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Posts Tagged ‘Josh Bayne’

Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits wrap drive. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits warp drive.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

First place is on the line.

And yes, this is still early in the season, but when Coupeville hosts Port Townsend Friday night (5:30 kickoff), it’s for sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League football standings.

The Wolves, who will be playing their fourth straight home game (four of the next five are on the road) are 2-1 overall, 1-0 in league play, a record shared by the visiting Redhawks.

League mates Chimacum and Klahowya, which will pair off Friday, are both 0-3, 0-1.

The battle for the top spot will feature some of the biggest stat compilers in 1A this season.

Coupeville has the #1 rusher (Josh Bayne, 436 yards), #2 quarterback (Joel Walstad, 652 yards) and three of the top ten receivers (#2 CJ Smith, #7 Bayne and #10 Ryan Griggs) in their classification.

Port Townsend answers with the #3 rusher (David Sua, 292 yards), #6 passer (Jeff Seton, 435 yards) and #8 receiver (Austin Khile) in 1A.

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Wiley Hesselgrave, destroyer of souls. (John Fisken photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave, destroyer of souls. (John Fisken photos)

Even recent shoulder surgery couldn't keep CHS softball star (and super fan) McKayla Bailey away from the game.

Even recent shoulder surgery couldn’t keep CHS softball star McKayla Bailey (and mom Donna) away from the game.

Willie

Willie Smith (left) and Joel Norris keep things hoppin’ in the press box.

Wiley Hesselgrave was back and the Earth trembled.

Returning to the lineup after missing a game with a hurt shoulder, the Coupeville High School junior linebacker was like a wild beast unleashed Friday night, and it kick-started his Wolf teammates.

Hitting harder than they had a week before, with Hesselgrave laying down bone-crackin’ licks to set the pace, CHS rolled out to a 27-0 lead after one quarter before strolling home with a 48-24 win over visiting Chimacum.

The victory lifted Coupeville to 2-1 overall, 1-0 in Olympic League play.

It also sets up an early-season battle for first place in the new four-team 1A league.

Port Townsend (2-1, 1-0), which beat Klahowya 22-9 Friday, travels to Whidbey next Friday, Sept. 26, with a 5:30 kickoff.

They’ll find a Wolf team waiting for them which ripped off four touchdowns in four minutes against Chimacum.

After trading punts with the Cowboys, Coupeville broke through on a one-yard quarterback keeper by Joel Walstad with five and a half minutes in the quarter.

The score was set up by runs of 13 and 12 yards by Josh Bayne and a quick pass-catch-and-smash-through-three-would-be-tacklers from Walstad to Hesselgrave.

Then the dam broke.

Jumping on Chimacum errors — a fumble recovery by Bayne and an onside kick snagged by a freewheeling Hesselgrave — the Wolves punched in touchdowns on back-to-back offensive plays.

The first was another 1-yard keeper by Walstad, the second a broken play that turned magical.

Scrambling to evade a would-be sacker, Walstad stayed on his feet just long enough to allow Bayne to break free, hitting the speedy senior in mid-stride for a 33-yard scoring strike.

Coupeville tacked on a two-point conversion, with Walstad lobbing a pass to his tallest target, six-foot-two junior Ryan Griggs, who plucked the ball from the heavens.

Not done, the Wolves forced another fumble recovery and three plays later, Bayne strolled up the middle, virtually untouched, for a five-yard touchdown run.

Up 27-0, CHS got two more scores before the halftime break.

Bayne scored the third of his four touchdowns on the night on an eight-yard burst to the promised land, then CJ Smith made a sensational catch, going airborne and reaching over two defenders, while being lit up, to haul in a 20-yard bomb from Walstad.

After that, the second half was all about letting the clock run freely and getting young players such as Cameron Toomey-Stout, Hunter Downes, Mitchell Carroll and Clay Reilly some solid varsity action.

Chimacum, playing for pride, punched in three scores in the second half to make the final score more reasonable, but Coupeville had also long ago taken its foot off the gas pedal.

Walstad, who had thrown for 200+ yards in both of the first two games, settled for more of a game-managing role this time around. He completed six of 11 passes for 128 yards and two touchdowns.

Bayne hauled in three passes for 57 yards, Smith collected two for 57 and Hesselgrave’s reception and demolition of the Chimacum defense netted 14 yards.

Coupeville opted to get most of its offense on the ground, with Bayne busting out several big runs as he rolled up 171 yards on just 13 carries.

Two-way terror Hesselgrave tossed in 94 yards on seven runs, with Lathom Kelley (4-47) and Jacob Martin (4-6) also chipping in.

The unsung heroes were blockers like Martin and the Wolf line — Aaron Wright, Isaac Vargas, Brenden Gilbert, Oscar Liquidano and Matt Shank — who controlled play and blew big holes open for their guys.

Many of them were also featured in a defensive front which Wolf coach Tony Maggio credited heavily, saying “Our defense was really impressive. They really swarmed to the ball and didn’t give up any big plays, especially in the early going.”

Shank and Bayne each netted eight tackles, while Kelley (7), Wright (5), Hesselgrave (4), Gabe Wynn (3), Vargas (3), Gilbert (2), Liquidano (1) and James Vidoni (1) brought the heat, as well.

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Wolf QB Joel Walstad prepares to kick off while Matt Shank (Photos courtesy Renee Walstad)

Wolf QB Joel Walstad prepares to kick off while lineman Matt Shank silently sings “Welcome to the Jungle” to himself. (Photos courtesy Renee Walstad)

Brenden Gilbert (74)

Brenden Gilbert (74) and the rest of the Wolf line listen intently to Walstad (5).

True story.

True story.

The computers have lost that lovin’ feeling for the Wolves, but the stat man still loves them.

A 40-18 loss to 2A Sequim Friday dropped the Coupeville High School football squad from #13 to #37 in the 1A rankings on http://www.scoreczar.org/.

Which manages to put a 1-1 Wolf squad that smacked Island rival South Whidbey on opening night two slots LOWER than next week’s opponent, Chimacum, which is 0-2 after losing 27-8 to Forks.

The Cowboys, who lost 47-21 to that same Sequim squad, have been outscored 74-29.

Computers…

Fellow Olympic League rivals Port Townsend (1-1) and Klahowya (0-2) are at #5 and #46, respectively, while Freeman has taken over the #1 ranking.

But, if we look at cold, hard stats, the Wolves are much more highly regarded.

In fact, Wolf QB Joel Walstad is flat-out #1.

The senior signal caller has thrown for 524 yards over his team’s two games (while also kicking and playing defense), the most of any quarterback among  Washington state schools who have reported stats to MaxPreps.com.

Not just in 1A. He’s #1 for ALL classifications, currently coming in ahead of quarterbacks from Lynnwood and Eastside Catholic.

At least for the moment.

Skyline’s Blake Gregory sits at #4 with 415 yards, but that was from one game. Once his second game stats come in, you would expect him to hurdle the guys ahead of him, including Walstad.

But right now, as I type this, the top passer in the state is a Wolf. So, there’s that.

Season stats:

Passing:

Joel Walstad 41-74 – 524 yards – 4 TD
CJ Smith 0-2

Receiving:

Smith 10-154
Ryan Griggs 10-128
Josh Bayne 10-112
Wiley Hesselgrave 4-77
Jacob Martin 5-32
Lathom Kelley 4-21
Gabe Wynn 1-0

Rushing:

Bayne 25-264
Martin 19-71
Hesselgrave 6-14
Walstad 8-11
Kelley 3-6

Touchdowns:

Bayne 3
Hesselgrave 2
Griggs 1
Kelley 1

Solo Tackles:

Bayne 10
Oscar Liquidano 7
Martin 7
Wynn 7
Kelley 4
Aaron Wright 4
Matt Shank 3
Griggs 2
Brenden Gilbert 1
Jake Lord 1
Hunter Smith 1
Walstad 1

Interceptions:

Bayne 1

Fumble Recoveries:

Bayne 1
Kelley 1
Wynn 1

Blocked Kicks:

Shank 1

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Josh Bayne, seen here last season, had big hits on defense and big catches on offense Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Josh Bayne, seen here last season, had big hits on defense and big catches on offense Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Willie Smith was on fire Friday. The refs, not so much.

Coupeville High School’s baseball coach, who doubles as the PA announcer for Wolf football games, was at the top of his game as he called the match-up between visiting Sequim (his alma mater) and his current employers.

One finger operating his tunes, sending bursts of AC/DC and Guns ‘N Roses out into the early evening air in a bid to rouse a sleepy crowd, he kept the zingers coming.

Even over the course of a game that clocked in at a minute shy of three hours, he never faded.

The guys in black and white, whose habit of throwing one, two, three and sometimes four flags on seemingly every other play, were a bit more of a drag on a night when 2A Sequim (eventually) bounced 1A Coupeville 40-18.

By the time the refs had finished marching off 122.5 yards in accepted penalties against CHS, the Wolves probably felt like they were playing 11-on-16 most of the night.

Though actually, even then, they didn’t play all that badly.

Josh Bayne and Jacob Martin laid down earth-shattering tackles, where they caught Sequim players in mid-stride and lifted them airborne before planting them face-first into the turf.

Toss in fumble recoveries by Lathom Kelley and Gabe Wynn, a blocked PAT by Matt Shank, and a back-pedaling over-his-shoulder interception by Bayne (AKA “Joshsome,” which rhymes with Awesome, courtesy of the man behind the mic) and the Wolf defense put up some big plays.

And we still haven’t talked about the moment when Sequim felt the true impact of “The House of Bayne” after the Wolf senior chased down a receiver and punched the ball out of his hands at the one-yard line, turning a sure-thing touchdown into a turnover.

“Our defense was strong. They got some big hits and, to a man, played hard all night,” said Coupeville assistant coach Orson Christensen.

Coupeville started the first meeting between the two schools since 1930 (Willie Smith’s freshman year?), with Bayne’s interception blunting Sequim’s opening drive.

The Wolves then drove half the field before settling for a 27-yard field goal from Joel Walstad to take what turned out to be their only lead of the game.

A second quarter marred by (what else) penalty flags galore killed Coupeville, as Sequim busted open a close game. Up 7-3 after one, they scored three times in the second 12 minutes to go into the locker room up 27-3.

The final score was a dagger through the heart, as a fourth down at the Sequim 21 blew up in Coupeville’s face when Walstad’s pass was picked off and returned for a 79-yard TD with just eight seconds left on the clock.

Knocking some of his papers off the press box table in the excitement, Willie Smith caught them on the way down.

“I’m like a cat … well, sometimes I’m like a really old cat rolling over after a nap … but still a cat.”

Inspired by his words of wisdom perhaps, Coupeville staged a mini-rally in the second half, ripping off two touchdowns.

Walstad, who was under pressure all night, but avoided it most of the time, hit Bayne for a 15-yard scoring strike, before “Machine Gun” Kelley crashed in for a six-yard scoring run.

The extra point attempt after Kelley’s score threatened to blow up on Coupeville, but quick thinking and nimble fingers saved the Wolves.

When the snap skidded into the grass in front of the holder, Bayne, he snared it and flipped it to Walstad, who cut his foot swing in mid-stride, whirled to the left and lobbed it to CJ Smith, who rumbled home for two points.

Back within two scores, Coupeville’s offense stalled out, however, and Sequim tacked on a late score to stretch the final margin.

Even at the end, however, the refs were still throwing flags (including nailing CHS for an “audible profanity”), causing Willie Smith’s right hand man, clock-operator supreme Joel “The Ice Cream Man” Norris, to get a bit agitated.

“Don’t stop the clock! I’ve got dinner reservations!!” became his mantra over the final, flag-infested half hour.

On the field, Walstad went down firing, completing 21 of 45 passes for a career-high 272 yards (he has 524 yards through two games).

He also spread the wealth, with five receivers hauling in catches. CJ Smith snagged five for 96 yards, followed by Bayne (5-86), Ryan Griggs (4-56), Kelley (4-21) and Martin (3-13).

With the ball flying so much in an effort to cut into Sequim’s lead, Coupeville ran the ball far less than normal, with Bayne (eight carries for 46 yards) the standout.

On defense, Bayne (8 tackles), Oscar Liquidano (7) and Wynn (7) led the way, while Kelley, who missed the opener against South Whidbey, returned to record four tackles and a team-high 10 assists. Martin (6 tackles), Aaron Wright (4) and Shank (3) chipped in.

The Wolves (1-1) return to action Friday, Sept. 19 when they host Chimacum (5:30 kickoff) in their first-ever Olympic League game.

The Cowboys are 0-2 after losing 27-8 to Forks.

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Wolf leaders (l to r) Joel Walstad, Bayne and Aaron Wright

 Joel Walstad (left) and Josh Bayne (center) with Aaron Wright, one of the Wolf linemen who cleared a lot of space for them Friday. (Shawn Walstad photo)

That’s how it’s done, Everett Herald.

After being ignored by the big city papers when they nominated their top players for week one of the high school football season, Coupeville’s talented combo of Joel Walstad and Josh Bayne got some respect Monday from a more highly-attuned source.

The Wolf duo, who shredded South Whidbey Friday night to bring “The Bucket” back to Cow Town after a year of exile in Langley, were named to the Northwest Elite Index Elite Performers list.

Walstad chucked the ball for 252 yards and three touchdowns, while Bayne scampered for 218 more on the ground, punching in a pair of scores, including the game winner, in the 35-28 victory.

That landed them on a list that included players from high profile schools like Lynden, King’s, Marysville-Pilchuck and Tumwater.

To read more and bask in the afterglow, hop over to:

http://www.northwesteliteindex.com/2014/09/07/washington-week-one-elite-performers/

Then bookmark the site, cause this probably won’t be the only time Coupeville’s finest pop up there.

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