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CJ Smith, a man for all seasons. (John Fisken, Shelli Trumbull and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   CJ Smith, a man for all seasons. (John Fisken, Shelli Trumbull, Charlotte Young and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Big things sometimes start quietly.

The first time I saw CJ Smith, he suddenly appeared, perched at the end of the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball bench one night, a couple of games into the 2013-2014 season.

Someone in the stands, a fellow player’s dad, said he had just transferred into the school, but no one knew much about him.

As the game went on, CJ (we didn’t even know his name that night) watched the court like a hawk, once in awhile murmuring a question or two to the guy next to him, then nodding, face impassive.

Little did we know at that moment, cloaked in stoic quietness, that we were seeing the birth of one of the best athletes to ever wear the red and black.

Later, we discovered he was a sophomore, and we wouldn’t see him in a game for close to two weeks, as he got up to speed on practices.

When he finally touched the court, wearing a Coupeville uniform for the first time, he didn’t come out screaming, or wildly waving.

He played calmly, coolly, under control, making sharp passes and even sharper cuts.

Captain Cool had arrived, and, for the next two-and-a-half years we got to witness a young man who handles his business as strongly as any Wolf I have witnessed.

CJ, who celebrates a birthday today and graduated from CHS last month, gave us two strong basketball seasons (he sat out his senior season to focus on schoolwork), two superb football campaigns and three dazzling baseball years.

Through it all, he was the picture of composure, a guy who didn’t seem to ever have a butterfly and never, ever flinched away from the big moment.

If he was nervous, if he had self-doubt, CJ hid it well from the fans.

When he was on the mound, whiffing hitters in great gobs, it was nearly impossible to tell if he was up 20-0 or trailing 1-0.

And that calmness, his sense of purpose, always seemed to settle his teammates down around him.

Which was especially helpful during his senior season, when most of his teammates were freshmen and sophomores.

Teaming with senior catcher Cole Payne and his brother, sophomore Hunter Smith, CJ led Coupeville to its first baseball league title in 25 years.

During that run there were many moments when the team could have fallen apart, but it didn’t, thanks in large part to its easygoing mound ace.

That serene spirit flows through CJ’s entire family.

Turns out we got a 5-for-1 deal, with CJ, Hunter and lil’ sis Scout all three-sport stars, while mom Charlotte and dad Chris are superb coaches.

As his prep career played out, Captain Cool was a rock for the Wolves, a talented athlete, but, more importantly, a quality dude through and through.

So happy birthday CJ, and thanks for letting us all be part of the ride for the last three years.

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Ulrik and Izzy Wells were two of the five Central Whidbey diamond dandies to play with Oak Harbor this week. (Katy Wells photo)

   Ulrik and Izzy Wells were two of five Central Whidbey diamond dandies to play with Oak Harbor this week. (Katy Wells photo)

Katy and Lyle Wells have been busy bees lately.

With three children, all whom play for different diamond squads, the family has been bouncing all over the place.

Now, with the two oldest kids having wrapped their seasons this week, things may slow down a bit.

Maybe.

With Oak Harbor’s Babe Ruth baseball squad and North Whidbey Little League’s Majors softball team being eliminated one game shy of a state tourney berth, Ulrik and Izzy Wells will be spectators when lil’ sis Savina takes the diamond next week.

The youngest Wells is a key player on Central Whidbey Little League’s Minors softball squad, the Yellow Jackets, which opens its best-of-three District 11 championship tilt July 5.

Sedro-Woolley is the foe and the games (Tuesday, Wednesday and possibly Thursday) will be played at Rhododendron Park in Coupeville.

The Yellow Jackets, who went 13-1, are the only one of Central’s three softball squads which were able to advance to All-Stars as a team.

The 13-3 Venom (Juniors) and 15-0-1 Crush (Majors) didn’t have enough players sticking around to go on as complete teams.

So, Izzy Wells and Crush teammate Abby Mulholland jumped over to North Whidbey to keep playing, and the Purple Thunder took Sedro to a full three games in their tourney.

After falling 9-5 in the opener, North Whidbey won the middle game 8-3, then was nipped 7-4 in the finale.

Wells gunned down eight batters from the pitcher’s circle in the championship game.

The Babe Ruth squad, which features three Coupeville players — Daniel Olson, Gavin Knoblich and Ulrik Wells — split a pair of games in a round-robin tourney, but was eliminated from advancing to state by run differential.

Oak Harbor beat Sedro 6-5, then fell hard to Friday Harbor, losing 13-3.

Sedro bopped Friday Harbor 12-6 in the other game, leaving all three teams with 1-1 records.

Sedro advanced to state based on giving up the fewest runs, as they surrendered 12 to Friday Harbor’s 15 and Oak Harbor’s 18.

Knoblich ripped a double and a single in the finale, while Olson had a pair of singles. Both he and Wells knocked in runs, as well.

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(Paula Peters photo)

   Yellow Jackets players (l to r) Hope Sinclair, Gwen Gustafson and Vivian Farris will be playing in their All-Star tourney next week. (Paula Peters photo)

Want to get out of the house?

Then I have a job for you. Or, actually, several jobs.

Central Whidbey Little League is hosting two All-Star tournaments next week at Rhododendron Park and is looking for volunteers to help make things sail along smoothly.

The league needs people for scoring, concessions and field prep from July 5-9.

Tournaments in play will be 9-10 softball and 10-11 baseball.

If you’re interested in giving back to your community, call Mariah Knoblich at (360) 632-6846 or email her at mariahknoblich@yahoo.com.

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CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

   CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

He’s gone, but not forgotten.

Three weeks after he graduated from Coupeville High School, Cole Payne received one final honor for his baseball playing skills.

The standout catcher, who was earlier honored as the 1A Olympic League MVP, was named as a First-Team All-State player Tuesday.

Payne follows in the footsteps of former teammate Ben Etzell, who nailed the same honor as a pitcher in 2014.

The award comes courtesy the Washington State Baseball Coaches Association.

After leading the Wolves to their first baseball league title in 25 years, Payne was the lone Whidbey Island player named to the All-State team.

The complete 1A squad:

First-Team:

Henry Cheney (Charles Wright)
McKabe Cottrell (Freeman)
Ashton Dulfer (Vashon)
Luke Gleasman (Chelan)
Brayden Hale (Medical Lake)
Skyler Jump (Hoquiam)
Matt Kelleran (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Cole Payne (Coupeville)
Blaine Ross (Zillah)
Nate Rossine (Kiona-Benton)
Kaleb Strawn (Tenino)
Gabe Tolrud (Connell)
Kylan Touch (Aberdeen)
Isaac Wersland (Cle Elum)

Second-Team:

Thomas Butler (University Prep)
Peter Dudunakis (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Tyler Fox (Cascade Christian)
Trystan Garland (Connell)
Dalton Hawk (Cle Elum)
Chase Kuhnert (Lakeside – Nine Mile Falls)
Ryan Long (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Jack Paukert (Freeman)
Lino Rivera (Kiona-Benton)
Joel Rodriguez (Eatonville)
Blake Vandel (Cascade-Leavenworth)
Cory Wagner (Medical Lake)

Coach  of  the  Year:

Steve  Hall (Vashon)

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Julian Welling lays down the law: "There had better be cake! That's all I'm saying..." (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling lays down the law: “There had better be cake! That’s all I’m saying…” (John Fisken photos)

"Wait, there is cake, right?"

“Wait, there is cake, right?”

"There is cake!!!!!!! It's mah birthday!!! Dance all day and party all night!!!"

   “There’s cake!!! It’s mah birthday!!! Dance all day and party all night!!!” (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Julian Welling is one of the best athletes at Coupeville High School, hands down.

A slugger on the baseball diamond and a ferocious hitter on the gridiron, JoJo, who will be a junior in the fall, is the real deal, a talented guy with size, strength and a motor that runs hot and heavy.

But, if you want to know what separates him from the pack, what truly makes him special, you have to step back and watch him when he’s NOT playing.

Watch him when he’s in the stands, cheering on his lil’ sis, Melia, during her little league games.

Playing for the Venom, who went 13-3 this spring in Juniors action, Melia, who had very little experience coming in, made huge strides at the plate.

As her confidence built, boosted in large part by very vocal encouragement from her brother, she became much more aggressive at the plate and started ripping some liners.

The biggest blow came against South Whidbey, when she launched a game-busting two-run double to left that caused Julian to come unglued.

Bouncing on the top row of the stands, waving his blanket left and right, big bro bellowed “That just made my day, Melia!!”

The grin that split his sister’s face as she rocked back and forth while astride second base didn’t leave for the remainder of the game.

At which point Julian came flying around the side of the dugout to grab her in a bear hug and carry her off like a trophy he had just won.

It’s moments like that which make Welling, who celebrates a birthday today, one of the true bright spots in Wolf Nation.

He is as friendly and outgoing as anyone wearing the red and black these days, a fun-loving big kid who charges into battle with a grin on his face and light-hearted mischief in his heart.

Welling is also, though, a true standup guy, a young man who showed a lot with how he conducted himself during what could have been a negative time at the start of this year’s baseball season.

A person can complain when things don’t go their way or they can, day in and day out, show their coaches, in big ways and small ways, why they deserve to wear that uniform.

When Julian made his season debut, taking the ball in relief in his first game, he was being rewarded for not taking the easy way out.

For standing up and acting like a man when it mattered, even if that stung at times.

So, when I think of Welling, I absolutely acknowledge his talent.

But I really hail him for the person he is — the proud big brother who dotes on his sister, the fun-loving entertainer and the guy who admits mistakes, then turns them into positives.

A lot of people are good athletes.

Julian is much more than that, and as a Wolf fan, I am glad I can claim him as one of our guys.

Happy birthday, Mr. Welling.

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