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Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Grey Rische emerges from the water.

Grey Rische emerges from the water.

“My schedule is swamped with activities!”

Grey Rische is not joking. The Coupeville High School freshman has his days jam-packed, bouncing from activities as diverse as being the Class of 2017 President to scuba diving, welding, jazz band and his newest pursuit — smacking tennis balls along side older brother Jared Helmstadter.

“I have been playing tennis for about three weeks now and I sincerely enjoy it,” Rische said. “I started playing tennis because my brother played and I thought it looked like a lot of fun.

“I love the fact you can be competitive and not have to listen to the coaches behind you,” he added. “You are your own coach and your own motivator when you are on the court playing. I also love being able to play with my brother.”

While he’s a newcomer to the hard courts, Rische is no stranger to sports.

He plans to play basketball (“I love being able to race along the court to try to take home a victory with my fellow teammates”) and run track at CHS, and has an extensive baseball background. Then there’s his underwater adventures.

“I’ve been scuba diving since last April and I have enjoyed it ever since,” Rische said.

On the tennis court, he has a bit of a built-in comfort factor, teaming up with his brother to form a potent doubles duo. Known as Thunder and Lightning when they played little league baseball, they mesh well together.

“My goal for the upcoming season is to play some varsity matches with Jared,” Rische said. “We know each others strengths and weaknesses, which should make us capable to win some.

“My strengths include my back hand and my spikes, although I still need to work on both due to being a newbie player,” he added. “I still need to work on my forehand and being able to stay positive. I am a very competitive person and when I lose I get very down on myself. So I need to work on that too.”

In the moments between his many sporting accomplishments, Rische enjoys geometry (“I love math in general, but geometry is a new type, which makes it even better”) and welding (“I have gotten one burn, but it will eventually make a cool scar”). Music also drives him, whether he’s playing it or listening to it.

“I love music, but not music everyone else loves,” Rische said. “I love jazz and a few other bands such as Imagine Dragons and The Script.”

Whether playing sports or learning in the classroom, Rische draws huge support from his large family, which can always be found at any games involving him, Jared or sister Camilla.

“My brother has made a huge impact on me. Whether it be on the field or on the court, he is always helping me brush up on my skills or teaching me more,” Rische said. “If it weren’t for my brother I don’t think I would be half the athlete as I am today.

“Also, my dad would have to be another huge impact on me,” he added. “He is the one who urges me to run for office and to complete new activities such as scuba diving. He is the Superman to my Kryptonite.”

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Joey Lippo

Joey Lippo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Several Coupeville players are playing fall baseball up in Oak Harbor, and fellow blogger Joe Lippo contributed the following report from the first game of the season:

There was to be no Fall baseball in Coupeville.

Or South Whidbey, for that matter.

Only in the frigid North could you find baseball, so sluggers loaded up the sled dogs and headed for Oak Harbor to join their Junior League Fall Ball team.

Soon after, they found themselves called into action at Volunteer Field against the Anacortes squad.

Clay Reilly (2 for 2) was the first Coupeville player to get on the board with a solid single, just out of reach of the Anacortes second baseman.

He quickly stole second. An Oak Harbor player advanced him to third, and this is also where the scoring began, when Reilly was sent across the plate on an errant pickoff attempt to first base.

Third baseman Ethan Marx (1 for 1, walk) added a walk and a single.

Solid play at second base by Johnathan Thurston (0-1, walk) and at catcher by Reilly helped with preventing Anacortes from starting anything.

Joey Lippo (1 for 1, walk), in his Junior League debut, contributed a single and two scores.

At one point, Coupeville players filled the infield on defense, with Reilly at third, Lippo at short and Thurston at second. Not very much got through this speedy trio, and the score climbed to 13-3 at the middle of the fifth frame.

In what was to be the last inning due to the ten-run rule, Lippo made a long run from the shortstop position to flag down a roller behind second base and fired a laser beam to first for the out, eliciting oohs and ahs from both fan bases.

Oak Harbor pitching, after allowing a single and a walk, retired the last two Anacortes batters to seal the victory.

So, on a Friday the 13th filled with woe, a small bright spot from the North shines on Coupeville.

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Korbin Korzan and Iris Ryckaert

Korbin Korzan and Iris Ryckaert

Notre Dame (the one in Paris, not Indiana)

Notre Dame (the one in Paris, not Indiana)

Ready to zip-line...

Ready to zip-line…

Off the side of a mountain.

Off the side of a mountain.

Farewell from The Atomium in Brussels.

Farewell from The Atomium in Brussels.

Korbin Korzan traded in a season of football for the trip of a lifetime.

The Coupeville High School junior, who had packed on the muscle in anticipation of returning to the gridiron for the Wolves, had his plans thrown awry when he met Belgian foreign exchange student Iris Ryckaert.

The duo dated during her time in America, and Korzan chose to skip playing football this year so he could spend a chunk of August and September visiting Ryckaert back in her stomping grounds. While their romance is taking a breather — at least for now — Korzan, also a standout Wolf baseball player, got to experience a whole new world.

His thoughts on the still-continuing trip:

Alright, well, probably the first thing I should get out there is that when I return Iris and I will no longer be in a relationship together.

We have made a mutual agreement due to the fact that she will be in a very fast paced university and I will also be very busy working, doing Running Start and my junior year. We have decided that for now best friends is what’s best for the both of us.

I’m confident our paths will cross in the future. True love always finds a way.

Other than that, Europe has been without a doubt the most amazing experience in my life.

I can’t even choose what I have enjoyed most because everything is so perfect here.

I’ve done so many cool activities from riding a Segway up a mountain, zip-lining off a cliff, seeing the Eiffel Tower, exploring all the old buildings in Paris, 23-mile bike rides, visiting many cities (and a country) on the French Riviera such as Cannes, Fréjus, Saint Raphaël, Monaco, Nice, Sainte Maxime, Saint Tropez…

So basically you name it, I’ve done it.

But when it all comes down to it, my favorite part is just experiencing European life with the best friend I could ever ask for.

One in a million get to stay in a house (a very very nice house) for three weeks for free in Belgium and France and I’m that one thanks to Iris. This has been the best summer of my life and I will never forget it.

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Remember the good times. Work for more. Don't stop believing. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell celebrates during the high school season. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Call him Big Time.

Coupeville High School senior Ben Etzell went off the Island this summer for his baseball fix, playing with the Skagit Sox. A mix of top high school players and young college studs, the team provided him with a way to sharpen his skills and showcase his abilities.

And showcase he did, moving throughout the lineup (he generally hit #3 for the Wolves as a junior), banging the ball at better than a .300 clip, tossing strikes from the mound and making several superb plays in the field.

One web gem in particular, on an attempted drag bunt, drew the approval of one of his coaches, a former Major Leaguer who saw time with the San Francisco Giants.

As his season came to an end with a hard-fought loss in a tournament championship game — in which Etzell scored his team’s lone run with a wild head-first slide into home — he reflected on his season in the sun.

It was really an eye-opening experience for me.

I didn’t really know how I would do against many of the best players in the state. I entered the season looking at it as an opportunity to judge whether or not I had the ability to play at the next level (college).

I now look back on the summer and am more than thrilled with the way I performed. It proved to me I am someone who can play somewhere at a higher level.

It helped me grow as a ball player in the fact I was around kids who had already experienced a year in college baseball. I found out what expectations are and what I need to do looking forward to college ball.

Having a coach who doubles as Skagit Valley College’s head coach also proved helpful. I found out what college coaches are looking for and his guidance really helped to further my understanding of the game as well.

I also learned that I am capable of hitting just about anywhere in the lineup.

I hit in every single lineup spot but 2nd and 5th I think this summer. By doing that, it helped me realize what different approaches I can have as a hitter in certain spots in the lineup.

I’d have to say my favorite spot to hit was 7 because it allowed me to do just about anything.

I think I had seven or eight bunt base-hits this summer and at least five of them came when I was hitting towards the bottom of the order.

As far as stats go, I don’t have exact numbers for you but I can tell you I was definitely one of the top hitters average-wise on a team that included six or seven guys who have played college ball already.

I probably hit around .315-.330 and led the team in bunt base-hits and sacrifice hits. I also scored quite a few runs and was surprisingly a pretty good base-stealer (against the best catchers in the state).

Defensively, I had a great season. I played second, third, right field and left field this summer, along with a very little amount of pitching.

I made several stellar defensive plays which our coach and others were very impressed with. There was one play I made on a drag bunt down the third base line where my coach, who played for the San Francisco Giants, commented and said it was “One of the best defensive plays he’d seen in a long, long time.”

It was moments like this where I knew I was playing for the right team. It was a great group of guys who were all very supportive and fun to travel with.

Also, as far as pitching stats go, there isn’t much… The only game I started happened to be the semifinal game of our last tournament.

Coach finally gave me a shot and what did I do? Threw a complete game two-hitter to get us into the championship game against one of the better teams in our area.

It makes me wish I would have pitched a lot more often (I had only pitched twice prior to then and they were both in non-pressure situations when we were up by a lot).

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"Cake? I have no clue what you're talking about, ma'am!" (Shelli Trumbull photos)

“Cake? I have no clue what you’re talking about, ma’am!” (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aaron Trumbull swings big.

Aaron Trumbull swings big.

"If I had seen this cake you speak of, which I didn't, I'm sure it would have been delicious."

“If I had seen this cake you speak of, which I didn’t, I’m sure it would have been delicious.”

Aaron Curtin emerges from the celebration.

Aaron Curtin emerges from the celebration.

"They don't call me, allegedly, the Cake Bandit for nothing!!"

“They don’t call me, allegedly, the Cake Bandit for nothing!!”

Cole Payne: "There was cake?!?! No one told me we were having cake!!"

Cole Payne: “There was cake?!?! No one told me we were having cake!!”

"My work here is done. Another town, another cake. I'm a busy man."

“My work here is done. Another town, another cake. I’m a busy man.”

So, there’s still some baseball left to play.

Keeping the American Legion season going as long as possible, South Whidbey and its hired mercenaries from Coupeville (The Fab Five — Aaron Trumbull, Cole Payne, Kurtis Smith, Morgan Payne and Aaron Curtin) played on through tournament play.

The more intriguing story: where did all the cake go?

Liam Curtin has no clue, and he’d appreciate it if you stopped asking.

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