
Four-year starter Matt Hilborn is one of five returning letter winners for Coupeville High School baseball. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)
Let’s shake things up.
Coupeville High School baseball soared through much of the 2018 season, winning its second Olympic League title in three years and falling a single win shy of advancing to the state tourney.
Jump forward to this spring, and many things have changed for third-year head coach Chris Smith.
He needs to replace an especially strong group of seniors from last year’s 15-6 squad, having lost eight to graduation, including league MVP Hunter Smith.
And, while doing so, the Wolves are bouncing into the new North Sound Conference, a league headed up by Cedar Park Christian, which has finished 2nd and 4th at state the past two seasons.
After playing a scattershot schedule during their four-year run in the Olympic League, Coupeville returns to a more traditional schedule in their new surroundings.
Much like the Wolves did in their old stomping grounds in the Cascade Conference, NSC teams will play three-game series in a single week.
Instead of a game here, a game a month later, and then a final match-up sometime after that, the new league operates with a Monday-Wednesday-Friday schedule.
So, when the Wolves open their league schedule, against the aforementioned CPC, they’ll go to Bothell Monday, host the Eagles Wednesday, then travel back to Bothell Friday.
The new schedule more closely replicates what college and pro teams play, while giving coaches more of a chance to use strategy as they set up their pitching and adjust to changes as each week plays out.
While he won’t have his son ready to take the mound this year, Smith can lean on a pair of veteran hurlers.
Seniors Matt Hilborn and Dane Lucero top the mound rotation, and are joined by three other returning lettermen, seniors Jake Pease and Shane Losey and junior Gavin Knoblich.
“All are expected to start this year and make a strong impact,” Smith said. “We have strong returning pitching and a strong senior core, but we will be a very young team.”
Among the younger players expected to play key roles include juniors Ulrik Wells and Mason Grove, sophomore Daniel Olson, who got the strikeout to clinch last year’s league title, and freshman Hawthorne Wolfe.
The roster will lean towards players making their varsity debuts this time around.
“(There are) some other up and coming players that will definitely have the opportunity to help out when called upon,” Smith said.
While his team may not be the most-experienced, the eternally-upbeat Wolf coach is aiming for success, as always.
With the season opener at home Mar. 12, against non-conference foe Friday Harbor, Smith is rarin’ to get going.
“Our number one goal is to make a run at the league title; our number two goal is to qualify for the state tournament,” he said.
“It will be a successful season if we play good baseball, and maintain a high level of motivation, energy and effort regardless of the outcome.”












































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