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CJ Smith, about to take off for another stolen base. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CJ Smith, about to take off for another stolen base. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Ethan Marx cleared the bases with a three-run single in the first Saturday.

Ethan Marx cleared the bases with a three-run single in the first Saturday.

Cole Payne slams the door shut on the Falcons.

Cole Payne slams the door shut on the Falcons.

It was over quick.

The Coupeville High School JV baseball squad came out swinging the big sticks Saturday morning, pounding away for seven runs in the first two innings on its way to an 8-5 win over visiting South Whidbey.

The home game, coming on a cold, crisp, thankfully non-windy day on the prairie, was the first of the season for the young Wolves, and the first JV baseball game in several seasons for CHS.

With a pack of freshmen having turned out this year, Coupeville coach Willie Smith has two squads for the first time in the last four seasons.

And, with all of the varsity players on hand to offer frequent and vocal encouragement to their younger counterparts, the continued growth of the CHS program took another big step forward.

The offensive attack was on-point from the first batter for the Wolves, as sophomore Cole Payne thumped a lead-off double to straight-away center field.

After a passed ball moved Payne to third, he skipped home on an RBI single from CJ Smith, who promptly stole second himself. Walks to Kyle Bodamer and Clay Reilly juiced the bags, and then the runs really started coming.

Gabe Wynn slapped an RBI single up the middle to give Coupeville a 2-1 lead, then fellow frosh Ethan Marx unloaded with a shot down the right field line, clearing the bases.

The third guy coming home, Wynn hit the ground hard, sliding around a sweeping tag from the Falcon catcher and smacking his hand emphatically on the plate with his team’s fifth run.

The Wolves added two more in the second, when junior Korban Korzan crunched an RBI double, then later scored on a passed ball. Wynn capped the scoring in the fourth with an RBI on a sacrifice fly.

With CHS not having a full nine-man JV roster, Korzan and fellow junior Aaron Trumbull came down from the varsity to get brief stints in on the mound. The duo combined with freshman Jonathan Thurston and Payne to share mound time.

Payne, channeling his inner Mariano Rivera, slammed the door shut in the seventh. With the bases loaded, he recorded back-to-back strikeouts to end the threat and earn the save.

The game marked the high school debut of Wynn, Thurston, Reilly, Marx, Jimmy Myers and Aiden Crimmins.

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Josh Bayne had three hits and three RBI Friday. (John Fisken p[hoto)

Josh Bayne had three hits and three RBI Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Aaaaaaaa-goooooooo-nyyyyyyyyyyyy.

Three outs away from a sweep of its season-opening three-game series against arch-rival South Whidbey, the Coupeville High School baseball squad couldn’t get the door all the way slammed.

Instead, they surrendered four runs in the bottom of the seventh Friday, losing 10-9 on a walk-off, two-out, two-run single.

Still, the Wolves, now 2-1 on the season, did win the series and will hold a tiebreaker over the Falcons, the only other 1A school to play baseball in the Cascade Conference. King’s doesn’t play baseball, while the other five league schools are 2A.

Coupeville will hit the road for non-conference games at Concrete and Nooksack Valley next week before returning to league play against the biggest baddie in all the land, Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

The game started slowly Friday, got pretty awesome for a stretch, then slipped away piece by piece.

The Wolves went with sophomore CJ Smith on the mound, and he didn’t have the command he had shown out of the bullpen in a CHS win Thursday.

After a rough first inning, in which he surrendered three runs, he settled down, but trailed 4-0 when he turned the ball over to Wade Schaef in the fourth.

After scraping together a run on an Aaron Trumbull double and Kurtis Smith single, Coupeville seemingly blew the game open with an eight-run fifth inning.

The Wolves used three hits, five walks and a crucial South Whidbey error to amass the runs. Morgan Payne (two-run single) and Josh Bayne (three-run double) delivered the biggest blows.

With Schaef cruising into the sixth inning, Coupeville seemed primed for the sweep, but the plucky Falcons refused to go away.

South Whidbey cut the margin to 9-6 going into the seventh, then jumped on mental errors by the Wolves to get two more in the bottom of the seventh.

Clinging to a 9-8 lead, with runners at second and third and two outs, Coupeville still had a chance to escape.

But it wasn’t to be, as the Falcon cleanup hitter became a hometown hero with a textbook single into left center to score the tying and winning runs.

Bayne paced the Wolves with three hits and three RBI, while Trumbull added two hits and two runs.

While he would have preferred getting back on the bus with a win, CHS coach Willie Smith came away mostly pleased with how his team handled the season-opening series.

“Although we lost, we did take the series and we had a lot of good things happen over the past three games,” Smith said. “We still have some work to do, as we struck out far too much today, mostly looking, and we still need to be able to put a team away when we have them on the ropes.

“But I feel like we put ourselves in a good position league-wise,” he added. “The areas we need to work on are definitely areas which we can fix.”

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Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin called a good game Thursday, as CHS pitchers (John Fisken photo)

  Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin called a good game Thursday, then chipped in at the plate with two hits and three stolen bases. (John Fisken photo)

Church was in session Thursday, and the sermon was all about denial.

Coupeville High School hurler Aaron “Church” Curtin was flingin’ smoke, and backed by an opportunistic defense, he shut down visiting South Whidbey to a 6-1 tune.

The second straight win over their Island arch-rivals, it lifted the Wolves to a glossy 2-0 on the young season and clinched the tie-breaker between the only two 1A schools playing baseball in the Cascade Conference.

While Coupeville still has another 18 regular season games to play, 16 in league play (including a game in Langley Friday), it doesn’t hurt to know that, if it comes down to it, the Wolves will have an edge when playoff berths are decided.

“Well, it certainly helps, but we still need to finish ahead of them in league, so a long ways to go until it’s completely secured,” said a low-key CHS coach Willie Smith.

If Curtin keeps pitching like he did in his first outing of the season, following on the heels of strong work from Ben Etzell in the opener, it’s just going to get better for Coupeville.

Aaron pitched a heckuva game,” Smith said.

Curtin struck out six over six innings and effectively scattered five hits, spacing them out where they did little damage.

When the Falcons did get bat on ball, the Wolf defense was ready.

Etzell went airborne to snag a screaming liner, then doubled a runner off of second for an inning-ending double play.

Then Wade Schaef topped him with “an ESPN highlight reel play,” laying out on a dead run to grab a liner at his shoestrings, snatching away a huge hit at a time when CHS was clinging to a one-run lead.

Schaef also swung a huge bat for the Wolves, crunching a double and knocking home three runs.

The whole lineup clicked, with Korbin Korzan thumping a double and Jake Tumblin racking up two hits and three stolen bases. Korzan, Tumblin and Morgan Payne each had an RBI, while Etzell and Josh Bayne also collected steals.

Coming into the season, pitching was a strong suit for the Wolves, with Etzell, Curtin, Aaron Trumbull, Bayne, Schaef and others forming a strong staff. But that staff may be even deeper than thought.

Sophomore CJ Smith, who transferred to Coupeville during basketball season, made his debut on the mound in the seventh and closed the game with a bang. Facing the top of the order for the Falcons, he retired them one-two-three on just eight pitches.

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There will come a day when Madeline Strasburg and Co. get to play a softball game. That day was not today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

There will come a day when Madeline Strasburg and Co. get to play a softball game. That day was not today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The sun is out, but no one is playing.

The after effects of rain washed away both scheduled Coupeville High School games Wednesday afternoon.

The Wolf baseball squad was supposed to welcome South Whidbey to town for the middle game of a three-game season opening series, but, even with the rain having stopped earlier in the day, the CHS field was not recovered enough for play.

Or, Coupeville coach Willie Smith just misses the warmth of a gym.

“It’s cold and windy and muddy and I’m older and wimpier … and it’s cold!!!,” Smith wailed, while giggling.

The game has been rescheduled for Thursday (4 PM), which will bump the JV baseball game planned for that day. That game will likely jump to Saturday, if things work out.

The tweaking puts baseball up against softball, as the CHS fast pitch squad will attempt (again) to open its season Thursday (also 4 PM), when it also hosts South Whidbey.

The softballers were turned away from a trip to Port Townsend Monday when that school’s infield disappeared underwater.

Tuesday they were supposed to host South Whidbey, but a scheduling snafu with Friday Harbor bumped that game to Thursday.

A trip to Archbishop Thomas Murphy Wednesday fell through due to weather, so try #4 will come Thursday.

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Korbin Korzan (13) flies into the bag as a South Whidbey player goes airborne in pursuit of a badly-overthrown ball. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Korbin Korzan (13) flies into the bag as South Whidbey’s Ricky Muzzy goes airborne in pursuit of a badly-overthrown ball. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CHS baseball guru Willie Smith works his magic. "Maybe you guys win, or maybe you get to walk back to Coupeville..."

   CHS baseball guru Willie Smith works his magic. “Maybe you guys win, or maybe you get to walk back to Coupeville…”

Winning pitcher Ben Etzell gets congrats from a teammate.

Winning pitcher Ben Etzell (middle) gets congrats from a teammate.

Josh Bayne tiptoes along the baseline, daring the pitcher to run him back to the bag.

  Josh Bayne tiptoes along the baseline, daring the pitcher to run him back to the bag.

No ball gets past the vacuum that is Morgan Payne.

No ball gets past the vacuum that is Morgan Payne.

Etzell flings some high, hard cheddar.

Etzell flings some high, hard cheddar.

Shelli Trumbull is just an insurance agent in her spare time.

Her true calling is as a baseball photographer, stalking son Aaron and his Coupeville High School teammates, clicking away and documenting  their exploits on the diamond.

The Wolves kicked off a new season Monday with a come-from-behind 8-4 thriller over arch-rival South Whidbey, and, once again, the fastest clicker in the biz was on hand — having made the long drive to Langley — to provide you with photos hot off the presses.

Maybe tell her thank you the next time you see her. That would be nice.

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