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Lathom

Lathom Kelley ran for 189 yards and 3 TD’s Friday to spark CHS to a huge 29-21 victory. (John Fisken photo)

(Cheridan Eck photo)

Wolf cheerleaders enjoy the night. (Cheridan Eck photos)

With the only remaining home game being Homecoming, Senior Night festivities were held early this year.

 With the only remaining home game being Homecoming, Senior Night festivities were held early this year.

The experts were wrong. Every single freakin’ one of them.

Every newspaper reporter who picks winners and losers for football games. Every computer.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

The Port Townsend High School football team arrived on Whidbey Friday night already anointed as the champion in waiting of the 1A Olympic League.

Then, Lathom Kelley and Josh Bayne punched the Redhawks in the face and claimed first place for Cow Town.

By the time the Coupeville duo were done, rolling up a combined 333 yards on the ground, the Wolves had captured a thrilling 29-21 victory and staked a claim to sole possession of first place in the league.

With the win, CHS improved to 3-1 overall, 2-0 in league play. Port Townsend (2-2, 1-1) dropped into a tie with Klahowya (1-3, 1-1) which nipped Chimacum (0-4, 0-2) 36-26 Friday.

The Wolves, who opened with four straight home games, will now take their show on the road.

They play four of their final five games away from Whidbey, starting with a first-ever meeting with Klahowya next Friday, Oct. 3.

Facing a Redhawk squad that had won two straight, Coupeville came out on fire.

Using a pounding ground game (and a few trick plays), the Wolves rolled to a 29-7 lead midway through the second quarter, then withstood a late Port Townsend rally to nail down the win.

Kelley crashed in from six yards out to open the scoring less than five minutes into the game.

Port Townsend responded quickly, tying things up on their own 14-yard scoring run three minutes later, but the Wolves never flinched.

Wolf quarterback Joel Walstad, who left the game in the third quarter with a hip pointer (he’s expected to be OK), plunged in from the two-yard line on a sneak, before Coupeville blew the game open with a bit of treachery.

Clinging to a 14-7 lead, CHS coach Tony Maggio called for a fake punt and Kelley broke through the defense on a 46-yard scoring jaunt, leaving the Redhawks with their jaws scraping the turf.

Not done there, the Wolves tacked on a safety by Matt Shank and a third TD run from Kelley — this one went eight yards.

About the only miscue Coupeville had was a failure to tack on a two-point conversion after the final TD run.

Port Townsend rallied the troops in the second half, scoring twice to get within a touchdown and two-point conversion of forcing overtime.

But the Redhawks hopes died a sudden death when Bayne stepped in front of a pass and picked it off with under two minutes on the game clock.

In the biggest performance of his stellar high school career, Kelley, a junior, rambled for 189 yards on 14 carries.

Bayne, who entered the game as the leading rusher in 1A, tacked on 144 more on 18 carries, while Wiley Hesselgrave (25), CJ Smith (9), Jacob Martin (7) and Walstad (2) all chipped in to a 376-yard team effort.

Walstad (82) and his backup, Smith (12), accounted for 94 passing yards, with junior Ryan Griggs hauling in six passes for a team-high 60 yards.

Smith (2-18), Bayne (2-12) and Hesselgrave (1-4) also made sweet targets.

The Wolf defense stepped up multiple times, picking off four passes. Bayne hauled in two, while both Smith brothers (CJ and Hunter) snared one as well.

Shank was a rampaging beast, knocking down a pass and collecting the safety on a QB sack, while Walstad recovered a fumble on a kickoff.

Bayne paced the ‘d’ with eight tackles, followed by Hesselgrave (6), Oscar Liquidano (4), Kelley (3), Shank (2), Brenden Gilbert (1), Aaron Wright (1) and Isaac Vargas (1).

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"This line will not break!" (John Fisken photo)

“This line will not break!” (John Fisken photo)

“Am I proud? You bet!”

Coupeville Middle School football coach Bob Martin has a very raw team at his command, but, for the second week in a row, the Wolves came dangerously close to an upset win.

An inability to convert PAT’s cost CMS in the end, letting host Port Townsend slip away with a 14-12 win. But, other than the final score, the day was one full of highlights for the Wolf faithful.

“We dominated the first half; the team did good,” Martin said. “We have a very young, very inexperienced team, all of who attend practice six days a week.

“They are progressing, they know their responsibilities and are motivated to excel and are a great group of kids to coach!”

Eighth grader Chris Battaglia carried the load on offense, racking up 100 yards and a pair of touchdowns on the ground. He also brought back a punt 30 yards and recovered a fumble on defense.

It was the second straight game he had recorded two touchdowns.

Teo Keilwitz (26 yards) and Sean Toomey-Stout (13) backed up Battaglia, while Wolf quarterback Shane Losey hooked up with Luke Martin for a 15-yard reception.

Battaglia and Jake Pease paced the CMS defense, collecting seven tackles apiece, with Toomey-Stout, Keilwitz and Jaushon Clay each picking up six.

Losey (3), Martin (2), Dawson Sorrows (2), Josh Robinson (2) and Gavin Knoblich (1 assist) all contributed, with Losey tacking on a team-high six assists and Toomey-Stout picking off a Port Townsend pass.

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Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits wrap drive. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits warp drive.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

First place is on the line.

And yes, this is still early in the season, but when Coupeville hosts Port Townsend Friday night (5:30 kickoff), it’s for sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League football standings.

The Wolves, who will be playing their fourth straight home game (four of the next five are on the road) are 2-1 overall, 1-0 in league play, a record shared by the visiting Redhawks.

League mates Chimacum and Klahowya, which will pair off Friday, are both 0-3, 0-1.

The battle for the top spot will feature some of the biggest stat compilers in 1A this season.

Coupeville has the #1 rusher (Josh Bayne, 436 yards), #2 quarterback (Joel Walstad, 652 yards) and three of the top ten receivers (#2 CJ Smith, #7 Bayne and #10 Ryan Griggs) in their classification.

Port Townsend answers with the #3 rusher (David Sua, 292 yards), #6 passer (Jeff Seton, 435 yards) and #8 receiver (Austin Khile) in 1A.

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Former Wolf QB Gunnar Langvold's knee, post surgery.

Former Wolf QB Gunnar Langvold’s knee, post surgery. (Photos courtesy Gunnar Langvold)

A second look at total freakin' destruction.

A second look at total freakin’ destruction.

Langvold, pre-surgery, hanging out with girlfriend Jovanah Foote.

Langvold, pre-surgery, hanging out with girlfriend Jovanah Foote.

Trampolines. They hate you. They hate me. They hate all of us.

Insidious alien torture devices disguised as play toys, the Death Machines claimed another victim when former Wolf quarterback Gunnar Langvold had to have ACL reconstruction surgery this week to fix the damage inflicted by a trampoline.

A two-year starter for Coupeville High School, the 2014 grad also had his MCL repaired and his meniscus stitched up.

He’s on crutches currently, but is supposed to ditch them by the end of the week.

Stitches will be removed next week, and Langvold will start physical therapy. A full recovery is expected in nine months.

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Joey Edwards

Joey Edwards

He was a tough guy with a soft center.

During his days at Coupeville High School, Joey Edwards took hits with the best of them, whether it was allowing himself to be drilled with a fastball to get a crucial runner on base or cracking a runner coming across the field on the gridiron.

Off the field, the avid biker and car buff could still be seen as a tough guy. But one with a huge smile seen frequently gracing his face.

He came across as a genuinely nice guy, someone who fit in with his teammates and was well liked.

A transfer from South Whidbey midway through his high school days, Edwards became a valued part of Wolf Nation, graduating from the school this past year.

Now he’s off in the Army, serving his country and making his family proud of the young man he has become.

Today he’s far from Whidbey (the military doesn’t give you an off day for your birthday), but those of us back here on The Rock send him our best wishes on his big day.

Keep on keepin’ on, Mr. Edwards.

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