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Posts Tagged ‘Hunter Smith’

Uriel Liquidano was one of several Wolves who made big plays in Saturday's big win. (John Fisken photo)

   Uriel Liquidano had six tackles and a sack in Coupeville’s 41-10 win over South Whidbey. (John Fisken photos)

Jacob Martin rambled for 129 yards in week one, most by any player from the Olympic/Nisqually League.

   Jacob Martin rushed for 129 yards in week one, most by any player suiting up for an Olympic/Nisqually League team.

The Wolves are off to a great start.

Of the eight football teams who make up the Olympic/Nisqually League, only two won on opening night.

One was perennial state title contender Cascade Christian and the other was Coupeville.

After rocking arch-rival South Whidbey 41-10 to reclaim The Bucket, the Wolves are dominating on the stat sheets, as well.

They currently have the top player in nine different categories among league teams who have reported stats to MaxPreps.com.

Of all the leaders, maybe the most impressive is Clay Reilly, who recorded 365 yards on eight kickoffs.

That puts him #1 in league, #1 in 1A and #2 among all 30 kickers in the state who have reported stats.

The only booter ahead of him is Jack Clayville of 3A Mercer Island (434 yards on nine kicks), and he had an extra chance to unleash his foot.

Where Reilly and his teammates sit after week one, as reported by CHS coaches:

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 4-8 for 98 yards (#3 in league) with 2 TD and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 4 receptions for 98 yards (#1 in league)

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 11 carries for 129 yards (#1 in league)
Clay Reilly 5-33
Chris Battaglia 6-5
Smith 5-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 4-(-13)

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

Smith 202
Martin 129
Reilly 61
Battaglia 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Martin 129 (#4 in league)
Smith 101
Downes 85
Reilly 33
Battaglia 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 3 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin 2 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 1 (tied for #5 in league)

PATs:

Reilly 5 (#1 in league)

Points:

Smith 18 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin
12 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 6
Reilly 5

Defense:

Tackles:

Teo Keilwitz 7
Martin 7
Smith 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
Reilly 6
Battaglia 5
Julian Welling
5
Cameron Toomey-Stout
4
Sean Toomey-Stout
3
James Vidoni
3
Jacob Zettle
3
Shane Losey
1
Dane Lucero
1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (#1 in league)
Liquidano 1 (tied for #2 in league)
Martin 1 (tied for #2 in league)

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #1 in league)

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 8 for 365 yards (#1 in league/#2 in entire state)

Punts:

Reilly 2 for 36 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 2 for 84 yards (#1 in league)
Reilly 3-28

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Hunter Downes (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes ran a crisp, high-impact offense all night long. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

All-League kicker Clay Reilly mashes a moon ball.

Jacob Martin

Jacob Martin (32) leaves the Falcons with no room to run.

team

“On three, we unleash Hell!!”

tackle

Teo Keilwitz (left) and Reilly team up to tenderize an unlucky Falcon.

Denied! Uriel Liquidano rises up to swat away a Falcon pass.

Denied! Uriel Liquidano rises up to swat away a Falcon pass.

Opening night was all smiles for Martin, as he ripped up the field on both sides of the ball.

   Opening night was all smiles for Martin, as he ripped up the field on both sides of the ball.

Hunter Smith will not be denied on his birthday, diving in for one of his three touchdowns.

   Hunter Smith will not be denied on his birthday, diving in for one of his three touchdowns.

It was pretty much a perfect storm.

Coupeville unleashed a big-play offense, matched it with a ferocious, pedal-to-the-metal defense and destroyed arch-rival South Whidbey 41-10 Saturday night.

As they brought The Bucket back home, the Wolves did so under the watchful eye of wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who provides us with the pics seen above.

To gaze upon more and possibly buy grandma some glossies, (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20160903-Coupeville-vs-Sout/

or

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11781&league=21&page_name=photo_store&pid=0.21.24.0.206&school=24&sport=0

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, slicin’ ‘n dicin’ defenses on the gridiron. (John Fisken photos)

baseball

Flingin’ the high, hard cheese.

(Photos courtesy Charlotte Young)

Evolution of a superstar. (Photos courtesy Charlotte Young)

Sometimes you get lucky.

Over the years Coupeville has lost a lot of pretty talented athletes, young men and women whose families have taken them away, for one reason or another, just as they were about to hit their prime.

But sometimes the scales get balanced, and that’s what happened when Chris and Charlotte Smith moved to town three years ago.

Somehow, against all odds, we got three superb young athletes (and better people) in one fell swoop, a boon to Wolf athletics for years.

Older brother CJ delivered 2.5 years of excellence across football, basketball and baseball before graduation and little sister Scout, just now a freshman at CHS, is already a supernova.

And then, in the middle, we have the young man who is carving out a legend which will loom large over the prairie for many years.

Hunter Smith, a Wolf junior who happens to be celebrating his birthday today, has been a slam-dunk since day one.

Pick the sport and he will go out and kick your fanny in it, small smile on his face as he lets his actions speak louder than words.

In football, he already holds (or is tied, there’s still some debate) the school’s single-season record for interceptions, having snagged seven of them as a sophomore.

A two-way warrior, he was the team’s leading pass catcher as well, and is primed for a major breakout season in his third tour of duty, which begins tonight against South Whidbey.

On the basketball court, Hunter is a dead-eye shooter, a hustler and a scrapper who hits buzzer beaters to electrify the crowd yet still is willing to do the dirty work.

Put him on the baseball diamond, and Smith is a strikeout-hucking pitcher, a rock-solid middle infielder prone to dazzling displays of defensive virtuosity and a lead-off hitter who rocks both power and speed in his trim frame.

If they were taking bets on it in Vegas, he would have to be the odds-on favorite for CHS Male Athlete of the Year in 2016-2017, primarily because he does everything and he does everything really, really well.

And yet, what makes Hunter truly rise above the crowd is the way he handles himself, on and off the field.

If there’s ego there, he hides it well.

Confidence? Yes. A belief in his own abilities? Without a doubt.

But like his siblings and his parents, Hunter is a cool cat who goes about his business with style and genuine class.

A mix of Honor Roll smart and big game tough, the middle Smith kid is a winner in every way, and we are lucky to have inherited him (and his family).

So happy birthday, Hunter.

I look forward to being there as you torch the record books for years to come.

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Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith, our 2016 Athlete Supreme. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Grove (John Fisken photo)

Runner-up Lauren Grove at work on the soccer field.

Hunter 2

Smith checks the base runner (and the vote count).

Return your voting finger to its upright position.

If you can…

The past 100 hours have seen an unprecedented explosion of fervor — mixed with a little screaming, whining, pleading, snarkiness and good-old-fashioned trash talking — here on Coupeville Sports.

This is the fourth time I’ve celebrated the end of the school sports year by holding a winner-take-all poll for the Athlete Supreme.

But year #4 made years #1-3 look downright quaint.

We topped out a bit over 15,000 votes last year, when CJ Smith joined Nick Streubel (2013) and Amanda Fabrizi (2014) in claiming a title that exists only in our minds.

This year?

123,908 votes cast in 100 hours, with Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith riding an explosion of votes in the final 36 hours to upend junior Lauren Grove and make it back-to-back wins for his family.

At one point Tuesday, the two were separated by three votes, than the Smith mafia (I kid, I kid) kicked it to another gear and it was done, man.

Hunter finished with an uncanny 28,440 votes.

Grove (23,286), freshman Lindsey Roberts (15,496), senior Makana Stone (12,962) and sophomore Julian Welling (12,098) rounded out the top five in our 20-athlete field.

To those who played along, thanks.

And to those like laid-back Lathom Kelley and feisty McKenzie Bailey, who couldn’t have cared less about my silly poll, you know you’re still on my A-list.

Maybe even more so now.

The poll, kicked off Saturday afternoon, was a knock-down, drag-out affair, with early front-runners taken down hard in the second half by athletes with extremely deep benches of family and friends who voted in a frenzy.

By the time we got to the final 24 hours, it was firmly a two-person race between three-sport stars, both of whom are standout athletes and better people.

Nerves got frazzled, charges of voter fraud were launched more than once (I, for one, never saw any, but if people found a way to bend the system, hey, let’s give credit where credit is due) and everyone got worked into a froth for an award that exists … only in our minds.

Will I go back to one-person, one-vote next year? We’ll see. I have 12 months to ponder it all.

For now, a bow in the direction of Hunter Smith, our 2016 Athlete Supreme.

And now we can all return to our normal lives and some of you can go stick your thumbs in a bucket of ice.

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Cole Payne (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   Wolf catcher Cole Payne whacked two hits on Senior Night. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Payne is joined by fellow seniors CJ Smith (middle) and Brenden Gilbert during festivities.

   Payne (left) is joined by fellow seniors CJ Smith (middle) and Brenden Gilbert during festivities.

This one may sting for awhile.

Having already clinched its first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad had nothing to really prove Wednesday.

So, while they were nipped 4-3 by visiting Klahowya in their regular season finale, the loss alone doesn’t affect the Wolves playoff hopes.

What might, however, is the loss of sophomore lead-off hitter Hunter Smith, who was ejected in the fifth inning after the ump believed his strike zone was questioned.

If the ejection is upheld, it carries a one-game suspension with it, which means Smith would have to sit out Coupeville’s playoff opener May 10.

The Wolves, who finished the regular season 10-10 overall, 7-2 in 1A Olympic League play, are guaranteed at least two games at districts, could play three, and need two wins to advance to state.

To see the district bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Klahowya, which had lost the first two meetings between the teams this season, jumped on Coupeville for three quick runs in the first, putting together four hits in the rally.

From that point on, Wolf hurler CJ Smith was in lock-down mode, holding the Eagles scoreless until the seventh.

Coupeville got a single in the first from Cole Payne, then walked the bases full in the second, but were hurt by strikeouts both times (they whiffed 13 times on the day) and failed to plate a run.

The Wolves finally broke through with two runs in the third.

CJ Smith and Payne, both celebrating Senior Night, stroked back-to-back singles to start the inning, before both coming around to score on Klahowya errors.

CHS knotted the game up at 3-3 in the bottom of the sixth (Kory Score singled, stole second and eventually scored on a ground-out), but left two runners on.

The Eagles regained the lead in the top of the seventh, using back-to-back base knocks to get a runner to third before dumping a ball into the gap between second and first.

Wolf second baseman Joey Lippo had no chance to make a play at home, but managed to gun down the runner going to first for the second out.

Fans hoping for one final rally had their dreams crushed when the Wolves went down one-two-three in the bottom of the seventh.

The game was the final home appearance for Payne, CJ Smith and Brenden Gilbert, who made his first varsity start in left field.

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