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Posts Tagged ‘Joel Walstad’

Josh Lord (John Fisken photos)

Josh Lord (John Fisken photos)

Jake Lord

Jake Lord

Stats are a tricky business.

Keeping track of them as action unfolds under Friday Night Lights, tricky. Keeping them straight in the record books, game after game, even trickier.

As you scroll through these — the final tallies from 10 games played in 2014 by the Coupeville High School gridiron squad — keep one thing in mind.

I did not keep these stats.

Think you should have an extra tackle or a couple extra yards? Go talk to your coaches.

I pulled these from MaxPreps.com, and they were originally put there by the Wolf coaching staff.

So, if you like the stats, you’re welcome. If not, I’m passin’ the blame and gettin’ out of Dodge.

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad  108 completions for 1,589 yards with 18 TDs and 10 INTs
CJ Smith 9-99 with 1/1
Wiley Hesselgrave 1-46 with 1/0
Josh Bayne
1-43

Receiving:

Ryan Griggs 29 receptions for 485 yards
Bayne
31-460
C. Smith 24-351
Hesselgrave 21-311
Jacob Martin 9-66
Mitchell Carroll 4-59
Lathom Kelley
5-33
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-12
Gabe Wynn
1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 143 carries for 1,528 yards
Hesselgrave 52-430
Kelley
46-407
Martin 57-295
Walstad 16-27
Mitchell Losey 8-27
Chance Kleinfelter 2-16
C. Smith 4-12

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 19-349
Bayne
11-224
Kelley 5-83
Aaron Wright
3-60
C. Smith
1-13
Losey
1-10
Toomey-Stout 1-8
Matt Shank 1-6
Wynn
1-0

Total yards:

Bayne 2031
Walstad 1616
Hesselgrave 787
Griggs
485
C. Smith
462
Kelley
440
Martin 361
Carroll 59
Losey 27
Kleinfelter
16
Toomey-Stout
12

Touchdowns:

Bayne 25
Hesselgrave 7
Kelley 5
Griggs
4
Walstad
4
Kleinfelter 1
C. Smith 1

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne (91) 77 solo, 14 assists
Hesselgrave (62) 51-11
Wright (49) 36-13
Shank (44) 39-5
Oscar Liquidano
(39) 32-7
Kelley
(37) 21-16
Martin (27) 19-8
Hunter Smith
(18) 18-0
Wynn
(18) 17-1
Dominic Dausey (13) 11-2
Griggs
(12) 9-3
C. Smith
(12) 9-3
Isaac Vargas (11) 8-3
Brenden Gilbert
(10) 10-0
Walstad (8) 7-1
Losey
(7) 5-2
Carroll
(6) 5-1
Josh Lord (6) 4-2
Jake Lord (4) 4-0
Carson Risner
(3) 3-0
James Vidoni (2) 1-1
Kleinfelter (1) 1-0

Sacks:

Hesselgrave 3
Bayne 2
Shank
2
Dausey
1
JR Pendergrass
1
Wright 1
Wynn 1

Interceptions:

Bayne 6
C. Smith 2
Martin 1
H. Smith
1

Fumble recoveries:

Hesselgrave 5
Bayne
4
Vargas
2
Dausey
1
Kelley 1
Jake Lord 1
Martin
1
Shank
1
H. Smith
1
Walstad 1
Wright 1
Wynn
1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

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Joel

Joel Walstad (left) and Josh Bayne savor the final moments of their senior football season. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Sophomore Dominic Dausey was a hard-hitting force on defense Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

  Sophomore Dominic Dausey was a hard-hitting force on defense Friday night, with five solo tackles, two assists and a sack for a loss. (John Fisken photo)

This is how you say farewell.

Playing in their final game Friday night, Coupeville High School seniors Josh Bayne and Joel Walstad lit up the scoreboard and filled the stat sheet, carrying the Wolves to a huge 55-38 win over visiting Bellevue Christian.

The non-conference victory, capped by a 28-point fourth quarter in which CHS scored on the very first play of a drive three times, lifted the Wolves to 5-5.

That gave Coupeville its most wins in a season since 2007 and its first .500 or better year since 2005.

In their first season in the Olympic League, the Wolves were the only team to beat league champ Port Townsend, which got knocked out of the playoffs 24-14 by Charles Wright Friday.

Driving the high-powered Coupeville offense (which finished with 597 yards) were Bayne, who rushed for 311 yards and netted six touchdowns (four on the ground, two through the air) and Walstad, who threw for 182 yards and four scores (two to Bayne, two to junior Ryan Griggs.)

Both seniors went past 1,500 yards — Walstad in the air and Bayne on the ground — a feat that departing coach Tony Maggio had wanted to hit in the group’s swan song.

Maggio, who increased the team’s win total in each of his three seasons at the helm and beat Island rival South Whidbey twice, is stepping down to spend more time with family.

His final game on the gridiron started as a rout, turned into a nail-biter, then went back to being a rout.

Running Bayne right, left and every which way in the first quarter, Coupeville jumped out to a 14-0 lead before Bellevue Christian ran a single offensive play.

The Wolves hit pay dirt on an eight-yard scamper to the end zone by Bayne, who finished with 25 touchdowns on the season.

They then recovered the ensuing onside kick and handed the ball right back to Awesome Joshsome, who plunged in again, this time from five yards out.

The Vikings finally got their hands on the ball, with quarterback David Postma, a burly beast of a boy, running the ball up the gut repeatedly on QB draws.

Coupeville’s defense stiffened, holding Bellevue to a 31-yard field goal, before seemingly blowing the game wide open with back-to-back spectacular plays.

First Griggs soared through the crystal clear sky, scraping the moon itself to haul in a one-handed reception in which he caught the ball while reaching back over his body.

Not to be outdone, Walstad and Bayne hooked up on a beauty of a scoring play two seconds later.

Shakin’ and bakin’, sidestepping three would-be sackers, Walstad kept the play alive to the very last possible second, then zipped a ball down the right sideline, where it banked sharply and dropped into Bayne’s fingers.

Having snagged the ball, Bayne promptly juked two Viking defensive backs out of their spikes, leaving them sprawled on the ground as he twirled into the end zone.

But, just as things seemed to be headed towards a leisurely stroll for Coupeville, BC refound its mojo.

The Wolves tossed in another Bayne score — this one on a 64-yard sprint down the sideline — and Wolf freshman Julian Welling blew up a return man while playing on special teams, but Bellevue surged back into contention with three scores of its own.

Having pulled within 27-24 and suddenly short-circuited Coupeville’s offense in the third quarter, the Vikings had the ball and were driving for the go-ahead score.

Enter Jacob Martin, who can normally be found operating as a smash-mouth rusher who loosens up defenses so Bayne can then exploit gun-shy tacklers with bursts of speed.

This time, with the game tottering in the balance, Martin stepped in front of a Bellevue pass and hauled in his first interception of his high school varsity career.

Sparked by the play, the Wolves came out to start the fourth and wasted no time in scoring. At all.

Bayne busted out a 58-yard TD run, then Walstad went berserk.

He nailed Griggs on a 33-yard scoring bomb, hooked up with Bayne on a 59-yard catch-and-run, then went back to Griggs on a 42-yard strike.

In all, Coupeville scored four touchdowns on four possessions, using just five plays — Martin had a two-yard run before the scoring pass to Bayne — in less than five minutes.

Bellevue countered with two touchdowns of its own, as the two squads combined for 42 points in a torrid six and a half minutes, but the Wolves refused to crack.

Sophomore Gabe Wynn shot through a crack in the Viking line to drop Postma for a loss on a sack and Bayne plucked an interception out of the air to blunt a final BC charge.

The victory brought an end to the runs of Wolf seniors Walstad, Bayne, Carson Risner, Aaron Wright, Matt Shank, Oscar Liquidano and Isaac Vargas.

While they will be greatly missed, the cupboard is stocked for next season, with three-year lettermen Lathom Kelley and Wiley Hesselgrave (who spent his birthday crackin’ heads and takin’ names) set to lead what will be a strong senior class.

The Class of 2016 also boasts players like Griggs, speedy receiver (and possible Walstad replacement at QB) CJ Smith, fullback Mitchell Losey, multi-talented Cole Payne and linemen Brenden Gilbert, Jake Lord and Josh Lord.

Toss in current sophomores Martin, Wynn and Mitchell Carroll and freshmen such as Hunter Smith and Cameron Toomey-Stout and whomever replaces Maggio will have a decent talent pool to draw from.

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Joel Walstad

Joel Walstad

Kyle King

Kyle King

They are old school (well, not that old…) and new school, united by a love of athletics, an alma mater and a birthday.

Kyle King is the grizzled vet, a former state champ track star at Coupeville High School who went on to run, very successfully, at two D-1 colleges.

Joel Walstad is the current leader of the pack, a heat-flingin’ quarterback who’s currently putting up sweet numbers for the Wolf football squad. After that, basketball and soccer seasons beckon.

Both are part of successful athletic families, with King’s siblings Brianne and Tyler and Joel’s bro and sis Tim and Bessie forming potent trios in CHS sports history.

The two guys celebrating a joint birthday today also share a laid-back attitude (the dudes abide) and a penchant for being at the forefront of cheering on their fellow athletes.

If there’s a student section rocking the house, King is smack dab in the middle of it, a trait shared by Walstad, who’s quite fond of the face paint and screaming like a banshee.

While they’ve followed different athletic paths (though Kyle did suit up as a gridiron warrior for a bit), and only one of them has sported a spectacular porn star-style ‘stache for a bit (spoiler: it was the college guy), the duo both deserve big props.

Strong athletes and students who happen to be quality people, they give Coupeville a good name.

Let’s return the favor and wish them well on their big day.

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Josh Bayne and (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne and mom Kathy. (John Fisken photos)

Wiley Hesselgrave is

   Wiley Hesselgrave is third for the Wolves in rushing, fourth in receiving and third in total yards.

We’re making the wrong argument.

It’s not whether Coupeville High School senior Josh Bayne should follow in the footsteps of Nick Streubel and be the second Wolf in as many years to be picked as an All-State player.

That’s a given.

The argument we should be making is for Bayne to be the 1A Player of the Year.

Why not?

Bayne is a two-way terror who does everything.

He runs, he catches, he returns kickoffs and punts (when other teams will send it his way, which is rare), and the one time he threw a pass this season, it went for a 43-yard completion.

Put him on defense, patrolling the backfield, and Awesome Joshsome is a lethal tackling machine who picks off anything remotely hurled in his vicinity.

Eight games into the season, he is in the top five in six different categories for 1A players (four on offense, two on defense) and is in the top ten in three categories when you count all classifications together (1B to 4A).

Bayne is tied for the most touchdowns (16) and interceptions (5) in 1A.

Barring any schools who haven’t been keeping up to date with MaxPreps, the clearing house for football stats, only touchdown tornado Robert Terhune of Cascade Christian and interception magnet Charlie Patterson of South Whidbey can match him in those categories.

But Bayne destroys both of them in every other applicable category and there is no one else I can find in 1A who stands out as more of a two-way success this season.

The Wolves, at 4-4, may not be in the discussion for a state title. Bayne, however, should be the talk of the table when player awards are handed out.

Team stats through eight games:

Offense:

Passing:

Joel Walstad  89 completions for 1,235 yards (#3 in 1A) with 13 TDs and 10 INTs
CJ Smith  9-99 with 1/1
Wiley Hesselgrave 1-46 with 1/0
Josh Bayne
1-43

Receiving:

Bayne 29 receptions for 420 yards (#4 in 1A)
Ryan Griggs
23-340 (#9 in 1A)
C. Smith 20-299
Hesselgrave 14-226
Jacob Martin 9-66
Lathom Kelley 5-33
Mitchell Carroll
3-27
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-12
Gabe Wynn
1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 112 carries for 1,081 yards (#3 in 1A, #8 in all classifications)
Kelley 44-404
Hesselgrave
43-343
Martin 42-227
Walstad 16-27
Mitchell Losey 8-27
Chance Kleinfelter 1-14
C. Smith 4-12

Kickoff/punt returns:

Bayne 8 returns for 174 yards
Hesselgrave 9-146
Kelley 5-83
Aaron Wright
2-34
Losey
1-10
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1-8
Wynn 1-0

Total yards:

Bayne 1544 (#3 in 1A)
Walstad 1262 (#5 in 1A)
Hesselgrave 615
Kelley
437
C. Smith
410
Griggs 340
Martin 293
Carroll 27
Losey 27
Kleinfelter
14
Toomey-Stout
12

Touchdowns:

Bayne 16 (tied for #1 in 1A, tied for #5 in all classifications)
Hesselgrave 6
Kelley 5
Walstad
4
Griggs 2
Kleinfelter 1
C. Smith 1

Defense:

Tackles:

Bayne (74) 62 solo, 12 assists (#4 in 1A for total tackles)
Hesselgrave (50) 41-9
Wright (42) 31-11
Shank (36) 32-4
Kelley
(36) 20-16
Oscar Liquidano (29) 23-6
Martin (25) 17-8
Hunter Smith
(16) 16-0
Wynn
(14) 14-0
Griggs (12) 9-3
C. Smith
(12) 9-3
Isaac Vargas (11) 8-3
Brenden Gilbert
(7) 7-0
Losey (7) 5-2
Dominic Dausey
(6) 6-0
Walstad
(6) 5-1
Josh Lord (6) 4-2
Carroll
(4) 3-1
Carson Risner
(3) 3-0
Jake Lord
(2) 2-0
James Vidoni
(2) 1-1
Kleinfelter 1-0

Sacks:

Hesselgrave 3 (tied for #6 in 1A)
Bayne 2
JR Pendergrass
1
Shank 1
Wright 1

Interceptions:

Bayne 5 (tied for #1 in 1A, tied for #2 in all classifications)
C. Smith 2 (tied for #10 in 1A)
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Bayne 3
Hesselgrave 3
Vargas
2
Dausey
1
Kelley 1
Jake Lord 1
Martin
1
Shank
1
H. Smith
1
Walstad 1
Wright 1
Wynn
1

Blocked kicks:

Shank 1

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Jerry Helm plays "Amazing Grace" to honor former Wolf Adam Garcia and the victims at Marysville-Pilchuck. (John Fisken photos)

  Jerry Helm plays “Amazing Grace” to honor former Wolf Adam Garcia and the victims at Marysville-Pilchuck. (John Fisken photos)

Wofl seniors

Wolf seniors (l to r) Aaron Wright, Matt Shank, Carson Risner, Josh Bayne, Oscar Liquidano, Isaac Vargas and Joel Walstad.

It was heartbreaking.

Real. Immediate. Crushing in the moment.

But Friday was a day awash in genuine heartbreak. A day when Marysville-Pilchuck should have sent its football team to Whidbey Island to play Oak Harbor before a school shooting tragically reshaped the day for all involved.

So, in the end, having a high school football game stolen away from you in the final seconds is not the end of the world.

Yes, Coupeville came within one minute and 14 seconds of clinching a playoff berth, before a questionable ref’s call gave Klahowya renewed life.

And yes, the Eagles rose to the moment, scoring twice in those final 74 seconds to escape with a wild 42-35 win and leave Wolf Nation deflated.

But, as much as it meant to the young men on the field, and to the fans in the stands and overflowing across the track and on to the grass in every direction, it was just a game. A very good one at that.

A Homecoming game that started with an emotional tribute to former Wolf Adam Garcia, who was murdered in Oak Harbor at age 21 last week.

Kenney Chesney and Brad Paisley songs led into a moment when the Coupeville players went over to hug Garcia’s relatives, then Central Whidbey firefighter Jerry Helm followed a moment of silence with a haunting bagpipe performance of “Amazing Grace.”

A game that had everything — huge touchdown plays, bone-crunching sacks that blew up the quarterback and forced fumbles, frequent lead changes and two or three moments at the end that will linger for a long time.

The first came with Coupeville clinging to a hard-earned 35-28 lead and Klahowya facing fourth and ten from the Wolf 15 with less than a minute and a half on the clock.

Eagle quarterback George Harris fired a ball into the end zone, the Wolves defended it almost perfectly, the ball hit the ground and the roar from the pro-Coupeville crowd could be heard for miles.

CHS would run the clock out and two weeks later be in the 1A playoffs.

Except, from the corner, a ref who had done little all game dropped a flag and took the first jab at Wolf Nation’s psyche.

The call was pass interference, though there was no contact and seemingly no reason to think twice about the play.

Given a reprieve (and five extra yards it probably shouldn’t have had) Klahowya took advantage, with Harris zinging a game-tying TD pass on his second attempt at fourth down.

The ball came in low, very low.

How low?

From many angles, it looked like it might have skipped into the Eagles receiver’s hands, but, in the high school world of no instant replay, the ref’s arms shot up and the lead was gone.

With the ball back in its hands, Coupeville chose to come back all guns firing. Not content to run out the clock and head to overtime, the Wolves went to the air repeatedly in the final minute.

And it worked, big time. Until it didn’t.

Wolf quarterback Joel Walstad hit three different receivers on consecutive passes, tearing off chunks of yardage and quickly moving Coupeville into game-winning territory.

Josh Bayne snagged a 19-yard strike. CJ Smith hauled in a short pass, then side-stepped defenders and turned it into a 22-yard catch-and-run. Then Wiley Hesselgrave went airborne and made a sensational snag on a 20-yard bomb while splitting defenders.

With the ball at the Klahowya 25, Coupeville sent in a running play, only to have its signals scrambled.

Running for his life, Walstad refused to go down easily (he had repeatedly evaded Eagle tacklers and kept plays alive all night long) and made a bid for a fourth straight big pass.

Unfortunately, the ball, heaved towards the left sideline, landed on the fingertips of a Klahowya defensive back, who brought the ball back 75 yards for a game-busting pick six with just 24 ticks on the clock.

Even then, with defeat having sucker-punched likely victory, Walstad never buckled, hitting two passes after the kickoff, before the clock ran out on him and his team’s postseason chances.

With the win, Klahowya (4-4 overall, 4-2 in Olympic League play) will join Port Townsend (6-2, 5-1) in the playoffs.

Coupeville (4-4, 3-3) closes its regular season Oct. 31 with a non-conference game at Concrete.

The Wolves will likely pick up another home game against a team from the Nisqually Valley League that also missed the playoffs the following week.

While Friday’s game will be remembered for how it finished, it was, hands down, the most action-packed affair of the season.

The two teams went toe-to-toe in the first half, racking up a combined 56 points.

Down 7-0, Coupeville responded with back-to-back touchdown lobs from Walstad to Hesselgrave. The first covered 15 yards, while the second was a thing of beauty.

An Eagle rusher had Walstad’s jersey in his hands, only to watch the senior slip his grasp, spin and lob a little eight-yard gem into his receiver’s arms.

Coupeville added two more scores in the second quarter.

Bayne busted out a six-yard scoring run in which he started in one speed, then hit the corner and found three more speeds in three steps, then the Wolves got tricky.

Walstad pitched the ball to Hesselgrave, who stopped on a dime and threw a long pass that hung in the air for a half hour, before tumbling over and over and landing in Bayne’s grasp 46 yards away.

After battling to a 28-28 halftime stalemate, the team’s switched gears in the third and put on a defensive clinic.

Twice Hesselgrave came flying around the Klahowya line and blindsided Harris, knocking the ball loose both times with an audible pop. Matt Shank and Jake Lord snagged the resulting fumbles.

But even with the turnovers, the Wolves couldn’t break through in the second half themselves until they put together a 57-yard drive in the fourth.

Hammering away with short runs, Coupeville ground up yardage and the clock.

After a roughing the passer penalty kept the drive alive, Lathom Kelley, who played like a one-man wrecking crew while wearing a heavy cast on one arm, punched the ball in from the one with 3:28 to play.

The final three minutes was two exhausted teams standing in the middle of the field and punching like mad.

Harris jabbed with quick passes to his fleet-footed, hard-to-track receivers. Hesselgrave exploded around the end for a back-dislocating sack that set up the fateful fourth-and-ten at the 15.

It was a game that deserved a great ending, and, if you were a Klahowya Eagle, you got the one you wanted.

If you were a Coupeville Wolf, you did not.

But whether you jumped and screamed and dog-piled at the end, or mingled with fans and classmates who rightly praised you for leaving every last ounce of effort, sweat and commitment on the field, you got to play a game Friday night.

A very entertaining, very competitive game.

Some days that is enough.

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