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A pack of CHS cheerleaders made the trip to Anacortes Saturday for a season-opening jamboree. Left, top to bottom, are Mica Shipley, Melia Welling and Kim Castro. On the right, Coral Caveness perches atop Moira Reed. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jake Pease (44) delivers his trademark move, “The Spleen Destroyer.”

   Michael Davidson is ready for his close-up, while Charlotte Young is more interested in the action on the field.

Dane Lucero can’t be stopped, even when the would-be tacklers team up.

   Lisa Toomey (left) and Beth Stout are on hand to document the derring-do of their son Sean.

In between the action, the Wolf cheerleaders amuse themselves.

   Isaiah Bittner (74) and Brian Casey (67) man the line, as QB Dawson Houston barks out signals behind them.

High school sports are back, and the weather has already made the adjustment.

Coupeville’s football squad, plus cheerleaders, parents, and wanderin’ cameraman John Fisken, dodged a few sprinkles Saturday in Anacortes, and the sun was nowhere to be seen.

The event which drew them off Whidbey was a season-opening jamboree featuring the Wolves, Concrete and the host Seahawks.

With the butterflies now out of the way, CHS kicks off regular-season games next Friday, Aug. 31, when it travels to Port Townsend for a 7 PM non-conference game.

As you prep for that, jump over to the link below to see everything Fisken shot Saturday:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Football-2018-2019/FB-2018-08-25-Jamboree-at-Anacortes/

And, when you do, remember, a percentage of each purchase goes to fund college scholarships which are given out every spring to two Coupeville graduates.

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Wolf goalie Sarah Wright gets a kick out of life. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jacob Burke mashes a pesky tennis ball.

Gridiron speed demon Sean Toomey-Stout, momentarily at rest.

Chelsea Prescott sends the ball skyward.

It’s early, but tennis guru Ken Stange already has his goatee in mid-season form.

Lindsey Roberts keeps her life in perfect balance.

Football bruiser Chris Battaglia checks to make sure his feet are still there.

Freshman Eryn Wood makes a strong first impression.

Photos, photos and more photos.

Wanderin’ camera clicker John Fisken has hit practices for four of five CHS fall sports teams in the early days, so here’s a few more snappy pics.

The glossy photos cover soccer, tennis, volleyball and football, and they come with this reminder – just nine days until the first official game of the new school year.

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New Coupeville Middle School football coach Brett Casey, wife Melissa and son Brian. (Photo courtesy Casey)

“I love being around football and kids.”

Those are the words of Brett Casey, the new Coupeville Middle School football coach, a man ready to tackle his new job in style.

When the Coupeville School District hired his wife, Melissa Casey, as a Special Education Life Skills teacher this summer, it set off an eventual 2-for-1 deal.

A longtime gridiron ace as a player and coach, Brett Casey then decided to pursue the job opening which appeared when Bob Martin resigned.

Now, a few months later, Casey is in place and raring to go, counting down the days until the first CMS practice Aug. 27.

“When my wife accepted a teaching job, I looked for the opportunity to continue coaching on the island,” he said. “I grew up playing in a small community, and I look forward to returning to that atmosphere as a coach.”

After earning All-State honors in high school as a wide receiver and defensive back, he played in the Down Under Bowl in Australia, before joining the football team at the University of Montana Western.

That’s the same school former Coupeville standout Mitch Pelroy suited up for during his own college football career.

After his playing days came to a close, Casey turned to coaching, and has put in three seasons working at the youth football level and six more with high school teams.

Over the past six years, his teams have posted a combined record of 48-9.

As a coach, Casey is straight-forward, asking his players to give back to the game what it gives to them.

“I would like them to have respect for the game, their teammates, opponents, and officials,” he said. “I would love to see kids excited about football again at CMS.

“Build it into a winning program and a feeder program for CHS.”

While he ultimately guides his team’s strategy, Casey wants his players to develop to the point where they are working with him, and not just for him.

“I enjoy the chess match-like strategy battle that ensues during the game,” he said. “Watching the players grow once they understand the how and why of the game.

“Once the players get that, the game opens up and the players can start giving their input on the offense or defense.”

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Alex Turner and crew were out in force Thursday as CHS football put in practice time. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Freshman Gabe Shaw waits for a moment to impress the coaches.

Jake Pease (60) goes low, getting stretched out, while Chris Battaglia enjoys the nice day.

Ben Smith is like a coiled snake, ready to strike at any moment.

Wolf frosh Miles Davidson may be young, but this ain’t his first rodeo.

Junior QB Dawson Houston gets limbered up for some gun-slingin’.

We have photographic proof.

While the calendar says summer, the practice schedule says fall, with high school football launching a new season this week.

Wanderin’ photo god John Fisken, back from vacation just in the nick of time, arrived in Coupeville Thursday to document day #2 of the gridiron activity and the photos above are courtesy him.

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Sean Toomey-Stout led Coupeville football in rushing, and was among state leaders in tackles when an injury prematurely ended his sophomore season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a whole new world.

Quite a lot is radically different for Coupeville High School football, as the Wolves enter the 2018 season with a new coaching staff, a new league and new leaders on both sides of the ball.

Record busters like Hunter Smith and Hunter Downes have graduated, Marcus Carr has replaced Jon Atkins as head coach, and CHS is reuniting with former foes in the brand-new North Sound Conference.

After four years of life in the Olympic League, and two seasons of a joint venture with the Nisqually League for football, the Wolves will line up against “new” foes in King’s, Sultan, South Whidbey, Granite Falls and Cedar Park Christian.

The last one of those schools really is a new rival, as CPC joined the Cascade Conference as Coupeville’s replacement when the Wolves bolted in 2014.

The Eagles football program is run by Butch Goncharoff, who built Bellevue into a 3A powerhouse before being run out of town in the aftermath of WIAA troubles.

Carr, who takes over Coupeville’s gridiron team after two very successful seasons in Concrete, points to CPC as one of two schools who will carry the biggest rep into the new league.

“I think all the teams in our league will be tough,” he said. “But I would have to say King’s, just for the amount of bodies they can sub in and out to keep players fresh, and Cedar Park Christian, because of their head coach.

“Despite the off-the-field things, he has won 11 state championships on the field.”

Not that Coupeville’s new head man is willing to concede anything.

“No matter what, we will be ready to play and beat them all!,” Carr said. “GO WOLVES!!”

Carr, who is joined by five assistants who are new to CHS — Nathan BellamyTyson Boon, Kwamane Bowens, Robert Carr and Bennett Richter — is putting a laser-focus on his new players “becoming tougher, mentally and physically.”

The line, which includes returning players such as seniors Dane Lucero, Jake Pease and Ryan Labrador and junior Gavin Knoblich, is bolstered by the addition of senior Alex Turner.

A transfer from South Whidbey, Turner, who played for Coupeville in middle school, was a First-Team All-Conference pick by Cascade Conference coaches as a sophomore.

The Falcons played an independent schedule last season, preventing a repeat of league honors, but Turner showed a knack for catching TD passes from the tight end position.

Coupeville will have a new quarterback throwing those passes, with Downes, the school career leader in scoring strikes, having graduated.

After an injury ended his sophomore year early, he returned to lead the Wolf offense the past two seasons, firing passes primarily to Hunter Smith and Cameron Toomey-Stout, both also now departed.

Replacing Downes under center will likely be either junior Dawson Houston or senior Shane Losey, though Lucero is also in the mix in the early days of practice.

That trio has combined to throw three varsity passes entering 2018.

While Coupeville’s passing game will be new-look, its running game retains almost every contributor from last season, one reason Carr hails it as a key strength.

Junior Sean Toomey-Stout is healthy again after a devastating injury ended his breakout sophomore campaign at the halfway point, and “The Torpedo” is primed to slice through defenses.

When he went down during week #5 at Vashon, it changed the direction of the season.

Toomey-Stout was Coupeville’s top rusher and among the state leaders in tackles from his defensive back position, before taking a blow to his leg as he headed out-of-bounds.

While the Wolves hung on to beat the Pirates, improving to 3-2, CHS dropped its final five games.

Injuries tore through Coupeville’s roster in 2017, and by the season finale against Cascade Christian, almost every major offensive contributor was on the sideline in street clothes.

Seniors Matt Hilborn and Chris Battaglia (both coming off of injuries) and junior Andrew Martin also ran strong a year ago and could help Toomey-Stout.

Battaglia’s status for the season is a question mark, though, as he continues to recuperate.

As the Wolves plow through the first days of practice (the season opener, a non-conference game at Port Townsend, is Aug. 31), the lineup will shift and change.

Whomever ends up lined up for that first kickoff will carry the weight of the past, and the hope of the future, with them.

Coupeville hasn’t posted a winning record on the gridiron since 2005, but bolstered by “an ability to run the ball on offense and a swarming, ball-hawking defense,” the Wolves are ready to surprise people.

The mission? To live up to the mantra preached by their new head coach.

“Our goal is always to win league and make the playoffs,” Carr said. “Always.”

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