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Posts Tagged ‘football’

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

   Lauren Rose (center), Payton Aparicio (left) and Ema Smith return to Mickey Clark Field for another season. (John Fisken photos)

Ben Olson

   Ben Olson debates going rogue and firing off the drum solo from Van Halen’s “Hot for Teacher” just to see if anyone’s paying attention.

Booster Club

Coupeville Booster Club bigwigs have their eyes on you.

girls

That moment when your team is beating the snot out of your biggest rivals.

Ariah and Nick

Nick Etzell (left) and Ariah Bepler are just here for the photo ops.

Luci

   Incoming frosh Luci Coleburn plays her first sporting event as a fully accredited member of the high school band.

Danny

   Three Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famers — (l to r) Amanda Fabrizi, Danny Savalza and Haley Sherman — come back to visit their alma mater.

crowd

“Drive home safely, South Whidbey!!”

It was fandemonium.

Saturday’s home football opener brought out a huge chunk of Coupeville, from current students to alumni, Booster Club bigwigs to the working media.

Wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken fired off a few hundred photos to capture the off-field scene, which I’ve culled down to a reasonable eight or so for the moment.

Jump in, and come out as happy as the Wolf faithful were after a 41-10 demolishing of Island arch-rival South Whidbey.

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Birthday boy James Vidoni (left), seen during a game last season. (John Fisken photo)

   Birthday boy James Vidoni (left), seen during a game last season. (John Fisken photo)

James Vidoni celebrated his birthday a few hours early.

The Coupeville High School junior, who turns 17 today, exploded to the forefront of Wolf football Saturday night, helping lead CHS to a 41-10 thrashing of dastardly South Whidbey.

Making his first varsity start, Vidoni came roaring up on the outside twice to crumple the Falcon QB with sacks that looked and sounded like a freight train hitting a grocery cart left unattended on the tracks.

It was a big night for James, and a huge step forward in his development as a player.

Like big sis Monica before him, he has been a three-sport athlete for the Wolves every step of the way.

Football, basketball and baseball have kept him busy, and he’s shown growth in all three while remaining a low-key warrior.

It’s always nice to see athletes like James, who get in there and fight every step of the way, be rewarded for their efforts.

He got a lot of applause Saturday night, almost enough for Monica to hear it all the way in Minnesota, where’s she playing college volleyball right now.

And he deserved it, both for his accomplishments and for the guy he is in day-to-day life.

So, happy birthday Mr. Vidoni and congratulations on your stellar season debut.

Here’s to many more big nights for you, on and off the gridiron.

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Hunter Downes (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes ran a crisp, high-impact offense all night long. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

All-League kicker Clay Reilly mashes a moon ball.

Jacob Martin

Jacob Martin (32) leaves the Falcons with no room to run.

team

“On three, we unleash Hell!!”

tackle

Teo Keilwitz (left) and Reilly team up to tenderize an unlucky Falcon.

Denied! Uriel Liquidano rises up to swat away a Falcon pass.

Denied! Uriel Liquidano rises up to swat away a Falcon pass.

Opening night was all smiles for Martin, as he ripped up the field on both sides of the ball.

   Opening night was all smiles for Martin, as he ripped up the field on both sides of the ball.

Hunter Smith will not be denied on his birthday, diving in for one of his three touchdowns.

   Hunter Smith will not be denied on his birthday, diving in for one of his three touchdowns.

It was pretty much a perfect storm.

Coupeville unleashed a big-play offense, matched it with a ferocious, pedal-to-the-metal defense and destroyed arch-rival South Whidbey 41-10 Saturday night.

As they brought The Bucket back home, the Wolves did so under the watchful eye of wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who provides us with the pics seen above.

To gaze upon more and possibly buy grandma some glossies, (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20160903-Coupeville-vs-Sout/

or

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11781&league=21&page_name=photo_store&pid=0.21.24.0.206&school=24&sport=0

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Making his first varsity start Saturday, James Vidoni delivered two huge sacks for a fired-up Wolf defense. (John Fisken photos)

   Making his first varsity start Saturday, James Vidoni delivered two huge sacks for a fired-up Wolf defense. (John Fisken photos)

Senior captains

   Senior captains Uriel Liquidano (63), Jacob Martin (32) and Clay Reilly (2) celebrate bringing The Bucket back to Coupeville.

The even-year magic continues.

Kicking off Jon Atkins first season as head coach in style, the Coupeville High School football team crushed visiting South Whidbey 41-10 Saturday night, claiming The Bucket for the third time in five years.

The opening night non-conference win means the Wolves have already matched last season’s victory total and gives them Island bragging rights for a year.

After winning the showdown with their closest rivals in 2012 and 2014, 2016 offered Coupeville another taste of gridiron magic.

Only this time, it was a total rout.

Using a big-play offense and a bruising defense, the Wolves put the game away early, then emphatically stepped on the Falcons late in the game.

Up 20-0 after one quarter, Coupeville stretched the lead to 34-0 late in the third quarter, and they did it by controlling both sides of the line.

With a vengeance.

Letting their pads do the talking, CHS ripped open huge holes, then unleashed their weapons in all directions.

Setting the tone early was senior running back Jacob Martin, the team’s soft-spoken, rock-solid leader.

For three years he has sacrificed, blocking for others, doing the dirty work.

Saturday night it was his turn, and he answered the bell, big-time.

Taking a hand-off from quarterback Hunter Downes early in the first quarter, Martin exploded through an opening, shook off a would-be tackler and rumbled 39 yards for the first score of the season.

Leaving a trail of Falcons in his dust, the only thing which could have possibly caught up with him was the shouts of one of his former coaches, Charles Clark.

“I see you #32! I see you!!,” the well-liked gridiron guru exclaimed as he pumped both fists in the air from the top row of the bleachers.

Martin wasn’t done, either, later romping to the end zone on a 66-yard second quarter touchdown run in which he ping-ponged his way through the Falcons, then hit another gear and was gone, baby, gone.

In between his scoring strikes, Martin’s QB had his way with the Falcons, as well.

Returning to the field after missing much of his sophomore year with an injury, Downes scored on a one-yard keeper, following right behind Julian Welling’s crushing block, then spun an 18-yard TD pass to birthday boy Hunter Smith.

Up 27-0 coming out of the half, Coupeville offensive coordinator Brad Sherman, returning to coach at the school where he owns the passing records, set up Downes for the kind of play he once pulled off.

Double-pumping a Falcon rusher into the parking lot, Downes fired a BB that dropped right on to the fingertips of a sprinting Smith. 54 yards later the junior receiver was dropping the ball into the referee’s hands after scoring yet another touchdown.

South Whidbey, which hurt itself with a number of penalties, finally got on the board late in the third, but only when Coupeville committed a rare miscue.

A snap on a punt went a good ten feet over Clay Reilly’s head and sailed through the end zone for a safety, netting the Falcons two points and one of their few happy moments of the night.

South Whidbey notched its only touchdown early in the fourth, on a four-yard scramble by young QB Wesly Crain, then tacked on a two-point conversion.

The solace was brief, however, as on the ensuing kick-off, Coupeville opened up a final can of whup-ass.

Smith, who also picked off two passes on his cake day, punctuated things with his third touchdown of the night.

Taking the kick, he drifted slowly for a moment, waited for his blocks to develop, then hit warp speed and pierced a hole on the left side.

One moment he was perfectly still, the next he was but a blur, covering 70+ yards as the Falcons could do little but half-heartedly wave at him as he flew by.

While the frequent scoring was a genuine highlight, Coupeville was just as imposing on defense, with a number of players stepping up to have huge games for defensive coordinator Ryan King.

Senior Uriel Liquidano was a beast unleashed, spending most of his night gently cradling frightened Falcons as he slammed them to the turf after shedding would-be blockers.

Welling spiked a pass into the bleachers to force a turnover, Martin roared up the gut to destroy the suddenly-exposed QB for a sack that netted a loss of ten yards, and James Vidoni left some dents in some Falcon face masks.

The junior defensive end, making his first varsity start, unloaded on South Whidbey, delivering two crushing sacks that brought the Wolf faithful to their feet.

CHS frosh Sean Toomey-Stout, who at 5-foot-7 and 140 pounds gives up five inches and 90 pounds to Vidoni, was a revelation on special teams, blowing up return men like he had been shot out of a cannon.

All in all it was a game Coupeville’s new head coach will treasure.

“Our line played really, really well tonight,” Atkins said. “They sustained their blocks and made big holes for our guys.

“We wanted this to be the start of something big, something that will last a long time. When they look back 10 years from now, we want them to remember a night like tonight.

“Now we just need to keep moving forward.”

As the clock ticked down, Martin sought out his fellow senior captains, Reilly and Liquidano, and the four-year veterans embraced as a trio off to the side.

For a moment, it was just the three of them, and then they pulled Downes and Smith and others into their circle and the celebration really took off.

It may not stop for a very long time.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, slicin’ ‘n dicin’ defenses on the gridiron. (John Fisken photos)

baseball

Flingin’ the high, hard cheese.

(Photos courtesy Charlotte Young)

Evolution of a superstar. (Photos courtesy Charlotte Young)

Sometimes you get lucky.

Over the years Coupeville has lost a lot of pretty talented athletes, young men and women whose families have taken them away, for one reason or another, just as they were about to hit their prime.

But sometimes the scales get balanced, and that’s what happened when Chris and Charlotte Smith moved to town three years ago.

Somehow, against all odds, we got three superb young athletes (and better people) in one fell swoop, a boon to Wolf athletics for years.

Older brother CJ delivered 2.5 years of excellence across football, basketball and baseball before graduation and little sister Scout, just now a freshman at CHS, is already a supernova.

And then, in the middle, we have the young man who is carving out a legend which will loom large over the prairie for many years.

Hunter Smith, a Wolf junior who happens to be celebrating his birthday today, has been a slam-dunk since day one.

Pick the sport and he will go out and kick your fanny in it, small smile on his face as he lets his actions speak louder than words.

In football, he already holds (or is tied, there’s still some debate) the school’s single-season record for interceptions, having snagged seven of them as a sophomore.

A two-way warrior, he was the team’s leading pass catcher as well, and is primed for a major breakout season in his third tour of duty, which begins tonight against South Whidbey.

On the basketball court, Hunter is a dead-eye shooter, a hustler and a scrapper who hits buzzer beaters to electrify the crowd yet still is willing to do the dirty work.

Put him on the baseball diamond, and Smith is a strikeout-hucking pitcher, a rock-solid middle infielder prone to dazzling displays of defensive virtuosity and a lead-off hitter who rocks both power and speed in his trim frame.

If they were taking bets on it in Vegas, he would have to be the odds-on favorite for CHS Male Athlete of the Year in 2016-2017, primarily because he does everything and he does everything really, really well.

And yet, what makes Hunter truly rise above the crowd is the way he handles himself, on and off the field.

If there’s ego there, he hides it well.

Confidence? Yes. A belief in his own abilities? Without a doubt.

But like his siblings and his parents, Hunter is a cool cat who goes about his business with style and genuine class.

A mix of Honor Roll smart and big game tough, the middle Smith kid is a winner in every way, and we are lucky to have inherited him (and his family).

So happy birthday, Hunter.

I look forward to being there as you torch the record books for years to come.

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