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Posts Tagged ‘Dominic Coffman’

Coupeville High School football players Daylon Houston (left) and Aiden O’Neill, off to Friday Harbor on a business trip. (Davin Houston photo)

One year, two epic streaks spiked.

First, the Coupeville High School boys basketball team broke a 34-year dry spell, advancing to the state tournament for the first time since 1988.

And now, after a 43-14 dismantling of host Friday Harbor — it was 43-0 when CHS pulled most of its starters — the Wolf football squad is state-bound for the first time since 1990.

The win, Coupeville’s sixth-straight on the gridiron, lifts it to 7-1 on the season and caps a flawless 4-0 run through the Northwest 2B/1B League.

After previously clinching at least a tie for their first conference title since the ol’ ball coach, Ron Bagby, was still sportin’ short shorts, the Wolves won the NWL crown outright Friday night.

It’s the third league title for CHS football, with the 2022 squad joining the 1974 and 1990 teams, and this will be the fifth trip to state for the program.

The 12-team 2B state tourney kicks off Nov. 11, and the Wolves won’t know their foe or the site of their opening game until the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association seeds the teams Sunday, Nov. 6.

For a look at the still-blank state bracket, pop over to:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3666

To punch their state ticket, the Wolves took a business trip to Friday Harbor and, quite simply, punched their hosts in the mouth.

Do the CHS football players, ages 14-18, really understand how ferocious Mike Tyson was in his prime in the ’80s and ’90s?

You know, those years where each time he stepped into the boxing ring you thought he might actually kill the poor sap trying to hide in the other corner, weeping into his gloves?

Maybe. Maybe not.

But, to a man, they imitated Iron Mike Friday, inflicting damage, both physical and emotional.

Peyton Caveness, warrior. (Brenna Silveira photo)

Dominic Coffman and Scott Hilborn, operating behind a line of big ol’ boys like William Davidson, Zane Oldenstadt, and Josh Upchurch, ran over Friday Harbor.

Then Wolf QB Logan Downes gashed the already-hurting defense, with fleet-footed receivers like Daylon Houston, Tim Ursu, and Hunter Bronec hauling in buttery-soft passes.

Coupeville scored on each of its first six possessions Friday and wasn’t subtle about it.

Coffman capped an opening 50-yard drive, plunging into the end zone on a short bull run, garnering what would be the first of four touchdowns on the night for the CHS senior.

Tack on a Daylon Houston PAT, force and recover a Friday Harbor fumble three plays later, then score again, and the tone was set.

Touchdowns #2 and #3 also came via Coffman — a 13-yard burst to freedom around the left side, followed by a 25-yard jaunt down the right sideline.

In between those scores, Friday Harbor put together its best drive of the game and got absolutely zip to show for it.

The Wolverines ran 15 plays, starting in the first quarter and ending in the second, went from their own 33-yard line to Coupeville’s 19, but had back-to-back running plays absolutely blown up at the end by CHS defenders.

Facing a fourth-and-nine, Friday Harbor went for the field goal, only to watch in horror as the ball ended up somewhere down around the ferry parking lot instead of splitting the uprights.

Coupeville tacked on a fourth touchdown right before the half, with Downes lofting a scoring strike into the waiting hands of Ursu.

Tim Ursu, unleashed. (Photo courtesy Ashleigh Casey)

Pushing the Wolf advantage to 28-0, it capped a drive in which CHS, facing a fourth-and-four, laughed at the danger and pulled off a 23-yard pass play with Bronec using a death grip to pluck the incoming ball from the heavens.

If Friday Harbor thought it might pull off a miracle second-half comeback, those hopes were dashed.

Quickly.

Hilborn outran a Wolverines receiver in a sprint downfield, then came back to the ball to pick it off, a roundhouse right to the temple for Friday Harbor.

Seconds later (OK, three plays), it was time for the Wolf weapons to detonate one more time.

Knocking Friday Harbor defenders off their feet, Hilborn shot in from 20 yards out for a touchdown, then Coupeville muffed the snap on the PAT.

Which might have been the plan all along, as Daylon Houston stopped in mid-stride, dropped his kicking leg back to Earth, snatched the ball off the sod, and flipped the jets.

Showcasing his wheels, Daniel and Alia’s middle son took off like a bat out of Hell, and beat a pack of defenders to the corner, waving bye-bye-bye as he notched his first two-point conversion of the season.

“Hey Dawson … mom says I’m faster than you.” (Alia Houston photo)

Tack on touchdown #4 for Coffman, this one on a 63-yard rumble down the left sideline, and a final Houston PAT and we had arrived at 43-0 and the end of the third quarter.

Now, give Friday Harbor some credit.

Trying to retain a bit of dignity as the league title was ripped from their hands on the night they celebrated Homecoming, the Wolverines scored twice in the waning moments against Coupeville’s younger players.

Which is fine and dandy, but Coupeville has still outscored its foes 349-101 this year, with Friday’s six-touchdown effort giving the Wolves 50 TD’s.

Riding his four-score effort, Coffman reclaims the team lead with 13 TD’s, while Ursu and Hilborn each have 12.

Downes first-half scoring pass was his 17th touchdown heave of the season, leaving him one off of Joel Walstad’s single-season CHS record of 18, set back in 2014.

As a team, the Wolves have rushed for 24 TD’s and thrown for 18 — freshman Chase Anderson connected on one while subbing for Downes earlier this season.

The school single-season team records, both set in 2014 by Josh Bayne, Walstad, and Co., are 26 TD’s on the ground and 20 through the air.

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Wolf sophomore Hunter Bronec has the most receiving yards of any non-senior this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tim Ursu is money in the bank. (Brenn Sugatan photo)

Roll on, Wolves.

The Coupeville High School football team is off to a 5-1 start after bashing 2A Bellingham 48-6 last week, and the stat sheet reflects a balanced attack on both side of the ball.

From fab frosh to seasoned seniors, 26 different Wolves appear in the numbers compiled by CHS coaches.

With three weeks left in the regular season, a look at where things sit:

 

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Logan Downes — 60-109 for 807 yards with 11 TDs
Chase Anderson — 4-10 for 31 yards with 1 TD

 

Receiving:

Tim Ursu — 21 receptions for 215 yards
Scott Hilborn — 16-205
Daylon Houston — 11-189
Dominic Coffman — 6-133
Hunter Bronec — 4-48
Aiden O’Neill — 1-25
Johnny Porter — 1-14
Cameron Breaux — 1-5
Marquette Cunningham — 1-(-3)

 

Rushing:

Coffman — 59 carries for 465 yards
Hilborn — 39-368
Jo. Porter — 30-135
Downes — 16-58
Ursu — 11-31
O’Neill — 5-17
Jack Porter — 1-8
Xander Stinnett — 2-5
Anderson — 3-4
Devinion Hill — 1-1
Mikey Robinett — 1-0

 

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes — 865
Coffman — 598
Hilborn — 573
Ursu — 246
Houston — 189
Jo. Porter — 149
Hun. Bronec — 48
O’Neill — 42
Anderson — 35
Ja. Porter — 8
Breaux — 5
Stinnett — 5
Hill — 1

 

All-Purpose Yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Hilborn — 673
Coffman — 598
Ursu — 519
Houston — 360
Jo. Porter — 149
Downes — 83
O’Neill — 49
Hun. Bronec — 48
Ja. Porter — 8
Breaux — 5
Stinnett — 5
Anderson — 4
Hill — 1

 

Pancake blocks:

William Davidson — 1
Zane Oldenstadt — 1

 

Touchdowns:

Hilborn — 10
Coffman — 8
Ursu — 8
Jo. Porter — 3
Houston — 2
Downes — 1
O’Neill — 1

 

Conversions:

Ursu — 1

 

PATs:

Houston — 12
Anderson — 11

 

Field Goals:

Houston — 1

 

Points:

Hilborn — 60
Ursu — 50
Coffman — 48
Houston — 27
Jo. Porter — 18
Anderson — 11
Downes — 6
O’Neill — 6
Team — 2

 

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

Hilborn — 57
Ursu — 52
Coffman — 40
Kevin Partida — 40
Peyton Caveness — 30
Jonathan Valenzuela — 26
Davidson — 23
Downes — 18
Josh Upchurch — 17
Robinett — 16
Kai Wong — 10
Houston — 9
O’Neill — 7
Marcelo Gebhard — 6
Oldenstadt — 5
Hurlee Bronec — 2
Coen Killian — 2
Anderson — 1
Myca Clarkson — 1
Ja. Porter – 1

 

Tackles For Loss:

Hilborn — 10
Valenzuela — 6
Coffman — 5
Upchurch — 4
Caveness — 3
Ursu — 3
Robinett — 2
Downes — 1
Partida — 1

 

Interceptions:

Downes — 3
Coffman — 1
Hilborn — 1
O’Neill — 1
Ursu — 1

 

Passes Defensed:

Ursu — 8
Downes — 5
Hilborn — 3
Davidson — 2
O’Neill — 2
Ja. Porter — 1
Valenzuela — 1

 

Fumble recoveries:

Coffman — 3
Caveness — 2
Hilborn — 1
Partida — 1
Upchurch — 1
Ursu — 1
Valenzuela — 1

 

Sacks:

Coffman — 3
Hilborn — 2
Valenzuela — 2
Caveness — 1
Robinett — 1
Upchurch — 1

 

QB Hurries:

Coffman — 4
Davidson — 4
Oldenstadt — 3
Hilborn — 2
Robinett — 1
Wong — 1

 

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Punts:

Downes — 7-255

 

Kickoff returns:

Houston — 4-171
Ursu — 4-155
Hilborn — 3-97
O’Neill — 1-7

 

Punt returns:

Ursu — 6-118
Hilborn — 1-3

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Coupeville senior Dominic Coffman scored four touchdowns in a 48-6 win over Bellingham. (Brent Coffman photo)

The Dominator … dominated.

Coupeville High School senior Dominic Coffman scored four touchdowns, recovered a fumble, and picked off a pass Friday as the 2B Wolves scorched 2A Bellingham 48-6.

For his efforts, the gridiron giant was honored by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, named as one of the group’s Athlete of the Week winners.

Each week during the school year, the WIAA tabs a male and female athlete from each of its classifications — 4A, 3A, 2A, 1A, 2B, and 1B.

Winners receive a letter of recognition from the WIAA Executive Director, a Certificate of Achievement, and a $25 DICK’S Sporting Goods gift card courtesy of Gesa Credit Union.

Coffman doubled his season output with his four-touchdown performance, scoring in multiple ways.

He smashed into the end zone twice on rushing attempts, blowing up Bellingham tacklers on 36 and three-yard runs.

Coffman also hauled in a 50-yard scoring strike from Wolf QB Logan Downes and returned a fumble he forced for another touchdown.

It was the first defensive score this season for the Wolves, who also added a safety in the rout.

With eight touchdowns through six games, Coffman is tied with fellow senior Tim Ursu for second-best on the team, trailing just Scott Hilborn, who has hit paydirt 10 times.

Coupeville is 5-1 heading into a road trip to Leavenworth to play 1A Cascade, the best start by a Wolf football team in years.

To see the official notice hailing Coffman and his fellow winners, pop over to:

https://wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=347

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Coupeville freshman Aiden O’Neill celebrates his first high school interception. (Brenna Silveira photo)

Hide the women and children, cause Dominic Coffman is killin’ folks up in here.

Hitting would-be tacklers hard enough to knock their souls into the next realm, the Coupeville High School senior crashed and banged his way to a four-touchdown night Thursday.

Scoring three different ways — on the ground, through the air, and while playing defense, Coffman sparked the Wolf gridiron squad to a 48-6 demolishing of visiting Bellingham before a sellout crowd.

And the butts were in the seats despite the game being bumped a day early thanks to a ref shortage in the region.

The non-conference victory, coming against a 2A school, lifts 2B Coupeville to 5-1, riding a four-game winning streak as they plan for the longest, and most-dangerous trip of the season.

The Wolves hit the road next Friday, Oct. 14 to travel 140+ miles to Leavenworth to clash with 1A Cascade, which is 5-0 heading into a game with Cashmere.

It’s a rematch for Coupeville against a team which beat them 42-13 on Whidbey last year, though this year’s Wolves are not quite last year’s Wolves.

This time around, CHS, which has three players with eight or more touchdowns — Scott Hilborn, Tim Ursu, and Coffman — has outscored its foes 228-90 and seems to be clicking on all cylinders.

That was certainly the case against Bellingham, with the Wolves rolling up their 48 points in just the first 20 minutes of game time.

Coupeville, despite repping a much-smaller school, had bigger, faster, and much-stronger players than the Bayhawks brought to town.

Bellingham is 2-4 this season, playing an independent schedule during a rebuilding phase, and the Wolves feasted on a foe which couldn’t slow them down.

Hilborn almost broke away for a touchdown on the opening kickoff but settled for scoring on an even more dramatic play a minute or so later.

Wolf quarterback Logan Downes lofted a pass over the Bellingham defense, allowing Hilborn to run past the Bayhawks, then dive while pulling in the falling football.

The 24-yard scoring strike was the first of two touchdowns on the night for Hilborn, pushing his team-leading total to 10.

Tack on a Daylon Houston PAT, and the Wolves were up 7-0 less than two minutes into the game.

Things would not get better for Bellingham.

Coupeville immediately forced a three-and-out thanks to William Davidson and Hilborn savagely taking down Bayhawk runners, then delivered the night’s most giddily violent play.

Taking over at Bellingham’s 36-yard line, Downes handed the ball to Coffman, then looked away so he wouldn’t have to witness the carnage.

Two Bayhawk defenders hit Coffman on his second step, only to have the Dominator flex every muscle in his body and knock both Bellingham players on their keisters.

The resulting bang could be heard in neighboring states, prompting several government officials to question whether a nuke had gone off in the region.

Back on the turf at Mickey Clark Field, Coffman ran straight through several more Bayhawks, shedding tackles and shredding psyches.

Bull-rushing his way to the back of the end zone, he completed the kind of mind-melting power run not seen since former Wolf great Ian Barron used to hit people so hard his own teammates politely declined the opportunity to try and tackle him during practices.

B is for Bellingham, but B is also for bruise, and there will be a lot of the latter in the former tomorrow.

Dominic Coffman? He’d rather run through you than around you. (Bailey Thule photo)

The Bayhawks had their one bright moment of the night in the aftermath, blocking Coupeville’s PAT before driving methodically down the field for their only score.

It came on a short fourth-down run from rugged sophomore Tyler Frost, who churned away all game, though usually with four or five Wolves hanging all over his 230-pound body.

If Bellingham could have frozen time, that moment, when it trailed 13-6, would have been worth remembering.

But the clock waits for no Bayhawk, and the Wolves bit back hard.

Ursu brought the ensuing kickoff back to midfield, and two plays later Downes tossed a 50-yard TD pass to Coffman, with freshman Chase Anderson tacking on the extra point.

If 20-6 looked nice after one quarter of play, 48-6 at the half looked even better.

Fab frosh Aiden O’Neill picked off a pass to open the second quarter, followed by the Wolves scoring on three of the next four snaps.

The only non-scoring play was a “modest” 25-yard run from Coffman, crushing fools with every step.

Otherwise, it was all “celebrate in the end zone, all the time” for the Wolves.

Hilborn zigged and zagged his way to a 45-yard scoring run, Coffman forced a fumble and returned it for Coupeville’s first defensive TD of the year, and a pack of Wolves converged on the Bellingham ballcarrier to net a safety.

In between, freshman Ezra Boilek bashed a kickoff through the end zone for a touchback, earning big kudos from his teammates and Wolf assistant coach Bobby Carr.

Coupeville actually scored again immediately after the safety, only to have a long TD pass negated by a penalty.

Sighing deeply, the Wolves said, “Fine, we’ll work for it,” and used a six-play drive to chip some time off the clock before Coffman plunged in from three yards out to make it 40-6.

The Wolves wrapped up their offensive firepower show with a final touchdown with a hair under four minutes to play in the first half.

Downes did most of the work, scrambling for 49 yards on third-and-10, going down right at the one-yard line.

That allowed sophomore Johnny Porter a chance to stroll in from one yard out on the next play, notching his third touchdown of the season as the Wolf line drove Bellingham’s defense off the field and into the nearby bushes.

Toss in Coupeville’s first two-point conversion of the season, on a pass from Downes to Ursu, and the scoreboard was in full melt-down mode.

Bellingham tried to salvage a little self-respect on the final drive of the half, but Coupeville’s defense was unwilling to relent.

Mikey Robinett blew up a runner in the backfield, Hilborn crushed a Bayhawk a millisecond after he yanked a bad snap off the ground, and Jonathan Valenzuela sacked Bellingham’s QB on fourth down.

With the game a rout, the second half was all about a running clock getting the visitors back on the bus and headed home to the big city.

Coffman and Ursu both collected interceptions, though what should have been a pick-six for Ursu was denied thanks to one of his teammates getting caught delivering a chop block to a Bayhawk.

As the Wolf faithful celebrated, even with another day of school and work looming, CHS head coach Bennett Richter basked in the afterglow.

He got every player in uniform into the game Thursday and won on wife Megan’s birthday.

As the stadium lights turned off overhead, Richter’s smile lit up the darkness.

“This? This is fun!”

And then he was off to plan for Cascade.

Wolves (l to r) William Davidson, Mikey Robinett, Logan Downes, and Zane Oldenstadt enjoy a big win. (Michelle Glass photo)

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Sophomores Mia Farris and Hurlee Bronec kick off a parade of Coupeville High School Homecoming royalty. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s Homecoming festivities from a different angle.

John Fisken pops up to offer the pics seen above and below, which capture Friday’s halftime tribute to Coupeville High School’s royalty.

From fresh-faced frosh to seasoned seniors, they all get their moment in the (setting) sun.

Senior girls (l to r) Carolyn Lhamon, Ryanne Knoblich, Karyme Castro-Sotelo, and Alita Blouin bask in the spotlight.

Senior boys (l to r) Tim Ursu, Daylon Houston, Cameron Gates, and Dominic Coffman await the announcement of King.

Juniors William Davidson and Skylar Parker are on the scene.

Coupeville’s mascots join the festivities.

Fab frosh Abbigail Bond and Aiden O’Neill, earning honors early in their career.

All is revealed, as hidden balloons point to the King and Queen.

Coffman and Blouin promise to be benevolent rulers.

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