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Posts Tagged ‘Hunter Smith’

Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith broke CHS single-season records for receiving yardage and TD receptions. (John Fisken photos)

Sean Toomey-Stout

   Sean Toomey-Stout, seen here making a tackle in an earlier game, had a breakout freshman season on offense, defense and special teams.

Four weeks from now Cascade Christian could very likely raise the trophy as 1A state football champs.

The Cougars have a 6-foot-3 freshman QB with a cannon for an arm and a stable of super-quick running backs and receivers, and it’s not hard to figure out how they’ve gone 10-0 this season.

That being said, victim #10, Coupeville, walked off the field Friday holding its collective heads high.

With two of three senior captains (Clay Reilly and Jacob Martin) out with injuries and quarterback Hunter Downes ripped up by a stomach illness, the Wolves chances of upsetting the #5 team in the Associated Press poll were slim.

So it wasn’t a huge surprise Cascade Christian rolled to a 47-8 win to close out Olympic/Nisqually League play.

But Coupeville, which tripled its win total from a season ago, finishing 3-7, refused to go down easy, scoring late to accomplish something league runner-up Port Townsend couldn’t against the Cougars.

The Wolves didn’t get waxed like Vashon Island (which was crushed 82-6), weren’t shut-out like the RedHawks (who fell 42-0) and stayed scrappy until the end.

Not that the game was especially close, as Cascade Christian rode a four-touchdown performance from senior running back Zach Bartolome to snag a 40-0 halftime lead and trigger a running clock in the second half.

But, under that running clock, Coupeville “won” the second half 8-7, even with the Cougars leaving their starters in until the fourth quarter.

The Wolves closed the season on a strong note, ramming a late touchdown down Cascade Christian’s throat.

It came on a short four-yard lob from Downes to Hunter Smith (the junior receiver tacked on a two-point conversion) and was set up by Matt Hilborn softening the Cougar defense with an 18-yard bolt through traffic on the previous play.

The scoring strike was significant, as it allowed Smith to break his second record of the night.

He hauled in nine catches for 124 yards Friday, finishing the 2016 campaign with 915 receiving yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

Both those marks are school single-season records, besting Chad Gale (844 yards in 1987) and Josh Bayne (10 TD catches in 2014).

Smith will enter his senior season with very little work left to do to claim three CHS career marks.

He has 1,334 yards and 13 TD’s as a receiver, and Gale’s records are 1,345 and 17. With 11 interceptions, Smith also sits just one off of Bayne’s career record.

After spending Thursday night and Friday morning heaving, Downes reached down deep to make it on the field for the finale, and went out slinging passes until the game’s final play.

He racked up 143 yards against Cascade Christian — Cameron Toomey-Stout pulled in two passes for 19 yards to supplement Smith — and, after missing most of his sophomore year with an injury, put together one of the best seasons ever by a Wolf quarterback.

Downes finished with 1,559 yards passing and 17 TD’s, one shy of Joel Walstad’s single-season mark.

While the Hunter to Hunter combination was clicking, the young guns stepped up and made an impact running the ball.

With Martin (hand surgery) and Reilly (concussion), the team’s top two rushers, sidelined, freshman Sean Toomey-Stout and sophomores Hilborn and Chris Battaglia stepped into their shoes.

All three had at at least one carry of ten-plus yards.

The game marked the end for six Wolves.

Kory Score, Taylor Consford and Jonathan Thurston all saw playing time for CHS this season, with Thurston on the field Friday, but Coupeville’s three senior captains will leave the biggest hole.

Martin was a rock for four years, doing the dirty work on both sides of the ball, especially shining when it came to laying down block after block for runners like Bayne, Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley.

Reilly was a superb defender in the backfield and a beast in the kicking game during his career.

He ripped off a 70-yard punt at one point (it was all leg), and made the guys in the press box at Bellevue Christian fall out of their chairs with his supersonic PATs.

Their co-captain, Uriel Liquidano, was the only one of the trio healthy enough to play Friday, and he more than earned the bring-down-the-house ovation he received during pre-game introductions.

Like his older brother Oscar before him, Woody was an animal in the trenches and a gentleman the rest of the time.

After the final buzzer had sounded, the captains joined their team for one final talk by first-year head coach Jon Atkins, who had the Wolves a play or two away from going 5-5, which would have matched the best CHS record of the past decade-plus.

The huddle was packed with young players, established stars like Downes and Smith, fast-risers like Sean Toomey-Stout and still green youngsters such as Dawson Houston, Andrew Martin and Gavin Knoblich.

It is a team full of promise, and the key will be whether the new leaders work as hard as the three captains who stood together at the heart of the huddle.

The season ended with a loss, but the feeling on the field in the afterglow was of seeing a program make a turn for the positive.

Different players will carry the banner going forward, but what was started links directly to those three young men — Martin, Reilly and Liquidano.

They honored their uniform, their school and their families. They played and practiced with passion, and they went out as brothers.

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Hunter Downes (3) stalks the CHS record book. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes (3), under the guidance of Brad Sherman, stalks the CHS record book. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, seen here hauling in a pass against Chimacum, could break two school records Friday night.

   Hunter Smith, seen here hauling in a pass against Chimacum, could break several school records Friday night.

One night to bust the record books.

Coupeville High School faces its toughest football opponent of the season Friday when it hosts Cascade Christian (7 PM kickoff.)

The Cougars are 9-0 and ranked #5 in 1A by the Associated Press.

They also have the stoutest defense in the Olympic/Nisqually League, allowing just 12.6 points per game.

But expect Coupeville (3-6) to come out firing, regardless.

The Wolves, who are averaging a hair over 23 points a game this season, have a chance to bust several school records on Senior Night.

Though, if the records go down, they will be shattered by underclassmen.

CHS quarterback Hunter Downes sits two away from tying the school single-season record for touchdown passes in a season, trailing Joel Walstad 18-16.

If he connects with fellow junior Hunter Smith, it will allow his receiver to break a tie with Josh Bayne for the single-season mark for TD receptions.

Smith hauled in #10 last Friday against Chimacum to tie the mark.

Even if he doesn’t break the plane of the end zone, Coupeville’s most dangerous receiver could dismantle two other records, which have stood much longer.

Chad Gale racked up 844 receiving yards in 1987, and 29 seasons later, Smith sits at 791 yards on the season heading into the finale.

Reach 136 receiving yards tonight and Smith knocks Gale off the record book twice, as he would also take the career mark away.

Gale leads that race 1,345 to 1,210.

Oh, and there’s another career mark within Smith’s reach as well, though this one is on defense.

With three interceptions this season, he’s up to 11 overall, one shy of Bayne’s 12.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

   This is Hunter Smith. You can’t stop Hunter Smith. End of discussion. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Downes

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes scrambles for a first down under the watchful eyes of his coaches.

trio

   CHS spikers (l to r) Emma Smith (rockin’ the old school letter jacket), Payton Aparicio and Ally Roberts kill some time while waiting for their playoffs to begin.

Julian Welling

The Beast, AKA Julian Welling, rises up out of the muck to fire a snap to his QB.

Cameron

   Cameron Toomey-Stout can smell the concession stand behind him, but he only has eyes for the football.

Dylan Estes

   The fastest water boy in the biz, Dylan Estes stays one step ahead of a thirsty pack of Wolves.

Clay Reilly

Bending the laws of physics, Clay Reilly hovers in mid-air.

Uriel and Jake

   Wolf senior captains Uriel Liquidano (63) and Jacob Martin, looking tough in a photo which will make them cry when they look at it again in 20 years.

Well, at least one of us wasn’t sick.

While I stayed back in Coupeville Friday with a touch of the good ol’ stomach flu, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken was feeling hale and hearty and hopped on the ferry to cover Coupeville’s football game against Chimacum.

The photos above, which come from various stages of a 24-6 Wolf win, are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161028-Coupeville-at-Chim/

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Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing yards and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

This could be a record-breaking season.

With two games left on the schedule, a pair of Coupeville High School football players are making bids to put their names on the program’s all-time record board.

Junior QB Hunter Downes and junior receiver Hunter Smith already tied CHS single-game records for touchdowns thrown and caught in a single game.

That came when Downes riddled Bellevue Christian for four scoring strikes, three of which went to Smith.

Now, Smith sits one snag away from tying Josh Bayne’s season record of 10 touchdown receptions, while also finding himself just 143 yards shy of Chad Gale’s mark (844 yards in 1987) for receiving yards in a single campaign.

When it comes to career marks, Smith sits 225 yards and six touchdowns off of Gale’s records (1,345 yards and 17 TD’s).

Downes is a little further away from his goals, but with a strong finish could make runs at Ian Smith’s single-season mark of 1,848 passing yards and Joel Walstad’s 18 touchdown passes in a year.

The Wolf gunslinger sits at 1,201 yards and 13 touchdowns and Friday’s foe, Chimacum, has the second-worst scoring defense in the Olympic/Nisqually League.

Cascade Christian, Coupeville’s final rival Nov. 4, is #1 in every defensive stat, however.

While the Hunter to Hunter passing attack is making a run at history, they are not the only Wolves putting up strong stats this season.

Here’s a look at where the whole CHS roster stands through week #8 on offense and defense, according to numbers posted on MaxPreps by Wolf coaches.

Complete kicking/kick-returning stats aren’t available at the moment, but are expected to be back in the mix by the end of the season, said CHS coach Jon Atkins.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 55-126 for 1201 yards (#2 in league, #5 in 1A) with 13 TD and 10 INTs
Hunter Smith 1-1 for 67 yards
Shane Losey 1-1 for 5 yards

Receiving:

Smith 30 receptions for 701 yards (#2 in league, #3 in 1A, #16 in all divisions)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 15-317 (#6 in league, #13 in 1A)
Jacob Martin 5-137
Clay Reilly 3-64
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-32
Jake Hoagland 2-17
Taylor Consford 1-5

Rushing:

J. Martin 74 carries for 488 yards
Reilly 59-224
Smith 26-103
Chris Battaglia 24-61
S. Toomey-Stout 8-45
Matt Hilborn 15-20
Teo Keilwitz 1-12
Andrew Martin 3-7
C. Toomey-Stout 2-1
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Losey 2-(-10)
Downes 37-(-80)

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

Smith 1040
J. Martin 625
Reilly 404
C. Toomey-Stout 395
S. Toomey-Stout 87
Hilborn 65
Battaglia 61
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 1121 (#3 in league, #6 in 1A)
Smith 871 (#8 in league, #13 in 1A)
J. Martin 625
C. Toomey-Stout 318
Reilly 288
S. Toomey-Stout 77
Battaglia 61
Hilborn 20
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 12
J. Martin 5
C. Toomey-Stout 4
Downes 2
Battaglia 1
Keilwitz 1
Ryan Labrador 1
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 20 (#2 in league, #6 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 72
J. Martin 30
Reilly 26
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Downes 12
Battaglia 6
Keilwitz 6
Labrador 6

Defense:

Tackles:

J. Martin 62
Uriel Liquidano 46
Reilly 44
Smith 38
Hilborn 27
S. Toomey-Stout 27
Battaglia 24
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Julian Welling 24
Keilwitz 14
Labrador 12
Dane Lucero 12
Jacob Zettle 11
Axel Partida 10
Jake Pease 5
James Vidoni 4
Matt Stevens 3
Hoagland 2
Downes 1
Losey 1
A. Martin 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim 1

Sacks:

Liquidano 5.5 (#2 in league, #4 in 1A, #18 in all divisions)
Vidoni 2
Zettle 1.5
J. Martin 1
Welling 1

Fumble recoveries:

Battaglia 1
Hilborn 1
Labrador 1
Lucero 1

Interceptions:

Reilly 2
Smith 2
C. Toomey-Stout 2
S. Toomey-Stout 1

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While teammates Hunter Downes and Hunter Smith were setting offensive records Saturday, Axel Partida was going all-out on defense. (John Fisken photo)

   While teammates Hunter Downes and Hunter Smith were tying offensive records Saturday, Axel Partida was going all-out on defense. (John Fisken photo)

It was a record-tying day when ultimately it needed to be a record-breaking one.

Coupeville High School quarterback Hunter Downes connected on four touchdown passes Saturday afternoon — tying a school single-game record held by his offensive coordinator — but came up one pass short of rallying the Wolves past a feisty Bellevue Christian squad.

Despite a stellar performance from the Wolf junior, who threw for 243 yards while dealing with a wet football, and a record-tying game from receiver Hunter Smith, Coupeville was nipped 34-28 in a game played at Lake Washington.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-3 in league play, 2-5 overall.

Downes four scoring strikes, two of which came in the fourth quarter, ties a mark set by Corey Cross in 1971 and tied twice by Brad Sherman (the current CHS play-caller) in 2001.

Smith hauled in three of those TD’s, making him the fourth Wolf receiver to ever accomplish that feat.

Glenn Losey (1970), Brian Fakkema (2001) and Josh Bayne (2014) are the others to pull off a trio of scoring catches in one game.

Unfortunately, all the records set Saturday are overshadowed a bit by the final score.

Coupeville looked like it was going to pull off a stunner, rallying from the brink of death with less than five minutes to play.

With the weather far balmier and a million times less windy than forecasters had predicted, the only storm was on the scoreboard, with CHS trailing 34-21 and having just turned the ball over deep in its own territory.

Holding on to a two-score lead and taking over at Coupeville’s 17-yard line, BC was ready to put the hammer down.

But, with their main running back, senior Daniel Ficca, having hobbled to the bench a few plays earlier, the Vikings went away from the run and tried to seal the deal with a pass.

It was a bad move, as Cameron Toomey-Stout picked the pass to put the ball back in Downes hands.

Two dropped passes and a sack later, Coupeville was shoved back to its 15, Downes was sent to the bench for a play by the refs after getting leveled and the Wolves needed another miracle.

And they found it, as Smith promptly connected with Toomey-Stout on a 67-yard catch-and-run in which the super-speedy #11 twirled like a ballet dancer, bouncing off of bodies and carrying half the Bellevue team down the field with him.

Bursting back into the game, Downes got Coupeville into the end zone four plays later, sliding a four-yard pass into Smith’s waiting hands, helping both players tie single-game marks at the same time.

Closing to within 34-28, the Wolves seemed to be crafting a storybook ending.

They forced the Vikings to go four and out, accepted a punt and stood 51 yards away from victory with 1:56 to play.

But the football gods, unlike the weather gods, were not smiling on Coupeville, as a Bellevue player read things correctly, jumped the route and picked off Downes on the Wolves next play.

Unable to stop the clock, Coupeville missed on getting one final play when the officials allowed too much time to bleed off the clock at the end of the game.

It appeared BC would have to punt, but, thanks to a fast clock and a slow ref, the Vikings escaped unscathed.

Up until the wild end, the game had been a back-and-forth affair, with Bellevue scoring and then Coupeville responding.

Despite the on-and-off rain, Downes was on point most of the afternoon, raining down fire from above.

His first scoring strike, set up by a Chris Battaglia fumble recovery, was a 30-yarder to Smith in the first quarter in which he flung a frozen rope that split two defenders in mid air.

Downes then came back with a 75-yard scoring play early in the second quarter on which he threw a bomb out into the great unknown and let Smith outrace two defenders to snag it.

Touchdown #3 went to Toomey-Stout, a 40-yard play early in the fourth quarter, before #4 went to Smith during the furious finale.

While the wind never developed into a problem of any magnitude, a slick ball was often hard for both teams to hang on to, as multiple fumbles were lost.

Dane Lucero joined Battaglia in snaring a loose ball, while a third was scooped up by an unknown Wolf in the middle of a dog pile.

CHS coach Jon Atkins praised his defense, giving credit to Uriel Liquidano for being a rampaging force of nature and Lucero and Axel Partida for “doing a really good job of setting the edge.”

Up in the press box, Clay Reilly’s super-powered leg, shown off on extra points and kick-offs, was the #1 topic of discussion among the locals.

Unofficially, Coupeville threw for 310 yards (243 from Downes and 67 from Smith), with Toomey-Stout accounting for 166 of those yards and Smith 144.

Jacob Martin led the Wolves with 62 yards on the ground, while Coupeville had three kick returns of 15+ yards.

Smith brought one back 26 yards and another 19, while Matt Hilborn creased the defense on a 16-yard return.

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