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Posts Tagged ‘Josh Bayne’

Wolf seniors celebrate with coach Tony Maggio. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Wolf seniors celebrate with coach Tony Maggio. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Brenden Gilbert (left) and Ryan Griggs enjoy the moment. (Heidi Smith photo)

Brenden Gilbert (left) and Ryan Griggs enjoy the moment. (Heidi Smith photo)

Josh Bayne (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Josh Bayne (12) prepares to get medieval on South Whidbey’s behind. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Danny Savalza, a senior two years ago when CHS last owned The Bucket, was one of many former Wolves in attendance.

   Danny Savalza, a senior two years ago when CHS last owned The Bucket, was one of many former Wolves in attendance. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

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

Wolf leaders (l to r) Joel Walstad, Bayne and Aaron Wright hoist The Bucket. (Shawn Walstad photo)

(Monica Vidoni photo)

The celebration rages on, till the break of dawn. (Monica Vidoni photo)

Bucket mania is sweeping through Cow Town.

Friday night’s epic 35-28 win over visiting South Whidbey set off a celebration in Coupeville that will last well into the wee hours.

With the victory, the Wolves regain possession of The Bucket, which will now appear in 1,478 photos, if past history is any indication.

Above are just a few of the many which will pop up. Prepare your very soul, because your Facebook and Twitter feeds will be deluged in the days to come.

Of that, you can be dang sure.

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Joel Walstad's first start as a varsity QB was an electrifying one, as the senior threw for 252 yards and 3 touchdowns Friday. (John Fisken photo)

  Joel Walstad’s first start as a varsity QB was an electrifying one, as the senior threw for 252 yards and 3 touchdowns Friday. (John Fisken photo)

“It was a great moment, a great game, a great time for the community of Coupeville. I am very, very proud to be a Wolf tonight!!”

As half the town celebrated on its home field Friday, Coupeville High School football coach Tony Maggio sported the biggest smile of his time in Cow Town.

Despite being able to only suit up 24 players, despite missing two key injured starters (Lathom Kelley and Carson Risner), despite the presence of a former major college coach running the program on the other side of the field, the Wolves pulled off one of the greatest wins in school history.

Josh Bayne’s 35-yard sprint to the end zone with less than four minutes to play, followed up by a remarkable defensive stand that ended when CJ Smith denied a possible game-tying catch in the end zone, sealed the deal, lifting Coupeville to a 35-28 victory over arch-rival South Whidbey.

The win, coming in the season opener for both squads, brought The Bucket back home after a year in captivity.

The trophy, which goes to the winner of the annual showdown, will now return to its rightful place in the CHS trophy case.

It got there because every one of the Wolves that saw action made an impact.

The big stats came from Bayne, who opened his senior season with a 218-yard performance on the ground, and senior Joel Walstad, who made his first start at quarterback and picked apart the Falcons, completing 20 of 29 passes for 252 yards and three touchdowns.

But the win also was spurred by role players, from junior Mitchell Losey, who made all four of his tackles while crashing around on special teams, to sophomore defensive ace Gabe Wynn and freshman Cameron Toomey-Stout, who might be the smallest player on the field, but is fearless.

And, if a game ball was given for player of the game, it would be held by junior Wiley Hesselgrave right now.

Despite playing through a possibly separated shoulder (he came out in pain and stayed on the sideline for a bit before plunging back in to the fray), he was everywhere. He caught two touchdown strikes from Walstad, but it was a third catch that was perhaps the biggest play of the game.

With the game tied at 28, Walstad lofted up a ball that Hesselgrave came back for, making a superb spinning snag, then reversing his body and crashing forward for huge yardage.

The 36-yard catch-and-run put the Falcons on their heels, and Bayne took advantage, taking off for the eventual winning score on the very next play.

The game was a classic from the start, with balmy weather and what soon became a capacity crowd coming to its feet when Bayne scored the first touchdown of the season just 50 seconds into play.

He took a hand-off from Walstad, slashed to the right, then cut back to the left and blew up the ‘d’ for a 59-yard scoring strike.

South Whidbey tied the game on a touchdown pass from Parker Collins to Charlie Patterson, but Coupeville regained the lead late in the second quarter.

Ryan Griggs, barely keeping his feet in-bounds, made an electrifying catch in the very farthest right hand corner of the end zone, with Walstad dropping the ball perfectly in between a defender’s hands and Griggs outstretched arms.

The Falcons never blinked, however, ripping off two touchdowns in less than a minute to head into the locker room up 21-13, and with momentum seemingly in their favor.

Enter Hesselgrave.

First he snagged a six-yard TD strike, with Walstad converting the two-point conversion on a run where he faked the entire defense to the right, then zipped in untouched to his left.

Then came the capper on a 13-yard TD catch with a mere 28 seconds on the clock in the third to knot things up at 28.

After both offenses spent most of the time running wild, the Wolf defense stepped up huge in the fourth, forcing South Whidbey to punt both times it had the ball.

Holding on to the lead, Coupeville faced its final test, a fourth-and-inches with less than 20 seconds to play. The Falcons came hard, with every man hitting the line, but the Wolf line surged twice as hard, crashing for the first down.

Unable to stop the clock, the Falcons could do nothing but accept their one true destiny — losing.

In the aftermath, Maggio passed a huge chunk of the credit to his coaching staff, in particular his coordinators, Orson Christensen (offense) and Brett Smedley (defense).

“Those guys were incredible. They really had a hand on the pulse of the game tonight and called just great games,” Maggio said. “I can’t give my guys enough credit.”

The Wolves were remarkably balanced on offense, running for 289 yards and passing for 252.

Bayne gained his 218 yards on 17 carries, while Jacob Martin (12 carries for 55 yards), Hesselgrave (6-14) and Walstad (2-2) all chipped in.

Griggs hauled down six catches for 72 yards, with Hesselgrave (4-62), Smith (5-58), Bayne (5-26) and Martin (2-19) also benefiting from Walstad’s laser-precision touch.

Bayne (7 tackles), Hesselgrave (7), Aaron Wright (6), Martin (4) and Losey (4) paced the defense.

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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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With the graduation of Jake Tumblin, Josh Bayne will carry the rushing load for CHS. (John Fisken photos)

   With the graduation of Jake Tumblin, Josh Bayne will carry the rushing load for CHS. (John Fisken photos)

Joel Walstad is the early favorite to inherit the starting QB job.

Joel Walstad is the early favorite to inherit the starting QB job.

Are you ready for some football?

If so, you’re in luck, because, even though it’s still July, this weekend will bring pigskin play back to the gridiron.

Coupeville High School has scheduled a scrimmage against 3A school Lakeside for 1 PM Saturday at Mickey Clark Field.

The informal event will officially kick off Tony Maggio’s third year at the helm of the Wolves, while giving fans a taste of what to expect when fall rolls around.

A strong Class of 2014 led by Nick Streubel and Jake Tumblin departed, but running back Josh Bayne and linemen Carson Risner and Aaron Wright return as captains for CHS.

Senior Joel Walstad is favored to be the starting quarterback, while big hittin’ juniors Lathom Kelley and Wiley Hesselgrave should anchor the defense.

Lakeside, which hails from Seattle, is coached by Casey Selfridge.

Coupeville, which is leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference for the 1A Olympic League this season, kicks off the regular season Friday, Sept. 5 with a home game against South Whidbey.

That game will now be a non-conference affair, but the winner will still claim The Bucket, which has resided in captivity in Langley since last year.

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