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Senior Jonathan Thurston is one of several Wolf pitchers who will be counted on to help replace graduated staff ace CJ Smith. (John Fisken photos)

   Senior Jonathan Thurston is one of several Wolf pitchers who will be counted on to help replace graduated staff ace CJ Smith. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, a First-Team All-League pick last year as a sophomore, will anchor CHS on the mound and in the infield.

   Hunter Smith, a First-Team All-League pick last year as a sophomore, will anchor CHS on the mound and in the infield.

Last year they shocked the world. This year they have a bulls-eye on their chest.

Coming off its first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad will look to keep the good times going in year two under coach Marc Aparicio.

“Our long term varsity goal this season is to win state,” Aparicio said. “Our JV goal is to support the varsity goal and to build a strong long-term future for our baseball program.

“Our short term goal is to win one game at a time.”

Coupeville returns almost every varsity player from a season ago, though two losses — CJ Smith and Olympic League MVP Cole Payne — are huge.

Smith was the team’s undisputed pitching ace, a serene strikeout artist who held his team together through good times and bad, while Payne was a rock behind the plate, a catcher who combined a potent bat with solid defensive skills.

On the mound, the Wolves won’t necessarily try to replace CJ Smith with just one hurler.

Younger brother Hunter Smith, himself an All-League pick as a pitcher, returns for his junior campaign, and he’ll have plenty of help as CHS “has about eight very good pitchers to try and replace CJ.”

Those include junior Julian Welling, senior Jonathan Thurston and sophomore Matt Hilborn, who was a First-Team All-League pick as an infielder in 2016.

“We are very fortunate this year to have a lot of kids that want to pitch,” Aparicio said.

Payne’s replacement will likely come in the form of Taylor Consford, a senior who transferred from Oak Harbor.

He was a starter for the 3A Wildcats last season, playing in 17 games and collecting five RBIs.

Other key returning players include catcher Jake Pease, infielders Kory Score, Dane Lucero, Joey Lippo and Nick Etzell and outfielders Clay Reilly, Gabe Wynn, Jake Hoagland and Ethan Marx.

The Wolves have also picked up a collection of new players, some of whom might start to contribute right away.

“Our freshman class is small, but all the players are looking very good so far,” Aparicio said. “A good fit to our already solid team.

“We will work hard this year to play as a team – play for the team and not as an individual.”

For Coupeville to repeat as league champs, it will need to scale Klahowya, which won in 2015, Chimacum and a Port Townsend squad that should be resurgent after an 0-16 year in which it never got to play at home thanks to field issues.

“Our league competitors will certainly put up a fight this year, as they did last year,” Aparicio said. “However, we’re confident we will go beyond league play.

“This is what we are practicing for.”

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Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

When you talk about what are arguably the two greatest pitching performances in Coupeville High School history, one fact is crystal clear today — no one is matching them in 2017.

I’m talking about Bob Rea going 16 innings and whiffing 27 Darrington batters in a 2-1 win and Ray Cook taking down 21 sluggers in a 13-inning playoff game in ’76.

And why could they not be duplicated this season?

It has nothing to do with the talent of current Wolf hurlers like Hunter Smith or Julian Welling, and all to do with a brand-new rule instituted by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

Effective immediately, no high school baseball pitcher in our state will be allowed to throw more than 105 pitches in a calendar day.

And, if they do hit that limit, or come within 29 pitches of it, they can’t pitch for the next three calendar days.

Seriously.

The days of making a run behind a true ace are gone.

Better to have a deep staff of halfway decent pitchers than one fireball-blazing stud in the “touchy-feely, can-I-encase-that-arm-in-bubble-wrap” age we’re entering.

Warm-ups pitches don’t count, but anything in the flow of the game does.

Score-book keepers will be expected to track pitch counts, with the home book the official final word, and both teams are supposed to confer after every inning to check the counts.

Umpires have no control over pitch counts.

And yes, a pitcher would have to leave in the middle of facing a hitter if he tops out.

Cue every batter in the world trying to perfect the 20-pitch at-bat, nicking foul ball after foul ball.

Violate the pitch count limits and get caught? You’re going to be smacked the same as if you got caught using an ineligible player.

Forfeit city, baby.

The limits:

76-105 pitches = 3 rest days
51-75 pitches = 2 rest days
31-50 pitches = 1 rest day
1-30 pitches = 0 rest days

So, if Smith throws 76 pitches on Mar. 15 against Chimacum, CHS can’t use him on the mound in its next two games — Mar. 17 vs. Sequim or Mar. 18 vs. South Whidbey — because he’s not eligible to pitch again until Mar. 19.

He could play in the infield, but step near the mound and the WIAA enforcement police will take him down with a dart gun.

Allegedly.

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(Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Paul Schmakeit, during his days as a Coupeville High School baseball player. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Paul Schmakeit, a member of the 2010 Central Whidbey Little League juniors baseball team which won a state title, has been sentenced to 20 months in prison for his role in a 2015 burglary which broke the 68-year-old victim’s back and left him paralyzed.

The former athlete, who graduated from Coupeville High School in 2013, plead guilty Sept. 26 to residential burglary and assault in the second degree.

He is currently incarcerated in the Washington Corrections Center in Shelton, inmate #394801.

During a burglary of a Greenbank residence July 27, 2015, the homeowner, Dennis Phillips, returned and engaged Schmakeit.

The former Coupeville High School football player tackled the older man, landing on top of him and breaking his back, as detailed in police reports.

Schmakeit fled into the woods and was later arrested while trying to avoid a customs inspection at the Canadian border at Sumas.

He was found in possession of a handgun.

Canadian authorities have not publicly stated whether they will pursue their own charges against Schmakeit.

Phillips, who was not found until five hours after the crime, remains paralyzed.

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Taylor Consford

Taylor Consford (Submitted photo)

Taylor Consford has changed schools, but retained his positive outlook.

Having moved from Oak Harbor to Coupeville for his senior year, he’s jumping right in, with plans of being a three-sport athlete for the Wolves.

Consford is currently suiting up for the CHS football squad, with plans to play basketball and baseball as the year unfolds.

Regardless of which sport he’s playing, the future Navy man is always working on his game.

“My strengths are always something to improve,” Consford said. “My mentality is that I can always improve, so I don’t look at my strengths.

“I look at what I can do better.”

During his Wildcat days, Consford played with and against some of his future Wolf baseball teammates in summer ball.

While he has a comfort zone on the diamond (“my main sport”), taking to the gridiron is a new experience.

“This is my first year playing football. I have always wanted to play football but I’ve always been too nervous,” Consford said. “I started to play because I love to be a part of a team.

“I enjoy everything about football, being a part of a team, making new friends,” he added. “But in reality, to me they aren’t my friends, they are my family. They accepted me and made me feel great.”

As Consford and the Wolf squad head into the second half of the season with a Homecoming match-up with Port Townsend Friday, he just wants to make an impact, in whatever way he’s called upon.

“My goals this season for football are to always be there for everyone that needs me,” he said. “Do whatever I can to help my team win, and not to play for my self but all of my brothers that are out there by my side.”

Away from the field, he enjoys history class (“It just gives so much meaning to learn about what happened in the past to form the world around us today”) and hanging out with girlfriend Gaby Halpin and their friends.

“My main focus this year is to have the best senior year I can,” Consford said.

“The people that have made an impact in my life would most definitely be my parents and friends,” he added. “Everyone around me has encouraged me to great things and pushed me to the best of my ability to perform.”

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The 1909 Fort Casey baseball team takes a moment out for a photo op. (Photo courtesy Renae Mulholland)

   The 1909 Fort Casey baseball team takes a moment out for a photo op. (Photo courtesy Renae Mulholland)

All your history will be ours.

My continuing project to bring to light as many photos from the olden days of Coupeville athletics as possible hits new pay dirt.

The photo above, which comes to us from Renae Mulholland and her mom, Dorothy Keefe, showcases a baseball squad from 107 seasons back.

The 1909 Fort Casey diamond men included their lil’ mascot, Tommy Clark, who grew up to be Dorothy’s dad and Renae’s grandpa.

The call remains to all — if you have sports history from Central Whidbey, I want to see it, and pass it on to my readers.

You can mail me stuff at:

David Svien
165 Sherman
Coupeville, WA 98239

Or contact me on Facebook or email me at:

davidsvien@hotmail.com

Together we can blow off the dust from Coupeville athletics!

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