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   While we wait for a new grandstand to arrive, CHS football fans should expect to sit as close together as the Wolves are in this pic. (John Fisken photo)

Patience is a virtue.

While it’s true Coupeville High School will have a new football grandstand at some point in the near future, it won’t be in place for the home opener against La Conner this Friday.

And that means fans are going to be cozy for a bit.

Once in place, the new grandstand will sit in front of the apartments on what was previously the visitors side of the field.

The ground has been prepared, concrete supports have been laid, but thanks to delays by the grandstand manufacturer, the local guys are left twiddling their thumbs.

With everything in mid-construction, that side of the field will be roped off Friday and all fans, Coupeville and non-Coupeville, get to congregate together on the far side of the field.

If you attended a game last year, you know seating on that side of the field is limited.

When the old grandstand and (bee-infested, but deeply-missed) press box were ripped out prior to the 2016 football season, two smaller sections of bleachers were moved in to form what will one day officially be the visitors stands.

For now, those bleachers and the surrounding grass and track will provide one dumping ground for home and road fans alike.

So, either arrive early (kickoff is 7 PM), bring a lawn chair or get used to standing.

One thing that could help is Coupeville’s gridiron schedule begins with four of the first six games on the road.

After facing La Conner, the Wolves welcome Charles Wright Academy to town Sept. 22, then don’t play at home again until mid-Oct.

If we’re lucky, that shiny new grandstand will be in place in time for Coupeville’s late-season three-game home-stand (Oct. 13 vs Bellevue Christian, Oct. 20 vs. Klahowya, Oct. 27 vs. Chimacum).

Hey, miracles can happen.

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   Hunter Smith broke the CHS career receiving yardage record Friday night, and missed the single-game mark by just two yards. (John Fisken photo)

Hunter Smith is coming for all the records. I said all of them!

The Coupeville High School senior now owns at least a share of five Wolf football records, and came within a measly two yards Friday night of getting a sixth one.

Smith hauled in seven passes for 200 yards and a pair of touchdowns to spark CHS to an 18-0 win over host South Whidbey.

His first catch of the night, a 12-yard reception, gave him the school’s career receiving yards record.

Chad Gale racked up 1,345 yards in the late ’80s, and Smith had 1,335 entering the 2017 season.

The record Smith narrowly missed was the single-game mark for receiving yards.

While his 200 yards topped his own personal best (178, which Smith hit once as a sophomore and once as a junior), Gale’s 202 yards from an ’87 game is still the gold standard … if just barely.

The quarterback flinging passes Smith’s way, senior Hunter Downes, threw for 310 yards, just 13 off his personal best (323 vs. Charles Wright as a junior).

The Hunter to Hunter connection was the big news, but plenty of other Wolves posted sterling stats in the opening night victory.

Where we stand after week one, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 13-26 for 310 yards with 3 TDs and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 7 receptions for 200 yards
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-57
Matt Hilborn 2-39
Cameron Toomey-Stout 2-8
Shane Losey 1-6

Rushing:

S. Toomey-Stout 5 carries for 54 yards
Smith 2-5
Chris Battaglia 1-2
Hilborn 6 (-14)
Downes 6 (-27)

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

Smith 205
S. Toomey-Stout 111
C. Toomey-Stout 50
Hilborn 25
Losey 6
Battaglia 2
Downes (-27)

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 283
Smith 205
S. Toomey-Stout 111
Hilborn 25
C. Toomey-Stout 8
Losey 6
Battaglia 2

Touchdowns:

Smith 2
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Points:

Smith 12
S. Toomey-Stout
6

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

S. Toomey-Stout 14
Battaglia 12
Hilborn 8
Dane Lucero 8
Julian Welling 7
Losey 6
Jake Pease
6
C. Toomey-Stout
6
James Vidoni
5
Trevor Bell
3
Jake Hoagland 3
Smith
3
Andrew Martin
1

Interceptions:

C. Toomey-Stout 2

Fumble recoveries:

Hoagland 1
Pease 1
Welling 1

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Kickoffs:

Hilborn 4 for 140 yards

Punts:

Downes 2 for 40 yards

Kickoff/Punt returns:

C. Toomey-Stout 1 for 12 yards

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   Trevor Bell had a strong defensive game Friday as Coupeville rolled to a win in its season opener. (John Fisken photo)

Big wins, big losses and a forfeit.

Week one of the high school football season brought a little bit of everything to the eight teams which make up the Olympic/Nisqually League.

Overall, the schools won four of seven non-conference games, while Port Townsend forfeited its match-up with 2A Sequim, citing “a lack of eligible players.”

It was a sour start for the RedHawks, who have been a dominant program in recent years.

They lost their best player, senior Detrius Kelsall, when he unexpectedly transferred to Shasta High School in Redding, CA, and currently sit with a shockingly-low 26 players on their roster.

The news was much better for most league schools, with Coupeville retaining The Bucket after drilling South Whidbey and defending league champ Cascade Christian rolling in its opener.

The key to victory? Having a C at the start of your school’s name, as Chimacum and Charles Wright Academy also won.

Week 1 scores:

Coupeville 18
South Whidbey 0

Bremerton 45
Klahowya 6

Charles Wright 19
Toledo 18

Forks 68
Vashon Island 0

Chimacum 21
Neah Bay 6

Cascade Christian 41
Orting 7

Cedar Park Christian 14
Bellevue Christian 7

Sequim 2
Port Townsend 0

Olympic/Nisqually League football standings:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 1-0
Cascade Christian 0-0 1-0
Charles Wright 0-0 1-0
Chimacum 0-0 1-0
Bellevue Christian 0-0 0-1
Klahowya 0-0 0-1
Port Townsend 0-0 0-1
Vashon Island 0-0 0-1

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   Cameron Toomey-Stout picked off two passes Friday as Coupeville blanked South Whidbey 18-0. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf fans came out in force, making the trek to Langley to cheer on their team. (Kim Bepler photos)

   Sean Toomey-Stout’s fan club responds to his game-busting fourth quarter 57-yard touchdown catch and run.

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes holds The Bucket after Coupeville beat South Whidbey for the third time in four years.

The Bucket stays in Cow Town.

Coupeville’s gridiron seniors will depart having beaten arch nemesis South Whidbey three times in four seasons after upending the Falcons 18-0 Friday night in Langley.

The season-opening non-conference win, arriving on the night SWHS renamed its football field in honor of former longtime coach Jim Leierer, gives the Wolves back-to-back victories in the clash of Island rivals.

Coming on the heels of a 41-10 win in Coupeville last year, CHS head coach Jon Atkins improved to a flawless 2-0 against the Falcons.

Overall, the Wolves have won four of the last six meetings, also winning in 2012 and 2014 under Tony Maggio.

This time around it was a tale of two defenses slugging it out, as the game went 38+ minutes without a score.

Coupeville, having held South Whidbey out of the end zone on nine consecutive possessions, finally broke the game open early in the fourth quarter.

The Wolves, with the ball in their own hands for the ninth time, struck when QB Hunter Downes dropped a gorgeous throw on a dime into the waiting hands of Hunter Smith in the left corner of the end zone.

The scoring throw, coming at the 9:54 mark of the fourth quarter, instantly changed the flow of the game.

Three plays later Jake Pease jumped on a fumble recovery for CHS, and then Downes and his receiving corps went back to work in the blink of an eye.

On the first play after the fumble, Downes threaded a short pass into the arms of Sean Toomey-Stout, who promptly blew up the tiring Falcon defense.

Shedding would-be tacklers with every fleet-footed step, the speedy sophomore ducked, bobbed, weaved, then hit an extra gear and was off to the races, leaving everyone in his wake as he roared 57 yards to the waiting end zone.

While Coupeville’s ensuing two-point conversion failed (the Wolves were 0-2 on conversions and had an extra point attempt blocked after touchdown #3), a 12-0 lead was more than enough for the riled-up CHS defense.

After forcing another turnover on downs — Smith read a fourth down pass perfectly and knocked it away from the receiver at the last millisecond — Coupeville capped the scoring with a KO punch.

Sitting at its own 11-yard line with the clock running under three minutes, the Wolves went semi-conservative, with Downes slapping a hand-off into Smith’s never-gonna-fumble hands.

While CHS would have settled for a couple of yards, a cloud of dust and a chunk of change run off the clock, Smith had other ideas.

Spinning to the right, he hung motionless for just a second, perhaps giving older brother CJ time to cock an eyebrow in appreciation up in the stands, then bolted to daylight.

Running like the state meet-bound track sprinter he can never be (he loves baseball too much), the silky senior ripped off 89 yards in a few effortless strides, only slowing at the end as he flipped the ball to the ref a moment before he was mobbed by his teammates.

Smith, who broke Chad Gale’s school career receiving yardage record on his opening catch of the game, a 12-yard snag early in the first quarter, also busted out a 52-yard reception right before halftime.

It was a game of big plays for Coupeville, even when it was struggling to break into the scoring column.

Matt Hilborn pulled off a replay-worthy catch, hauling in a 21-yard bomb from Downes while simultaneously splitting two defenders and executing a picture-perfect slide.

Meanwhile, Sean Toomey-Stout tore off 32 yards on a reversal early in the third quarter, while big brother Cameron was lights out in the defensive backfield.

The elder Toomey-Stout made off with two third-quarter interceptions (the second eventually set up the Wolves first touchdown), while also chasing down wayward Falcons on both sides of the field.

While the picks were huge, his explosive tackle on a fourth quarter kick-off, in which he went airborne and just about ripped the cleats off the guy unlucky enough to touch the ball first, drew much hootin’ and hollerin’ from a collection of former Wolf coaches in the crowd.

And he wasn’t the only Coupeville defender to earn oohs and ahs.

Jake Hoagland shut down a Falcon drive, jumping on a fumble, while Dane Lucero ended another South Whidbey possession by chasing down the rival QB in the backfield on fourth down.

Falcon signal caller Greyson Clements was an elusive target all night, prone to scrambling away for a few yards here, a few more there.

But, when they could get their hands on him, Lucero and fellow linemen Julian Welling and Trevor Bell rode him down into the grass with a cold fury.

As his players soaked in the win, Atkins pointed to the play of his defense as key.

“Getting a shutout in the first game is big time; our defense played huge for us,” he said. “That was great to see.

“It took us a little while to get going (on offense), but once we started executing and staying with our blocks, things got better,” Atkins added. “We just need to go forward, fix the little things, and keep working.”

Coupeville returns home next Friday, Sept. 8, when it hosts La Conner, which is ranked #6 in the state among 2B schools. That game will be the season-opener for the Braves.

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   Lauren Rose and her volleyball teammates will be road warriors, playing 9 of 14 regular season matches on the road. (John Fisken photo)

Schedules are tricky things.

Jump back some 78 days and I was brave (or naive) enough to publish the first batch of fall sports schedules for Coupeville High School.

Of course, just as I suspected, stuff has changed. A few little tweaks here, a few radical detours there.

So now, as we sit less than 72 hours away from the first official game of the 2017-2018 school sports year, here’s the revamped, buffed ‘n shined version of the fall sports schedules.

Will things continue to change? Without a doubt.

After this, weather will play a big part in how smoothly the tennis schedule plays out.

And, of course, we live on an Island that gets a fair amount of wind and relies on ferries, so…

Use this as a guide, but keep on eye on http://coupeville.tandem.co/ and http://www.olympicleague.com/ for updates.

And here you go, 98.3% correct … at least for a moment:

Boys Tennis (varsity and JV):

Tues-Sept. 5 Port Angeles (3:15)
Mon-Sept. 11 @ Sequim (3:30)
Wed-Sept. 13 Kingston (3:15)
Fri-Sept. 15 @ Klahowya (4:00)
Thur-Sept. 21 South Whidbey (Site and time TBA)
Fri-Sept. 22 Overlake (3:30)
Mon-Sept. 25 @ North Mason (4:00)
Wed-Sept. 27 Chimacum (3:15)
Fri-Sept. 29 @ Klahowya (4:00)
Tues-Oct. 3 North Kitsap (3:15)
Wed-Oct. 4 @ Chimacum (4:00)
Thur-Oct. 5 Klahowya (4:00)
Thur-Oct. 12 Chimacum (3:15)
Mon-Oct. 16 South Whidbey (Site and time TBA)

Football (varsity):

Fri-Sept. 1 @ South Whidbey (7:00)
Fri-Sept. 8 La Conner (7:00)
Fri-Sept. 15 @ Nooksack Valley (7:00)
Fri-Sept. 22 Charles Wright Academy (7:00)
Fri-Sept. 29 @ Vashon Island (6:00)
Fri-Oct. 6 @ Port Townsend (5:30)
Fri-Oct. 13 Bellevue Christian (7:00) HOMECOMING
Fri-Oct. 20 Klahowya (6:00)
Fri-Oct. 27 Chimacum (6:00)
Sat-Nov. 4 @ Cascade Christian (7:00)

Football (JV):

Mon-Sept. 25 @ Charles Wright Academy (5:00)
Mon-Oct. 2 Vashon Island (5:00)
Mon-Oct. 9 Port Townsend (5:00)
Wed-Oct. 11 @ Olympic (4:30)
Mon-Oct. 16 @ Bellevue Christian (TBD)
Mon-Oct. 23 @ Klahowya (5:00)
Mon-Nov. 6 Cascade Christian (5:00)

Girls Soccer (varsity):

Thur-Sept. 7 @ South Whidbey (6:00)
Sat-Sept. 9 Bellevue Christian (1:00)
Tues-Sept. 12 @ Chimacum (4:30)
Thur-Sept. 14 @ Sequim (5:15)
Sat-Sept. 16 @ Port Townsend (1:15)
Mon-Sept. 18 Mount Vernon Christian (4:00)
Thur-Sept. 21 @ North Mason (4:00)
Tues-Sept. 26 Klahowya (5:00)
Thur-Sept. 28 @ Port Townsend (6:00)
Tues-Oct. 3 Chimacum (5:00)
Thur-Oct. 5 @ Port Angeles (5:00)
Tues-Oct. 10 Sequim (4:00)
Tues-Oct. 17 @ Klahowya (4:00)
Thur-Oct. 19 Port Townsend (5:00)
Mon-Oct. 23 Klahowya (4:00)
Wed-Oct. 25 @ Chimacum (4:30)

Volleyball (varsity):

Tues-Sept. 5 @ Mount Vernon Christian (6:00)
Sat-Sept. 9 @ South Whidbey Invite (9:00)
Tues-Sept. 12 @ Chimacum (5:45)
Fri-Sept. 15 @ Yakima Sundome Invite (TBA)
Tues-Sept. 19 @ Bellevue Christian (6:30)
Thur-Sept. 21 @ North Mason (5:15)
Tues-Sept. 26 Klahowya (4:00)
Thur-Sept. 28 @ Port Townsend (5:45)
Tues-Oct. 3 Chimacum (5:45)
Thur-Oct. 5 @ Port Angeles (5:00)
Tues-Oct. 10 @ Sequim (4:45)
Tues-Oct. 17 @ Klahowya (4:00)
Thur-Oct. 19 Port Townsend (5:45)
Tue-Oct. 24 @ Chimacum (5:15)
Thur-Oct. 26 Klahowya (4:00)
Sat-Oct. 28 Port Townsend (1:15)

Volleyball (JV):

Tues-Sept. 12 @ Chimacum (4:30)
Tues-Sept. 19 @ Bellevue Christian (5:00)
Thur-Sept. 21 @ North Mason (4:00)
Tues-Sept. 26 Klahowya (5:15)
Thur-Sept. 28 @ Port Townsend (4:30)
Sat-Sept. 30 @ Sequim JV Tourney (9:00)
Tues-Oct. 3 Chimacum (4:30)
Tues-Oct. 10 @ Sequim (3:30)
Tues-Oct. 17 @ Klahowya (5:15)
Thur-Oct. 19 Port Townsend (4:30)
Tue-Oct. 24 @ Chimacum (4:30)
Thur-Oct. 26 Klahowya (5:15)
Sat-Oct. 28 Port Townsend (12:00)

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