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Nick Streubel hangs out with family on Central Washington University football Senior Night. (Photos courtesy Nanette Streubel and Amanda Jones)

“I taught the boy everything he knows about football, just saying…”

Uncle Nick, the gentle gridiron giant.

“The Big Hurt” went out by delivering a … really big hurt.

Coupeville High School grad Nick Streubel celebrated Senior Night Saturday by leading his Central Washington University football team to a 72-17 win over Missouri’s Southwest Baptist University.

The non-conference rout was the fifth-straight win for the streaking Wildcats, who sit at 6-4 with one game left on the regular season schedule.

Central, which is 4-1 in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference, travels to Canada next Saturday, Nov. 16 to play Simon Fraser University (1-4, 1-8).

With a win, the Wildcats clinch half the GNAC title, which they will share with Western Oregon (5-1, 7-3).

The two teams split this season, with the Wolves coming out on top 36-26 in late September, before Central rebounded for a 42-41 overtime win in mid-October.

If Streubel and Co. win out and lay claim to their share of the title, it will be the third-straight year CWU has done so.

While he and his teammates are hopeful of landing a spot in the NCAA D-II playoffs, the former Wolf is nearing the end of what has been a rock-solid college career.

Thanks to two red-shirt seasons, one as a freshman, then a second due to a hand injury, Streubel spent six seasons in the Wildcat program.

A team captain and the face of CWU football this season, the anchor of the offensive line has already graduated but returned for one final go-round on the gridiron.

During his time as a ‘Cat, Streubel has been named to All-League and All-Region teams, while having ESPN announcers hype him as a guy worthy of a look from the NFL.

Way back when he was still a growing man mountain, and not yet the carved-from-granite physical specimen he has become, “The Big Hurt” was a three-sport standout at CHS.

Football, basketball, and track kept him busy, but his greatest moment came after a season-ending gridiron clash against Chimacum his junior year.

The stadium in Port Townsend had been used the night before the Wolves and Cowboys played, and the field was ripped up, mushy, and stinky.

After a game in the trenches, Streubel was given a rushing attempt as a reward for years of work, and he promptly carried at least seven screaming, sobbing Cowboys on his back, crashing forward for yardage, ending the play in the middle of a giant mud puddle.

The Wolves had to high-tail it to catch the last ferry out of town after the game, which gave no one a chance to clean up.

At the dock, Streubel, all 6-foot-3 and 300 pounds of him, coated from head to toe in mud, chased after his coaches, eventually snagging one and wrapping them in a grimy embrace.

So, basically, it’s great to see Nick do so well in college and all.

But, that said, I already witnessed him at his finest on that dock.

The man was a freakin’ legend at 17, and just keeps getting better with time.

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Ben Smith was one of five Coupeville High School football players to both score a touchdown and pick off a pass this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sean Toomey-Stout led CHS with seven touchdowns.

So, this isn’t 100% complete.

Let’s just get that out of the way from the start.

But, that being said, it’s better than nothing.

The Coupeville High School football team rolled to a very-respectable 5-4 record this season — posting the first winning mark by a Wolf gridiron squad since 2005, if you didn’t hear that fact the first 100,000 times I mentioned it.

Here’s where I’d like to present a flawless accounting of stats for the whole year, but, for a lot of different reasons, I don’t have those numbers.

What I do have are the stats I was able to keep track of personally – some of the big ones like who scored, how they scored, and how often they scored.

Like I said, it’s better than nothing.

So here you go:

 

Passing TD’s:

Dawson Houston – 9

 

Receiving TD’s:

Sean Toomey-Stout – 5
Gavin Knoblich – 4

 

Rushing TD’s:

Andrew Martin – 5
Dawson Houston – 3
Sage Downes – 1
Dakota Eck – 1
Scott Hilborn – 1
Ben Smith – 1

 

Defensive TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 1

 

Return TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 1

 

Total TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 7
Martin – 5
Knoblich – 4
Dawson Houston – 3
Downes – 1
Eck – 1
Hilborn – 1
Smith – 1

 

PAT’s:

Daylon Houston – 9

 

Conversions:

Dawson Houston – 2
Martin – 2

 

Points:

Toomey-Stout – 42
Martin – 34
Knoblich – 24
Dawson Houston – 22
Daylon Houston – 9
Downes – 6
Eck – 6
Hilborn – 6
Smith – 6

 

Interceptions:

Toomey-Stout – 4
Eck – 3
Hilborn – 2
Sage Downes – 1
Joven Light – 1
Smith – 1

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Coupeville senior Sean Toomey-Stout strides out of football season, and heads towards basketball season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One team left standing.

Coupeville High School boys tennis, girls soccer, and now football have wrapped their seasons, leaving just CHS volleyball still in action.

Plus, lone Wolf cross country runner Catherine Lhamon, who leaves her squad behind to compete at the 1A state meet next weekend.

While the Coupeville junior has one race left to run, her school’s volleyball team faces a busy week ahead.

The Wolf spikers play two more matches at the district tourney Tuesday, an event which they host.

Win at least one of those, and Coupeville moves on to bi-districts, which plays out next Thursday and Saturday.

After that, there’s the possibility of state for volleyball, while winter and basketball loom on the horizon.

As we begin to transition seasons, a last look at the league standings, through the games of November 2:

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
King’s 10-0 16-0
Coupeville 8-2 14-3
CPC-Bothell 5-5 10-8
South Whidbey 4-6 5-11
Sultan 2-8 8-11
Granite Falls 1-9 4-11

 

North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell 3-1 7-2
King’s 3-1 4-5
Coupeville 0-0 5-4
Granite Falls 2-2 3-6
South Whidbey 2-2 6-3
Sultan 0-4 1-8

**CHS football played an independent schedule and had no league games.**

 

North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
King’s 9-1 14-4-0
South Whidbey 9-1 15-2-1
CPC-Bothell 5-5 10-7-0
Granite Falls 5-5 9-9-0
Coupeville 2-9 3-13-2
Sultan 1-10 1-14-2


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Seattle Academy 12-1 12-1
University Prep 12-1 12-1
Overlake 8-5 8-5
Bear Creek 7-7 7-7
Eastside Prep 3-7 3-7
Bush 3-9 3-9
Coupeville 3-11 4-11
South Whidbey 3-11 3-11

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Dominic Coffman leads off a collection of CHS football portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jonathan Partida

Cole Hutchinson

Nick Armstrong

Joven Light

Isaiah Bittner

Kevin Partida

Daylon Houston

The games are done, the uniforms have been turned in, and, now, the final photos hit the internet.

The Coupeville High School football team finished 5-4 in 2019, the first winning record for a Wolf gridiron squad since 2005.

Along the way, we used a lot of pics, but I still find myself sitting with a collection of portraits shot in the preseason by John Fisken.

Today, those photos run free.

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Gavin Knoblich and his fellow CHS seniors closed their prep careers Friday with a hard-fought loss to 3A Interlake. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf senior captain Sean Toomey-Stout (right) hugs junior Ben Smith after the game. (Deb Smith photo)

There’s the finale you deserve, and the finale you get, and the two are often not the same.

This year’s Coupeville High School football team accomplished something the Wolves haven’t done since 2005, finishing with a winning record at 5-4.

For a program which has been mired in the mud for so long — 12 losing seasons and one .500 record in 2014 — it’s a giant step forward.

It’s a testament to the seniors on the squad, who led by voice and by example.

It’s also a promise of what could be to come, as numerous young stars rose under the tutelage of CHS head coach Marcus Carr and his staff.

And it all culminated perfectly a week ago, when Coupeville, a 2B-sized school forced by the state to pretend to be 1A for years, smacked 2A Anacortes.

Winning on their home field, on Senior Night, the Wolves brought all the emotion, all the accomplishment, together, and topped it with a giant bow.

It was a fitting finale.

Except, there was still a game left on the schedule.

In a year in which Coupeville football abandoned the North Sound Conference and went independent, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith did his best to pull together a schedule from scratch.

He wanted teams in a similar place as Coupeville, a mix of young teams, rebuilding teams, programs also mired in the mud, and he pretty much pulled it off.

But week #9 was always going to be a bit problematic.

Going on the road to Bellevue to face Interlake, a 3A school with 900+ more students than Coupeville, was a tall order.

While the Saints have been getting reamed for the past three seasons, they play in KingCo, a powerhouse league headed up by 11-time state champ Bellevue.

Coming in to play Friday night, Interlake was 1-7, but it was a battle-hardened 1-7, and the Saints, at least according to their roster, had a 20-man advantage on the Wolves.

They also had a group of seniors who have been roughed up, rolled over, and crunched week after week.

A group of veterans who, on their own Senior Night, were looking for some redemption in front of their fairly-sparse crowd.

Now, this blog isn’t called “Interlake Sports,” so the finale we were looking for would have been more of a “small town team shocks the big city boys.”

But, sometimes reality intrudes, and that was the case Friday night, as the Saint seniors pulled off enough big plays to deny the Wolves, rolling to a 36-7 win.

The game wasn’t as lopsided as the score might suggest, as Coupeville stayed within two scores until midway through the third quarter.

Only at the end, when the Wolves, already missing starters Gavin St Onge and Ben Smith, watched big-timers Andrew Martin, Sean Toomey-Stout, and Gabe Shaw sent to the sidelines with injuries, did the margin get out of reach.

Martin, the team’s leading rusher, suffered a second-half concussion when “their big, fat kid sat on my head,” though he regained his sense of humor after a visit to Mod Pizza on the way home.

Shaw, a standout sophomore likely playing in his final game as a Wolf due to an impending family move, ripped his way through the Interlake line all night, pulling down runners and flinging bodies left and right before his own momentarily gave out with a foot injury.

And then there is Toomey-Stout, one of the most dynamic players to ever wear a Wolf uniform, but, more than that, the owner of one of the largest hearts we have ever witnessed in a Coupeville athlete.

For four years “The Torpedo” has endured, triumphed, led, and inspired.

First while playing alongside big brother Cameron, the two of them pointing at each other, then pointing downfield at the poor sap about to field a kickoff or punt, igniting a brother vs. brother race to annihilate the ball carrier.

After “Camtastic” left for college, Sean moved into a solo spotlight (unless he’s standing near twin sister Maya, his match in every way as an electrifying, passionate star), and word of his exploits has spread near and far.

Friday night, on a hunk of artificial turf far from Whidbey Island, on the final play of his prep football career, “The Torpedo” made the biggest statement of his time as a Wolf.

He had been on the sideline with a badly pinched nerve in his arm, but then, very late in the game, as Coupeville’s defense took the field to play out the final moments of a lost cause, the Wolf coaches suddenly called timeout.

It wasn’t to set up a play, or change a defense, or swap players out, but to retrieve Toomey-Stout, who, unable to feel much of his arm, had still charged back onto the field with his team trailing by four touchdowns.

Why? Because it’s his defense, he’s the leader, and as long as his team was on the field, that’s where he wanted to be as well.

Regardless of the score. Regardless of his own pain.

Because Sean Toomey-Stout doesn’t quit.

Never has. Never will.

He came back off the field because his coaches, being responsible adults, made the decision for him, but in the moments afterward, as he paced the sidelines, you knew it took every last bit of self control for him not to sneak back out there on the very next play.

When we look back at his career, we will remember Sean’s dramatic touchdowns, especially the one that went viral on the internet when a deer dashed on the field last year to become his lead blocker.

We’ll remember the scorching runs. The death-defying catches. The spine-crushing tackles, of which he laid down another 2,000 against Interlake.

But, most of all, we will remember this small slice of time, a moment when #1 refused to leave his teammates behind.

Because it’s what Sean did, every moment of every game of his whole career.

That will resonate far longer than any of the plays, even the 31-yard touchdown run by Sage Downes late in the fourth quarter, which kept Coupeville from being shut out in any games this season.

Toomey-Stout’s leadership and refusal to quit, traits mirrored by fellow seniors Martin, Dawson Houston, Gavin Knoblich, St Onge, Jonathan Partida, and Gavin Straub, have set up the program for future success.

As the team mingled with coaches and families after the game, a mix of tears, exhaustion, and a sense of completion all in the mix, Knoblich turned and motioned to Straub.

“Come here, G3!!” he softly said, and the duo, who have grown up together from tentative underclassmen to seasoned upperclassmen, hugged under the glow of their last Friday Night Lights.

The game they had just played had stayed scoreless through much of the first quarter, with Coupeville looking like the better team.

Wolf freshman Scott Hilborn picked off a pass, his second interception of the season, to snuff out Interlake’s opening drive.

After that, CHS used a couple of Martin rumbles on the ground and a Houston-to-Partida pass play to come tantalizingly close to scoring.

Facing fourth-and-12 from the Interlake 34, the Wolves used a little razzle-dazzle to get the ball into Knoblich’s hands, and the Wolf receiver pegged a pass towards the end zone.

Interlake had Toomey-Stout double-teamed, however, and the ball was batted up, then down, as the Wolves just missed out on landing a hay-maker.

The Saints broke through on a two-yard run up the middle by senior QB Charlie Galanti with 2:37 to play in the opening quarter.

A safety early in the second quarter, thanks to Interlake blowing up an intended pitch right outside the end zone, stretched the lead to 9-0, before Galanti found Luke Hirsch on a 33-yard scoring strike to make it 16-0 at the half.

In between, Coupeville’s defense came up big after giving up a ginormous 53-yard pass play.

Interlake had the ball at the Wolf 13, got it to the eight, then went down with a whimper when Toomey-Stout burst up the middle, before body-slamming the runner to the turf on fourth down.

After some early success moving the ball, Coupeville’s offense sputtered through the end of the first half, then found its groove on the opening drive of the second half.

With Martin slamming through the line on three successive plays, the Wolves had the Saints on their heels, and looked like a team about to cut a two-score margin to one.

It wasn’t to be, however, as Houston’s pass to the end zone was plucked out of the air by a guy in the wrong uniform, ending the drive, and the Wolves last great shot.

Galanti and Hirsch struck one more time, hooking up on a 70-yard TD pass five plays later, and most of the air went out of Coupeville.

The Wolves didn’t quit, with freshman Joven Light picking off a pass right in front of the end zone, but Interlake eventually wore the Wolves down, especially after they started losing key players.

A pair of two-yard scoring runs, from seniors Grady Fleming and Tyler Turman, made the local fans happy and sent the Interlake band (which was pretty dang good) into endless renditions of “When the Saints Go Marching In.”

Toss in a robot which was programmed to shoot t-shirts into the crowd, created by Interlake’s robotics department, and the locals got to enjoy one of their few happy Fridays this season.

For Coupeville, in the waning moments, it was a time for the coaches to look at the players of the future.

Dakota Eck ran strongly, to the joy of mom Cheridan, lil’ sis Aubrey, and family, while sophomore QB Cole Hutchinson hooked up with freshman receiver Kevin Partida on a fourth-down pass that netted a first down and could be a sign of good things to come.

Every season ends, and there are only a few who get to walk away 100% happy.

For Coupeville’s 2019 team, the final game, the final moments, weren’t what they hoped for. That doesn’t change everything which came before.

Charles Clark, who has spent a lifetime around football, as a player, coach, and fan, gazed out across the field as the Wolves embraced on a cool, clear evening with the stars sparkling in the sky above.

“They played a game they love, a game not everyone can play, and they played it well,” he said. “They should look back and be proud.”

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