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Joey Lippo (back row, far left), during the summer little league season. (Joe Lippo photo)

Joey Lippo (back row, far left), during the summer little league season. (Joe Lippo photo)

Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader Joey Lippo is at national baseball spring training, the only player in his age group from Washington state.

The following is dad Joe Lippo’s first hand account of the adventure:

Live from Mesa, Arizona, it’s 73 degrees and partly cloudy.

By “partly cloudy”, I mean “somebody might have seen a cloud. Maybe.”

Since the drills, conditioning, and education were similar or the same as yesterday (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/01/19/and-then-joey-lippo-got-a-hit-off-a-major-leaguer/), we can get right to the Main Event — Joey’s Black team vs. the Navy team.

He was put in to bat in the #3 slot, and his first at-bat resulted in a single into right field, just past the outstretched glove of a diving second baseman.

He advanced to second on a walk, and stole third on a passed ball (which scored a run), but a pick-off and a couple fly balls later stranded him there. The inning ended 1-0 in favor of the Black team.

The next time Joey saw the plate was in the third inning and the score was 3-1.

This at-bat was a little more stressful as the Navy pitcher was finding his groove. The count ran up to 2-2, and Joey stayed alive by fouling off two more pitches, then drove a single into shallow left field.

He was again stranded, on second base this time, but another run scored, and the inning ended with the Black team up 4-1.

On defense, Joey played shortstop, soaking up whatever was hit in his direction, throwing runners out at first and second, helping preserve his team’s lead.

On one particularly hairy play, a hard hit ball took a hard skip off the grass and Joey was just barely able to get a free hand up and bat the ball away before it rearranged his face.

Even so, the trainer was up and on her feet, and the spectators were cringing before everyone realized that he was OK, and had escaped with a slightly stinging hand.

His last at-bat was a hit that the pitcher knocked down and threw to first for the out, but also resulted in an RBI, running the final score to 7-1.

Joey’s stats through two days: .500 batting average (3 for 6), one stolen base, one RBI.

Not too shabby, considering the level of competition.

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Joey Lippo (right) during the fall ball season. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Joey Lippo (right) during the fall ball season in Oak Harbor. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader Joey Lippo is at national baseball spring training this weekend, the only player in his age group from Washington state.

The following is dad Joe Lippo’s first hand account of the adventure:

Mesa, Arizona. 0700.

That’s 7 AM to you civilian types.

24 kids aged 12-14, including Coupeville’s own Joey Lippo, dragged themselves out of bed, showered, ate, and then climbed on the bus to engage in national level spring training.

They arrived at the athletic compound, in the middle of an active orange grove, and were immediately in awe.

This was, after all, a professional field. The Los Angeles Angels do spring training here.

Dead center field boasts a sign that reads “420”, a distance that kids dream about hitting. There’s little comfort looking left or right, as those signs indicate an only slightly more reachable 369.

To make matters a little more intimidating, they were greeted by professional coaches and players as they got to the dugout.

The hitting coach for the Colorado Rockies. The catchers coach from the New York Yankees. An outfielder from the Detroit Tigers. The list would go on.

But it was time, and these coaches wait for no one.

At 9 AM (sharp!) basic warmups commenced. Catching, throwing, base-running, fielding, batting, stretching, agility and distance laps.

For three hours.

Then after a Jimmy Johns delivered lunch, the drills began again, with no let up. Kids were starting to wonder just what they had gotten themselves into.

Then, at 3:30, they were called in from various stations, and the inter-squad scrimmage began.

Navy vs Black, and the pitcher was none other than former Detroit Tiger Ernie Young, an eight-year MLB veteran. This was a “coach pitch” scrimmage, so he pitched from behind the net to every player.

Joey cracked Young’s first offering to him past the second baseman on his first at bat, then on a subsequent play, beat a throw to home for the score.

In his second and third at bats, two solid hits were flagged down by speedy infielders, preventing him from reaching base again.

All in all, this is not what these kids are used to. They are used to hitting a ball to the shortstop and beating the double play throw to first, or hitting to shallow right and getting a base hit.

Not here.

A double play ball is going to be a double play about 95% of the time. There are very, very few dropped fly balls.

It’s 10 hours a day of constant physical and mental challenges. We shall see if Joey survives the weekend…

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Joey Lippo (left) with fall ball teammate James Besaw. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Joey Lippo (left) with fall ball teammate James Besaw. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Lippo (far left) and teammates wielded big bats during the little league season.

Lippo (far left) and teammates wielded big bats during the little league season. (Joe Lippo photo)

Joey Lippo is on his way.

The Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader is quickly scaling rungs in the baseball world, attracting attention as he does.

Coming off successful summer little league and fall ball seasons, Lippo has been selected to attend a national level spring training program in Mesa, AZ Jan. 17-20.

The only player to represent Washington state from the 12-14 year-old category, Lippo earned his spot with a stellar performance at a tryout in Bellevue, where he beat out a field of 30 players.

His booming bat and slick glove both nabbed the eyes of scouts.

Coaches at the national event will hail from colleges at the D-1 and D-2 levels, as well as a coach from Team USA.

His father, Joe Lippo, was having trouble staying calm after the news came through. While his son has been attending informal morning practices set up by CHS players — the only middle school student to do so — the invite to Arizona is a major step.

“I can barely contain myself,” Joe Lippo said. “My entire extended family is only mildly surprised. I, on the other hand, want to make town square announcements.”

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Chris and Shannon Tumblin

Chris and Shannon Tumblin

Tumblin (right) during his days as a wrestling stud.

Tumblin (right) during his days as a wrestling stud.

Today is the birthday of the greatest quote machine known to man.

Well, at least he was until his wife, Shannon, made him stop giving quotes to the press.

Ladies and gentlemen, Whidbey paramedic, football/baseball coach and silver-tongued devil Chris Tumblin:

Josh had one tackle on a receiver, folded him in half like a cheap hooker who was punched in the gut by her pimp. He had to sit out for awhile and wait for his liver to start working again.”

Happy 46th, Mr. T.

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Cole Payne lays down the law: "We're gonna run right through there, 200 times!!" (John Fisken photo)

Cole Payne prepares to be explosive. (John Fisken photo)

For a kid fighting through injury the entire time, Cole Payne had a pretty good football season.

The Coupeville High School sophomore was the JV team’s biggest weapon, whether working as a receiver on offense or crashing the party and hauling down folks while patrolling the backfield on defense.

Whenever he was on the field, Payne made an impact, a feat his coaches noticed. Without a doubt, he is earmarked for major varsity time the next two seasons.

“My main goal is to start on varsity next year,” Payne said. “I love the challenge and effort you have to put toward the game. To be the best you have to put in work to get better. I enjoy making hits and great catches.”

And he did all that while fighting off pain, having hurt his shoulder at the start of the school year.

“It has really affected the ability that I can play,” Payne said. “If it didn’t happen, I would have had a lot better season.”

Still, he helped lead his team to big wins over South Whidbey and Granite Falls and collected a string of strong personal moments, before getting knocked off the field late in the season.

His most recent injury — a dislocated shoulder — will keep him off the basketball court as he heals, but Payne, who got varsity at-bats as a freshman, expects to be ready for baseball season.

“I remember everything the day I hurt my shoulder,” Payne said. “I was running a route, caught the ball and right away got hit by Wade (Schaef) and like 100% on my left elbow and I dislocated my shoulder.

“But I did hold on to the ball the whole time!”

Holding on to the ball under pressure was a trademark for Payne, who was a consistent target for Wolf quarterbacks Ramon Booker and Joel Walstad. Once he had the ball, he was often electric in the open field, but would like to add more explosiveness to his game.

“I am really good at catching,” Payne said. “I need to work really hard to get faster and I will continue to work and get stronger.

“I think just being the youngest athlete by a year in my grade just pushes me harder to get right where they are,” he added. “All my coaches have influenced me to become a better, more disciplined person. They put me into shape.”

While he can’t decide on his favorite sport (“I think I enjoy football and baseball equally the same. I like to play both sports and that’s what I want to get in to college for”), off the field, he is a big math fan.

And also a huge disciple of working on his lifting under the tutelage of Wolf assistant coaches Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Brett Smedley.

“I enjoy algebra based math. I like biology,” Payne said. “And when ever I have nothing to do I try to get in the weight room to make myself better.

“When ever I have an opportunity to make myself better, I take the opportunity.”

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