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Posts Tagged ‘Joel Walstad’

Wolf QB Joel Walstad waits for the snap from Carson Risner. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf QB Joel Walstad waits for the snap from Carson Risner during a summer scrimmage. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne skies to pick off a Lakeside pass.

Josh Bayne is deadly on both sides of the ball. Here he skies to pick off a Lakeside pass during the scrimmage.

Cue the "CSI: Miami" scream. Matt Shank is going to need sunglasses

When Matt Shank isn’t busy anchoring the Wolf line, he does a pretty good impersonation of David Caruso on “CSI: Miami.” (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Even with the departure via graduation of 1,000-yard rusher Jake Tumblin, the Coupeville High School football squad has speed to burn in the backfield.

And with a veteran line to run behind, the fleet-footed ball carriers are hoping to break big runs on a regular basis.

Senior Josh Bayne, who busted out a 204-yard rushing performance against Sultan as a junior (he also snagged four passes for 57 yards in that game), is the featured back.

Junior fullback Lathom Kelley, junior wing Wiley Hesselgrave and senior quarterback/kicker Joel Walstad will join Bayne in trying to stuff the ball down opponent’s throats in 2014.

Kelley and Hesselgrave, who also double as two of the Wolf defense’s hardest hitters, are already two-year lettermen, while Walstad is the biggest unknown on the offense.

He showed a nice touch throwing the ball at the JV level, but is a first-year starter at QB after seeing most of his previous varsity playing time at kicker and defensive back.

Walstad and Co. will operate behind a seasoned offensive line headed up by seniors Carson Risner (if he’s healthy), Matt Shank, Aaron Wright and Oscar Liquidano.

That line will miss All-State selection Nick Streubel, now a redshirt freshman at Central Washington University, but has depth and some big bodies.

While the team’s leaders were already largely in place entering the start of practice, several newcomers have thrown their names into the battle for varsity stardom.

That group includes juniors CJ Smith (QB/WR/CB) and Ryan Griggs (WR/CB) and sophomores Clay Reilly (WR/CB) and Dominic Dausey (OL/DL).

Regardless of which players end up where, third-year Wolf coach Tony Maggio is looking for them all to aim for improvement from week to week.

“Of course we want to win a league title, but more than that, we want to compete in all aspects of the game,” Maggio said. “Our goal is to improve in every offensive and defensive category from last year.”

The single biggest change for CHS has nothing to do with the loss or addition of any players.

Instead, it’s a league swap, as the Wolves left their home for the last eight seasons, the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, and have joined Chimacum, Klahowya and Port Townsend in the new 1A Olympic League.

Coupeville will play each league opponent twice (home and away), while filling out the remainder of the regular season schedule with South Whidbey, Sequim and Concrete.

Gone are the days of playing private schools that double as sports factories (ATM, King’s) and large 2A schools (Lakewood, Cedarcrest) with rosters more than twice as big as what the Wolves could scrape together.

Maggio was a strong proponent of the swap, and thinks it will benefit CHS across the board and not just on the gridiron.

“I’m excited,” he said. “Our kids should compete well, in all Coupeville sports. We should see participation increase over the next few years with good showings.”

For their part, his players are fired up, regardless of the opponent.

“All I want this year is to win,” Lathom Kelley said. “Freshman year we won two games, sophomore we won four. This year I want all of them to be wins.

“What I want more than anything, though, is to have every single person on the team to want it as bad as I do.”

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Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Already a varsity vet as a kicker, Joel Walstad is stepping up as the team’s starting QB this season. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday's scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

   Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday’s three-team scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Joel Walstad was on point.

The Coupeville High School senior is just seven days away from making his first-ever regular season start as a varsity quarterback and he looked strong in his warm-up.

Playing in a three-team scrimmage Friday in La Conner, Walstad threw for two touchdowns and sophomore Gabe Wynn ran for another as the Wolves blitzed their hosts.

Both of Walstad’s scoring strikes went into the arms of senior Josh Bayne.

Wynn, returning to the gridiron after spending his freshman year playing tennis, ripped off a 40-yard run to the end zone for his score.

Walstad wasn’t the only Wolf QB to hit the highlight reel, as freshman Hunter Downes also connected with Mitchell Carroll on a 20 yard-plus heave.

The afternoon scrimmage, which also involved Burlington-Edison, gave all three teams a chance to iron out the kinks as they prepare for opening night next Friday, Sept. 5.

The Wolves will host Island neighbor South Whidbey in a battle for ownership of The Bucket.

While it’s now a non-conference game, with Coupeville having hopped from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, the local rivalry aspect marks the game as a huge one.

Based on what he saw Friday, and in the team’s opening week-and-a-half of practice, CHS coach Tony Maggio is pleased with where the Wolves are.

“Kids gave a great effort, we threw the ball well against La Conner,” Maggio said. “Our defense allowed only one touchdown each game; overall a great job.

“We will be ready for South Whidbey on Friday!”

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Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

  Senior QB/kicker Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

Walstad fires a jumper last season.

Walstad fires a jumper last season.

Joel Walstad is about to step into the spotlight.

The third of three children in a highly-successful athletic family (following older siblings Tim and Bessie), Joel has been a strong player in all three of his sports — football, basketball and soccer.

But, as he enters his senior year at CHS, it will be a whole new ballgame, as he becomes The Man and not just a supporting player.

First up is the gridiron, where he’ll replace the graduated Gunnar Langvold as Coupeville’s starting quarterback.

While still finding time to limber up his leg and deliver extra points, field goals and punts for the Wolves.

Walstad can strike from many different directions, though he is still looking to fine-tune his skill set.

“My strengths are kicking and quickness,” he said. “I would like to improve on my passing and reading the defense.”

Now in his sixth season as a football player, having first picked up the sport as a seventh grader (“It looked like it would be fun”), Walstad wants to make an impact in his final go-around.

“Team goal is an (Olympic) League championship,” Walstad said. “Individual goals would be to kick a 40-yard field goal in a game and to throw for less than 5 interceptions on the year.”

The senior signal caller points to his family, including parents Shawn and Renee, and “all my coaches” as having shaped his game, and his life.

A big fan of history class who likes to spend most of his free time hanging out with friends, Walstad would give the slight edge in his sports world to hoops — “Because I have played it the longest” — but it’s football that he hopes might open doors at the next level.

“I would like to try to go to college for kicking,” he said. “I kicked a 55-yard field goal one time. You can ask Coach (Tony) Maggio!”

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Joel Walstad earned the shutout win in goal for the Wolves Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Joel Walstad earned the shutout win in goal for the Wolves Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Earlier this season, Cameron Boyd broke a tooth during a tussle for a soccer ball.

Friday night, the Coupeville High School senior shattered something else, but was probably a lot happier about it. Scoring his first varsity goal, he helped carry the Wolves to a 1-0 win at Sultan.

The victory broke a five-game winless streak for Coupeville, gave the Wolves a season sweep of the Turks and improved their record to 5-7-1 overall, 4-7 in Cascade Conference play.

It wasn’t enough to keep their slim playoff hopes alive, however.

With wins of their own Friday, South Whidbey (7-2-2 in league) and King’s (7-3-1) clinched the two 1A postseason berths available from the 1A/2A league.

Coupeville has three games remaining, two at home, but the best they could finish in league play is 7-7 and even if King’s were to lose its final three, they would edge out the Wolves by a half game.

Still, even without a trip to the playoffs, this has been a season of improvement for CHS, which went 3-14 a season ago and had little scoring pop.

While big scorers Abraham Leyva, Zane Bundy and Sean Donley were scoreless Friday, Boyd’s goal was all Wolf goaltender Joel Walstad and his defense needed.

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Shane Squire (right), with partner in crime Sebastian Davis.

Shane Squire (right), with partner in crime Sebastian Davis.

Math brought Shane Squire back to soccer. Sort of.

The Coupeville High School sophomore started playing the beautiful game at age four and stayed with it through sixth grade, then walked away for a few years.

Now, he’s back on the pitch, partially inspired by the words of his match teacher, Kyle Nelson, who just happens to be the new varsity soccer coach at CHS.

Not that Nelson gets sole credit, as Squire’s friends, who include fellow soccer and tennis players (he’s a two-sport athlete who also dabbles in theater and Science Olympiad) were the ones who put him over the top.

“I decided to play this year because I enjoy playing it with friends and wanted to engage in more school sports,” Squire said. “I hope to get more physically fit and win some games, while enjoying the sport I am playing.”

Sebastian Davis, a tennis/theater/Science Olympiad compatriot, was a big inspiration. As was Wolf goalie Joel Walstad.

Sebastian convinced me to try out for sports and has helped me train for the past few years to reach a higher level of physical fitness.” Squire said. “Joel encouraged me to play “futsal,” — indoor soccer — at the school, which peaked my interests and got me involved with the team.”

Away from the soccer pitch, he stays active, tossing in longboarding, biking (while listening to music), skiing and playing basketball with friends to his already long list of school-related activities.

On the field, the defender is always trying to work on the finer points of his game.

“I think my strengths would include my ability to learn quickly and not give up,” Squire said. “I would like to improve my endurance and accuracy.”

At the end of the day, win or lose, soccer’s mix of team and individual play intrigues him, and keeps him coming back for more.

“I enjoy that we both have to rely on our teammates, but can excel on our own at the same time,” Squire said. “I also like that it challenges me both mentally and physically.”

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