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Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

  Senior QB/kicker Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

Walstad fires a jumper last season.

Walstad fires a jumper last season.

Joel Walstad is about to step into the spotlight.

The third of three children in a highly-successful athletic family (following older siblings Tim and Bessie), Joel has been a strong player in all three of his sports — football, basketball and soccer.

But, as he enters his senior year at CHS, it will be a whole new ballgame, as he becomes The Man and not just a supporting player.

First up is the gridiron, where he’ll replace the graduated Gunnar Langvold as Coupeville’s starting quarterback.

While still finding time to limber up his leg and deliver extra points, field goals and punts for the Wolves.

Walstad can strike from many different directions, though he is still looking to fine-tune his skill set.

“My strengths are kicking and quickness,” he said. “I would like to improve on my passing and reading the defense.”

Now in his sixth season as a football player, having first picked up the sport as a seventh grader (“It looked like it would be fun”), Walstad wants to make an impact in his final go-around.

“Team goal is an (Olympic) League championship,” Walstad said. “Individual goals would be to kick a 40-yard field goal in a game and to throw for less than 5 interceptions on the year.”

The senior signal caller points to his family, including parents Shawn and Renee, and “all my coaches” as having shaped his game, and his life.

A big fan of history class who likes to spend most of his free time hanging out with friends, Walstad would give the slight edge in his sports world to hoops — “Because I have played it the longest” — but it’s football that he hopes might open doors at the next level.

“I would like to try to go to college for kicking,” he said. “I kicked a 55-yard field goal one time. You can ask Coach (Tony) Maggio!”

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Senior co-captain Carson Risner (John Fisken photos)

  Senior captain Carson Risner works on hand-offs with his quarterback. (John Fisken photos)

Joel Walstad

  Joel Walstad barks out signals while Lathom Kelley prepares to unleash a little thing he calls “Super Fast Blinding Speed.”

Someone may have forgotten to use sun screen...

Someone may have forgotten to use sun screen…

Jose

Jose Castro prepares to explode off the line.

Cameron Toomey-Stout

Freshman Cameron Toomey-Stout flies around the corner during a drill.

Did CHS head coach Tony Maggio sleep at all the night before the first day of practice? Probably not.

  Did CHS head coach Tony Maggio sleep at all the night before the first day of practice? Probably not.

One eye on the field, one eye on the cameraman.

One eye on the field, one eye on the camera. OK, maybe both eyes on the camera…

Vacation is done.

The first wave of Coupeville High School athletes hit the practice field Wednesday, officially kicking off the 2014-2015 school athletic year.

Today it was Wolf football. In five days, girls’ soccer, volleyball and boys’ tennis will join them.

The first official game: Friday, Sept. 5 when CHS welcomes South Whidbey to Cow Town for a football game that will decide the fate of the universe itself.

And thus it begins.

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Lathom Kelley (John Fisken photo)

Lathom Kelley (John Fisken photo)

In just under 24 hours Coupeville High School will kick off a new fall sports season with the first day of football practice.

The Wolves hit the practice field 1 PM Wednesday, starting two-a-days.

Opening night is Sept. 5, when South Whidbey comes to town.

While the two schools are now in different leagues, with CHS jumping from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, the game is still for Island bragging rights and possession of The Bucket for the next year.

One of the players most excited to get on the field and start is Wolf junior Lathom Kelley.

As a freshman, he and his teammates went to Langley and claimed the trophy, while last year The Bucket went back South after the Falcons won a foggy battle in Cow Town.

Kelley’s thoughts on this, Football Eve:

I’m very excited for football this year.

I won’t lie, having South Whidbey as our first game this year is going to be a great way to start off our season.

Through my past years in football I have noticed a lack of excitement, but I’m hoping that this year, being in a new league and kicking South Whidbey’s butt for our first game, will raise the level of excitement and effort throughout the season.

I am pretty big on practicing how you play, so these next two weeks are going to be very difficult with two-a-days and gold card sales (get ahold of me if you want one!).

All I want this year is to win.

Freshman year we won two games, sophomore we won four. This year I want all of them to be wins.

What I want more than anything, though, is to have every single person on the team to want it as bad as I do.

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Bob Martin, at work and rest.

Bob Martin, at work and rest.

Bob Martin is the unsung backbone of Coupeville sports.

Whether coaching football and basketball, working with the high school boosters or the Boys and Girls Club, volunteering for Race the Reserve road crew work or simply making sure the lights stay on and the PA system works in the CHS gym during games, he’s everywhere at once.

In a small town, you need people like Bob, who are willing to put a lot of time and work in for very little pay, to make things work.

He may not always be in the spotlight, which he seems quite happy about, but he is indispensable.

Plus, he upholds a proud tradition honored by myself and Wolf football coach Tony Maggio, among others, of wearing shorts almost 24-7-365, rain and/or snow be danged.

Good man.

So, on this, his birthday, take a moment to give a hand to the quiet man of Coupeville sports, the guy who helps keep everything running while building for the next generation.

There is a landmark that sits in front of the CHS gym — a rock that is spray painted every time someone has something to get off their chest.

When it comes to Wolf sports, from the pee wees to the big kids, Bob Martin is the real-life embodiment of that rock.

Just don’t go spray painting him any time soon…

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Travis Pennington

Travis Pennington

Pennington hauls in his second interception of the game during a win against Vashon last season.

Pennington hauls in his second interception of the game during a big win against Vashon last season.

With Coupeville leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League this fall, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves in the future.

Travis Pennington picked a great time to have a breakout game last season.

Pennington, who will be a senior at Chimacum High School this year, picked off two passes to help the Cowboys beat Vashon Island 33-21 in a game that covered two days and ended at an unusual site.

The battle started on a Friday night at Memorial Field in Port Townsend, a stadium Chimacum shares with its closest rival.

Then, moments after Pennington’s second pick, a transformer fire killed the power and brought the game to a screeching halt with a little over five minutes left to play and Chimacum trailing 21-20.

Three days later, action was picked up at Chimacum High School — the first time any part of a game had been played at the high school since at least the 1970’s — and the Cowboys rallied for the win behind two scores from Alex Morris.

It was a season-defining win for a Chimacum squad that was bedeviled by injuries last season — Pennington was among a chunk of Cowboys who missed the season finale at Coupeville, sitting out a 54-0 non-conference blowout with a concussion.

The Vashon game, and his key role in the win, makes for a much better memory.

“We ended up winning in Chimacum, which was the first time in a few decades CHS has done that,” Pennington said. “I’m proud to be a part of something special like that.”

As he prepares for his final season, and another crack at Coupeville now that the schools have become league rivals and will play twice, Pennington is confident he can help bring leadership to the Cowboys.

“My goals are to teach the underclassmen how to work hard and play with pride,” he said. “Football is my favorite sport because it isn’t a one person sport. It takes a team to succeed.

“I enjoy the excitement and the competition of the game,” Pennington added. “My athletic strengths are studying my opponents strengths and weaknesses and I’m very loyal to my teammates.”

While he missed out on last year’s game against Coupeville, Pennington did play against the Wolves as a sophomore.

In that game, Chimacum held on for a wild 56-39 win on a sloppy, muddy field in Port Townsend in a game that featured ejections, a ref tackled in the end zone (on purpose) and 300-pound Wolf lineman Nick Streubel getting a rare hand-off and carrying five Cowboy players on his back as he crashed into the world’s biggest mud hole on the right sideline.

Regardless of how this year’s games play out, Pennington appreciates his time as a Cowboy, and the lessons he’s learned along the way.

“Most of my coaches that I have had made huge impacts on me,” he said. “For the past four years they have pushed me to be a better student, athlete, and man.”

When he does hang up his football helmet and pads, Pennington will look to finish his final year at Chimacum on a high note, combining education with fun.

“My interests, other then sports, are graduating high school, getting a college degree so I can provide for a family and having good times with friends.”

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