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Posts Tagged ‘flag football’

Flag football mania is sweeping the nation.

Or at least Whidbey Island, as Camp Casey is hosting a free clinic Sept. 6 for players ages 5-12.

After that, the YMCA will run an eight-week flag football league for interested players. Cost for the league is $50 per player.

For more info, pop back up to the pics above for all the details.

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Coupeville QB Dawson Houston, who will be a senior this fall, returns to lead a football team which is transitioning to an independent schedule for a season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s a positive buzz in the air.

Coupeville High School’s football coaching staff met with players and parents Wednesday, acknowledging challenges which face the Wolf gridiron program, while focusing on the positives.

With gear being issued Thursday, and spring practice kicking off the next day, 40-50 people were in the stands in the CHS gym as head coach Marcus Carr kicked off his second season at the helm of the program.

“I’m looking forward to getting started!” he said.

Carr is currently hoping for somewhere in the range of 22-25 players, which would be very solid given 10 of the 22 players on last fall’s season-ending roster graduate next week.

The roster should be headlined by next year’s seniors, key contributors such as Sean Toomey-Stout, Andrew Martin, Dawson Houston, and Gavin Knoblich.

Younger players such as Gabe Shaw and Brian Casey have added muscle, while former CMS star Dakota Eck, who returned to town this spring after starting high school elsewhere, was one of several potential new players in the audience.

Coupeville, which started 3-1 last season before injuries steadily chipped away at the team’s depth during an 0-5 league campaign, is switching up the plan this season.

With the school expected to drop to 2B when new classification counts go into effect for the 2020-2021 school year, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith was granted permission for the football program to go independent this fall.

All other Wolf sports teams remain in the 1A North Sound Conference next school year.

Football, however, will play a schedule made up of schools, ranging from 2B-3A, which are in the same boat as Coupeville’s gridiron squad, which has been small in numbers, and undersized in the trenches.

South Whidbey (and the battle for The Bucket) remains on the schedule, as does Port Townsend, La Conner, Friday Harbor, and Vashon Island.

But Kittitas, Northwest Christian, Interlake, and Anacortes will be new to Wolf fans.

“Most of the teams in our league had lines which averaged 230-245 pounds a guy, and our size just doesn’t match up right now,” Carr told his audience.

“We were looking for smaller schools, schools new to football (like Northwest Christian), or schools closer to us in numbers,” he added. “This will give us a chance to be competitive, get our system in place and help our players prepare for the (likely) move to 2B.”

CHS coaches are putting a major emphasis on player safety, and hope to lessen injuries, keeping players on the field all season and able to compete at a top level.

The school purchased Guardian Caps, soft shell covers which slip over the player’s helmets, and provide another layer of safety during practices.

According to reviews, the caps “reduce the overall buildup of small blows that occur over the course of a season by allowing greater energy dissipation at the point of contact with a pliable material.”

The Wolves will also have “less live tackling” in practice, while teaching proper techniques and utilizing The Tackle Wheel in place of always crashing into live bodies.

“I know some of you are going to try and jump through it while it’s moving,” Carr said of the device, which resembles a giant doughnut.

“And if you do that, you’re gonna feel pretty good about yourself. We’ll see if any of you are that talented…”

The team has also added Iron Neck devices, used to stabilize the neck and help strengthen muscles during workouts.

“You work on your neck muscles, it helps with everything,” Carr said.

The Wolf football coach wants to be able to turn to the sideline and see more than one or two reserves by midway through the season.

“We want to reduce in-practice injuries and have our guys be ready for the season,” Carr said. “We want to make sure we’re being safe and keeping everyone healthy.”

Along with safety, keeping players focused on putting in time in the weight room, which has been key to every successful football program since players wore leather helmets, is a major goal.

“Our summer weight program is very important,” Carr said. “Other teams are in there on a regular basis, and we should be, too, if we want to compete with them.

“We need to make every minute in there count.”

While laying out the day-to-day program for the season-to-come, Carr also took side detours to show off the team’s glossy new helmet stickers and have son/assistant coach Bobby detail a community service project for the Wolves.

The younger Carr is a professional painter, and is arranging for the CHS players to join him in painting the building used by the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club.

Along with the Carrs, returning CHS coaches include Bennett Richter, Tyson Boon, and Gabe Shaw, Sr.

Nathan Bellamy’s schedule won’t allow him to coach this fall, and Kwamane Bowens has moved out of state to pursue his musical career, but Brett Casey is moving up from the middle school to join the CHS coaching staff.

He became available when Smith shut down the CMS football program, citing a severe lack of players.

The middle school had to cancel half of its six-game schedule last fall.

Coupeville’s stated plan is to replace tackle football with flag football before high school, but little is known about the new proposal, which would reportedly include athletes in grades 3-8.

Smith was at a different meeting Wednesday, so issues such as whether the Boys and Girls Club will be involved, and whether the Wolves will play other schools, or just compete in-house, were tabled for another day.

Instead, the focus remained on the high school program (and the free pizza the players were eyeballing) and with Marcus Carr working the room like a pro, projecting a calm confidence, things seemed pretty good.

“We have to be in the weight room and dedicated to putting on muscle,” the CHS head coach told his audience. “And most of all, we need everyone putting in the effort in the classroom. That’s the big thing.

“We’ll go forward and tackle all our challenges, get bigger and better, get people in the right spots, and do our thing.

“We’ll be just fine.”

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Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

   Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

The strength of the Wolf is the pack.

Proving that to be true, 20 Coupeville High School football players showed up Friday — on a day when there was no school — to help their coaches run a flag football clinic for local children.

The event, put on through the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club, drew 28 participants, said CHS head football coach Brett Smedley.

“We had a great turn out and they had a great time!” he said.

Drawing in both girls and boys on a sunny afternoon, the clinic featured a mix of lessons and fun.

As he continues to build his own program at the high school, Smedley is also reaching out to the sport at other levels.

Getting assistance from a wide range of helpers was invaluable, he said.

“I’d like to thank the Boys and Girls Club, Coupeville Elementary, the CHS Football Team, Coach (Bob) Martin, and Coach (Ryan) King for putting this on!”

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Bailey

  Want to soar like McKenzie Bailey one day? Start playing today. (John Fisken photo)

Flaf gootball

The gridiron beckons. (Photos courtesy Coupeville Boys & Girls Club)

VB

Get your spike on.

It’s never too soon to start planning for summer.

While we’re only in the first weekend of April, registration is open for flag football and volleyball being offered later this year through the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club.

The football league, which is open to children in grades 3-6, is free, and will take place May 6.

Volleyball camp, which will be split for two groups (K-2 and 3-8), runs June 24-25 and costs $25 and $50, respectively.

To find out more, take a gander at the extra-helpful pics above, which contain most of the pertinent info.

To register, or seek more knowledge, or both, pop over to:

https://sites.google.com/a/coupevilleboysandgirlsclub.org/current/athletics

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Start playing football today, and one day you could be suiting up for CHS like Hunter Downes (?). (John Fisken photo)

Start playing football today, and one day you could be suiting up for CHS like Hunter Downes (9). (John Fisken photo)

You’re never too young to be a gridiron warrior.

The Boys and Girls Club is starting a four-week flag football program for Coupeville kids in grades 3-6, which will give young athletes a chance to pick up the sport in a fun, low-key environment long before they reach middle and high school.

Cost is $25 and the clinics, which start this Thursday, Sept. 18, will cover offense, defense, throwing techniques, stretching, light conditioning, and rules.

To register, email Jamie@coupevilleboysandgirlsclub.org or call (360) 678-5640.

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