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Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

   Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

Clay Reilly was the best punter in 1A as a junior.

It’s their time.

With Coupeville High School’s football team hoping to field a dynamic running attack, continuing a trend from recent years, three Wolf seniors hope to step up and make a big impact.

Young guns like Chris Battaglia and Teo Keilwitz should figure in the mix, but Jacob Martin, Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll are hoping to give the Wolves a three-headed monster of a backfield.

Martin is the only one of the three who played there last season, picking up 123 yards on 25 carries.

He was third on the squad in rushing behind seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley, but spent much of the year slowed by injuries.

Now he’s feeling healthy and wants to take a crack at the kind of numbers former teammates Jake Tumblin and Josh Bayne rolled up on the gridiron.

“I’m quick and shifty, hard to take down,” Martin said. “I want to set scoring and rushing records.”

Reilly, a strong defensive back who led all 1A punters last season with 1,156 yards, is eager to make an impact on both sides of the ball this season.

“My strengths as a rusher is that I’m fast and strong,” he said. “My goal as a rusher is to have a touchdown every game (at least).”

Carroll, who opts to let his actions speak for him, was among team leaders in tackles as a junior, and is coming off of his first trip to state as a track jumper.

However the carries shake out among the seniors and their sophomore counterparts, they all aspire to reach the heights set by their recent predecessors.

Watching some of the now departed players in action every day at practice and in games helped to shape the current Wolves outlook on the game.

Lathom taught me to lower my shoulder and run through defenders,” Martin said. “Jake and Josh taught me to lead by example and to keep my head up.”

That last sentiment is one shared by Reilly.

“What I’ve learned from them is to run through defenders, stiff arm them when they try to take me down and to always keep my head up,” he said.

They may not agree on which player has the best skill-set, staking their own claim (Martin says “I’m the quickest” while Reilly counters with “I think I’m the fastest”), but they remain committed to excel, as individuals and a team.

Knowing this is their final prep season, they want to exit strongly and impact younger players like Bayne and Co. did with them.

Reilly sums it up perfectly for all of the backfield seniors.

“I’m gonna try to be the best.”

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Wolf seniors-to-be (l to r) Clay Reilly, Jacob Martin, Uriel Liquidano, Ethan Marx and Jonathan Thurston. (Kalia Littlejohn photo)

   Wolf seniors-to-be (l to r) Clay Reilly, Jacob Martin, Uriel Liquidano, Ethan Marx and Jonathan Thurston. (Kalia Littlejohn photo)

Football’s back, at least for a few days.

Spring practice kicked off Wednesday, and returning Coupeville High School players were out on the practice field after school.

Without an official head coach, but with high hopes intact.

The Wolves, who open the season Sept. 2 at home against South Whidbey, will be playing for their third coach in as many seasons — once that coach is actually hired.

With the departure of Brett Smedley (he left after one season to take a coordinator job at Columbia River), players who will be a junior this fall will have played for a different head coach every year in high school.

After two years of playing twice against league rivals, they’ll also face a twist in the schedule, with the Olympic League and Nisqually League having formed a super league for football.

Coupeville will play three non-conference foes, then seven league games, with Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya now joined by Cascade Christian, Vashon Island, Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright Academy.

But a new coach and the schedule are thoughts for tomorrow.

For now, the focus is on putting in work under assistant coach Ryan King (a candidate for the head job), and turning things around after last fall’s 1-9 season.

Some thoughts from day one:

Ryan King:

We had 27 kids show up today, not including the incoming freshman, and a few others who couldn’t make it due to legion baseball and what not.

But those kids are determined, they put in the work today and their mindset isn’t on who will be the next head coach but their focus is on game number one.

They want to be the best and they want to make a difference. They want to compete for a league title.

I have an amazing group of kids.

From the seniors to the juniors to the sophomores and I know a lot of the freshman coming up; I am so proud of what I saw today from them.

Whoever will be the next head coach is gonna have a great group of athletes.

If I get the position, awesome, I’m honored.

If not, then at least I got these kids ready.

Jonathan Thurston (senior):

We’re seniors and we’re gonna try to do better then last year.

I’m excited to play at home to win The Bucket; it’s gonna be a great game.

Going into this new league is gonna be interesting, but fun to play different schools than what we’re used to.

I could not ask for better players to be side by side with on that field and senior year is gonna be a blast!

Jacob Martin (senior):

We have strong returners from Clay, Uriel, Mitchell Carroll, me and Jon.

It’s all about the players, and how much work they’ve put in during the off-season.

No coach, no problem!

I personally think this team will be special, despite being delayed without a coach, or low expectations from others. We genuinely have seniors who will unite this team.

Uriel Liquidano (senior):

To start, I want to say that it’s going to be a great season and I have a strong feeling that we are going to do good.

It sucks we won’t have Smedley next year but who ever is going to be the new head coach I’m sure he’ll do good.

This coming football year I’m going to be a senior so I’m going to have to GIVE IT ALL I HAVE for my team, my family, my town.

It’s going to be a good year!

We’re going to lead this town together. Give it all we have. And yes, beat South Whidbey here on our game field and take that bucket back.

Clay Reilly (senior):

The goals I have in mind for this upcoming football season are beating South Whidbey at home, fighting until the end against every team we face and hopefully winning league.

I’m so stoked to play football as a senior and leading the team into every game.

With finding a new coach, I hope us seniors find common ground and excel with what he wants to do with this great program.

This new league is a whole bunch of new challenges and I think it will make us better individually and as a unit. I want this season to be one I can look back on throughout the rest of my life.

Gabe Eck (sophomore):

The goals for this year would be to definitely beat South Whidbey and improve and build on what we had from the season before.

With the league bigger we’re going to have to be in the weight room all summer and come out bigger, faster, and stronger.

Ethan Marx (senior):

I’d like to add, we play as a team, and that our team remains a family no matter what happens on or off the field!

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Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

   Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

The strength of the Wolf is the pack.

Proving that to be true, 20 Coupeville High School football players showed up Friday — on a day when there was no school — to help their coaches run a flag football clinic for local children.

The event, put on through the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club, drew 28 participants, said CHS head football coach Brett Smedley.

“We had a great turn out and they had a great time!” he said.

Drawing in both girls and boys on a sunny afternoon, the clinic featured a mix of lessons and fun.

As he continues to build his own program at the high school, Smedley is also reaching out to the sport at other levels.

Getting assistance from a wide range of helpers was invaluable, he said.

“I’d like to thank the Boys and Girls Club, Coupeville Elementary, the CHS Football Team, Coach (Bob) Martin, and Coach (Ryan) King for putting this on!”

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Birthday buddies Jacob Martin (left) and Gabe Wynn. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Birthday buddies Jacob Martin (left) and Gabe Wynn. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

They are truly birthday buddies.

Coupeville High School juniors Jacob Martin and Gabe Wynn, both multi-sport stars for the Wolves, were born on the exact same day.

At the time, no one probably had the slightest clue they would one day unite at CHS to rep the red and black, but it’s worked out quite nicely for both of them, and for us, their fans.

The duo are superb athletes, with Gabe having suited up for tennis, football, basketball and baseball, while Jacob has been a rock on the football field and a fleet-footed runner on the track oval.

If you have to pick one sport for each, Martin’s biggest impact has been on the gridiron, where he hits with a cold fury (while smiling) and is a dangerous runner.

During a down season for Wolf football last year, he was one of the true shining stars, a guy who went flat-out every snap they let him on the field.

I fully expect him to be a leader as a senior next year, both in piling up stats and in keeping Coupeville moving back up in the standings.

With Gabe, it’s hoops.

The first time I ever covered him in person was during his 8th grade season on the hardwood, when he was a one-man wrecking crew.

In one game against Sultan, the Wolves were being smacked around pretty good, until Wynn, devilish grin creeping across his face, went absolutely bonkers and blew the Turks sky-high.

He’s continued that style of play through his high school days, where he has been, without a doubt, the player most likely to collect bruises from diving for balls, fighting through screens and, occasionally, flipping completely over the defender’s head while wrestling for rebounds.

Take both Jacob and Gabe off the gridiron or hardwood, though, and they really shine.

While they have made their name as athletes, both guys come across as quality young men in everything they do.

Well-spoken, smart, considerate of others, loyal to their friends and family, outgoing. The list of positive attributes could go on and on.

But, they have cake days to celebrate, so let’s just wrap things up simply by saying this — they’re as good as it gets, and Coupeville is blessed to have both of them.

Happy birthday, gentlemen.

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Jacob Martin punched in Coupeville's lone touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Martin punched in Coupeville’s first touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Brenden Gilbert, Zane Bundy, Lathom Kelley and Ryan Griggs bow out together. (Janine Bundy photo)

   Wolf seniors (l to r) Brenden Gilbert, Zane Bundy, Lathom Kelley and Ryan Griggs bow out together. (Janine Bundy photo)

In the end, it turned out to be a very long trip with very little payoff.

At least on the scoreboard.

Bringing their first season under head coach Brett Smedley to an end Friday night, the Coupeville High School football squad ran afoul of Pirates, falling 70-31 in a non-conference game at Vashon Island.

The very-young Wolves, who started freshmen at several key positions including quarterback, finished 1-9, their fewest wins in a season since 2011.

It was the tenth straight non-winning season for Coupeville football.

Other than a 5-5 mark last year in Tony Maggio’s third and final season, the Wolves have posted losing marks every year since 2005, when they went 6-5 under Ron Bagby.

Facing off with Vashon in a crossover game featuring two teams that failed to make the playoffs, Coupeville got stung early and often.

The Wolves trailed 36-0 early in the second quarter before finally breaking through on offense.

Once they did, they scored their most points of the season. Coupeville’s previous high came in their only win, a 28-26 victory at Chimacum Sept. 18.

Junior Jacob Martin bolted in for his second touchdown of the season — his first came on a fumble recovery against South Whidbey in the season opener — then Zane Bundy tacked on the PAT.

Coupeville continued to chip away at the lead, with Lathom Kelley skipping in to the end zone to match Martin with his second score of the year.

The Wolves added a two-point conversion when Bundy pulled off a fake and took the ball in himself.

His PAT and conversion gave the first-year kicker 25 points on the season, as he edged past Wiley Hesselgrave to be the team’s leading scorer at 25-24.

That was well behind last year, when All-State senior running back/defensive back Josh Bayne tallied 25 touchdowns on his way to 152 points by himself.

Coupeville closed its scoring with touchdowns from freshman twins Gabe and Ty Eck.

The Wolves tacked on two-point conversions after both, via seniors Ryan Griggs and CJ Smith.

The game was the final one for a group of seniors led by four-year letter winners Kelley and Hesselgrave.

Also departing are Bundy, Griggs, Smith, Jake Lord, Josh Lord, JR Pendergrass, Mitchell Losey, Jordan Ford and Brenden Gilbert.

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