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Injuries and a lack of depth on the roster has brought the Coupeville Middle School football season to an early end. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves, who were low on experienced players, went 0-3, but showed marked improvement.

Down, but not out.

Injuries and lack of depth on the roster is slicing the Coupeville Middle School football schedule in half.

The Wolves, who scrambled to field a team, opened the season with 14 players under first-year head coach Brett Casey.

After cancelling their first game because of not enough players being eligible, CMS played twice against Sultan and once again Langley, going 0-3 but showing marked improvement.

But injuries have reduced the roster to 12 players, and Friday morning Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith pulled the plug on the remainder of the season.

The Wolves final two games, home contests against King’s Oct. 10, and Langley Oct. 17, have been cancelled.

While the season didn’t completely play out as Casey and assistant coaches Junior Scroggins and Michael Davidson would have liked, the trio remain committed to building the program.

Casey is already moving forward with an eye on the future:

I am disappointed that the season is over. We had two games left and 12 players; the decision to cancel the season did not come from me.

Moving forward, I am trying to get the boys in the weight room to introduce them to that and keep them in shape for their next sport.

Looking back on this season, the boys were improving each week and that is what I was looking for.

The offense started to understand who they needed to block on plays and the running backs were seeing the holes they needed to hit.

Defensively, they were swarming the ball carriers and were trying to force fumbles.

They were figuring out how to play as a team, which was something we talked about during our shortened season.

Next year, the coaches will be able to talk to the boys before school is out and get more kids out.

I have talked with the (high school) varsity coaches and we will piggyback off of them during spring ball.

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Freshman Audrianna Shaw is part of a Coupeville High School girls soccer team which captured its second win last week. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You win some, you lose some, you move on.

Coupeville High School fall sports teams pulled a .500 record last week, winning three varsity contests and losing three.

Volleyball and soccer fell to King’s, the defending state champs in both sports, then rebounded to drill non-conference foe Port Townsend headed into Homecoming.

That shindig was painful for the Wolf football squad, which was pounded for the first time this season.

With just three regular-season games left, the lopsided loss to Sultan also puts a big crimp in the pursuit of a playoff berth.

Meanwhile, off in its own world, the CHS tennis squad continued to surprise, toppling Bush, and solidifying its better-than-expected standing in the Emerald City League, AKA The Toughest Tennis Conference in the State.

Things get busy in the week ahead, with all four of the Coupeville teams which keep track of wins and losses (plus cross country, which bops to its own tune) facing a full schedule.

Volleyball and soccer square off with Sultan, which is mired in the North Sound Conference cellar in both sports, then go toe-to-toe with the more-dangerous Cedar Park Christian.

The spikers go right through next weekend, as well, heading off to Wenatchee for a big tourney.

Tennis gets three foes, weather permitting, and both of the league teams they’re scheduled to play — Bush and Bear Creek — are squads they’ve already beaten.

In the middle is a non-league match-up with long-time nemesis Friday Harbor.

But perhaps the single biggest game of the week comes next Friday, Oct. 12, when the CHS football team travels down Island to square off with South Whidbey.

The stakes are huge.

It’s Homecoming for the Falcons. The Bucket, which Coupeville has held for two years, is on the line. And, most importantly, if the Wolves want to have any realistic shot at making the playoffs, they need a win and they need it now.

So lace up your shoes, brace your very soul, and let’s get ready to rumble all next week.

 

Standings through Oct. 7:

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
King’s 4-0 7-1
COUPEVILLE 3-1 6-1
CPC-Bothell 2-2 6-3
South Whidbey 2-2 5-4
Granite Falls 1-3 3-5
Sultan 0-4 3-5


North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell 2-0 4-1
King’s 2-0 2-4
South Whidbey 1-1 4-2
Sultan 1-1 2-4
COUPEVILLE 0-2 3-3
Granite Falls 0-2 0-6


North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
King’s 6-0 10-1-0
Granite Falls 4-2 4-5-1
South Whidbey 4-2 6-4-1
CPC-Bothell 3-3 6-5-0
COUPEVILLE 1-5 2-8-1
Sultan 0-6 4-8-0


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Seattle Academy 10-0 10-0
Overlake 7-3 7-3
University Prep 7-3 7-4
COUPEVILLE 5-4 5-4
South Whidbey 3-6 3-6
Bush 3-7 3-7
Bear Creek 2-8 2-8
Eastside Prep 0-6 0-6

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CHS freshman Gabe Shaw snagged his first varsity reception Friday during a loss to Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let’s be honest, Friday was not a great night for Coupeville High School football.

First off, no cameos by renegade deer, so we miss out on having a video go viral for a third time in one season.

If you dig deep enough (and we will), you can find a few bright spots, but, overall, being bashed 38-6 by visiting Sultan was frustrating, a bit demoralizing and painful in multiple ways for the Wolves.

The Homecoming loss, in which it didn’t get on the scoreboard until the final minutes, drops Coupeville to 0-2 in North Sound Conference play, 3-3 overall.

The Wolves are tied with Granite Falls (0-2), a game off of South Whidbey (1-1) and Sultan (1-1) and two back of King’s (2-0) and Cedar Park Christian (2-0), with three league games left on the schedule.

CPC bounced South Whidbey 35-20 Friday, while King’s held on to nip Granite Falls 13-12.

While the postseason schedule hasn’t been released, early word indicates four of the league’s six teams will make the playoffs, earning a chance in week #10 to play for a berth in the 16-team state tourney.

CHS travels to Langley next Friday to play their Island rivals for ownership of The Bucket.

The Wolves will be looking to run their dominance over the Falcons to three straight years, but the game will also have a huge say in how realistic Coupeville’s chances of advancing to the playoffs may be.

Hopefully it will be a week of healing for the guys in black and red, as several of them exited Friday’s game early.

Starting QB Dawson Houston and two-way terror Andrew Martin both ended up on the sidelines with injuries, while starters Chris Battaglia and Jake Pease were in street clothes from the start of the game.

Sultan was exactly what everyone expected, a rough and tumble team which played smash-mouth football, picked up a lot of yards (and a lot of penalties, including having a player ejected), and hit with abandon, both during the play and often after the whistle.

Turk QB Jensen Webster was the man with the plan, using his fleet feet to beat the Wolves to the edges when he ran (which was often), then dropping a couple of pin-point passes.

The Sultan senior scored twice on the ground on short runs, while also burning Coupeville for a pair of 30+ yard touchdown flings, including one on which the receiver slipped behind the defense and had no one within 20 yards of his body as he hauled in the scoring lob.

Tack on two more scores on the ground, and the Turks were in control from start to finish, taking a 20-0 lead in at the half, then stretching it out to 38-0 before surrendering a late Wolf score.

Sultan also spent much of the game hammering Coupeville, severely limiting its offensive output.

About the only thing the Turks couldn’t do was hit on PAT tries, as they missed all three kicks and were stuffed on two of three two-point conversion attempts.

One of Coupeville’s few real bright points came when senior Alex Turner crashed through the line and blocked an extra-point try, before sneaking away, dramatically waving his hands.

He also collected a team-high 10 tackles, doing his best to stymie the Turks.

Alex played extremely well on defense,” said Coupeville coach Marcus Carr. “He was a strong leader for us out there.”

With Sultan keeping control of the ball for large chunks of time, the Wolves had plenty of opportunities to pile up the tackles.

Sean Toomey-Stout chased down eight ball-carriers from his spot in the secondary, while Martin racked up six tackles before exiting the game.

Offense was more of an issue for Coupeville, as it turned the ball over on downs five times.

Toss in two botched punts — one of which went for five yards and another which netted zip as the refs ruled the Wolves inadvertently downed the ball before they got the kick off — and two interceptions, and the engine was sputtering.

The Wolves finally broke through late in the fourth quarter, when they put together their only sustained drive of the night.

Shane Losey, having slid under center after Houston exited limping, connected on a couple of quick passes to Dane Lucero and Gabe Shaw, and a roughing the passer penalty on Sultan moved the Wolves a chunk of yardage closer to the end zone.

Within striking distance, Toomey-Stout, who was hit late on multiple runs by the frequently-chippy Turks, blasted in from 10 yards out for his eighth touchdown of the season.

“The Torpedo” is carrying the scoring burden for the Wolves this season, with no other CHS player having reached the end zone more than once.

Toomey-Stout also had Coupeville’s most-dynamic play of the night, and, while it didn’t gain much yardage, it was still a pretty piece of work.

Losey, scrambling away from several rampaging Turks, zipped a pass in to a narrow target, only to have the ball hit a hand and pop skyward.

As it did, Toomey-Stout launched himself over a rival, snagged the free-falling ball and pulled it in for a reception, even as he got smacked hard from defenders coming in from two sides.

For what was ultimately a four-yard reception, it still drew appreciative “ooh’s” and “ah’s,” as is only right.

If we’re really digging for bright spots, we can add Shaw, a freshman, netting his first varsity reception, Gavin St Onge blowing up a couple of Turk runners while working hard on the line, and Matt Hilborn doing a bit of everything.

The Wolf senior laced one well-hit punt for 50-some yards, crashed hard through the defense as a rusher and receiver, yanked a runaway Turk down to save a TD, and was elected Homecoming King, even though he was with his team and not present when he and Queen Sarah Wright were honored.

Oh, and CHS debuted its new permanent ticket booth/concession stand/bathrooms/fancy entrance to Mickey Clark Field, and the day-long deluge of rain stopped right before kickoff.

Some nights you find your positives where you can.

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Dominic Coffman forced a fumble and recovered another one Thursday afternoon in Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Find positives and build on them.

That’s one of the goals for the Coupeville Middle School football coaching staff as it tries to hold a very-thin Wolf roster together, while also teaching and building for the future.

Thursday afternoon in Sultan, CMS fell 30-0 and lost starting QB Nathan Ginnings to a broken arm, but the Wolves scrambled.

They moved Scott Hilborn under center and let him create, they moved a couple of players into positions they hadn’t played before, and they continued to play scrappy, opportunistic ball.

“The bright side is we stopped all their extra points,” said Coupeville coach Brett Casey. “Our defense played great.”

While the Wolves were beaten twice on big pass plays (“we had great coverage, they just had a little better play”), they forced three turnovers.

William “The Cornish Game Hen” Davidson and Dominic “The Dominator” Coffman forced fumbles, with Mike Robinett, Josh Upchurch and Coffman snatching up the loose balls.

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William “The Cornish Game Hen” Davidson kicks off a look at CMS football portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Josh Upchurch

Nathan Ginnings

Scott Hilborn

Coaches (l to r) Michael Davidson, Brett Casey and Junior Scroggins lead a 14-man squad.

Nicholas Guay

Timothy Ursu

Owen Shelly

Mike Robinett

They wear two faces.

On the field, lined up against their rivals, they are merciless and determined.

But, off the field, with a little coaxing from the cameraman, most of the Coupeville Middle School football players bust out a smile.

Grandmas everywhere will be happy.

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