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Mikey Robinett scored three touchdowns in a recent win over La Conner. (Jackie Saia photos)

They’re chasing big numbers.

Last year’s Coupeville High School football team reached the end zone 52 times, scoring 363 points across nine games.

That breaks down to a fairly astonishing 5.8 touchdowns and 40.3 points a night, helping drive a 7-2 season which included the program’s first league title and trip to state since 1990.

Seven of the 12 Wolves who racked up a TD last year are still in uniform this season, though the five graduates accounted for 43 of the 52 scores.

This time out, Coupeville has already had nine different players hit paydirt through just the first four games.

That gives the Wolves 17 TD’s — eight through the air, eight on the ground, and one on a pick-six — and 114 points, which breaks down to 4.3 touchdowns and 28.5 points per game.

Of the players to score, four — Mikey Robinett, Adrian Cunningham, Malachi Somes, and Jack Porter — have notched their first touchdown this season.

Chase Anderson, Hunter Bronec, Peyton Caveness, Logan Downes, and Aiden O’Neill appear on both the ’22 and ’23 scoring chart.

Meanwhile, lineman William Davidson and injured running back Johnny Porter are still looking for their first ’23 touchdown.

Logan Downes scampers for the end zone.

 

Coupeville’s scoring stats through four games:

 

Touchdowns:

Aiden O’Neill – 4
Mikey Robinett – 3
Adrian Cunningham – 2
Logan Downes – 2
Jack Porter – 2
Chase Anderson – 1
Hunter Bronec – 1
Peyton Caveness – 1
Malachi Somes – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson — 11
Downes – 1

 

Points:

O’Neill — 24
Robinett – 18
Anderson — 17
Downes – 13
Cunningham – 12
Ja. Porter – 12
Bronec – 6
Caveness – 6
Somes – 6

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Adrian Cunningham (left) and Jaje Drake flexed big time as Coupeville thrashed La Conner. (Sophia Broderick photo)

Party like you’re in first place.

After opening with three straight games against bigger schools, the Coupeville High School football team finally faced off with a fellow 2B rival Friday night.

Advantage Wolves, in a big way.

Sparked by a dominant ground attack, even with its top rusher sidelined, Coupeville whacked visiting La Conner 48-6, with the victory lifting the red and black to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 1-3 overall.

That sets up a major showdown next Friday, Sept. 29, when the Wolves travel to Friday Harbor to play the Wolverines (1-0, 2-1) for sole possession of first place.

With another game against both of their 2B compatriots left on the schedule, La Conner (0-2, 0-3) isn’t eliminated from playoff contention yet, but the Braves have a lot of ground to make up.

Friday’s victory keeps Coupeville undefeated in league play under second-year head coach Bennett Richter, as the Wolves try and win back-to-back conference titles for the first time in program history.

Back on their home turf for the first time in three weeks, the Wolves controlled the game on both sides of the ball.

Even missing key starters Johnny Porter and Peyton Caveness, who were in street clothes and nursing injuries, Coupeville’s offense punched in six rushing touchdowns.

Flip it to defense, and the Wolves were equally ferocious, swiping four passes, including one for a pick-six, recovering several fumbles, and blocking a punt deep in La Conner territory.

CHS struck first, taking the opening kickoff and promptly driving down the field to open the scoring.

Wolf QB Logan Downes hit Hunter Bronec and Chase Anderson on quick passes, while Aiden O’Neill slashed the Braves on a double reverse.

Mikey Robinett doesn’t go down easy. (Nikki Breaux photo)

But it was big, bad bruiser Mikey Robinett who carried the biggest load, thumping through the line five times on the drive, reminding viewers of former Wolf great Dominic Coffman as he ran over, and not around, defenders.

Plunging into the end zone from 10 yards out, carrying multiple screaming Braves along for the ride, the CHS senior racked up his first varsity touchdown.

And liked it so much he came back around to repeat the accomplishment twice more before his night was done and he turned rushing duties over to younger brother Dylan.

Tack on a booming PAT off the foot of Anderson, and the Wolves were up 7-0, but far from finished.

Forcing a three-and-out in about 2.7 seconds, Coupeville got the ball right back and once again slammed its way down the field, a bruising carry at a time.

Downes vaulted in from the two-yard line for his second rushing touchdown of the season, a mere moment after threading a pass through a pack of players, dropping the ball into the waiting fingers of Jack Porter.

La Conner, a proud program with a storied past, is currently struggling, but the Braves remain chippy, as they demonstrated late in the first quarter.

Scrappy QB Ivory Damien, who spent much of the game scrambling for his life, flung a bomb down the right sideline, the ball splashing into the arms of Logan Burks, who had gotten behind the Wolf defense.

The result was a 79-yard scoring strike — coming before La Conner had a single first down in the game — and it momentarily sent a ripple of excitement through the visitor’s side of the field.

And then we returned to our normally scheduled beatdown.

Coupeville’s defense stuffed the two-point conversion attempt, and the rest of the evening largely formed a perpetual highlight reel for the folks reppin’ Cow Town.

Mikey Robinett added the second of his three scoring runs to open the second quarter, before CHS stretched the lead to 28-6 on a sensational bit of defensive teamwork.

Shedding would-be tacklers, Wolf lineman Marcelo Gebhard suddenly got up close and extremely personal with Damien, wrapping his arms around the squirming gunslinger as he went for the sack.

Trying to get rid of the ball, La Conner’s leader flung the pigskin away, and right into the hands of Jack Porter.

Cradling the ball as he slashed his way through the defense for a game-busting pick-six, one half of Jenny and Jeff’s set of twin sons notched his second TD of the season.

While causing the CHS student section to make a noise not unlike a really loud fire alarm.

Jack Porter (88) is a star on both sides of the ball. (Bailey Thule photo)

The first half scoring may have been done, but the half itself wasn’t, as the clock crawled to the break, thanks to a never-ending series of penalties and misdirected La Conner passes.

Off to the side, 101(!!) junior cheerleaders, all likely jacked out of their lil’ minds on sugar and adrenaline, nervously waited to rush the field for their halftime performance.

On that patch of gridiron meanwhile, O’Neill picked off a pass, while Anderson came dangerously close to drilling a long field goal attempt.

The second half, while moving at a slightly faster pace, was much of the same — which was fine by most Wolf fans.

Mikey Robinett left one last trail of tears as he carved his way to his third, and final, trip to the end zone, before sophomore Adrian Cunningham exploded on the scene to score back-to-back touchdowns.

Getting his biggest chunk of playing time yet, while freshman Matthew Gilbert subbed in for Downes at QB, Cunningham was the full package.

He was nimble, he was explosive, he was dang hard to bring down, and he was flat-out electric, whether zipping away from grasping hands or churning away, pulling tacklers down the field with him.

Coupeville’s defense was equally hyped-up, and everyone on the field contributed, whether it was Zane Oldenstadt, Cameron Breaux, or Skylar Sand.

Casey Masters crushed the last bit of spirit from La Conner’s QB on a dynamic sack, while Jaje Drake knocked fools out of his way as he blocked a punt that the Wolves recovered.

Picks #3 and #4 came from senior lineman William Davidson — who went airborne to snag a ball after it bounced off the pads of a La Conner receiver — and fab frosh Davin Houston, making older brothers Dawson and Daylon proud.

Coupeville lineman William Davidson (blue shirt), a snappy dresser and a defensive dynamo. (Bailey Thule photo)

With the clock ticking down the final seconds, Wolf students continued to rock the joint in their best Barbie and Ken-inspired spirit outfits.

Neal Diamond vied with John Denver on the soundtrack, even as the stadium’s sound system threatened to stop working and deny Coupeville fans the velvet tones of PA announcer Willie Smith.

Not that the man who gave us the immortal “Balls … balls … balls” seemed to mind, as he multitasked — eating a hamburger, wailing about the Mariners annual September collapse, and planning a sprint down to the field to set up soccer nets for a noon Saturday game.

But first, one more “ADDDDRIAAAANNN CUNNINGHAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!” as the rising star closed the scoring, and the sound system survived for a few more moments.

Afterwards, with the man, the myth, the legend already transforming a football gridiron into a soccer pitch as a million people milled around, taking photos and marinating in the moment, Smith’s son-in-law, CHS football coach Bennett Richter, basked in the afterglow.

Like the smart man he is, Richter made sure to say good night to his mom and check in on wife Megan first, but then cracked a smile as wide as the field itself.

“The young guys really stepped up and showed us they’ve earned the playing time,” he said. “And now we control our own playoff destiny, man!

“That’s the way we like it!”

Wolf football coach Bennett Richter is 5-0 in league games. (Cole White photo)

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“Where do you think you’re going, young man?!?” (Nikki Breaux photos)

The warmups are done. On to the main event.

Coupeville High School football players have turned their attention to the season opener, which arrives this Friday, Sept. 1, when Klahowya travels to Whidbey for a 6:00 PM kickoff.

But first the Wolves ventured down to the wilds of Sultan for a jamboree, getting a chance to hit and be hit in live action against rival teams.

Along for the trip was Coupeville mom Nikki Breaux, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

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Cole White and Co. romped to a big win Wednesday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes perfection is overrated.

The Crescent High School varsity boys’ basketball squad arrived in Coupeville Wednesday night carrying a flawless 5-0 record.

By the time they left Cow Town however, the Loggers were stinging from a 60-14 thumping administered by a well-balanced, high-functioning pack of Wolves.

With the non-conference victory, Coupeville gets to 2-3 on the season, with both of their wins boasting a big enough margin to trigger a running clock.

The losses, all fairly close, came against schools from bigger classifications, as the 2B Wolves are playing a tough non-league schedule to open the season.

Wednesday night’s tussle on the hardwood was over almost before it began, with Coupeville jumping on the Loggers quickly.

Wolf gunners Alex Murdy and Logan Downes each tossed in nine points during the opening quarter, with CHS using a ferocious full-court press to bolt out to a 20-4 lead.

Murdy, bringing extreme pressure as the lead big dog on the defensive end of the floor, made off with several steals, as did running mate Cole White.

Everything was clicking for the Wolves in the early stages, and the final play of the frame was a perfect example.

Coupeville whipped the ball around the arc, all five players touching it, as they ran the clock down and kept the Loggers jumping from side to side.

Then, just a fraction of a moment before the shot clock buzzer sounded, the ball landed in Murdy’s hands, the senior sniper calmly knocked down a short jumper, and all the life went out of Crescent.

The Loggers played hard all night, but it was as if, in that moment, they realized to a man, this was not going to be a fun road trip.

On the other side of the floor, it was nothing but good times for Coupeville.

Jonathan Valenzuela stepped up big in the second quarter, raining down seven points, while Downes and Ryan Blouin both snapped the net on gut-punch three-balls.

Up 39-12 at the break, Coupeville turned in a sterling defensive effort after halftime, holding Crescent to just a single bucket over the game’s final 16 minutes.

Going to his bench for extended periods, CHS coach Brad Sherman gave 13 Wolves playing time, and everyone contributed.

William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt were terrors on the glass, with Davidson also cartwheeling out of bounds in pursuit of a loose ball and bouncing hard off the back wall.

Immediately jumping to his feet, “The Show Pony” cracked a small grin, shook the cobwebs out of his head, then hit the gas pedal and chased down a rival ballhandler.

The Logger meekly surrendered the ball before Davidson could crush him like a rampaging semi-truck in a Michael Bay film. Sometimes common sense wins out.

And the hits kept coming, with Ryan Blouin arcing in another three-ball while sister Alita, also a superb long-range marksman, nodded in approval.

Toss in a sweet runner for fab frosh Chase Anderson and the rampaging force of nature that is known as Dominic Coffman — stealing balls, crashing hard to the hoop, and scaring anyone stupid enough to get in his path.

Mikey Robinett made a big splash in his varsity debut. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

The night’s biggest cheers, though, were reserved for junior Mikey Robinett.

Making his varsity debut, he became the 411th Wolf boy who I’ve been able to document scoring points in the program’s 106-year history.

Not content to stop with one bucket, Robinett knocked down the final two of the evening.

The first came as he rolled hard to the hoop, the ball popping up in the air, swirling around the rim, then falling gently through the net to the screams of his classmates.

Bucket #2 came on a shot which banked off the glass, as Robinett rose to the moment.

Coupeville spread its offense out, with Downes rippling the nets for 17 and outscoring Crescent by himself.

Murdy (9), Valenzuela (9), Blouin (6), Coffman (5), Robinett (4), White (4), Nick Guay (2), Anderson (2), and Davidson (2) also scored.

Wolves Jermiah Copeland, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Oldenstadt all saw floor time as well.

The victory kicks off a busy stretch for the Wolves, who host Sedro-Woolley Thursday, then travel to Forks Saturday.

The Wolves bask in the afterglow. (Michael Davidson photo)

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A family move will take Wolf three-sport star Mikey Robinett from Whidbey Island to Tennessee. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville’s loss is Nashville’s gain.

Three-sport star Mikey Robinett, one of the most promising young Wolf athletes, won’t be wearing a CHS uniform next school year.

Instead, he and his family will be in Tennessee after a family move in the next couple of weeks takes them to Music City.

Robinett, who just wrapped his sophomore year at CHS, plays football, basketball, and track and field.

On the gridiron he had a sizable impact on both sides of the ball.

While playing defense, Robinett delivered thunderous cracks, while on offense he showed great promise as a runner.

Basketball, where a large senior class is departing, is the one sport where he’s been a JV player.

Robinett crashed the boards with intensity last season and looked to be in the mix for making the jump to the top team.

The Wolf super sophomore earned his first trip to the track and field state championships this spring, where he was an alternate for the 4 x 100 relay squad.

During the season Robinett also competed in the 200, 3200, discus, and long jump.

He’s not the only active Wolf athlete in his family either, as younger brother Dylan is a cross country, basketball, and track athlete who just wrapped his 7th grade year.

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