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Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photo)

Stats are a tricky business.

Whether they’re being recorded with pen and paper on the sidelines, or off of game film later, one thing remains constant.

Every player is dang sure their numbers should be higher than what the stat sheets show.

To which I say, hey, it is what it is.

The stats below, which document Coupeville High School’s gridiron progress through three weeks, come with a couple of caveats.

One, if tackles seem a bit low, it’s because no totals have been posted for the La Conner game (at least not on MaxPreps or Hudl).

And two, if you disagree with your stats, talk to your coaches.

Me? I’m just the messenger, not the stat keeper.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 12-30 for 276 yards (#2 in league) with 3 TD and 4 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 8 receptions for 210 yards (#1 in league)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3-57
Jake Hoagland 1-9

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 25 carries for 159 yards
Clay Reilly 24-134
Smith 17-32
Chris Battaglia 7-10
Matt Hilborn 4-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 15-(-26)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 478
Reilly 162
Martin 159
C. Toomey-Stout 68
Hilborn 48
Battaglia 10
Sean Toomey-Stout 10
Hoagland 9

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 250
Smith 242
Martin 159
Reilly 134
C. Toomey-Stout 57
Battaglia 10
Hoagland 9
Hilborn 3

Touchdowns:

Smith 4 (tied for #4 in league)
Downes 2
Martin 2
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 7 (#2 in league)

Points:

Smith 24 (tied for #4 in league)
Reilly
13
Downes
12
Martin
12

Defense:

Tackles:

Martin 15
Smith 14
Reilly 12
Teo Keilwitz 10
C. Toomey-Stout 8
Battaglia 7
Julian Welling 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
S. Toomey-Stout 6
Jacob Zettle
6
Dane Lucero
5
Hilborn
4
James Vidoni 3
Shane Losey 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (tied for #1 in league)
Liquidano 1
Martin 1

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #2 in league)
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Fumble Recoveries:

Reilly 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 14 for 585 yards (#1 in league)

Punts:

Reilly 9 for 308 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 8 for 219 yards (#2 in league)
Hilborn 3-45
Reilly 3-28
C. Toomey-Stout 2-11
Pacquette-Pilgrim 2-0

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Uriel Liquidano was one of several Wolves who made big plays in Saturday's big win. (John Fisken photo)

   Uriel Liquidano had six tackles and a sack in Coupeville’s 41-10 win over South Whidbey. (John Fisken photos)

Jacob Martin rambled for 129 yards in week one, most by any player from the Olympic/Nisqually League.

   Jacob Martin rushed for 129 yards in week one, most by any player suiting up for an Olympic/Nisqually League team.

The Wolves are off to a great start.

Of the eight football teams who make up the Olympic/Nisqually League, only two won on opening night.

One was perennial state title contender Cascade Christian and the other was Coupeville.

After rocking arch-rival South Whidbey 41-10 to reclaim The Bucket, the Wolves are dominating on the stat sheets, as well.

They currently have the top player in nine different categories among league teams who have reported stats to MaxPreps.com.

Of all the leaders, maybe the most impressive is Clay Reilly, who recorded 365 yards on eight kickoffs.

That puts him #1 in league, #1 in 1A and #2 among all 30 kickers in the state who have reported stats.

The only booter ahead of him is Jack Clayville of 3A Mercer Island (434 yards on nine kicks), and he had an extra chance to unleash his foot.

Where Reilly and his teammates sit after week one, as reported by CHS coaches:

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 4-8 for 98 yards (#3 in league) with 2 TD and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 4 receptions for 98 yards (#1 in league)

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 11 carries for 129 yards (#1 in league)
Clay Reilly 5-33
Chris Battaglia 6-5
Smith 5-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 4-(-13)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 202
Martin 129
Reilly 61
Battaglia 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Martin 129 (#4 in league)
Smith 101
Downes 85
Reilly 33
Battaglia 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 3 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin 2 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 1 (tied for #5 in league)

PATs:

Reilly 5 (#1 in league)

Points:

Smith 18 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin
12 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 6
Reilly 5

Defense:

Tackles:

Teo Keilwitz 7
Martin 7
Smith 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
Reilly 6
Battaglia 5
Julian Welling
5
Cameron Toomey-Stout
4
Sean Toomey-Stout
3
James Vidoni
3
Jacob Zettle
3
Shane Losey
1
Dane Lucero
1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (#1 in league)
Liquidano 1 (tied for #2 in league)
Martin 1 (tied for #2 in league)

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #1 in league)

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 8 for 365 yards (#1 in league/#2 in entire state)

Punts:

Reilly 2 for 36 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 2 for 84 yards (#1 in league)
Reilly 3-28

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Ian Smith (right) imparts wisdom to one of his succesors, Aaron Trumbull, in 2012. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Ian Smith (right) imparts wisdom to one of his successors, Aaron Trumbull, while coaching American Legion ball in 2012. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Erik King

Homer-happy Erik King takes the field in 2010. (Amy King photo)

The base-knocks never stopped landing.

Look back at the last three decades of Coupeville High School baseball and no team has put together an offensive run to equal what the 2010 squad accomplished.

They weren’t the most successful Wolf team in terms of record or postseason accomplishments.

Didn’t make it to state. Didn’t win a league title. Finished at dead .500 with a 12-12 mark.

And yet that last sentence is deceiving.

The reality is Willie Smith’s squad played superb ball at times, but faced a truly brutal year as the smallest school in a tough 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

The Wolves finished fourth in the league standings at 8-9, a full four games ahead of South Whidbey, the only other 1A league school playing baseball at the time.

King’s used to sit the hardball season out back in the day, leaving the Wolves and Falcons to tangle with the five 2A schools.

Archbishop Thomas Murphy and its rotating band of future college players and MLB draftees went 22-4 and finished 3rd at state in the 2A tourney, while Cedarcrest finished 15-5.

While the 2016 Wolves snapped a 25-year dry spell and won the 1A Olympic League title, it’s hard to really compare their three foes (Klahowya, Port Townsend, Chimacum) to the razor-tipped romp through a no-man’s land Coupeville “enjoyed” in its old league.

Having survived the trek, CHS split four postseason games, beating Lynden Christian 6-4 and Nooksack Valley 10-9, while falling to Meridian 7-1 and (in what became the season finale) Seattle Christian 8-7.

Meridian went on to claim 3rd at the 1A state tourney.

But while their record, as hard-earned as it was, may not be an all-time best, the Wolves were a force to be reckoned with at the plate.

Coupeville had five All-Conference players in ’10, with infielder JD Wilcox landing on the First Team and Ian Smith (P), Chase Griffin (C), Chad Brookhouse (INF) and Erik King (OF) Second-Teamers.

The Wolves were a veteran group that year, with seven seniors in their lineup (though Jason Bagby missed a huge chunk of time) as one era closed out.

That summer a group of Central Whidbey Little League players like Ben Etzell and Morgan Payne won a state title and they joined the high school program almost en masse the next year.

And promptly got beat on for awhile by the 2A powers and their junior and senior-heavy rosters.

But in 2010, Coupeville claimed as many grizzled vets as any team, and they swung the bat like no Wolf team in memory.

The stats are uncanny, frankly.

The top four single-season highs for hits by an individual CHS player in the last 30 years all came that season, and the Wolves hit for average and power.

Wilcox, a certified star, was exactly that, but Coupeville also got career-best work from Brookhouse, a tough-nosed journeyman, and a surprising power show from a slightly unexpected source.

King is not a big, burly dude, but he had exceptional bat quickness and a well-honed eye and used both to pace the team in home runs and slugging percentage.

League titles are not to be sneezed at, and state trophies (like the 3rd place one nabbed by the ’87 CHS squad) live forever, but don’t sleep on the 2010 Wolves.

They blew up the scoreboard and should be remembered for all they accomplished.

Take a look at their plate stats, then tip your hat to the greatest offensive show the prairie may have ever seen.

The stats:

Player AB Runs Hits 1B 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. Slug.
Griffin 68 28 22 19 2 1 9 20 10 .324 .397
Smith 78 23 30 19 8 2 1 7 8 22 .385 .577
Wilcox 78 31 31 22 6 2 1 12 12 18 .397 .564
King 66 19 27 20 4 3 3 15 20 .409 .606
B-house 70 20 32 26 4 2 2 10 32 .457 .600
Bagby 15 5 6 4 2 3 3 7 .400 .533
Eaton 68 12 22 17 5 1 9 16 .324 .397
McClain 67 8 17 17 2 10 10 .254 .254
Wheat 59 7 12 10 2 6 5 .203 .237
Thurman 50 6 12 10 2 3 4 8 .241 .281
Bodamer 5 1 1
Sele 3
Chan 9 1 1 1 2 .111 .111
Carlson 1
McCormick 1
Gooch 1
TOTALS 639 159 212 165 35 4 8 42 99 151 .332 .437

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Hailey Hammer (John Fisken photo)

Hailey Hammer hauls in a throw at first. (John Fisken photo)

Vidoni

   Monica Vidoni (back row, second from left) and her teammates celebrate after winning four of six games this past weekend. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

The games are getting bigger and bigger.

As college baseball and softball teams work their way towards the postseason, four Coupeville High School grads are in the thick of things.

A quick look at the stats for the former Wolves (in alphabetic order):

Ben Etzell — Sophomore at Saint John’s University (Minnesota)

The Johnnies are 25-10 with one regular-season doubleheader left before starting postseason tourney play.

On the mound, Etzell is 2-1 with 32 strikeouts in 35.1 innings, while at the plate he’s racked up six hits (including two doubles), seven runs and four RBI.

Hailey Hammer — Freshman at Everett Community College

The Trojans are 14-14 with eight regular season games left to play.

Hammer has 13 hits (including a double and a home run), seven runs and six RBI.

Madeline Roberts — Sophomore at Shoreline Community College

The Dolphins are 10-12, with 10 more games on the regular season schedule.

Roberts has slapped seven hits (including a double), scored four times, stolen four bags and knocked in a run.

Monica Vidoni — Freshman at Rainy River Community College (Minnesota)

The Voyageurs are 26-11, and, having finished as runner-ups in the Northern Division tourney over the weekend, are now off to the Region 13B tourney starting Friday.

Vidoni is hitting .310 with 18 hits, 16 runs, seven walks and 11 RBI.

She’s also shown a knack for picking up extra bases, with three home runs and a pair of doubles in her first season of college ball.

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Gavin Keohane (John Fisken photos)

Gavin Keohane is one of only three Wolves to score 300+ points in two separate seasons in the last 25 years. The other two are Rich Morris and Mike Bagby. (John Fisken photos)

Mike Bagby, your CHS single game and career scoring leader -- at least over the past 25 years.

   Mike Bagby, your CHS single game and career scoring leader — at least from 1991 to present.

Twenty years and no one has touched Pete Petrov.

Way back in the 1995-96 high school basketball season, the Coupeville High School gunner, who was a junior at the time, threw down 442 points over 25 games.

Petrov, who rang up 917 points in four years as a Wolf, was remarkably consistent that season, scoring in double figures in every single game, with highs of 29 against Nooksack Valley and 27 against Sultan.

And those two games? Both playoff contests, reinforcing his rep as a big-game performer.

Why do I bring this up?

Mainly because I spent a good chunk of Saturday buried in old score-books, thanks to former CHS hoops guru Randy King.

The school doesn’t have any kind of glossy record board for basketball, like it does with track, football or volleyball, and the records are just floating out there in the haze.

King, after much harassment from me, managed to find 17 score-books from his 20-year career as the head coach of the Wolf boys’ program (1991-92 to 2010-11).

Thanks to Jim Waller at the Whidbey News-Times, we’ve since added one of the missing seasons.

And what I did learn after crawling through page after page of handwritten history?

Well, that my eyes may never uncross, but also that I now can rattle off all sorts of scoring stats until your eyes cross as well.

While we have to hedge our bets slightly with the two missing score-books, I can pretty confidently state that:

Petrov has the single best single-season scoring totals in the last 25 years, but Mike Bagby has the single-best game (34 at Orcas on Jan. 6, 2006) and the most career points.

Technically, if we go off only the 17 books I have, Petrov edges Bagby 917-915, with Arik Garthwaite hot on their heels at 867.

But, and it’s a huge but, one of the missing books is from 2003-2004, Bagby’s sophomore season.

And, since I know from previous research he was a First-Team All-Northwest League pick that year, it’s safe to say he scored more than the necessary three points to overtake Petrov.

But hey, it wouldn’t be Coupeville if at least part of the school’s athletic history wasn’t lost or missing.

So, keeping in mind this is close, but not 100%, marinate in some Wolf hoops history, one bucket at a time.

Best single game performance (1991-present):

Mike Bagby 34 vs. Orcas (04-05)
Gabe McMurray 33 vs. Sultan (94-95)
Mike Bagby 32 vs. Mount Vernon Christian (04-05)
Mike Bagby 32 vs. South Whidbey (05-06)
Arik Garthwaite 32 vs. Mount Vernon Christian (97-98)
Gavin Keohane 32 vs. Granite Falls (98-99)
JJ Marti 32 vs. Darrington (05-06)
Mike Bagby 30 vs. Shoreline Christian (04-05)
Brad Sherman 30 vs. Bush (02-03)

Best single season performances (1991-present):

Pete Petrov 442 (95-96)
Arik Garthwaite 423 (97-98)
Mike Bagby 414 (04-05)
Brad Sherman 396 (02-03)
Cody Peters 380 (08-09)
Gavin Keohane 374 (97-98)
Mike Bagby 364 (05-06)
Gabe McMurray 355 (94-95)
Virgil Roehl 341 (92-93)
Pat Bennett 340 (99-00)

And (pretty much) everyone who scored during the Randy King era:

1991-1992:

Virgil Roehl 189
Troy Blouin 115
Kit Manzanares 92
Brandon Huff 84
Jason McManigle 70
Jason McDavid 62
Ross Buckner 52
Danny Bonacci 36
Scott Sollars 28
Matt Douglas 20
Boom Phomvongkoth 18
Erik Anderson 8
Tracy Wilson 3
Jeremy McCormick 2

1992-1993:

Virgil Roehl 341
Brandon Huff 161
Troy Blouin 141
Brad Miller 66
Kit Manzanares 60
Boom Phomvongkoth 55
Ryan McManigle 39
Jason McManigle 31
Ross Buckner 25
Chris Cox 20
Gabe McMurray 2

1993-1994:

Brad Miller 238
Gabe McMurray 235
Chris Cox 157
Virgil Roehl 141
Kit Manzanares 123
Boom Phomvongkoth 100
Matt Ortega 75
Ryan McManigle 65
Pete Petrov 13
Bill Hamilton 5
Michael Vaughan 4
Chris Locke 2
Dennis Terrell 2

1994-1995:

Gabe McMurray 355
Brad Miller 222
Pete Petrov 188
Arik Garthwaite 109
Boom Phomvongkoth 102
Mike Vaughan 62
Ryan McManigle 44
Jeremy Staples 23
Keith Dunnagan 19
Greg White 18
Bill Hamilton 6

1995-1996:

Pete Petrov 442
Rich Morris 328
Greg White 194
Nick Sellgren 190
Arik Garthwaite 176
Mike Vaughan 162
Bryan Hamilton 43
Jeremy Staples 39
Keith Dunnagan 23
Christian Lyness 18
Gary Boyke 17
Christian Townsdin 5
Teo Benson 2
Scott Stuurmans 2

1996-1997:

Rich Morris 309
Pete Petrov 274
Nick Sellgren 216
Arik Garthwaite 159
Greg White 131
Mike Vaughan 109
Christian Lyness 77
Dennis Terrell 55
Christian Townsdin 25
Scott Stuurmans 13
Gavin Keohane 3
Jerry Helm 1

1997-1998:

Arik Garthwaite 423
Gavin Keohane 374
Greg White 261
Scott Stuurmans 173
Christian Townsdin 86
Bryan Hamilton 56
Caesar Kortuem 52
Jerry Helm 47
Andrew Cashen 8
Pat Bennett 6
Ben Hancock 5

1998-1999:

Gavin Keohane 300
Pat Bennett 201
Matt Frost 108
Caesar Kortuem 98
Ty Blouin 94
Andrew Cashen 76
Ben Hancock 58
Jim Marti 35
Joe Donellon 26
Chris Good 21
Noah Roehl 11
Joe Kelley 2

1999-2000:

Pat Bennett 340
Caesar Kortuem 219
Matt Frost 182
Ty Blouin 163
Noah Roehl 129
Joe Donellon 75
Jason Fisher 71
Chris Good 43
Marvin Mitchell 18
Travis Hooker 10
Geoff Hageman 8
Andrew Cashen 3
Matt Helm 1

2000-2001:

Chris Good 305
Brad Sherman 203
Noah Roehl 161
Pat Bennett 112
Ty Blouin 112
Sean Callahan 98
Geoff Hageman 56
Matt Helm 56
Joe Kelley 47
Erick Harada 40
James Meek 39
Rob Blouin 18

2001-2002:

MISSING

2002-2003:

Brad Sherman 396
Brian Fakkema 271
Casey Clark 256
Mike Bagby 137
James Jorgenson 40
Daniel McDonald 28
Joe Rojas 28
Scott Fisher 19
Blake Day 18
JJ Marti 12
Daniel Graham 9
JD Myers 5
Eric Taylor 3

2003-2004:

MISSING

2004-2005:

Mike Bagby 414
Blake Day 188
JJ Marti 174
Andrew Mouw 173
Trevor Tucker 113
Trent Diamanti 23
Trevor Mueller 22
Brad Rogers 15
Ryan Kelley 7
Mike Duke 3
Eddie Fasolo 3
Stephen Stietenroth 2

2005-2006:

Mike Bagby 364
JJ Marti 190
Kramer O’Keefe 186
Brian Miller 157
James Smith 93
Casey Larson 83
Ryan Kelley 26
Mike Duke 24
Tony Prosser 20
Kyle King 9
Alex Evans 5

2006-2007:

Brian Miller 251
Kramer O’Keefe 215
James Smith 178
Casey Larson 164
Alex Evans 93
Trevor Tucker 81
Quinten Farmer 75
Tony Prosser 50
Jordan Emerson 20
Zepher Loesch 12
Geoff Wacker 8
Brian Folkestad 7

2007-2008:

Kramer O’Keefe 235
Brian Miller 189
Alex Evans 174
Zepher Loesch 151
Cody Peters 138
James Smith 111
Geoff Wacker 49
JD Wilcox 36
Jason Bagby 18
Zeb Williams 7
Hunter Hammer 4
DJ Kim 3

2008-2009:

Cody Peters 380
Hunter Hammer 208
Jason Bagby 193
JD Wilcox 176
Zepher Loesch 111
Geoff Wacker 97
Tim Walstad 59
Zeb Williams 28
Tyler King 20
Matt Petrich 19
Chad Brookhouse 16
DJ Kim 10
Ian Smith 9
Erik King 7

2009-2010:

Hunter Hammer 302
Jason Bagby 288
JD Wilcox 161
Chad Brookhouse 147
Ian Smith 119
Tim Walstad 109
Erik King 54
Tyler King 48
Ben Hayes 19
Nevin Miranda 2
Dalton Engle 2

2010-2011:

Ben Hayes 287
Hunter Hammer 245
Tyler King 202
Ian Smith 196
Dalton Engle 46
Nevin Miranda 38
Mitch Pelroy 14
Nic Anthony 5
Scott Davidson 5

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