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Freshman quarterback Matthew Gilbert saw extensive playing time in the fourth quarter Friday night. (Andrew Williams photo)

It was Friday the 13th after all.

In between the action and the falling rain drops, there were highlights for Coupeville High School football fans, from the announcement of Homecoming royalty to freshly cooked hot dogs and birthday sing-a-longs.

On the field, however, things turned fairly grim during a game in which the refs slowed things down to a crawl to throw 10,047 flags, and visiting Forks proved that when it spells class, it sometimes drops the C and L.

The Wolves were missing multiple key senior starters on offense, including quarterback Logan Downes, who is battling tonsillitis.

Logan Downes can’t feel his face. (Angie Downes photo)

Meanwhile the Spartans chose to leave their primary weapons in until the game’s final seconds, merrily racing the clock to pad stats in a lopsided 67-9 win.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 1-6 on the season but hope lives.

The final two regular season games pit the Wolves against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals La Conner and Friday Harbor, and CHS can still claim a share of the league title and punch a return ticket to state.

To do so, Coupeville, which is 1-1 in conference action, needs to beat the Braves (0-3 in league, 1-5 overall) and Wolverines (3-0, 4-2).

The first game is on the road Oct. 20, the second in Cow Town on Senior Night Oct. 27.

Sweep those two tilts and the Wolves finish in a tie with Friday Harbor at 3-1, with the teams splitting their two-game season series.

That would set up a tiebreaker mini game, with the winner advancing to the state tourney.

But that’s still a way off.

Friday night brought a strong Forks team to town, carrying a 5-1 record and a #6 ranking in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

And yet it took the Spartans a bit to pull away, as a scrappy Coupeville team led by sophomore QB Chase Anderson, making his first start under center in place of Downes, hung tough.

Forks signal caller Emmanuel Hernandez, just a freshman, ripped off a 36-yard scoring run three minutes into the game to stake the visitors to an early lead, but the Wolves countered.

Chewing up six-plus minutes of clock, Anderson and his crew methodically moved downfield, with the slippery sophomore scrambling out of danger three times to keep the drive alive.

Anderson’s biggest burst was a 19-yard bolt to the right side, weaving and bobbing, daring anyone to tackle him, then ducking under the outstretched arms of would-be tacklers.

Mixing in a couple of passes to Jack Porter, Hunter Bronec, and Malachi Somes, the Wolf QB proved to be a killer with his arm as well as his feet, but penalties finally stalled out Coupeville.

Facing a fourth-and-15, CHS coach Bennett Richter put the ball on Anderson’s toe, and he blasted his first field goal of the season, a 33-yard bomb into the twilight.

Casey Masters (holding helmet) and other Wolf linemen gave it their all against Forks. (Jackie Saia photo)

Forks scored again before the looooooong first quarter ended, with Brody Lausche rumbling in from 10 yards out for the first of his five TD’s, but Coupeville again had an answer.

Anderson connected with Bronec on a pass by accident to open the second quarter, as the ball hit another receiver’s arms and popped up into the air only to be snagged by the lanky junior.

Very next play, a 29-yard heave into the night air landed on the fingertips of Jack Porter for his third score of the season.

It was Anderson’s first TD pass this year, and the second of his prep career.

While a two-point conversion run was snuffed out just short of the line, Coupeville was down just 14-9 at that point, with almost three full quarters left to play.

Unfortunately, Porter’s trip to the end zone was the last time the Wolves would score on this evening. At least if you believe the refs.

A 73-yard bolt to freedom by Hernandez made the score 20-9 in favor of Forks, but a muffed snap on the PAT attempt spurred hope.

Even down 28-9, after a short scoring run by Lausche and a successful conversion attempt, the Wolves seemed like they would make it a battle royal.

Anderson lofted a pass over the defense, dropping the ball into Porter’s hands, and several big steps later, the Coupeville speed demon had broken off an 80-yard TD pass play.

Except…

A lonely flag sat nestled in the grass, and after a prolonged conversation among the refs — perhaps wondering who had misplaced their rule book and bifocal glasses — the zebras overturned the touchdown, driving a stake through the heart of Wolf Nation.

From that point on, Coupeville’s offensive attack deflated, while Forks went on a rampage, ramming in an additional six touchdowns.

Five scores came on the ground, while another was courtesy of a blocked punt, the ball plucked off the ground by Walker Wheeler, who strolled in for a quick six.

With the lead cracking the 40-point barrier, a running clock went into action, and the Spartans answer was to hunker down with their starters and keep battering away.

Hernandez scored his third touchdown of the night very late in the fourth, sweeping in behind most of the same guys blocking for him back at the start of the game.

While Coupeville didn’t score over the game’s final 35 minutes, it did get several strong kickoff returns from Davin Houston and Aiden O’Neill, plus a blocked PAT by Adrian Cunningham.

If there is a sour taste to Forks willingness to run up the score, there is an answer.

Take care of business the next two weeks, get back to the state playoffs, and maybe earn a rematch with the Spartans.

This time with the full lineup in place.

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Malachi Somes is one of 10 Wolves to score this season. (Bailey Thule photos)

They’ve hit double digits again.

Last season, during a run to a league title and a trip to the state playoffs, 12 Coupeville High School football players scored a touchdown.

This year, with a younger roster, scoring is down, but the Wolves have still found a way to get 10 players into the end zone.

Freshman Davin Houston snagged a touchdown pass from Logan Downes against Friday Harbor to become that 10th player to hit pay dirt.

With six games in the books, Coupeville has tallied 147 points and 22 touchdowns this season, averaging out to a not-bad 24.5 and 3.7 per game.

Admittedly, that is down from last year’s nine-game total of 363 points and 52 scores, but last year was also one of the best in program history.

Jack Porter (grey shirt) has found the end zone twice.

The Wolves have three regular season games left to play, with a non-conference Homecoming rumble against Forks set for this Friday, Oct. 13.

After that comes a road trip to La Conner and a Senior Night rematch with Friday Harbor as CHS pursues a return to state.

As the final games play out, one thing to keep an eye on is the play of quarterback Logan Downes.

The senior gunslinger has 13 touchdown passes this season and 33 for his career.

Logan Downes already owns the CHS single-game record of five scoring heaves and is chasing Joel Walstad (18) and big bro Hunter Downes (35) for the single-season and career marks.

Logan Downes chases history.

 

Scoring stats through Oct. 9:

 

Touchdowns:

Aiden O’Neill – 5
Chase Anderson – 4
Mikey Robinett – 3
Adrian Cunningham – 2
Logan Downes – 2
Jack Porter – 2
Hunter Bronec – 1
Peyton Caveness – 1
Davin Houston – 1
Malachi Somes – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson — 14
Downes – 1

 

Points:

Anderson – 38
O’Neill — 30
Robinett – 18
Downes– 13
Cunningham — 12
Porter – 12
Bronec – 6
Caveness – 6
Houston – 6
Somes – 6

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Chase Anderson is a two-way warrior for Coupeville. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A lot has changed in a year.

Jump back to fall 2022 and 2B Coupeville pounded the crud out of 2A Bellingham to the tune of 48-6, part of a 7-2 season for the Wolves.

Now, return to 2023 and the tide has turned, as the Bayhawks answered back Friday on their home field, shredding CHS for seven touchdowns — all on plays of 30+ yards — en route to a 50-7 victory.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves, who were missing five starters, to 1-5 on the season heading into a Homecoming showdown with Forks, which is 4-1 with a Saturday clash with Friday Harbor on their schedule.

Coupeville had the game’s first highlight play Friday, with Marcelo Gebhard recovering a Bellingham fumble.

After that, positive plays were few and far between for the Wolves.

The Bayhawks defense stiffened and got the ball back, then quarterback Josh Leonard went to work.

A 6-foot-3 senior who transferred from Squalicum to join his dad Adam, the head coach at Bellingham, he tossed four touchdown passes in the first quarter, breaking off 49, 40, 58, and 42-yard scoring bombs.

Toss in a 38-yard scoring run by Christian Olberg and the home team was up 36-0 at the first break.

Bellingham added a pair of rushing touchdowns, covering 30 and 37 yards, to coast into halftime with a 50-0 lead and a running clock on the horizon.

In the midst of all that scoring, Coupeville did force another turnover, with freshman Davin Houston snaring a fumble to join Gebhard in the ball retrieval business.

With the clock rolling relentlessly, neither team scored in the third quarter, then Coupeville finally cracked the end zone on its own long-distance play.

Logan Downes limbers up his arm. (Bailey Thule photo)

Senior QB Logan Downes connected on a 49-yard scoring strike with sophomore Chase Anderson midway through the fourth quarter, with Anderson tacking on the PAT.

It was the fourth touchdown of the season for the young gun, pulling him closer to fellow sophomore Aiden O’Neill, who leads the Wolves with five scores.

For Downes, the pass was historical.

His 13th touchdown bomb of the season, it gives him 33 for his career, tying him with current CHS boys’ basketball coach Brad Sherman for #2 all-time in program history.

Logan Downes needs two TD passes to tie older brother Hunter for the top spot, and three to stand alone on top of gunslinger hill.

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Michael Golden

A former Coupeville Middle School football coach has been charged with a federal crime, with authorities alleging he defrauded investors more than $3 million.

Michael Golden was an assistant coach with the Wolf gridiron program for several months in 2017, before moving back to Alabama.

He has been charged with one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in jail.

The announcement was made Friday by Northern District of Alabama U.S. Attorney Prim Escalona and FBI Special Agent in Charge Carlton Peeples.

The complaint against Golden, 48, alleges as founder and owner of three businesses, he duped investors between January 2018 and July 2022.

Those companies are Wolf-Tek LLC, MountainTop Timber LLC, and DroneTek Inc.

According to the complaint, Golden is alleged to have misrepresented his businesses to investors in multiple ways.

This includes stating he had timber leases and a way to harvest said timber for profit, that he had hundreds of pre-orders for drones, and that his businesses were about to be sold for millions of dollars to Amazon and other companies.

It is also alleged Golden gave investors promissory notes in which he misrepresented his ability to repay.

The charges state Golden defrauded investors to the tune of $3.5 million dollars and used the money to pay back prior investors and for personal expenses.

The investigation of the case was conducted by the FBI, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Rummage is prosecuting the case.

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Ready to shoot in the golden light. (Jackie Saia photo)

The photos are falling faster than the leaves.

Fall is upon us, with the calendar clicking over into October, and a vast pack of photographers spreads out across the prairie, cameras in hand.

They’re here and they’re clear … to snap away.

Gridiron giant Zane Oldenstadt gets caught on film. (William Davidson photo)

Coupeville running guru Elizabeth Bitting introduces foreign exchange students to the prairie. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Kassidy Upchurch inspires the next generation of cheerleaders. (Brittany Kolbet photo)

“What is best in life? To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentations of their women.” (Andrew Williams photo)

Greg and Morgan White watch their favorite son sparkle on the soccer pitch. (William Davidson photo)

Senior cheerleaders bring their A-game to the sidelines. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spikers Jada Heaton (left) and Taylor Brotemarkle escape the gym for a night. (Jackie Saia photo)

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