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Archive for the ‘Middle School’ Category

Former David's DVD Den manager Daniel Olson is ready to start droppin' buckets at the 8th grade level. (John Fisken photo)

   Former David’s DVD Den “manager” Daniel Olson is ready to start droppin’ buckets at the 8th grade level. (John Fisken photo)

The hard-court boys are about to come back.

Coupeville Middle School football wraps up this afternoon with a road game at Chimacum, and then five days later hoops begins.

The first day of practice is Monday, Nov. 7, with the first game three weeks after that.

Coaches Bob Martin (8th grade) and Randy King (7th) return to helm the ship.

CMS goes with a staggered schedule due to gym space, and the Wolf girls start their season Jan. 30.

For now, you can print and laminate the boys schedule below, while keeping an eye on the school or league websites for changes or updates.

All home games tip at 3:15 PM.

Mon-Nov. 28 Sequim
Mon-Dec. 5 @ Stevens
Thur-Dec. 8 Forks
Mon-Dec. 12 @ Blue Heron (Port Townsend)
Thur-Dec. 15 Chimacum
Thur-Jan. 5 @ Forks
Mon-Jan. 9 Blue Heron (Port Townsend)
Thur-Jan. 12 @ Chimacum
Tues-Jan. 17 @ Sequim
Thur-Jan. 19 Stevens

School website: http://coupeville.tandem.co/

Olympic League: http://olympicleague.com/index.php?pid=0.1004.10372.0.300

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Dakota Eck (John Fisken photos)

   Dakota Eck picks up a full head of steam en route to a 30-yard run. (John Fisken photos)

run

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden, just out for a relaxing stroll.

Jake Mitten

   Jake Mitten fools the defense on the PAT, suddenly rolling out and finding Golden for the conversion.

tackle

   Jacob Kendall (21) and Ben Smith (1) lead a fired-up pack of Wolves as they haul down a wayward Cowboy.

Trystan Ford

Trystan Ford dares you to try and get through the line when he’s blocking.

Cheridan and Deb

   Football moms Cheridan Eck (left) and Deb Smith brave the gusty winds to watch their sons play.

Jesus

Jesus Garcia-Partida is cold, wet and ready to play for another three hours.

Wertz

Logan Wertz prepares to drop “The Stunner” on Chimacum’s QB.

The wind was howling, the pads were popping and the camera was clicking.

Wandering paparazzi John Fisken ended up down in Cow Town Wednesday and snapped away as Coupeville and Chimacum staged an overtime thriller on the gridiron.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161026-Coupeville-MS-vs-C/

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Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

   Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

It was a thriller that kept you guessing until the final play.

A rainy day turned halfway nice, if predictably windy, Wednesday afternoon, allowing Coupeville and Chimacum ample opportunity to wage a knock-down, drag-out middle school battle on the gridiron.

By the time it was done, with the visiting Cowboys pulling out a 35-34 thriller in overtime, there had been something for everyone.

Big pass plays, last second escapes, even a Wolf coach wiping out on the muddy sideline and crashing into the team bench.

The game ended when Chimacum’s line shoved Coupeville’s defense back into the end zone on an extra point conversion run, giving the Cowboys the slimmest of margins.

With the game knotted at 28-28, after Chimacum had pulled off a fourth-down miracle with under a minute to play in the fourth quarter to force the extra period, the two squads took turns trying to punch the ball in from the 10-yard line.

The Wolves had the ball first in OT and hammered the ball in on fourth and goal, with Jake Mitten plunging around the right side for his fourth score of the afternoon.

But, on the ensuing extra point attempt, the Wolves couldn’t get the snap down for kicker Sage Downes and Chimacum players swarmed through the line to smush holder Dakota Eck.

With the ball in their own hands, the Cowboys took one play to score a touchdown — on a run up the middle — and one play to end things, ramming home the game’s final point behind a cloud of dust.

The frantic overtime action capped a game with five lead changes, and a miracle at the end of regulation.

Coupeville had gone ahead 28-20 with three-and-a-half minutes to play thanks to a three-yard scoring run from Mitten and a successful PAT kick from Downes.

Middle school football rewards teams with two for a kick and one for a run or pass on extra point plays — the opposite of high school action — and with Chimacum down by eight and going into the wind, things looked good for the Wolves.

The Cowboys had two miracles (a big one and a very important small one) still in their pocket, however.

First, they slipped a tiny, but quick receiver behind the defense on fourth-and-everything from the 30-yard line, and his TD reception with 47 seconds to play pulled Chimacum to 28-26.

Then, despite kicking into the wind, a burly Cowboy drove the ball through the uprights — by the slimmest of margins — to knot things up.

Somehow, despite there being less than a minute to play in regulation, both teams got the ball back before the buzzer sounded.

Coupeville went four and out and gave Chimacum the ball with 15 seconds to play, then dodged a bullet when Cade Golden tipped away a potential game-winning pass.

With regulation run down, and a ferry awaiting the Cowboys, there was serious discussion at midfield on whether to call the game a tie.

To the delight of players on both sides, and the surprise of onlookers who have grown accustomed to middle school games not being allowed overtime action, the refs shut off the clock and let the teams decide the game on the field.

While Coupeville would have liked to have held on for the win, the Wolf coaches were thrilled to see two similarly-sized schools get a chance to go at it, with neither side backing down.

“They played with their hearts and for each other; loving it!!!,” said CMS head coach Bob Martin. “It was a good day!”

The Wolves stung Chimacum several times, starting with their opening drive.

After watching the Cowboys eat up nearly seven minutes of clock while marching to a touchdown after taking the kick-off, Coupeville responded with its own score in less than 75 seconds.

Eck broke free for a 31-yard sprint to daylight, then Golden hooked up with Mitten on a 25-yard pass play to put CMS on the doorstep.

From there, it was all Ben Smith, as he took a hand-off and scampered around the left side for a two-yard touchdown run.

Mitten dropped a perfect conversion pass into Golden’s waiting arms for the extra point and the Wolves were up 7-6 and off to the races.

Coupeville’s next two touchdowns came through the air, with Golden flinging the ball into the overcast sky and Mitten hauling it in, then churning away for extra yardage.

The first went 32 yards, the second 75 yards.

In between Golden picked off a Cowboy pass — the only turnover in a very cleanly played game.

Thanks to weather issues that erased a game from earlier in the season, the two teams will reunite in a week, this time at Chimacum.

The Nov. 2 clash will bring the middle school football campaign to an end.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Kylie Chernikoff (28), Savannah Smith (10), Catherine Lhamon (5) and Genna Wright (grey hoodie) all had big performances Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

First they rallied, then they struck with a vengeance.

Bouncing back from a lackluster middle set Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade varsity volleyball squad scorched visiting Forks with precision serving down the backstretch and rolled to an impressive win.

The 25-23, 13-25, 15-5 victory came in the Wolves final home match and offered a preview of what these spikers may offer the high school program in the coming years.

It might have been easy to break after surrendering eight unanswered points at the end to drop the second set.

Apparently, these Wolves are made of strong stuff, however, as they never blinked.

Instead, they rode the hot serving hands of Savannah Smith, Kylie Chernikoff and Catherine Lhamon in the third set and crushed the Spartans in decisive fashion.

Smith, the fast-rising lil’ sister of CHS sophomore sensation Emma Smith, got things kicked off with four straight points off her serve as Coupeville built an insurmountable 5-0 lead.

Three of her points were straight-up winners, as Forks couldn’t get a handle on Smith’s serves all match, while one point came off a daring play by teammate Genna Wright.

Dancing dangerously close to the net, Wright dropped a gorgeous tip between two Spartans.

As the ball found pay dirt and skidded away, the irrepressible Wolf stole a look over her shoulder, and the look on her face told the tale — she expected the ref to wave off the winner.

When he didn’t, a huge smile burst across her face and she subtly pumped a fist.

Once CMS had the final-set lead, the Wolves jammed the gas pedal down and put Forks out of its misery fast.

Chernikoff, who was en fuego all match, ripped an ace that caused two Spartans to collide as they went for (and missed) the ball, then Lhamon got creative.

Dropping little daggers over the net with a variety of soft, and very effective serves, she pushed the lead all the way out to 13-3 and you could hear the Forks bus driver firing up their vehicle in the parking lot.

The final set rally capped an afternoon in which Coupeville was consistently on-point on serve.

Smith, Chernikoff and Chelsea Prescott all had runs at the stripe in the opening set, with Chernikoff also blasting a pair of winners off of Spartan players who found themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Prescott, made famous earlier in the season when one of her spikes blew up an opponents face and decorated the gym with blood, didn’t physically hurt anyone this time.

But she did wreck the Spartans psyches, with her lasers causing them to progressively edge further and further away from her cannon shots.

The prettiest play of the match came on the final point the Wolves got in the second set, as Prescott set up Wright, who then popped a perfect set right back at her, allowing Prescott to finish things off with a resounding put-away.

Coral Caveness, Maddie Vondrak and Jaimee Masters also saw floor time and each provided a spark to the CMS attack.

JV sweeps:

The second unit was even more brutally efficient, as the 8th grade JV rolled Forks 25-14, 25-17.

Jaelyn Crebbin, playing in the high school gym her mom Toni once ruled as CHS volleyball coach, was everywhere, picking up a tip for a winner, then firing an ace that ricocheted off of two opponents before punching a service return that split the defense for another point.

Caveness and Vondrak picked up service aces of their own while Lacy McCraw twisted her body into a pretzel in midair while dropping in a winner.

Eryn Wood was straight-up money at the stripe, picking up eight points on her serve in the first set alone, while Emily Fiedler and Amanda Thomas chipped in with hustle and strong effort during their shifts on the floor.

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"What's that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory." (Deb Smith photos)

“What’s that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory.” (Deb Smith photos)

Wolf fans

Wolf fans enjoy the balmy Port Townsend weather.

Bob Martin

CMS coach Bob Martin (red shirt, middle) rallies his troops.

wolves

“Water tastes nice, victory even better!”

“It was “that” game, the one you wish you could duplicate throughout the season.”

As he basked in an improbable, but highly satisfying, rout of host Port Townsend, Coupeville Middle School football coach Bob Martin was almost downright giddy.

Almost.

Former Marine Corps drill sergeants don’t do full-on giddy. Even when their out-manned team rises up and thrashes their foe 52-13.

So, maybe not giddy, but definitely pleased.

“Yes, we need to work on tackling, but once those young players figured out they could do it, you couldn’t stop them,” Martin said “Yes, our hard work beat their talent!

“They had big kids and you could tell our boys were intimidated, but that wore off quickly.”

Despite hitting the gridiron Wednesday with just 14 active players, the Wolves seized control of the game early and never looked back.

Coupeville took a 14-13 lead, stretched it out to 30-13 at halftime, and continued to pour it on in the second half, scoring from all directions.

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden lit up the skies, completing 12 of 17 passes for 180 yards and four touchdowns, while Jake Mitten and Dakota Eck tallied three touchdowns apiece.

Mitten, who rushed for 80 yards, scored twice on passes from Golden and once on a run, while also finding time to kick four field goals.

Eck was a two-way threat, rumbling for 72 yards, scoring twice on offense and pulling off the play of the game on defense for touchdown #3.

With Port Townsend threatening to score, the CMS 8th grader swooped in, stripped the ball at the two-yard line, then sprinted 98 yards the other way for a game-busting score.

Coupeville’s defense was strong (Miles Davidson and Ben Smith recovered fumbles while Alex Jimenez had a “great bone-crushing tackle while on kickoff – stopped the kid in his tracks!”) and its offense even stronger.

When Mitten and Eck weren’t lugging the ball, Smith (42 yards rushing) and Gabe Shaw (28 and a touchdown) both stepped up and helped shoulder the load.

The key to a successful day was the team’s line (Tian Yu, Davidson, Shaw, Smith, Sage Downes and Logan Wertz), which shoved Port Townsend back time and again.

“Can’t do anything without them,” Martin said. “They’re figuring it out, gaining confidence every day. It’s great to see!”

With just 14 active players, everyone chipped in, and Coupeville also got contributions from Dylan Estes, Damon Stadler, Trystan Ford and Jacob Kendall.

The team-wide effort was best summed up by assistant coach Michael Golden, who surveyed the winning Wolves and delivered the line of the night.

“They played their hearts out!”

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