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Julian Welling had a pair of doubles and knocked in two runs in an 8-0 win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling had two hits and two RBI in an 8-0 Coupeville win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

CJ Smith had a new target Friday, but came through with the same old results.

Throwing to younger brother Hunter Smith instead of normal starting catcher Cole Payne, who was out with an injury, the Coupeville High School senior hurler tossed a four-hit, six-strikeout, complete-game shutout in La Conner.

The 8-0 non-conference baseball win was the second victory in the last three games for the Wolves and raised their record to 4-6 at the halfway point of the regular season.

While the Coupeville offense kicked in hard during the latter stages of the game, providing him with some breathing room, CJ Smith didn’t really need it.

Pitching on girlfriend Sylvia Hurlburt’s birthday, he retired 16 of the final 17 hitters he faced.

After letting La Conner get a pair of base runners in both the first and second, CJ Smith recorded the final out of the second inning on a come-backer.

From that point on he was all but flawless, giving up just an infield single in the fifth, while retiring the side in order in the third, fourth, sixth and seventh innings.

With Payne sidelined by a shoulder injury suffered in practice, Hunter Smith swapped out his infielder’s glove for a catcher’s mitt and matched his big bro in playing flawlessly.

He pounced on a little nubber that hit in front of the plate and skipped to the side, snaring the ball and whipping a throw to Kory Score at first in one fluid motion to kick off the third, bringing an ooh or two from an overflow Wolf fan section.

Proving they travel better than any other school, Coupeville hardball fanatics outnumbered La Conner’s hometown fans, and they got some bang for their buck early.

CJ Smith and Julian Welling crunched back-to-back one-out doubles in the top of the first, giving the Wolves the only run they would need on the day.

The Braves soft-tossing lefty starter managed to escape after that, though, and kept a pitcher’s duel going until the fourth inning, when Coupeville pounced on La Conner errors to tack on a second run.

Score led off with a hard shot down the third-base line that the Braves fielder juggled for an error, before Clay Reilly was nailed with an errant pitch and Dane Lucero laid down a sacrifice bunt to move the runners to second and third.

Wolf freshman Matt Hilborn then rapped a one-hopper into the hole at short for a fielder’s choice that plated Score.

Up 2-0, and even though he didn’t need it, Coupeville decided to bestow presents upon CJ Smith, breaking the game open with two more runs in the fifth and four in the sixth.

Joey Lippo lofted a pinpoint single to center to kick off the fifth, eventually coming around to score on a throwing error several batters later.

Welling slapped an RBI single up the middle to cap the inning, before the Wolves really went wild in the sixth.

A single from Lucero, a gorgeous drag bunt for a hit from Hilborn and an error that put Gabe Wynn on first juiced the bags with no outs.

After that, it was wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am, as Cameron Toomey-Stout lofted a sac fly to plate Lucero, Hunter Smith lashed an RBI single to send Hilborn home and CJ Smith knocked in Wynn and his brother with a two-run double to right.

Coupeville closed the game in style, with the Smith brothers working in tandem to wrap the seventh.

Hunter Smith tracked down an errant pop up behind home, before CJ Smith collected his final K, punching out the Brave hitter with some nasty heat.

The final out?

Poetic, as it was a slow chopper back to the mound, giving CJ plenty of time to pocket the ball, turn and lob it to Score before strolling off the field and out to a birthday dinner with the patiently waiting Hurlburt.

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Madeline

Madeline Roberts, looking spiffy in her college duds. (John Fisken photo)

Hailey

   Former Wolf slugger Hailey Hammer (right) has taken her game to Everett. (Photo courtesy Hammer)

Four players, four success stories.

As the college baseball and softball seasons play out across the country, several former Wolves are busy polishing their reps.

Softball sluggers Madeline Roberts (Shoreline Community College), Hailey Hammer (Everett CC) and Monica Vidoni (Rainy River CC) and diamond man Ben Etzell (Saint John’s University) are all sporting different uniforms these days.

But, while they may have departed Coupeville High School, their exploits are still avidly followed by local fans.

A mid-season report card:

Hammer, a freshman, is hitting .333 for a 7-7 Everett squad, with eight hits, four RBI and three runs in 10 games.

She’s cranked a double, drawn two walks and has a .966 fielding percentage for a team that’s 2-0 in conference play.

Roberts has piled up two hits (including a double), four runs, two walks and two stolen bases in seven games thus far in her sophomore campaign.

Shoreline sits at 5-5 overall, 1-1 in league play.

Vidoni’s team, based out of Minnesota, kicked off the season earlier than the Washington schools, and the freshman has seen action in 17 of her team’s 19 games.

The Voyageurs are 12-7 and Vidoni has 11 hits (including an over-the-fence home-run), seven runs, six RBI, two walks and a stolen base.

Etzell, a sophomore, is also in Minnesota, where the Johnnies are 13-7 on the season.

The former Wolf has seen mound time in four games, going 1-0 with a 6.88 ERA, striking out 16 over 17 innings of work.

At the plate, he has six hits (including two doubles), seven runs, four walks and four RBI in 12 games.

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(John Fisken photo)

Steve Marx, back at it with the open-toed shoes. (John Fisken photo)

And I get grief for wearing shorts to spring sports…

March and April on Whidbey Island are way too dang early to be playing anything outdoors on a consistent basis, as proven by the rain, cold and often brutal, non-stop wind we have endured so far.

Look outside and see a sunny day and you know nothing is on the schedule.

Look outside and see the cows trying not to be blown off the prairie and into Penn Cove and you know there are at least three home games scheduled for that afternoon … and they’re all going to be played.

Unless it’s tennis.

Tennis always takes the easy way out. Always.

Hey, it’s true.

I put in three years on the hard-courts at Tumwater High School back in olden times, but even I have to admit — one rain drop hits the court and everyone is ankling for home.

The worst weather we’ve seen this spring was during a Wolf softball win over Bellevue Christian.

Three hours of non-stop tornado erupting over second base and kicking the entire infield into fans’ faces.

I still have grit between my teeth.

A close second was last Saturday’s baseball doubleheader in Langley, which, while not the least bit windy, was damp, cold and fairly miserable.

Enter a hero, however.

Steve Marx, dad of CHS baseball player Ethan (and former Wolf star Haley) showed up not only matching me in shorts, but taking it one step further with … open-toed shoes.

Man is a beast. A beast.

Your move, Mother Nature.

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(John Fisken photos)

   Coupeville High School second baseman CJ Smith is in place to apply the tag. (John Fisken photos)

you're

“And you’re…”

OUT!!"

“OOOOOOOOOOOOOUT!!”

But the ump called him safe, causing Wolf fans like Kathy Bayne to feel the pain.

  Except the ump called him safe, leaving Wolf fans like Kathy Bayne to feel the pain.

The umpires try.

But sometimes they make you want to cry.

Saturday in Langley, as Coupeville and South Whidbey clashed on the diamond, there was a wham-bam moment at second that went the way of the Falcons.

Except it shouldn’t have, since the camera of John Fisken clearly shows Wolf second baseman CJ Smith slapped the tag on BEFORE the runner touched the bag.

But, high school ball, unlike Major League Baseball, doesn’t have replay.

It does, however, have bloggers willing to needle the umps.

So, that’s a start…

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Wolf first baseman Kory Score takes a break while waiting for a pitching change. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf first baseman Kory Score takes a break while waiting for a pitching change. (John Fisken photo)

Kory Score

Coupeville’s new clean-up hitter pauses for a selfie.

Soccer purists like to call their sport “the beautiful game,” but Kory Score is pretty sure they’re mistaken.

For the Coupeville High School junior, baseball is now, and has always been, the real winner when it comes to sports achieving true beauty.

“What I enjoy about baseball is the fact that it’s the most beautiful sport to watch, unlike basketball or football, where everyone is bashing on each other and is all sweaty,” Score said. “Baseball has become part of my life and has found a special part in my heart that I like to call home.

“I’ve grown up to love the sport because of all the fun I can have with all the guys I’ve played with and also how fun it is to just win.”

Score, who currently mans first base for the Wolves, picked up the game at age five “because my mom basically pushed me into the sport.”

And, while he’s played other sports over the years, with stints as a basketball and football player (he’s considering a return to the gridiron in the fall), the diamond has always captivated him.

He presents a tall target at first, which helps his fellow infielders greatly when they’re firing on the move, but Score would like to pack on a little more muscle to his lanky frame at some time.

“My strengths are definitely out in the field, working the ball defensively, as I’m more of a taller, thinner, and quicker first baseman than most,” Score said. “I’ve got a little power and muscle behind me, but that’s an area that I’d like to work on that ties into batting.

“My hitting is good and I can hit the ball farther than most,” he added. “But if I put a little more meat on my bones, just imagine how much farther that ball could go.”

A very-young Wolf squad sits at 3-6, but have been competitive in most of their losses.

They are atop the 1A Olympic League currently, having savaged Port Townsend 9-0 in the only league game played this season.

“My goals for this season are to have fun and win, win, win,” Score said. “I’ve always loved to win, so making this new coach (Marc Aparicio) proud and possibly going to state his first year as a coach would be amazing.”

Away from the diamond, he enjoys working out and “just trying to get outside as much as possible on this rainy Island.”

A “Star Wars” fan (“nothing surpasses them”) who can often be found on his XBox or listening to music by bands such as Bullet For My Valentine and Miss May I, Score picks chemistry and pre-calculus as his favorite school subjects.

“I want to move on in the future to major in astronomy because the stars and everything out there just fascinate me.”

Score has spent much of his life on the move, bouncing from Coupeville to Minnesota (he’s lived in Blooming Prairie and Owatonna at separate times), back to Coupeville, to Oak Harbor and once again back to Central Whidbey.

Having rejoined many of his friends from elementary and middle school in time for his junior year at CHS, he hopes to finish his high school days as a Wolf, with an eye on garnering a college baseball scholarship before he’s done.

Wherever he’s been, one woman has always been there for him, and he greatly appreciates everything she has meant to him.

“Definitely the person that’s made the biggest impact on me throughout my entire life is my mom,” Score said. “She’s shown me how strong she is and how much of a role model a girl can be to a boy.

“My mom has never stopped fighting for me and my brother and sister and always pushes through to give us the best life we can have and currently do have,” he added. “The main thing I’ve learned from my mom is to never quit; giving up isn’t the Score way!”

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