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Posts Tagged ‘Lathom Kelley’

Jake Hoagland (8) snagged the first two catches of his varsity career Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Jake Hoagland (8) snagged the first two catches of his varsity career Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Chris Battaglia (23)

Freshman Chris Battaglia (23) is tied for fifth on the team in tackles.

More stats than you can imagine.

OK, maybe not, but I have expanded how many categories I listed (ardent Zane Bundy fans can now track his kicking totals), plus, Friday’s game at Sequim produced results which sent a bunch of new names onto the stat sheets.

So, without further ado, your up-to-the-moment Coupeville High School football stats through week #2, as reported to MaxPreps by the Wolf coaches.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 25-46 for 239 yards with 1 TD and 3 INTs
Gabe Eck 4-8 for 13 yards
CJ Smith 1-1 for 10 yards

Receiving:

C. Smith 6 receptions for 120 yards
Wiley Hesselgrave 9-83
Hunter Smith 10-42
Ryan Griggs 1-10
Jake Hoagland 2-7

Rushing:

Lathom Kelley 14 carries for 37 yards
Jacob Martin 7-12
G. Eck 9-0
Chris Battaglia 1-4
Mitchell Losey 1 (-3)
Downes 12 (-49)

Total yards:

Downes 190
C. Smith 130
Hesselgrave 83
H. Smith 42
Kelley 37
G. Eck 13
Martin 12
Griggs 10
Hoagland 7
Battaglia 4

Touchdowns:

Martin 1
C. Smith 1

PATs:

Zane Bundy 2

Points:

Martin 6
C. Smith 6
Bundy 2

Defense:

Tackles:

Kelley 15
Ty Eck 12
Hesselgrave 9
Julian Welling 8
Battaglia 7
Uriel Liquidano 7
Losey 7
Mitchell Carroll 6
Brenden Gilbert 5
Martin 5
Tyler McCalmont 3
Clay Reilly 3
Jordan Ford 2
H. Smith 2
Griggs 1
Jake Lord 1
Josh Robinson 1

Sacks:

Battaglia 1
Gilbert 1
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1

Interceptions:

Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
Reilly 1
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Martin 2
T. Eck 1
Ford 1
Liquidano 1
H. Smith 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Bundy 4 for 153 yards

Punts:

Bundy 12-308

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 6 for 91 yards
T. Eck 5-42

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Hunter Downes (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf sophomore QB Hunter Downes threw for 139 yards in his high school varsity debut Friday. (John Fisken photo)

They lost, but they piled up some stats.

While the final score of Friday’s season opener wasn’t quite what the Coupeville High School football squad wanted, the Wolves had their moments.

And now, at least in the early stages of teams reporting in to Maxpreps.com, several players are among the best in class 1A.

Topping the chart are receiver C.J. Smith, who leads all receivers in yards gained, and kicker Zane Bundy, who was flawless on extra point attempts in his high school debut.

Not to be outdone, other Wolves like Jacob Martin, Lathom Kelley and Hunter Downes are firmly entrenched in the top three in their category after one game.

There’s a long season to play, but never skip a chance to celebrate your accomplishments along the way.

Current stats after one game (and, if you disagree with the numbers, talk to your coaches — they’re the ones who came up with these numbers, not me).

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 9 completions for 139 yards (#3 in 1A) with 1 TD and 2 INTs

Receiving:

C.J. Smith 3 receptions for 94 yards (#1 in 1A)
Wiley Hesselgrave
4-27
Hunter Smith 2-18

Rushing:

Lathom Kelley 14 carries for 37 yards (#6 in 1A)
Downes 2-1

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 4 for 73 yards (#4 in 1A)

Total yards:

Downes 140 (#5 in 1A)
C. Smith 94 (#8 in 1A)
Kelley 37
Hesselgrave 27
H. Smith 18

Touchdowns:

Jacob Martin 1
C. Smith 1

PATs:

Zane Bundy 2 (#1 in 1A)

Points:

Martin 6
C. Smith 6
Bundy 2

Defense:

Tackles:

Kelley 13 (#2 in 1A)
Hesselgrave 6
Mitchell Carroll 5
Julian Welling 5
Ty Eck 4
Brenden Gilbert 3
Martin 3
Uriel Liquidano 3
Tyler McCalmont 3
Mitchell Losey 2
Chris Battaglia 1
Jordan Ford 1
Clay Reilly 1
H. Smith 1

Sacks:

Hesselgrave 1 (#2 in 1A)
Martin
1 (#2 in 1A)

Interceptions:

Martin 1
Reilly 1
H. Smith 1

Fumble recoveries:

Martin 2
Ford 1

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Lathom Kelley: American Bad-Ass

Lathom Kelley: American Bad-Ass

Lathom, Lathom, Lathom

The Coupeville High School Class of 2016 has a parade of talented athletes — Makana Stone, Wiley Hesselgrave, Dalton Martin, Sylvia Hurlburt, Jared Helmstadter, Ryan Griggs, McKenzie Bailey and on and on.

But one dude stands out, the wild child, the rebel, the Lone Wolf who most closely resembles an outlaw country singer from the ’70s (I’m leaning towards Waylon Jennings), both in looks and attitude.

I’m serious.

Go listen to Jennings sing “I’ve Always Been Crazy” and tell me you don’t pick up parallels to Lathom Kelley, and I mean that with deep respect.

Waylon was The Man, and so is Lathom.

As he celebrates his 18th birthday today, Mr. Kelley is a fireball of intensity, exploding upwards and off the walls at CHS.

Sometimes literally, as when he sprints by you and zooms up the gym wall, executing a back-flip punctuated by a guttural scream and huge grin after sticking the landing like a Ukrainian gymnast winning the gold medal.

He is the most entertaining guy in sports entertainment, Coupeville division, mainly cause you never know what he’s about to do.

On the football field, he is pure, crackling electricity, madly thumping rival runners, then crashing through the line himself, throwing care to the wind as he churns out yardage.

Put him near a track oval and there is nothing the guy can’t do. Seriously.

While he has his areas of expertise, such as sprints, part of the fun of the past few years has been watching Lathom cartwheel from event to event, randomly picking up a new challenge and then kicking booty with no prior preparation.

Off the athletic stage, his sarcastic grin just barely disguises the good dude underneath.

The impression I have always had of him is of a guy who lives and dies for his close friends and family.

A genuinely nice guy, but also the person most likely to cap a roving pack of zombies and save the world, if it came to that.

Athletes come and athletes go, and some make more of an impression than others, either through their accomplishments or their personality.

But, every once in awhile, a true supernova comes hurtling through the door, grabs the world by the lapels and screams, “Let’s get this party started!!”

Lathom is one of a kind, of that there is no doubt. And we are a better school, a better town, for having him burn brightly here these past years.

Much respect, on your birthday and every day, man.

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Seniors Lathom Kelley (left) and Ryan Griggs will be called on for big yards and big leadership. (John Fisken photos)

   Seniors Lathom Kelley (left) and Ryan Griggs will be called on for big yards and big leadership. (John Fisken photos)

Brett Smedley will make his debut as Coupeville's head football coach this Friday, when the Wolves travel to Langley.

   Brett Smedley will make his debut as Coupeville’s head football coach this Friday, when the Wolves travel to Langley.

Change is in the air.

Coming off a 5-5 season that snapped a streak of eight straight losing seasons, the Coupeville High School football squad lost its head coach and seven seniors, including the inaugural 1A Olympic League MVP.

After three seasons at the helm of the Wolves (and two wins over arch-rival South Whidbey), Tony Maggio turned the keys over to assistant coach Brett Smedley.

As he prepares to kick off his first season as head coach this Friday, the first-year man will have to do so without that departed MVP (Josh Bayne) and record-setting QB Joel Walstad, now both off to play college ball.

The cupboard is far from bare, however, as the Wolves seek their first winning season since the 2005 squad went 6-5.

Nine seniors, all of whom have seen substantial playing time in the past, will anchor Coupeville’s attack.

Leading the way are Wiley Hesselgrave, a First-Team All-League pick at linebacker as a junior, and hard-hitting Lathom Kelley, who both can become four year letter winners this season.

Joining them are linemen Brenden Gilbert, Josh Lord, JR Pendergrass and Jake Lord as well as multi-talented weapons CJ Smith, Ryan Griggs and Mitchell Losey.

Rounding out the key returning players are juniors Mitchell Carroll, Dominic Dausey, Jacob Martin and Clay Reilly and sophomores Hunter Downes, Hunter Smith, Cameron Toomey-Stout, James Vidoni and Julian Welling.

On a list dominated by seniors, Hunter Smith was the lone freshman named to the All-League team last year, earning Honorable Mention consideration.

While the loss of Bayne, a two-way All-State player, leaves a big hole to fill, the Wolves do return almost all of their offensive weapons.

Seven of their top eight receivers are back, led by Griggs, who topped the Wolves in 2014 with 485 yards on 29 catches.

Coupeville also brings back three backs who rang up yards on the ground in Hesselgrave (52 carries for 430 yards), Kelley (46-407 despite missing a chunk of the season with an injury) and Martin (57-295).

The hope is that one, or more of them, will step up and make a run at posting Bayne-like numbers (143-1,528).

Walstad threw for 18 touchdowns and nearly 1,600 yards as a senior, and, at least in the early days of practice, the battle to replace him at QB was wide-open, with Downes, the Smith brothers and freshman Gabe Eck in the mix.

Eck and twin brother Ty (WR/DB), sophomore Jake Hoagland (TE/LB) and seniors Zane Bundy (WR/DB) and Jordan Ford (WR/DE) are among the newcomers who have caught the eyes of coaches.

Hoagland and Bundy are making their high school football debuts, while Ford is a transfer student who has come home to the school where many of his relatives, including his dad and grandfather, have been athletic stars.

However the lineup shakes out, in true small-school style, many of the players will go both ways.

“We at CHS play a certain brand of football, and that’s an “Iron man” style of football,” Smedley said. “A few kids are going to be on the field all game everyday.

“We continue to develop this mentality in our players!”

While Port Townsend is the defending league champs, they also lost a chunk of key players.

Coupeville, which finished third at 3-3, was the only league school to beat the Redhawks last year, and came agonizingly close to upending Klahowya to earn a playoff berth.

Smedley sees no reason the Wolves can’t fight for a league title.

“This is a very strong league,” he said. “Any given night anyone has the ability to win the game.”

Coupeville opens with four straight games on the road, not playing at home until Oct. 2, but having veteran leadership should make that easier to handle.

“We have a lot of players that have been in the program for four years, and they will be the true leaders of this program,” Smedley said. “Their leadership on and off the field is one of our huge strengths.”

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(JOhn Fisken photos)

Lathom Kelley, ready to hit some folks. (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Griggs

Ryan Griggs stays busy by firing off a few hundred push-ups.

Wiley Hesselgrave

Wiley Hesselgrave (right) goes low to snag a reception during practice.

Josh Poole

Josh Poole is impressed.

Fall is about to kick in the door.

With rain drops splattering down on the prairie Monday, we are officially at T-minus-100 hours until the kickoff of games that count.

Now, technically, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team is the first in action with a jamboree Thursday in Oak Harbor, but the first contest that goes in the win/loss column comes a day later.

That’s when the Wolves travel down Island Friday to face-off with arch-rival South Whidbey in Langley (7 PM kickoff) in their first game under new head coach Brett Smedley.

The Falcons will have their own first-year man in Michael Coe, with Chris Tormey having fled the Island after just one season to go work in the Canadian Football League.

At stake in the non-conference game will be bragging rights and ownership of The Bucket, the trophy which has spent two of the last three years living in Coupeville.

Let the battles begin.

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