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Posts Tagged ‘Lathom Kelley’

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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Lathom Kelley (John Fisken photo)

Lathom Kelley (John Fisken photo)

In just under 24 hours Coupeville High School will kick off a new fall sports season with the first day of football practice.

The Wolves hit the practice field 1 PM Wednesday, starting two-a-days.

Opening night is Sept. 5, when South Whidbey comes to town.

While the two schools are now in different leagues, with CHS jumping from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, the game is still for Island bragging rights and possession of The Bucket for the next year.

One of the players most excited to get on the field and start is Wolf junior Lathom Kelley.

As a freshman, he and his teammates went to Langley and claimed the trophy, while last year The Bucket went back South after the Falcons won a foggy battle in Cow Town.

Kelley’s thoughts on this, Football Eve:

I’m very excited for football this year.

I won’t lie, having South Whidbey as our first game this year is going to be a great way to start off our season.

Through my past years in football I have noticed a lack of excitement, but I’m hoping that this year, being in a new league and kicking South Whidbey’s butt for our first game, will raise the level of excitement and effort throughout the season.

I am pretty big on practicing how you play, so these next two weeks are going to be very difficult with two-a-days and gold card sales (get ahold of me if you want one!).

All I want this year is to win.

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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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. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne skies to pick off a Lakeside pass.

Josh Bayne skies to pick off a Lakeside pass.

Freshman Hunter Downes gets ready to throw the long ball.

Freshman Hunter Downes gets ready to throw the long ball.

Recently graduated All-State lineman Nick Streubel was shocked to discover the cameraman was stalking him.

Recently graduated All-State lineman Nick Streubel was shocked to discover the cameraman stalking him.

The 2014 edition of the CHS Wolves.

The 2014 edition of the CHS Wolves.

It was football, but of a different sort.

With the start of a new high school season six weeks away, the Wolves welcomed 3A Lakeside to town Saturday afternoon for a scrimmage.

The bleachers ended up two thirds full, a few plays brought a buzz from the crowd and both teams got to work on plays under live conditions, even if players were wearing shorts, the scoreboard was turned off and coaches were grouped in the backfield.

Oh, and also, the sun was blazing away, a far cry from normal conditions at Mickey Clark Field.

Trust me, first-time fans, come back in mid-October, when the fog attacks and the rain slices down sideways. That, my friends, is true Cow Town football weather.

This was mid-summer vacation weather, which allowed for the gathered to work on their sun burns while watching Lathom Kelley and Wiley Hesselgrave administer whiplash to Lakeside runners.

Josh Bayne picked off a pass, while coming within a fingertip of a second interception, team captain Carson Risner came up out of a scrum ready to rumble with the entire Lakeside defensive line like it was the playoffs and the smallest player on the field had the biggest hit.

That was incoming freshman Cameron Toomey-Stout, who came flying up the left sideline and laid into a Lakeside receiver as he took his first step after snagging a short pass.

One of the few times Coupeville stopped Lakeside from breaking big runs down the sideline — something the Wolves will need to work on before they open their season Sept. 5 against South Whidbey — it got a roar from the crowd and Toomey-Stout was jumped ‘n thumped by his teammates as he headed back to his position.

To see more photos, and possibly purchase some (part of the proceeds goes to fund scholarships for CHS seniors) jump over to:

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf354d7ba545

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Lathom Kelley, poppin' collars and knockin' helmets off. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Lathom Kelley, poppin’ collars and knockin’ helmets off. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Joel Walstad is the favorite to be under center when the Wolves kick off the 2014 season. (John Fisken photo)

Joel Walstad is the favorite to be under center when the Wolves kick off. (John Fisken photo)

Let the countdown begin.

A mere 84 days from now, the Coupeville High School football team will step onto its home turf to kick off a new gridiron season.

And when Lathom Kelley, Wiley Hesselgrave, Josh Bayne and Co. take the field, it’ll be a whole new game for the Wolves.

After eight seasons of being the smallest team, by far, in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, Coupeville will be on a somewhat more level playing field.

The Wolves will still rep the smallest 1A school in the state. Actually, having lost several students AFTER the classifications were set for the next two years, CHS will  have fewer students than several 2B schools.

But, their new opponents in the 1A Olympic League will be much closer in size to them than Cedarcrest or Lakewood in years past.

Coupeville will play home-and-away against their three new league rivals — Chimacum, Port Townsend and Klahowya — while retaining the Island rivalry for The Bucket with South Whidbey.

That matchup, which kicks off the season, will be one of three non-conference tilts.

The Wolves will play one 2A school, Sequim, which went 0-10 a season ago, and one 2B squad, with a revival of an old school rivalry with Concrete on Halloween.

The schedule as it stands now has CHS home for four straight to kick off the year:

 

9-5 South Whidbey
9-12 Sequim
9-19 Chimacum
9-26 Port Townsend
10-3 @ Klahowya
10-10 @ Port Townsend
10-17 @ Chimacum
10-24 Klahowya
10-31 @ Concrete

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The Kelley boys (Lathom, left, and big bro Brandon) are coming for all your track titles. (Shawna Kelley photo)

The Kelley boys (Lathom, left, and big bro Brandon) are coming for all your track titles. (Shawna Kelley photo)

Makana Stone: An unstoppable force of nature. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone: An unstoppable force of nature. (John Fisken photo)

Now it gets freakin’ serious.

The regular season meets are done, and it’s on to the postseason run for the Coupeville High School track and field squads.

First up is the Cascade Conference championships Thursday, where the Wolves will face off with fellow 1A schools King’s and South Whidbey and the league’s five 2A teams.

It will be the final appearance for CHS, which moves to the 1A Olympic League in the fall.

After that comes the Last Chance Qualifier Friday, which gives athletes on the outside exactly what the title implies — a last chance to nab a qualifying time or throw to advance on to districts.

Districts run Wednesday, May 14 and Friday, May 16, and, after that, at least some Wolves would be expected to advance on through tri-districts (May 22, 24) and on to state (May 30-31).

Current Coupeville stars Makana Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt and Marisa Etzell are all state meet veterans and are aiming for a return trip to Cheney, while fellow young guns like Lathom Kelley and Jared Helmstadter would like to make it a co-ed trip this year.

Wolves currently in the Top 10 for District 1:

GIRLS:

200 — Makana Stone (2nd) 27.22

400 — Stone (1st) 59.75

4 x 100 Relay — Marisa Etzell, Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt, Lauren Grove (6th) 53.21

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Stone, Hurlburt, Etzell (4th) 1:51.58

4 x 400 Relay — Etzell, Carlie Rosenkrance, Mattea Miller, Stone (6th) 4:39.73

Shot Put — Skyler Lawrence (7th) 29-11

BOYS:

100 — Lathom Kelley (9th) 11.80

200 — L. Kelley (5th) 23.85

400 — L. Kelley (5th) 53.30

300 Hurdles — Brandon Kelley (7th) 45.26

4 x 100 Relay — Ryan Griggs, B. Kelley, Jared Helmstadter, L. Kelley (4th) 46.31

4 x 400 Relay — B. Kelley, L. Kelley, Helmstadter, Sebastian Davis (5th) 3:46.87

Shot Put — Nick Streubel (5th) 45-9.50

Discus — Streubel (7th) 129-00; Dalton Martin (8th) 127-1.00

High Jump — Griggs (6th) 5-06

Triple Jump — Griggs (10th) 35-10

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