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Posts Tagged ‘Wiley Hesselgrave’

Jordan Ford, here hauling in a rebound, was one of the few bright spots for Coupeville Wednesday night. (John Fisken photo)

    Jordan Ford, here hauling in a rebound, was one of the few bright spots for Coupeville Wednesday night. (John Fisken photo)

One team came out fired-up. The other was in a much more tepid mood.

And it showed, as South Whidbey used a big first half to race past host Coupeville 61-36 Wednesday night in a non-conference boys’ basketball game.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 0-2 on the young season and left CHS coach Anthony Smith more than a bit frustrated. After having a long locker room talk with his team, he didn’t mince words.

“We were not ready to play. The boys were just not ready tonight,” he said. “They (South Whidbey) wanted it a lot more than us.

“We had so many unforced turnovers and they’re a good enough team to take advantage of that.”

If there were any bright spots for Coupeville, a big one was that the Wolves played better in the second half, at least as far as the scoreboard went.

Down 36-13 at the break, after enduring 18-7 and 18-6 quarters, CHS battled the Falcons almost even after halftime.

They were nipped just 13-10 in the third and actually won the fourth quarter, though just by a point at 13-12.

Playing without their leading scorer from opening night (sophomore Hunter Smith was sidelined with a back injury) the Wolves turned to their most reliable veteran, Wiley Hesselgrave, and he responded.

Fighting through a flock of Falcons every time he touched the ball, he went for nine of his team-high 13 in the second half.

Another positive was the inspired play of senior Jordan Ford, who worked hard for his first eight points as a Wolf hoops star.

Six of those points came off of rebounds that he snatched and then took right back up, while his final two came on a pair of free-throws after being hammered while driving 1-on-3 in the paint.

Jordan was a real bright spot for us tonight,” Anthony Smith said. “He hasn’t had that much chance to really play organized ball before, but once he really gets it going, he’ll be a big boost for us.”

South Whidbey hit the floor running, breaking out to a 7-0 lead before Gabe Wynn momentarily stopped the bleeding with a soft jumper from the side.

Shots weren’t dropping for the Wolves, however, and they didn’t get another field goal until the final seconds of the quarter, when Risen Johnson exploded the length of the floor on a breakaway.

The Falcons, paced by explosive senior Chase White, a South End resident who had played for Archbishop Thomas Murphy the last three seasons, quickly put the game away.

They out-ran, out-passed, out-moved and out-shot the Wolves in the first half, and a 13-5 advantage on made free throws didn’t hurt.

Coupeville put together some nice mini-runs in the second half, but it wasn’t enough.

The Wolves had an 8-3 spurt in the third sparked by a trey from Hesselgrave, then closed the game on a 10-4 run that included an especially sweet three-point bomb off of Johnson’s fingertips.

Ford and Johnson scored eight apiece to back Hesselgrave’s 13, with Wynn (4) and Ryan Griggs (3) rounding out the scoring tally.

Dante Mitchell, Desmond Bell, DeAndre Mitchell and Jared Helsmstadter all saw floor time, as well.

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Hunter Smith, seen here last year, went for a team-high 12 Monday at Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith, seen here last year, went for a team-high 12 Monday at Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

For one half they were as good as they’ve ever been.

Putting together an absolutely stellar 16 minutes of ball Monday night at Meridian, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team carried an 11-point lead into the halftime locker room.

Unfortunately, as hot as things were in the first half, they went cold in the second, as a string of missed Wolf shots allowed the much-bigger hosts to scramble back for a 51-41 non-conference victory on opening night.

The Wolves will have a day to rest and sharpen their skill-set before they welcome Island foe South Whidbey to town Wednesday in their home opener.

Tip-off is 5:15 PM, with a Wolf/Falcon girls game to follow at 7.

If Coupeville wants to stun their arch-rivals, they’ll need to channel some of that first-half excitement.

“We played the best half of basketball in the first half that has been played under Coach (Anthony) Smith,” said Wolf assistant coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “We played inspired, hard-nosed, good basketball.”

After going toe-to-toe with the Trojans in the first quarter — Meridian clung to a 14-13 lead at the first break — Coupeville drilled their hosts 16-4 in the second.

The third quarter, which was the Wolves Achilles heel last year, was a different story, however.

“We missed some easy shots and they used their height to their advantage,” Van Velkinburgh said.

The Trojans jumped all over Coupeville to the tune of 22-5 in the third, before salting things away with an 11-7 mini-run in the fourth.

Despite the loss, the Wolves came away with a number of positives, led off by a balanced scoring attack.

Sophomore Hunter Smith, making his first varsity start, went for a team-high 12, hitting a pair of three-point bombs, and made off with two steals.

Seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Risen Johnson each knocked down 11, while DeAndre Mitchell (3), Ryan Griggs (2) and Gabe Wynn (2) rounded out the scorers.

Griggs hauled down five boards and rejected three Meridian shots, Johnson had three rebounds and two steals and Dante Mitchell and Wynn added three rebounds apiece.

Jared Helmstadter and Jordan Ford also saw floor time, with Ford following in the footsteps of dad David by making his first start as a Wolf hoops player.

The JV game was cancelled because Coupeville couldn’t field enough players due to injuries and players who haven’t had enough practices to be eligible. The Wolves expect to play a JV game Wednesday.

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Jordan Ford (left) and Jared Helmstadter work on a defensive drill in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photo)

   Jordan Ford (left) and Jared Helmstadter work on a defensive drill in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photo)

They have speed. They have talent. They just don’t have a lot of bodies.

A combination of injuries, lack of practice time and players who chose not to return from last year or dropped off in the first week of practice this year has left the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad thin in numbers.

Of Coupeville’s 18 players, three started late and likely won’t be eligible on opening night (Monday, Nov. 30), while two others are injured.

That could mean the only way the Wolves play a JV game in the early going would be to have five guys be 32-minute men, while stealing a swing player from the varsity just to get that starting five.

The low numbers could also affect the varsity, especially if any more injuries crop up and deplete the front-line guys.

For now, at least, CHS coaches Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkinburgh are looking on the bright side, however.

They may not have great depth, but the guys they do have offer nothing but upside.

“If we shoot the ball well, we’ll be hard to beat,” said Smith, who is going into his fifth season as head coach. “Teams will probably play a lot of zone against us and we need to make them pay.

“If we take care of the ball, keep the turnovers down, we’ll be right in there every game.”

Coupeville is a bit undersized, with relatively few big bangers, but they do have quickness and offensive explosiveness, and will look to ride whichever player has the hot hand on a given night.

They also have experience, with eight of what’s expected to be the top ten players being seniors.

Senior Wiley Hesselgrave, a First-Team All-Conference player a year ago, is “our gun,” and the Wolves will look to exploit his toughness on both sides of the ball.

Senior Risen Johnson and sophomore Hunter Smith will handle the ball for CHS, while seniors Jared Helmstadter and Ryan Griggs and junior Gabe Wynn round out the returning varsity players.

Gabe is our X factor,” Anthony Smith said. “With the energy he plays with, he can cause a lot of havoc for us.”

Seniors DeAndre Mitchell, Desmond Bell and Dante Mitchell slide up from last year’s JV team, while the real X factor might be senior Jordan Ford.

A transfer who can claim long athletic bloodlines in Coupeville, the bearded one was an immediate hit during football season, where he was a solid two-way player.

Now Ford will take his game to the hardwood, where he’s expected to join Griggs as the team’s only real inside players.

Also fighting for positions are senior Beauman Davis, junior Brian Shank, sophomores Luke Merriman, Ariah Bepler, Hunter Downes (who may have suffered a season-ending injury Tuesday) and Cameron Toomey-Stout and freshmen Gabe Eck and Ty Eck.

However the roster ends up shaking out, Coupeville will look to continue heading back upwards in the standings.

After a winless first season under Anthony Smith, when the new coach inherited virtually an all-freshman roster, the Wolves have increased their win total in each of the last three seasons.

Last year they went 7-13 overall, 3-6 in 1A Olympic League play.

A number of their losses were close ones, and one of the wins came against Chimacum, the eventual league champs.

The Cowboys and league mate Klahowya had senior-dominated rosters last year, so their turnover could mean good things for Port Townsend and Coupeville.

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Clay Reilly was tabbed as the 1A Olympic League's best punter. (John Fisken photos)

   Clay Reilly was tabbed as the 1A Olympic League’s best punter. (John Fisken photos)

Wiley Hesselgrave

   Wiley Hesselgrave was First-Team All-Conference for the second straight season, while also being named Coupeville’s MVP for his two-way play.

Lathom Kelley

   Lathom Kelley led the Wolves in tackles and joined Hesselgrave as the only seniors from the Class of 2016 to letter all four years.

Thursday was a good night to be named Wiley Hesselgrave.

The Coupeville High School senior capped his stellar four-year football career by being named MVP and taking home First-Team All-Conference honors as a running back.

Hesselgrave also joined Lathom Kelley as the only Wolf seniors in the Class of 2016 who lettered all four years.

Coupeville landed five players on the All-Conference team when 1A Olympic League coaches tallied up their votes.

Sophomore defensive back Hunter Smith, junior punter Clay Reilly, senior offensive lineman Brenden Gilbert and senior receiver CJ Smith joined Hesselgrave in being honored.

Hunter Smith, who snagged a school record seven interceptions this season, was an honorable mention pick last year while Hesselgrave garnered his second straight First Team selection.

He was tabbed as a linebacker as a junior.

When the Wolves handed out team awards at their season-ending banquet Thursday, Hesselgrave was joined by five other winners.

Freshman quarterback Gabe Eck was picked as the team’s Offensive MVP, Gilbert was tabbed Alpha Male and Hunter Smith collected the Defensive MVP.

Cameron Toomey-Stout (ACE Award) and Zane Bundy (Special Teams) rounded out the honorees.

Earning varsity letters (* indicates 4-year player)

Chris Battaglia
Zane Bundy
Mitchell Carroll
Hunter Downes
Gabe Eck
Ty Eck
Jordan Ford
Brenden Gilbert
Ryan Griggs
Wiley Hesselgrave (*)
Lathom Kelley (*)
Uriel Liquidano
Jake Lord (*)
Josh Lord (*)
Mitchell Losey (*)
Jacob Martin
Tyler McCalmont
JR Pendergrass
Clay Reilly
CJ Smith
Hunter Smith
Julian Welling

Certificate Of Participation:

Dewitt Cole
Seth David
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Ethan Kedrowski
Teo Keilwitz
Ryan Labrador
Shane Losey
Dane Lucero
Garrett Machen
Ethan Marx
Axel Partida
Jake Pease
Mike Rice
Josh Robinson
Jacob Smith
Matt Stevens
Jonathan Thurston
Cameron Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni
Greg Villarreal
Tavian Woolett
Jacob Zettle

Managers:

Tyler Cermak
Nick Crownover
Dominic Dausey
Baylee Dunsmore

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Zane Bundy (John Fisken photo)

   Senior kicker Zane Bundy  led the Wolves in scoring this season. (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Labrador

Ryan Labrador (left) recorded his first three varsity tackles Friday.

Freshman Chris Battaglia

Freshman Chris Battaglia was second on the team in tackles and first in sacks.

And now the end has come.

Fall sports officially came to an end Friday night, with the Coupeville High School football squad wrapping its season on Vashon Island.

But, before we let go for good, one final look at Wolf football stats, with a couple of new names slipping in just under the deadline.

Jacob Zettle hauled in his first varsity pass, Teo Keilwitz got his first carries at running back and Ryan Labrador collected his first-ever varsity tackles in the finale.

As always, if you disagree with your numbers, talk to your coaches.

They compile these numbers. I just pluck ’em off of MaxPreps.com.

Finals stats:

Offense:

Passing:

Gabe Eck 84-176 for 1062 yards (#2 in Olympic League, #7 in 1A) with 4 TD and 7 INTs
Hunter Downes 26-47 for 272 yards (#4 in Olympic League, #14 in 1A) with 1 TD and 3 INTs
CJ Smith 2-2 for 30 yards
Wiley Hesselgrave 0-2

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 32 receptions for 419 yards (#2 in Olympic League, #10 in 1A)
C. Smith 30-365 (#4 in Olympic League, #13 in 1A)
Jordan Ford 10-175 (#10 in Olympic League)
Ty Eck 17-163
Hesselgrave 11-107
Ryan Griggs 4-81
Lathom Kelley 2-22
Jacob Zettle 1-15
Jake Hoagland 2-7

Rushing:

Hesselgrave 108 carries for 451 yards (#5 in Olympic League)
Kelley 43-219 (#8 in Olympic League)
Jacob Martin 25-123
G. Eck 74-55
Mitchell Losey 13-54
T. Eck 1-6
Chris Battaglia 1-4
Teo Keilwitz 2-3
C. Smith 2 (-3)
Downes 12 (-49)

Total yards:

G. Eck 1117 (#3 in Olympic League, #11 in 1A)
Hesselgrave 558 (#6 in Olympic League)
H. Smith 419
C. Smith 392
Kelley 241
Downes 223
Ford 175
T. Eck 169
Martin 123
Griggs 81
Losey 54
Zettle 15
Hoagland 7
Battaglia 4
Keilwitz 3

Touchdowns:

Hesselgrave 4
T. Eck 3
Kelley 2
Martin 2
H. Smith 2
G. Eck 1
Ford 1
C. Smith 1

PATs:

Zane Bundy 8 (#3 in Olympic League, #9 in 1A)

Field Goals:

Bundy 5 (tied for #1 in 1A, tied for #4 in entire state)

Conversions:

Bundy 1
Griggs 1
Martin 1
C. Smith 1

Points:

Bundy 25 (#9 in Olympic League)
Hesselgrave
24 (tied for #10 in Olympic League)
T. Eck
18
Martin
14
Kelley
12
H. Smith
12
C. Smith
8
G. Eck
6
Ford
6
Griggs
2

Defense:

Tackles:

Kelley 73 (#6 in Olympic League, #10 in 1A)
Battaglia 56 (#10 in Olympic League)
T. Eck 54
Hesselgrave 53
Uriel Liquidano 45
Julian Welling 32
Mitchell Carroll 29
Martin 27
Tyler McCalmont
25
Brenden Gilbert
24
H. Smith
21
Griggs
18
Ford
16
Losey
16
Reilly
16
Jake Lord
11
Josh Lord
8
C. Smith
8
JR Pendergrass
4
Ryan Labrador
3
Keilwitz
2
Tavian Woolett
2
Bundy
1
Matt Hilborn
1
Hoagland
1
Ethan Kedrowski
1
Josh Robinson
1
Cameron Toomey-Stout
1
James Vidoni
1
Zettle
1

Sacks:

Battaglia 3 (tied for #4 in Olympic League, tied for #19 in 1A)
Ford 2 (tied for #8 in Olympic League)
Gilbert 2 (tied for #8 in Olympic League)
Kelley 2 (tied for #8 in Olympic League)
Carroll 1
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
McCalmont 1

Interceptions:

H. Smith 7 (CHS single season record, tied for #1 in entire state)
T. Eck 1
Griggs 1
Hesselgrave
1
Martin 1
Reilly 1

Fumble recoveries:

Griggs 3
Martin 3
Ford 2
Liquidano
2
H. Smith 2
Carroll 1
T. Eck 1
Hesselgrave 1
Kelley 1

Blocked kicks:

Hesselgrave 2
Kelley 1
Liquidano 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Bundy 15 for 539 yards (#2 in Olympic League, #6 in 1A)

Punts:

Reilly 34 for 1156 yards (#1 in 1A, #17 in entire state)
Bundy 12-308 (#6 in 1A)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 22 for 345 yards (#3 in Olympic League, #5 in 1A)
Kelley 8-156
T. Eck 11-124
H. Smith 7-99
Martin 3-27
Reilly 6-0
Losey 2-0
C. Smith 2-0
Carroll
1-0
Pendergrass 1-0
Welling 1-0

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