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Hunter

Hunter Smith prepares to go ballistic on another pitcher. (Charlotte Smith photos)

The Oak Harbor Babe Ruth team, which includes five Coupeville Middle School players. (Charlotte Smith photos)

 The Oak Harbor Babe Ruth team, which includes five Coupeville Middle School players.

The “Battle of the Harbors” ended with a magnificent meltdown.

At least if you were an Oak Harbor fan, that is.

Friday Harbor’s pitcher lost the ability to get the ball over the plate at the worst possible moment Wednesday, plunking three hitters in a row as he tried to hold a one-run lead in the seventh.

That was just the beginning, as a string of walks allowed the Wildcat Babe Ruth baseball squad to turn a 2-1 deficit into a somewhat unexpected 8-2 romp and a berth in the championship game of the district tourney.

Oak Harbor, which features five players from Coupeville, will face Ferndale 5:30 PM Thursday at Rotary Park in Burlington with a chance to punch its ticket to next month’s state championships.

Win, and they’re guaranteed a trip to Spokane for the July 8-11 tournament. Lose, and they’ll get another game.

The top two teams from this district advance to state, but, even if things suddenly go disastrously wrong for the ‘Cats and they lose two straight, they could still get in as a wild card team.

Even hard-core fans are a little confused by the last possibility.

“I don’t understand it,” said team dad (and hockey buff) Joe Lippo. “It’s more confusing than World Cup!”

Continue to keep their hot streak alive and the ‘Cats won’t have to bother about point differential, however. Win and you’re in.

One of Oak Harbor’s Central Whidbey imports kicked things off with a bang against Friday Harbor, which was the #1 seed.

Hunter Smith led off the game and whacked a shot under the fence for a ground rule double. He came around to score shortly after on a deep sac fly off the bat of teammate Corey Roberts.

Then, the runs came to a screeching halt for Oak Harbor.

Down by one entering the top of the seventh and final inning, the ‘Cats needed a miracle. And they found more than one.

Coupeville’s Gabe Eck chipped a single to right, then Will Danielson added his own hit.

Kamryn Mebane hit a wicked shot right back at the pitcher, who juggled it before getting Mebane at first.

That was enough for the fleet-footed Eck to sprint home with the tying run, setting up the possibility of extra innings.

They weren’t necessary, however, because Mebane’s smash apparently rattled the Friday Harbor pitcher big time.

Thomas Anderson reached on an error, and Coupeville’s Joey Lippo walked, juicing the bags. Then the dam broke, one bad pitch at a time.

Three Oak Harbor hitters in a row were plunked, breaking the tie. After that, Friday Harbor stopped putting its pitches into the ribs of ‘Cat hitters, but walked another three runs home before getting out of the inning.

Thoroughly deflated, Friday Harbor went down quietly in the bottom of the seventh, sealing the win for Whidbey’s finest.

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Don't tell anyone, but I shared some of the cookies liberated

  Don’t tell anyone, but of the hundreds of cookies I received this spring from CHS moms, a few were shared with my Whidbey News-Times “rival.” (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It’s true — I like to poke the Evil Empire up in Canada that owns the three Whidbey newspapers.

And yes, I once cashed checks from them back in my misbegotten youth. We all have our youthful indiscretions.

But never think that I am poking the guy who is doing the same job for those papers that I am, covering sports.

Jim Waller, the Sports Editor of the Whidbey News-Times (whose articles also run in the shadow paper that calls itself the Whidbey Examiner) was my high school journalism teacher during the extra semester I spent at Oak Harbor High School after my dad moved us out of Tumwater mid-way through my senior year (long story).

He is the person most directly responsible for my journalism career — and a lot of my editors since that point would like to have a long discussion with him about that, outside, behind the building, about now — getting me in the door of the News-Times at 18.

I have a great deal of respect for Mr. Waller, as a teacher, as a Hall of Fame high school baseball coach and as a journalist.

The man is a consummate pro, the quiet, elegant flip side of the coin to my frequently hyperventilating, gossipy Dennis the Menace approach to sports coverage.

With that being said, I just wanted to direct you to something he wrote recently. It was timed to Father’s Day, but it slipped past me somehow and I just noticed it the other day.

It’s a reflection piece on the life and times of his dad, Mert Waller, maybe the single most influential coach to ever work on Whidbey Island.

My path crossed with the senior Waller during his later days, when he had moved to being an assistant baseball coach for his son on Wildcat teams that I covered for the News-Times.

He was a class act through and through, a great guy, and that comes through vividly in the article Mr. Waller wrote.

Go take a look at it. It’s well worth your time.

http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/sports/263081711.html

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Hunter Smith (right), with siblings CJ, a baseball star for CHS, and Scout.

Hunter Smith (right), with siblings CJ, a baseball star for CHS, and Scout.

Hunter Smith swung a big bat Tuesday.

Pounding a three-run triple, then coming around to score when the ensuing throw went wild, the Coupeville Middle School baseball star sparked his Oak Harbor Babe Ruth squad to an 8-2 win in their district playoff opener.

Powered by Smith and CMS schoolmates Joey Lippo and Gabe Eck, the ‘Cats had little trouble polishing off Burlington.

Now comes the big challenge, as Oak Harbor advances to play top-seeded Friday Harbor Wednesday.

Win the “Battle of the Harbors” and Ferndale awaits on Thursday.

Against Burlington, the ‘Cats benefited from Smith’s huge swing and from a stellar start on the mound from Chris Trisler.

Lippo cracked Oak Harbor’s first hit, one of two he collected in the game, while Eck snared several key catches in right.

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Ben Etzell gets congrats from coach Willie Smith and catcher Jake Tumblin. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Ben Etzell gets congrats from coach Willie Smith and catcher Jake Tumblin after another mound gem. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Etzell also swung a big bat for the Wolves.

Etzell also swung a big bat for the Wolves.

Just when you thought it was done, it wasn’t.

Officially putting the very final stamp on the high school baseball season, the Washington State Baseball Coaches Association has named its All-State teams.

And lo and behold, there’s a Wolf at the highest level.

Pitcher Ben Etzell, who became the first Coupeville High School athlete to win a league MVP award in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference in any sport, was named as a First-Team selection for the A/B squad.

The recent CHS grad was the second Wolf honored for the 2013-2014 school year.

Senior lineman Nick Streubel was named a Second-Team All-State player during the football season.

Cam Walker of Naches Valley was picked as the A/B player of the year and South Whidbey’s Colton Sterba was named as a Second-Team pick.

Three other Cascade Conference players — Colton Sandhofer of Cedarcrest, Riley Larsen of Granite Falls and Ryan Dorney of ATM — were named First-Team picks on the 2A squad.

For the complete lists of All-State selections from 4A down to A/B, skip over to the Everett Herald’s story:

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20140624/BLOG18/140629573/1007/Local-baseball-players-honored

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CJ Smith goes hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photo)

CJ Smith goes hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photo)

Smith prepares to run wild on the basepaths. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Smith prepares to run wild on the basepaths. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Kacie Kiel (right) was the runner-up in the 33-athlete poll and fought hard to the end, as she always does. (Fisken photo)

  Kacie Kiel (right) was the runner-up in the 33-athlete poll and fought hard to the end, as she always does. (Fisken photo)

The “Face of the Future” belongs to CJ Smith.

Smith, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School in the fall, held off a hard-charging Kacie Kiel and 31 other contestants to win our 48-hour orgy of voting madness.

His reward — he’ll hold down the banner photo across the top of this blog through Jan. 1.

In the end, 34,719 votes were cast, with Smith topping the field with 7,290 votes (21%), edging out Kiel (5,869) and Makana Stone (4,684).

Skyler Lawrence and Zane Bundy rounded out the top five.

After moving to town midway through his sophomore season, Smith flashed signs of brilliance on the basketball court for the Wolf JV boys’ hoops squad.

Then he played a substantial role on the CHS baseball squad, which made it all the way to the state tourney.

Quick on the base paths and fluid in the field, Smith played several infield slots and eventually became the team’s #2 pitcher as the season wore on.

To see the complete results of the poll, jump over to:

https://coupevillesports.com/2014/06/22/vote-til-your-fingers-drop-off/

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