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Posts Tagged ‘The Bucket’

Jon Atkins patrols the sideline during an Oak Harbor High School girls' basketball game. (John Fisken photos)

   Jon Atkins will do double-duty, coaching football at Coupeville, while staying on as girls basketball coach at Oak Harbor. (John Fisken photo)

One part Wolf, one part Wildcat.

Jon Atkins will be balancing two schools, two teams and two towns from this point on, after being offered the head football coaching job at Coupeville High School.

While it won’t be official until the school board approves the hire at their next meeting June 27, Atkins met his new players Thursday and will run spring practices.

Taking the Wolf job, which opened up when Brett Smedley left after one season to return to Columbia River, his alma mater, Atkins will let go of his current football job — defensive coordinator for Oak Harbor.

But while he’ll be running the CHS football program, he will also remain at OHHS as a teacher and as the varsity girls’ basketball coach.

Atkins has coached in Oak Harbor the last four years.

Before that he did a stint in the U.S. Army and spent a year as an intern strength and conditioning coach at Washington State University.

The gridiron has always been important to Atkins, both as a player and coach.

“I played football since I was a young boy,” he said. “It was always a part of my life.”

After four years of high school ball, he played two years at Yuba Community College in California.

Coming out of the Army, Atkins attended Western Washington University, majoring in kinesiology.

That led him to Wazzu, before he took a detour into the world of high school athletics, getting his teaching degree along the way.

Working under Jay Turner in Oak Harbor, Atkins has been part of a successful program, one which he will still hold near and dear.

“The highlights of the program have to be the relationships that were built with the players and coaches,” Atkins said. “That I can say that the coaches and players did things the right way, even when faced with some tough decisions, we always did things right.”

He picks a playoff win over Kennedy Catholic in 2014 as a particular high point.

“One of my more memorable memories,” Atkins said. “The team really came together.”

When the Coupeville job came on the market — he will be the school’s fourth head coach in seven seasons after Ron Bagby put in a quarter-center at the helm of the Wolves — Atkins saw a chance to recapture what he experienced as a young athlete.

“I am from a small school, my alma mater has about 450 students,” Atkins said. “My former coach, Scott Turner, and Defensive Coordinator Ryan Reynolds, took that team and built a program that is respected throughout Northern California.

“More importantly, he (Turner) had a huge impact on the community and every player on his team,” he added. “I saw the CHS job as a way for me to make the same kind of impact on Central Whidbey as he did in my small town of Sutter, California.”

While he’s been on the job less than 24 hours, Atkins likes what he sees.

Coupeville went 1-9 last season, but returns a fair chunk of its starters.

That includes Hunter Smith, who owns the school single-season interception record, both players who saw time at QB a year ago — Hunter Downes and Gabe Eck — defensive whirlwinds Uriel Liquidano and Chris Battaglia, All-League punter Clay Reilly and durable running back Jacob Martin.

“I think that there is a lot of potential with this group,” Atkins said. “There are some very skilled players returning from last year’s team. They looked eager to get better and they are committed.”

The new coach plans to build around five core covenants — Commitment, Family, Toughness, Leadership, and Competition — and his new players seem eager to buy in.

“I spoke with the seniors that were out there and they seemed on board with those covenants and are going to work very hard to leave a legacy after they are gone,” Atkins said.

Goal one? An opening night win at home against arch-rival South Whidbey.

“The players and I were on the same page of returning The Bucket back to its rightful home on September 2nd.”

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Wolf seniors-to-be (l to r) Clay Reilly, Jacob Martin, Uriel Liquidano, Ethan Marx and Jonathan Thurston. (Kalia Littlejohn photo)

   Wolf seniors-to-be (l to r) Clay Reilly, Jacob Martin, Uriel Liquidano, Ethan Marx and Jonathan Thurston. (Kalia Littlejohn photo)

Football’s back, at least for a few days.

Spring practice kicked off Wednesday, and returning Coupeville High School players were out on the practice field after school.

Without an official head coach, but with high hopes intact.

The Wolves, who open the season Sept. 2 at home against South Whidbey, will be playing for their third coach in as many seasons — once that coach is actually hired.

With the departure of Brett Smedley (he left after one season to take a coordinator job at Columbia River), players who will be a junior this fall will have played for a different head coach every year in high school.

After two years of playing twice against league rivals, they’ll also face a twist in the schedule, with the Olympic League and Nisqually League having formed a super league for football.

Coupeville will play three non-conference foes, then seven league games, with Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya now joined by Cascade Christian, Vashon Island, Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright Academy.

But a new coach and the schedule are thoughts for tomorrow.

For now, the focus is on putting in work under assistant coach Ryan King (a candidate for the head job), and turning things around after last fall’s 1-9 season.

Some thoughts from day one:

Ryan King:

We had 27 kids show up today, not including the incoming freshman, and a few others who couldn’t make it due to legion baseball and what not.

But those kids are determined, they put in the work today and their mindset isn’t on who will be the next head coach but their focus is on game number one.

They want to be the best and they want to make a difference. They want to compete for a league title.

I have an amazing group of kids.

From the seniors to the juniors to the sophomores and I know a lot of the freshman coming up; I am so proud of what I saw today from them.

Whoever will be the next head coach is gonna have a great group of athletes.

If I get the position, awesome, I’m honored.

If not, then at least I got these kids ready.

Jonathan Thurston (senior):

We’re seniors and we’re gonna try to do better then last year.

I’m excited to play at home to win The Bucket; it’s gonna be a great game.

Going into this new league is gonna be interesting, but fun to play different schools than what we’re used to.

I could not ask for better players to be side by side with on that field and senior year is gonna be a blast!

Jacob Martin (senior):

We have strong returners from Clay, Uriel, Mitchell Carroll, me and Jon.

It’s all about the players, and how much work they’ve put in during the off-season.

No coach, no problem!

I personally think this team will be special, despite being delayed without a coach, or low expectations from others. We genuinely have seniors who will unite this team.

Uriel Liquidano (senior):

To start, I want to say that it’s going to be a great season and I have a strong feeling that we are going to do good.

It sucks we won’t have Smedley next year but who ever is going to be the new head coach I’m sure he’ll do good.

This coming football year I’m going to be a senior so I’m going to have to GIVE IT ALL I HAVE for my team, my family, my town.

It’s going to be a good year!

We’re going to lead this town together. Give it all we have. And yes, beat South Whidbey here on our game field and take that bucket back.

Clay Reilly (senior):

The goals I have in mind for this upcoming football season are beating South Whidbey at home, fighting until the end against every team we face and hopefully winning league.

I’m so stoked to play football as a senior and leading the team into every game.

With finding a new coach, I hope us seniors find common ground and excel with what he wants to do with this great program.

This new league is a whole bunch of new challenges and I think it will make us better individually and as a unit. I want this season to be one I can look back on throughout the rest of my life.

Gabe Eck (sophomore):

The goals for this year would be to definitely beat South Whidbey and improve and build on what we had from the season before.

With the league bigger we’re going to have to be in the weight room all summer and come out bigger, faster, and stronger.

Ethan Marx (senior):

I’d like to add, we play as a team, and that our team remains a family no matter what happens on or off the field!

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Jacob Martin, seen here stuffing a runner during a summer scrimmage, was electric Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Martin, seen here stuffing a runner during a scrimmage, was electric Friday, with a sack, an interception and a fumble recovery for a touchdown. (John Fisken photo)

The set-up was strong, but they just couldn’t quite stick the landing.

An opportunistic, big-play defense that had its fuse lit by an electrifying performance from Jacob Martin, kept things close, but too many bobbled opportunities in the fourth quarter Friday sent the Coupeville High School football squad to a 27-14 loss.

The defeat, coming on the road at the hands of Island rival South Whidbey, forced the Wolves to relinquish The Bucket.

After a year of bliss in Cow Town, the trophy will now live in captivity in Langley, a town that couldn’t even keep its scoreboard powered on opening night.

And we’re gonna get to the game, but seriously, you charge people $6 a pop and then have no programs for the fans?

You massacre a recorded version of the national anthem by playing it through a 25-cent sound system that faded in and out, all but begging for a mercy killing?

And where to start with the scoreboard, which sputtered through two quarters, went cold and dark for the entire third quarter, then managed to get back up to about 9% operating capability in the fourth?

But hey, whoever was operating it managed to keep the clock wildly running in the final quarter long after penalty flags should have killed things, tearing away 10-20 seconds from Coupeville at a burst while blind, timid refs stared at their feet, unable to get up the gumption to make a correction.

Joel Norris weeps.

But anyway. Ignore the fact South Whidbey was not remotely ready to host a football game — they do have a teacher’s strike going on, so I like to think there was one lunch lady pulling mad overtime trying to run concessions and the scoreboard at the same time.

So, it’s possible “Myrtle” kept on unhooking the power cord for the scoreboard every time she powered up the microwave. Fair enough.

In the midst of the madness, however, two fairly young football teams put on a decent show, with Coupeville’s defense the big star for much of the night.

Repeatedly South Whidbey drove deep into enemy territory in the first half, and every single time the Wolves refused to bend.

Martin got things rocking with a pretty, pretty interception, snaring a ball that popped up off of a Falcon shoulder pad, then Wolf teammate Hunter Smith pulled off his own pick to bring a skidding halt to another drive.

With neither offense unable to break through, Martin seized the day with a vengeance.

A play after South Whidbey had pulled off a long catch and run to shove the Wolf “D” back on its heels, Martin exploded in from the side and snatched up a fumble.

Stumblin’ and rumblin’ down the sidelines, he left the Falcons clutching at air as he brought the ball back 65 yards for the first score of the season.

After Zane Bundy tacked on the extra point, Coupeville seemed poised to head into the halftime locker room up 7-0 and rolling.

But the first mistake reared its head when a Wolf receiver was nabbed near the end zone with a mere eight ticks on the clock (yes, at that point the scoreboard was 75% functional…).

While it looked like he was out past the line, the refs awarded South Whidbey with a safety, cutting the lead to 7-2.

Still, the Wolves seemed to be in command, and stayed that way until a sensational diving TD catch in the end zone gave the Falcons the lead midway through the third quarter.

Coupeville’s offense was seriously sputtering as the scoreboard loomed like a giant blank slate in the third, but an interception by Clay Reilly and a blow-em-up sack in the backfield by Martin kept the Falcons from adding to their lead.

And then it happened, the break-through play that could have spurred an epic win. Except it didn’t.

Senior Jordan Ford, a transfer playing his first-ever game in the same Wolf uniform that many of his relatives once wore, made off with a fumble and bolted nearly the length of the field, cartwheeling into the end zone and sending the packed visitors bleachers into a frenzy.

But then the frenzy faded as quickly as it hit, as the game-changing touchdown was called back, victim to a penalty whistled on one of Ford’s blockers.

A little bit of the life went out of the Wolves after that, and yet, even though they continued to stall out on offense, the score stayed 9-7 until the final six minutes.

Then, for the first time, a tired Coupeville defense softened just a bit, and the Falcons took advantage, slashing away for three scores on the ground in a four-and-a-half-minute surge.

With the game gone, the Wolves did find some final bits of redemption in the waning moments, with CJ Smith striking twice.

Sophomore QB Hunter Downes hooked up with the senior receiver on an 80-yard scoring strike, then Bundy pulled off a successful onside kick that Smith beat the Falcons to, snaring the ball while hurtling around like a madly-bouncing pinball.

It wasn’t enough to completely save the day, but it showed a team that was willing to fight until the final gun, a positive sign as Coupeville goes forward.

The Wolves play their first four games on the road, and, if the first game was any indication, they will be a dangerous team when they get all the wrinkles worked out.

Their defense, in particular, is a hard-hitting assault team, anchored by seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley.

I didn’t see a win Friday, but I did see potential.

Can’t say the same for the folks operating South Whidbey’s stadium.

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James Vidoni

James Vidoni (John Fisken and Monica Vidoni photos)

James Vidoni’s big day is a big day for all of Wolf Nation.

As the Coupeville High School sophomore celebrates his birthday today, he and his teammates will kick-off a new football season tonight.

And, of course, it’s no mere game, as the Wolves invade Langley to clash with their Island arch-rivals, South Whidbey (7 PM).

At stake? The Bucket (which CHS has held for the last year), another year of bragging rights and the chance to make the Southenders weep salty tears of despair.

Before he hops on the bus, possibly riding a sugar high from cake, we want to take a moment to pay tribute to Mr. Vidoni.

A three-sport athlete for Coupeville (football, basketball, baseball) and younger brother of former Wolf Monica Vidoni, James is a quiet, let’s-go-hit-someone kind of guy.

So, exactly the sort of dude most coaches like.

As he continues to grow and come into his own as an athlete, the future is bright for Vidoni and we wish him all the best, on the field and off.

Happy birthday, James!

Now, go make some Falcons cry.

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(JOhn Fisken photos)

Lathom Kelley, ready to hit some folks. (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Griggs

Ryan Griggs stays busy by firing off a few hundred push-ups.

Wiley Hesselgrave

Wiley Hesselgrave (right) goes low to snag a reception during practice.

Josh Poole

Josh Poole is impressed.

Fall is about to kick in the door.

With rain drops splattering down on the prairie Monday, we are officially at T-minus-100 hours until the kickoff of games that count.

Now, technically, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team is the first in action with a jamboree Thursday in Oak Harbor, but the first contest that goes in the win/loss column comes a day later.

That’s when the Wolves travel down Island Friday to face-off with arch-rival South Whidbey in Langley (7 PM kickoff) in their first game under new head coach Brett Smedley.

The Falcons will have their own first-year man in Michael Coe, with Chris Tormey having fled the Island after just one season to go work in the Canadian Football League.

At stake in the non-conference game will be bragging rights and ownership of The Bucket, the trophy which has spent two of the last three years living in Coupeville.

Let the battles begin.

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