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Riley White, looking for those W’s. (Jackie Saia photo)

Gas up the busses.

Coupeville High School fall sports teams hit the road for six of their eight contests this coming week.

Cross country heads to Mount Vernon Christian Thursday for the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships, while football plays under Friday Night Lights at La Conner.

Meanwhile, Wolf soccer sends its JV team to MVC Monday, then its varsity squad to Lopez Island Wednesday afternoon.

Senior Night at home against La Conner Friday wraps up a busy week for the booters.

Noelle Western powers for the finish line as Coupeville coaches Elizabeth Bitting and Amber Wyman cheer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

CHS volleyball also plays three times, kicking things off with a home match Monday against Providence Classical Christian.

A day later the Wolves travel to Seattle to tangle with The Bush School, before heading to the wilds of Darrington Thursday to put a cap on things.

As they pack all the snacks (and pillows), a look at standings through games of Oct. 14:

 

Northwest League boys’ soccer:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 5-0-0 8-1-0
PC Christian 4-1-0 8-3-0
MV Christian 3-1-0 9-2-1
Orcas Island 3-2-0 6-5-0
Lopez Island 2-2-0 4-4-0
Coupeville 2-3-0 5-4-0
Grace Academy 1-4-0 1-8-0
La Conner 1-4-0 3-7-0
CPC-Lynnwood 0-4-0 3-7-0

 

Northwest League football — (11-Man):

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 3-0 4-2
Coupeville 1-1 1-6
La Conner 0-3 1-5

 

Northwest League football — (8-Man):

School League Overall
Darrington 1-0 6-1
Concrete 0-1 5-2

 

Northwest League volleyball:

School League Overall
La Conner 6-0 7-6
Orcas Island 5-1 8-3
Darrington 4-2 10-3
Coupeville 3-2 5-4
MV Christian 2-4 6-5
Concrete 1-6 5-8
Friday Harbor 0-6 0-11

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Freshman quarterback Matthew Gilbert saw extensive playing time in the fourth quarter Friday night. (Andrew Williams photo)

It was Friday the 13th after all.

In between the action and the falling rain drops, there were highlights for Coupeville High School football fans, from the announcement of Homecoming royalty to freshly cooked hot dogs and birthday sing-a-longs.

On the field, however, things turned fairly grim during a game in which the refs slowed things down to a crawl to throw 10,047 flags, and visiting Forks proved that when it spells class, it sometimes drops the C and L.

The Wolves were missing multiple key senior starters on offense, including quarterback Logan Downes, who is battling tonsillitis.

Logan Downes can’t feel his face. (Angie Downes photo)

Meanwhile the Spartans chose to leave their primary weapons in until the game’s final seconds, merrily racing the clock to pad stats in a lopsided 67-9 win.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 1-6 on the season but hope lives.

The final two regular season games pit the Wolves against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals La Conner and Friday Harbor, and CHS can still claim a share of the league title and punch a return ticket to state.

To do so, Coupeville, which is 1-1 in conference action, needs to beat the Braves (0-3 in league, 1-5 overall) and Wolverines (3-0, 4-2).

The first game is on the road Oct. 20, the second in Cow Town on Senior Night Oct. 27.

Sweep those two tilts and the Wolves finish in a tie with Friday Harbor at 3-1, with the teams splitting their two-game season series.

That would set up a tiebreaker mini game, with the winner advancing to the state tourney.

But that’s still a way off.

Friday night brought a strong Forks team to town, carrying a 5-1 record and a #6 ranking in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

And yet it took the Spartans a bit to pull away, as a scrappy Coupeville team led by sophomore QB Chase Anderson, making his first start under center in place of Downes, hung tough.

Forks signal caller Emmanuel Hernandez, just a freshman, ripped off a 36-yard scoring run three minutes into the game to stake the visitors to an early lead, but the Wolves countered.

Chewing up six-plus minutes of clock, Anderson and his crew methodically moved downfield, with the slippery sophomore scrambling out of danger three times to keep the drive alive.

Anderson’s biggest burst was a 19-yard bolt to the right side, weaving and bobbing, daring anyone to tackle him, then ducking under the outstretched arms of would-be tacklers.

Mixing in a couple of passes to Jack Porter, Hunter Bronec, and Malachi Somes, the Wolf QB proved to be a killer with his arm as well as his feet, but penalties finally stalled out Coupeville.

Facing a fourth-and-15, CHS coach Bennett Richter put the ball on Anderson’s toe, and he blasted his first field goal of the season, a 33-yard bomb into the twilight.

Casey Masters (holding helmet) and other Wolf linemen gave it their all against Forks. (Jackie Saia photo)

Forks scored again before the looooooong first quarter ended, with Brody Lausche rumbling in from 10 yards out for the first of his five TD’s, but Coupeville again had an answer.

Anderson connected with Bronec on a pass by accident to open the second quarter, as the ball hit another receiver’s arms and popped up into the air only to be snagged by the lanky junior.

Very next play, a 29-yard heave into the night air landed on the fingertips of Jack Porter for his third score of the season.

It was Anderson’s first TD pass this year, and the second of his prep career.

While a two-point conversion run was snuffed out just short of the line, Coupeville was down just 14-9 at that point, with almost three full quarters left to play.

Unfortunately, Porter’s trip to the end zone was the last time the Wolves would score on this evening. At least if you believe the refs.

A 73-yard bolt to freedom by Hernandez made the score 20-9 in favor of Forks, but a muffed snap on the PAT attempt spurred hope.

Even down 28-9, after a short scoring run by Lausche and a successful conversion attempt, the Wolves seemed like they would make it a battle royal.

Anderson lofted a pass over the defense, dropping the ball into Porter’s hands, and several big steps later, the Coupeville speed demon had broken off an 80-yard TD pass play.

Except…

A lonely flag sat nestled in the grass, and after a prolonged conversation among the refs — perhaps wondering who had misplaced their rule book and bifocal glasses — the zebras overturned the touchdown, driving a stake through the heart of Wolf Nation.

From that point on, Coupeville’s offensive attack deflated, while Forks went on a rampage, ramming in an additional six touchdowns.

Five scores came on the ground, while another was courtesy of a blocked punt, the ball plucked off the ground by Walker Wheeler, who strolled in for a quick six.

With the lead cracking the 40-point barrier, a running clock went into action, and the Spartans answer was to hunker down with their starters and keep battering away.

Hernandez scored his third touchdown of the night very late in the fourth, sweeping in behind most of the same guys blocking for him back at the start of the game.

While Coupeville didn’t score over the game’s final 35 minutes, it did get several strong kickoff returns from Davin Houston and Aiden O’Neill, plus a blocked PAT by Adrian Cunningham.

If there is a sour taste to Forks willingness to run up the score, there is an answer.

Take care of business the next two weeks, get back to the state playoffs, and maybe earn a rematch with the Spartans.

This time with the full lineup in place.

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It was a different time, back in the days when the press box was small, open air, and bee-infested — and a scoreboard operator could get his Wobble on. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Where were you when they turned Wobble off?

It’s been 11 years since the powers that be shut down use of the song, which came with its own dance, as the exit music for Coupeville High School football games.

Scoreboard operator and ice cream purveyor Joel Norris has never been the same since.

Without being able to Wobble, he’s a mere shell of a man.

Instead of living the sweet life in a world of soul-sustaining Rocky Road and Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough, there are rumors Joel has been experimenting with Rum Raisin and … choke … Black Licorice.

Now, if you weren’t around in October 2012, you likely have no clue of what I’m talking about.

The rapper V.I.C., who launched the song and the subsequent dance craze across America, has largely faded away himself, not having a measurable hit since 2015.

The internet says he’s still out there, bustin’ rhymes until the break of dawn in relative obscurity, and Wobble even had a brief renaissance on TikTok in 2020.

But he’s not headlining any major tours with Beyonce.

Hopefully V.I.C. (short for Victory in Christ – thanks, Internet) held on to all the rights to his greatest hit, and still lives in the comfort he deserves.

Cause Wobble was, and is, a banger.

Even in the slightly cleaned-up version which was used by high schools.

Cause that was what one parent complaint brought crashing down — the PG-ized take on the song, which was what CHS cheerleaders used for their performance.

It’s way past time to bring Wobble back to Coupeville football games, even if current Wolf seniors were … um, seven years old … the last time it ripped from the PA sound system.

I mean, we were still using the old, tiny wooden press box ruled by 10,001 angry bees — some alive, others likely zombies — back in those days.

So, reality tells me Wobble isn’t on the soundtrack for most current Coupeville students.

But hey, these are the same teens who belt out every line of Take Me Home, Country Roads by John Denver and Sweet Caroline by Neil Diamond, not to mention a whole slew of ’80s and ’90s classics.

They can learn the Wobble again.

And V.I.C. might be out there looking for a gig that gives him a trip to a small island in Washington state and be willing to lead the revival in person.

Stranger things have happened.

As we count down the days until Homecoming 2023, now is the time to rise up and declare as one:

Oh, oh, oh, oh
All the shawtys in the club
(Let me see you just)
Back it up, drop it down
(Let me see you just)
Get low n scrub the grown
(Let me see you just)
Push it up, push it up
(Let me see you just)

Don’t do it just for the kids. Do it for Joel Norris!

Don’t forsake the ice cream man to a Hellscape where … choke … black licorice ice cream is an option.

 

The song:

 

The dance:

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Malachi Somes is one of 10 Wolves to score this season. (Bailey Thule photos)

They’ve hit double digits again.

Last season, during a run to a league title and a trip to the state playoffs, 12 Coupeville High School football players scored a touchdown.

This year, with a younger roster, scoring is down, but the Wolves have still found a way to get 10 players into the end zone.

Freshman Davin Houston snagged a touchdown pass from Logan Downes against Friday Harbor to become that 10th player to hit pay dirt.

With six games in the books, Coupeville has tallied 147 points and 22 touchdowns this season, averaging out to a not-bad 24.5 and 3.7 per game.

Admittedly, that is down from last year’s nine-game total of 363 points and 52 scores, but last year was also one of the best in program history.

Jack Porter (grey shirt) has found the end zone twice.

The Wolves have three regular season games left to play, with a non-conference Homecoming rumble against Forks set for this Friday, Oct. 13.

After that comes a road trip to La Conner and a Senior Night rematch with Friday Harbor as CHS pursues a return to state.

As the final games play out, one thing to keep an eye on is the play of quarterback Logan Downes.

The senior gunslinger has 13 touchdown passes this season and 33 for his career.

Logan Downes already owns the CHS single-game record of five scoring heaves and is chasing Joel Walstad (18) and big bro Hunter Downes (35) for the single-season and career marks.

Logan Downes chases history.

 

Scoring stats through Oct. 9:

 

Touchdowns:

Aiden O’Neill – 5
Chase Anderson – 4
Mikey Robinett – 3
Adrian Cunningham – 2
Logan Downes – 2
Jack Porter – 2
Hunter Bronec – 1
Peyton Caveness – 1
Davin Houston – 1
Malachi Somes – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson — 14
Downes – 1

 

Points:

Anderson – 38
O’Neill — 30
Robinett – 18
Downes– 13
Cunningham — 12
Porter – 12
Bronec – 6
Caveness – 6
Houston – 6
Somes – 6

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Coupeville cross country coach Elizabeth Bitting keeps a watchful eye on her runners. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re in the thick of things.

Fall sports are chugging along, with the race for league titles and playoff seeding part of daily life.

In that environment, Coupeville High School teams have six events in the coming week, with three at home and three on the road.

Wolf fans are on the edge of their seats.

Wolf volleyball enjoys home cooking, hosting Concrete Tuesday and Mount Vernon Christian Thursday night.

Meanwhile, CHS football has its Homecoming game Friday, with Forks making the long trek to participate.

Rounding out things, cross country gets on the bus for a trip to Lake Padden Park in Bellingham Thursday for the Lake Lap Invitational, while boys’ soccer makes two trips off-Island.

The Wolf booters travel to Friday Harbor Tuesday to square off with the defending state champs, then amble down to Bothell Thursday to play Providence Classical Christian.

As we continue to work our way towards basketball season, a look at up-to-the-moment league standings through games of Oct. 7:

 

Northwest League boys’ soccer:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 3-0-0 6-1-0
Coupeville 2-1-0 5-2-0
MV Christian 2-1-0 8-2-1
Orcas Island 2-1-0 5-4-0
PC Christian 1-1-0 5-3-0
Grace Academy 1-2-0 1-6-0
La Conner 1-2-0 3-5-0
CPC-Lynnwood 0-2-0 3-5-0
Lopez Island 0-2-0 2-4-0

 

Northwest League football — (11-Man):

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 2-0 3-2
Coupeville 1-1 1-5
La Conner 0-2 1-4

 

Northwest League football — (8-Man):

School League Overall
Darrington 1-0 6-0
Concrete 0-1 4-2

 

Northwest League volleyball:

School League Overall
La Conner 5-0 6-5
Orcas Island 4-1 7-3
Darrington 3-1 9-2
Coupeville 1-2 3-4
MV Christian 1-3 5-4
Concrete 1-4 4-6
Friday Harbor 0-4 0-9

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