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Posts Tagged ‘injuries’

Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith hauled in his ninth TD reception Friday, leaving him one shy of Josh Bayne’s school single-season record. (John Fisken photo)

Real life mattered more than wins and losses Friday night.

While the Coupeville High School football team would prefer to have returned from Silverdale with something other than a 45-12 loss to Klahowya, relief over teammate Jacob Zettle’s health was first on everyone’s minds.

The Wolf junior crashed hard while trying to make a tackle in the first quarter and remained down on the field for close to 15 minutes before being removed by medics.

He was strapped onto a backboard and taken to a local ER, where his grandmother Suzanne said doctors found he had a concussion and neck spasms, but, thankfully, no issues with his vertebrae.

Zettle’s injury was one of of least three big ones an already-undermanned Wolf gridiron squad suffered.

Matt Hilborn was rocked on a play late in the game and is believed to have suffered a concussion, while the team’s leading rusher, Jacob Martin, went down in the first quarter with a hand injury.

Klahowya was rockin’ a 67-man roster (CHS, at full strength, runs maybe half that) and the Eagles were looking for some payback after being knocked out of the playoff race with a loss Monday at Port Townsend.

Led by the one-two punch of Gabe Wallis, who scored three touchdowns on the ground, and Dylan Zuber, who had three picks on defense and ripped off a long run for a TD of his own while at QB, the Eagles controlled the game from start to finish.

They had numbers, they had skill and they even had some luck.

Jack Cooper, who doubles as a Klahowya soccer player, nailed a second-quarter field goal that hit the left upright, caught an updraft and spun back to the right for a miracle three.

The lead announcer on the Kitsap Sun live stream that was playing on the internet just about broke his mic as he fell off his seat while marveling at Cooper’s bank shot.

Coupeville’s luck, on the other hand, was nonexistent.

Down 24-0 with the halftime break coming up fast, the Wolves got knifed twice by the refs.

First, Hunter Smith outraced a group of Eagles to the right sideline, skipping nimbly in for a three-yard scoring run, only to see the play waved off on a holding call.

Taking a different tack, he went left on fourth and goal from the eight-yard line, snagged a pass from Hunter Downes and appeared to score for a second time.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the ref ruled Smith down a half-yard shy, giving Klahowya the ball back.

The Eagles rolled the dice one more time and found Lady Luck ready to give them a sloppy kiss, as Zuber artfully danced away from a safety on the final play of the half.

If you thought Coupeville’s luck would change after the halftime show, you would be about 93.2% wrong.

Smith made a sensational snag on a ball from Downes, rambled through several defenders, but couldn’t get past the very last hand in his way and hit the turf at the one-yard line.

And yes, with first and goal from the one, but missing their battering ram in Martin, who was stuck on the sideline, the Wolves somehow then went four and out.

CHS finally found a positive — a bright, glimmering one — when it recovered a fumble on the very next play, which eventually set up a 34-yard touchdown strike from Downes to Smith.

It was Smith’s ninth TD catch of the season, putting him one off of Josh Bayne’s school single-season record.

For Downes, it was scoring toss #13, leaving him five behind Joel Walstad’s record of 18 in one year with two games to play.

Klahowya held firm, though, closing the third with Zuber’s 40-yard-plus scoring run, then opening the fourth with a smash-mouth TD from Eagle Twitter legend James Gherna.

Showing far more class than Port Townsend did when it left its starting offense in while up 50-0 on the Wolves in the fourth quarter, the Eagles went to their back-ups and coasted in for the win.

Coupeville also played its bench for much of the fourth, giving freshmen like Andrew Martin and Dawson Houston valuable field time.

Jake Hoagland and Sean Toomey-Stout hauled in passes, with Toomey-Stout’s being of the 42-yard variety, while Teo Keilwitz garnered his first varsity touchdown to cap Coupeville’s scoring.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-4 in Olympic/Nisqually League play and 2-6 overall.

Coupeville travels to Chimacum next Friday, then closes at home against Cascade Christian Nov. 5.

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"We're NOT going to Bellevue!!!!" (John Fisken photo)

“We’re NOT going to Bellevue!!!!” (John Fisken photo)

Weather couldn’t kill the game, but other factors finally did.

Coupeville was supposed to spend Saturday playing a girls soccer game against Bellevue Christian at Lake Washington, but things took one turn after another Friday.

First, storm concerns caused the two schools to move the game up from 4 PM to noon (while also bumping football from 7:00 to 3:00).

A few hours later, though, the non-conference soccer game was called off when BC decided it didn’t have enough players, due to injuries and girls who were out of town.

The game will not be made up.

Coupeville (4-1 in league play, 6-4-1 overall) returns to action Tuesday, when it hosts Klahowya (5-0, 7-1-2) in a battle for first-place in the 1A Olympic League.

The Wolves, who finished second in league in 2014 and 2015, close the season with four league games in an eight-day period.

**Football is still on, with a 3 PM kickoff at Lake Washington.**

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Wolf sophomore QB Shane Losey has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder. (Scott Losey photo)

   Wolf sophomore QB Shane Losey has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder. (Scott Losey photo)

Football gives and football takes away.

Late in Friday’s Homecoming game against Port Townsend, Coupeville back-up quarterback Shane Losey completed his first varsity pass, hooking up with Taylor Consford.

It was the first reception for his senior receiver, a first-year player, and a bright moment for the sophomore signal-caller.

Unfortunately, it’s likely to be the final big play of either player’s season.

Both suffered injuries in the final minutes against the RedHawks, with both believed to be season-ending.

Scott Losey confirmed his son has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder and will be out four to six weeks.

With four games left on the regular-season schedule, that means Shane won’t see the field again this year, leaving freshman Dawson Houston as Hunter Downes back-up at QB.

Downes, a junior who has been mostly pain-free this year, was knocked out early last year by the same type of injury Shane Losey suffered.

“These are the bumps of the sport,” said Scott Losey, a former Wolf player whose dad, uncle and two sons all suited up for CHS.

Consford was on crutches at the Homecoming dance after taking a shot to his knee.

Sunday morning he confirmed that his first varsity catch was also his last.

“I’m out for the season,” Consford said.

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Kyla Briscoe (John Fisken photos)

   Kyla Briscoe was a key player as a sophomore on last year’s girls’ hoops squad which went to state. (John Fisken photos)

Briscoe, seen here last year with Sarah Wright (left) and Katrina McGranahan,

   Briscoe, seen here last year with Sarah Wright (left) and Katrina McGranahan, is a two-year letter winner in volleyball.

Briscoe models her new cast Monday. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Briscoe models her new cast Monday. (Amy Briscoe photo)

One bad step during the off-season will put the Coupeville High School volleyball squad down a player this year.

Junior Kyla Briscoe, a two-time letter winner for the Wolf spikers, ripped seven ligaments and two tendons in her left ankle during a summer volleyball camp.

Coming down after a block, she landed on another player’s foot and rolled her own ankle, hard.

A small smidgen of good news was delivered Monday, however, as Briscoe learned she wouldn’t need surgery.

Instead, she will wear a cast for the next three weeks.

After that, Briscoe is expected to move into a boot and begin rehab.

While it’s expected she’ll miss the entire volleyball season, and the chance to play a final season alongside older sister Tiffany, the lack of surgery might put her back in play for basketball season.

Kyla Briscoe saw her playing time steadily increase as her sophomore hoops season played out.

A scrappy player on both sides of the ball, she helped lead the Wolf basketball squad to its first state tourney berth in a decade.

CHS hoops coach David King was planning on keeping Briscoe actively involved in the program, regardless of her playing status.

She is currently slated to assist Sherry Roberts with Coupeville’s fall ball team.

“One thing she knows is the plays and how we as a team want to play,” King said. “That insight is invaluable.”

A few days back, when it appeared Briscoe might be out for a substantial period of time, her coach expressed regret.

“Not having Kyla is going to leave a huge hole within our team,” King said. “The growth towards the end of last season and this summer really allowed her to gain confidence in herself and her game.

“We were looking forward to having her full time on varsity and being a contributor in all facets of the game.”

Monday’s prognosis may brighten the outlook for King, however, depending on how fast Briscoe’s ankle mends itself.

For now, it’s a waiting game, though one with more of a silver lining than it might have seemed at first.

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Wolf defenders Keegan Kortuem (18) and Oscar Liquidano (4), seen here during the jamboree, (Wendy McCormick photo)

Wolf defenders Keegan Kortuem (18) and Oscar Liquidano (4), seen here during the jamboree, played strongly Thursday in a losing effort. (Wendy McCormick photo)

Well, at least it didn’t rain all night.

The fact the liquid coldness only splattered down here and there Thursday was about the lone bright spot on a rough night for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad.

Facing a tough South Whidbey squad that returned virtually everyone from a team that made the state quarterfinals a year ago, the Wolves didn’t get their first shot on goal until three minutes into the second half.

Toss in the loss of starting goaltender Joel Walstad (he sat out the second half after limping off at halftime) and the resulting 9-0 defeat wasn’t pretty.

But, with Coupeville having moved to the Olympic League, it was a non-conference loss, and, while it dropped the Wolves to 0-2, there is still a lot of soccer left to play.

The health of Walstad is a concern, and the team’s inability to break into the scoring column in the first two games another.

The Wolves spent much of the first half backpedaling as the Falcons aggressively pushed the pace of the game.

South Whidbey got in the scoring column a slim 1:33 into the game, then tacked on four more scores before the break.

One came off a highly questionable penalty kick awarded to a player whose goal was followed by a loud, popular chorus of “You’re still a flopper, dude!!” from the Coupeville JV players in the stands.

With Walstad on the bench in the second half, and backup goalie Connor McCormick unavailable after playing the entire JV game, Coupeville rustled up goaltender clothes for junior defender Tanner Kircher and threw him out there to fend as best as possible.

He actually did fairly well, making several impressive saves while fending off a barrage of Falcon shots.

Up front, the Wolves finally broke through for several shots on goal, getting pushes from Zane Bundy, Garrett Compton and others, but were turned away by South Whidbey goalie Charlie Stelling.

JV shut out:

It was largely the same story in the night’s opening contest, as South Whidbey breezed to a 6-0 win.

The Falcons only took 1:04 in this one to score their first goal, but it was the visiting goaltender who exited early after being blown up by rampaging Wolf Laurence Boado on a play in front of the net.

McCormick did his best to limit the high-powered Falcon offense, but the night’s best save was a team effort.

Down on the ground after stopping a shot, McCormick managed to get his hand on a second shot, but the ball took a South Whidbey skip, with an incoming Falcon having a seemingly wide-open third try at the net.

He failed, however, when Wolf midfielder Taylor Chiles suddenly appeared out of nowhere in the mouth of the goal, sacrificing his body and blocking the shot out of bounds with his hip.

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