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Posts Tagged ‘Hunter Smith’

Jered Brown (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf freshman Jered Brown made an auspicious debut Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

This could be the start of something big.

Proving he’s ready for the spotlight from moment one, Coupeville High School freshman Jered Brown wasted no time.

Making his varsity debut Tuesday in the fourth quarter of an opening night loss to visiting Blaine, the Wolf gunner touched the ball for the first time and promptly drilled a three-bomb bomb from the right side.

It was the one moment the crowd truly went bonkers all night, and provided a ray of sunshine on an otherwise stormy evening.

Brown also slid a pair of free-throws through the twines, but even his perfection with the rock wasn’t enough to save Coupeville.

Hammered by a 22-0 run in the second quarter, the Wolves lost their grasp on a once-close game and fell 72-28.

CHS, which returns just two varsity players in Gabe Wynn and Hunter Smith, looked and played like a squad still adjusting to each other and the faster, more physical style of varsity basketball.

The Borderites, a deep, aggressive 2A team, won the battle in the trenches — hitting the boards with a fury — and on the outskirts, dropping seven treys, primarily on kick-outs to wide-open guys in the corners.

Coupeville actually led early (really early) when Wynn knocked down a pull-up jumper to kick off his senior campaign.

A bucket from Brian Shank, on a sweet roll to the hoop on which he sliced through a pack of Blaine defenders, knotted things at 4-4 and gave hope that the sizable opening night crowd was in for a fight to the finish.

Unfortunately things got away from the Wolves in a hurry.

Blaine dropped in a pair of three-balls to stretch the lead out to 14-7 after the first eight minutes of play, then went into lock-down mode in a second quarter that was brutally efficient.

In between a pair of free-throws from Ariah Bepler and a bucket in the paint from Steven Cope, the Borderites ripped off a game-busting run of 22 consecutive points.

After hitting three straight bombs from behind the arc, Blaine made off with back-to-back running layups off of steals, as they used their full-court press to utterly confound the inexperienced Wolves.

Things didn’t get much better after the break, as frequent steals and treys propelled the Borderites on another run, this time to a tune of 24-7.

Smith provided all the offense for the Wolves in the quarter, dropping in seven of his team-high 11 points.

The highlight came on a play where he juked his defender out of his shoes, then pulled back and nailed a soft trey from the top.

Coupeville made a stand in the final quarter, “winning” the fourth 10-9 using a sharp eye at the charity stripe and Brown’s smooth touch.

While he wasn’t a fan of the final score, CHS coach Anthony Smith knows he has a team that is very much a work in progress.

“They (Blaine) came to play. They can take you out of your game, and we have some guys who haven’t played at this level before. It’s a different game,” he said.

“It was a good thing it was a non-conference game,” Anthony Smith added. “We’ll watch some film and get back in the gym and get ready for Sultan Friday. We will get better.”

Hunter Smith (11), Wynn (5) and Brown (5) combined for 21 of Coupeville’s 28 points, while Shank added three and Cope and Bepler chipped in with two apiece.

Joey Lippo hit the boards hard in his return to the court after a year off, while Hunter Downes and Cameron Toomey-Stout contributed with scrappy defense and hustle.

JV falls:

Much like the varsity, the young guns, who have 12 freshmen on a 13-man roster, are a work in progress.

After Sean Toomey-Stout banged home a jumper from the right side, the Wolves were within 5-4 and looked to be right in the thick of things.

Then came a 26-0 run by the Borderites, stretching over chunks of the first and second quarters, and things got progressively bleaker en route to a 67-17 defeat.

Toomey-Stout paced CHS with four points, also banking in a silky runner, while Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim (3), Brown (3), Ulrik Wells (2), Koa Davison (2), Nikolai Lyngra (2) and Aiden Juras (1) all chipped in.

Mason Grove, Elliott Johnson, Aram Leyva and Kyle Rockwell all saw playing time as well.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

   Hunter Smith was named a 1st-Team player on both sides of the ball by 1A Olympic/Nisqually League football coaches. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Downes

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes earned 2nd-Team honors after throwing for 1,569 yards and 17 TD’s.

They like him. They really like him.

Coupeville High School junior Hunter Smith was tabbed as a First-Team selection on both sides of the ball when 1A Olympic/Nisqually League football coaches cast their All-Conference votes.

He was named as both a receiver, where he tallied school single-season records of 916 yards and 11 touchdowns, and as a defensive back, where he picked off three passes and rang up 49 tackles.

Junior quarterback Hunter Downes, who threw for 1,569 yards and 17 TD’s, was named to the Second Team.

Wolf seniors Clay Reilly (Special Teams), Jacob Martin (running back) and Uriel Liquidano (linebacker) and junior Julian Welling (offensive line) received Honorable Mention kudos.

Port Townsend senior quarterback Berkley Hill, who ran defenses ragged with his ability to slice and dice while on the move, was the MVP.

Other top honorees included Cascade Christian junior Tyquan Coleman (Offensive MVP), Klahowya senior Gabe Wallis (Defensive MVP), and Cascade Christian’s Randy Davis (Coach of the Year).

The league’s sportsmanship award was shared by Vashon Island and Port Townsend.

Which is kind of a crock.

While no one discounts Port Townsend’s success this year, finishing second in the eight-team league and going one-and-out in the state playoffs, sportsmanship was hardly the RedHawks calling card.

When you’re up by 50, with a running clock in the fourth quarter, and you choose to put your starting offense back in to ram a meaningless TD down the throats of another team’s JV players, there are a lot of words which come to mind.

None of them are “sportsmanship.”

 

1st-Team Offense:

QB —Parker Johnson – Cascade Christian (09)

RB — Detrius Kelsall – Port Townsend (11)

RB — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

RB — Gabe Wallis – Klahowya (12)

WR — Hunter Smith – Coupeville (11)

WR — Austin Carder – Cascade Christian (12)

TE — Cooper Cochran – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Jackson Foster – Port Townsend (11)

OL — Dylan Leer – Klahowya (12)

OL — Evan Minsk – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Jeremy Ocbian – Cascade Christian (11)

OL — Corbin Nohr – Cascade Christian (11)

Athlete — Dylan Zuber – Klahowya (12)

 

1st-Team Defense:

DL — Corbin Nohr – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Nathan Suiter – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Jackson Foster – Port Townsend (11)

DL — Christian Miller – Bellevue Christian (12)

DL — Dylan Leer – Klahowya (12)

LB — Detrius Kelsall – Port Townsend (11)

LB — James Gherna – Klahowya (12)

LB — Tanner Carle – Cascade Christian (11)

LB — Blake Stoltenberg – Charles Wright (12)

LB — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

DB — Dylan Zuber – Klahowya (12)

DB — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

DB — Hunter Smith – Coupeville (11)

Athlete — Zach Bartolome – Cascade Christian (12)

 

1st-Team Special Teams:

Kicker — Gerry Coker – Port Townsend (12)

Punter — Lane Dotson – Chimacum (12)

Kick Ret. — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

 

2nd-Team Offense:

QB — Henry Lenaberg – Charles Wright (11)

QB — Hunter Downes – Coupeville (11)

RB — Zach Bartolome – Cascade Christian (12)

RB — James Vogelgesang – Charles Wright (12)

RB — Daniel Ficca – Bellevue Christian (12)

WR — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

WR — Joe Helton – Bellevue Christian (12)

TE — Tanner Carle – Cascade Christian (11)

OL — Peter Besel – Bellevue Christian (11)

OL — Riley Grider – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Lane Dotson – Chimacum (12)

OL — Kaiden Parcher – Port Townsend (11)

OL — Abel Nutu – Cascade Christian (11)

 

2nd-Team Defense:

DL — Jeremy Ocbian – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Abel Nutu – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Evan Minsk – Charles Wright (12)

DL — Jacob Massie – Port Townsend (12)

DL — Chris Greene – Klahowya (12)

LB — Jonathan Smith – Port Townsend (12)

LB — Michael Tucci – Charles Wright (11)

LB — Jake Nielsen – Cascade Christian (12)

DB — Connor Hoisington – Vashon (11)

DB — Joe Helton – Bellevue Christian (12)

DB — Noa Apker-Montoya – Port Townsend (09)

DB — Tyquan Coleman – Cascade Christian (11)

 

2nd-Team Special Teams:

Kicker — Billy Chissoe – Charles Wright (11)

Punter — Billy Chissoe – Charles Wright (11)

Kick Ret. — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

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Kyle Rockwell

   Kyle Rockwell brings an infusion of height to the Wolf boys’ basketball squad. (John Fisken photo)

Gabe Wynn

Gabe Wynn (with ball) is one of two returning varsity players.

Another step up the mountain.

That’s what the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad wants to take this season.

The Wolves are coming off a 9-11 campaign, their best in the five years Anthony Smith has been at the helm of the program.

A year ago, they swept Klahowya in a three-game series, took a road game off of league champ Chimacum and finished third in 1A Olympic League play at 4-5.

Now Coupeville wants to continue to improve its numbers and get back into a winning groove.

“The goals are making the playoffs and getting the players to play for each other,” Smith said. “Also, for the players to want to get better every practice and be ready to compete every game, and good things will happen.”

The Wolves will be featuring almost a completely new roster thanks to graduation, returning only two varsity veterans.

Junior guard Hunter Smith and senior swing-man Gabe Wynn will anchor the squad, while the rest of the roster is expected to be filled out by guys jumping up from JV and new and semi-new additions.

Returnees include senior Brian Shank and juniors Ariah Bepler, Hunter Downes and Cameron Toomey-Stout, who “will contribute right away.”

Juniors Joey Lippo and Ethan Spark played JV as freshmen, then took last season off, and are back to bolster the team at guard.

Also in the mix are 6’3 junior Kyle Rockwell and two seniors who transferred in, Steven Cope and Taylor Consford.

However the rotation plays out, Coupeville will ask those players to put an emphasis on the defensive side of the ball.

“The plus will be us playing hard nose d, and getting after it,” Anthony Smith said. “Wanting to have teams turn the ball over, and have fun doing it.

“We will have to work on taking care of the ball and putting the ball in the basket.”

Coupeville graduated nine of the 11 players who scored a season ago, including its top three scorers in Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford and Risen Johnson.

Hunter Smith, who banged in 130 points while missing time with injuries, and Wynn (84) were #4 and #5 on the scoring chart last year.

The dynamic duo, and their new running mates, will be aiming to take down Chimacum and Port Townsend, who tied for the league’s best mark at 7-2. The Cowboys won two of three over the RedHawks to defend their title.

For now, though, the focus is firmly an internal one. Make yourself better, and then go out and beat your rivals.

“The first week of practice was good,” Anthony Smith said. “This team will work hard, and if guys accept and play their roles, which I think they will, we will be OK.”

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Sophomore lineman Matt Stevens is one of ?? Wolf football players to letter this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Sophomore lineman Matt Stevens is one of 34 Wolf football players to letter this season. (John Fisken photos)

Freshmen Dawson Houston (left) and Andrew Martin are part of a young group on its way up.

   Freshmen Dawson Houston (left) and Andrew Martin are part of a young group on its way up.

Cameron Toomey-Stout

   Cameron Toomey-Stout piled up numbers on both sides of the ball during his junior campaign.

Hunter Smith broke school records left and right this season, and Wednesday night his coaches and teammates hailed him for his work.

Smith, who snapped school single-season records for receiving yards (916) and receiving touchdowns (11), was named Offensive MVP as Coupeville officially closed out its first football season under head coach Jon Atkins.

Uriel Liquidano was tabbed Defensive MVP, Clay Reilly (and his super-powered kicking leg) made off with Special Teams MVP and Julian Welling was named Most Valuable Lineman.

Jacob Martin capped the honors, taking home the Wolf Award.

He, Reilly, Liquidano, Welling and quarterback Hunter Downes were also hailed for their work as captains.

The 1A Olympic League hasn’t announced All-Conference picks yet.

To earn a letter, Wolf players had to be on the field for at least one varsity play during the season and end the year in good standing.

Letter winners:

Chris Battaglia
Trevor Bell
Luke Carlson
Hunter Downes
Tucker Hall
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Dawson Houston
Teo Keilwitz
Gavin Knoblich
Ryan Labrador
Uriel Liquidano
Shane Losey
Dane Lucero
Spencer Machen
Andrew Martin
Jacob Martin
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim
Axel Partida
Jonathan Partida
Jake Pease
Clay Reilly
Josh Robinson
Matthew Shreffner
Hunter Smith
Matt Stevens
Gavin Straub
Jonathan Thurston
Cameron Toomey-Stout
Sean Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni
Julian Welling
Ulrik Wells
Jacob Zettle
BayLee Dunsmore
(manager)

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Hope Lodell

   Hope Lodell (left) is joined by Hunter Smith and Mia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

We’re spanning the generations today.

As we open the doors to welcome our 73rd class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the athletes and performances being honored stretch from 1925 all the way up to a mere eight days ago.

It’s a diverse group, as we welcome four Wolves into this hallowed digital shrine.

One goes in for his entire career, while the other three, who are much younger, are honored for crafting major moments which shattered records.

With that we welcome Roy Armstrong, CHS Class of 1926, and Hope Lodell, Mia Littlejohn and Hunter Smith, all on their way to being part of the CHS Class of 2018.

Armstrong is the only one of the four being honored for his entire body of work, mainly because the other three aren’t done writing their story yet.

While it’s very likely Lodell, Littlejohn and Smith will be returning to the Hall one day to be inducted as athletes, for today they’re being hailed for what they accomplished this fall.

All four, however, will be found hanging out together at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, after this ceremony.

Our first inductee, Armstrong, is also the first person I’ve put into the Hall without a photo.

While I couldn’t tell you what ol’ Roy looked like, I can tell you he left a sizable impression on the stat sheets of the past.

The campaign which really stands out (because I happen to have lucked into possession of a rare 1925 CHS annual) is Armstrong’s junior year of 1924-1925.

During that school year, he lettered in three sports (football, basketball and track), leading all three to Island County championships.

With Armstrong front and center on all three squads, Coupeville thrashed Oak Harbor and Langley to claim Island supremacy that year.

On the gridiron, he scored a key offensive touchdown in the title-clinching win over the North Enders, while also pulling off a memorable 60-yard fumble recovery in a “sea of mud” against Fairhaven for another score.

Once he moved to the hard-court, Armstrong was Coupeville’s primary scoring weapon, as he accounted for 80 of his team’s 177 points.

That included dropping in 18 of 41 points during a three-game run at the district tourney.

In the spring, he was captain of the track squad, winning the pole vault and running on a dominant relay squad as CHS demolished its Island rivals in the year’s big meet.

Coupeville rolled up 70 points in the 1925 Island County Track Meet, while Langley (28) and Oak Harbor (21) mounted little resistance to the farm boys from Cow Town.

Armstrong’s three companions on this induction day followed in his (long ago) footsteps, putting together record-setting seasons as juniors.

Littlejohn, who had eight goals through her first two seasons on the pitch, went ballistic this fall, torching the nets for 27 as she led the Wolf booters to the first winning season in program history.

That topped the 20 notched last spring by Abraham Leyva and was almost three times the previous girls single-season record of 10 tallied by lil’ sis Kalia Littlejohn in 2015.

Our third inductee, Smith, has been a two-way star on the gridiron since the first moment he pulled on a CHS helmet, and he’s on the cusp of shattering numerous career marks on both sides of the ball.

This season, he knocked off two single-season receiving marks, rolling up 915 yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

The first erased a record which had stood since Chad Gale set it in 1987, while the second nipped a more recent mark set by Josh Bayne in 2014.

Along the way, he also tied a CHS single-game record, pulling in three of those TD catches against Bellevue Christian.

Our final inductee, Lodell, not only broke a single-season record, but she did it in a way which actually broke two records at once.

After dropping 31 service aces as a sophomore, the ever-springy one found a new zone as a junior, raining down 110 aces as Coupeville volleyball put together its best season in 12 years.

Now pause for just a second.

Not only was the 110 aces a single-season record, but, by itself, it allowed Lodell to break the Wolf CAREER ace record (109 by Hall o’ Famer Mindy Horr).

With 141 aces to her credit and a season left to go in her vaunted career, she now has a chance to put the career mark way out of reach.

But that’s the future, a time when we will most likely be revisiting 2016’s terrific trio and inducting them into the Hall a second (or third or fourth) time.

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