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   Mason Grove fires up a serve for a Wolf tennis squad which came within a whisker of winning a third-straight league title. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Allison Wenzel and Hope Lodell (1) are part of a deep senior class which carried the CHS spikers to back-to-back league crowns.

   Coupeville’s football season started strongly, but an astonishing run of injuries made life difficult in the second half of the season.

   Lauren Bayne’s fan club saw her help lead the Wolf soccer squad to a program record-tying eight wins.

Surprises, until the end.

Capping the final day of regular-season play for fall sports, Chimacum football shocked Klahowya 17-14 in overtime Friday night.

The first time the Cowboys have beaten the Eagles on the gridiron since the 1A Olympic League formed in 2014, it gave Chimacum’s oldest players a great parting gift on their Senior Night.

Preventing Klahowya from notching another league win also aids Coupeville, allowing the Wolves to stay right on the heels of the Eagles for varsity wins spread across four fall sports.

With conference play complete in girls soccer, volleyball, boys tennis and football, KSS holds a 21-20 edge over CHS as we exit the fall and head for the basketball court.

Port Townsend, with seven wins, and Chimacum, with five, are lagging way back in the hinterlands at the moment.

Coupeville, which captured the varsity wins crown in 2016-2017, after two years of narrowly being nipped by Klahowya, is riding high thanks to its female athletes.

An undefeated, league-title winning volleyball squad and a solid, second-place soccer unit have compensated for a football team which was ripped asunder by a historic run of injuries.

With two Olympic League teams still active in the postseason (Coupeville volleyball and Klahowya soccer are state-bound), standings through Nov. 5:

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 7-0 9-1
Charles Wright 6-1 8-2
Bellevue Christian 4-3 4-6
Klahowya 3-4 3-7
Port Townsend 3-4 3-7
Chimacum 2-5 4-6
Vashon Island 2-5 2-8
COUPEVILLE 1-6 3-7

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 9-0 13-3
Klahowya 5-4 7-9
Port Townsend 3-6 6-12
Chimacum 1-8 1-11

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 9-0 17-1
COUPEVILLE 6-3 8-9
Chimacum 2-7 2-11-1
Port Townsend 1-8 2-13

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Klahowya 4-1 12-2
COUPEVILLE 4-2 6-7
Chimacum 0-5 0-11

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   The only thing associated with Coupeville High School football which wasn’t injured this season. (David Stern photo)

The season started with great promise, only to end with great frustration.

With a roster ripped asunder by injuries, a severely-depleted Coupeville High School football team could have made a pretty good argument in favor of forfeiting its finale.

But the Wolves skipped the easy way out, pulled together what players they had left and traveled to Puyallup Saturday, where they were hammered 70-6 by a state-ranked, playoff-bound, very-healthy Cascade Christian squad.

The loss, Coupeville’s fifth straight after losing explosive two-way stars Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, drops them to a final mark of 1-6 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-7 overall.

After starting the season 2-0, with wins over South Whidbey and La Conner, CHS was flying high.

Even after tough losses to Nooksack Valley and Charles Wright Academy, both of which have qualified for the 16-team state tourney, the Wolves rebounded by thrashing Vashon.

But that night, while a romp on the scoreboard, was the beginning of the end.

Smith, the team’s leading receiver and owner of seven Wolf football records, and Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading rusher and tackler, were both lost for the season after sustaining devastating injuries.

After that, the pain never stopped coming, claiming, among others, key two-way starters Matt Hilborn, Chris Battaglia, Andrew Martin, and, in the final game, the team’s leading scorer, Cameron Toomey-Stout.

Coupeville went to Puyallup missing its top four rushers, and six of the 10 players with at least one rushing attempt, and the Cougars savaged what was left of the Wolf roster.

In a small win for the Wolves, they became only the second league team to score against Cascade Christian this season, something even Charles Wright failed to do.

Wolf quarterback Hunter Downes tossed the 35th and final touchdown pass of his career, dropping it into the hands of fellow senior Jake Hoagland to momentarily pull Coupeville to a 6-6 tie early in the first quarter.

With both teams on the board, but having missed PATs, there was the briefest thought the game might be close.

It was, though, the briefest of brief.

Cascade Christian tacked on four more touchdowns in the first quarter, with one coming off of a 53-yard bomb on the first play after the Cougars took over on downs, and the rout was officially on.

Five more TDs and a safety came in the second quarter, as the Cougar starters wrapped up their night with a 37-point second-quarter.

The biggest weapon for Cascade, as it has been all season, was Madden Tobeck, son of 14-year NFL veteran (and former Seahawk) Robbie Tobeck.

Coupeville’s depleted defense had no answer for him, or Tyquan Coleman or Parker Johnson. Or, basically for anyone in a Cougar uniform.

That job now falls to Cascade Christian’s first-round playoff foe, Nooksack Valley, and the other 14 teams gunning for a 1A state title.

For the Wolves, time to put away their pads and helmets, try and focus on the positives of the season, and, for those healthy, turn their attention to basketball.

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   Julian Welling sweet-talks the rival QB. “I like you, dude, I really do … but I’m still gonna have to body-slam you. It’s not personal, just business.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville’s cheer squad, the loudest ‘n proudest in the game.

Wolf QB Hunter Downes scans the defense, looking for an opening.

   Wolf cheerleader turned cheer coach Amanda Jones hangs out with her fearless daughter.

“Where do you think you’re going??”

Absolutely, positively up to shenanigans.

Camtastic being Camtastic.

“I … am … outta here!!”

He finally made it to town.

With his son Michael a starter for the Oak Harbor High School football team, wanderin’ photo man John Fisken hasn’t been seen in Coupeville during any football games.

Until this past Friday, when the Wolves lucked out thanks to OHHS holding its Homecoming game on a Thursday.

Camera(s) in hand, Fisken went right back to work, and the pics above are courtesy him.

To see a ton more action photos, pop over to the link below.

And, when you do, remember, purchases fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Football/2017-10-27-vs-Chimicum/

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   Lauren Rose and Coupeville volleyball sail into the postseason flying high. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a donnybrook, and we’re only (almost) a third of the way into the fight.

With regular season play done for volleyball, soccer and tennis, and just one more week of football left, year #4 of the Olympic League is again a two-team tussle.

Klahowya, the second-biggest 1A school in the state, and Coupeville, the sixth-smallest, are all but tied as we begin to make the turn and look ahead to basketball season.

The Eagles hold a narrow 21-20 lead on the Wolves, when varsity wins across those four sports are totaled up.

Meanwhile, way in the back, Port Townsend sits with seven victories and Chimacum four.

Coupeville volleyball and Klahowya soccer, which both went 9-0 in conference action, winning their second and fourth consecutive titles, respectively, were the cream of the crop.

With both tennis squads tying with four wins apiece, the edge has come down to football, where the Wolves have been hammered by the worst spate of season-ending injuries in several decades.

KSS is not only much healthier, but gets the better draw in the season’s final game next week, traveling to Chimacum, while CHS visits state-ranked Cascade Christian.

However those games break down, one thing is certain — the battle for league supremacy remains truly a battle as we head into the second of three legs.

League standings, through Oct. 29:

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 6-0 8-1
Charles Wright 5-1 7-2
Bellevue Christian 3-3 3-6
Klahowya 3-3 3-6
Port Townsend 3-3 3-6
Vashon Island 2-4 2-7
COUPEVILLE 1-5 3-6
Chimacum 1-5 3-6

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 9-0 12-2
Klahowya 5-4 7-8
Port Townsend 3-6 5-11
Chimacum 1-8 1-11

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 9-0 15-1
COUPEVILLE 6-3 8-9
Chimacum 2-7 2-11-1
Port Townsend 1-8 2-13

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Klahowya 4-1 12-2
COUPEVILLE 4-2 6-7
Chimacum 0-5 0-11

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   Kyle Rockwell leads off our Senior Night football portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hunter Smith

Cameron Toomey-Stout

James Vidoni

Tyler McCalmont

Hunter Downes

Jake Hoagland

Julian Welling

Their final Friday Nights Lights at home began in the daylight.

Before the Coupeville High School football squad teed it up against Chimacum, coaches, fans and parents took time to hail eight seniors.

From a record-setting quarterback to the linemen who protected him, they make a diverse bunch, all caught on film by John Fisken.

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