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Posts Tagged ‘Bryce Hoisington’

Sophomore lineman Ryan Labrador recovered a fumble for his first varsity touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Sophomore lineman Ryan Labrador recovered a fumble for his first varsity touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

They flipped the script.

A year ago, Vashon Island throttled Coupeville 70-31 on the gridiron as Bryce Hoisington ran for a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns on his home turf.

Friday night, back in Cow Town, it was time for the big pay-back.

Scoring five different ways (pass, run, punt return, interception and fumble recovery) the Wolves mashed the Pirates 63-32 in their biggest assault on the scoreboard in memory.

The win snapped a three-game skid for Coupeville and evened their Olympic/Nisqually League mark at 1-1 headed into a Homecoming showdown with Port Townsend and former Wolf assistant coach Alex Heilig.

Coupeville is 2-3 under first-year head coach Jon Atkins, which doubles its win total from a season ago.

“This was a quality win,” Atkins said. “We’ve been working really hard on executing the little things, and we did that really well tonight. It was a big difference.”

The Wolves came out on fire and never turned down the flame.

While Bryce Hoisington still got them for four touchdowns this time around, they all came after Vashon was already dead and buried.

Far more often, the Wolf defenders, led by Julian Welling, Clay Reilly, Dane Lucero and Co., swarmed him, rode him down hard, caught him from behind and, all in all, made dang sure they weren’t going to be on the wrong side of history again.

Coupeville scored early, late and often, hitting big less than two minutes into the game.

Having forced Vashon to punt — Jacob Martin hauled down Vashon QB Connor Hoisington for a loss on third down — the Wolves seized the moment.

Junior speed demon Hunter Smith pocketed the kick a step behind his 20-yard line, sauntered to the side for a half-step, then dropped the booster rockets and roared through 11 would-be tacklers like a hot knife slicing through sweet, defenseless butter.

Up 7-0, the Wolves were just getting warmed up, and they started hitting with a vengeance on defense.

While the Hoisington brothers are a slippery duo, CHS lost a few battles while winning the overall defensive war.

Chris Battaglia blew-up a pitch for a loss, then Uriel Liquidano and Ryan Labrador combined to plant Connor Hoisington 15 yards from where he started on a sack by committee.

Coupeville, which never punted on the evening, scored on every possession except one.

That was on a lost fumble, but they immediately responded by forcing yet another Vashon punt to even things out.

Martin plunged in from four yards out to push the game to 14-0, then Labrador fell on a fumble in the end zone with just 25 ticks on the clock in the first quarter to effectively end the game.

A second touchdown from Smith, this one on a 31-yard sprint to daylight on his only rushing attempt of the night, made the score 28-0 midway through the second quarter.

The play was set-up by a sensational block from Cameron Toomey-Stout. While it was the first time the junior’s name was intoned by PA announcer Randy King, it was far from the last.

While he waited to score until Coupeville’s fifth touchdown, Toomey-Stout actually led the Wolves, crossing the goal line three times.

First came a 43-yard catch and run in which Wolf QB (and birthday boy) Hunter Downes heaved a bomb, then a 14-yard dart of a scoring pass on which Toomey-Stout beat his man to the deepest part of the right corner of the end zone.

After a brief rest — while Battaglia and Martin each added 25-yard scoring runs — Toomey-Stout returned to put the cherry on the victory sundae.

With 3:40 to play on the clock, Connor Hoisington heaved a desperation pass into coverage, only to see #11 in the red and black go airborne, snag the wayward ball, then spin and take things to the house.

Covering 60+ yards on his final jaunt, Toomey-Stout brought the overflowing stands to their feet and came dangerously close to making Wolf camera woman BayLee Dunsmore cough up a lung as she screamed like a woman possessed.

That she didn’t knock best bud Madison Aylesworth off the top of the stands in her frenzy (she came close) was probably the most remarkable thing about the play.

With the game decided, the Wolf bench got playing time, with sophomore QB Shane Losey getting some snaps and Matt Hilborn ripping off a pretty 21-yard jaunt that almost turned into touchdown #10.

The win leaves Coupeville a game back of the league leaders, with five to play.

In other action Friday, Cascade Christian crunched Klahowya 40-6 and Port Townsend blasted Chimacum 55-7. Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright play Saturday.

Current Olympic/Nisqually League standings:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 2-0 5-0
Port Townsend 2-0 3-2
Charles Wright 1-0 2-2
COUPEVILLE 1-1 2-3
Klahowya 1-1 3-2
Bellevue Christian 0-1 0-4
Chimacum 0-2 1-4
Vashon Island 0-2 0-5

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Bree Daigneault and the Wolf booters aim to take down Klahowya. (John Fisken photos)

   Bree Daigneault and the Wolf booters aim to take down Klahowya. (John Fisken photos)

Joseph Wedekind is back to help the Wolf netters defend their league crown.

Joseph Wedekind is back to help the Wolf netters defend their league crown.

Story-lines as far as the eye can see.

As we begin to wind our way towards the start of fall sports (football practice starts Aug. 17, while the other three CHS teams kick things off Aug. 22), here are a few things to anticipate.

1) History reclaimed — This one is a bit personal, as it’s something I’ve been working on for an eternity, but, when school kicks off, the Coupeville High School gym will look very different than it did when the Class of 2016 graduated.

Or, at least, one wall will.

All the research, all the haggling, all the fundraising will pay off as a new Wall of Fame will rise up around the Sad Coyote painting, celebrating 116 years of Wolf sports.

Did you play on the 1960 CHS baseball squad which won a Northwest League title?

Run for the 1982 girls cross country team which placed 4th at state?

Take the mat for the 2006 competitive cheer squad which brought home a state title?

Now you, your teammates and coaches will have your accomplishments remembered where everyone can see them.

It’s been a long time coming, and with the help of a lot of people, it’s about to be a reality.

2) Oval mania — While it won’t be used until the spring, the new CHS track oval will make its public debut when the Wolves kick off the football season.

After several years of no home track meets because of poor track conditions, Coupeville is back in the game thanks to a levy and a lot of dump truck work.

3) Bucket brigade — The first fall sports event is also the only one which involves a trophy, as the Wolves welcome South Whidbey to the gridiron Sept. 3.

The Saturday night opener (7 PM) may be a non-conference game, but the winner of the rivalry game claims possession of The Bucket for a year and bragging rights for a lot longer.

Coupeville has won in even years recently, claiming ownership in 2012 and 2014. Will 2016 follow suit?

4) New boss, not the same as the old boss — With the departure of Brett and Breanne Smedley, CHS football and volleyball have new coaches in Jon Atkins and Cory Whitmore, respectively.

Both are Oak Harbor teachers who will continue to work up North during the day, then travel to Central Whidbey to lead their teams.

Atkins, the fourth football coach in the last seven years, debuts Sept. 3 (as mentioned above), while Whitmore, the volleyball program’s third leader in the last four years, hits the court Sept. 6 when the Wolves play Mount Vernon Christian.

5) A league of their own — While tennis, volleyball and soccer will continue to play in the four-team 1A Olympic League, football is mixing things up.

Along with Chimacum, Klahowya and two-time defending league champ Port Townsend, they will unite with the Nisqually League (Charles Wright, Vashon Island, Cascade Christian, Bellevue Christian) for the next two years, at least.

The simple break-down?

Coupeville and its counterparts will have a set-in-stone 10-game regular season (no need to scramble and find a foe for a crossover game at the end), with seven league games.

The Wolves also won’t have to play the same teams twice each year anymore.

At the end, the top two or three teams (depending on how allocations break out) advance to the playoffs.

6) History, Part 2? — One of those new football league foes (Vashon) comes to Coupeville Sept. 30.

When they do, the Wolves will be staring across the field at Bryce Hoisington, who put them into the state record books (against their will) last year.

Back then, the game was a non-conference tilt, and Vashon’s running back went off on his home turf for 573 yards and nine touchdowns on 51 carries in a 70-31 Pirate win.

That’s the most yards any runner has gained in a single game in the entire history of Washington state high school football, and it also put Hoisington over the top for the single-season state rushing record of 2,929 yards.

Barring injury or a sudden love of tennis, Vashon’s best player will be back on the gridiron for his senior season, and Coupeville’s defense will be looking for a little payback.

7) Two homecomings in one — Port Townsend hits Whidbey Oct. 7, just as Coupeville celebrates Homecoming.

It’ll be a reunion, as Alex Heilig, a former Wolf assistant coach (and husband of CHS three-sport legend Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby) is the new head coach of the RedHawks.

He’s been gone for two years (one as an assistant in South Whidbey, one as head coach in Granite Falls), but he taught and coached many of the current Wolf players.

8) Defend the crown — Boys tennis knocked off Klahowya to claim the league title last season, the eighth championship in program history and first since 2011.

Wolf coach Ken Stange will be in search of his 12th title at Coupeville (he has four on the boys side, seven on the girls), but he’ll have to scramble to replace his top two singles players, who both graduated.

9) More games that truly count — After two seasons of playing six league games, volleyball and soccer are joining sports like basketball, baseball and softball by jumping to a schedule which has nine league contests.

That means three match-ups apiece against Chimacum, Port Townsend and Klahowya, and less chance of what happened last year, when the Wolves had to play “non-conference” games against conference foes in a bid to fill out their schedules.

More league games also means:

10) Time to clip the Eagles — Of the 10 sports all four Olympic League teams vie in (we don’t count track, as its scoring system exists in its own special world), there are five teams which have never lost a league game in the two-year history of the conference.

Coupeville girls basketball (18-0) towers over everyone, while Klahowya volleyball (12-0), girls soccer (12-0) and boys soccer (12-0) also haven’t been touched.

Rounding out the undefeated is Coupeville girls tennis (11-0).

In eight of the ten sports there have been back-to-back league champs (Coupeville – girls tennis and basketball; Port Townsend – football; Chimacum – boys basketball, softball; Klahowya – boys and girls soccer, volleyball).

The only sports which went different in 2015 than they did in 2014 were boys tennis and baseball, where the Wolves took away titles from their big school rival.

Coupeville won four league titles in 2015, most of any school, after Klahowya nabbed five in 2014.

Now it’s time to keep that momentum going and finally ding the Eagles in volleyball and soccer.

If 2016 is to fully be the year of the Wolf, it all starts there.

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Wolf football players like Jacob Martin (32) will tackle new conference foes starting next season. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf football players like Jacob Martin (32) will tackle new conference foes starting next season. (John Fisken photo)

Get ready for round two with Bryce Hoisington.

A major shakeup to the Coupeville High School football schedule guarantees the Wolves will get a rematch with the Vashon running back who lit them up for a state record 573 yards in this season’s finale.

Only the second time around, it will be a conference game.

As reclassification shakes out across the state, leagues have latched on to the idea of combining to form football-only conferences, and the Wolves and their three mates in the 1A Olympic League have joined the dance.

According to a report in the Peninsula Daily News, the Olympic League will team up with the Nisqually League, which also has four football-playing teams.

The union will affect only the one sport.

Under the agreement, Coupeville will no longer face Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum twice each season on the gridiron.

Instead, after playing non-conference games in the first three weeks (keeping alive the tradition of facing off with South Whidbey, one would assume), the Wolves will play seven conference games against seven opponents.

Along with the one game each against their three regular foes, they will now play conference games against Cascade Christian, Charles Wright Academy, Vashon and Bellevue Christian.

Cascade Christian will likely be the team to beat, having played in the 1A state title game five of the past eight seasons, winning titles in 2010 and 2014.

In previous seasons, week 10 was devoted to a non-conference crossover game (this season that was the Vashon bout), but that has been eliminated under the new agreement.

From the eight teams, the top two (or three, depending on each year’s allocation) will advance to the playoffs.

Both leagues will crown their own regular season champs.

While the new reclassification rules cover four-year intervals (a new count will happen in 2020), Olympic and Nisqually Athletic Directors plan to evaluate the football agreement after two seasons.

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"Ow, ow, owie ow ow..." (John Fisken photo)

“Ow, ow, owie ow ow…” (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville helped set Washington state high school football history Friday night.

Not that anyone probably wants to talk about it all that much.

When the Wolves lost 70-31 at Vashon Island to end a 1-9 season, they were savaged by Pirate running back Bryce Hoisington in a way no team in modern recorded state history has ever been.

The Vashon junior carried the ball 51 times for 573 yards and nine touchdowns.

By doing so, Hoisington broke two records for 11-man football in Washington state.

The 573 yards shattered the previous single game record of 488 yards put up by Eisenhower’s Branden Curtis in 2012, and the final burst also allowed Hoisington to capture the single season record as well.

He ran for 2,929 yards and 32 touchdowns on 337 carries this season, breaking a yardage record that had stood for all of a season.

Chiawana running back Austin Urlacher set the record in 2014, when he collected 2,877 yards over 14 games as his team advanced to the 4A state title game.

Hoisington broke the record while playing four less games.

While we try to figure out how Vashon missed the playoffs — the Pirates finished 4-6, somehow losing to Chimacum along the way — let’s take a look at his record-breaking stats, courtesy a chart from the Tacoma News-Tribune.

Forks — 28 carries for 136 yards
Port Angeles — 34-266
Charles Wright — 41-376
South Delta (B.C.) — 38-288
Marriott (B.C.) — 6-150
Charles Wright — 33-380
Bellevue Christian — 40-289
Cascade Christian — 24-102
Chimacum — 42-369
Coupeville — 51-573

What can you say but this? Congratulations Mr. Hoisington, and we hope we don’t see you again next season.

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