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Posts Tagged ‘records’

Lindsey Roberts, doin’ work. (Photos by JohnPhotos.net)

No pressure, Lindsey Roberts, but this is your year.

In much the same way last year was about Hunter Smith making a run at claiming all the records, the 2018-2019 school year is set up to be the Year of Lou.

Even after dealing with an injury which cost him half his senior season, Smith graduated owning seven CHS football records.

He followed that up by burning up the nets, finishing his basketball career as the 11th highest scorer in Wolf boys basketball history.

While baseball stats are a trickier thing to track in the world of Cow Town sports, Smith put a cap on things by being named Olympic League MVP and helping lead the Wolves to their second conference crown in three years.

He was one of the best we’ve ever seen in a Coupeville uniform, and Roberts, a senior this year, is much the same.

Her parents, Jon and Sherry, are both former CHS Athlete of the Year winners.

Uncle Jay? Still on the school’s track record board 30+ years after graduation, a board where his niece appears three times already.

Lindsey’s cousins Madeline and Ally were stars, her grandfather Sandy a living legend, but Lou is primed to pass them all.

More than any other active athlete at CHS, she is within striking distance of breaking, tying or making a run at records – and in every one of her three sports.

So, here’s what to keep an eye on as the new school year unfolds:

 

Soccer:

Admittedly, this is the one which would be most difficult for her to accomplish.

Mia Littlejohn holds the CHS girls soccer career scoring record with 35 goals, and Kalia Littlejohn was hot on her heels with 33 through her first three seasons.

With Kalia opting not to play as a senior, Mia’s record gets a reprieve, and Roberts inherits the mantle as the leading active scorer for the Wolves.

She has 13 goals, notching six apiece the past two seasons after tallying a lone goal as a freshman.

Making that more impressive, she’s done so while playing almost exclusively as a defender, albeit one blessed with a cannon for a leg.

It’s more likely Genna Wright, who torched the nets for 10 goals as a freshman last year, will be the one ultimately coming for the record.

Still, you can’t discount the offensive fireworks Roberts can launch, even if she’s doing it from half a field away.

 

Basketball:

With a season to play, Roberts sits 36th all-time on the Wolf girls scoring chart with 298 points, and has increased her point totals each year.

She tossed in 54 as a frosh (good for #6 on the squad), raised that to 83 as a sophomore (#4), then soared to 161 as a junior, which topped the team.

While it’s unlikely she’ll catch Brianne King (1549), Zenovia Barron (1270) or Makana Stone (1158) atop the charts, Roberts still stands a very good chance of making a run at the top 20.

She stands 102 points away from becoming the 23rd Wolf girl to crack 400 career points, and a repeat of her 161-point junior year performance would carry her to #18 on the all-time list.

 

Track:

Roberts final prep season could be her greatest moment.

She enters her senior season having already claimed five state meet medals – a 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th – and is one of only 10 Wolves, and one of only four girls, across 118 years, to pile up that kind of hardware.

Within her reach? Exiting as the most-decorated CHS female track athlete in school history.

If Roberts wins at least one medal next spring, and she has done so in each of her three previous seasons, she breaks a tie with Yashmeen Knox and rises to tie Natasha Bamberger.

Two medals, she joins Makana Stone with seven, or match her freshman total of three, and she finishes with eight, trailing only Tyler King (11) and Kyle King (10).

Roberts came dangerously close to winning a state title in the hurdles as a junior, nipped at the end by Lillian Kirry, a sophomore from Chewelah.

If she can return the favor next spring, Roberts would be the first Wolf to win a state title in any sport since Tyler King wore the 1A boys cross country crown in 2010.

So, buckle in, keep an eye on the stats and prepare for eight months of excitement — the Year of Lou begins.

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   Three generations of star Wolf quarterbacks, finally caught together on film. From left to right, Brad Sherman, Hunter Downes and Corey Cross. (Lisa Jenne photo)

Three men, of different eras, all linked by the uniform they wore and the touchdowns they threw.

If you look at the Coupeville High School record board, Corey Cross, Brad Sherman and Hunter Downes share a line, tied for the most touchdown passes in a single game by a Wolf quarterback.

The magic number is four, and was first accomplished by Cross in 1971.

Three decades later, Sherman matched the mark, doing it twice during the 2001 season.

Jump forward 15 more seasons, and this time, it was Downes dropping a quartet of scoring bombs during a road game in 2016.

Sherman was on the sideline, calling the plays for Downes as the CHS Offensive Coordinator, and with his help, the young gun claimed a second mark, this one for career TD passes, during his senior season in 2017.

The holder of that career mark? Sherman … who had originally taken it away from Cross.

Three legends, forever linked.

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   Shane Losey played a strong defensive game Friday, including blocking a Bellevue Christian PAT kick. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Where’s Marshawn Lynch when you need him?

An inability to get one yard, twice, killed the Coupeville High School football team on a very chilly Friday the 13th.

Unable to punch the ball in during the second half, despite having first-and-goal from the one-yard line on their opening drive, then third-and-goal from the one on their next possession, the Wolves fell 24-12 to visiting Bellevue Christian.

The Homecoming loss drops CHS to 1-3 in league play, 3-4 overall.

It also adds a new layer of frustration for Coupeville coach Jon Atkins, who has seen his team decimated by injuries which have thrown a wrench into a season which started quite strongly.

Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading receiver and rusher, both went down for the season back in week five, and that has limited the Wolves offensive attack since.

Still, Chris Battaglia and Andrew Martin ran strongly Friday, battering through the BC defense — until Battaglia went down with his own foot injury.

While he was able to return late in the game, Battaglia’s absence was huge, as he had carried the ball on four of the previous five plays, tearing off chunks of yardage on the opening drive of the third quarter.

With #23 being attended to on the sideline, the Wolves went to #32, and Martin crushed it, ramming up the middle for nine, six and 22 yards on the next three plays.

The third run came up a single yard short of a touchdown, as a horde of Vikings finally rode Martin to the turf just outside the goal line.

Trailing 16-12 coming out of halftime, CHS seemed poised to regain the lead, sitting on a first-and-goal, with the end zone tantalizingly close.

Only it didn’t happen, as the Wolves started marching straight backwards, with two aborted runs and a holding penalty turning a first-and-goal on the one into a third-and-goal from the 15.

After 10 straight running plays to open the second half, CHS went to the air, only to have back-to-back Hunter Downes passes batted down by defenders at the last second.

Coupeville’s second half death march continued from there, with BC putting together a 16-play, 85-yard scoring drive to bust open the game, followed by the Wolves suffering another disaster at the goal line.

It started with a first-and-goal from the Viking four-yard line, after CHS used a mix of Martin power runs and three Downes to Cameron Toomey-Stout passes to move 70 yards.

In the open field, the Wolves were moving, churning their way to glory. Up close, however, they stalled out.

Three incomplete passes and a run stuffed at the line later, any hopes of a comeback win were gone, and all Atkins could do was shake his head in frustration.

“Two Red Zone scores, we punch those in, we win,” he said. “We have 1,000 pounds on the line. We have to learn to push forward and be a little more nasty. We have to learn how to move that ball.”

Coupeville’s scoring came in the second quarter, as the two teams combined for 25 of the game’s 36 points and changed leads several times.

Bellevue kicker Mark Postma had staked his squad to an early 3-0 lead with a 25-yard field goal hit with enough foot to probably clear from 45 out.

After coming up empty on its first four possessions, Coupeville finally broke through, taking advantage of a fumble recovery deep in Viking territory.

Downes, rolling out at the BC 19-yard line, dropped the ball into the left corner, where Toomey-Stout made a sensational catch, dancing like he was back on the ballet stage he once graced in a production of “The Nutcracker.”

A blind ref shanked Wolf fans by claiming Camtastic had been knocked out at the half-yard line, but Coupeville shook it off with ease.

On the very next snap Toomey-Stout went the opposite way, curling into the right corner, and Downes deposited the ball on his waiting fingertips.

The touchdown toss was the 30th all-time for the senior gunslinger, pulling him within three of Brad Sherman’s CHS career record.

Downes also continued his pursuit of Sherman’s career record for passing yardage (3,613), cracking the 3,000-yard barrier on a 24-yard screen pass to Battaglia late in the first half.

While Toomey-Stout’s touchdown put Coupeville up 6-3, the Wolves PAT was blocked, then the teams exchanged scores in record time.

Bellevue bashed the ball in from three yards out to regain the lead at 10-6, only to watch Matt Hilborn take the ensuing kickoff all the way back.

The Wolf junior plucked the ball out of the air at the 15-yard line, spun into a pack of Viking tacklers, then somehow broke free, did several pirouettes, found a surprise gap in the defense and was off to the races.

Hugging the left sideline, he roared 85 yards to pay-dirt and wham, bam, Coupeville had the lead back as fast as it had lost it.

The Wolves couldn’t keep it, though, with a failed conversion pass limiting them to a 12-10 lead, which vanished right before the half on another short BC touchdown run.

Coupeville saved at least one point when Shane Losey blew through the line and blocked Bellevue’s extra point try. That kept the halftime deficit to what, at the time, seemed like a very manageable 16-12 tally.

Martin, a sophomore wearing the same number #32 his older brother Jacob did before him, had an especially strong game, plucking his first interception of the season.

He also rumbled for 67 yards (unofficially) as a rusher, all in the second half.

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   Jeff Stone’s basketball scoring records still stand nearly 50 years after he hung up his CHS uniform.

There are records, and then there are RECORDS.

As I research Coupeville High School’s basketball history, one season in particular stands out.

It’s been 47 years since Jeff Stone played his final game in a Wolf uniform — a 63-54 loss to Kittitas Mar. 5, 1970 at the state tourney.

His totals that night: 27 points and 24 rebounds.

Nearly five decades have passed since then, and yet what he accomplished in his senior season remains as astounding today as it was back then.

Playing at a time before the three-point shot was a thing, the lanky 6-foot-4 gunner, who would go on to be a college hoops star, before a long run as a coach, teacher and administrator at Oak Harbor High School, was unstoppable.

Over the course of 24 games in the 1969-1970 season (when CHS went 20-4 and became the first Whidbey Island basketball team to win a district title), Stone dropped in 644 points.

He averaged 26.8 a night, while NEVER failing to score in double figures, as the Wolves poured in 1,836 points (76.5), breaking 100 points four time.

A 114-48 win over Watson-Groen stands as the greatest scoring night in CHS history, boys or girls.

To put Stone’s 644 points in perspective, the next highest single-season Wolf performance I have found on the boys side of the board was Pete Petrov’s 442 in 25 games during the 1995-1996 season.

And Petrov both had the trey at his disposal, and used it quite often.

Oak Harbor’s single-season scoring mark is 469 from Manny Martucci in 1993 — a season I covered while at the Whidbey News-Times.

Stone, wearing “short” shorts and getting his points two at a time, never went below 14 points as a senior, and topped out with a school-record 48 in the biggest game of his career.

That performance came in the district title game against longtime rival Darrington, in a game played in front of 2,200 fans (according to newspaper articles of the day).

He earned every one of the points, as well, hitting 17 of 28 from the field and a crisp 14 of 16 from the charity stripe.

And, while Stone’s 48 is one off of the 49 netted by Oak Harbor’s Pat McGreevey in a 1953 game, let’s also note the Wolf star exited the title game with a full 90 seconds left to play.

If Coupeville coach Bob Barker doesn’t pull him early enough to take a curtain call, 50 is a certainty and 60 is not out of the question.

As I continue to go through newspaper articles, chase down score-books and forgotten stat sheets and permanently cross my eyes, I’m sure I’ll find a lot of highlights — some expected, some surprises.

But I have no doubt. Nothing I find is going to stand up to Stone’s superb swan song.

By the numbers:

Regular season:

Neah Bay — 41 points (102-42 win)
Quilcene — 36 (74-31 win)
Quilcene — 14 (71-40 win)
Joyce — 19 (67-20 win)
Watson-Groen — 38 (114-48 win)
Darrington — 37 (67-50 win)
Joyce — 27 (103-29 win)
Clallam Bay — 16 (70-49 win)
Orcas Island — 30 (95-58 win)
Friday Harbor — 18 (64-38 win)
Skykomish — 19 (64-59 win)
Clallam Bay — 30 (71-40 win)
La Conner — 18 (53-49 loss)
Watson-Groen — 35 (86-29 win)
Darrington — 24 (76-52 win)
Orcas Island — 16 (84-49 win)
Friday Harbor — 21 (82-46 win)
Skykomish — 31 (78-76 win)
Bellevue Christian — 26 (106-46 win)
La Conner — 23 (54-50 loss)

Districts:

Skykomish — 19 (74-58 win)
Darrington — 48 (84-62 win)

State:

Ritzville — 31 (63-51 loss)
Kittitas — 27 (63-54 loss)

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   Wolf QB Hunter Downes, seen here last spring, is gunning for several career school marks. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, his primary target, also has his eye on busting records.

   Downes (his noggin protected from the blazing sun) strikes a pose at football camp last weekend. (Photo courtesy Downes)

The man in black (pants) fled into the record books, and the gunslinger followed.

As he prepares for his senior season, Coupeville High School quarterback Hunter Downes, the gunslinger in this story, is hot on the trail of his school’s QB records.

The man he’s pursuing is the guy helping shape him, Wolf offensive coordinator Brad Sherman, who threw for 3,613 yards and 33 touchdowns before graduating in 2003.

Downes, who opened spring practices with his teammates Tuesday, spent last weekend in Everett at a USA Football regional development camp.

The camp allows high school players to work on their skills and techniques with current NCAA coaches while also putting them in a pool for possible inclusion on the U.S. national team.

After missing all but two games of his sophomore year with an injury, Downes put up one of the best seasons in CHS history as a junior.

He threw for 1,569 yards and 17 touchdowns, missing the school’s single-season TD mark (18 by Joel Walstad in 2014) by a hair.

Downes did tie the school’s single-game TD record, dropping four against a tough Bellevue Christian defense on the road while playing on a slippery, rain-splattered turf.

That equaled a mark set by Wolf legend Corey Cross in 1971, and tied by Sherman in 2001.

With his precision passing, Downes helped his #1 target, fellow junior Hunter Smith, set school single-season records with 916 yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

The duo are ankling to shred the record board this fall, when they kick off their senior campaign Sept. 1 on the road against South Whidbey.

Downes, who has 1,841 yards and 18 TD’s in a little over a season of action, needs 1,773 yards and 16 TD’s as a senior to top Sherman’s career records.

Smith is even closer, with 1,335 yards and 13 TD’s in two seasons as a receiver.

He trails Chad Gale (1,345 and 17) by just 10 yards and four scores, while also needing three interceptions (he has 10 in his career) to pass Josh Bayne’s CHS career mark of 12.

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