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Birthday duo Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout. (John Fisken photos)

Birthday duo Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout. (John Fisken photos)

They are the titanic twosome, the dazzling duo, the Wonder Twins, The Gazelle and The Torpedo.

When Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout popped into the world 15 years ago today, they heralded a new age in Wolf sports, even if no one realized it at the time.

It’s all paying off now, here in the present, as the Coupeville High School freshmen continue to impact virtually every sports team in town, something they first started doing back in their middle school days.

Where to begin with this duo, who are following in the electric, well-dressed footsteps of older brother Cameron?

Whatever we say, we need to do it quickly, as Maya and Sean are all about the speed.

Hence the nicknames (whether they want them or not).

Maya (aka The Gazelle) stealing second base on a softball diamond is a no-brainer, as she accelerates so quickly she’s generally wiping infield dirt off her pants before the rival catcher even comes up out of her crouch.

Sean (aka The Torpedo) flies down the football field like a mad man unleashed when playing on special teams, exploding into the returner’s chest a nanosecond after they’ve hauled in the kick.

Where some runners always look they’re straining, the Toomey-Stout twins generally look like they’re gliding, slicing by Flash-style while everyone else is caught in a vat of molasses.

And it’s not just speed for them.

Pick a sport and they are naturals, whether it be volleyball, basketball, softball, football, track or anything else you might be interested in having your rear tattooed in today.

Of course, sports are but a small (but important) part of their family’s lives.

Moms Lisa Toomey and Beth Stout have raised three hyper-intelligent, extremely friendly children who bring hard work, dedication and humility to everything they do.

They are the poster children for a family doing things the right way, and it’s a treat to have the Toomey-Stout clan reside in our town.

So happy birthday, twins, and get ready, because I’m going to spend the next four years gushing about you to the world.

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Ulrik Wells (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells hauled in his first high school pass reception Monday night in Langley. (John Fisken photo)

JV games are about growth.

So, even though his squad came away with a 34-2 loss at South Whidbey in its opener Monday, Coupeville High School coach Ryan King liked a lot of what he saw.

“Wasn’t a bad game,” he said. “Overall, I was very pleased and proud with how this team played until the end.”

“They are a great group of kids and will continue to grow.”

The Falcons, looking for a bit of revenge after being savaged in the varsity game between the two schools, jumped out to an early lead.

They used a nine-play drive to put together their first touchdown, then added two more scores off of fumbles to bust things open.

While it didn’t end up putting many points on the board, Coupeville clicked a lot better after the halftime break.

“We bounced back and played a great defensive game in the second half,” King said.

Shane Losey and Dawson Houston split time at QB, with Ulrik Wells sparkling at receiver with a gorgeous 13-yard snag.

“Great day for him at receiver,” King said.

Andy Martin, Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim and Teo Keilwitz “all ran the ball very well tonight” while Matt Stevens, Luke Carlson and Axel Partida “had great days on defense.”

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Bob Martin is back to lead the Coupeville Middle School football program. (John Fisken photo)

   Bob Martin is back to lead the Coupeville Middle School football program. (John Fisken photo)

Kick-off time fast approaches.

Deep into their second week of practices, the 20 players who make up the Coupeville Middle School football squad are nearing their first chance to play against someone in a different uniform.

The Wolves start with an epic journey to Forks this coming Saturday for a jamboree, then begin a six-game regular season at Chimacum Sept. 22.

The schedule (all home games kick-off at 3:45 PM):

Thur-Sept. 22 @ Chimacum
Wed-Sept. 28 Sequim
Wed-Oct. 5 Forks
Wed.-Oct. 12 @ Port Townsend
Wed.-Oct. 19 @Stevens
Wed.-Oct. 26 Chimacum

And the roster, as it stands today:

Daniel Barajas
Isaiah Bittner
Cole Collins
Miles Davidson
Sage Downes
Dakota Eck
Dylan Estes
Trystan Ford
Jesus Garcia-Partida
Cade Golden
Alex Jimenez
Evan Johnson
Jacob Kendall
Jake Mitten
Gage Powers
Gabe Shaw
Ben Smith
Damon Stadler
Logan Wertz
Tian Yu

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith gets ready to slice ‘n dice in the open field. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

Clay Reilly looks for running room.

captains

   Wolf captains (l to r) Hunter Downes, Uriel Liquidano, Reilly and Jacob Martin get ready for the singing of the national anthem.

cheer

CHS cheerleaders work on their sideline moves.

handoff

Martin (left) gets ready to accept a gift from his quarterback.

Clay

   There’s nowhere to run, nowhere to hide for a Brave runner once Reilly appears on the scene.

The score wasn’t so great, but the photos were better.

With Oak Harbor having played a rare Thursday game, wanderin’ photo man John Fisken was free to head down to La Conner Friday night to catch Coupeville in action.

And, while the Wolves got roughed up a bit in a 53-6 loss, they did manage to provide the paparazzi with some nice photo ops.

To see more of Fisken’s work (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20160910-Coupeville-at-LaCo/

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Hunter Smith (top left) is joined in the end zone by fellow record holders (clockwise, from top right) Chad Gale, Brian Fakkema, Nick Streubel, Ian Smith, Joe Kelley, Josh Bayne, Ian Barron, Joel Walstad and Brad Sherman.

Hunter Smith (4) is joined by fellow record holders (clockwise, from top right) Chad Gale, Brian Fakkema, Nick Streubel, Ian Smith, Joe Kelley, Josh Bayne, Ian Barron, Joel Walstad and Brad Sherman.

Imagine a magical world.

In this utopia, a chain-smoking, bee-hived-hairdo-rockin’ lady (we’ll call her Gladys) has been working out of a small office in the back of the Coupeville High School gym complex for decades.

While there she’s been faithfully recording stats and filing them away neatly in frequently-dusted filing cabinets.

Now, come back to reality, where any pursuit of Wolf athletic history involves latching on to whatever scattered records someone pulls out of their dusty attic or spending hours trying not to rip the brittle pages of the bound volumes in the Whidbey News-Times archives.

So, it is, with justifiable trepidation that I approach calling any history definitive.

But, having gone cross-eyed and ink-stained, I am, we’ll say, 98.3% certain that the CHS football records I’m about to present are pretty dang close to being canon.

With one or two niggling doubts still trying to be ironed out.

As you scan these records, the oldest of which hails from 1970 (and yes, I went back WAY before that), remember several things.

One, sacks were not tallied as such in the olden days, so the players of earlier decades may have hauled down a lot of quarterbacks but will never own the record.

Two, the game has changed, with tons of tweaks aimed at ramping up offenses.

Go back in the archives and there are quite a few 6-0 games, and quite a few talented players who never had the chance to put up numbers like the modern day guys.

And three, and this is the biggest of them all — high school football stats, especially at small schools, are notoriously fickle and largely dependent on how good that year’s record keepers were.

But you don’t care about all the rationale, you just want the glossy numbers.

So here you go, my 98.3% correct all-time Coupeville High School football records.

If you disagree, speak up now or forever hold your peace.

And, if you want to argue, have something to back up your story.

Missing stat sheets, newspaper clippings which tell a different tale than what I saw, game film, a time travel machine that allows us to go back and watch it all unfold live.

Bring it on, I say.

BEST INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME PERFORMANCE:

Rushing Yards – (320) Ian Barron-1998
Passing Yards – (403) Gabe Eck-2015
Receiving Yards – (202) Chad Gale-1987
Rushing TDs – (6) Ian Barron-2000
Passing TDs – (4) Corey Cross-1971, Brad Sherman-2001
Receiving TDs – (3) Glenn Losey-1970, Brian Fakkema-2001, Josh Bayne-2014
Tackles – (27) Scott McMartin-1981
Interceptions – (4) Brian Fakkema-2002
Sacks — (4) Nick Streubel-2013

BEST INDIVIDUAL SEASON:

Rushing Yards – (1753) Ian Barron-1998
Passing Yards – (1848) Ian Smith-2010
Receiving Yards – (844) Chad Gale-1987
Rushing TDs – (16) Ian Barron-1998
Passing TDs – (18) Joel Walstad-2014
Receiving TDs – (10) Josh Bayne-2014
Tackles – (142) Joe Kelley-2001
Interceptions – (7) Dan Neider-1986, Hunter Smith-2015
Sacks – (10) Nick Streubel-2013

BEST INDIVIDUAL CAREER:

Rushing Yards – (4713) Ian Barron
Passing Yards – (3613) Brad Sherman
Receiving Yards – (1345) Chad Gale
Rushing TDs – (37) Ian Barron
Passing TDs – (33) Brad Sherman
Receiving TDs – (17) Chad Gale
Tackles – (301) Joe Kelley
Interceptions – (12) Josh Bayne
Sacks – (12) Nick Sellgren

BEST TEAM SINGLE-SEASON PERFORMANCE:

Rushing Yards – (2742) 2014
Passing Yards – (1863) 2014
Receiving Yards – (1863) 2014
Rushing TDs – (26) 2014
Passing TDs – (20) 2014
Receiving TDs – (20) 2014
Tackles – (800) 2008
Interceptions – (20) 1986
Sacks – (22) 1996

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