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May Rose (John Fisken photos)

May Rose and her soccer teammates have won back-to-back games. (John Fisken photos)

After 12 days off, the Wolf spikers get back at it tonight when they host Bellevue Christian.

After 12 days off, the Wolf spikers get back at it tonight when they host Bellevue Christian.

Senior Isaac Vargas has grown into being a two-way terror on the line.

Senior Isaac Vargas has grown into being a two-way terror on the line.

When he's been healthy, Loren Nelson has held down half of the #1 doubles team.

When he’s been healthy, Loren Nelson has been half of the #1 doubles team.

The schedule has been sort of odd this season.

With Coupeville High School adjusting to a new league, less conference games and a more jumbled non-conference schedule, there have been some weird gaps between games.

At least it seems that way.

Case in point, the Wolf volleyball squad (0-4) hasn’t played in 12 days.

They return to the court tonight (JV 5 PM, varsity 6:15), when they host Bellevue Christian. Then, they’re off for another six days.

The CHS soccer squad (3-2) suddenly added a new game to the schedule, plugging in a non-conference affair at Oak Harbor tonight. Kickoff is 6 PM.

That game will bring together a huge chunk of the GU18 Whidbey Islanders squad, with Wolves like Micky LeVine and Jacki Ginnings facing off with their select teammates who play for OHHS such as Becca Pabona and Jacalyn Hefflefinger.

Football (3-2) and boys’ tennis (2-4) both return to action Friday.

The gridiron squad travels to Port Townsend (5 PM kickoff), while the netters will welcome the Chimacum/Port Townsend combined team, with first serve at 4 PM.

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Oscar Liquidano (John Fisken photo)

Senior lineman Oscar Liquidano is tied for fifth on the team in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

Sophomore Jacob Martin

Sophomore Jacob Martin is piling up stats on both sides of the ball.

Josh Bayne is making a bid to be an All-State player.

The Coupeville High School senior is in the Top 10 in Class 1A in at least five different categories and is the driving force behind a Wolf gridiron squad (3-2 overall, 2-1 in league) that is tied for first in the Olympic League.

As CHS prepares for a huge road game this Friday, Oct. 10 at Port Townsend, marinate for a bit in the latest stats, direct from MaxPreps.com:

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad  57 completions for 786 yards (#3 in 1A) with 6 TDs and 6 INTs
CJ Smith  9-99 with 1/1

Receiving:

C. Smith 16 receptions for 241 yards (#7 in 1A)
Ryan Griggs 18-236 (#8 in 1A)
Josh Bayne  18-228 (#9 in 1A)
Wiley Hesselgrave 6-95
Jacob Martin 6-49
Lathom Kelley 4-21
Mitchell Carroll 2-15
Gabe Wynn
1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 70 carries for 671 yards (#2 in 1A, #4 in state)
Kelley 21-242
Hesselgrave 24-169
Martin 29-99
C. Smith 4-12
Walstad 13-10
Mitchell Losey 1-1

Kickoff/punt returns:

Bayne 7 returns for 144 yards
Kelley 5-83
Hesselgrave 1-16
Losey
1-10
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-8
Wynn 1-0

Scoring:

Bayne (42) — 7 TD (#2 in 1A)
Walstad (35) — 3 TD, 12 PAT, 1 FG, 1 two-point conversion
Kelley (24) — 4 TD
Griggs (14) — 2 TD, 1 conversions
Hesselgrave
(12) — 2 TD
C. Smith (10) — 1 TD, 2 conversions
Matt Shank (2) — 1 safety

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne 38 solo, 7 assists (#6 in 1A)
Kelley 14-12
Aaron Wright 14-7
Shank 17-3
Hesselgrave 16-2
Oscar Liquidano
14-4
Martin 10-4
Wynn
13-0
Griggs 8-3
Isaac Vargas
8-2
Brenden Gilbert 7-0
Walstad
5-1
C. Smith
4-2
Josh Lord
3-2
Losey 2-2
Dominic Dausey
3-0
Hunter Smith
2-0
James Vidoni 1-1
Jake Lord 1-0
Mitchell Carroll
0-1

Sacks:

Bayne 2
Hesselgrave 2

Interceptions:

Bayne 4 (#2 in 1A)
C. Smith 1
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Bayne 3
Dausey 1
Hesselgrave
1
Kelley
1
Martin 1
H. Smith
1
Vargas
1
Walstad 1
Wynn 1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

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Logan Downes (27) and teammates absorb the first loss of their football careers. (Pat Kelley photos)

   CES 3rd grader Logan Downes (27) and his OH teammates absorb the first loss of their football careers after starting 5-0. (Pat Kelley photos)

"And I said stay down!!" Downes delivers a forearm shiver

  “And I said stay down!!” Downes delivers the “Hand o’ Death” as he sends a defender crashing.

Win or lose, mom is always there for you.

Win or lose, mom is always there for you.

A new Downes rises.

Following in the football footsteps of older brothers Hunter and Sage, Logan Downes, a third grader at Coupeville Elementary School, has burst onto the gridiron scene.

As a starting running back and free safety for the Oak Harbor Pee Wee Wildcats, the youngest Downes has helped guide his squad to a 5-1 record.

With Downes stiff-arming would-be tacklers as he charges down the field — he has eight touchdowns with another four called back by penalties against his blockers — the Wildcats mauled their first five opponents.

The run came to a brief stop this weekend, when a late fumble on a kick return cost Oak Harbor a 20-13 loss to an undefeated Stanwood Red squad.

While the loss stings, it should only be a temporary setback for the multi-talented Downes.

Most of his scoring runs have been of the epic variety, with most covering between 30 and 50 yards.

He’s also a pass-catching threat and is expected to move behind center eventually and become a quarterback like older brother Hunter, a freshman at CHS.

A true two-way player, Logan also combines speed and sure hands to be ruthless when patrolling the secondary from his safety position.

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They're no longer Wolves, but they continue to excel. Clockwise, from left, are Mitch Pelroy, Amanda d'Almeida and Tyler King.

  They’re no longer Wolves, but they continue to excel athletically. Clockwise, from left, are Mitch Pelroy, Amanda d’Almeida and Tyler King.

It was a busy week for Wolf grads playing college sports.

Three former Coupeville High School stars made big impacts on the playing field, separated by the sports they play and the states they currently reside in, but joined together by excellence.

AMANDA d’ALMEIDA:

Finally healthy again, the Carleton College sophomore played the full 90 minutes Saturday as her team upset #13 College of Saint Benedict 2-0 in an NCAA D-3 game.

It was the highest ranked school that the Knights had toppled in six seasons and lifted Carleton to 7-3-1 on the season. They’re 4-0-1 in league play.

With d’Almeida playing at center mid, the Knights out-shot their foes 12-1 in a game played in Northfield, Minnesota.

TYLER KING:

The former CHS state cross country champ continued a strong start to his junior campaign at the University of Washington.

Running in the inaugural Washington Invite Saturday, which drew half of the country’s Top 10 teams, King finished 39th out of 96 runners.

He covered the 8,000-meter course at Jefferson Park in 24 minutes, 20 seconds.

Patrick Tiernan of Villanova won in 23 minutes flat, while King’s teammate, UW All-American Aaron Nelson, claimed 5th in 23:33.

The Huskies finished 6th as a team, besting three Top 10 schools — #5 Portland, #7 Indiana and #9 Villanova.

Northern Arizona, which finished second at last year’s NCAA Championships, claimed the team title.

King will be back in action Oct. 17, when he and his teammates run at the Adidas Invitational in Wisconsin.

MITCH PELROY:

Montana Western stumbled Saturday, falling 31-14 to Carroll in a NAIA game, but Pelroy used his time on the field wisely.

He returned a kick-off 22 yards — best return by any Bulldog on the afternoon — and recorded an unassisted tackle from his position in the secondary.

It wasn’t enough, though, as Montana Western fell to 2-4, despite two epic touchdowns from quarterback Tyler Hulse.

Hulse connected on scoring strikes of 53 and 63 yards, but Carroll used a 17-point second quarter to blow the game open.

Pelroy and Co. return to action Oct. 11 when they hit the road to play Southern Oregon.

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Wolf freshman Hunter Smith (4) continued his strong play, recovering a fumble Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

  Wolf freshman Hunter Smith (4) continued his strong play, recovering a fumble Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Good news first.

The Coupeville High School gridiron squad is in a three-way tie for first place in the 1A Olympic League at the halfway point of the season.

Bad news?

The Wolves are there because they played their worst game of the season — by far — falling 49-6 at Klahowya Friday night.

The loss, combined with Port Townsend lighting up Chimacum 56-0, left Coupeville, Klahowya and Port Townsend at 2-1 in league play, with Chimacum bringing up the rear at 0-3.

It’s a true tie, as well, with each of the three schools in first having beaten one of the others while losing to one of the others.

Things will shake out over the next three weeks, as the Wolves (3-2 overall) pursue a playoff berth and get their second crack at their three new league rivals.

Coupeville travels to Port Townsend (3-2) next Friday, Oct. 10, visits Chimacum (0-5) the following week, then hosts Klahowya Oct. 24 for Homecoming.

The Wolves wrap the regular season with a non-conference game at Concrete, reigniting an old-school rivalry, on Halloween night.

Playing their first road game of the season after opening with four straight at home, the Wolves had their chances Friday night.

Klahowya, which dropped down from 2A before this season and is one of the three biggest 1A schools in the state, fumbled the ball away on its first two possessions.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, the Eagles stiffened their own defense, shutting the Wolves down both times as well.

Klahowya then broke things open with a fury in the second quarter, rolling up five straight touchdown drives to take a 35-0 lead into the half.

Konner Langholff was Mr. Untouchable, strolling past the Wolf ‘d’ three times on scoring runs of seven, six and 13 yards.

The sudden assault was punctuated when Klahowya senior Austin Sargent blew up the CHS line en route to an 89-yard scoring run of his own.

For the game, the Eagle duo combined for 332 yards, with Langholff garnering 193 yards on 18 carries and Sargent rambling for 139 on just five carries.

The hosts capped their incredible second quarter run with a 34-yard scoring pass from George Harris to Nate Hough, who tipped the ball to himself and snagged it over a Wolf defender who went to the ground.

After Klahowya tacked on two more rushing TD’s in the second half, Coupeville avoided the shutout when backup quarterback CJ Smith hit Ryan Griggs on a nine-yard scoring strike late in the fourth.

The junior shared QB duties with starter Joel Walstad, who was at less than 100% after suffering a hip pointer in last week’s win over Port Townsend.

Smith hit on 7 of 10 passes for 87 yards, while Walstad struggled for the first time this season. The senior, who entered the game in the top five for 1A passers, completed just four passes for 32 yards.

Josh Bayne hauled in three passes for 47 yards, while Griggs (3-28), Mitchell Carroll (2-15), Smith (2-12) and Jacob Martin (1-17) all chipped in.

The Wolves, coming off of a game in which they rushed for 350+ yards, were held to 150 on the ground.

Bayne got the majority of those, carrying the ball 14 times for 91 hard-earned yards.

Wiley Hesselgrave (4-36), Martin (4-15), Walstad (1-4), Smith (1-3) and Mitchell Losey (1-1) rounded out the ball carriers.

Coupeville was missing its second-leading rusher, junior Lathom Kelley, who was sidelined with a shin injury.

The defense, which was missing senior captain Aaron Wright, also out with an injury, spread out the tackles.

Bayne led the way with six, while Hesselgrave, Griggs and Oscar Liquidano each had four.

Matt Shank (3), Isaac Vargas (3), Gabe Wynn (2), Dominic Dausey (2), Martin (1), CJ Smith (1), Jake Lord (1), Josh Lord (1) and Hunter Smith (1) all tracked down runaway Eagles and wrapped them up.

Hesselgrave blew through the Klahowya line to haul down Harris for a six-yard loss on a sack and recovered a fumble to cap a strong all-around performance.

Dausey and Hunter Smith also snagged fumble recoveries.

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