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Posts Tagged ‘CJ Smith’

Dante Mitchell

Dante Mitchell rambles. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg

Madeline Strasburg zings.

Wiley Hesselgrave

Wiley Hesselgrave strolls.

JUmp

  With the lyrics from the huge 1992 Kriss Kross track playing in their head (yeah, probably not), the Wolf girls “Jump, jump.”

CJ Smith

CJ Smith motors.

McKenzie Bailey

McKenzie Bailey flies.

Joey Lippo

Joey Lippo rumbles.

Allison Wenzel

Allison Wenzel gets mugged by her own hair.

It’s Thanksgiving and you’re likely sitting around, eating.

At that moment when you feel your fullest, take a moment and stroll over this way and partake of today’s conditioning-heavy photo essay, courtesy John Fisken.

Captured in the earliest stages of basketball practice for the Coupeville High School basketball squads, the photos depict a whole heck of a lot of running — exactly the sort of thing no one in their right mind feels like doing today.

But now, at least, you can say “Hey, I looked at people running. It made me tired. Workout accomplished. Now ‘scuse me while this pie and I go take a nap together…”

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CJ Smith (John Fisken photo)

  Junior CJ Smith is third on the team in receiving and fourth in total yards. (John Fisken photos)

Freshman James Vidoni (65)

Freshman James Vidoni (65) has chipped in with two tackles this season.

One more game to pile up some stats.

The Coupeville High School football squad (4-5) will close out the 2014 season Friday with a non-conference home game against Bellevue Christian (1-8).

Kickoff is 7 PM and the Wolves will look to close with a roar.

A win would give CHS the highest win total in coach Tony Maggio’s three years at the helm, and the game will be the final chance for seniors such as Josh Bayne and Joel Walstad to add to their already-impressive season stats.

Where they and their teammates sit through nine games:

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad 101 completions for 1,407 yards (#4 in 1A) with 14 TDs and 10 INTs
CJ Smith 9-99 with 1/1
Wiley Hesselgrave 1-46 with 1/0
Josh Bayne
1-43

Receiving:

Bayne 29 receptions for 420 yards (#7 in 1A)
Ryan Griggs
26-383
C. Smith 24-351
Hesselgrave 20-303
Jacob Martin 9-66
Lathom Kelley 5-33
Mitchell Carroll
3-27
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-12
Gabe Wynn
1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 124 carries for 1,217 yards (#2 in 1A, #7  in all classifications)
Kelley 46-407
Hesselgrave
46-366
Martin 49-257
Mitchell Losey 8-27
Walstad 16-27
Chance Kleinfelter 1-14
C. Smith 4-12

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 13-233 (#3 in 1A)
Bayne
9-202
Kelley 5-83
Aaron Wright
3-60
C. Smith
1-13
Losey
1-10
Toomey-Stout 1-8
Matt Shank 1-6
Wynn
1-0

Total yards:

Bayne 1680 (#3 in 1A)
Walstad 1434 (#6 in 1A)
Hesselgrave 715
C. Smith
462
Kelley
440
Griggs 383
Martin 323
Carroll 27
Losey 27
Kleinfelter
14
Toomey-Stout
12

Touchdowns:

Bayne 19 (#1 in 1A, #6 in all classifications)
Hesselgrave 7
Kelley 5
Walstad
4
Griggs 2
Kleinfelter 1
C. Smith 1

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne (84) 72 solo, 12 assists (#4 in 1A)
Hesselgrave (53) 44-9
Wright (42) 31-11
Shank (36) 32-4
Kelley
(36) 20-16
Oscar Liquidano (29) 23-6
Martin (26) 17-8
Hunter Smith
(16) 16-0
Wynn
(14) 14-0
Griggs (12) 9-3
C. Smith
(12) 9-3
Isaac Vargas (11) 8-3
Brenden Gilbert
(7) 7-0
Losey (7) 5-2
Dominic Dausey
(6) 6-0
Walstad
(6) 5-1
Josh Lord (6) 4-2
Carroll
(5) 4-1
Carson Risner
(3) 3-0
Jake Lord
(2) 2-0
James Vidoni
(2) 1-1
Kleinfelter (1) 1-0

Sacks:

Hesselgrave 3
Bayne 2
JR Pendergrass
1
Shank 1
Wright 1

Interceptions:

Bayne 5 (#3 in 1A, tied for #3 in all classifications)
C. Smith 2
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Hesselgrave 4
Bayne
3
Vargas
2
Dausey
1
Kelley 1
Jake Lord 1
Martin
1
Shank
1
H. Smith
1
Walstad 1
Wright 1
Wynn
1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

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Wolf freshman Hunter Smith (4) continued his strong play, recovering a fumble Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

  Wolf freshman Hunter Smith (4) continued his strong play, recovering a fumble Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Good news first.

The Coupeville High School gridiron squad is in a three-way tie for first place in the 1A Olympic League at the halfway point of the season.

Bad news?

The Wolves are there because they played their worst game of the season — by far — falling 49-6 at Klahowya Friday night.

The loss, combined with Port Townsend lighting up Chimacum 56-0, left Coupeville, Klahowya and Port Townsend at 2-1 in league play, with Chimacum bringing up the rear at 0-3.

It’s a true tie, as well, with each of the three schools in first having beaten one of the others while losing to one of the others.

Things will shake out over the next three weeks, as the Wolves (3-2 overall) pursue a playoff berth and get their second crack at their three new league rivals.

Coupeville travels to Port Townsend (3-2) next Friday, Oct. 10, visits Chimacum (0-5) the following week, then hosts Klahowya Oct. 24 for Homecoming.

The Wolves wrap the regular season with a non-conference game at Concrete, reigniting an old-school rivalry, on Halloween night.

Playing their first road game of the season after opening with four straight at home, the Wolves had their chances Friday night.

Klahowya, which dropped down from 2A before this season and is one of the three biggest 1A schools in the state, fumbled the ball away on its first two possessions.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, the Eagles stiffened their own defense, shutting the Wolves down both times as well.

Klahowya then broke things open with a fury in the second quarter, rolling up five straight touchdown drives to take a 35-0 lead into the half.

Konner Langholff was Mr. Untouchable, strolling past the Wolf ‘d’ three times on scoring runs of seven, six and 13 yards.

The sudden assault was punctuated when Klahowya senior Austin Sargent blew up the CHS line en route to an 89-yard scoring run of his own.

For the game, the Eagle duo combined for 332 yards, with Langholff garnering 193 yards on 18 carries and Sargent rambling for 139 on just five carries.

The hosts capped their incredible second quarter run with a 34-yard scoring pass from George Harris to Nate Hough, who tipped the ball to himself and snagged it over a Wolf defender who went to the ground.

After Klahowya tacked on two more rushing TD’s in the second half, Coupeville avoided the shutout when backup quarterback CJ Smith hit Ryan Griggs on a nine-yard scoring strike late in the fourth.

The junior shared QB duties with starter Joel Walstad, who was at less than 100% after suffering a hip pointer in last week’s win over Port Townsend.

Smith hit on 7 of 10 passes for 87 yards, while Walstad struggled for the first time this season. The senior, who entered the game in the top five for 1A passers, completed just four passes for 32 yards.

Josh Bayne hauled in three passes for 47 yards, while Griggs (3-28), Mitchell Carroll (2-15), Smith (2-12) and Jacob Martin (1-17) all chipped in.

The Wolves, coming off of a game in which they rushed for 350+ yards, were held to 150 on the ground.

Bayne got the majority of those, carrying the ball 14 times for 91 hard-earned yards.

Wiley Hesselgrave (4-36), Martin (4-15), Walstad (1-4), Smith (1-3) and Mitchell Losey (1-1) rounded out the ball carriers.

Coupeville was missing its second-leading rusher, junior Lathom Kelley, who was sidelined with a shin injury.

The defense, which was missing senior captain Aaron Wright, also out with an injury, spread out the tackles.

Bayne led the way with six, while Hesselgrave, Griggs and Oscar Liquidano each had four.

Matt Shank (3), Isaac Vargas (3), Gabe Wynn (2), Dominic Dausey (2), Martin (1), CJ Smith (1), Jake Lord (1), Josh Lord (1) and Hunter Smith (1) all tracked down runaway Eagles and wrapped them up.

Hesselgrave blew through the Klahowya line to haul down Harris for a six-yard loss on a sack and recovered a fumble to cap a strong all-around performance.

Dausey and Hunter Smith also snagged fumble recoveries.

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Senior captain Aaron Wright is third on the team in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

Senior captain Aaron Wright is third on the team in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

"Hi. We're gonna roll up about 500 yards on you. That work? It does? Nice."

“Hi. We’re gonna roll up about 500 yards or so on you. That work for you? It does? Nice.”

The best team in all the land.

Coming off a huge 29-21 win over highly-regarded Port Townsend Friday night, the Coupeville High School football squad is in sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

Now 3-1 overall, 2-0 in league play, the Wolves hold a game lead over Port Townsend (2-2, 1-1) and Klahowya (1-3, 1-1) and sit two up on Chimacum (0-4, 0-2).

Coupeville also boasts the best record on Whidbey, leading Oak Harbor (2-1) and South Whidbey (1-3).

How did the Wolves get there? By puttin’ up stats, baby. Big stats.

Take a gander below and marinate in all the statty glory:

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad  53-94 for 754 yards (#2 in 1A)
CJ Smith  2-5 for 12 yards

Receiving:

CJ Smith 14 receptions for 229 yards (#2 in 1A)
Ryan Griggs 15-208 yards (#4 in 1A)
Josh Bayne  15-181
Wiley Hesselgrave 6-95
Jacob Martin 5-32
Lathom Kelley 4-21
Gabe Wynn 1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 56 carries for 580 yards (#1 in 1A)
Kelley 21-242
Hesselgrave 20-133
Martin 25-84
CJ Smith 3-9
Walstad 12-6

Kickoff/punt returns:

Bayne 5 returns for 114 yards
Kelley 5-83
Mitchell Losey 1-10
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-8
Wynn 1-0

Scoring:

Bayne (42) — 7 TD
Walstad (35) — 3 TD, 12 PAT, 1 FG, 1 two-point conversion
Kelley (24) — 4 TD
Hesselgrave (12) — 2 TD
Smith (10) — 1 TD, 2 conversions
Griggs (8) — 1 TD, 1 conversion
Matt Shank (2) — 1 safety

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne 26 solo, 5 assists
Kelley 14-12
Aaron Wright 10-5
Shank 11-2
Oscar Liquidano 8-4
Wynn 10-0
Martin 7-2
Hesselgrave 6-1
Isaac Vargas 4-2
Brenden Gilbert 4-0
Griggs 4-0
Jake Lord 2-2
Walstad 2-0
CJ Smith 1-1
James Vidoni 1-1
Hunter Smith 1-0
Mitchell Carroll 0-1

Sacks:

Bayne 2
Hesselgrave 1

Interceptions:

Bayne 4
CJ Smith 1
Hunter Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Bayne 2
Kelley 1
Vargas 1
Walstad 1
Wynn 1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

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Brothers CJ (left) and Hunter Smith get their game face on in the hours leading up to their first football game at CHS. (Charlotte Smith photo)

   Brothers CJ (left) and Hunter Smith get their game face on in the hours leading up to their first football game at CHS. (Photos courtesy Charlotte Smith)

CJ Smith, the early days.

CJ Smith, the early days.

Hunter Smith, following in his brother's footsteps.

Hunter Smith, following in his brother’s footsteps.

They have a common last name and uncommon talent and drive.

Having moved to Whidbey with their family midway through last school year, CJ and Hunter Smith have quickly emerged as two of the more promising athletes in Coupeville.

CJ quickly made a name for himself as a sophomore, helping lead the Wolf baseball squad to its first state tourney berth in several seasons, and now, with Hunter joining his older brother at the high school level, the duo promises to thrill year-round.

Both play football, basketball and baseball, which, in itself is intriguing, since no CHS athlete has played the three traditional male sports in either of the last two school years.

CJ, a junior, started at wide receiver (“a first for me”) Friday and hauled in five passes for 58 yards in Coupeville’s epic 35-28 victory over visiting South Whidbey.

He also starred on defense, expertly defended an incomplete pass in the end zone in the game’s final seconds, preventing the Falcons from tying up the game and possibly forcing overtime.

Younger brother Hunter, a freshman, is expected to share snaps at quarterback with Hunter Downes Monday when CHS travels to Langley for a match-up of the schools JV gridiron squads.

Both play multiple positions (CJ also plays QB, safety and corner while Hunter bounces between defensive end, linebacker, QB, safety and corner), and picked up the game early.

They first played together on a flag football team in Sammamish when CJ was eight and Hunter six.

The younger brother wasn’t originally on the team because of his youth, but team coaches let him practice and were so impressed with his hustle they gave him a spot on the roster.

Later came a jump to full-on tackle football when each hit age nine. By that time the family was in Michigan.

“We have always enjoyed watching football and wanted to play for our community and school with our friends. We enjoy playing team sports and football is a game that we have always enjoyed watching and playing.”

Both brothers are hard workers who commit fully to their team.

“I think we are smart players, knowing the plays and the situation.

“We communicate well with our team and coaching staff and work hard, getting to know our new team, contributing as much as possible through leadership and hard work, getting to know coaching staff and their expectations, then exceeding their expectations.”

While they play multiple sports, baseball is their favorite, and the brothers have a long history of playing select ball.

Their dad has been their primary coach across all three sports, but each of the Smiths also single out a select baseball coach in Michigan for having a huge impact on the development of their games.

For CJ it’s Orville Thomas, while Hunter hails Bruce Baer.

In the (brief) down moments between sports, the Smith brothers, along with talented little sister Scout (a seventh grade volleyball player for CMS who has excelled at softball, soccer and especially basketball in the past), enjoy family movie nights and rooting for the Seahawks and Mariners.

Then they go out and play like their professional inspirations, which is a beautiful thing.

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