Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘football’

Sean Toomey-Stout hauls in a reception.

Sean Toomey-Stout was a two-way terror this season. (John Fisken photo)

More like great day.

Closing their season in style, the Coupeville Middle School football squad savaged host Sultan 46-0 Thursday, avenging an earlier season loss to the Turks.

The first time the two schools met, it was much different.

“The last time we met Sultan it was our first and only home game, most players had less than 24 hours of football under their belts and we were beat; it wasn’t pretty,” said CMS coach Bob Martin. “This time the story was a bit different.

“Our young men practiced six days a week, conditioned just about every day, and showed Sultan the results of what hard work and dedication can accomplish,” he added. “It was a good day.”

Coupeville came out ready to rumble, stripping the ball away from Sultan on the opening kickoff.

One play later, the Wolves scored their first touchdown and the rout was on.

“Our offense and defense were very solid; we scored on almost every possession and limited them to no more than five first downs,” Martin said. “It was a total team effort, everyone knew what their responsibilities were and did it.”

Chris Battaglia closed out a stellar eighth grade season by rumbling for 265 yards on the ground, while Teo Keilwitz (50-yard TD) and Sean Toomey-Stout (20-yard pick six) both chipped in with game-busting plays.

The Wolf defense hit Sultan from every side, and always with intensity.

Toomey-Stout (seven tackles), Keilwitz (6), Koa Davison (5), Jaushon Clay (5), Jake Pease (4) and Battaglia (4 tackles, 3 assists) all made an impact.

Read Full Post »

Former Wolf QB Gunnar Langvold.

Former Wolf QB Gunnar Langvold.

Bord Langvold

Bord Langvold

I have always liked Gunnar Langvold.

The former Coupeville High School quarterback would likely be the first to admit he had a checkered career with the Wolves.

Gunnar, who I used to work with at Christopher’s on Whidbey, is a goofball who means well but, sometimes allowed the, shall we say, slightly idiotic side of his personality, to win over common sense.

He was also a kid, growing up and finding his way.

Kids make mistakes. Hopefully they learn from their errors while they still have time.

I was very happy to see Gunnar get back on the field last year, after injuries and personal errors in judgement cost him parts of two seasons.

He played well in the games where he was eligible and healthy, including leading Coupeville to a huge blowout win over Chimacum in his final game.

Even better, he graduated from CHS and has seemed to settle more on the side of making positive choices.

So, it’s tough to see the guy facing more battles in his life.

He had recent knee surgery, thanks to a renegade trampoline, but, as he recovers from that, his family is facing hard times.

Gunnar’s dad, Bord Langvold, who used to be a regular at Videoville during my 12 years behind the counter, has been fighting the ravages of kidney disease.

It’s an illness I know all too well, as my mom was slowly chipped away by it.

Bord is on kidney dialysis three times a week and now his insurance has decided not to cover the entire bill, leaving the Langvolds responsible for 20% of the bill.

With retirement and disability checks not covering everything, the family’s house has gone into foreclosure, as well.

Through good times and bad times, Gunnar was a huge part of Wolf Nation.

I think his time playing football and the work put in by gridiron coach Tony Maggio and his staff to try and shape Gunnar into a stronger person first and a better athlete second benefited him greatly.

It would be nice if we, as a community, could continue and try to keep that helping hand extended.

Whether you can help financially or through a few words of support, reach out to Gunnar. Let him know that you care about him and where he, and his family, are going in life.

He’s a good guy at heart, maybe a little misunderstood at times and more than a little idiotic at others, but a young man with great promise and potential he is starting to fully tap.

Let’s make sure we don’t forget him now that his days in the red and black are done.

To see Gunnar’s fundraiser for his dad, pop over to:

http://www.gofundme.com/ftqcyw

Read Full Post »

Matthew Kelley sports a reminder that football is a contact sport. (Pat Kelley photo)

Matthew Kelley sports a reminder that football is a contact sport. (Pat Kelley photo)

Not even a cheap shot can derail the Kelley Express.

Bouncing back after a shot to the ribs knocked him out of the game for much of the first half Saturday, Coupeville Middle School gridiron giant Matthew Kelley returned just in time to decide his team’s game.

Flying back on to the field at Friday Harbor, Kelley, a sixth grader at CMS, racked up eight tackles and two sacks, stripping the ball from the quarterback on the second take-down.

That allowed his Oak Harbor Junior Gold squad to recover the ball and turn the tide in what became a 19-12 win.

The victory kept Oak Harbor perfect at 7-0. Having already secured the #1 seed for the playoffs, the Wildcats will close the regular season with an all-Island match-up with South Whidbey (1-6) Oct. 18.

Friday Harbor was clinging to a 12-6 lead and had the ball on its own 35-yard line when Kelley broke through the line, leveled the QB and popped the ball out.

The Wildcats took immediate advantage, recovering the ball and driving for the go-ahead touchdown. They added a final score to pad the lead with four seconds left in the game.

Kelley wasn’t the only Coupeville kid to shine last weekend.

Logan Downes, who moonlights for the Oak Harbor Pee Wees, shined in a 40-6 win over Friday Harbor.

Downes, who attends third grade at Coupeville Elementary School, took a punt back 55 yards and later ripped off a 95-yard scoring run in the third quarter that put the game on ice.

His ‘Cat squad is 6-1.

Read Full Post »

Mitch Pelroy (Kirsten Pelroy photo)

Mitch Pelroy, owner of the best hair in college football. (Kirsten Pelroy photo)

Maybe they should put the ball in Mitch Pelroy’s hands more often.

When the former Coupeville High School gridiron star got his mitts on the football Saturday, things happened. Exciting things.

When he didn’t, not so much.

Pelroy took back two kickoff returns for big yardage, ripping off runs of 24 and 25 yards, but with the rest of his Montana Western teammates having a stagnant day, the Bulldogs fell 31-6 to host Southern Oregon in NAIA play.

The loss dropped Montana Western to 2-5 on the season.

The Bulldogs, who were out-gained 481 yards to 278 on the day, failed to score until they netted a pair of fourth-quarter field goals from Connor Greth.

While Montana Western is struggling a bit in the win-loss column, Pelroy has been putting up nice numbers.

He has returned 13 kicks for 343 yards and four punts for 56 yards. His 399 all-purpose yards put him third on the Bulldogs stat chart for the season.

Pelroy has also found time to patrol the defensive backfield, recording eleven solo tackles and assisting on two others.

Montana Western will try to break its recent backwards slide when it returns home Saturday, Oct. 18 to face Eastern Oregon.

Read Full Post »

Gabe Wynn (John Fisken photo)

Sophomore Gabe Wynn has 13 tackles in his first season. (John Fisken photo)

Numbers tell the story.

Wracked by injuries, Coupeville High School has taken a backwards step or two in the past two weeks, dropping consecutive games and falling back to #29 in the rankings (http://www.scoreczar.org/classifications/4-high-school-football-wa1a ).

But, as the Wolves sit at 3-3 overall, 2-2 in the 1A Olympic League (just a game off of first-place), they have continued to pile up some impressive stats.

Senior two-way terror Josh Bayne currently sits in the Top 10 for 1A players in six categories, while senior quarterback Joel Walstad’s name appear three times.

Your up-to-date stats, heading into next Friday’s game at Chimacum:

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad  73 completions for 943 yards (#2 in 1A) with 7 TDs and 9 INTs
CJ Smith  9-99 with 1/1
Josh Bayne 1-43

Receiving:

Ryan Griggs 22 receptions for 328 yards (#5 in 1A)
Bayne 23-279 (#8 in 1A)
C. Smith 17-242
Wiley Hesselgrave 9-134
Jacob Martin 9-66
Lathom Kelley 4-21
Mitchell Carroll 2-15
Gabe Wynn
1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 87 carries for 732 yards (#2 in 1A)
Kelley 21-242
Hesselgrave 25-175
Martin 33-132
Mitchell Losey 4-23
C. Smith 4-12
Walstad 14-11

Kickoff/punt returns:

Bayne 7 returns for 144 yards
Hesselgrave 8-110
Kelley 5-83
Losey
1-10
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-8
Wynn 1-0

Total yards:

Bayne 1054 (#2 in 1A)
Walstad 954 (#6 in 1A)
C. Smith 353
Griggs 328
Hesselgrave 309
Kelley 263
Martin 198
Losey 23
Carroll 15

Scoring:

Bayne (48) — 8 TD (#2 in 1A)
Walstad (41) — 4 TD, 12 PAT (#6 in 1A), 1 FG, 1 two-point conversion
Kelley (24) — 4 TD
Hesselgrave (18) — 3 TD
Griggs
(10) — 1 TD, 2 conversions
C. Smith (10) — 1 TD, 2 conversions
Matt Shank (2) — 1 safety

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne 48 solo, 10 assists (#4 in 1A)
Hesselgrave 24-4
Aaron Wright 18-9
Kelley 14-12
Shank 22-3
Oscar Liquidano 21-4
Martin 13-4
Wynn
13-0
Griggs 9-3
Isaac Vargas
8-3
Brenden Gilbert 7-0
C. Smith 5-2
Hunter Smith 6-0
Walstad
5-1
Losey 4-2
Josh Lord
3-2
Dominic Dausey 3-0
James Vidoni 1-1
Jake Lord 1-0
Mitchell Carroll
0-1

Sacks:

Bayne 2
Hesselgrave 2

Interceptions:

Bayne 4 (#2 in 1A)
C. Smith 1
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Bayne 3
Vargas 2
Dausey
1
Hesselgrave
1
Kelley
1
Martin 1
H. Smith
1
Walstad 1
Wright 1
Wynn
1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »