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Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Joey Lippo is tearing up college pitching. (Photo courtesy Connie Lippo)

His bat is on fire.

Coupeville grad Joey Lippo has kicked off his senior season of college baseball with a bang, piling up stats across the first three games.

While the University of Maine at Presque Isle is still looking for its first win, the Owls leadoff hitter is getting the job done.

Lippo and company are in Auburndale, Florida, where they’ll play their first seven games at Lake Myrtle Park before heading off to Massachusetts and Maine for the remainder of the season.

Before leaving the Sunshine State, Presque Isle plays a doubleheader Wednesday, then single games Thursday and Friday.

The Owls fell 14-7 to Lakeland University Sunday in their opener, before dropping both parts of a doubleheader Monday against Principia College.

The Panthers won 6-5 and 14-10 to get to 5-5 on the season, while Presque Isle drops to 0-3.

Lippo went down swinging hard Monday, however, collecting four hits and seven RBI in the doubleheader.

Through three games, the former Coupeville diamond ace is hitting .417, with five hits, seven RBI, three runs, and three walks.

This is the final season for Lippo, who has played both golf and baseball during his time at UMPI.

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Spring approaches like a freight train, which means only one thing.

Time to get signed up for baseball and softball action.

Registration for Central Whidbey Little League is active and runs through March 1.

Scan the photo above for pertinent info, then get crackin’.

Before the bats themselves get … crackin’.

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Lyla Stuurmans smiles because she’s warm inside the gym. But “spring” approaches. (Delanie Lewis photo)

Will it be sunny and mid-60’s or cloudy, rainy, (extremely) windy, and low-40’s?

If you have to ask, you’ve never experienced spring sports on Whidbey Island…

While I ponder who I can sweet-talk into buying Coupeville Sports one of those plastic viewing bubbles, the annual freezing of the nether regions approaches.

And no, it wouldn’t help if I wore pants and not shorts.

I’ve tried that before, and, other than slightly blocking gusts of wind shooting up the backside of my legs, there isn’t much difference.

It will be dastardly … I mean, delightful out there on the prairie.

“Ladies, ladies, I am but a toasty lil’ tot. Let’s just stay here and never, ever speak of venturing out onto the frozen tundra of the prairie.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As I look in the mirror and try to psych myself up to stare down Mother Nature at her orneriest, here’s a look at Coupeville High School varsity schedules for “spring” sports.

If there’s a ** next to a game, it indicates a Northwest 2B/1B League contest.

And no, you’re not reading things wrong.

Wolf tennis will NOT be playing at home this season, instead hitting the road for all 10 matches as they wait for new courts over by the CHS gym to be finished.

It’s the road life for the netters, with ferries and buses taking them to other areas where maybe the wind doesn’t howl quite so much.

But don’t hold your breath.

 

BASEBALL:

Mon-Mar. 11 — Meridian (4:00)
Fri-Mar. 15 — @ South Whidbey (4:00)
Sat-Mar. 16 — North Mason (1:00)
Tue-Mar. 19 — Friday Harbor (4:00) **
Fri-Mar. 22 — Mount Vernon Christian (4:00) **
Tue-Mar. 26 — @ Orcas Island (4:00) **
Wed-Mar. 27 — Sequim (4:00)
Fri-Mar. 29 — @ Concrete (4:00) **
Sat-Mar. 30 — South Whidbey (1:00)
Mon-Apr. 8 — Sultan (4:00)
Tue-Apr. 9 — @ Darrington (4:00) **
Thur-Apr. 11 — La Conner (4:00) **
Sat-Apr. 13 — @ Forks (1:00)
Tue-Apr. 16 — @ Friday Harbor (4:45) **
Fri-Apr. 19 — @ Mount Vernon Christian (4:00) **
Tues-Apr. 23 — Orcas Island (4:00) **
Thur-Apr. 25 — Concrete (4:00) **
Sat-Apr. 27 — Darrington (1:00) **
Thur-May 2 — @ La Conner (4:00) **

 

GIRLS TENNIS:

Wed-Mar. 13 — @ South Whidbey (3:30)
Fri-Mar. 15 — @ Friday Harbor (4:30) **
Fri-Mar. 22 — @ Granite Falls (4:00)
Wed-Mar. 27 — @ Bush (3:30)
Wed-Apr. 10 — @ South Whidbey (3:30)
Wed-Apr. 17 — @ Friday Harbor (4:30) **
Sat-Apr. 20 — @ University Prep (TBD)
Wed-Apr. 24 — @ Bush (3:30)
Fri-Apr. 26 — @ Friday Harbor (4:30) **
Fri-May 10 — @ Friday Harbor (4:30) **

 

SOFTBALL:

Fri-Mar. 15 — @ South Whidbey (4:00)
Tue-Mar. 19 — Friday Harbor (4:00) **
Sat-Mar. 23 — @ Blaine (2:00)
Tue-Mar. 26 — @ Orcas Island (4:00) **
Fri-Mar. 29 — @ Concrete (4:00) **
Sat-Mar. 30 — Onalaska (12:00/2:00) — DOUBLEHEADER
Mon-Apr. 8 — Sultan (4:00)
Tue-Apr. 9 — @ Darrington (4:00) **
Thur-Apr. 11 — La Conner (4:00) **
Sat-Apr. 13 — @ Forks (1:00)
Tue-Apr. 16 — @ Friday Harbor (4:45) **
Sat-Apr. 20 — @ Granite Falls (12:00)
Tues-Apr. 23 — Orcas Island (4:00) **
Thur-Apr. 25 — Concrete (4:00) **
Sat-Apr. 27 — Darrington (1:00) **
Thur-May 2 — @ La Conner (4:00) **
Fri-May 10 — South Whidbey (4:00)

 

TRACK AND FIELD:

Wed-Mar. 13 — @ La Conner (3:30)
Sat-Mar. 16 — @ Rainier Invite (11:00)
Wed-Mar. 20 — HOME MEET (3:30)
Sat-Mar. 23 — @ Freshman/Sophomore Meet (Stanwood) — (10:00)
Thur-Mar. 28 — @ Mount Vernon (3:30)
Fri-Mar. 29 — @ Trojan Twilight (Meridian) — (4:00)
Tues-Apr. 9 — @ Nisqually League Track (Port Townsend) — (TBD)
Sat-Apr. 13 — @ Forks Lions Club Invite (11:00)
Wed-Apr. 17 — Coupeville Invite (3:30)
Sat-Apr. 20 — @ Li’l Norway (North Kitsap) — (10:00)
Sat-Apr. 27 — @ Sunny and 70’s Invite (Lakewood) — (10:00)
Wed-May 1 — @ Northwest League Championships (Mt. Vernon) — (3:30)

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Jim Hosek, Coupeville High School’s most successful baseball coach.

Wolf Nation lost a diamond legend late last year.

Jim Hosek, who passed away at age 76 on Oct. 30, 2023, was the most successful baseball coach in Coupeville High School history.

During his six years in charge of the Wolf hardball program from 1973-1978, he led his teams to 103 wins, five straight league titles and four district crowns.

Hosek’s crew advanced to the state tournament four times during that run, with the ’77 team becoming the first CHS baseball squad to win a game at the big dance.

Those Wolves bopped Kittitas 14-0.

Coupeville was primed to keep the surge going, only to lose Hosek thanks to a questionable at best decision by the school board of the time.

After stepping down as a teacher to run the family’s novelty business, he offered to remain as Wolf baseball coach.

Instead, the board insisted it wanted a teacher as coach, and Hosek moved on to take over the Skagit Valley College baseball program.

To no one’s surprise, he was equally as successful at the college level as he had been leading high school teams.

Along with collecting a string of wins and titles, Hosek was unique in making sure all of his team’s uniforms had a one somewhere in the jersey number.

That was to reinforce the mandate that he and his team always view themselves as #1.

While I’m too young to have written about Hosek during his CHS days, I came to know him as a faithful customer at Videoville, and, before that, as dad to Mika, one of the first Wolf stars I covered during my stint at the Whidbey News-Times.

Later, with the blog, I spoke to many of his former players, from Bill Jarrell to Keith Jameson, and beyond, and they all praised their former diamond skipper.

He had an admirable baseball career, helped put Coupeville High School sports on the map, and always came across as a genuinely nice guy.

Inducting Hosek into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame in 2016 was an incredibly easy decision. He more than earned that spot.

As we approach another windswept spring on the prairie, the next time you head out to the CHS baseball diamond, take a moment and tip one out for a hardball legend.

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Scott Hilborn, ready to inflict some damage. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Give him the ball and let him go to work.

Scott Hilborn, like his brother Matt before him, was remarkably self-contained, or at least seemed that way to those watching his exploits from the cheap seats.

Steve and Wendi’s youngest son wasn’t one for hollering or screaming, for drawing unnecessary attention to himself.

Eyeballs may have followed Scott’s every athletic achievement, but it was earned.

At the heart of it, he seemed cut from a different generation — the one which used to go work on prairie farms before and after games.

Old school in a new school world, Scott wasn’t overly fancy, and I mean that in the best way possible.

He clocked in, and then clocked you out.

Whether separating a runner from his mouth guard with a lethal, yet legal hit, or slicing through the defense on one of his own torrid runs, Scott played football like every play mattered.

No awkward post-sack dances or elaborately choreographed end zone celebrations.

Do your job, get up and be ready for the next rumble, every movement designed for maximum impact.

On offense, he was a weapon of mass destruction, able to chew up yardage (and score frequent touchdowns) off of pass receptions, runs, and kick returns.

Outrunning the setting sun. (Bailey Thule photo)

Scott never seemed all that fast until the moment when he turned the corner and was suddenly gone, streaking across the grass as the setting sun attempted (and failed) to catch up to his lethal movements.

In that, he was a whole lot like Jake Tumblin or Josh Bayne, two of the best to ever lace up their shoes and pull on a Wolf helmet.

Joining up with fellow seniors Dominic Coffman and Tim Ursu, Scott formed a triple threat which annihilated rival defenses in 2022 as Wolf football reached heights not seen in three decades.

A league title. A ticket to the state tourney, with a home game (in Oak Harbor) to boot.

That success was built on the effort of players like Scott — in the weight room, on the practice field, and in play after play under Friday Nights Lights.

He was a leader in a way the men who wore the same uniform in the ’50s and ’60s would have appreciated.

Parts of the game have certainly changed — rule tweaks, equipment improvements, and the like — but one thing remains consistent.

The young man who hits the hardest, then gets back up and ignores the pain, the sweat, and the bright lights to do it again, and again, and again, is the one we remember.

And few swung the hammer like Scott did.

It was a trait which carried over to the baseball diamond, where he finished his CHS run playing for his father.

The man, the myth, the ready-for-a-museum-wall legend. (Wendi Hilborn photo)

An ace pitcher, a slick-fielding (and power-hitting) shortstop, sometimes even a rock-solid catcher, Scott could play any position on the field and dominate.

Plug him into any hole, slap him on any rung in the batting order, and he was the most-dangerous dude on the diamond.

Most days he hit leadoff, reaching base at an often-uncanny rate via hits, walks, and wearing pitches while acting like the rival hurler was throwing mush balls.

We heard the crack of ball hitting muscle in those moments, but Scott didn’t flinch in public, merely ambling down to first, before promptly stealing second and third before his dad had time to inquire as to how his incoming bruise might be feeling.

Teams tried to pitch around him at times, but he always seemed to find a way to counteract their best efforts.

And groove a pitch to him, or at least offer up a ball remotely close to his strike zone?

Start running, because the horsehide was about to be deposited into the deepest, darkest corners of the field.

Scott might not have been the hardest thrower to ever prowl the mound at CHS, but he was consistent in a way which recalled greats who came before him — young men like CJ Smith, who also led his squad to a league title.

If you’re noticing a trend here, when comparing what the younger Hilborn brought to the game, gridiron or diamond, the names popping up are all guys who left behind a sizable impact on Coupeville sports history.

He can stand with those greats, and yet carved his own remarkable story — a testament to why Scott, like those others, will hear his name invoked for years to come when old men ramble on about how they don’t make ’em like they used to.

Tearing up the diamond alongside Jonathan Valenzuela. (Morgan White photo)

As he closed his prep career in the spring of 2023, he gave mom Wendi (his most faithful, fervent fan) one more chance to beam from the stands.

Facing down Toledo, a huge favorite, he tossed a complete game shutout in a 3-0 Wolf win, guiding Coupeville to its first victory at the state baseball tourney since 1987.

While accounting for two of those three runs, coming around to score after getting aboard on an error and a walk.

Scott followed that up by smashing an RBI single off of future Major League Baseball draftee Zach Swanson of Toutle Lake in a season-ending loss in the quarterfinals.

He reached base four times during Coupeville’s day at the state tourney — the best showing of any Wolf hitter.

Which was hardly a surprise, as Scott led his team in 16 of 21 stat categories during his senior campaign.

Before he graduated, he racked up league MVP honors in both of his sports, earned an invite to the All-State baseball feeder game, and shared Coupeville’s Male Athlete of the Year award with Tim Ursu, the other hardest-working man in Cow Town.

Today, Scott joins an impressive list of Wolf overachievers in cementing their status as one of the best to ever do it on the prairie.

The doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame swing open, and Matt’s lil’ bro, a star in his own right, earns his rightful induction into the club.

After this, you’ll find the Hilborn brothers two places.

In real life, they’re probably out working (and outworking) everyone in sight, while in our digital fever dream, they’ll be camped out at the top of the blog, up under the Legends tab.

In either place, one thing is certain — they’ll be making mom super proud.

Time to go to work. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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