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Archive for the ‘Football’ Category

Payback!!

Cole Payne lays down the law: "We're gonna run right through there, 200 times!!" (John Fisken photo)

Cole Payne lays down the law: “We’re gonna run right through there, 200 times!!” (John Fisken photo)

Boom! Chew on this, Langley.

Three days after a Homecoming loss, the Coupeville High School JV football team went South Monday and used a bruising ground game to earn some redemption, shredding South Whidbey 14-13.

The second win in a row for the Wolves, it was sparked by Jacob Martin’s feet, a ferocious offensive line and a ton of big-time plays at just the right moments. Maybe even better, it was that genuine article, a TEAM win.

“Most important to me is the willingness to put the WE before the ME,” said CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “We did a lot of that tonight as we saw kids who deserved time on the field take a step back and told us coaches to use others as THEY felt it gave us a better chance to win.

“Watching these kids wanting to play for one another and fight for one another is very rewarding,” he added. “And I could not be more proud of them.”

Martin, just a freshman, ran wild, rolling up close to 200 yards and scoring both a touchdown and a two-point conversion.

Running behind five sophomores who “controlled the line of scrimmage and opened gaping holes all night long,” he also benefited from the blocking of wing Cole Payne and big, bad Xavier Clark, who saw his first action at fullback and was “a human battering ram.”

When they went to the air, the Wolves got huge catches from a variety of players, with Tyree Booker, Anthony Bergeron and Mitchell Carroll hauling in key receptions.

Bergeron put Coupeville on the board early, when he hauled in a five-yard touchdown pass from Joel Walstad, while Booker was a two-way star, breaking up what could have been a Falcon touchdown right before the half.

He and his teammates stepped up their biggest when the spotlight was brightest, stopping South Whidbey three times inside the five-yard line with less than two minutes to play.

Coupeville then brought extreme pressure on the Falcon kicker, who shanked a field goal try wide left.

“The defense played a very well rounded game,” Van Velkinburgh said. “Nice to see things starting to click and every position at one point or another made great and important plays.”

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Jake Tumblin rushed for 233 yards and three touchdowns Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin, born to run. (John Fisken photo)

Running through the fog Friday night, Jake Tumblin wasn’t easy to see.

But, once the white veil had lifted and all the stats were counted, the Coupeville High School senior’s numbers were so eye-popping that he once again landed on the radar of football watchers far away.

After scrambling for 233 yards and three touchdowns, while also throwing down a team-high 16 tackles in a Homecoming loss to South Whidbey, Tumblin was selected as one of the week’s top performers by Northwest Elite Index.

In the article, author Ryland Spencer hails the speedy Wolf as “one of the state’s top two-way players.”

To bask in the afterglow head over to http://www.northwesteliteindex.com/2013/10/20/washingtons-elite-performers-for-october-20th-2013-by-ryland-spencer/.

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Matthew Kelley breaks free and heads to pay dirt. (Pat Kelley photos)

Matthew Kelley breaks free and heads to pay dirt. (Pat Kelley photos)

The team's crusty defensive coordinator lays out her game plan. "OK men, I want you to hit 'em. Then hit 'em again!!"

   The team’s crusty defensive coordinator lays out her game plan. “OK men, I want you to hit ’em. Then hit ’em again!!”

"Ma'am! Yes, ma'am!!"

“Ma’am! Yes, ma’am!!”

Now it gets serious.

Coming off a 24-0 thumping of much-heralded La Conner Saturday, the Anacortes Midget Sea Hawk football squad, and its three Coupeville stars, heads to the postseason.

The Sea Hawks, who feature Coupeville Elementary School students Matthew Kelley, Sage Downes and Jake Mitten, are 6-2 and tied for second place entering the playoffs. That begins Oct. 26 with a likely meeting against Oak Harbor.

Playing La Conner, Anacortes threw down a defensive butt-whuppin’, holding their foes to just one first down the entire afternoon.

When they had the ball in their hands, the Sea Hawks put the ball in the end zone on a regular basis. Kelley busted out a pass reception on fourth and long for a touchdown, while Gaige Berow and Gavin Moore had long scoring runs of their own.

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Wolf football players Xavier Clark (left) and Ramon Booker enjoy the parade. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Wolf football players Xavier Clark (left) and Ramon Booker enjoy the CHS Homecoming parade Friday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Longtime Wolf coach Larrie Ford (left) hangs out with a quality crowd.

Longtime Wolf coach Larrie Ford (left) hangs out with a quality crowd.

Even after running the parade route, CHS cheerleaders can still smile.

CHS cheerleaders Kirsten Pelroy (left) and Ciera St Onge are all smiles.

Aaron Trumbull, matinee idol.

Aaron Trumbull, matinee idol.

Kacie Kiel is camera shy (for the first time in her life).

Kacie Kiel is camera shy (for the first time in her life).

It is not 1924 anymore.

Sadly, I don’t think that’s a fact that has ever really sunk in for the Canadian-owned newspapers on this Island.

As a former employee of both the Whidbey News-Times and Whidbey (Coupeville) Examiner, I don’t say that with as much glee as you might think. It is, instead, with a certain amount of sadness as I watch once vibrant institutions slide further into obscurity.

There are very good people at both papers — actually, they’re the same people, since they no longer have separate staffs, regardless of what they might like you to think — people whose writing and reporting skills are of the highest caliber.

But the papers themselves, subsidiaries of the giant (and I do mean giant) Black Press empire, are stuck in a ’20s mindset.

They refuse to acknowledge that the internet has long ago become the primary way people get their information. They have a lot of weapons at their disposal and continually choose to shoot themselves in the foot without provocation.

What has inspired this rant, you ask?

This Island is made up of small towns. We are not covering Detroit or L.A. or Moscow. It is small towns.

And when you cover small towns, events like Homecoming football games and parades, events that draw in a large cross-section of a town, are vitally important to those small towns.

Stuff like that is, or should be, the lifeblood of what they, and I, do.

But, here we are 24 hours later, a time period when I have run three separate photo essays (with 25 photographs) covering every aspect of Coupeville High School’s celebration, from parade to halftime show.

Now this diatribe runs it to 30 photos.

I also had a story on the game — which, by virtue of featuring Coupeville hosting South Whidbey, was even more ramped-up in interest locally than otherwise — up online an hour after the game finished. That story had a fresh photo of Jake Tumblin, so that would be 31 pics.

This is the time period when modern-day readers — the people living in 2013 — turn to the internet for exactly this. Immediate, intimate coverage of life in small towns.

Whether on Facebook or on a blog, they want to see it as soon as possible.

But, if you turned to the News-Times, Examiner or even the South Whidbey Record today, you found diddly and squat. A newspaper empire that sits closer to Coupeville’s football field than I do — and I only live a little over a mile away — is silent.

And that’s a shame.

They may tell you they are holding the photos and stories for the print edition of the paper. Except that doesn’t arrive until Wednesday, and we are in 2013 and not 1924. Readers are not waiting for the newspaper to hit the stoop anymore.

So then they’ll tell you they’ll put some of what they have up online Monday, when they go back to the office. Except 72 hours is about the same as 72 years in 2013 and you don’t have to be in the office to upload a picture.

I mean, good lord, how is it even conceivable that I, the last cave man who refuses to get a cell phone, much less a smart phone, continues to kick their pampered asses so easily?

They should be ashamed. They should wake up.

It is 2013 and this business has changed. If you don’t realize that at some point, there will be a day — much sooner than you think — when the small towns you serve no longer even realize you exist.

And that is sad.

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Some day she'll be a mega-star, but for one night, Savannah Dohner (right) shared her guitar god skills with the town.

   Some day she’ll be a mega-star playing arenas, but for one night, Savanna Dohner (right) shared her genuine guitar god skills with the town.

The Duke and Duchess, Mr. and Mrs. Eller, meet their subjects.

The Duke and Duchess, Mr. and Mrs. Eller, meet their subjects.

Queen Heni Barnes and her court (l to r) senior princesses Kenzie Kooch, Emilee Crichton and Julia Felici.

Queen Heni Barnes and her court (l to r) senior princesses Kenzie Kooch, Emilee Crichton and Julia Felici.

Straight out of the '20s and headed to Broadway, Andy Walker.

Straight out of the ’20s and headed to Broadway, Andy Walker.

The flappers get things jumpin'.

The flappers get things jumpin’.

"I got places to go..."

“I got places to go…”

Longtime coach Larrie Ford is honored for his contributions to the Coupeville Booster Club.

Longtime coach Larrie Ford is honored for his contributions to the Coupeville Booster Club.

"Let's get this sock hop hoppin'!"

“Let’s get this sock hop hoppin’!”

And then the fog swallowed everyone up again...

And then the fog swallowed everyone up again…

The final score may have been less than desirable, but the halftime show scored big time.

With each class paying tribute to a different decade, and the velvet voice of announcers Randy King and Joel Norris providing running commentary, Coupeville High School parted the low-hanging fog Friday night to put on a Homecoming show.

The photos above are courtesy Team Trumbull, as mom Shelli and daughter Alexis both worked behind the camera.

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