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Kory Score, seen here making a defensive play

   Kory Score, seen here snagging a low throw at first in an earlier game, knocked in both of Coupeville’s runs Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

One out away.

Stung twice by crucial two-out hits, the Coupeville High School baseball squad fell 4-2 to visiting Meridian Saturday.

The non-conference loss to the #10-ranked team in 1A dropped the Wolves to 7-8 heading into the stretch run of league games.

Sitting atop the Olympic League at 4-0, Coupeville has five games left, with a key stretch of three looming in the week ahead.

First up is Chimacum (1-3) at home Monday, then a trip to Klahowya (2-1) Wednesday, before winding up back on Whidbey Friday to face Port Townsend (0-3).

Saturday’s game was a warm-up for that run at a possible league title, and, while the Wolves came up just a bit short, they held their own against a highly-regarded squad.

CHS hurlers Julian Welling and Matt Hilborn combined to limit the Trojans to just four hits, but Meridian made them count.

Henry Skaggs blasted a three-run, two-out double in the top of the second to stake Meridian to a lead it never relinquished.

Coupeville chipped away, getting back into the game with a single run in both the second and third innings, but left the bags juiced in the third.

Welling led off the second with a walk, and then pinch-runner Joey Lippo sprinted all the way home on an RBI double from Kory Score.

The second Wolf run came via their own backs-to-the-wall magic, as Score capped a run of four-straight two-out hits with an RBI single that plated CJ Smith.

In between Smith and Score, Cole Payne and Welling also dropped in hits.

Both teams swapped zeros on the (non-existent) scoreboard until the sixth, when the two-out bugaboo hit again for the Wolves.

This time it was an RBI double off of the bat of Baker Otter, and it capped the scoring.

While his team came up a hair short, Wolf coach Marc Aparicio liked a lot of what he saw.

“It was a great game. We both played strong, but they just got one hit more than us,” he said. “I’m happy how our team played. Focused on Chimacum now.”

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Ben Etzell meets with up with some of his relatives while playing college ball. (Photo courtesy Kristi Etzell)

   Ben Etzell meets with up with some of his relatives while playing college ball. (Photo courtesy Kristi Etzell)

A loss? What’s that?

Coupeville High School grad Ben Etzell won for the third time as a college baseball pitcher Saturday, and has yet to taste the sting of defeat.

The former Cascade Conference MVP started and tossed five innings in Minneapolis as his Saint John’s University squad rolled Augsburg College 8-4 in the first game of a doubleheader.

Toss in a 9-8 win in the second game, and the Johnnies sit at 22-9 overall, 10-4 in league play.

Etzell improved to 2-0 on the mound as a sophomore, following strongly on the heels of a freshman season in which he went 1-0 with two saves.

Saturday, he scattered four hits, plunked a batter (just to keep them guessing) and struck out three.

That gives Etzell 31 K’s in 31.2 innings of work this season.

While he didn’t hit against Augsburg, Etzell has piled up some stats at the plate, as well, with six hits, seven runs, four RBI and a pair of doubles.

Saint John’s has three more doubleheaders scheduled this season, then opens the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference post-season tourney May 12.

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Hunter Smith smacked three singles, collected 3 RBi and struck out

   Hunter Smith smacked three singles and collected 3 RBI at the plate Thursday, while also whiffing 10 on the mound. (John Fisken photo)

It was brutal and efficient, just the way it needed to be.

Raining down 11 hits (from eight different batters) the Coupeville High School baseball team rolled to its fourth straight league win Thursday, crushing visiting Port Townsend 15-4.

The win, the fifth in their last seven games, lifted the Wolves to 7-7 overall, 4-0 in the 1A Olympic League.

It also kept them a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (2-1, 11-3) in the race for a league title, and well clear of Chimacum (1-3, 3-8) and Port Townsend (0-3, 0-10).

Thursday’s showdown could have easily been a “trap game,” with CHS coming off of a huge upset of Klahowya only to turn around and face a win-less team.

To Coupeville’s credit, other than one sloppy inning, it never played that way, though.

The Wolves came out with sharp pitching from sophomore hurler Hunter Smith, who whiffed 10 RedHawks, and aggressive hitting from the get-go.

Coupeville scored in every inning, notching three in the first and two more in the second before exploding for a game-deciding eight-spot in the third.

The third-inning burst came at the exact right moment, as the Wolves early 5-0 lead was cut to 5-4 when their defense crumbled a bit in the top of that inning.

Four CHS errors, a lively mix of bobbled balls and throws that skipped away, helped keep the RedHawks alive, and then a huge two-run single back up the middle got the visiting fans in a momentary tizzy.

Hunter Smith was having none of it, however, as the unflappable one calmly ended the inning with another punch-out, stranding two runners.

For an agonizing moment or two, the game tottered on the precipice.

And then the Wolves attacked.

Sending 14 batters to the plate in the third, Coupeville used six walks and five hits in the inning to savage Port Townsend beyond recognition.

Nick Etzell and Hunter Smith drew bases-loaded walks to pad the lead slightly, before CJ Smith stroked a two-run single and Cole Payne lashed an RBI double.

The Wolves weren’t done, though, as Kory Score drove a two-run single to center-field and Clay Reilly looped an RBI single into the gap to stretch the lead all the way out to 13-4.

Running aggressively, even with a large lead, Coupeville tacked on two more runs in the fourth to put the ten-run rule into effect, and with Hunter Smith unhittable down the stretch, there was no hope for the RedHawks.

Coupeville had opened the game with three in the first.

Both Smith brothers came sprinting home when Payne’s bunt was thrown into right field, then pinch-runner Joey Lippo trotted across the plate on a ground-out off the bat of Julian Welling.

The Wolves tacked on two in the second, with Reilly dropping a beautiful bunt single to kick things off.

The junior outfielder stole second, took third on a single from birthday boy Gabe Wynn and came home on a passed ball.

Wynn was plated by Hunter Smith, smashing one of his three singles on the afternoon.

Reilly had two hits, while CJ Smith, Payne, Score, Ethan Marx, Wynn and Lippo all chipped in with one apiece.

While Welling was one of only two starters not to get a hit, that was only because the sophomore third baseman got flat out robbed. Twice.

After his first-inning RBI (which came on an epically long at-bat, as he fouled off pitch after pitch to stay alive), he came within an inch or two of a pair of extra-base hits.

Welling smashed a long shot down the left field line that was somehow run down, then had a wicked liner to third get snared by a RedHawk who jumped at just the right moment.

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Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling abused the Klahowya pitcher twice, once with the Stare O’ Death, then by ripping an RBI single. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith keeps a laser focus as he drops a bunt.

Kory Score

Kory Score provides a tall target at first.

Cole Payne

“Go, man, go!” Wolf coach Marc Aparicio sends Cole Payne flying for home.

Clay Reilly

   Lurking among the dandelions, Clay Reilly is in the right spot at the right time to rob Klahowya of a hit.

Smith

Smith pulls out his best hurdler moves as he flies into first.

The best in the biz.

After shocking Klahowya on Tuesday afternoon, the Coupeville High School baseball squad sits atop the 1A Olympic League with a perfect 3-0 record.

Wandering around, snapping pics as the action unfolded, was paparazzi John Fisken, and 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:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11280&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Wolf freshman Shane Losey reached base four times Tuesday, keying Coupeville's comeback. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf freshman Shane Losey reached base four times Tuesday, keying Coupeville’s comeback. (John Fisken photo)

No quit in the young guns.

Down by five runs in the sixth, with the clock ticking down thanks to a waiting ferry, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad rallied to force an 11-11 tie at Klahowya Tuesday afternoon.

While it could technically count as a loss, since the Wolves had to sprint to the bus before the Eagles got a chance to hit in the bottom half of the inning, this is Coupeville Sports, not Klahowya Sports.

We’re calling it a tie.

“We had a pretty good game,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith. “We sure left on a high note, knowing that we battled back to tie things up.”

The Wolves fought back all afternoon, after the Eagles opened the first with a six-run bang.

Jonathan Thurston took over on the mound for Wolf starter Ty Eck, who was forced from the game in the second by a hurting knee, and struck out eight batters over 3 2/3 innings of work.

Coupeville chipped away relentlessly at the lead, plating one in the second, four in the third and another in the fifth before the big five-run rally in the sixth.

The offense came from everyone in the lineup, with freshman Shane Losey sparking the attack, reaching base all four times he came to the plate.

Eck thumped a key two-run double and scored three times while Jake Pease scratched out three walks and crossed home twice.

Cameron Toomey-Stout (walk, single), Nick Etzell (walk, error), Brenden Gilbert (errors), Aiden Crimmins (walk, error) and Kyle Rockwell (walks) all reached base twice apiece, as the Wolves took advantage of whatever they were offered.

“We managed to frustrate the other team and their coach to no end,” Smith said with a laugh. “Nothing spectacular, but we figured out a way to keep ourselves relevant in this game.”

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