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Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

   Robin Cedillo (left) goes high, Jae LeVine goes low and everything works out beautifully as the Wolves snuff out a Vashon rally. (John Fisken photos)

Creepin’ and a crawlin’, Jake Hoagland sneaks back onto the base.

A few rain drops can’t disrupt super fan Sylvia Arnold’s good mood.

Dodging the liquid sunshine, Ethan Marx hauls in a catch.

Katrina McGranahan gets medieval on a sneaky softball.

Twice Saturday, Hunter Smith lashed a two-RBI hit. This is one of those.

   “I am … the law!!” Darren Crownover pretends to watch daughter Veronica crush home runs, but in his mind, he’s doing a Sylvester Stallone as Judge Dredd impression.

No softball escapes Hope Lodell. Ever.

The rain was fallin’ and the camera was clickin’.

Despite fairly miserable Whidbey weather Saturday, Coupeville High School managed to get in both softball and baseball games, sweeping visiting Vashon Island.

Along for the ride, and working both sides of the street, was damp yet plucky paparazzi John Fisken, who was nice enough to kick these pics our way.

To see everything he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

Softball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170325-vs-Vashon/

Baseball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170325-vs-Vashon/

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   Jake Pease had multiple hits, caught and made his high school pitching debut Saturday in a road doubleheader. (John Fisken photo)

“The short story is that we ran out of pitching, and our bats found leather when theirs found grass.”

Coupeville High School JV baseball coach Chris Smith had a short bench Saturday, but he still got his Wolves to battle valiantly through a doubleheader on sunny Vashon Island.

While the varsity squad was getting damp back on Whidbey, the Wolf JV played in a relative heat wave, holding the lead in both games before falling 6-4 and 14-5 to the Pirates.

The losses drop the young guns to 1-2 on the season.

“It was a long day and a grind on the field, which is what we like,” Smith said. “I was very proud of our pitchers, who knew they were going into this doubleheader with very little to no support in relief.

“Both Nick Etzell and Elliott Johnson should be commended on their strong pitching performances,” he added. “They both made valiant efforts and pitched a good game, maintaining a Coupeville lead into the 4th and 5th inning, respectively.”

Etzell went five innings in the opener, with Gavin Knoblich coming on to throw in relief, then Johnson teamed with Knoblich and first-time pitcher Jake Pease in the nightcap.

Coupeville notched a quick two runs in the top of the first in game one and held that lead until Vashon struck for five in the bottom of the fourth.

Not content to go down easily, the Wolves got two back in the sixth, but couldn’t quite catch up.

Game two might look like a rout if you just look at the score, but it was far from that.

With Johnson in command on the mound, CHS was on top 5-3 heading into the bottom of the fifth inning. Then Vashon struck, racking up 11 runs in a two-inning span to seal the deal.

Etzell and Pease led the way offensively for the Wolves, rapping out multiple hits, with Etzell scoring twice in both games.

“Our guys battled the whole way,” Smith said. “It was good baseball, even better than the score reflected.

“Everyone demonstrated a never-say-die attitude and we went down swinging,” he added. “Well, not literally; our last out of the second game was a strikeout looking, but you get my point.”

Coupeville played tough defense all game, with several plays bringing a smile to Smith’s face.

The Wolves pulled off a slick double play (Etzell to Pease to Kyle Rockwell) in game one, and twice gunned down runners at the plate in game two.

On both those plays, Etzell was the cutoff man and laid the ball perfectly in Cameron Dahl’s waiting glove behind the plate.

“We made some plays that demonstrated some defensive brilliance,” Smith said. “I love that!”

The hardball guru was also pleased with the hustle and effort he got from a trio of bench players — Johnny Carlson, Seth Weatherford and Gavin Straub.

“We got a lot of support and heart from our bench,” Smith said. “They stood ready in the dugout, waiting for their moment to shine and shine they did.”

Carlson “lost both of his cleats in separate strides as he stormed down the left field line after a double,” actually running out of his shoes.

Weatherford “made a huge out in right catching a hard line drive that he charged in to gobble up” and Straub “put the bat on the ball in both of his AB’s and did everything humanly possible to reach safely.”

Ulrik Wells, Jacob Zettle, James Vidoni and Shane Losey rounded out the Wolf roster, with Wells smacking a single in game two.

While he wanted to come away with wins, Smith couldn’t fault his team’s effort or desire.

“In the end (assistant coach) Mike (Etzell) and I walked away bummed we couldn’t squeak out a win,” he said. “But content that we played “Baseball” and part of baseball is knowing how to deal with the disappointment.

“We will move on and work to get better,” Smith added. “I was proud of this team because they delivered on our expectations for them to “Play Hard, Play Smart, Play Together and Have Fun!

“At the end of the day that is all I really ask or expect!”

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   Hunter Smith tossed six scoreless innings and racked up four RBIs Saturday in an 8-2 win over defending state champ Vashon Island. (John Fisken photo)

Vashon Island was the toast of baseball a year ago.

The Pirates took out Meridian, Nooksack Valley, Overlake/Bear Creek and defending state champion Hoquiam en route to taking home the trophy as the best 1A team in all the land.

Maybe it’s a good thing they didn’t face Hunter Smith along the way.

The Coupeville High School hurler got his crack at the Pirates Saturday and thoroughly bushwhacked them, tossing six scoreless innings and driving in four runs to spark an 8-2 win.

The non-conference victory, the third straight for the Wolves, lifts them to 3-2.

Coupeville has a busy week ahead, with two of three at home.

The Wolves host non-conference foe Sultan Monday, then open defense of their Olympic League crown with a home game Wednesday against Klahowya and a road trip Friday to Port Townsend.

Now, if we’re being totally fair, we’ll acknowledge this year’s Vashon squad is not the same as last year’s, since the Pirates lost nine players to graduation.

But until someone takes away the title, they will still enter every game this year bearing the moniker “defending state champs,” so it is what it is.

And Vashon flat-out had no luck against Coupeville’s junior ace, who welcomed the Pirates to Whidbey by setting them down one after another.

Smith whiffed ten, while giving up just a single in the second and a walk in the fifth, cruising home with an 8-0 lead.

Vashon managed to scrape together two runs in the seventh against Wolf reliever Matt Hilborn, but he settled down quickly and ended any hopes of a late-game rally.

Coupeville jumped on the Pirates quickly, scoring two in the first and another two in the second.

The opening runs came courtesy an RBI double from Clay Reilly and an RBI single by Jake Hoagland, before Smith struck in the second with a two-run single.

Two innings later, Smith was right back at it, this time crushing a two-run double to run the score to 6-0.

Reilly and Dane Lucero plated runners in the fifth to cap Coupeville’s scoring.

While Vashon couldn’t buy a hit most of the day, the Wolves collected six base-knocks, with four of them being of the extra-base variety.

Smith, Reilly and Ethan Marx all had doubles, while Reilly also tripled.

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   Jonathan Thurston struck out nine in four innings Friday, leaving with a 4-2 lead in what turned into a 14-7 win. (John Fisken photo)

A whole lot of runs, a whole lot of screaming.

Playing on a windy, often very chilly Friday afternoon, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad took advantage of an endless stream of walks and errors, drilling visiting North Mason 14-7 in their first game of the season.

With the Wolves piling up 16 walks and the Bulldogs committing 10,904 errors (give or take one or two), the game went more than three hours, eventually being called after five innings because of encroaching darkness.

Before the game ended, fans were treated to a solid pitching outing from CHS starter Jonathan Thurston, who whiffed nine and gave up just two unearned runs in four innings of work.

They were also treated to either the world’s most entertaining, or annoying (depending on your pain tolerance) rival player.

We may never know the name of North Mason’s catcher, but his voice, which ripped across the diamond on every single pitch for 180+ minutes — it was like he was channeling a young Ozzy Osbourne working as a baseball announcer when he was in the dugout — will never be forgotten.

Well played, young sir, well played.

The game he was so deeply committed to started with a quick run in the top of the first for North Mason, and it was a run which set a tone for the next 20.

A Bulldog hitter struck out, but reached base when the pitch got loose and bounced off the backstop.

A pick-off throw went wild to move him to second, then a steal of third was capped by the ensuing throw landing deep in left field while the North Mason runner skipped home.

Luckily for Coupeville, while that style of creating runs continued all afternoon, after that it was the Wolves pulling off the creative scoring.

CHS collected two of its four hits in the first — singles from Joey Lippo and Kyle Rockwell — and combined that with four Bulldog errors and two walks to retake the lead 3-1.

The Wolves added another run in the second, off of an RBI single from Lippo, and the game actually played out as a bit of a pitcher’s duel for three-and-a-half innings.

Then, with Coupeville up 4-2 headed into the bottom of the fourth, things got kooky, to the tune of 15 runs in the next inning and a half.

A whopping 12 batters strolled to the plate in the bottom of the fourth, with six different Wolves reaching on a walk.

Add in four North Mason errors — coming on four consecutive plays — and a string of stolen bases, and Coupeville threw six runs on the (non-existent) scoreboard in the inning.

Without once hitting the ball out of the infield.

Up 10-2 with the bases still juiced and just one out, CHS was rolling, but a strikeout and a force at home kept the Wolves from entering 10-run territory.

Still, they were in solid control of the game … until they weren’t.

With Thurston done for the afternoon, Coupeville hit a rough patch in the top of the fifth, suddenly committing the same kind of wild-eyed errors the Bulldogs had been in love with all game.

Taking advantage of throws sailing from the pitcher’s mound into deep right field, and a missed tag here and there, North Mason picked up a five-spot of its own, tightening things back to 10-7.

The Wolves escaped though, after relief pitcher Lippo teamed up with infielder Nick Etzell to pick two straight runners off of second base, ending the threat.

CHS padded the lead out in the bottom half of the inning, and took long enough doing it to run through the remaining daylight.

Freshman Ulrik Wells punched a single to load the bases, before the Wolves plated four more, three on walks to Elliott Johnson, Cameron Dahl and Jonathan Carlson.

For the game, 14 of the 15 Wolves to see action reached base, with Jake Pease getting on four times, thanks to three walks and a Bulldog error.

Jacob Zettle walked three times, Shane Losey turned two errors and a walk into three trips around the base-paths and Gavin Knoblich reached base twice, while spending his “down” time sprinting from the dugout like a madman every time a foul ball landed within 200 feet of him.

James Vidoni, Gavin Straub and Seth Weatherford rounded out the Wolf roster, with Vidoni and Weatherford collecting walks.

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Ben Etzell gets nasty. (Libby Auger photo)

The Coupeville connection is alive and well.

Former Wolves can be found playing on college softball and baseball diamonds in several states this spring.

Ben Etzell and Monica Vidoni are pulling on their uniforms in Minnesota, while Aaron Trumbull and Hailey Hammer are still swinging away here in Washington state.

An alphabetically-assembled update through Wednesday:

Ben Etzell — Now a junior at Saint John’s University, the former Cascade Conference baseball MVP has made a team-high six appearances on the pitching mound.

He has a 1.86 era across 9.2 innings, with 13 strikeouts and a save for a Johnnies squad which sits at 9-5.

Hailey Hammer — The sophomore slugger mashed a grand slam for Everett Community College, and overall is hitting .308 with seven RBI in 10 games.

The Trojans are 4-9 and she has eight hits, seven walks and six runs.

Aaron Trumbull — Playing as a freshman for Olympic Community College, he’s appeared in three games for a 2-6 team. Overall, he’s hitting .250 with a run and a walk to his credit.

Monica Vidoni — A sophomore at Rainy River Community College, she’s hitting .267 through 10 games for a 6-5 Voyageurs squad.

She has four hits (including a double), three runs, two RBI, two walks and a stolen base.

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