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Jonathan Valenzuela and friends racked up 19 runs, 13 hits, and 15 walks Tuesday afternoon in a big win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Back on track.

After absorbing a couple of close non-conference losses, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball team bounced back with a vengeance Tuesday afternoon.

Raining down runs and getting a strong pitching performance from 8th grader Chase Anderson, the Wolves walloped visiting La Conner 19-9 in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

The victory, coming in Coupeville’s conference opener, lifts it to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 2-3 overall.

It’s also a nice kick-off to a stretch where the Wolves play seven straight games against league foes.

Coupeville dominated in the early going, ringing up seven runs in the bottom of the first, then tacking on another two in the second and four in the third.

That left CHS up 13-0 when Anderson departed the mound after three innings of work in his high school pitching debut.

After playing in the infield previously this season, the middle school ace was darn near impeccable on the mound Tuesday, retiring nine of the 11 Braves hitters he faced.

Anderson whiffed five while giving up just a single hit and a lone walk.

Chase pitched awesome, especially for an 8th grader,” said Coupeville coach Will Thayer.

La Conner got to the Wolf bullpen a bit, pushing across six runs in the top of the fourth, and another three in the fifth, but the CHS hitters matched them step-for-step, ending the game early.

On the day, 15 Wolves saw action, with eight of them recording at least one base-knock.

Coupeville leadoff hitter Hawthorne Wolfe crunched a double and single to pace the hit attack, while Scott Hilborn, Cody Roberts, Jack Porter, and Anderson each delivered a pair of singles.

Sage Sharp, Xavier Murdy, and Jonathan Valenzuela also rapped out a hit apiece, as the Wolves piled up 13 base-knocks and 15 walks.

Three of those free bases carried a sting however, as La Conner pitchers plunked a trio of CHS sluggers with wayward pitches.

Thayer was able to keep most of his players busy, with Cole White, Alex Murdy, Aiden O’Neill, Zane Oldenstadt, Camden Glover, Johnny Porter, and Cole Hutchinson also seeing the field.

It was the high varsity debut for 8th graders Glover and O’Neill.

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Violette Huegerich, a relative newcomer to Wolf Nation, makes her photo debut in Coupeville Sports. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

No games, but plenty of pics.

The only action on the prairie Monday will be of the type which Allen Iverson used to hate — practice.

Until contests against other schools return Tuesday, here’s a handful of Coupeville High School baseball and softball photos to keep you busy.

The pics come to us from John Fisken, and you can see a lot more by popping over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/

 

Cody Roberts makes his catcher’s mitt pop.

Maya Nottingham vacuums up a grounder.

Hawthorne Wolfe beats the throw.

Cole Hutchinson is ready for his close-up.

Mckenna Somes awaits your best fastball.

Xavier Murdy (left) and Will Thayer discuss how Kentucky’s loss blew up their March Madness brackets.

Izzy Wells fires darts.

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Allie Lucero unleashes the flame-thrower. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s Darrington’s league. For the moment.

With spring sports action still kicking into gear, there have been only two games so far in which Northwest 2B/1B League teams squared off in a conference clash.

Both of those bouts, one on the baseball diamond and one on the softball field, went to the Loggers, who swept La Conner.

So, as we publish our first look at spring sports standings, everything is coming up roses for Darrington.

Now, there are still a lot of games left to play, so maybe don’t go to Vegas and bet the farm on the Loggers just yet.

Coupeville, for one, is scheduled to play its first NWL games this coming week, with baseball, softball, and girls tennis all set to start climbing up the standings ladder.

Baseball gets two league games, hosting La Conner Tuesday, then travelling to Concrete Friday.

Wolf baseball coaches ponder life.

Softball has a split, hosting La Conner Tuesday as well, before hitting the road for a non-conference game Saturday at South Whidbey.

Rounding out the CHS spring teams which keep win/loss records, the netters (weather permitting) have a non-league road trip to Oak Harbor Wednesday.

Wolf tennis then turns right back around and hosts Friday Harbor — the only other NWL team to play the sport — Thursday.

Where things sit through Mar. 20:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Darrington 1-0 1-0
Concrete 0-0 0-0
Coupeville 0-0 1-3
Friday Harbor 0-0 2-1
MV Christian 0-0 1-0
Orcas Island 0-0 0-1
La Conner 0-1 0-1

 

Northwest League girls tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-0

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Darrington 1-0 1-1
Coupeville 0-0 1-1
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-1
Orcas Island 0-0 0-1
La Conner 0-1 0-1

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Sage Sharp reached base twice as Coupeville battled North Mason on the wind-swept prairie. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Somewhere in Coupeville people frolicked Saturday afternoon, bathed in sunshine and warmth.

Some bought ice cream at Kapaw’s, while others scampered over to watch Orcas swim by in Penn Cove.

And then there were the few, the proud, the unbreakable — the ones lost out on the open prairie, hunched over as an unforgiving wind slashed across the Coupeville High School baseball field and knifed us, one and all, right in the freakin’ kidneys.

Those folks, the ones contemplating lighting their jackets on fire for warmth — while still wearing those same coats — now know what weather conditions must have been like for soldiers fighting at Stalingrad.

Except some of those guys got shot in the first 30 seconds, while they were still halfway warm.

We were out there for two hours plus.

So basically, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith needs to start handing out purple hearts or personal, battery-powered heaters, or convince the rest of the state to start high school baseball games in May.

While we breathlessly wait for any of that to happen, those still alive — those chipped free from the ice and revived thanks to having jumper cables attached to their chests out in the parking lot — can recount a tale of a pretty good game being played in the middle of Hell Storm ’22.

Not a great game, mind you, only because Coupeville, playing without three starters, couldn’t quite pull the win out, falling 7-5 to visiting North Mason.

Still, with two freshmen and an 8th grader in the starting lineup, the Wolves showed a lot of heart, rallying from behind twice and coming within one well-placed hit of nabbing a walk-off win.

Unfortunately for CHS, Scott Hilborn’s bash down the left field line with the bags full and two outs in the bottom of the seventh curled foul at the very last second.

When his next moon shot was tracked down along the first-base line for the game’s final out, the Wolves fell to 1-3 in non-conference play.

Next up for Coupeville, which should have a reloaded lineup after a busy weekend, is the first of seven-straight Northwest 2B/1B League games, starting with a Mar. 22 home game against La Conner.

Saturday’s battle royal on the frozen tundra started as a pitcher’s duel, with the teams swapping scoreless frames for three innings.

Hilborn was never in trouble on the mound in the early going, piling up four of his six strikeouts and keeping North Mason’s hitters guessing.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s sluggers were getting on base, but the Wolves couldn’t find that one crucial hit to break things open.

Hilborn whacked a single to dead center, followed by a walk to Jonathan Valenzuela in the bottom of the first, but both were left stranded.

It was the same for Chase Anderson, who singled in the second, and Hilborn, who walked in the third.

But then, even as the wind stiffened, both teams started poking balls through the gusts, combining for 12 runs across the final four innings.

North Mason struck first, using a string of hits to plate three runners in the top of the fourth.

The damage could have been worse, but Coupeville recovered nicely on an aborted pickoff play at third base, with Valenzuela and Hilborn teaming up to nail a runner flying in from second.

Blowing desperately on their frozen fingers between at-bats, the Wolves finally clicked into a groove in their own half of the fourth, tying the game back up thanks to some timely hits.

And a little luck.

North Mason’s pitcher committed two errors, with one ball taking a nasty hop off of a divot in the infield, while a popup caught a gust of wind and fell the opposite direction of where the waiting mitt was.

In between those weather-induced miscues, Anderson laid down a bunt which started fair, headed foul, then shot back fair at the last moment thanks to Mother Nature blowin’ like a madwoman.

Key to the play was Anderson flying down the baseline, and not waiting around to see where the ball ended up — exactly the way every coach preaches.

Eighth grader Chase Anderson has been a high school varsity starter, and major contributor, since day one.

With the bags full and two outs on the board, Coupeville got one runner home on a wild pitch, then brought two more across thanks to RBI singles from Jack Porter and Sage Sharp.

Not content to stop there, the squads tossed another three runs into the mix in the fifth inning.

North Mason pushed across a go-ahead score in the top half, before CHS came right back with a two-spot to reclaim the advantage at 5-4.

Cody Roberts eked out a walk, followed by Anderson reaching on an error, with the former coming around to tap home on a delayed double-steal and the latter scoring off a Cole White RBI groundout.

Jack Porter almost upped the ante, but his two-out smash back up the middle with runners at second and third was speared by the North Mason pitcher, who went to his knees on the play.

Neither team could score in the sixth, though Anderson came within a whisker of making the magic happen.

With two runners aboard, he launched a cannon shot to left, only to see the wind knock the ball down, allowing a fielder to track it down for the third out.

The scene was set for an emotional Wolf win, with the hometown team pulling out the victory and making their fans forget the day’s brutal weather.

Not every game gets the fairytale ending, however, and North Mason, a strong squad, found one final rally in its bats, dumping three runs on the board in the top of the seventh.

With everyone in attendance praying for three runs and the win, and not just two — which would have sent us to extra innings and an extended stay in Siberia — Coupeville came close to making it a reality.

Cole Hutchinson swatted an infield single, bustin’ his butt to first to beat the throw, before Zane Oldenstadt punched a note-perfect base-knock which dropped in front of the right fielder.

Down to their final out, the Wolves loaded the bases when Sharp drew a walk, bringing Coupeville’s most-dangerous hitter to the plate.

Hilborn gave the ball a ride, first in one direction, then the other, but ultimately couldn’t hit pay dirt this time around.

The junior still paced the Wolves, reaching base three times Saturday, once on a hit and twice on walks.

He was joined on the hit parade by Oldenstadt, Hutchinson, Roberts, Sharp, Jack Porter, and Anderson, who was credited with two base-knocks.

Valenzuela, Roberts, Sharp, and Hutchinson also walked, with Hutchinson getting big yelps from the bench after he wore a pitch, taking the wayward ball off his foot.

Alex Murdy and Johnny Porter rounded out the Wolf lineup on the day.

Johnny Porter makes contact.

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Joey Lippo and mom Connie hang out in Florida.

Time to pack the bags and head home.

Coupeville High School grad Joey Lippo and his college baseball team capped a nine-games-in-five-days run through Florida Thursday, winning their getaway game.

The University of Maine at Presque Isle earned a split on the day, falling 10-5 to Colby-Sawyer College, before rebounding to win the nightcap 13-9.

Lippo and the Owls sit at 2-9 on the season.

The former Wolf three-sport star piled up two hits, two RBI, three walks, and five runs across the Thursday doubleheader.

Through 11 games Lippo leads Presque Isle in batting average (.389), RBI (9), runs (12), and walks (6), and is tied for the team lead in home runs (1).

The CHS grad and twin brother of dance supernova Skyy Lippo is second on the Owls in hits (14), triples (1), on-base percentage (.444), and slugging percentage (.583).

After its southern marathon, Presque Isle is off until Mar. 26, when it takes the field in Massachusetts to face Fisher College.

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