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Posts Tagged ‘football’

Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Already a varsity vet as a kicker, Joel Walstad is stepping up as the team’s starting QB this season. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday's scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

   Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday’s three-team scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Joel Walstad was on point.

The Coupeville High School senior is just seven days away from making his first-ever regular season start as a varsity quarterback and he looked strong in his warm-up.

Playing in a three-team scrimmage Friday in La Conner, Walstad threw for two touchdowns and sophomore Gabe Wynn ran for another as the Wolves blitzed their hosts.

Both of Walstad’s scoring strikes went into the arms of senior Josh Bayne.

Wynn, returning to the gridiron after spending his freshman year playing tennis, ripped off a 40-yard run to the end zone for his score.

Walstad wasn’t the only Wolf QB to hit the highlight reel, as freshman Hunter Downes also connected with Mitchell Carroll on a 20 yard-plus heave.

The afternoon scrimmage, which also involved Burlington-Edison, gave all three teams a chance to iron out the kinks as they prepare for opening night next Friday, Sept. 5.

The Wolves will host Island neighbor South Whidbey in a battle for ownership of The Bucket.

While it’s now a non-conference game, with Coupeville having hopped from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, the local rivalry aspect marks the game as a huge one.

Based on what he saw Friday, and in the team’s opening week-and-a-half of practice, CHS coach Tony Maggio is pleased with where the Wolves are.

“Kids gave a great effort, we threw the ball well against La Conner,” Maggio said. “Our defense allowed only one touchdown each game; overall a great job.

“We will be ready for South Whidbey on Friday!”

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Cole Payne, a man for all seasons.

Cole Payne, a man for all seasons.

If there’s a birthday cake, no one let him near the knife.

Coupeville High School junior Cole Payne is a pro at everything he does — football, baseball, being a freakin’ American hero — but he’s also pretty skilled at hurting himself.

Frequent injuries have been the only thing slowing down his rise to being a full-fledged star.

In fact, his latest surgery, which came just days before his birthday, will knock him out for the complete football season. That’s a huge blow to the Wolves.

When he was healthy last year, Payne was a heat-seeking missile on the gridiron.

If you had the ball and tried to run away from him, you usually ended up planted face-first in the turf, wondering how that freight train that just hit you managed to get on the field.

Cole was equally potent on the offensive side of the ball, both as a receiver and a runner.

But, while football coach Tony Maggio may (secretly) shed tears over the loss of Payne, there is a silver lining.

Having surgery on his bum shoulder at this point of the year should give him plenty of time to get back to full health by baseball season.

And it is as a boy of summer that Payne, like older brother Morgan, really shines.

Whether as a pitcher or, more often these days, as a catcher, he’s a sweet-swingin’, fleet-footed two-way terror, capable of turning the tide in favor of his squad on both offense and defense.

With five key seniors, including Morgan, having graduated, Cole should move into a leadership position and be at the forefront of Wolf baseball the next two seasons.

That is how we want to see him, on the field, kickin’ fanny and takin’ names, not on the sideline, arm in a sling.

I’m not saying he can’t be entertaining as he works those sidelines, but we want more Payne and less pain.

So happy birthday, Cole, and here’s to a bright future. May it include as few doctors as possible.

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Nick Streubel (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel (John Fisken photo)

He may not have wi-fi all the time yet, but, other than that, Nick Streubel is adapting to college life.

The former Coupeville High School All-State lineman is currently wrapping up his first camp as a college player at Central Washington University.

After that comes a move into his dorm and then work, work and more work as he fine-tunes his game and prepares for one day knocking helmets on the college gridiron.

Having caught him during a laundry run, one of the few times when he has access to the internet right now, we were lucky enough to get this update directly from The Big Hurt himself.

In it, he discusses a position change from high school and his excitement over getting to retain his jersey number.

Yeah, they said either guard or center and right now it looks like I’ll stay at center.

I’m looking forward to trying something new on the line. And honestly I’m loving it and the challenge of it.

Yeah, I’m gonna redshirt this year, so I won’t be playing in any of the games or traveling to the away games.

I do get to be on the sideline in my jersey and the number I got was 68!

Other then that, football camp ends soon and we’re getting ready for game prep against Montana.

Things are going great over here in Ellensburg and I can’t wait to see what this year has in store for me!

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Coach V

Coach V

Coupeville is blessed with a strong group of coaches.

Across the board, regardless of the sport, at the high school, middle school, youth or select team levels, Cow Town has a group of men and women who show great commitment to their athletes and work with them on both a sports and a personal level.

One of the best of the group, Dustin Van Velkinburgh, aka Coach V, hits the big 3-0 today.

And, while his advancing years may require him to seek out a walker and a stiff shot of prune juice (says a guy 13 years older…), there is no quit in the guy.

A very talented athlete in his day (football, basketball, soccer and on and on), he can still kick the pampered rears of most, if not all, of his players.

But, while that reality lingers out there, Coach V is the perfect example of a player’s coach.

One who knows when to be a kid’s best friend and when to be the guy in charge. When to console and cheer and when to push.

He remembers what it was like to be a young man without a father figure.

What it was like to find guidance and the (occasional) kick in the rear from coaches like Ron Bagby and Randy King during his own days as a Wolf.

It made him a man, one who has gone on to raise a swarm of happy children with wife Jessica.

Coupeville gave him much in his younger days, something he speaks of often. And he has returned the favor over the years, giving back to the children of a community he deeply loves.

There is no artifice. No question dodging. He remains the same after a big win as after a horrifying loss.

A small smile, a quiet word off to the side to one kid, a public calling-out of another.

He finds out how they tick, what will drive them and what will crumple them, and he hits all the right notes, fitting his lesson to them as individuals, not faceless cogs in an athletic factory.

Coach V, and others like him, are doing more than making athletes. They are given teenagers and they do their best to help them prepare for life after the cheers and pep rallies.

If they win games, great, but the bigger victories come years later, when the next Coach V stays in town (or returns) and picks up the mantle. The man makes a kid a man and he pays it forward.

Every community worth its salt has a coach like Dustin. That one guy who is his town through and through.

Who, only years later, when you see his legacy in full, do you realize the impact he had. The lives he steered in the right direction, the kids he gave a last chance to, the way he altered destinies, sometimes subtly and sometimes with a bold hand.

In Coupeville, we call him Coach V, and we should be very, very grateful we have him.

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In between his many touchdowns, Ty Eck found time to drop the boom on defense as well. (John Fisken photos)

   In between his many touchdowns, Ty Eck also found time to drop the boom on defense. (John Fisken photos)

Gabe Eck

Gabe Eck, calm and cool while directing the offense.

A third Coupeville kid playing for Oak harbor, Alex Turner, holds the line.

A third Coupeville kid playing for Oak harbor, Alex Turner (50), holds the line.

Ty Eck was en fuego Saturday.

The eighth grader hit pay dirt nearly every time he touched the ball, busting off touchdown runs of 72 and 82 yards while also teaming up with quarterback brother Gabe on a 75-yard pass-and-run-like-crazy play.

Fueled by the Coupeville duo, who are masquerading as Wildcats right now, Oak Harbor savaged Sedro-Woolley 49-8 in youth football play.

They are joined on their squad by a third Coupeville player, fellow eighth grader Alex Turner.

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