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Cole Payne (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   Wolf catcher Cole Payne whacked two hits on Senior Night. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Payne is joined by fellow seniors CJ Smith (middle) and Brenden Gilbert during festivities.

   Payne (left) is joined by fellow seniors CJ Smith (middle) and Brenden Gilbert during festivities.

This one may sting for awhile.

Having already clinched its first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad had nothing to really prove Wednesday.

So, while they were nipped 4-3 by visiting Klahowya in their regular season finale, the loss alone doesn’t affect the Wolves playoff hopes.

What might, however, is the loss of sophomore lead-off hitter Hunter Smith, who was ejected in the fifth inning after the ump believed his strike zone was questioned.

If the ejection is upheld, it carries a one-game suspension with it, which means Smith would have to sit out Coupeville’s playoff opener May 10.

The Wolves, who finished the regular season 10-10 overall, 7-2 in 1A Olympic League play, are guaranteed at least two games at districts, could play three, and need two wins to advance to state.

To see the district bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Klahowya, which had lost the first two meetings between the teams this season, jumped on Coupeville for three quick runs in the first, putting together four hits in the rally.

From that point on, Wolf hurler CJ Smith was in lock-down mode, holding the Eagles scoreless until the seventh.

Coupeville got a single in the first from Cole Payne, then walked the bases full in the second, but were hurt by strikeouts both times (they whiffed 13 times on the day) and failed to plate a run.

The Wolves finally broke through with two runs in the third.

CJ Smith and Payne, both celebrating Senior Night, stroked back-to-back singles to start the inning, before both coming around to score on Klahowya errors.

CHS knotted the game up at 3-3 in the bottom of the sixth (Kory Score singled, stole second and eventually scored on a ground-out), but left two runners on.

The Eagles regained the lead in the top of the seventh, using back-to-back base knocks to get a runner to third before dumping a ball into the gap between second and first.

Wolf second baseman Joey Lippo had no chance to make a play at home, but managed to gun down the runner going to first for the second out.

Fans hoping for one final rally had their dreams crushed when the Wolves went down one-two-three in the bottom of the seventh.

The game was the final home appearance for Payne, CJ Smith and Brenden Gilbert, who made his first varsity start in left field.

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Jason McFadyen, back in his homer-hittin' CHS baseball days. (Photos courtesy the Carmen McFadyen Archives)

   Jason McFadyen, back in his homer-hittin’ CHS baseball days. (Photos courtesy the Carmen McFadyen Archives)

The end of the road for the '91 Wolf baseball squad.

The end of the road for the ’91 Wolf baseball squad.

What a difference 25 years makes.

In the gap that exists between this year’s Coupeville High School baseball squad winning a league title and the last Wolf diamond squad to do so, technology has exploded, countries have fallen (and risen), the Cold War ended and baseball players started looking like they were wearing pajamas.

But fashion trends aside (modern-day players need to pull their pants up and start showing their socks again, and that’s my rant for the day…), how do these two squads compare?

Well, from looking at score-books, the ’91 squad was a heck of a lot more dominant, for sure. At least in terms of inflicting beat-downs.

Record-wise, they’re kind of similar.

Playing in the six-team Northwest B Conference at the time, the old school Wolves went 9-1 in league play, losing only to Darrington in their finale.

By comparison, today’s squad, competing in a four-team 1A Olympic League, sits at 7-1 with one game left.

But the ’91 squad won 12 of 13 at one point, slicing through opponents on their way to finishing 13-6 after a remarkably tough playoff loss (more on that in a bit).

The current squad is 10-9 and guaranteed at least three more games, two in the playoffs, so they can tie the win total, but have already lost more games and haven’t been able to put together a streak to match the ’91ers.

What really sets the two teams apart is their offense.

While today’s team has outscored opponents 106-90, the ’91 team bopped foes to a 145-79 tune, and that’s skewed a bit by the 16 runs they gave up in their playoff loss.

The modern-day Wolves have poked out a fair amount of singles, but their big blows have been limited to doubles and an occasional triple.

In ’91, Coupeville hit the long-ball, and they hit it regularly.

As I deciphered the book and newspaper clippings from the time, I found at least four Wolves — Brad Haslam, Jason McFadyen, Matt Cross and Frank Marti — who went yard that season.

After being shut-out twice by Sequim on Opening Day, Coupeville only scored fewer than four runs in a game once the remainder of the year.

Along the way, they carved up Grace Academy for 16 runs, La Conner for 14 and 13, Winlock for 13, Sultan and Concrete for 12 apiece and Friday Harbor, Concrete and Orcas for nine in separate games.

In those 10 league games (two each against Darrington, Friday Harbor, La Conner, Orcas and Concrete) they outscored their foes by an 84-25 count.

So, through 19 games, the ’91 squad averaged 7.63 runs per game (while giving up 4.16), while the ’16 team sits at 5.58/4.74.

The two teams also differ in their pitching styles.

Senior CJ Smith is the epitome of calm, cool and collected as the staff ace this year.

The ’91 team featured some Marti and a lot of Haslam, who was a raging inferno on the hill, a scary, scary giant who flung a no-hitter and topped double digits in strikeouts in more than two-thirds of his starts.

Where this year’s team would like to differ the most from the ’91 squad, though, is in playoff success.

Back then, the Wolves were primed to make a long run, only to fall a strike short.

Coupeville opened the regional playoffs at Marysville, playing a Winlock team which carried a 9-9 mark into the game, but had won its final six games.

The Wolves, getting a big day at the plate from seniors McFadyen and Chris Frey, who combined for seven hits, charged out to a 13-6 lead heading into the seventh and final inning.

Faced with the possibility they would be playing a second game in the same day if they won the opener, Coupeville’s coaches had juggled their pitching staff to deal with inning restrictions then in force.

That kept Haslam off the mound until the team fell apart in the seventh, and, by the time he took the ball, things were getting out of control.

Having surrendered four runs thanks to a run of errors (the Wolves had nine miscues on the day), CHS clung to a 13-11 lead with two outs and two strikes.

Not yet in a flow, Haslam missed on a pitch and Winlock took advantage, hammering a two-run single up the middle to send the game to extra innings.

Once there, the Wolves bats utterly deserted them for one of the few times in their miracle run, and they fell 16-13 in 10 innings.

The loss, while painful in the moment, capped one of the most successful school years for boys sports in the 116-year history of the school.

McFadyen had quarterbacked the Wolf football team to a 9-0 mark, a league title and a home state playoff game, then moved to the basketball court and sparked CHS to the tri-district playoffs.

Talked into joining baseball at the last second, he made it three-for-three that spring, then departed along with Frey, Marti and hot-hitting Brian Barr.

As we look back at ’91, there’s also one semi-tenuous connection between the two programs.

Jon Crimmins, who was a varsity bench player as a sophomore in ’91, is now a dad, and his son Aiden, plays for the Wolf JV in 2016.

And why do I bring that up?

Because it gives me the chance to recount this story from the ’91 playoff game.

The elder Crimmins and his teammates were all given per diem money for food when they went to regionals, but he and fellow sophomore Keith Currier opted to spend most of their money on baseball cards.

“We sat around the hotel room and opened packs of cards all day. That was my playoff payoff!,” Jon Crimmins said with a laugh.

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Hailey Hammer (John Fisken photo)

Hailey Hammer hauls in a throw at first. (John Fisken photo)

Vidoni

   Monica Vidoni (back row, second from left) and her teammates celebrate after winning four of six games this past weekend. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

The games are getting bigger and bigger.

As college baseball and softball teams work their way towards the postseason, four Coupeville High School grads are in the thick of things.

A quick look at the stats for the former Wolves (in alphabetic order):

Ben Etzell — Sophomore at Saint John’s University (Minnesota)

The Johnnies are 25-10 with one regular-season doubleheader left before starting postseason tourney play.

On the mound, Etzell is 2-1 with 32 strikeouts in 35.1 innings, while at the plate he’s racked up six hits (including two doubles), seven runs and four RBI.

Hailey Hammer — Freshman at Everett Community College

The Trojans are 14-14 with eight regular season games left to play.

Hammer has 13 hits (including a double and a home run), seven runs and six RBI.

Madeline Roberts — Sophomore at Shoreline Community College

The Dolphins are 10-12, with 10 more games on the regular season schedule.

Roberts has slapped seven hits (including a double), scored four times, stolen four bags and knocked in a run.

Monica Vidoni — Freshman at Rainy River Community College (Minnesota)

The Voyageurs are 26-11, and, having finished as runner-ups in the Northern Division tourney over the weekend, are now off to the Region 13B tourney starting Friday.

Vidoni is hitting .310 with 18 hits, 16 runs, seven walks and 11 RBI.

She’s also shown a knack for picking up extra bases, with three home runs and a pair of doubles in her first season of college ball.

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CJ Smith had one of the few hits for Coupeville Monday in a 3-0 loss. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   CJ Smith had one of the few hits for Coupeville Monday in a 3-0 loss. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Seven steps forward, one step backward.

A game after they clinched their first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad came out a bit flat Monday afternoon.

Call it a hangover loss.

Unable to generate much offense, the Wolves fell 3-0 at Chimacum, taking their first league defeat under first-year head coach Marc Aparicio.

Now 7-1 in the 1A Olympic League, 10-9 overall, CHS will wrap its regular season with a home game against Klahowya Wednesday.

Win or lose, the Wolves open district play May 10 at Curtis High School.

They’ll also play May 12 and possibly May 14 and will need two wins to advance to state.

To see the playoff bracket, hop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Facing off with a foe they had beaten by a single run in each of their first two meetings, Coupeville got stung early Monday.

Chimacum plated all three of its runs in the first inning, using a couple of singles and two Wolf errors to do their damage.

It was the only time all afternoon the Cowboys had much going at the plate, but it turned out to be enough, as Coupeville struggled offensively.

“We played well, but couldn’t get the bats working,” Aparicio said.

Coupeville went down in order three times, and only managed to get more than one runner on in the same inning twice in the game.

Singles from CJ Smith and Cole Payne in the first went for naught, while a brief fourth inning rally sputtered out as quickly as it began.

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Ty Eck was one of four Wolves to see mound duty Saturday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Freshman Ty Eck was one of four Wolves to see mound duty Saturday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

The Falcons got a bit of revenge.

Playing a hastily scheduled game Saturday to bulk up their schedules, South Whidbey and Coupeville’s JV baseball squads went toe-to-toe in Langley for much of the morning.

In the end, though, it was the hometown team’s bats that got hot last, as the Falcons scored nine unanswered runs across the fourth and fifth innings to nab an 11-7 win.

The loss dropped the Wolf JV to 5-2-1 on the season, with one game left on their schedule. That’s a proposed road trip to Klahowya Wednesday, May 4.

Facing off with the Falcons a day after the Wolf varsity won its first league title in 25 years, the Wolves scratched out an early run, before the two teams played hot potato with the lead.

South Whidbey went up 2-1, Coupeville responded with a four-run fourth to surge ahead 5-2, then thew floor fell out from beneath its feet when it surrounded four in the fourth and five in the fifth.

Fighting until the end, the Wolves scored two in the top of the seventh, but the late rally died out as quickly as it began.

Coupeville had a chance to stretch out its pitching, using four hurlers — Jonathan Thurston, Dane Lucero, Ty Eck and Nick Etzell — on the day.

Thurston was the most effective, tossing two scoreless innings and whiffing three Falcons to kick things off.

Jake Pease scored twice to pace the Wolf attack.

CHS coach Chris Smith was philosophical about the game, disappointed in a loss, but eager to use it as a teaching tool.

“Some good plays, some not so good. Some good plate appearances, some not so good,” was how the hardball guru summed it up.

Lessons learned, on to the next game.

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