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   CHS junior hurler Hunter Smith was tabbed an All-Conference selection by Olympic League coaches for the second straight year. (John Fisken photos)

   After being honored as a third-baseman in 2016, sophomore Matt Hilborn was a First-Team pick as a second-baseman this season.

Hot on the heels of a second-place finish in the 1A Olympic League, Coupeville High School’s baseball squad landed four players on the All-Conference team.

Junior Hunter Smith (P) and sophomore Matt Hilborn (2B) were honored for the second straight year, while seniors Clay Reilly (OF) and Taylor Consford (C) were tabbed for the first time.

Those awards headlined Coupeville’s season-ending banquet Monday night.

Reilly was the night’s big winner, taking home MVP and Offensive Player of the Year, while also receiving his captain’s certificate and recognition for playing all four years.

Consford and Ethan Marx shared captain honors, while first-baseman Kory Score was tabbed Defensive Player of the Year.

Joey Lippo (The Dirt Bag Award) and Aiden Crimmins (The Aiden Award) rounded out the night’s winners.

Reilly, Score, Consford, Marx, Crimmins and Jonathan Thurston were honored as seniors.

Varsity letter winners:

Taylor Consford
Aiden Crimmins
Nick Etzell
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Joey Lippo
Dane Lucero
Ethan Marx
Clay Reilly
Kory Score
Hunter Smith
Jonathan Thurston
Julian Welling

Varsity participation certificates:

Elliott Johnson
Jake Pease

JV participation certificates:

Johnny Carlson
Cameron Dahl
Elliott Johnson
Gavin Knoblich
Shane Losey
Jake Pease
Kyle Rockwell
Gavin Straub
James Vidoni
Seth Weatherford
Ulrik Wells
Jacob Zettle

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   Clay Reilly is one of three Coupeville seniors tabbed to play in the All-State baseball feeder games. (John Fisken photos)

He’ll be joined by Taylor Consford.

Kory Score makes three, bringing a smile to coach Chris Smith’s face.

Don’t turn in those uniforms just yet.

Three Coupeville High School seniors will get at least one more day on the baseball diamond after being selected to play June 1 in the Northwest District A/B feeder games.

Clay Reilly, Taylor Consford and Kory Score have been tabbed to visit Bellingham and play at Joe Martin Field.

Feeder games are held in numerous locations across the state from May 30-June 5, featuring Washington’s best senior ballplayers.

The best performers at each place are nominated for the All-State Baseball Series, and those who make the final cut travel to Yakima June 10-11.

In recent years, CHS pitchers Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin got the All-State call, with Etzell making the trip and pitching in 2014.

Reilly, an outfielder who sometimes moonlighted at catcher, was a four-year player for the Wolves.

A feared hitter with a powerful arm, he helped lead CHS to its first baseball league title in 25 years during his junior season.

Score was also a starter on that squad, manning first base the last two seasons after moving back to town, while Consford, Coupeville’s starting catcher, transferred from Oak Harbor before his senior season.

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   It was then, late in the third inning of a mid-season game, that Gavin Knoblich began to contemplate the meaning of the universe. (John Fisken photos)

Hawthorne Wolfe streaks for home.

“Are you ready for the high, hard cheese, son? No, no, you’re not.”

“Get on my bat, ball!!”

Chelsea “Cool Rider” Prescott gets ready to slash.

“I believe I can fly and … crud.”

Well, I can’t read a schedule.

Somehow I missed the fact the Central Whidbey Babe Ruth baseball team was playing at home Tuesday, less than a mile from my house.

Thankfully, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken is more on top of things, and these pictures, captured as the Wolves bounced North Whidbey in a game called short by darkness, are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170516-Babe-Ruth-Coupeville-vs-North-Whidbey/

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Ben Etzell gets nasty. (Libby Auger photo)

Big Ben is still dealing heat.

He may have moved on from Coupeville High School several years back, but Ben Etzell continues to excel on the baseball diamond.

Now a junior at Saint John’s University, he was named a First-Team All-League pick Monday when Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference coaches announced their postseason honorees.

Etzell was joined on the first team by sophomore pitcher Jake Dickmeyer and freshman outfielder Wyatt Ulrich, who was also named the league’s MVP and Freshman of the Year.

Ulrich is the first frosh to win MVP since 1999, and the third Johnnie overall to bring home the top award.

Etzell, who’s playing for dad Mike’s alma mater, switched in 2017 from being primarily a starting pitcher to being St. John’s answer to Mariano Rivera.

He appeared in a team-high 18 games, going 3-1 with five saves and a 2.23 ERA.

His 28 strikeouts were third-best among St. John’s hurlers, but he produced K’s at a much-higher rate than any of his teammates.

Along with leading the squad in saves and appearances, Etzell had the team’s top ERA and lowest opponent batting average of any pitcher to throw 10 or more innings.

For his three-year collegiate career, he is 8-2 with seven saves and 76 strikeouts in 37 appearances.

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   “Yep, batting gloves do NOT taste good…” Having worked that out, Chelsea Prescott returns to her hitting duties. (John Fisken photos)

Sage Sharp goes low in pursuit of the perfect bunt.

Daniel Olson takes one for the team.

   CHS hardball stars (l to r) Taylor Consford, Jonathan Thurston and Clay Reilly can’t stay out of the dugout.

Hawthorne Wolfe waits patiently for an incoming delivery.

   Wolf catcher Matt Hilborn gets tangled up with a runner during a bang-bang play at the plate.

Maybe they play better on a full stomach.

Fortified by a between-games potluck lunch, the Central Whidbey Babe Ruth baseball squad bounced back with a vengeance Saturday afternoon, knocking off the Mount Vernon Diamond Dawgs.

The 5-3 win, fueled by a big RBI double off the bat of Cody Roberts, avenged an 8-3 loss earlier in the day, and gave the two teams a split of their weekend doubleheader.

The Wolves come out of the twin-bill sporting a 3-5 record on the season.

Game 1:

One rough inning derailed what was otherwise a very-close game.

Central Whidbey’s starting pitcher, Daniel Olson, tossed six strong innings, and helped his own cause by picking runners off of second base not once, not twice, but three separate times.

The only inning his pick-off move couldn’t completely save the day was in the top of the third, when the Wolf defense imploded for a moment or two.

Racking up three errors in a four-batter sequence, Central Whidbey saw a 2-1 lead slip away and turn into what became an insurmountable 5-2 deficit.

Maybe it was the early morning sunshine. The light prairie breeze. Gloves that weren’t properly oiled.

Whatever the cause, the Wolves picked up errors in six of seven innings in the opening game, and it made the job tougher for Olson and reliever Gavin Knoblich.

When Central Whidbey did hold on to the ball, however, it often sparkled on the defensive side.

George Dailey ended a threat in the sixth with a nifty double play, spearing a liner at short, then gunning down a runner who had strayed off of second thinking the ball was outfield-bound.

Olson had his pick-off move working flawlessly, of course, while second-baseman Scott Hilborn made a strong play on a hard chopper into the gap, knocking it down while on the move, then recovering and throwing the runner out.

The capper came on a play in the seventh.

Scott Hilborn started things with a throw to third-baseman Xavier Murdy, immediately followed by X-Man pivoting and laying the ball into catcher Matt Hilborn’s glove to nab a runner steaming home.

Central Whidbey scratched out three hits in the opener, with Ulrik Wells thumping a double while Knoblich and Murdy singled.

The Wolves plated runners on bases-loaded walks to Wells and Sage Sharp, while Scott Hilborn rung up the third, shooting home while Dailey danced out of a pickle after being caught in no-man’s land between second and first.

Game 2:

A complete reversal of fortune, as Central Whidbey, fueled by hot dogs, beans, brownies and the like, was locked-down on defense.

Only one error the entire game this time around, and even that was questionable, as the ball took a late hop on the fielder.

With Matt Hilborn dealing BB’s on the mound — he whiffed six in five innings of work — the Wolves were in control from the start.

They also jumped on Mount Vernon while at the plate, and this time it was the Diamond Dawgs who got the yips with the gloves.

Four errors, a perfectly-placed single to center by Roberts, and smart Wolf base-running led to three runs in the first, and Central Whidbey never gave the lead back.

When Mount Vernon sliced the deficit to 3-2, the Wolves immediately responded.

With a runner at third with two outs in the bottom of the fourth, Wells brought one run home, smacking the ball off the third-baseman’s glove, then Roberts struck again.

Cranking the ball into deep right field, he ended up on second base with an RBI double, and the game was signed, sealed and delivered.

Roberts finished with two hits in the nightcap, while Caleb Meyer and Sharp added singles.

All 13 players in the Central Whidbey dugout saw extensive playing time, with Johnny Carlson carrying home multiple bruises after getting plunked twice in the opening game.

Hawthorne Wolfe and Chelsea Prescott chipped in with stellar defensive work, with Wolfe playing several infield positions and Prescott crisply rifling in throws while patrolling left field.

 

To see more photos from this game (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170513-Babe-Ruth-vs-Diamond-Dogs/

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