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   Matt Hilborn ripped off a 12-yard scoring run Friday, his second touchdown of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was a rough one to sit through for many, many reasons.

A spectacularly inefficient refereeing crew derailed any sense of momentum Friday night, raining down a never-ending stream of penalty flags and stretching out the Coupeville vs. Charles Wright Academy football game well beyond its recommended running time.

To their credit, the refs weren’t one-sided.

To their discredit, they were just flat out stinky on both ends of the field, though they ultimately stung the Wolves worse.

And frankly, Coupeville’s gridiron players didn’t respond tremendously well, allowing frustration to seep in as they watched a one-score game rapidly slip away and turn into a 52-20 defeat.

The loss, coming in the Olympic/Nisqually League opener for both teams, drops the Wolves to 2-2 overall, 0-1 in league play.

There was a moment, late in the first half, when it looked like Coupeville was in control of the game.

Rallying from a 13-0 deficit, the Wolves broke through on an electrifying 68-yard touchdown pass from Hunter Downes to Cameron Toomey-Stout.

It came on a fourth-and-eight from their own 32-yard line, with Downes double-clutching, then rifling a shot into the great unknown on which his speedy receiver outran a CWA defender to snag the ball in full stride.

A play later, Wolf senior Hunter Smith picked off the Tarrier QB for the second time — his first interception allowed Smith to break a tie with Josh Bayne and claim the CHS career record for picks — and Coupeville was starting to roll.

Downes marched the Wolves 68 yards down the field, mixing passes to Smith and Toomey-Stout with a run by Matt Hilborn and a crucial face mask penalty by Charles Wright.

Coupeville was sitting first and goal at the eight-yard line, ready to retake the lead and carry all the momentum into halftime.

But it wasn’t to be, as a short run by Sean Toomey-Stout was stuffed at the five, then three straight passes fell incomplete.

At which point, everything which could go wrong for Coupeville did.

It started with Sean Toomey-Stout, Coupeville’s leading tackler on defense this season, getting dinged up and spending the rest of the game on the sideline undergoing concussion protocol.

Then the refs got nasty, issuing three consecutive penalties on the Wolves, allowing CWA enough life to stage a miracle last-second drive and tack on a score on the first half’s final play.

While the refs shocked everyone by not throwing a single flag in the third quarter — don’t worry, they would make up for it in spades in the fourth — Charles Wright’s running game, personified by Asher Shakoor-Asadi, did more than enough damage on its own.

The silky-smooth Tarrier junior busted off two more touchdown runs, giving him four on the night, and a 27-0 third quarter surge crushed every last Wolf hope.

Coupeville didn’t go down without a fight, getting touchdown runs in the fourth from Downes and Hilborn, but that was small consolation.

The flags flew in flurries in the fourth, Smith was blatantly robbed of a touchdown reception by a ref whose seeing-eye dog promptly slunk out of the stadium in shame, and then the Wolves took a late sucker punch.

Junior Chris Battaglia, who is #2 on the team both in rushing yardage and tackles, was ejected when a tackle which went high was questionably ruled a punch.

That’s a double whammy, since an ejection in high school play results in the player being suspended for a game.

Barring a successful appeal — and WIAA rules make it virtually impossible to win, going as far as not allowing teams to present video proof of the ref being wrong — Battaglia will miss next Friday’s game at Vashon Island.

By the end the game was well out of hand, both on the scoreboard and with the zebra’s inability to understand their own rule book.

Much time was spent with the reffing crew huddled together arguing/debating/trying to correct blatant mistakes and it was beyond tiring.

“There’s another flag on the field” vied with “oh lord, they’re not talking again, are they” as two minutes on the game clock frequently translated into 10 minutes on people’s watches.

In the mash-up of emotion at the end — coaches on both sidelines were visibly upset at times, though genuine anger ruled on Coupeville’s sidelines by the final gun — a few strong plays by role players might have been missed.

Lineman Kyle Rockwell, making his debut, earned praise from an otherwise beyond-frustrated CHS coach Jonathan Atkins, and Jean Lund-Olsen showed no quit.

A botched Wolf running play on the next-to-last play of the night turned into a fumble which Charles Wright almost brought back for a game-capping 80-yard defensive touchdown.

Lund-Olsen though, sprinting full tilt from one end of the field to the other, caught the shocked Tarrier and slung him to the turf at about the two-yard line.

On a long, frustrating, angry night, it was an unexpected positive note for the Wolves, a sign that, even with the world conspiring against them, they’ll keep on fighting.

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   Mathias Anderson (5) and Nezi Keiper pose for a photo Thursday after making their debut as CMS football players. (Sarah Saunders photo)

   A young, fairly inexperienced Wolf squad almost pulled off a stunning comeback. (Bob Martin photo)

It came dangerously close to being a miracle comeback.

If you went to the parking lot just a hair early Thursday, you missed a wild finish to the season debut of the Coupeville Middle School football squad.

Down by two scores with under a minute to play, the Wolves pulled off half a stunning rally, only to finally have luck (and the clock) run out on them in a 21-14 loss to visiting Chimacum.

Damon Stadler sent a jolt of electricity through the packed bleachers, ripping a ball free and careening 80+ yards down the left sideline for a defensive touchdown with just 43 ticks left on the clock.

That pulled CMS from the brink of a sure loss to the tantalizing possibility of overtime, but it wasn’t to be, as Chimacum fell on Xavier Murdy’s ensuing onside kick.

The late-game heroics capped a game in which a thin, inexperienced Coupeville squad held its own pretty dang well.

Wolf coach Bob Martin has 20 players on his roster, but five of those weren’t wearing pads Thursday, leaving him with a fairly short bench.

Chimacum, which featured a surprisingly beefy line, controlled the pace of the game in the early going, building a 14-0 lead by running, running some more, then running one final time.

The Wolves sputtered a bit on offense in the first half, finally putting everything together on their final possession before halftime.

Caleb Meyer got things going when he brought back a kick-off 35 yards, then Murdy went to work under center.

The CMS 8th grader, replacing the departed Cade Golden at QB, hit Scott Hilborn and Hawthorne Wolfe on short passes to soften the defense, before connecting with Cody Roberts on his first scoring play.

A 36-yard catch-and-run, in which Roberts shed several would-be tacklers as he rambled down the left sideline, put CMS on the board, though the extra point attempt was thwarted by a bad snap.

The two teams burned some serious clock in the third quarter, going through 12 scoreless minutes during which each team had just a single possession.

If you were expecting Chimacum to go away from its clock-burning ways in the fourth quarter, you’d be out a few bucks, as the Cowboys continued to use a steady stream of runs to milk time.

When they finally bashed in their third score of the afternoon on a five-yard plunge up the middle, they had frittered away another eight-plus minutes, finally exiting the field up 21-6 with 3:52 to play.

Not having been on offense since early in the third quarter, Coupeville promptly went three and out and all the Cowboys had to do was run the clock out.

Enter Stadler and cue the miracle that almost was.

After his touchdown was made official — a flag on the field momentarily put a damper on things, but turned out not to be a Wolf spirit-crusher — Murdy nailed the PAT kick, which in middle school football is worth two points.

Coupeville set up for an onside kick, hoping to retrieve the ball and have a shot at a tie or win, but Murdy’s kick didn’t take a vicious enough bounce and a Cowboy fell face-first on it, ending things with a whimper and not a bang.

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   Wolf senior QB Hunter Downes is on target to erase almost every passing record in school history. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Middle school ball and the birth of a gunslinger.

Freshman year.

Downes and the man he’s chasing on the record board, Brad Sherman.

Brad Sherman.

Ian Smith.

Corey Cross.

Bob Rea.

What do those four share in common?

Well, for one thing, they’re among the best quarterbacks to ever run the Coupeville High School offense.

Scan the football record board in the gym hallway, or talk to anyone who witnessed them play in person, and it’s obvious — they set or redefined the standard for Wolf signal callers.

But now, as we head towards the fourth game of his senior season, we need to take a moment to pay tribute to the current CHS gunslinger, Hunter Downes.

He might not be as tall as Sherman, now the program’s offensive coordinator, or as legendary as Cross, whose exploits in the ’70s are related in hushed whispers, but Downes is on target to bust every record they, or any other Wolf QB, ever set.

As a junior, Downes tossed four touchdowns on the road at Bellevue Christian, tying Sherman and Cross for the school’s single-game record.

This year, he’s chasing the big four QB records — season and career marks for passing yardage and TD’s.

Sherman holds the career records with 3,613 yards and 33 scoring strikes, while the season-bests belong to Smith (1,848 yards in 2010) and Joel Walstad (18 TD’s in 2014).

Through three games Downes has 650 yards and eight TD’s. If he keeps that pace up, he’d finish the 2017 season with 2,167 and 27.

Career-wise, he enters Friday’s home game with Charles Wright Academy having amassed 2,491 yards and 26 TD’s in 16 games (three as a sophomore, 10 as a junior and three this year).

Play the final seven games of the regular season at the same pace as the first three, and Downes would walk off the field with career totals of 4,008 and 45, respectively.

Now, of course, nothing is set in stone.

Downes, more than most, knows that, as his career almost stalled just as it was starting to take off.

He won the starting QB job as a sophomore, throwing for 139 yards and a touchdown against South Whidbey in the opener, only to get hurt the next game.

Other than one pass thrown in game three against Concrete, Downes was done for his sophomore year.

Fighting his way back (after another injury on the basketball court), he reclaimed the QB job on day one of his junior year and hasn’t ceded it since.

Last season Downes came into his own, tossing for 1,569 yards and 17 TD’s, just missing Walstad’s single-season record.

He broke 200 yards four times, including three straight games, with a high of 323 against Friday’s foe, CWA.

Now, he’s kicked off his final high school campaign with three strong games in a row, burning South Whidbey for 310 yards and three TD’s, picking apart La Conner for 146 and three and piercing Nooksack Valley for 194 and two.

Only time will tell what Downes final numbers will be.

If, as all Wolf fans hope, he stays healthy and on target, the next two months could be record-setting ones.

With four home games still on the schedule, don’t miss the chance to see Downes and his pack of speed demon receivers — Hunter Smith, Cameron Toomey-Stout and Sean Toomey-Stout — make a play to rip up the record books.

Those that were there back in the day still talk about Cross and Sherman.

Someday, when they tell tales about Downes, you want to be able to say you were one of the ones who saw him do it live.

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   Wolf junior Chris Battaglia is second on the team in rushing yards and tackles. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If football stats are like stocks, Chris Battaglia is trending upwards.

The Coupeville High School junior had his best rushing game of the season Friday, grinding away for 53 yards against a tough, beefy Nooksack Valley defense.

That gave the Wolf passing game a little breathing room, where Hunter Downes (194 yards) and Shane Losey (16) combined to break the 200-yard barrier.

The biggest beneficiary of their heaves was Hunter Smith, who hauled in four tosses for 130 yards.

As he continues to pile up game, season and career CHS football records for receiving yards and touchdowns, as well as interceptions, the senior standout is also inching up on another maybe less-noticed milestone.

Those four snags gives Smith 95 career receptions, putting him on the cusp of breaking triple digits.

He pulled in 32 as a sophomore, 49 as a junior and has 14 through this year’s first three games.

Also of note is the tackling stats of sophomore stud Sean Toomey-Stout.

He’s racked up 38 take-downs through three games, which puts him on pace for 127, not that far off the school single-season record.

That belongs to Joe Kelley, who collected 142 tackles during the 2001 campaign.

As Coupeville (2-1) prepares for its league opener against Charles Wright (2-1) this Friday (7 PM kickoff), let’s take a gander at the season-to-date stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps.

Keep in mind, though, that when you look at where Wolf players are ranked, it comes with one caveat — not all teams in the state are actively reporting stats.

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 31-64 for 650 yards (#2 in 1A) with 8 TDs and 2 INTs
Shane Losey 1-2 for 16 yards

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 14 receptions for 360 yards (#1 in 1A, #4 in the state)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 10-129 (#9 in 1A)
Sean Toomey-Stout 4-120 (#10 in 1A)
Matt Hilborn 3-51
Losey 1-6

Rushing:

S. Toomey-Stout 22 carries for 128 yards
Chris Battaglia 22-114
Hilborn 16-13
Smith 3-5
Jean Lund-Olsen 1-3
Downes 12 (-25)

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

Smith 490
S. Toomey-Stout 293
C. Toomey-Stout 267
Battaglia 114
Hilborn 64
Losey 6
Lund-Olsen 3

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 625 (#3 in 1A)
Smith 365
S. Toomey-Stout 248
C. Toomey-Stout 129
Battaglia 114
Hilborn 64
Losey 22
Lund-Olsen 3

Touchdowns:

Smith 5 (#2 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout 3 (#7 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout 2 (#8 in 1A)
Hilborn 1

PATs:

Hilborn 6 (#3 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 30 (#2 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout
18 (#7 in 1A)
Hilborn
12 (#10 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout
12 (#10 in 1A)

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

S. Toomey-Stout 38 (#3 in 1A, #5 in the state)
Battaglia 21
C. Toomey-Stout 19
Hilborn 17
Julian Welling 14
Losey
13
Dane Lucero
12
Jake Pease
12
Smith
11
James Vidoni 11
Jake Hoagland
10
Tyler McCalmont 5
Trevor Bell 3
Gavin Knoblich 2
Andrew Martin 2
Koa Davison 1
Dawson Houston 1
Teo Keilwitz 1
Lund-Olsen 1

Tackles for Loss:

Vidoni 4
McCalmont 3
Lucero 2
Hoagland 1
Knoblich 1
Pease 1

Interceptions:

C. Toomey-Stout 2 (#1 in 1A, #6 in the state)
Smith
1 (#4 in 1A)

Fumble recoveries:

Pease 2
Hoagland 1
S. Toomey-Stout 1
Welling 1

Sacks:

Losey 1.5
Lucero 1.5
Battaglia 1
Pease 1
Vidoni 1
Welling 1

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Kickoffs:

Hilborn 11 for 273 yards
Ethan Kedrowski 3-44

Punts:

Downes 5 for 124 yards

Kickoff/Punt returns:

C. Toomey-Stout 5 for 108 yards (#3 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout 3-45
Smith 2-33

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   Coupeville grad Nick Streubel (68) reunites with high school teammate Brett Arnold after Saturday’s Central Washington University game. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Jacob Martin (39) has taken his skills to Cali. (Photo courtesy Jonathan Martin)

They were once Wolves, but now they rep the Wildcats, Golden Eagles and Blue Jays.

Three Coupeville High School football alumni are chasing the college football dream this fall, in three different states.

Nick Streubel is the oldest of the trio, and the one having the biggest impact.

The Big Hurt, who’s now sculpted like a Greek god (while boasting the silkiest flowing locks in all the land) is a red-shirt sophomore at Central Washington University.

Having bounced back from an injury which kept him sidelined last year, Streubel is a starter on an offensive line which has carried the Wildcats to a 3-0 start.

Their latest win came Saturday, when Gavin Todd booted a 42-yard field with a second left on the clock, lifting CWU to a 17-16 thriller over Azusa Pacific.

Central, which entered the game ranked #23 in the latest D-II rankings (Azusa was #22) improved to a flawless 2-0 in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference.

Meanwhile, Jacob Martin is a freshman linebacker/special teams player at Feather River College in California and Zane Bundy is a freshman kicker at Tabor College in Kansas.

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