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Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Matt Hilborn

   Matt Hilborn and Co. have scooped up their first ranking in a state baseball poll. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith

   Senior CJ Smith has been a huge factor in Coupeville’s rise, on the mound, in the field and at the plate.

Pardon me while I have the vapors.

The big boys have rediscovered Cow Town.

For the first time in recent memory, the Coupeville High School baseball squad has cracked the state’s Top 10 polls.

And it happened BEFORE they knocked off defending Olympic League champ Klahowya for the second time Wednesday.

When legendary former Anacortes coach Lem Elway kicked out his latest rankings at washingtonbaseballpoll.com Sunday, there was lil’ ol’ Coupeville sitting at #9 in 1A.

Yep, just three slots behind their league rivals, who dropped from #3 to #6 after their first loss to the Wolves.

Since the poll was released, CHS upended Chimacum Monday, then walloped Klahowya 10-2 yesterday to move within one win of its first baseball league title since 1991.

While Coupeville continues to get short thrift from the computers (ScoreCzar has them ranked at #29, behind teams with 4-11 and 5-12 records), Elway’s poll carries far more weight, as he shapes it after talking with coaches across the state.

The top 10 for 1A (through Sunday, Apr. 24):

1 — Naches Valley
2 — Eatonville
3 — Zillah
4 — Kiona-Benton
5 — Hoquiam
6 — Klahowya
7 — Freeman
8 — Kings Way Christian
9 — Coupeville
10 — Meridian

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Marc

   First-year CHS coach Marc Aparicio is one win away from getting his alma mater its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, seen here making a play

   Hunter Smith, seen here making a play in an earlier game, was superb on the mound and at the plate in a 10-2 win at Klahowya Wednesday.

The miracle ride continues.

Every pundit, every poll, every prognosticator said the same thing, and, so far, they’ve all been flat-out wrong.

Klahowya, the defending 1A Olympic League baseball champs, prepared for league play with a tough schedule full of 2A schools and did really well, earning a ranking as high as #3 in the state polls.

Then, they stepped right into the path of an oncoming train called the Wolf Express.

Exploding for seven runs in the sixth inning Wednesday, Coupeville ran away with a 10-2 win on the road and moved within a step of not only dethroning the Eagles, but winning its first baseball league title since 1991.

The Wolves have now taken two straight from Klahowya and sit at 6-0 in league play, 9-8 overall.

That gives them a two-game lead with three to play over the Eagles (4-2, 13-4), while Chimacum (2-4, 5-9) and Port Townsend (0-6, 0-13) root around down in the cellar.

Since it now owns the tiebreaker over Klahowya, Coupeville needs just one win in its final three games to clinch the title and an automatic berth in the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs.

First up is Port Townsend, which visits Whidbey Friday, with the first pitch at 4 PM.

After that comes a trip to Chimacum Monday, May 2 and a home regular-season finale against Klahowya Thursday, May 5.

The Wolves have put themselves in position to do what no CHS diamond squad has in 25 years thanks to one huge reason — their ability to get something out of everyone in the lineup.

“Every player performed when called upon, and we switched things up quite a bit. Next man up!!,” said first-year Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

“The highlight was “team.” Great job had by all of the kids,” he added. “Very proud of them – still have things to work on, but a great win. The kids are on fire!!!”

Coupeville used 14 players in the game, with eight of them scoring.

Sophomore Hunter Smith and freshman Matt Hilborn, who combined for the game’s first run, both crossed the plate twice to pace the attack.

With the game scoreless in the third, Coupeville finally broke through, thanks to some rough defense by the suddenly-rattled Eagles.

After only having one runner in the first two innings, the Wolves got Hilborn aboard on a one-out error by Klahowya’s third-baseman, then brought him around when Smith’s bunt was thrown into the outfield by the Eagle pitcher.

Klahowya countered with its own scratched-out run in the third, but after that could get next to nothing off Smith, who was superb.

Getting the nod on the mound after older brother CJ won the first meeting between the two squads, Hunter, AKA “Captain Cool,” whiffed five Eagles and was rarely in danger.

With Aparicio playing the mad scientist in the dugout, Coupeville took the lead with two runs in the top of the fifth.

Freshman pinch-hitter Dane Lucero eked out a crucial walk, then was replaced with sophomore speedster Nick Etzell, who used “some smart base running” to bust the tie.

“After that small switch our team was on fire,” Aparicio said. “Lots of stolen bases, we had great timely bunts and great base running overall.”

Up 3-1, the Wolves blew the game wide open with a 12-batter, seven-run assault in the top of the sixth.

Hunter Smith, CJ Smith, Kory Score, Gabe Wynn, Clay Reilly, Ty Eck and Hilborn all stamped on home as Coupeville put together its best offensive stretch of the season under the biggest spotlight.

With the game largely on ice, the Wolves went to Julian Welling to slam the door, and the sophomore didn’t fail, working a little of the ol’ Mariano Rivera magic in the seventh.

Perhaps appropriately, the game ended on an unassisted double play from Hunter Smith, the perfect cap to a remarkable game from the rising star.

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Jae LeVine (John Fisken photos)

   Jae LeVine climbs the staircase to heaven to snare a wayward softball. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   Wolf catcher Cole Payne contemplates backhanding the Chimacum runner for getting home plate all dirty.

Jazmine Franklin

Jazmine Franklin works all the angles on the tennis court.

Katrina

Katrina McGranahan comes in hot, easily beating the throw to second.

guys

   CHS tennis coach Ken Stange (right) alerts the authorities to the presence of the paparazzi.

Joey Lippo

   Using just the power of his mind, Joey Lippo freezes the baseball in midair. The force is strong with this one.

Matt Hilborn

Matt Hilborn pulls a 2-for-1 special, getting a good flex in while firing to first.

Hope Lodell

Hope Lodell, AKA “The Surgeon,” prepares to carve up the next pitch.

That moment right before McKenzie "Killer Kenny" Bailey drills you with the ball.

  That moment right before McKenzie “Killer Kenny” Bailey drills you with the ball.

John Fisken’s camera is currently packed in ice, cooling down.

The wanderin’ photo man hit up Coupeville Monday and went a little wild, snapping pics at four different locations.

Giving his trusty camera no time for a breather, Fisken shot middle school track (scroll down the blog an article or two to find those pics), as well as high school baseball, softball and tennis.

The latter three are represented here, with a smorgasbord of his work.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Softballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11349&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Baseballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11348&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Tennishttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11347&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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CJ Smith (John Fisken photos)

   CJ Smith, seen here covering the bag at third in an earlier game, tossed another gem on the mound Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   Cole Payne’s fleet feet delivered a 2-1 win to the Wolves, raising them to 5-0 in league play.

Don’t stop believin’.

Rallying for two runs late Monday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad pulled out another win, toppling visiting Chimacum 2-1 and clinching at least second-place in the 1A Olympic League.

With the victory, the Wolves (5-0 in league, 8-8 overall) stay atop the conference, one game up on Klahowya (4-1, 13-3) with four to play.

The Wolves and Eagles meet twice more, starting with a meeting at Klahowya Wednesday.

After that, Coupeville closes the regular season at home Friday against Port Townsend (0-5, 0-12), on the road at Chimacum (1-4, 4-9) May 2, and then, finally, at home against Klahowya May 5.

Regardless of how those games play out, CHS will finish ahead of both the Cowboys and RedHawks.

While Chimacum could still finish with the same record as Coupeville, the Wolves now own the tiebreaker.

The stakes are simple from this point.

Win a league title, something no Coupeville baseball squad has done since 1991, and the Wolves start in the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs May 11.

Finish second and CHS hosts a loser-out game May 7 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League.

Either way, six teams will play at districts, with two advancing to state.

To get an early look at the brackets, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Coupeville stayed on target Monday thanks to another stellar outing from senior hurler CJ Smith and some timely work at the plate.

Smith went the distance, fanning nine and surrendering just a single run in the fifth inning.

Still, for quite some time, that seemed like it might be enough to stop the Wolves, as they stranded a number of runners and were bedeviled by some odd calls.

That changed in the bottom of the sixth, when Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith gave his older brother a reprieve, plating Clay Reilly to tie the score at one apiece.

Buoyed by the run, CJ Smith held Chimacum down in the seventh, capping things with a final punch-out.

Tied going into the bottom of the seventh and final regular inning, Coupeville had nothing to lose (worst scenario? extra innings) and got adventurous.

With Cole Payne at third and Reilly at the plate, the Wolves went for broke and it worked.

Getting a good jump, Payne intended to steal home, only to have his teammate provide the perfect cover by rapping the ball in the direction of first base.

With Coupeville’s senior catcher hurtling for the plate, Chimacum had no play and meekly tossed Reilly out as the winning run scored.

Cue the celebration. And continue the march to history.

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

   They may call Lauren Rose “Mouse,” but her cannon of an arm roars like a lion when making the throw from third to first. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   One cock of the arm from Wolf catcher Cole Payne, and even the most daring of would-be base stealers feel their stomachs drop through their shoes.

Tamika Nastali

Eagle-eyed Tamika Nastali never flinches as she calmly watches ball four arrive.

Joey Lippo

   Joey Lippo’s mom, Connie, will have a mixed reaction to this pic. On the one hand, her son scored. On the other hand, someone has to wash those pants…

Julian Welling

   Julian Welling remains the king of delivering epic facial expressions while firing in the high, hard cheese.

Veronica Crownover

Raise your hand if you just scored, Veronica Crownover.

"Yeah, I don't think so..." Clay Reilly can't be fooled by your weak change-up.

“Yeah, I don’t think so…” Clay Reilly can’t be fooled by your weak change-up.

Jae LeVine

Jae “Flash” LeVine, quicker than a sand storm.

If it’s Saturday, swing away.

Taking advantage of a day off from school, both the Coupeville High School softball and baseball squads hosted non-conference games this weekend.

Bouncing back and forth across the road (while dodging traffic), travelin’ photo clicker John Fisken captured a bit of both games for your viewing pleasure.

The photos above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Softballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11316&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Baseball http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11317&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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