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Let them eat cake!!

Carson Risner (left) feeds fellow linemen Joey Edwards. (Sharon Edwards photos)

Carson Risner (left) feeds fellow lineman Joey Edwards. (Sharon Edwards photos)

Defensive MVP Nick Streubel gives mom Nanette a hug.

Defensive MVP Nick Streubel gives mom Nanette a hug.

Wolf seniors together one final time. Back row, (l to r) Jake Tumblin, Gunnar Langvold

   Wolf seniors. Back: Jake Tumblin, Gunnar Langvold, Nick Johnson, Jared Dickson,    Edwards, Ben Haight. Front: Raymond Beiriger, Streubel, Xavier Clark, Brett Arnold, Wade Schaef.

Assistant coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Edwards share a moment.

Assistant coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Edwards share a moment.

Sophomore Lathom Kelley works the receiving line, glad-handing coaches Tony Maggio and Ryan King.

  Sophomore Lathom Kelley works the receiving line, glad-handing coaches Tony Maggio (middle) and Ryan King.

A taste of dinner.

A taste of dinner.

Awards were handed out Tuesday night, but the real reason to go to any sports banquet is for the food.

With the theme of the evening being desserts, the Coupeville High School football squad closed out the fall sports season with a few speeches, some hugs and a lot of tasty calories.

On hand to document the goings-on was Sharon Edwards, grandmother of Wolf senior lineman Joey Edwards, and these photos are courtesy of her.

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Junior Josh Bayne, here fielding a punt, was his team's second-leading rusher in 2013. (John Fisken photos)

  Junior Josh Bayne, here fielding a punt, was his team’s second-leading rusher in 2013. (John Fisken photos)

Junior Joel Walstad was rock-solid on PATs and gave the Wolves a deadly weapon with his punting ability.

   Junior Joel Walstad was rock-solid on PATs and gave the Wolves a deadly weapon with his punting ability.

Senior Wade Schaef returned an interception 40 yards for a touchdown in his final game in the red and black.

Senior Wade Schaef returned an interception 40 yards for a touchdown in his final game in the red and black.

Five games.

That’s all Jake Tumblin needed, as the fleet-footed Coupeville High School senior tore up the gridiron for more than 1,000 yards in 2013 despite missing two complete games and being virtually absent from two others due to injuries.

Based on his eye-popping stats (he topped 200 rushing yards in a game three times, scorching Chimacum for 315), Tumblin easily ran away with the Offensive MVP award at his team’s season-ending banquet Tuesday night.

Fellow senior Nick Streubel, who routinely caved in the other team’s line at will, claimed the Defensive MVP honors.

Other awards went to sophomore Wiley Hesselgrave (Most Improved), senior Ben Haight (Coaches Award), junior Josh Bayne (Effort Award), senior Jared Dickson (Effort Award) and senior Brett Arnold (Recognition Award – for overcoming adversity and persevering).

Varsity letters:

Brett Arnold
Josh Bayne
Anthony Bergeron
Tyree Booker
Jared Dickson
Joey Edwards
Ben Haight
Matt Hampton
Wiley Hesselgrave
Lathom Kelley
Gunnar Langvold
Oscar Liquidano
Carson Risner
Wade Schaef
Matt Shank
Nick Streubel
Jake Tumblin
Joel Walstad
Aaron Wright

Participation certificates:

JB Barnes
Raymond Beiriger
Colin Belliveau
Ramon Booker

Mitchell Carroll
Jose Castro
Xavier Clark
Steven Cope
Brenden Gilbert
Nick Johnson
Austen Kirk
Uriel Liquidano
Jake Lord
Josh Lord
Mitchell Losey
Jacob Martin
Cole Payne
JR Pendegrass
Brian Shank
Isaac Vargas

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Nick Streubel and the blue turf at Boise State. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Nick Streubel and the blue turf at Boise State. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Jake Tumblin and parents Chris and Shannon hang out in the end zone. (Madison Tisa McPhee photo)

   Jake Tumblin and parents Chris and Shannon hang out in the end zone. (Madison Tisa McPhee photo)

Welcome to Boise. This ain't Whidbey. (David Streubel photo)

Welcome to Boise. This ain’t Whidbey. (David Streubel photo)

Off to snow country!

Taking an “unofficial” recruiting visit to Idaho Saturday, Coupeville High School seniors Nick Streubel and Jake Tumblin got to see big-time NCAA Division 1 football up close and personal.

Very up close and very personal, as the duo and their families, who attended the Boise State-Wyoming game at the invitation of coaches, watched warmups from the sidelines before viewing the game from seats behind the home bench.

While on scene, the Wolves and their parents sat through a presentation, visited the weight room and met with Boise State’s recruiting coach.

What was said, and how the participants felt about the trip, has to remain a bit under wraps, so as not to even remotely bump up against NCAA regulations. BUT, everyone WAS smiling, even though the weather was “freezing!”

Oh yes, and Boise State whomped Wyoming 48-7, if you were curious.

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victoryDon’t tread on Whidbey.

North, South and Central, and all the far-flung Wolf fans in every corner of the big, wide internet came together as one Tuesday and taught Marysville (population 62,402) a simple fact.

Coupeville (population 1,865) doesn’t go down easily.

Using an 800-73 run over a two-hour span (seriously) we broke the Everett Herald’s poll, now and forever.

Finally tally in the Herald’s poll for Prep Football Player of the Week:

Jake Tumblin of Coupeville (2,073 votes)

Deion Stell of Marysville-Pilchuck (1,624 votes)

That’s more votes than there are people in the town of Coupeville. Any questions?

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Jake Tumblin, takin' care of business. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin, takin’ care of business. (John Fisken photo)

What part of “you already lost” do you not understand?

What began as a simple thing — the vote for the Everett Herald’s Prep Football Player of the Week — has transformed into an epic battle between the plucky town that could, and its supporters everywhere, and the big town that’s going down.

There are seven players nominated, but it long ago became a two-man battle between Coupeville’s Jake Tumblin and Marysville Pilchuck’s Deion Stell.

Jake ran for 315 yards, scored four touchdowns, picked off a pass, recovered a fumble and took a knee at the one-yard line on what could have been another touchdown, to set up fellow senior Raymond Beiriger for the only score of his high school career.

Stell, a very good player, ran for … 75 yards.

When the voting kicked off Sunday morning, Jake took the lead and held a 40-vote margin for some time, then got swamped and fell behind by 350+ votes. But then, he rallied and shot past Stell and held a 150-vote lead.

An email from Herald prep sports editor Aaron Swaney, sent Tuesday morning, states:

Voting ended yesterday so it seems Jake won the fan vote for player of the week.

Except, the Herald hasn’t actually frozen the vote and Marysville (2012 census population of 62,402) has now shot Stell back ahead 1,468-1,344 (no one else has more than 199 votes), while Coupeville (2012 census population of 1,865) is like, “What? We won! Give us a freakin’ break!!”

So, we’re playing Chicago rules, then?

I call on every man, woman and child on Whidbey Island, especially Oak Harbor fans, who have no love for Marysville, to vote, vote, vote.

One Whidbey, united, kickin’ Marysville’s fanny.

The link: http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20131110/SPORTS01/711109894/1007/Vote-for-Prep-Football-Player-of-the-Week-

Or, email the Herald at aswaney@heraldnet.com and ask him to acknowledge on the web site that Tumblin won.

This is not over, Marysville. We got the equivalent of votes from 72% of the town. You got 0.02%.

You already lost.

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