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Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Joey Lippo

   Professor Joey Lippo teaches Baseball 101: always use two hands when fielding. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith

CJ Smith sends some dirt flying while patrolling second base.

Nick Etzell

Wolf hurler Nick Etzell reaches deep inside to impress the radar gun.

Clay Reilly

  Eyes locked on the incoming pitch, Clay Reilly prepares to execute a textbook sacrifice bunt.

Jacob Zettle

Jacob Zettle gets enterprising to avoid the rain.

Cole Payne

“My name’s Cole Payne and I … am … here … to bring … the PAIN!!”

Jake Pease

Jake Pease sets up the target.

Julian Welling

  Can you smell the heat coming off of Julian Welling’s fastball? You will in a second or two.

James Vidoni

  James Vidoni gets down, real down, as a wild Falcon hurler tries to take his head off.

Major League Baseball returned Sunday, but diamond action has already been underway for weeks on Whidbey.

Saturday brought an Island rivalry clash in Langley between Coupeville and South Whidbey — the schools split, with the Wolves winning JV and the Falcons varsity — and travelin’ photo man John Fisken was there to click away through the mist.

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:

Varsity — http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11107&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=17&sport=0

JV — http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11106&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=17&sport=0

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Freshman catcher Jake Pease had the defensive play of the day Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman catcher Jake Pease had the defensive play of the day Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Despite the cold, oozy weather, Wolf moms (Photo courtesy Charlotte Young)

   Despite the cold, oozy weather, Wolf moms (and a couple of photo-bombing varsity players) turned out in force. (Cole Payne photo)

The weather was miserable, the game endless, but the payoff superb.

After a tentative start that included losing their first batter to a game-ending injury, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad stormed back from four runs down to squash host South Whidbey 17-6 Saturday morning.

The win, when it came after nearly three hours of play in cold, damp conditions, lifted the young Wolves to a flawless 2-0 on the season.

Despite what the weather forecasters promised, the day was dank and foreboding, and took a devilish turn in the first inning when Cameron Toomey-Stout lurched to avoid a tag at home and hobbled off the field.

The speed demon sophomore never returned, but, playing in front of a sizable pro-Wolf crowd (Coupeville fans outnumbered Falcon faithful by a 3 to 1 ratio for the JV game), CHS caught fire from the third inning on.

Trailing 6-2 exiting the second (with both runs having been plated by errors), the Wolves woke up their bats, then spent the rest of the morning slapping South Whidbey silly.

Coupeville tallied five in the third to retake a lead they would never return, and it kicked off with the Ty Eck Experience.

The freshman, who had taken the mound in the second and would go on to pick up the win with three solid innings of work, led off the third with a single.

Legs churning, Eck promptly stole second, took third on a passed ball by a rattled Falcon catcher, then shot across home when another ball got loose.

With the Falcons in disarray, Coupeville pressed matters for four more, with the big blow coming off of the bat of sophomore Nick Etzell, who stroked a laser-like two-out RBI single into right-center.

Once they had the lead, Wolf relievers Eck and Etzell combined to toss four shutout innings.

The only scoring opportunity the Falcons had after the second came in the sixth, and was denied by a great hustle play from Wolf catcher Jake Pease.

With a runner at third, a wet ball skittered under his glove, causing a South Whidbey runner to break for the plate.

Whirling alertly around, though, Pease snagged the ball as it rebounded off the backstop and fired it on a line to Etzell, who slapped a decisive tag on a suddenly unhappy Falcon.

Backing up their pitching and defense, the Wolves rolled up 10 more runs, with three in the fourth, two in the fifth and a final five-spot during a long, damp sixth inning.

A steady, patient eye was key, as eight different CHS players took a walk during the final three innings, with Eck, Dane Lucero and Cameron Dahl each drawing a pair.

In between the freebies, and a host of South Whidbey errors as the ball continued to pick up slickness from the not-quite-rain that oozed down, Coupeville picked up some key hits.

Brenden Gilbert spanked a single up the middle, Matt Hilborn and Joey Lippo beat out infield hits and Jake Hoagland launched an RBI single to left that drew appreciate ooh’s and ah’s from the crowd.

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Cole Payne (John Fisken photo)

   Cole Payne stood tall for Coupeville Saturday, delivering one of just two hits South Whidbey hurler Ricky Muzzy surrendered. (John Fisken photo)

Ricky Muzzy said goodbye to Coupeville in style.

Not that the Wolves were all that thrilled about it.

Barring a reunion in the playoffs, Saturday’s non-conference baseball game in Langley, in which Muzzy used his crafty pitching arm and explosive bat to carry South Whidbey to a 7-3 win, will be the final time the Falcon senior will stare down his Island rivals.

Facing off with a Coupeville squad that includes players he has suited up with in American Legion ball, such as Wolf catcher Cole Payne, Muzzy was lights out on the mound.

Tossing six shutout innings, the Falcon hurler limited the Wolves to just a pair of hits — a second inning single up the middle by Wolf pitcher Julian Welling and a sixth-inning base knock from Payne.

That second hit was a rocket into the gap between third and short that a diving Falcon managed to knock down at the last second, but couldn’t recover as Payne zipped down the first-base line.

Still, until he turned the ball over to his bullpen, Muzzy was in total control, while also delivering the game’s biggest hit — a thunderous two-run triple to right in the fourth that broke open a fairly close game.

Up until that point, the Wolves, after a bit of trouble in the first, had stayed close.

South Whidbey scratched out three runs in the opening inning, putting together three hits and taking advantage of a wild pitch and a passed ball.

After that, though, Welling matched Muzzy in stringing together zeros until the fourth.

With one out quickly in the books, Coupeville looked like they had caught a break when a grounder that ricocheted off of Matt Hilborn’s glove at third shot right into the outstretched arm of shortstop Hunter Smith.

But, despite a strong throw on the move from Smith, the runner won the race to the bag, and that gave the Falcons just enough inspiration to stage a game-busting rally.

A single through the gap between second and first put two on the bags, before Muzzy launched a shot that had most South Whidbey fans thinking he had crushed a three-run home run.

Coupeville’s outfield managed to momentarily stem the tide with a quick throw to hold Muzzy at third, but two more runs eventually came across before the inning was done.

Trailing 7-0 entering the seventh, the Wolves mounted their first sustained offensive show of the afternoon by keeping the ball away from South Whidbey’s superb outfield crew.

Earlier, several shots that would have dropped in against most teams were run down by Falcon fielders, including a sensational diving snag in center on a drive by Kory Score that seemed to have extra-base hit written all over it.

Finally keeping the ball down when it came off the bat, the Wolves rallied for three in the final inning and had the bases loaded when the Falcons retired the final batter.

An error on a grounder by Welling, a low, slicing single to left from Gabe Wynn and a walk to Clay Reilly juiced the bags, before Joey Lippo (walk), Hunter Smith (infield single) and CJ Smith (a single to right that dropped in front of a charging fielder) plated runners.

While the young Wolves (now 3-6 on the season) departed Langley with a loss to last year’s 1A state runner-ups, first-year CHS coach Marc Aparicio liked a lot of what he saw.

“We hit the ball hard today, but they made some great plays on us defensively,” he said. “South Whidbey’s a great team, and we all saw that. But I’m real proud of our guys.”

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With a 9-0 win over Port Townsend Thursday, Joey Lippo and Coupeville are in first place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

   With a 9-0 win over Port Townsend Thursday, Joey Lippo and Coupeville are in first place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

This is how you break a losing streak.

Hot bats. A torrid pitching performance. Contributions from the top of the lineup to the bottom.

Riding a 13-strikeout complete-game performance from senior hurler CJ Smith, the Coupeville High School baseball squad rediscovered its winning ways Thursday afternoon.

Playing under a blazing sun on the prairie, the Wolves routed visiting Port Townsend 9-0 to snap a four-game skid and claim, at least for the moment, sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

Coupeville is 3-5 overall, 1-0 in league play and will have three non-league games (all on the road) before they face off with another league foe.

That won’t be until Apr. 14, when the Wolves travel to Chimacum.

Up first are con-conference games at South Whidbey, La Conner and Blaine, with the all-Island showdown coming Saturday in Langley.

JV kicks off a doubleheader at 10, with varsity set for noon.

Facing off with the RedHawks Thursday, Coupeville came out guns blazing.

CJ Smith retired the side in order in four of seven innings, scattering just a pair of hits while getting almost two-thirds of his outs via the punch-out.

The Wolves broke the game open in the bottom of the third, sending their first four hitters in the inning (Matt Hilborn, Hunter Smith, CJ Smith and Cole Payne) across the plate.

The first two scored on Port Townsend errors, while the latter two were knocked in by a blow from first baseman Kory Score.

CHS added three in the fifth and another two in the sixth — Hilborn, Cameron Toomey-Stout and Nick Etzell all chipped in with RBIs — getting something from everyone in a shuffled lineup.

“Everybody had great at-bats,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio. “We switched it up and slid some guys in off the bench and were able to get some different looks.

“Port Townsend is a very solid team, but we really got a lot out of the bottom of our lineup today.”

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Dane Lucero

   Dane Lucero, seen here in an earlier game, combined with Hunter Smith for a strong outing on the mound Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

One more hit.

That was about all that came between the Coupeville High School baseball squad and a comeback win Tuesday.

Playing on the road at Lynden Christian, the Wolves rallied to score four in the top of the seventh, but left the bags juiced and headed home with an 8-6 loss.

The non-conference defeat dropped CHS to 2-5 heading into the first 1A Olympic League game of the season.

That comes Thursday, when the Wolves play host to Port Townsend (0-5) in the only home contest Coupeville will have in a seven-game span.

Facing off with the Lyncs (3-5), Coupeville shot itself in the foot repeatedly in the early going.

Five errors and several bobbled balls in the outfield conspired to wreck the Wolves, who fell behind 8-2 despite strong work on the mound from sophomore Hunter Smith and freshman Dane Lucero.

“We struggled on defense,” said an understated Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

It wasn’t all bad, though, as first baseman Kory Score triggered a pair of double plays that came a hair away from being triple plays.

He also knocked in a run in his varsity debut.

Aparicio singled out the stellar defensive work of catcher Cole Payne, who kept Lynden Christian in check, gunning out a runner at second while narrowly missing on a second throw.

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