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Coupeville High School football manager Melanie Navarro leads off a collection of fall sports pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s really real.

The appearance of team photos is a major sign high school sports are fully back in action.

The pics above and below come to us courtesy John Fisken, whose work can be seen (and bought) at https://www.johnsphotos.net/.

 

Wolf girls soccer in the spotlight.

Coupeville’s varsity spikers are ready to rumble.

The pitch is theirs.

Edie Bittner gets her close-up.

The ace machine which is Coupeville’s JV squad.

Goalie Nick Guay (dark shirt) gets mobbed.

Football seniors hang out with the coaching staff.

Wolf volleyball, unleashed.

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Johnny Porter puts in preseason work. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let the stats rain down.

Fresh off their first-ever win over former league rival Klahowya, the Coupeville High School football squad crunched the numbers, and they look good.

The Wolves filled up the stat sheet in the season-opening 41-21 win, with grizzled vets and fresh-faced newcomers sharing top honors.

 

Stats through week one:

 

OFFENSE:

 

Passing:

Logan Downes — 13-22 for 201 yards with 3 TDs

 

Receiving:

Daylon Houston — 5 receptions for 67 yards
Scott Hilborn — 3-50
Dominic Coffman — 1-44
Tim Ursu — 3-31
Hunter Bronec — 1-9

 

Rushing:

Johnny Porter — 6 carries for 53 yards
Hilborn — 5-43
Coffman — 11-33
Ursu — 4-20
Aiden O’Neill — 2-14
Downes — 7-4

 

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes — 205
Hilborn — 93
Coffman — 77
Houston — 67
Porter — 53
Ursu — 51
O’Neill — 14
Bronec — 9

 

All-Purpose Yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Houston — 143
Ursu — 142
Hilborn — 93
Coffman — 77
Porter — 53
Downes — 29
O’Neill — 21
Bronec — 9

 

Touchdowns:

Ursu — 2
Coffman — 1
Hilborn — 1
Houston — 1
Porter — 1

 

PATs:

Houston — 5

 

Points:

Ursu — 12
Houston — 11
Coffman — 6
Hilborn — 6
Porter — 6

 

DEFENSE:

 

Tackles:

Hilborn — 8
Peyton Caveness — 6
Coffman — 6
Houston — 6
Kevin Partida — 5
Downes — 4
Ursu — 4
William Davidson — 3
O’Neill — 3
Kai Wong — 2
Chase Anderson — 1
Marcelo Gebhard — 1
Zane Oldenstadt — 1

 

Interceptions:

Downes — 2
Hilborn — 1

 

Fumble recoveries:

Coffman — 1

 

SPECIAL TEAMS:

 

Kickoff returns:

Ursu — 1-78
Houston — 1-76
O’Neill — 1-7

 

Punt returns:

Ursu — 1-13

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Dominic Coffman scored a touchdown and recovered a fumble in Coupeville’s opening win. (Photo courtesy Brent Coffman)

It started as a way to keep the peace.

When Coupeville High School and next-door neighbor South Whidbey clash on the gridiron, the winner walks away with The Bucket, a trophy created in 2008.

Ownership of the memento, which features the colors and logos for both the Wolves and Falcons, is a hotly contested affair.

In fact, one side of the trophy has a visible crunch on it, thanks to a losing coach who didn’t accept defeat with as much grace as they might have liked.

Along with getting to keep The Bucket, the winner inherits the right to deliver righteous smack talk, of course.

The latest clash between the Whidbey rivals arrives this Friday, Sept. 9, when Coupeville plays host to a match-up between undefeated teams.

Kick-off is 7 PM, and both the 2B Wolves and 1A Falcons enter the non-conference game with 1-0 records.

Coupeville beat Klahowya 41-21 on opening night, while South Whidbey drilled Friday Harbor 34-14.

For those who can’t be in town, the NFHS Network, which charges a fee, will stream the game at https://www.nfhsnetwork.com/.

And The Bucket?

It was the brainchild of two administrators looking for a positive outcome to a tense situation.

Senior captains (left to right) Uriel Liquidano, Jacob Martin, and Clay Reilly celebrate a rivalry game win in 2016. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith explains how it all began:

Ha ha … well, during a volleyball game at home against SW, one of our senior boys didn’t appreciate the cheering going on by the SW crowd.

So, this young man decided, erroneously and very immaturely, to take matters into his own hands.

He procured a licorice bucket, filled it with water, and proceeded to dump it on the SW crowd, who then chased him out of the gym and very nearly got into a brawl.

Said CHS student was suspended, and it almost got really ugly between the two schools.

So, John Patton (former SW AD) and myself decided to turn this negative event into a positive and came up with the idea to make the football game the “Bucket Game” and whomever won that game would keep the bucket for the year.

Thus, the annual Bucket Game began.

During the run of this blog, which launched in Aug. 2012, South Whidbey holds a 5-4 advantage, with no game being played in 2020 due to Covid.

The Wolves came out on top four times in six years between 2012-2017, with the Falcons now having won three straight games.

 

Results in the Coupeville Sports era:

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 — ??

Summer workouts translate to fall success. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Sean Toomey-Stout, rockin’ an NCAA D-I uniform. (Chelle Herbruger photo)

The Torpedo is a made man.

Coupeville High School graduate Sean Toomey-Stout saw his first on-field action as an NCAA D-I football player Saturday, as the University of Washington thumped visiting Kent State 45-20.

The former Wolf, a redshirt freshman for the Huskies, was in on the game’s final three tackles, bringing down Golden Flash runner Gavin Garcia each time.

Toomey-Stout recorded solo tackles after a pair of four-yard gains, while teaming up with fellow Dawg Makell Esteen to stuff Garcia on a three-yard plunge.

Garcia was a four-time state champion in high school, running for more than 2,000 yards as a senior while finishing his career with the second-most touchdowns in Pennsylvania history.

Maya Toomey-Stout’s twin brother joined the U-Dub football program as a walk-on after finishing a stellar prep career in Coupeville.

Sean was a two-time CHS Male Athlete of the year who starred for the Wolves on the football field (alongside older brother Cameron), basketball court, and track oval.

While he didn’t see on-field action for the Huskies last year, Beth Stout and Lisa Toomey’s son suited up for games and made the Pac-12 academic honor roll.

Toomey-Stout and the Dawgs return to action next Saturday, Sept. 10, when Washington hosts Portland State.

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Tim Ursu and Coupeville rocked Klahowya, hard. (Nikki Breaux photo)

Hello, Klahowya. Miss us?

Opening a new season with a thunderous roar, the Coupeville High School football squad romped to a 41-21 win Friday in Silverdale.

Coming in Bennett Richter’s debut as Wolf head coach, the non-conference road victory was a landmark for several reasons.

Maybe none bigger than it breaks a seven-game losing streak against Klahowya and gives Coupeville its first-ever football win over their former Olympic League rivals.

The Wolves, who play four of their next five games at home, starting with a rumble with South Whidbey for ownership of The Bucket, endured two separate ferry rides, and a long bus trip, just to get to Silverdale.

The trip home is going to be a joy ride.

Coupeville never trailed, unleashing a run of 27 unanswered points to turn a 14-14 tie into a dominant victory which hushed the Klahowya fans.

The Wolves weren’t perfect, maybe — it was the season-opener, after all — but they were very good when it mattered most.

Three touchdown passes off the fingertips of junior gunslinger Logan Downes, barely missing tying Coupeville’s single-game record of four, jointly held by Corey Cross, Brad Sherman, and big bro Hunter Downes.

Two more scores came on the ground, while Tim Ursu delivered the lightning bolt which fried the Eagles, bolting to daylight on a 75-yard kickoff return which ended with the Wolf senior hitting paydirt in the end zone.

Toss in three interceptions on defense, plus a fumble recovery for Dominic Coffman and a ferocious batted-down pass by William Davidson, and Coupeville was clicking.

And right from the start, as Daylon Houston snapped up the game’s opening kickoff and brought it back almost 80 yards, only getting brought down at the Klahowya six-yard line.

The Wolves seized the early advantage, with Logan Downes rolling to his right three plays later, pegging a touchdown pass to a wide-open Ursu.

Houston drilled the PAT through the uprights, Coupeville held Klahowya to nothing of value on its first possession, and the Wolves looked like they were going to make it two-of-two until one of their few real miscues of the night.

A bad snap on fourth and two from Klahowya’s 30 turned into a loss of 18 yards, and the Eagles responded with their own touchdown to knot things at 7-7.

After that the two teams scuffled for a bit, exchanging defensive stands.

Downes picked off his rival quarterback to stop one Eagles drive, and, for a hot second, the game seemed to be trending towards being a low-scoring affair.

Well, forget about that.

In less than a minute, the rivals combined to score three touchdowns (on just four plays), and the scoreboard started jumping.

Wolf senior Scott Hilborn began the ruckus by blowing through Klahowya’s line en route to a 26-yard jaunt down the left sideline for one touchdown.

Two plays later, Klahowya’s QB threw up a prayer, and had it answered.

Downes almost picked off the long, looping wobbler, but the ball (maybe?) caught a gust of wind and cleared his fingers by a smidge, before dropping in between two other CHS defenders.

Landing, somehow, against all the laws of man and God, on the fingertips of an alert Eagle receiver, it turned into a 68-yard gut-punch of a touchdown.

The game could have gone in either direction at that point. The score was knotted 14-14, the home team had an emotional boost, and…

Enter Tim Ursu.

Goodbye to all your hopes and dreams, Klahowya. Enjoy the nightmares this weekend, and beyond.

On the ensuing kickoff, Ursu snatched the ball off the swanky turf field, stumbled, ever so slightly, then punched the pedal through the metal, leaving 11 Eagles in his wake.

They gave chase, but no one was catching him. And no one was bringing him down.

That immediate payback, turning a 14-14 tie into a 21-14 lead, lit a fire under Coupeville, and the Wolves exploded.

Downes peppered the Klahowya defense, sliding passes into small openings, and the Eagles had no answers for Ralph and Angie’s youngest son.

He dropped a pass over the middle to Coffman, who turned it into a catch-and-destroy 44-yard scoring strike, then came back around to team up with Houston on a 26-yard bonanza.

That stretched Coupeville’s lead out to 35-14, before the Wolf defense slapped a punctuation mark on things right at the end of the first half.

Klahowya was scrambling against the clock and tried to plunge in for a score on the final play before halftime.

Instead, Coupeville’s scrappy gladiators brought the Eagle runner down just short of the goal line, causing Richter and his assistant coaches to punch the air like they were all auditioning for the next Creed movie.

Defense was the word in the second half, with Coupeville picking off two more passes, forcing a fumble and not allowing Klahowya to score again until the clock was under two minutes in the fourth quarter.

On offense, the Wolves rammed the ball up the field, using a variety of runners to pick up yardage and first downs while draining the clock.

Downes kept the defense honest with a few more pass completions, including one to freshman Chase Anderson, but it was the running game which kept Klahowya at bay in the final moments.

Sophomore Johnny Porter tacked on Coupeville’s sixth and final touchdown, turning a two-yard run into a 48-yard romp, shedding would-be tacklers in his wake.

1-0 and headed home. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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