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Posts Tagged ‘The Bucket’

Jack Porter heads off to retrieve The Bucket. (Bailey Thule photo)

It’s been six years.

No current Coupeville High School football player knows what it’s like to hoist The Bucket, as the Wolves have dropped four straight rivalry games to South Whidbey.

Toss in a pandemic-marred 2020 season in which the next-door neighbors didn’t play, and you have to go back to Sept. 1, 2017 for the last time CHS had bragging rights.

That night Hunter Downes tossed touchdown passes to Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, while Smith also broke off an 89-yard scoring run.

With Cameron Toomey-Stout picking off a pair of passes, and Jake Hoagland and Jake Pease recovering fumbles, Coupeville won 18-0, one of only two times when the big game has been a shutout.

The last Wolf team to claim The Bucket. (David Stern photo)

The Wolves, who won four of six Bucket games to kick off the Coupeville Sports era (2012-today), get another crack at the trophy this Friday, Sept. 8.

CHS heads down to Langley, with a 7:00 kickoff for the non-conference rumble.

Both teams enter play at 0-1, with Coupeville falling 28-25 on the final play of the game against Klahowya, while South Whidbey got smacked 35-20 by Friday Harbor in its opener.

Seniors Uriel Liquidano (63), Jacob Martin (32), and Clay Reilly (2) celebrate in 2016. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

For those who don’t know, this bucket we speak of is exactly what it sounds like.

Painted with Wolf colors on one side and Falcon colors on the other, it has been awarded to the winner of the rivalry game since athletic directors Willie Smith and John Patton created it in 2008.

Complete with a dent on one side, courtesy a South Whidbey coach unhappy about a loss, The Bucket lives at the winning school and is brought out for the game.

The “original” bucket once held licorice, but was filled with water by a Coupeville student, who dumped it on the South Whidbey crowd at a volleyball match, setting off a near-riot.

Looking to turn a negative into a positive, Smith and Patton transformed the weapon of mass hydration into a trophy.

Since then, Wolf coaches Tony Maggio and Jon Atkins have coached Coupeville to two wins apiece in The Bucket game, while current CHS head man Bennett Richter gets a second crack at making Falcon Nation cry.

Tony Maggio led Coupeville to two wins in the rivalry game. (Shawn Walstad photo)

 

For those keeping track, the history of The Bucket game:

2009 — SW 28-6
2010 — SW 33-7
2011 — SW 35-0
2012 — CHS 18-13
2013 — SW 57-33
2014 — CHS 35-28
2015 — SW 27-14
2016 — CHS 41-10
2017 — CHS 18-0
2018 — SW 48-20
2019 — SW 35-7
2020 — No game
2021 — SW 33-7
2022 — SW 47-28

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A Wolf cheerleader is ready to rock the joint at Friday’s Battle for the Bucket. (Photos by Helen Strelow and Jackie Saia)

She’s got skills.

Coupeville High School senior Helen Strelow is a top student, and an accomplished tennis and cross country athlete who has been to the state meet in the latter sport.

Now, camera in hand, she swings by to show off her photography bona fides, making an auspicious debut with her work at Friday’s football game between the Wolves and South Whidbey.

Offering up a mix of on field and off field action, Helen comes out of the gate strongly.

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Josh Upchurch was a force on the line Friday as Coupeville battled South Whidbey. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I’ve got fighters, man!”

It would have been easy for Coupeville High School football coach Bennett Richter to be upset Friday night, having been gut-punched by the refs en route to seeing his team fall 47-28 to visiting South Whidbey.

Instead, showing the grit and upbeat nature you hope to see in a young coach, he chose to look past the horror show which was the group in striped shirts, instead focusing on how his players responded to things beyond their control.

“I don’t have guys who quit, and they didn’t stop working at all,” Richter said. “Even when we were down two to three scores at the end, they kept playing and believing we could come back.

“At the end of the day, we move on to the next game against Sultan, then focus on winning a league title,” he added.

“I have faith in our guys, and after the effort I saw tonight, I’m feeling confident.”

Friday’s non-conference win lifts 1A South Whidbey to 2-0 and allows the Falcons to retain possession of The Bucket after garnering their fourth-straight win in the Island rivalry.

Meanwhile, the 2B Wolves, who were coming off of an emotional road win over Klahowya, drop to 1-1.

The tussle between next-door neighbors, which played out in front of an overflow crowd at Coupeville’s Mickey Clark Field, was closer than the score might indicate.

South Whidbey punched in an otherwise meaningless touchdown with just 29 seconds to play to stretch the final margin, and Coupeville was still within a single score early in the second half.

Now, it’s true the refs didn’t decide the game by themselves.

Coupeville had more than its share of big defensive plays, but also suffered too many breakdowns in the secondary, allowing the Falcons to pull off a string of long scoring plays.

But it’s also true the zebras made one of the more mystifying calls in recent memory, changing the entire flow of the game, and altering everything which came after.

The play in question came right at the end of the first half, with Coupeville up 14-12.

South Whidbey had a third-and-eight on the Wolf 14 with nine slim seconds to go before halftime and fired a pass over the middle.

A Falcon receiver snagged the airborne ball, pushed forward once, twice, but was stopped short of the goal line as time ran out.

Which sent Coupeville to the locker room on a serious high, its defense having denied a team a score on the final play of the first half for the second-straight week.

Except…

South Whidbey coach Luke Hodson, magnificently pleading his case like a southern preacher working the revival tent circuit, kept talking until the refs caved and put one second back on the clock.

The rationale offered was the Falcons hadn’t scored, but had reached a first down, which momentarily stops the clock in high school play.

Except…

If the clock ran out before the play was whistled dead, which it most assuredly did, there’s no time to go back on the clock.

Unless the refs just start making up stuff on the spot.

Coupeville, already in the locker room, was called back to the field, and in the confusion South Whidbey slammed the ball in from short range, before adding a two-point conversion.

Instead of holding a lead with all the momentum on their side, the Wolves, and their fans, and their coaches, and even a couple of deer watching from the nearby woods, were left puzzled and pissed.

Give South Whidbey credit, though.

Handed a chance to change the game, the Falcons did, scoring on that “extra” last play of the first half, before Lucas Taksony took the second-half kickoff to the house, motoring down the left side of the field for a game-busting score.

Now trailing 28-14, Coupeville didn’t break, however.

Scott Hilborn, a two-way star who puts extra pop in every play.

Scott Hilborn, who was a wild man on both sides of the ball all night, busted off a 65-yard touchdown run two plays later to cut the lead back to one score.

Then the Wolf senior came flying downfield on the ensuing kickoff, slid past a Falcon who neglected to pick up the ball, and gave CHS possession of the ball.

With the Coupeville cheerleaders rockin’ the joint, and Wolf fans finally making PA announcer Willie Smith proud by hitting the high decibels, there was a legitimate chance to make it a whole new game.

Bam, bam, back-to-back touchdowns, a tie game, and we’re ready to all forget about the smell of rotten eggs coming off the refs.

Except…

It wasn’t meant to be, as the Falcons stiffened, stopped Coupeville on a fourth-down run inside the 15-yard line, then immediately pulled off a touchdown on a pitch-and-pass play which put the ball in Elijah Dixon’s hands.

The South Whidbey senior outran the Wolf defense on a play which covered a solid 90 yards, and Coupeville would spend the remainder of the game at least two scores behind.

The Wolves got a fourth-quarter touchdown, with quarterback Logan Downes plunging into the end zone with his line clearing running room.

But down 40-28, CHS came up short on a fourth-down pass play from the six-yard line and the Falcons were able to burn off much of the final seven minutes with strong up-the-gut runs.

Coupeville started the game off strongly. Literally from the first play.

Daylon Houston snagged the opening kickoff and brought it back 40+ yards, one missed tackle away from finding the end zone just seconds into the rivalry game.

Dominic Coffman and Hilborn softened the defense up with smash-mouth runs, before Downes connected with Tim Ursu on a pretty, pretty 20-yard touchdown pass to open the scoring.

Coupeville’s quarterback, scrambling madly to his right, stayed one step ahead of his would-be tacklers, then dropped a perfect lob over the defense.

Ursu made the catch over his shoulder, juking his defender into the cheap seats, before rumbling in to deafening cheers from his highly active fan club.

With Houston tacking on the PAT, Coupeville was up 7-0 and came close to breaking off several more big plays before the first quarter was done.

Houston had another epic kickoff return, this one for a touchdown, only to have the play wiped out by a penalty called on his blockers.

Two plays later, Downes and Ursu connected on a 35-yard pass play, but the ball came free at the end of the run thanks to a ferocious hit from behind, slowing Coupeville’s roll.

Trailing 12-7 after twice preventing the Falcons from pulling off two-point conversions, Coupeville reclaimed the lead midway through the second period.

Hilborn capped an 11-play, 52-yard, five-minute-plus drive, plunging in from two yards out.

That brought Wolf Nation to its collective feet, though things would get a little more surreal and a lot less happy after that.

Though, even as the clock ran down, Coupeville was still playing at full intensity.

Coffman delivered one memorable run in which he whirled right, then left, then right again, rumbling down the sideline, knocking defender after defender backwards.

The audible pop of his pads shredding tacklers, as his feet churned, carrying him ever downfield, still echoed as fans exited the stadium.

Coupeville also dropped some tasty licks on defense, with Hilborn spending much of the night delivering haymakers as he dragged down guys trying, and failing, to run away from his patch of the gridiron.

Josh Upchurch, back in Cow Town after a year away, delivered an extra-nasty takedown on South Whidbey’s quarterback at one point, while William Davidson made his presence felt, one booming tackle at a time.

William “The Show Pony” Davidson, a wrecking machine.

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Dominic Coffman scored a touchdown and recovered a fumble in Coupeville’s opening win. (Photo courtesy Brent Coffman)

It started as a way to keep the peace.

When Coupeville High School and next-door neighbor South Whidbey clash on the gridiron, the winner walks away with The Bucket, a trophy created in 2008.

Ownership of the memento, which features the colors and logos for both the Wolves and Falcons, is a hotly contested affair.

In fact, one side of the trophy has a visible crunch on it, thanks to a losing coach who didn’t accept defeat with as much grace as they might have liked.

Along with getting to keep The Bucket, the winner inherits the right to deliver righteous smack talk, of course.

The latest clash between the Whidbey rivals arrives this Friday, Sept. 9, when Coupeville plays host to a match-up between undefeated teams.

Kick-off is 7 PM, and both the 2B Wolves and 1A Falcons enter the non-conference game with 1-0 records.

Coupeville beat Klahowya 41-21 on opening night, while South Whidbey drilled Friday Harbor 34-14.

For those who can’t be in town, the NFHS Network, which charges a fee, will stream the game at https://www.nfhsnetwork.com/.

And The Bucket?

It was the brainchild of two administrators looking for a positive outcome to a tense situation.

Senior captains (left to right) Uriel Liquidano, Jacob Martin, and Clay Reilly celebrate a rivalry game win in 2016. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith explains how it all began:

Ha ha … well, during a volleyball game at home against SW, one of our senior boys didn’t appreciate the cheering going on by the SW crowd.

So, this young man decided, erroneously and very immaturely, to take matters into his own hands.

He procured a licorice bucket, filled it with water, and proceeded to dump it on the SW crowd, who then chased him out of the gym and very nearly got into a brawl.

Said CHS student was suspended, and it almost got really ugly between the two schools.

So, John Patton (former SW AD) and myself decided to turn this negative event into a positive and came up with the idea to make the football game the “Bucket Game” and whomever won that game would keep the bucket for the year.

Thus, the annual Bucket Game began.

During the run of this blog, which launched in Aug. 2012, South Whidbey holds a 5-4 advantage, with no game being played in 2020 due to Covid.

The Wolves came out on top four times in six years between 2012-2017, with the Falcons now having won three straight games.

 

Results in the Coupeville Sports era:

2012 — CHS 18-13
2013 — SW 57-33
2014 — CHS 35-28
2015 — SW 27-14
2016 — CHS 41-10
2017 — CHS 18-0
2018 — SW 48-20
2019 — SW 35-7
2020 — No game
2021 — SW 33-7
2022 — ??

Summer workouts translate to fall success. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Mikey Robinett had a huge blocked kick Friday, but Coupeville fell 33-7 to arch-rival South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

When things changed, they changed fast.

And not in a good way.

For nearly 21 minutes Friday, the Coupeville High School football team battled host South Whidbey to a 7-7 stalemate.

Then the Falcons erupted for 26 unanswered points in a little over two minutes — including scoring touchdowns on three consecutive plays — and possession of The Bucket was ceded to the guys in blue and white.

Winning the battle of next-door neighbors 33-7, South Whidbey improves to 2-0 on the young season, while sending Coupeville to an 0-2 start.

The victory is the third-straight in the series for the Falcons, after the Wolves won four of the previous six clashes.

In the Coupeville Sports era (2012-2021), South Whidbey leads 5-4, with no game played in 2020 due to Covid.

The Wolves last gridiron win over the Falcons came 1,471 days ago, way back on September 1, 2017.

Though, at least for a bit Friday, it looked like that might change.

Coupeville got on the board first, and did so impressively, burning seven-and-a-half minutes off the clock on the game’s opening drive.

After losing yardage on each of the game’s first three plays, the Wolves struck paydirt when quarterback Cole Hutchinson hit running back Tim Ursu with a pass over the middle.

Ursu, shedding would-be tacklers with each step, picked up most of the 26 yards CHS gained on the play after the catch.

That triggered the Wolf offense, which mixed in runs from Hutchinson, Jonathan Valenzuela, and Scott Hilborn to keep the chains moving.

Hilborn broke free coming around the left side, rumbling like a freight train moving downhill, and bolted in from 15 yards out to get the first points on the board.

Tack on a majestic PAT from Wolf kicker Daylon Houston, and Coupeville was up 7-0 at the 4:30 mark of the first quarter, with a well-rested defense yet to see the field.

While the visitors milked the clock, South Whidbey chose to strike fast on its own opening drive, however.

Holding on to the ball on a quarterback keeper, Falcon senior Ryan Morgan sliced through the CHS defense on his team’s third play, taking off on a 57-yard romp to the end zone.

Boom, and just like that, the battle for Island supremacy looked like it might go a lot like Coupeville’s season opener, when the Wolves combined with Klahowya to put up 81 points.

Except, both offenses stalled out for the next 12 minutes and change, and the game was still knotted at 7-7 late in the second quarter.

At which point everything which could go wrong for Coupeville did.

First, Morgan slipped a touchdown pass into a receiver’s arms with 3:11 left in the half, after having way too much time to scramble.

Then, after South Whidbey whiffed on the extra point, it made up for the miscue by recovering an onside kick to get the ball right back.

While Coupeville fans righteously screamed about a Falcon who was blatantly offsides on the play — which should have denied the turnover — South Whidbey marched 46 yards down the field.

Morgan’s second touchdown pass, launched at the 1:31 mark, punctured Coupeville’s dreams, then the next two plays thoroughly deflated any lingering hopes.

South Whidbey scored touchdowns on Coupeville’s next two offensive plays, courtesy a pick-six interception and a fumble recovery, and Wolf fans were left with little to cheer for except the possibility of rain to wash away the suddenly-ugly scene.

Trailing 33-7, after surrendering 26 points in two minutes and 13 seconds of on-field action, CHS was left to scrape together what highlights it could.

Wolf junior Dominic Coffman ripped a pass out of the air, collecting his third interception of the season on the final play of the first half.

Jump forward to the second half, and you could praise Logan Downes, who busted off a big run on a quarterback scramble.

As well as hail the duo of Mikey Robinett and Kevin Partida, who teamed up for a late defensive gem.

With South Whidbey punting, Robinett crashed hard and blocked the kick with his body.

The Falcons recovered the ball, but Partida, coming in like a heat-seeking missile, made the tackle to complete the beat-down and hand the ball back to the Wolves.

Coupeville hits the road again next week, traveling to Port Townsend Sept. 17 to face East Jefferson — the new Chimacum/Port Townsend hybrid — in another non-conference game.

The first of four Northwest 2B/1B League games for the Wolves is the following Friday, when La Conner comes to Whidbey.

With an already-thin roster — Coupeville had 21 players to South Whidbey’s 31 — the Wolves took a major hit Friday when two-way lineman Zane Oldenstadt broke his left arm.

Zane Oldenstadt

The arm in question. (Photo courtesy Michelle Glass)

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