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(Photos courtesy Bob Davies)

Face masks? What’s a stinkin’ face mask? (Photos courtesy Bob Davies)

#2

Looking spiffy in the short shorts.

#3

The pride of the prairie.

#4

Ready to rumble on the hardwood.

Coupeville’s sports past is out there, waiting to be uncovered.

While there’s no museum dedicated to the exploits of the Wolves, or the many Cow Town athletes who played for city teams, little bits and pieces of history are stuffed into a million attics, basements and photo albums.

The trick is finding them all, and sharing it with new generations.

The photos above come to us from Bob Davies, who father, Howard, played with teams in the late ’20s and early ’30s.

The elder Davies passed away in 1968, when his son was 12, but he, and his compatriots from the early days of Coupeville athletics live on in the photos of the time.

If you have similar photos from any time period, now is the time to do something about them.

If you want to clean out the house, my address is:

David Svien
165 Sherman
Coupeville, WA 98239

If you want to hold on to your items, but would still like to share, snap a pic or scan them and email me at davidsvien@hotmail.com.

We can preserve Coupeville’s athletic history, if we all work together.

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Shane Losey threw for two touchdowns, ran for another and picked off a pass during a busy Monday night of football. (John Fisken photo)

   Shane Losey threw for two touchdowns, ran for another, picked off a pass and recovered a fumble during a busy Monday night of football. (John Fisken photo)

It was a night for trying new things.

With visiting La Conner not able to field a full JV squad, Coupeville agreed to play 8-man football Monday, then went out and waxed the Braves to capture the program’s first win in three years.

Sparked by a sensational game from sophomore quarterback Shane Losey, the Wolves rolled to an 18-6 win and evened their record at 1-1.

“This was a great win for these young kids,” said CHS coach Ryan King. “It gets their confidence up and rewards them for all the work they put in this summer and at practices.

“It’s a credit to all the coaches and all the players in the program.”

The win was a perfect example of teamwork, as King called the defensive scheme and fellow Coupeville assistant Brad Sherman pulled the strings on offense.

Working with three less players than usual took a bit of time for both teams to get used to, but Losey, who split time at QB with freshman Dawson Houston, adapted well.

He opened the scoring by plunging in on a short run on the final play of the first quarter, then came back to toss a pair of touchdown strikes in the second half.

The first was a 75-yard catch-and-run to Teo Keilwitz in which the Wolf running back ended up leaving not only the defenders, but his own shoe, behind him.

With one Brave still hot on his trail, Keilwitz hit the turbo jets, shed his shoe, and still took the ball to the house.

Not content to stop there, Losey moved Coupeville down the field one more time, then rifled a picture-perfect pass into the left corner of the end zone, putting the ball right on Jacob Zettle’s fingertips for the score.

Other than a few plays (including a four-yard touchdown run midway through the second quarter that knotted things at 6-6), the Wolf defense also adjusted to the different style of play.

They kept La Conner’s QB scrambling for his life most of the night and pulled off several takeaways.

Losey picked off a pass to ice the game in the fourth, after recovering a fumble on the opening kickoff.

So, basically he checked about every box possible on this night.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim had another fumble recovery, though the ball was jarred loose at the last second as he came dangerously close to turning it into a defensive touchdown.

Luke Carlson was a rampaging beast, in on what seemed like every other tackle, while Losey, Jake Hoagland, Ulrik Wells and Co. all chipped in with scrappy defensive play.

Coupeville stayed on the ground for much of the night, with Zettle, Keilwitz, Pacquette-Pilgrim and hard-charging Andrew Martin sharing the rushing duty.

Losey and Houston also showed a flair of holding on to the ball and grinding out yardage themselves.

One late carry from Pacquette-Pilgrim, in which he spun three defenders around as he reversed field, brought his varsity teammates to their feet for a round of sideline hysteria.

“Everyone played well,” King said. “I’m really, really proud of them all.”

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Emma Smith (John Fisken photos)

Emma Smith denies Sequim. (John Fisken photos)

Julian Welling

   The rock in the middle of the Wolf line, senior Uriel Liquidano, gets lined-up with his QB.

Joey Lippo

Doubles ace Joey Lippo slides into battle.

May Rose

May Rose leads an assault on the goal.

First place, all the way.

That’s exactly where every single fall sports team from Coupeville High School finds itself Monday afternoon.

Either in sole possession (soccer, tennis) or tied (volleyball, football) for the top of the 1A Olympic League standings.

Now, take a deep breath and accept a (big) caveat.

Football is technically in an eight-team tie for first, as none of the Olympic or Nisqually League teams, which have joined together for at least two years of gridiron action, have actually played a league game.

The first three weeks (when Coupeville went 1-2) were all non-conference tilts, while the next seven are the ones which really matter.

Things kickoff this Friday, when the Wolves travel to Tacoma to face Charles Wright Academy (1-2) for their league opener.

But, across the other three sports, Coupeville is a flawless 4-0, with a tennis win over Klahowya, a volleyball dismantling of Chimacum and a pair of soccer victories over Chimacum and Port Townsend.

Only time will tell where the Wolves finish fall, or whether they can match or top last year’s performance.

Of Coupeville’s six league titles in the first two years of Olympic League play, three have come in the spring, two in the winter and just one in the fall.

That banner came courtesy last year’s boys’ tennis team.

With 27 of 31 league games still left to play this fall (eight for volleyball, seven apiece for football and soccer and five for tennis), it’s way too early for predictions.

But it is a nice start.

Football:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 1-2
Bellevue Christian 0-0 0-3
Cascade Christian 0-0 3-0
Charles Wright 0-0 1-2
Chimacum 0-0 1-2
Klahowya 0-0 2-1
Port Townsend 0-0 1-2
Vashon Island 0-0 0-3

Volleyball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 2-1
Klahowya 1-0 2-0
Chimacum 0-1 1-2
Port Townsend 0-1 1-2

Girls Soccer:

School League Overall
Coupeville 2-0 2-1-1
Klahowya 1-0 2-0-1
Chimacum 0-1 0-2-0
Port Townsend 0-2 0-4-0

Boys Tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 1-4
Chimacum 0-0 0-3
Klahowya 0-1 0-4

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Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photo)

Stats are a tricky business.

Whether they’re being recorded with pen and paper on the sidelines, or off of game film later, one thing remains constant.

Every player is dang sure their numbers should be higher than what the stat sheets show.

To which I say, hey, it is what it is.

The stats below, which document Coupeville High School’s gridiron progress through three weeks, come with a couple of caveats.

One, if tackles seem a bit low, it’s because no totals have been posted for the La Conner game (at least not on MaxPreps or Hudl).

And two, if you disagree with your stats, talk to your coaches.

Me? I’m just the messenger, not the stat keeper.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 12-30 for 276 yards (#2 in league) with 3 TD and 4 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 8 receptions for 210 yards (#1 in league)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3-57
Jake Hoagland 1-9

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 25 carries for 159 yards
Clay Reilly 24-134
Smith 17-32
Chris Battaglia 7-10
Matt Hilborn 4-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 15-(-26)

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

Smith 478
Reilly 162
Martin 159
C. Toomey-Stout 68
Hilborn 48
Battaglia 10
Sean Toomey-Stout 10
Hoagland 9

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 250
Smith 242
Martin 159
Reilly 134
C. Toomey-Stout 57
Battaglia 10
Hoagland 9
Hilborn 3

Touchdowns:

Smith 4 (tied for #4 in league)
Downes 2
Martin 2
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 7 (#2 in league)

Points:

Smith 24 (tied for #4 in league)
Reilly
13
Downes
12
Martin
12

Defense:

Tackles:

Martin 15
Smith 14
Reilly 12
Teo Keilwitz 10
C. Toomey-Stout 8
Battaglia 7
Julian Welling 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
S. Toomey-Stout 6
Jacob Zettle
6
Dane Lucero
5
Hilborn
4
James Vidoni 3
Shane Losey 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (tied for #1 in league)
Liquidano 1
Martin 1

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #2 in league)
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Fumble Recoveries:

Reilly 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 14 for 585 yards (#1 in league)

Punts:

Reilly 9 for 308 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 8 for 219 yards (#2 in league)
Hilborn 3-45
Reilly 3-28
C. Toomey-Stout 2-11
Pacquette-Pilgrim 2-0

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Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first high school interception Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first high school interception Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The beginning, awesome.

The end, stellar.

The middle, needs some work.

The Coupeville High School football team opened strongly and finished strongly Friday night, but got burnt by seven unanswered touchdowns and fell 47-14 to visiting Nooksack Valley.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 1-2.

CHS kicks off its seven-game Olympic/Nisqually League schedule with a trip to Tacoma to face Charles Wright Academy next week.

Friday night’s tilt against the Pioneers started so promisingly, with Coupeville getting a strong kickoff return from Matt Hilborn, then marching right down the field for a game-opening touchdown.

Everything was clicking, with strong runs from Clay Reilly and Jacob Martin, split around two quick strikes from Wolf QB Hunter Downes.

First the junior signal caller tossed an 11-yard pass to Hunter Smith, then Downes connected with speed demon Cameron Toomey-Stout on a 34-yard reception.

The last Nooksack defender managed to knock Toomey-Stout out at the two-yard line, but Coupeville promptly stuffed the ball in two plays later.

Downes took the one-yard plunge to pay dirt behind a tooth-rattling lead block from Julian Welling.

Up 7-0 two-and-a-half minutes into the game, with clear skies and Wolf announcer Willie Smith spewing prime one-liners on the PA system, things looked rosy.

Then everything fell off a cliff for a bit.

Nooksack tied the game up just two plays later, when six-foot-five Pioneer QB Casey Bauman launched a rocket down the left sideline that hit his receiver in perfect stride.

Who that receiver was, no one knows, as a whole chunk of Nooksack’s jersey numbers didn’t match up with their roster.

Which didn’t matter much, because a few minutes later the heavens opened, rain began to fall and all the rosters become a sodden pile of of ink-streaked garbage anyway.

With CHS using temporary bleachers for a year, there’s no press box this season, and Willie Smith and timekeeper extraordinaire Joel Norris were left, well … high and dry would be the exact opposite of reality.

Huddled under a makeshift, at best, pop-up cover, they played chicken with using electronics in the rain, while fighting through a haze of darkness caused by the flimsy awning.

Which was probably for the best, as they only half-witnessed Nooksack rip off four more first-quarter touchdowns, the final one coming on a 28-yard pass with no time left on the clock.

The Pioneers tacked on two more scores in the second quarter to close the half, a time period where the high point for the Wolves was the two times Nooksack’s kicker shanked his extra point attempts.

Coupeville did have two standout plays of its own amid the carnage, however.

Hunter Smith laid out a Pioneer punt returner, lighting him up a millisecond after he snagged the ball, while Reilly pulled off a fake punt and turned it into a 45-yard sprint to daylight.

Just like with Cameron Toomey-Stout’s reception, though, the last Pioneer in the way managed to save the touchdown, and this time Coupeville fumbled the ball away two plays later.

With a running clock, a sodden crowd, and a severely compromised announcing crew, it would have been easy for the Wolves to write off the second half.

Instead, they took CHS coach Jon Atkins‘ halftime remarks to heart, and finished the final 24 minutes with their best sustained play of the night.

Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first career interception while Reilly was a two-way beast, scoring on an 11-yard run and making tackles left and right.

With fired-up seniors Reilly and Martin leading the attack, Coupeville held Nooksack scoreless in the second half, twice forcing the Pioneers to turn the ball over on downs.

That put at least a small smile on Atkins face afterwards.

“They got the message and finished strong,” he said. “We finished positive, showed a lot of intensity and won the second half. Now we’ll build on that.”

While praising several players, Atkins offered a special shout-out to his freshman warrior.

Sean is really earning his varsity time,” he said. “He played all four quarters tonight, got his first pick, and was flying around.

“He’s making a play for being top dog in his family.”

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