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Posts Tagged ‘Hunter Downes’

Hunter Downes (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf junior Hunter Downes leads all Olympic/Nisqually League QB’s in passing yardage this season. (John Fisken photo)

Everyone’s stats jumped.

Scoring 63 points against Vashon Island Friday — the most a Coupeville High School gridiron squad has scored in one game in decades — always helps with that kind of thing.

As we sit here on this Sunday morning, the Wolves have the top player in the Olympic/Nisqually League in six different categories, with the caveat that not every team has been flawless reporting stats to MaxPreps.

To those teams, tough.

As it stands, CHS has the #1 passer, receiver, runner, PAT kicker, sack king and kick returner.

As an aside, I tweaked one of Coupeville’s stat categories on my own, as it appears Hunter Smith’s 78-yard punt return against Vashon is being credited to Clay Reilly at the moment.

Since I clearly saw Smith’s #4 sail right past me as he took the punt to the house, I’m pretty confident on that change.

Unless Reilly is so fast he took the punt, stole Smith’s jersey and shot down the field in one smooth move…

Anyways, here are your pretty-close-to-set-in-stone CHS football stats at the halfway point of the regular season.

If you agree, awesome. If you don’t, whine to your coaches, not me. I’m just the messenger.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 29-54 for 673 yards (#1 in league) with 8 TD and 4 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 15 receptions for 369 yards (#1 in league)
Jacob Martin 5-137
Cameron Toomey-Stout 6-119
Clay Reilly 2-39
Jake Hoagland 1-9

Rushing:

Martin 51 carries for 399 yards (#1 in league)
Reilly 47-211
Smith 20-71
Chris Battaglia
15-50
Matt Hilborn 9-20
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 25-(-55)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 754
Martin 536
Reilly 280
C. Toomey-Stout 196
Hilborn 65
Battaglia 50
Sean Toomey-Stout 10
Hoagland 9

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 618 (#2 in league)
Martin 536
Smith 440
Reilly 250
C. Toomey-Stout 119
Battaglia 50
Hilborn 20
Hoagland 9

Touchdowns:

Smith 8 (tied for #3 in league)
Martin 5
C. Toomey-Stout 3
Downes 2
Battaglia 1
Ryan Labrador 1
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 18 (#1 in league)

Points:

Smith 48 (#4 in league)
Martin 30
Reilly 24
C. Toomey-Stout 18
Downes 12
Battaglia 6
Labrador 6

Defense:

Tackles:

Martin 35
Reilly 27
Smith 23
Uriel Liquidano 22
C. Toomey-Stout 15
Julian Welling 14
Hilborn
13
Teo Keilwitz
13
S. Toomey-Stout
13
Battaglia
12
Jacob Zettle
8
Dane Lucero
7
James Vidoni
4
Labrador
3
Axel Partida
2
Jake Pease
2
Hoagland
1
Shane Losey
1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Liquidano 4.5 (#1 in league)
Vidoni 2
Zettle 1.5
Martin 1

Fumble recoveries:

Labrador 1
Reilly 1

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #4 in league)
C. Toomey-Stout 2 (tied for #4 in league)
Reilly 1
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 8 for 365 yards (*not complete*)

Punts:

Reilly 2 for 36 yards (*not complete*)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 9 for 297 yards (#1 in league)
Hilborn 3-45
Reilly 3-28
C. Toomey-Stout 2-11
Pacquette-Pilgrim 2-0

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Hunter Downes: The hero we need now. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Downes: The hero we need now. (John Fisken photos)

He is the chosen one, the savior.

Flinging balls from all angles, racking up yards in big bursts, his impish grin shining from beneath his helmet, Hunter Downes is ready to lead Wolf football back to a golden age.

Last Friday, the Coupeville High School junior picked apart Charles Wright’s secondary for 323 yards — a career-high — and with 599 yards through four games he’s on target for a 1,500-yard season.

If that holds, Downes would land in the upper echelon of CHS quarterbacks, not that far off of Ian Smith’s school single-season mark of 1,848 yards.

Which is impressive, certainly.

But as Downes celebrates his birthday today by leading the Wolves onto the gridiron to face Vashon Island (6 PM) in a league clash, the bigger deal is the dude is healthy.

An injury knocked him down early last season, costing him most of his sophomore campaign after he opened the year as Coupeville’s starting QB.

You always hate to see young stars lose chunks of their very-short prep careers to troubles of the body, and then boom, another injury dinged Downes during the early days of basketball season.

He managed to stay on his feet for an entire track season in the spring, which allowed mom Angie to take the bubble wrap off her oldest son (for a bit, at least) and, this year, so far, nothing but the perfect image of health.

Which is great, not only because Hunter is one of the more talented athletes in the red and black, but because he’s a great guy who deserves to be out there building his legend.

An easy-going dude who saunters through many of his off-the-field photos, he’s super-friendly, a positive role model for young athletes coming up behind him, and a hard-working ball of fire who will wreck people when competing.

Downes is setting the pace, and younger brothers Sage and Logan, both talented guys themselves, are following in his big footsteps.

Would I love to see him go out there and bust Gabe Eck’s single-game CHS passing record of 403 yards?

Absolutely.

No slight on the former Wolf gunslinger intended.

Just acknowledgement that Hunter has seized the day, put himself into position to excel with the guidance of the original gunslinger, legendary Wolf QB turned offensive coordinator Brad Sherman, and deserves to reap some honors.

But whether Downes notches records or not, my respect level for him will still be sky-high.

In the immortal words of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, “They think he’s a righteous dude.”

I agree.

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Senior Clay Reilly recovered a fumble and hauled in a 31-yard pass Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior Clay Reilly fought hard on both sides of the ball Friday, recovering a fumble and hauling in a 31-yard pass. (John Fisken photo)

Second verse, not as sweet as the first.

Coming off a big win in week one, the Coupeville High School football team was flying high headed into Friday night’s clash at La Conner.

Unfortunately, a big, bruising, highly-efficient and ultimately pretty cold-blooded Braves squad reminded the very young Wolves there’s still a lot of work to do if they want to compete with the big boys.

By the time La Conner was done rolling to a 53-6 win, punctuating it by choosing to score with just 14 seconds to play rather than take a knee, a fair amount of damage had been done.

The key will be how the Wolves, who have just three seniors on their roster, respond to their first setback of the season.

“I liked that we kept fighting all the way,” said Coupeville coach Jon Atkins as he stood on a somber sideline after the game.

“We knew going in this would probably be the best team we face this season and it would be a tough one,” he added. “Now we gotta bounce back and prove we can get a win after a loss and get right back on track.”

A big key for the Wolves as they head into week three, when they host Nooksack Valley, also 1-1, in the final non-conference game on the schedule, will be to cut down on turnovers.

Coupeville was stung in the first half Friday by two huge miscues deep in La Conner territory.

Trailing 6-0 and with the ball in their hands for the first time, the Wolves drove from their own 29 to the Braves 12, with a 31-yard pass play from Hunter Downes to Clay Reilly helping move the chains.

But with Coupeville knocking on the door of making it a tie game, or taking the lead, it coughed up the ball, losing a fumble on the nine-yard line.

La Conner took immediate advantage, pulling off an 84-yard touchdown pass just three plays later.

After the Braves tacked on another score on the first play of the second quarter, the Wolves suffered their other huge momentum-killer.

Putting together a solid drive, keyed by a long pass from Downes to Hunter Smith, CHS made a play for the end zone, only to have La Conner standout Budda Luna jump a route and pick off the ball.

With an open field ahead of him, he hurtled 89 yards to the end zone, putting the game on ice.

Coupeville finally got on the board with a little under seven minutes to play in the first half, when Downes cranked a ball down the right sideline and Smith outran his defender to snag the ball for a 48-yard touchdown strike.

It was the fourth touchdown of the season for the junior receiver.

That was about it for the large contingent of Wolf faithful who traveled over to La Conner, however, as, other than a few plays here and there, the rest of the night was fairly uneventful.

Reilly recovered a fumble deep in his own territory to end one Braves drive, Uriel Liquidano stuffed a play right at the line of scrimmage and drove the runner back for a loss, and Jacob Martin chased down a breakaway runner from behind, preventing a score.

Smith came dangerously close to breaking off a kickoff return for a touchdown for the second straight week, but got snagged at the last second and had to settle for a 55-yard jaunt when he wanted 75 yards.

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Jacob Zettle (John Fisken photos)

Jacob Zettle puts in work during summer drills. (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Dawson Houston

Freshman Dawson Houston (left) runs the offense during a scrimmage.

(Claire Mietus photo)

   Coupeville’s five home football games are represented in these incredibly-detailed welcome signs drawn (freehand!!) by Wolf cheerleader Claire Mietus.

And so, it begins, again.

The 2016-2017 prep sports year officially kicks off at 9 AM Wednesday morning, as Coupeville High School football takes to the practice field for the first time in the Jon Atkins era.

Girls soccer, volleyball and boys tennis follow suit next Monday, Aug. 22, with the first official game Sept. 3, when the Wolves host South Whidbey on the gridiron.

With the Wolf seniors playing for their third coach in their prep career (Tony Maggio as freshmen/sophomores and Brett Smedley as juniors), it’ll be a season of transition.

The hope is to make it a successful one, as well, as Coupeville looks to improve on last year’s 1-9 mark.

Thoughts from the players as they pull on their helmets and prepare to put in work:

Jacob Zettle (junior):

This season is going to be a fresh start for us all; new playbook, new coach, new start.

I am excited and have been preparing all year, from getting in the weight room to catching with our quarterback.

We will have fun out there, and we will play hard.

And I can tell you this much, we ain’t goin’ 1-9 this year.

Hunter Downes (junior):

I just want to freaking win!

Clay Reilly (senior):

All I’ve got is I’m ready to embarrass South Whidbey and bring back The Bucket!

Jacob Martin (senior):

I think this season will be great because we’re disciplined, and have good leadership.

Our team goal is to win league and make the playoffs.

My knee is healing up well and I might make the first game.

Uriel Liquidano (senior):

South Whidbey doesn’t know what’s coming their way.

I just hope they are ready, because we have some hungry Wolves that want to eat some chicken.

It’s going to be a great season!

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Topknot firmly in place, Wolf QB Hunter Downes comes out firing. (John Fisken photos)

  Topknot firmly in place, Wolf QB Hunter Downes comes out firing. (John Fisken photos)

Teo Keilwitz

Teo Keilwitz gets ready to explode.

Jacob Martin

Jacob Martin daydreams of blowing up South Whidbey.

Mitchell Carroll

Mitchell Carroll hauls in a pass under pressure.

Freshman Dawson Houston

Freshman Dawson Houston makes his debut with the big boys.

Ryan King

   CHS assistant coach Ryan King (in hat) discusses the finer points of the offense with his players.

Jacob Zettle

Jacob Zettle, ready to terminate.

Julian Welling

Downes makes a connection with center Julian Welling.

It’s still very much mid-summer, even if the Whidbey weather doesn’t always seem like it.

But, even with that said, it’s only six weeks until the Coupeville High School football squad kicks off the 2016-2017 prep sports season with a Sept. 2 home showdown versus South Whidbey.

Putting in work to get ready, the Wolves faced off with Lakeside in a 7 on 7 scrimmage at Camp Casey Friday night, and wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken was nice enough to swing by and snap these pics for us.

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