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Davin Houston, seen last year, snagged a touchdown pass Friday in Tacoma. (David Somes photo)

The location? Impressive. The final score? Not so much.

The Coupeville High School football squad traveled to the wilds of Tacoma Saturday for its season opener, squaring off with non-conference foe Annie Wright at Stadium Bowl.

With its impressive architecture and water views, the joint, which sprawls next to Stadium High School, has hosted everyone from Teddy Roosevelt to Babe Ruth to Heath Ledger dancing his way through “10 Things I Hate About You.”

Stadium Bowl, in all its glory. (Stephanie Blas photo)

Unfortunately for the Wolves, a viewing of that much-beloved 1999 film would have left them happier than their rematch with the Gators did.

A year after demolishing Annie Wright 51-6 on Whidbey, this time it was Coupeville which came up on the short end of a 25-7 contest.

The game, which was delayed due to lightning in the second half — the Wolves returned home on a 1:00 AM ferry — was a defensive struggle until late.

Annie Wright held a narrow 2-0 lead at the half, thanks to a safety off of a blocked punt, then added a second safety in the third quarter.

That 4-0 deficit turned into a 10-0 gap after the Gators used a big kickoff return to set up a short touchdown pass.

Coupeville held tough, however, forcing Annie Wright to miss the PAT. When a penalty gave the hosts a second shot, they went for a two-point conversion, but the Wolves stuffed them short of the promised land.

The Wolves finally got on the scoreboard when senior quarterback Chase Anderson connected with Davin Houston on a 10-yard scoring strike, before the gunslinger tacked on the extra point.

That was as close as CHS would get, however, as Annie Wright used a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns to stretch the final margin out.

While the 2B Wolves came up short against their 1A foes, they did get solid play across the board from a variety of players, with Marquette Cunningham, Jackson Sollars, and Liam Blas among those making their presence felt on defense.

Sollars, in particular, was a handful, creating havoc time and again in the Annie Wright backfield after crashing through the line.

Coupeville, which plays its first four games against 1A opponents, hosts Cascade (Leavenworth) Friday, Sept. 12 in the home opener. Kickoff is set for 6:00 PM.

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Jack Porter, Marcelo Gebhard, and Johnny Porter bask in the afterglow of an opening night win. (Photo courtesy Jeff Porter)

Not today, Gators.

Annie Wright will get its first-ever varsity football win at some point in the future, but it didn’t come on Cow Town soil Friday night.

Playing a private 1A school suiting up for just its second game as a varsity unit, Coupeville, a 2B high school, made short work of the visitors, romping to a 51-6 win on opening night.

The victory, coming in front of a packed crowd on a steamy early September night on the prairie, was keyed by an explosive running attack and a ferocious defense.

With every player in uniform seeing field time, Wolf coach Bennett Richter kicked off his third year at the helm in most convincing style.

When the spotlight hit, whether it was a senior or a freshman, every player in red and black stepped up.

And they did it from the very first play of the season, as Chase Anderson hauled in the opening kickoff, then sliced through the Annie Wright defense for 30 yards.

Taking the reins at quarterback after two seasons as a receiver, the Wolf junior was on point in the opening drive, peppering the Gators from every angle.

Anderson busted out a 25-yard run, connected with Jack Porter on a 26-yard pass play, then capped things by scooting into the end zone on a lil’ three-yard scoring rumble.

Tacking on the PAT, with the ball flying off his foot like a missile and disappearing far into the night air, Coupeville’s most electric gridiron warrior staked the Wolves to a quick 7-0 lead and the rout was on.

Proving they could give the offense a run for its money, the CHS defense unleashed holy heck on the visitors, immediately having an impact.

Marcelo Gebhard, who spent the night cracking people in half, blew up a run, followed by Jack Porter manhandling half the line as he crashed through on his way to a QB sack.

Facing fourth down and backed up to its own 22-yard line, Annie Wright showed guts, choosing to fire a pass instead of punting.

Unfortunately for the Gators, the ball caromed off a Wolf defender, popped upwards, and was snatched out of the air by Liam Blas.

Cradling the ball as carefully as his mom Stephanie once held the DVD for her beloved Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights back in her Videoville days, the fab frosh earned big raves from his coaches.

Liam had some big hits and really played his role well,” Richter said. “We had a lot of young guys step up tonight, and I’m so excited to see that.”

Freshman Liam Blas had a big impact in his high school debut. (Photo courtesy Kevin Blas)

Not content to sit on a one-score lead, Coupeville rammed home two more touchdowns before the first quarter was done.

Johnny Porter punched in a 10-yard scoring run, before Marquette Cunningham, shedding would-be tacklers with each dynamic step, blasted away for a 22-yard touchdown jaunt.

The second quarter kicked off with the Coupeville student section singing along to the Backstreet Boys warbling I Want it That Way, a song which is now 25(!!) years old.

While the playback of the song stopped in mid-sentence, as Annie Wright went to launch a punt, a pack of teenagers not alive in 1999 finished the song themselves, absolutely nailing the lyrics.

You know who else absolutely nailed something, but in a far more painful way?

The Annie Wright punter, who later in the quarter, shanked the ball off of the teammate standing right in front of him.

The ball bounced backwards, with Jack Porter roaring in from the outside to land on the wayward pigskin for the game’s only defensive touchdown, and the stadium was rocking.

Add in a two-point conversion run from Anderson, then big defensive stops from Riley Lawless, Jackson Sollars, Davin Houston, and Camden Glover, and the game was a lopsided 29-0 at the half.

Annie Wright didn’t roll over, however, and showed a fair amount of pluck, especially for a fairly new program.

A sensational one-handed catch by Kient’e Caldwell brought oohs and ahs even from a rival crowd, and the Gators finally got on the board early in the third quarter.

A long pass play which caught the Wolf defenders flat-footed set up a short scoring run by freshman Jackson Wright, though CHS stuffed the conversion attempt.

That was the signal for Anderson to get fancy, as the Wolf gunslinger whipped passes to Johnny Porter and Malachi Somes before collecting his second and third touchdown runs of the night.

The first one covered five yards, with a conversion pass to Cunningham making it 37-6, while his final scoring burst covered 73 yards, as he merrily skipped down the left side of the field, two steps too fast for the defense.

That titanic tear was impressive, but there was more. Far more.

Cunningham, saving something special for the final moments, accepted a handoff deep in his own territory, then left a trail of tears behind him.

All 11 Gators had a chance to tackle the quicksilver one, but no one was capable of completing the job as he romped to paydirt.

Covering 70+ yards on Coupeville’s final offensive play, the Wolf junior brought the house down.

“This was his big breakout game, and I’m so proud of him,” Richter said. “Marquette has really built towards this for the last two years. He earned it.”

Wolf fans went home happy. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

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Davin Houston and Co. open a new season in 17 days. (Andrew Williams photo)

There’s a new foe on the gridiron.

When the Coupeville High School football team opens its season at home Friday, Sept. 6, the team it welcomes to Mickey Clark Field will be one it’s never played before.

And also one which is fairly new to the whole Friday Night Lights experience.

Annie Wright, a private 1A school from Tacoma, is a member of the Nisqually League and well-known for being successful on the basketball court.

But the Gators are new to football, having debuted just last year with a mostly JV schedule.

Coached by the school’s Director of Athletics, Harvard grad Mike Finch, Annie Wright played one varsity contest, closing the season with a 26-13 loss at La Conner.

Now, the Gators are set to take a much-bigger step, as a team with just four seniors is slated to clash with Cascade Christian, East Jefferson, and Klahowya among others.

First up, however, is a trip to Whidbey to face Coupeville, which beat La Conner 48-6 and 43-12 last season.

But everything rolls on in sports.

The Wolves will have new faces in new places as Bennett Richter opens his third year at the helm of the CHS gridiron program.

La Conner has moved, at least temporarily, from 11-man football down to the 8-man game.

And Annie Wright, which offers programs for preschool-12th grade, is ready for its prime-time football closeup in Cow Town.

Seventeen days away and counting.

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Longtime coaches David King (left) and Jim Waller talk basketball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was the big blowout before the big shutdown.

Washington state high schools capped the winter sports season by deciding their basketball champs during the first week of March, and former Coupeville coaches David and Amy King were there in person to witness the drama and excitement.

Their thoughts on what they saw, and how it relates to current Wolves:

Heading to a basketball or for that matter any state tournament is the ultimate goal of any coach or player.

We were lucky enough to be part of some teams in the early 2000’s for basketball that made it to state.

We also led a basketball team to regionals a few years back and coached a softball team to state about eight years ago.

So to attend a state tournament as fans is something we wanted to do. No pressure, just sit back and watch and enjoy.

We wanted to see the best of the best teams on both the boys and girls side of things along with seeing some of the best individual players.

We weren’t disappointed!

The atmosphere is something every athlete should experience.

Just walking in on day one of four we could tell the stakes were higher and the spirit throughout was awesome.

Players, coaches, even the refs, fans and the bands, how could that not be worth experiencing.

Then by day four everything was elevated ten-fold.

And to think we didn’t have a team we were linked to. But we matched the excitement of the day and games.

Here are some things we would like to share.

Each and every team felt like they belonged.

They each had an edge but not over the top. Confident, but not too cocky.

Well, maybe a few teams and players.

As coaches and fans of the game, we could see the dedication and discipline of each player and team.

If a team found themselves down, they never felt like they were out of it until the final buzzer. They stuck to their team’s game plan and kept fighting.

We saw some examples of that.

Annie Wright girls down with 0.4 seconds left and the ball 3/4 court away. They hit a game winning shot beyond half-court!

Or, in the boys championship game when one team seemed to dominate for most of the game, then the other team knocked down a three to send it to overtime. Then went on to win.

We saw players with resolve and nerves of steel. They would step up in crunch time with the ability to make free throws in tight games at the end.

Many of those were loser-out games.

Or players “wanting the ball” to be able to take that big shot for their team.

These players didn’t get there by “just showing up at times in the summer for summer practices.”

Or “coast through practices during their season.”

These players put in the time and effort to be able to play at this level.

We could tell pretty quickly that the team’s best players led their teams.

They did this by including their teammates. These better players wouldn’t be there if it wasn’t for their teammates.

They were willing to give up the ball for better shots. They trusted their teammates. The encouragement by all was a sight to see.

Every player made it about the team, it was never about individual stats. Every player played their role.

Ball handling. This is one thing that is so important for a successful program.

We witnessed guards, wings, posts and centers that ALL could handle the ball.

A player that can dribble is someone that improves their team.

Lastly, something that stuck with us was the fight and grit.

Players played through contact. Very rarely did players complain or expect a call. They were there to play basketball.

They gave their all every minute of every game.

Anyone serious about excelling at a sport and to help their team make state should attend tournaments like these if they can. The atmosphere is second to none.

Anyone who attends would understand the heart and sweat it takes to get to a state tournament.

We hope this helps those attending Coupeville to dedicate themselves to their team and teammates and put in the work to be able to experience state as a player.

Now that we are all off from school for six weeks, dribble a ball in the house. Work on your shooting form.

It’s the player that does things like this that elevates their individual game.

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