Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Clay Reilly’

Clay Reilly delivered strong work on defense in a tough loss Monday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf junior Clay Reilly delivered strong work on defense in a tough loss Monday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

Some days are just not your day.

Only a few hours back from Spring Break, with three starters sick or injured, the Coupeville High School baseball squad made a long trek Monday with very little reward.

After heading all the way up to the Canadian border, the Wolves got whacked 12-2 in five innings by a very efficient Blaine squad.

The non-conference loss dropped Coupeville to 4-7.

“Rough game for us. We just didn’t bring our game,” said CHS coach Marc Aparicio.

The hope is to get their mojo back quickly, as the Wolves play eight of their final nine regular season games against 1A Olympic League rivals.

Coupeville currently sits in a first-place tie with Klahowya at 1-0, and will kick off the stretch run with a road game against Chimacum (0-1, 2-5) Thursday.

Facing off with a Borderite squad that improved to 7-5, the Wolves surrendered runs in every inning.

Blaine went for two in the first, then added five, two, one and the final knock-out punch with two more in the bottom of the fifth.

After putting only one runner on in the first three innings, thanks to a Blaine error, Coupeville finally broke through with two runs in the top of the fourth.

The Wolves plated Hunter Smith and CJ Smith, but the rally fizzled almost as quickly as it began.

While his team didn’t have its strongest showing of the season, Aparicio came away pleased with the effort of at least two of his young guns.

Clay (Reilly) had a great day in the outfield and Kory (Score) hit well and helped score one of our only two runs,” he said.

Read Full Post »

Messner

Paul Messner, the beast of the gridiron, circa 1965. (Photo from Messner family archives)

Santa and his three daughters (clockwoise from lower left) Christi, Barbi and Aimee.

Santa and daughters (clockwise from lower left) Christi, Barbi and Aimee.

Jump back to opening day from football season for a moment.

Coupeville was on the road, facing off with arch-rival South Whidbey down Langley way, and Jordan Ford, heir to a proud athletic tradition from both sides of his family, made an explosive debut as a Wolf.

Recovering a fumble, he took it to the house for a touchdown that, momentarily, put CHS ahead and turned the tide of the game.

While the play was called back, thanks to a Wolf blocker getting nailed with a penalty flag for an illegal hit, it was a signal that Ford, whose family had moved back to Whidbey for his senior year, would be a bright spot for Coupeville.

And he was, racking up fumble recoveries and sacks on defense, while doubling as one of Wolf quarterback Gabe Eck’s top targets.

In the stands that night, proudly watching his grandson play, was Coupeville’s answer to Santa Claus, the fun-lovin’ force of life known as Paul Messner.

The question is, how many others in the stands knew that the guy with the white beard and the mile-wide grin was once one of the best to ever stride the gridiron for the Wolves?

How many know about his senior year, when, exactly 50 years before his grandson’s heroics, Messner put together one of the most impressive campaigns in school history?

Santa was a Superman, and the 1965 season, which started in glory and ended in pain, is one of the great long-lost legends in Wolf sports history.

Pull up a chair and let me tell you about a different time, a time when legends walked the land.

Or, in Messner’s case, when they slammed head-long into the line, scattering would-be tacklers and tearing off huge chunks of yardage like a man possessed.

How scary was he? Other teams refused to play the Wolves after dark on their home field.

Well, OK, that may have been because the CHS football stadium didn’t have lights at the time … but, we’re sticking with the legend. Sounds better.

The ’65 Wolves were thin in numbers, but coach Terry Paoletti had a 5-foot-11, 180-pound battering ram in Messner and he used him often behind a line that included guys like Dick Bogardus, Fred Salmon, Jim Henry and my future landlord, Jack Sell.

Jim Faris operated under center, while Bill Losey joined Messner at halfback.

The spotlight quickly landed on Messner, a two-year letterman entering the season, who was tabbed as the team’s captain.

He erupted for 185 yards on 15 carries, while also snagging 13 tackles in Coupeville’s opening game, a narrow 22-12 loss at Darrington.

Newspaper accounts at the time talk about the Wolves struggling a bit to adapt to the “high altitude of the mountain town,” but that hardly slowed the two-way beast of Cow Town.

Bringing his game back down to the lowlands, Messner went on a rampage the next week, savaging Chimacum for 208 yards on 19 carries. He also accumulated 17 tackles as Coupeville throttled the Cowboys 21-6.

With Messner rolling, the Wolves ripped off two more wins the next two weeks, rising to #7 in the state polls.

Coupeville beat La Conner 12-0 (Messner rolled up 223 yards) and nipped Granite Falls 13-7 (Messner tallied 154 yards rushing and took a kickoff back 90 yards for a touchdown) and, at 3-1, was atop the Northwest B League standings.

The win over Granite Falls, which featured a Tiger, Dan Maik, being ejected for “non-official roughing” of Wolf Terry Hesselgesser, was probably the most thrilling of the season.

Unfortunately, with Hesselgesser going to the sidelines with an injury, it also signaled the beginning of the end for a CHS team that barely had enough bodies BEFORE injuries wreaked havoc on the roster.

In the moment, however, the win was epic, with Coupeville rallying from behind at home, in the daylight, with a mixture of trickery and grit.

Facing a punt at midfield, the Wolves pulled off a fake, with their kicker, Henry, — who was the Clay Reilly of the time, with a 67-yard punt to his credit — hitting Sell on a 25-yard pass.

Messner took it from there, carrying the ball three straight times, with the final coming on a bull-rush up the gut for the go-ahead score.

Even then, Coupeville needed a miracle at the end to escape.

Granite Falls drove to the Wolf three-yard line with four seconds to go, before Bogardus crashed through the line on the final play, hauling down the ball-carrier to end the game.

As the Wolves celebrated, however, the specter of the injuries to come hung heavy.

According to an on-the-scene report by Whidbey News-Times legend Wallie Funk, CHS student Jim Keith, a sideline volunteer, took a lineman’s pole to the noggin mid-game.

His head bleeding from the wound inflicted by the metal pole, Keith passed out. His mom, having rushed to the field, promptly fainted as well.

Keith’s dad grabbed his son and headed for the doctor’s office. Unfortunately, the doctor had been called and was en route to the stadium, and the two cars passed before anyone realized what was going on.

Everyone came out of the situation fairly dandy (the wound was bloody but superficial), but maybe it should have been a sign.

Halfway through the season, Messner had nearly 800 rushing yards, the Seattle papers were starting to pay attention and then … disaster.

Game five was a match-up against the Oak Harbor JV, and things took a nasty turn early when Messner went down with a kidney injury less than five minutes in.

Bogardus was the next to go, and the injuries mounted in the second half, a time when Oak Harbor, clinging to a 6-0 lead, apparently ran in varsity players to save face.

By the time the Wildcat “JV” had pulled off a 26-6 win, the season was effectively done for the Wolves.

Coupeville cancelled a scheduled game against the Snohomish JV, then, racked by injuries, fell to Chimacum and Darrington, finishing a game behind the Loggers for the league title.

Messner had 770 yards before the injury and gutted out 41 more in the scant time he was able to play afterwards, forever leaving Wolf fans to wonder “what if?”

Still, while the second half pain put a bit of a damper on the season, ’65 remains a landmark year in Wolf football history.

Ten seniors — Messner, Bogardus, Sell, Faris, Salmon, Gary Bass, Mike Thompson, Steve Wilson, Lee Milheim and Tom Kroon — went on a final run, that, even now, 50 years later, looms large.

It was a time of legends, two-way warriors led by a good-natured beast who would grow up to become Santa Claus.

Read Full Post »

Birthday boy Clay Reilly (with a cameo by big sis Amanda Fabrizi).

Birthday boy Clay Reilly (with a cameo by big sis Amanda Fabrizi).

Clay Reilly, welcome to the big time.

The Coupeville High School junior has been kickin’ butt and taking names for three years now, as a football, basketball and baseball star, but this fall he moved to a lofty level.

One of the real bright spots during a somewhat dismal Wolf gridiron season, Reilly teamed with Hunter Smith to be lock-down defensive backs.

Teams scored a lot on the Wolves, but most of it came on the ground, as most other teams shied away from throwing into their coverage.

With Smith picking off a school-record seven passes, Reilly didn’t get as many balls to make plays on, but, when he did, he was highly effective.

He made off with his own interception, came within a fingertip of at least two others, and thoroughly discouraged opposing quarterbacks from trying to operate on his side of the field.

Perhaps better for Coupeville, however, was his emergence as the best punter in 1A.

The Wolves, who were working out the kinks in an offense featuring a host of young players, averaged nearly five punts a game.

Once Reilly took over the role midway through the season, his foot became Coupeville’s most dangerous weapon, as he piled up 1,156 yards on 34 kicks.

One of those exploded into the early evening sky, took a sharp bounce on his home turf and skidded to a rest some 70 yards later, giving his support crew plenty of time to haul tail down the field and keep the other team from even attempting to bring the ball back.

In a rough season for a still-developing squad, that punt was easily the most impressive play of the season.

Reilly being Reilly, he took off down the field after he let loose with the kick, wanting in on the tackle. He may be a punter, but he’s a hitter, first and foremost.

As he celebrates his 17th birthday today, the lil’ bro of former Wolf hoops star Amanda Fabrizi, is one of the best and brightest we have at CHS.

Will he return to basketball after taking a season off? Only time will tell.

Almost certainly Reilly will be back on the diamond in the spring, reclaiming his starting spot in the lineup.

He swung a wicked bat and displayed a laser arm as a sophomore, and, based on football, he has grown as an athlete.

As he celebrates his cake day, we want to wish him the best and thank him, for his refusal to quit, for his grit, for his willingness to pose for the camera, for the way he shines bright and reps Wolf Nation with class and style.

Happy birthday, Clay. Now go kick some more booty.

Read Full Post »

CJ Smith (John Fiskenb photos)

   Senior CJ Smith leads the Wolves in reception yards and is third in total yards. (John Fisken photos)

Josh (72) and Jake Lord have combined for

Linemen Josh (72) and Jake Lord have combined for 11 tackles this season.

Clay Reilly lets rip with a punt Friday night. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Clay Reilly lets rip with a punt Friday night. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Clay Reilly is movin’ on up.

Riding a 70-yard boot in Friday’s game against Port Townsend, the Coupeville High School junior is now the third most-proficient punter among 1A kickers whose coaches stay on top of their stats.

Reilly is averaging 32.6 yards per punt, which puts him hot on the heels of Jake Sargeant of Klahowya (34.8) and David Postma of Bellevue Christian (33.9).

His footwork highlights our weekly look at CHS football stats, as reported to MaxPreps by Wolf coaches.

Other guys making moves include Jacob Martin, who took over the team lead in fumble recoveries and Ty Eck, who rode a nine-tackle performance Friday to move within an inch of second-place in that category.

Stats through Week 6:

Offense:

Passing:

Gabe Eck 47-89 for 545 yards with 3 TD and 2 INTs
Hunter Downes 25-46 for 239 yards with 1 TD and 3 INTs
CJ Smith 1-1 for 10 yards

Receiving:

C. Smith 17 receptions for 254 yards
Hunter Smith 24-247
Ty Eck 12-109
Wiley Hesselgrave 10-87
Jordan Ford 4-58
Lathom Kelley 2-22
Ryan Griggs 1-10
Jake Hoagland 2-7

Rushing:

Hesselgrave 52 carries for 301 yards
Kelley 35-126
Jacob Martin 7-12
Chris Battaglia 1-4
C. Smith 1 (-1)
Mitchell Losey 1 (-3)
G. Eck 45 (-28)
Downes 12 (-49)

Total yards:

G. Eck 517
Hesselgrave 388
C. Smith 263
H. Smith 247
Downes 190
Kelley 148
T. Eck 109
Ford 58
Martin 12
Griggs 10
Hoagland 7
Battaglia 4

Touchdowns:

T. Eck 2
Hesselgrave 2
Martin 1
C. Smith 1
H. Smith 1

PATs:

Zane Bundy 4

Field Goals:

Bundy 3

Points:

Bundy 13
T. Eck 12
Hesselgrave 12
Martin 6
C. Smith 6
H. Smith 6

Defense:

Tackles:

Kelley 60
Hesselgrave 38
T. Eck 37
Uriel Liquidano 31
Battaglia 26
Brenden Gilbert 21
Mitchell Carroll 18
Julian Welling 17
Tyler McCalmont 16
Martin 14
H. Smith 14
Ford 12
Clay Reilly 12
Losey 11
Jake Lord 7
C. Smith 6
Josh Lord 4
JR Pendergrass 4
Griggs 1
Matt Hilborn 1
Teo Keilwitz 1
Josh Robinson 1
James Vidoni 1

Sacks:

Battaglia 2
Ford 2
Gilbert 2
Kelley 2
Carroll 1
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
McCalmont 1

Interceptions:

H. Smith 4
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
Reilly 1

Fumble recoveries:

Martin 3
Ford 2
H. Smith 2
T. Eck 1
Hesselgrave 1
Liquidano 1

Blocked kicks:

Hesselgrave 1
Liquidano 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Bundy 8 for 253 yards

Punts:

Reilly 17 for 555 yards
Bundy 12-308

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 16 for 237 yards
T. Eck 8-93
Kelley 5-68
H. Smith 4-39
Martin 2-2
Reilly 1-0

Read Full Post »

Freshman Chris Battaglia recorded seven tackles Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Chris Battaglia, dubbed “The Italian Stallion” by Coupeville PA announcer Willie Smith, recorded seven tackles Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

When your most exciting play of the night is a punt, pretty good bet you’re not going to win the game.

But, that said, the Coupeville High School football squad did capture a string of small, but important, moral victories Friday night while facing off with the best team they will see all season.

And it was a dang good punt. But more about that later.

A look at the scoreboard told the big story — that Port Townsend rolled to a 44-0 win to all but put a choke-hold on the 1A Olympic League title.

Now 4-0 in league play, 6-0 overall, the Redhawks hold a one-game lead over Klahowya (3-1, 4-2), while Coupeville (1-3, 1-5) and Chimacum (0-4, 0-6) bring up the rear.

Port Townsend will host Klahowya next Friday, and, having outscored opponents 299-6 this season (beating those Eagles 52-6 earlier), would seem a slam-dunk to repeat as league champs.

But there’s intrigue beyond that certainty, as the Wolves actually have a better chance at earning a playoff berth than originally thought.

While the Olympic League only sent two teams to the postseason last year, it was revealed Friday the top three teams will be playoff-bound in 2015.

For Coupeville, that means a Homecoming win over Chimacum next Friday would allow it to clinch a trip to the postseason.

Plus, a Wolf win combined with the inevitable Klahowya defeat at Port Townsend would pull CHS within a game of second place heading into the conference finale, when Coupeville hits the road to face the Eagles on their home turf Oct. 23.

So, what that all means is a loss against Port Townsend, while rough, is not the end of the world.

The Wolves hit the Redhawks hard, and often, holding Port Townsend to its fewest points of the season.

Along the way, Coupeville recovered a fumble — the third picked up this season by Wolf junior Jacob Martin — and forced the Redhawks first-string offense into a rare four-and-out at one point early in the second quarter.

What they could not do, and what no team has been able to do so far, was fully control an impressive ground attack led by a 5-foot-9, 235-pound, surprisingly nimble battering ram named Wesley Wheeler.

The Redhawk senior slammed in to the end zone three times, with a pair of one-yard scores sandwiched around a 14-yard touchdown.

When the Wolves did bring Wheeler down, the Redhawks mixed things up with Ezra Easley, who is 80 pounds lighter but three times as quick.

Easley bolted in to score on back-to-back possessions, as Port Townsend built a 21-0 lead after one quarter.

Coupeville’s best play of the night came midway through the second quarter.

After finally breaking through for a first down, on a pass from Gabe Eck to Jordan Ford, the Wolves hit a brick wall and eventually had to punt.

That was when junior Clay Reilly unloaded a cannon shot off of his toe.

Zooming across the black sky, what would turn into a 70-yard punt traveled most of that distance in the air, then bit the turf and skipped through the end zone, preventing Port Townsend from getting any return on the ball.

It was an impressive moment and drew a startled gasp from an out-of-town guy broadcasting the game across the internet and an enthusiastic “ooh” and “ah” from the guys in the CHS press box, silver-tongued announcer Willie “Balls… Balls…” Smith and clock wizard Joel Norris.

After that, it was all Port Townsend, largely, as Redhawk QB David Sua connected with Carson Marx on a 14-yard scoring strike in which Marx made a circus catch while tumbling backward.

Gerry Coker tacked on a 33-yard field goal to close out the scoring, but Coupeville escaped without being the team to give up Port Townsend’s 300th point of the season.

Good luck on stopping that next week, Klahowya.

With little to play for except pride, Coupeville came within an inch or two of busting Port Townsend’s string of shutouts.

With Eck hitting Hunter Smith on an 11-yard pass, the Wolves were down to the 25, forcing the Redhawks to put their first-string defenders back in with two minutes to play.

On fourth down, Eck rolled out and heaved a bomb to Smith, who reached over his shoulder and hauled in the pass as he crossed into the end zone.

Unfortunately, carried to the side by the pass, he couldn’t keep his feet in bounds and it went down as a beautiful catch that ultimately didn’t count.

Forced to scramble for his life much of the time, Eck compiled 40 yards through the air, with Ford hauling in two passes for 22 yards.

Wiley Hesselgrave led the ground game with a very-hard-earned 30 yards.

Freshmen Ty Eck (nine tackles) and Chris Battaglia (seven) paced the defense, while Hesselgrave had six and Lathom Kelley added five.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »