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Posts Tagged ‘Hunter Smith’

Flying solo, having lost his defender, Hunter Smith hauls in a TD pass. (John Fisken photos)

   Flying solo, having lost his defender, Hunter Smith hauls in a TD pass. (John Fisken photos)

Wiley

Wiley Hesselgrave (10) makes a play to rip the ball free.

wiley

And, on this play, with an assist from Brenden Gilbert (74), it works.

Lathom

Lathom Kelley heads to daylight.

kacie

Super fans Kacie Kiel (left) and Kailey Kellner eye the action.

line

   Gang tackling at its finest, as Mitchell Carroll (16), Kelley, Jordan Ford (88) and Gilbert team up to take down a Cowboy runner.

Gabe Eck

Wolf QB Gabe Eck lets fly…

Hunter

…and Smith hauls in another bomb.

The end result wasn’t pretty, but the action leading up to Friday’s Homecoming loss had its fair share of big plays and camera-friendly moves.

Snapping away was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who provides us with the pics above.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=9402&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

P.S. — Use coupon code EB94024962 before Oct. 31 and get 15% off your purchase.

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The look on former Wolf lineman OScar Liquidano's face just about sums it all up. (John Fisken photo)

   The look on former Wolf lineman Oscar Liquidano’s face just about sums it all up. (John Fisken photo)

At the end Friday night, there was a burst of raw emotion, of joy finally spilling out and sweeping over football players who had endured much.

That euphoria, that relief, however, did not emanate from Coupeville High School’s side of the field.

For the Wolves, this will go down as one of the most gut-wrenching losses in school history, in any sport.

Nothing, no pretty words, no rah-rah statements, will change that, and, if lessons are learned and pay off down the road, that still isn’t going to totally wipe away the sting.

You do not lose 14-9 when you surrender a touchdown with 1.6 seconds to go, on your home field, at Homecoming, to a school that entered the game with an 18-game losing streak, and walk away un-scarred.

But, before we go any further, we need to step back a moment and give Chimacum credit. The Cowboys seized the moment that was given them, and they fully deserve to enjoy erasing two years of futility.

So now, Coupeville (1-6) and Chimacum (1-6) sit with identical 1-4 records in 1A Olympic League play, having split the two games they played.

Port Townsend (5-0, 7-0) and Klahowya (3-2, 4-3) are guaranteed the league’s first two playoff spots. The RedHawks shredded the Eagles 43-6 Friday, and have now outscored their opponents 342-12.

With one league game left, the third and final playoff spot is still Coupeville’s to claim.

While Chimacum will be giddy for a day or two after Friday’s win, they should be easily stomped by Port Townsend next Friday.

So, if Coupeville can go on the road and knock off Klahowya, the postseason berth is theirs.

If both the Cowboys and Wolves lose and finish 1-5, then we would go to a tiebreaker, and what that is, I have no clue.

Not that it really matters at the moment.

Right now, what will linger for some time is that Chimacum overcame a 9-0 deficit in the fourth quarter Friday, driving 80 yards in the final three minutes to snatch victory from the jaws of almost certain defeat.

The Cowboys did so, somehow, despite throwing five incomplete passes on the drive — one of which was almost picked off — and twice being stung by Wolf junior Jacob Martin hauling down runners for losses in the backfield.

The second tackle, coming with 25 seconds on the clock, set up a 4th-and-12 from the 17-yard line.

Then Chimacum pulled off a miracle. Somehow.

A 12-yard completion (or a 10-11 yard completion and a really nice spot from the ref) gave them a first and goal, and then the Cowboys lobbed the ball into a scrum and came away with a five-yard touchdown pass.

In the mob of players, it was virtually impossible to tell who caught the ball and it took forever for any of the refs to throw their hands up in the air.

When they did, signalling a Cowboy score, the Chimacum sidelines unleashed an earthquake, while the (for once) intensely-noisy Coupeville fans collapsed, a great sigh of disbelief trembling off of every lower lip.

The two-point conversion completed the swing from 9-6 Coupeville lead to 14-9 deficit, and even though the Wolves got the ball back for one final Hail Mary, it fell well short of the end zone.

Only as the final buzzer sounded did the loss seem halfway real, because, up until then, there seemed no way it was going that direction.

Coupeville dominated the game everywhere but on the scoreboard, mixing crisp passing from freshman Gabe Eck with power running from Wiley Hesselgrave.

Eck piled up 164 yards through the air, spreading the love out among five receivers.

Hunter Smith racked up 89 of those yards, including 22 on a second quarter touchdown hookup with his QB that staked the Wolves to the full 9-0 lead.

Even though they were unable to tack on the extra point, due to a bad snap, the score added to a 24-yard field goal kicked earlier in the quarter by Zane Bundy.

When the Wolves were on defense, they were even more effective, and it all started with Smith.

The sophomore sensation picked off not one, not two, but three Chimacum passes, running his season total to seven picks.

That breaks the mark of six in a season currently sitting on the school record board under the name of Josh Bayne.

Lathom Kelley also recovered a fumble forced by Wiley Hesselgrave, then shot through the line later to block the extra point after Chimacum’s first touchdown.

Hesselgrave added seven tackles and a sack, while Martin (five tackles) and freshmen Chris Battaglia (eight tackles) and Ty Eck (five tackles) flew all around the field.

But, while Coupeville came dangerously close to blowing the game open on both sides of the ball, it didn’t.

The Wolves turned the ball over on downs three times and used punter Clay Reilly frequently, including on both of their fourth-quarter drives.

On its final time with the ball, Coupeville went from its own 26-yard-line down to Chimacum’s 21, riding Gabe Eck’s legs (a 33-yard scramble) and arm (a 22-yard pass to Ryan Griggs.)

Clinging to the three-point lead, and close enough for Bundy to kick another field goal, Coupeville then hit an unexpected wall.

A sack, an incomplete pass and a penalty turned a 1st-and-10 at the 21 into a 4th-and-22 at the 33, while also turning a potential field goal try into a punt.

The ball went back to Chimacum, and then, well, let’s not talk about the final three minutes any more.

Tomorrow is another day.

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Mitchell Carroll had the biggest hit of the night, flattening Klahowya's QB for a teeth-rattling sack. (John Fisken photo)

   Mitchell Carroll had the biggest hit of the night, flattening Klahowya’s QB for a teeth-rattling sack. (John Fisken photo)

It was kind of classless, and sort of fitting.

Capping a chippy, flag-riddled game Friday night, the Klahowya High School football squad, the clubhouse leader in face mask and late hit penalties, chose the lesser of two paths in the final moments, opting to punch in a meaningless touchdown instead of taking a knee up by 10 with 25 seconds to play.

The move gave the visiting Eagles a 29-13 victory over Coupeville, and might give the illusion to those who weren’t at Mickey Clark Field that the game was a blowout.

Which is far from the truth.

And you know what? Whether you won 29-13 or 23-13, here’s a quick piece of advice, Klahowya. Port Townsend ain’t gonna be impressed, either way.

The Redhawks, who demolished winless Chimacum 58-0 Friday to run their record to 5-0 (they’ve outscored opponents 255-6) are rolling through the 1A Olympic League this season.

So the match-up between Klahowya (now 3-2 overall, 2-1 in league) and Coupeville (1-4, 1-2) was a consolation prize, with the winner taking the inside lane on the league’s #2 playoff spot.

As such, it was an orgy of hard hits, defensive gems from the Wolf secondary and a whole lot of tusslin’.

Flags dropped from the skies with more frequency than the third-quarter rain drops, and they stung both sides.

A whole lot of yappin’ and a whole lot of late and flagrant hits, from both sides, set the tone of the game.

And up until the final moments it was a game either squad could have won.

Zane Bundy’s second field goal of the night, a 32-yarder that he whacked about 42 yards, pulled Coupeville to within 17-13, a score that held until the game’s final six minutes.

Klahowya broke through for good when Eagle quarterback George Harris blasted in from two yards out with 6:01 on the clock, capping a drive that was greatly aided by a face mask penalty on the Wolves.

Catching a mini-break when Klahowya misfired on the PAT, Coupeville took over down by 10 and started to make things happen. And then didn’t.

The Wolves had four consecutive gains, highlighted by an 18-yard pass from Gabe Eck to Ty Eck, erased by penalties.

Every time they surged forward, they shot themselves in the foot in the next breath, finally sputtering out and turning the ball over on downs.

The Eagles mixed in two short runs with Coupeville burning its final timeouts, then Harris whipped a 45-yard pass to drive the ball down to the five.

With no way to stop the clock, the Wolves could do little else but watch Klahowya take a knee and run out the game.

Except that wasn’t in the game plan, apparently.

To their credit, the Wolf defense immediately stepped back up and resoundingly blocked the extra point, preventing the Eagles from cracking the 30-point barrier.

Still, it’s hard not to look at Klahowya’s coaching staff and say, “Really?”

The game, the first at home for Coupeville after four straight road trips, had kicked off with a true back-and-forth feel.

The Eagles opened the scoring on a safety when a bad snap left Wolf punter Clay Reilly a sitting duck in the end zone, but the Wolves jumped right back into things on a five-yard scoring run from Wiley Hesselgrave.

Hesselgrave, who powered his way to 102 yards on the ground by repeatedly slamming head-first into would-be tacklers, paced Coupeville’s best running attack of the season.

The Wolves collected 217 yards as a team, with Lathom Kelley gutting out a season-high 91 to back up Hesselgrave.

Klahowya retook the lead on back-to-back second quarter touchdowns, but the opportunistic Wolf defense refused to buckle.

Sophomore Hunter Smith made off with a pair of interceptions, running his season total to four, while Hesselgrave also had a pick and Jordan Ford returned a fumble 20+ yards.

Bundy hit a 27-yard field goal at the halftime buzzer to cut the lead to 17-10, then provided the only scoring in the third quarter with his second field goal.

Kelley (14 tackles) and Hesselgrave (11) led the Wolf tackling machine, while the game’s best play might have come courtesy Mitchell Carroll.

The Wolf junior came crashing around the left side of the line to decimate Harris for a first quarter sack that rattled the Eagle quarterback.

He suffered the first of his three interceptions on the very next play, as Smith went airborne to rip the ball away from a Klahowya receiver.

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Gabe Eck (John Fisken photos)

   Eyes scanning downfield, young gun Gabe Eck gets ready to pick apart the defense. (John Fisken photos)

block

   “I said NOOOOOOOO!!!” Grizzled vets Lathom Kelley (44) and Wiley Hesselgrave (10) team up to block a Chimacum kick.

CJ Smith

Hauling in the ball in mid-stride, CJ Smith is footloose and fancy free.

Jordan Ford

Jordan Ford, getting ready to make his 2,561 relatives in the stands go crazy.

Wiley

Hesselgrave can not be stopped by mere mortals. Fools.

Mark

   Proud papa Mark Hesselgrave exchanges hair care tips with the most stylish soccer player in Wolf Nation, Kirsten Pelroy. Yep, I’m sure that’s what’s happening.

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith, about to make a lot of folks miss.

Uriel Liquidano

Uriel Liquidano (63) and Ford team up to lasso a Cowboy.

A win is a win, but photos last forever.

As the buzz from Friday’s victory over Chimacum fades just a bit (eventually the focus will shift to next week’s foe, Port Townsend), Wolf football fans can relive the moment through John Fisken’s photos.

With Oak Harbor High School on a rare bye week, we got the travelin’ photo man’s full attention, and he delivered the pics above.

To see more (a lot more), and possibly purchase some (thereby helping to fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=9057&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=183&sport=0

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

Hunter Smith, cold-blooded killer. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf volleyball star Hope Lodell and gridiron giant Julian Welling are all smiles after the win.

   Wolf volleyball star Hope Lodell and gridiron giant Julian Welling are all smiles after the win. (Ally Roberts photo)

Hunter Smith, with the adrenaline shot right to the heart.

The Coupeville High School sophomore wasn’t alive when Pulp Fiction hit movie screens, but he went all John Travolta on Chimacum Friday night, plunging in the needle and saving a huge football win for the Wolves.

Smith’s interception with just 32 seconds to play sealed a wild 28-26 win, the first-ever for CHS head coach Brett Smedley, and lifted the Wolves into a first place tie in the 1A Olympic League.

Coupeville (1-2 overall, 1-0 in league play) sits atop the league along with Port Townsend (3-0, 1-0), which crushed Klahowya 52-6.

The Wolves will hit the road for a fourth consecutive week next Friday, Sept. 25, when they will meet the high-powered RedHawks in a battle for sole possession of first.

Port Townsend, which entered this week ranked #10 in the state polls, has outscored its first three foes 145-6.

While it will be a daunting task, it’s one to think about on another day.

Tonight, if you hear the roar coming across the water as Coupeville players and fans return on the ferry, there’s reason. Big reason.

Facing a team that is better than its (now) 15-game losing streak might indicate, the Wolves, who were missing several starters, spent the night battling from behind, then surged into the lead in the late going, only to almost have it all ripped away.

Having reeled off 16 straight points, capped by a Zane Bundy field goal, Coupeville staked itself to its biggest lead of the game at 28-20.

Refusing to go down easily, the host Cowboys closed the gap on a touchdown with under a minute to play.

Coupeville blunted the damage by preventing Chimacum from converting on a two-point conversion that would have tied the game, but the Cowboys got a break when they recovered the ensuing onside kick.

With the ball in its hands, Chimacum came up firing only to have Smith, who was the only freshman to earn All-League honors last year, come up huge.

That dagger capped a wild and woolly affair in which the lead changed hands at will, often in the matter of one play.

Coupeville opened the scoring on a touchdown pass in which freshmen twins Gabe and Ty Eck hooked up.

But before the Wolves could really celebrate, Chimacum blocked the PAT and returned it the length of the field for a score of its own to grab a 7-6 lead.

Ty Eck would score again, but the Wolves trailed 13-12 at the half.

The strongest run of the game for Coupeville came in the second half, when the Wolves put together three straight scores to turn a 20-12 deficit into a 28-20 lead.

Wiley Hesselgrave slammed in for one touchdown, then Smith snagged another through the air, before Bundy converted on the first field goal of his short high school career.

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