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Wolf alumni Dawson Houston and Lily Leedy arrive to watch the next generation make their mark. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

If you play, they will come.

Coupeville and South Whidbey clashed in the annual Battle for the Bucket Friday night in Langley, drawing in a sizable number of fans supporting both schools.

There was even a bee or two (or 40,000…) hanging around the visitor bleachers, intent on joining the festivities.

Capturing it all on film was wanderin’ photo clicker John Fisken, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

To see more snaps, including action shots, pop over to:

 

Coupeville:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/CHS-Football-2023-2024/FB-2023-09-08-at-South-Whidbey/

 

South Whidbey:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/South-Whidbey-HS/FB-2023-09-08-vs-Coupeville/

CHS cheerleaders pause during warmups for a group shot.

“I swear, if one more bee divebombs me tonight, I’m going to unleash total freakin’ destruction!”

“He’s magic, man.” Chase Anderson’s parents watch their son dazzle on the gridiron.

Prepared for anything.

Wolf faithful enjoy watching a South Whidbey receiver drop a pass.

Pamela Morrell defies gravity.

Cow Town fans made the trip South to support their team.

Wolf coach Bobby Carr and senior captain Peyton Caveness share a moment.

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Coupeville lineman William Davidson (70) and Zane Oldenstadt fought hard in a losing cause Friday night. (Michelle Glass photo)

Good start, good finish, painful middle.

The Coupeville High School football team scored two of the first three touchdowns Friday, then came back around to notch the night’s final two trips to the end zone.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, in between that, they gave up 41 unanswered points, as a close game at South Whidbey unraveled and turned into a 48-28 loss.

With the victory, the host Falcons (1-1) won their fifth-straight rivalry game with their next-door neighbors and hold on to The Bucket for another year.

Coupeville, a 2B school opening with three straight non-conference games against 1A rivals, drops to 0-2 heading into a trip to Sultan.

Friday’s royal rumble was a nail-biter through halftime, with the Wolves leading until late in the second quarter.

South Whidbey got on the scoreboard first, forcing a punt, then driving down the field, carving up chunks of yardage with a run-powered offense.

But Coupeville, raining down pain from the heavens with senior quarterback Logan Downes slicing and dicing the Falcon secondary, rallied to regain the lead with back-to-back scores.

The first was setup by a long kickoff return from Aiden O’Neill and a series of power rumbles through the line by Wolf running back Johnny Porter.

With South Whidbey’s defensive players on their heels, Downes tossed a 20-yard scoring strike to Hunter Bronec with three minutes to play in the first quarter, before repeating the feat right at the end of the period.

Hunter Bronec (34) hauled in his first touchdown catch of the season against South Whidbey. (Bailey Thule photo)

The second TD lob settled into the hands of Jack Porter and came on the heels of the CHS defense stuffing the Falcons on a fourth-and-two.

Tack on a pair of PATs from kicker Chase Anderson, and the Wolves exited the first quarter up 14-7 and looking like they were in control.

Then the Coupeville offense hit a wall, not scoring again until the final two minutes of the game.

South Whidbey took advantage, slowly at first, then in much quicker fashion.

The Falcons trimmed the deficit to 14-13 on a short scoring run, but missed the PAT after penalties pushed their kicker back from his desired launching point.

It turned out not to matter, though, as South Whidbey freshman Bryson Taylor picked off a pass while falling backwards on Coupeville’s next offensive play, giving his team a chance to seize control.

And the Falcons did, driving 72 yards, mixing short swing passes with power runs up the middle of the field.

An eight-yard plunge produced a touchdown, and a two-point conversion run staked South Whidbey to a 21-14 lead, an advantage it would never relinquish.

The two teams traded defensive stands as the halftime break approached, with O’Neill picking off a pass to give the Wolves a final shot at knotting the score.

Downes hit Bronec on a pair of sweet passes but was tripped up on the final play of the quarter, sprawling face-first to the turf as the ball fell short of his intended target.

Still, the game was a one-score affair at the midway point, seemingly setting up Coupeville’s second nailbiter in as many weeks.

But, instead of a repeat of its opener with Klahowya, when the game was decided on the very final play, the trek to Langley fell apart in horrifying fashion.

South Whidbey tacked on three touchdowns in the third quarter, with a missed PAT (after another Falcon penalty) just a slight ding as a 21-14 lead stretched out to 41-14.

Little, irritating things stood out as the game slipped away.

The clock operator letting 15+ seconds vanish from the scoreboard on a play where the clock should have been stopped.

The wrong ref signaling a South Whidbey touchdown, after a long delay, and after the two zebras in place to make the call both walked away without raising their arms.

But reality says those are mere irritants — like the bees divebombing visiting fans during pregame warmups — and not game-changing moments when you give up six straight touchdowns.

Instead, the primary focus should be on giving South Whidbey credit (through gritted teeth) for asserting itself on both sides of the ball to claim bragging rights.

Wolf QB Logan Downes is chasing history. (Jackie Saia photo)

To their credit, the Wolves fought until the end, with William Davidson erupting through the line to force a fumble and Coupeville scoring twice in a 90-second span at the very end of the night.

Downes flung a 21-yard TD to fellow senior Peyton Caveness, before connecting with sure-handed sophomore Malachi Somes, who scampered in from 12 yards out for his first varsity touchdown.

Coupeville’s QB has thrown for six touchdowns across the first two games, with six different Wolf receivers catching one of his scoring missiles.

Logan Downes has racked up 25 TD passes (including two as a sophomore and 17 as a junior) as he chases older brother Hunter, who holds the school career record with 35.

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Jack Porter heads off to retrieve The Bucket. (Bailey Thule photo)

It’s been six years.

No current Coupeville High School football player knows what it’s like to hoist The Bucket, as the Wolves have dropped four straight rivalry games to South Whidbey.

Toss in a pandemic-marred 2020 season in which the next-door neighbors didn’t play, and you have to go back to Sept. 1, 2017 for the last time CHS had bragging rights.

That night Hunter Downes tossed touchdown passes to Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, while Smith also broke off an 89-yard scoring run.

With Cameron Toomey-Stout picking off a pair of passes, and Jake Hoagland and Jake Pease recovering fumbles, Coupeville won 18-0, one of only two times when the big game has been a shutout.

The last Wolf team to claim The Bucket. (David Stern photo)

The Wolves, who won four of six Bucket games to kick off the Coupeville Sports era (2012-today), get another crack at the trophy this Friday, Sept. 8.

CHS heads down to Langley, with a 7:00 kickoff for the non-conference rumble.

Both teams enter play at 0-1, with Coupeville falling 28-25 on the final play of the game against Klahowya, while South Whidbey got smacked 35-20 by Friday Harbor in its opener.

Seniors Uriel Liquidano (63), Jacob Martin (32), and Clay Reilly (2) celebrate in 2016. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

For those who don’t know, this bucket we speak of is exactly what it sounds like.

Painted with Wolf colors on one side and Falcon colors on the other, it has been awarded to the winner of the rivalry game since athletic directors Willie Smith and John Patton created it in 2008.

Complete with a dent on one side, courtesy a South Whidbey coach unhappy about a loss, The Bucket lives at the winning school and is brought out for the game.

The “original” bucket once held licorice, but was filled with water by a Coupeville student, who dumped it on the South Whidbey crowd at a volleyball match, setting off a near-riot.

Looking to turn a negative into a positive, Smith and Patton transformed the weapon of mass hydration into a trophy.

Since then, Wolf coaches Tony Maggio and Jon Atkins have coached Coupeville to two wins apiece in The Bucket game, while current CHS head man Bennett Richter gets a second crack at making Falcon Nation cry.

Tony Maggio led Coupeville to two wins in the rivalry game. (Shawn Walstad photo)

 

For those keeping track, the history of The Bucket game:

2009 — SW 28-6
2010 — SW 33-7
2011 — SW 35-0
2012 — CHS 18-13
2013 — SW 57-33
2014 — CHS 35-28
2015 — SW 27-14
2016 — CHS 41-10
2017 — CHS 18-0
2018 — SW 48-20
2019 — SW 35-7
2020 — No game
2021 — SW 33-7
2022 — SW 47-28

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Dominic Coffman will run over you, not around you. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ka-Chunk!

It is the sound I most associate with Dominic Coffman, as he chose to frequently run over, and not around, would-be tacklers on the football field.

During his time reppin’ the black and red for the Wolves, the 2023 Coupeville High School grad piled up his fair share of yards and touchdowns, and he did it by living up to the standard set by the program’s premier running back, Ian Barron.

Like the man who holds every school record associated with rushing, Coffman chose violence, and left a trail of battered and bruised rivals in his wake.

Fancy cuts are fine, sprinting for the sideline, then dodging a tackler to step out of bounds can be effective.

The Dominator, like Barron, was content to leave those moves to others, however.

Give him the damn football and get out of the way.

During his stellar senior season, when he captured Northwest 2B/1B League MVP honors while sparking Coupeville football to its first league title and trip to state in three-decades-plus, Coffman got most of his yards AFTER impact.

It took multiple tacklers to wrestle him to the ground on most carries, and if your grip slipped for a second, you were likely on your back, watching him inflict more carnage downfield.

Not that Coffman was a one-hit wonder.

He also had sticky fingers when it came to catching passes, and was a hellion on defense, steam erupting from his body on fall nights as he scared the bejesus out of rival QB’s.

The 2022 edition of Wolf football can make an argument as the best in program history — though 1990 will want a word — and Coffman, teamed with Scott Hilborn, Tim Ursu, Daylon Houston, and a host of others, were the senior core.

Enjoying Senior Night with his family. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A leader on and off the field, Coffman was rewarded with an invitation to the Earl Barden Classic, the state all-star game for small-school standouts, and he made his presence felt while lining up with a who’s who of gridiron giants.

Now the game is carrying him to Spain, where he will be suiting up for a semi-pro team playing American football.

They will know him soon, by the bruises he inflicts.

As intense as he can be on the football field, Coffman is a fairly soft-spoken dude off of the gridiron, and has always struck me as an intelligent, well-spoken young man.

The first time I came into contact with him was when, as a middle schooler, he informed me that if I had any photos of him playing sports, I should send them to him.

Younger, but already intense. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

After that, we spoke at a tennis match where he was camped out as a fan, and I couldn’t help but come away impressed with him.

He was that kid who grew up loving sports, not in a small way, but in a BIG way.

More than one coach told me stories about him having to be chased inside by teachers as he got every last second of enjoyment out of recess.

I once got detention for purposefully ignoring the bell, and continuing to play basketball — in a driving rainstorm — so I know where Dominic comes from.

As good a football player as he is, he was absolutely what a small-town school needs, playing three sports and playing them well.

On the basketball court, he played like a heat-seeking missile, fighting for rebounds and loose balls like a younger version of Dennis Rodman, while being the loudest member of the Wolf support crew.

Coffman was part of a boys’ basketball team which went 16-0 in the regular season and came dangerously close to toppling top-ranked Kalama at the state tournament.

In fact, he went to the big dance in all three of his sports, also making the trek twice in track and field, while qualifying in both the 4 x 100 relay and high jump both times.

Working with his relay teammates, Coffman brought home a pair of 2nd place medals, helping spur the Wolves to impressive team finishes.

Capping his senior season by shining at the state track meet. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

As he prepares to head to Spain, let’s take a moment to hail Coffman.

For the high school athletic career he put together, excelling season after season in multiple sports while retaining his joy and drive through difficult times in the world.

And, for always being That Guy — a class act who combined drive and desire, hard work and a refusal to back down, into being one of the most-distinctive student/athletes to ever walk the CHS hallways.

Soon the world will know, but we knew first.

Which is why we’re the first to honor him, but probably not the last.

Today Dominic Coffman throws open the door to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, joining fellow Wolf football legends like Ian Barron and Paul Messner, Brad Haslam and Brad Sherman in our lil’ digital shrine.

After this, you’ll find The Dominator up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, a fitting testament to a dude who never, ever quit working.

The Dominator. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Almost ready for her closeup. (Jackie Saia photos)

The stands were rockin’.

By the time Friday night’s Coupeville High School football season opener was in its final moments, the noise from the stands had picked up considerably from early in the game.

With the contest between the Wolves and visiting Klahowya taking place four days before the start of school, and with an early kickoff time, it was a gentle buildup, until PA announcer Willie Smith finally broke through with his calls for students to get loud.

As John Denver and AC/DC blared from the speakers during lulls in the game, CHS Yearbook Advisor Jackie Saia worked the stands, capturing the pics seen above and below.

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