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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   Wolf catcher Gavin Knoblich had two hits Friday as Coupeville toppled Chimacum and moved closer to clinching an Olympic League title. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Captain Cool struck again.

Coupeville High School ace Hunter Smith wasn’t flawless Friday, but he was perfect when it mattered, and now Wolf baseball is a win away from claiming its second Olympic League title in three years.

Backed by stellar, error-free play from his defenders, especially infielders Joey Lippo, Matt Hilborn and Dane Lucero, Smith shut down Chimacum, tossing a complete-game 2-0 shut-out.

The win, Coupeville’s fifth-straight and ninth in its last 10 games, lifts the Wolves to 6-1 in league play, 12-4 overall.

CHS is a game up, with two to play, on the Cowboys (5-2, 7-8) and hold the tiebreaker, having taken two of three after pulling off back-to-back shut-outs at home against their chief rivals.

“I love the goose eggs, love ’em!,” said a jubilant Coupeville coach Chris Smith.

His squad needs just a single win (it travels to Klahowya Monday, then hosts Port Townsend May 2) or a single Chimacum loss to officially clinch the title, which they last won in 2016.

The Cowboys, who are enjoying their best run in the Olympic League after three consecutive third-place finishes, have pushed the Wolves hard this season.

The first two meetings between the teams were one-run games, and this time a two-run lead seemed almost decadent.

Having escaped a brief first-inning jam when Hunter Smith whiffed a Cowboy with runners at the corners, Coupeville struck for the game’s only blood in the bottom of the second.

Flying on a high, as Smith punched out the Cowboys one-two-three in the top half of the inning, the Wolves capitalized on a huge Chimacum error.

Jake Hoagland led off the bottom of the second by swatting a chopper to third, before taking off like a bat out of Hell.

Slightly juggling the ball as he plucked it off the ground while on the move, Chimacum’s third-baseman tried to set his feet. It didn’t work.

The Cowboy fielder double-pumped, triple-pumped, then fired the ball to the moon, pulling his first-baseman off the bag as Hoagland thundered by.

Given unexpected life, Coupeville took immediate advantage.

Jake Pease, who would later take a nasty hit to the arm on a wayward pitch, had a much-happier first at-bat, plunking a single.

That set up the urban legend himself, Kyle Rockwell, a mountain among men, a titan capable of swatting the ball into the cars in the parking lot, who … dropped a bunt.

And it was a beauty of a bunt, too, perfectly placed into no-man’s land behind Chimacum hurler Cole Dotson.

Unable to make a play on the ball, Chimacum could only watch in horror as Hoagland streaked home with the game’s first run.

Meanwhile, the man perched safely on first was busy penning yet another chapter in his on-going best-seller, “I Rock: The Kyle Rockwell Story.”

Wanting to give his pitcher a bit more of a cushion, Wolf catcher Gavin Knoblich followed with equal flair, delivering a ringing RBI single back up the middle to make it 2-0.

While Chimacum escaped total disaster in the inning by nailing not one, but two, Wolves coming in hot to third, the damage was done.

Being careful to not let a single emotion flicker across his face while on the mound, Hunter Smith made big brother CJ, who patented the Captain Cool look while winning the ’16 title, a proud assistant coach on the Wolf bench.

And, while the CHS hurler was touched a few times more than normal, scattering seven hits, he and his teammates always had an answer.

Lucero, subbing at first base, pulled two low throws out of the dirt, then Lippo decided to get all dramatic and crank the defensive volume to crowd-pleasing levels.

Chimacum had a runner at second with two outs in the fourth, and said runner bolted as a Cowboy hitter launched a shot that had base hit stamped all over it.

The ball seemed to be too high for Lippo to snag at second, and was dropping too fast for Hoagland to catch on the run.

Until all of Lippo’s extensive ballet training (not a joke) came into play, as the Wolf senior, hauling tail, threw his glove over his shoulder.

Pulling off some Inspector Gadget “Go-Go-Gadget” action, one glove-clad limb extended as far as possible, Lippo made contact with the falling orb, punched it skyward, then hauled it back in, cradling the ball to his chest.

The sound you heard at that exact moment may have been his dad, Joe, hitting octaves not normally heard outside of an opera house.

He’ll deny it, of course, but we know the truth.

With the Chimacum fans openly sobbing (again, they’ll deny it, but we know the truth) the game sailed along through the sixth inning stuck at 2-0.

The Cowboys had one final bit of fight in them, however, bashing a pair of singles to left to kick off the top of the sixth.

Gathering his men on the mound, Chris Smith said a few words, then gave his son a small nod.

Hunter’s return nod was, of course, even smaller. Can’t mess with the brand.

Hilborn, though, wrapped his arm around his pitcher’s shoulder before he headed back to short, and might have said a few words.

If so, they were most likely, “I got this, man.”

The ensuing pitch came flying back off the bat, took a spinning hop and skidded towards Hilborn, who boldly looked destiny in the eye and accepted her challenge.

Shooting to his left, he slammed his foot through the bag at second for the force, then laid the ball into Lucero’s glove at first.

Hilborn’s throw came in on a sharp line, then tailed off at the end, landing softly with just a gentle whisper of “Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is.”

In 2.4 seconds (give or take one or two), Chimacum went from first and second and no one out to a lonely runner at third about to be stranded.

Slightly cocking one eyebrow — again, he has to stay on brand — Hunter Smith fired three straight strikes past the next Cowboy, buckling his knees an inch more with each fastball that exploded into Knoblich’s glove.

But, high school games go seven innings and not six, so while the air had been visibly punched out of the Cowboys, they still had the faintest flicker of hope left.

A one-out chopper that hit the fringe right in front of a charging Hilborn and skipped away presented Chimacum with its last, best hope in the seventh.

The Wolves would not be denied, though.

Rockwell, drifting way, way, way to his left while patrolling right field, tracked down a long foul ball, pulling it in for the second out.

That brought Issac Purser, Chimacum’s best player, to the plate, the last Cowboy standing.

Chimacum’s fans, prone to wailing (a lot), screamed and hollered and hooted and made a lot of bodily noises, then got really, really quiet as Purser punched a hole in the sky with a mile-high pop up.

Lippo, camped at second, had time to do his homework before the ball descended, but his glove was in place when it mattered.

Squeeze the ball, move within an inch of clinching the title. Mission, accomplished.

Knoblich, who has been a strong defensive player behind the plate this season, had his best offensive day, pacing the Wolves with two hits.

Hunter Smith added a pair of singles, while Pease and Rockwell rounded out the six-hit attack.

As he marinated in the moment, Chris Smith praised his team, top to bottom.

“We found a way to win once again,” he said with a slight chuckle. “It was a fun game and I’m very, very happy.

“Two shut-outs in a row against Chimacum, that’s huge. You know me, I absolutely LOVE those goose eggs!”

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   Wolf freshman Sam Wynn is playoff-bound in his first season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mission, accomplished.

Taking care of business Friday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad thrashed host Chimacum 11-1, officially punching its ticket to the playoffs.

With the win, the Wolves rise to 5-3 in Olympic League play, 6-6-2 overall.

After finishing in third-place in each of the first three seasons of the four-team conference, CHS put together its most-successful run in its final campaign.

Coupeville jumps to the new six-team North Sound Conference this fall.

Before they depart, the Wolves finally got over the hump against Port Townsend, knocking off the RedHawks twice.

That was huge in a year in which only two teams made the postseason cut, instead of the usual three.

After wrapping the regular season Monday at home with Senior Night against Klahowya (7-0, 11-2-1), the Wolves will prep for their playoff opener.

That tilt arrives Saturday, May 5, and will be a “home” game held at Oak Harbor’s stadium.

As the #2 seed from the Olympic League, the Wolves will play the #3 seed from the Nisqually League, Bellevue Christian (9-4), in a loser-out game at 1 PM.

Win, and Coupeville advances to the double-elimination portion of districts, where two of four teams will advance to the state tourney.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2658&sport=9

Facing a Chimacum squad which has been outscored 125-3 this season, the Wolves did what they could to keep the game mildly-competitive, while still making sure to get the win.

Senior captain William Nelson paced the Wolves, punching in four goals, which lifts his season total to seven.

Aram Leyva added his 10th score, while the Downes brothers, senior Hunter and freshman Sage, each collected a hat trick.

That gives Coupeville 58 goals (spread among 11 shooters), which is the most a Wolf boys soccer squad has scored in a single season.

The season-to-date scoring stats:

Derek Leyva – 21
Aram Leyva
– 10
William Nelson
– 7
Sam Wynn
– 4
Hunter Downes
– 3
Sage Downes
– 3
Pedro Gamarra
– 3
Ethan Spark
– 2
James Wood
– 2
Chris Cernick
– 1
Jonathan Partida
– 1

“Own” goal by other team – 1

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   Coupeville senior Payton Aparicio eyes a fourth-straight 1A Olympic League team title. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The road to an Olympic League girls tennis title still goes through Coupeville.

Pulling off the rare two-win afternoon Thursday in Silverdale, the Wolf girls tennis team bounced back into first place and set up a winner-take-all battle May 3 with Chimacum.

CHS drilled Klahowya twice, putting the final stamp on a 4-3 win in a match which began Apr. 17 but was delayed by rain, then romping 5-2 in Thursday’s regularly-scheduled rumble.

With the sweep, Coupeville soars to 4-1 in league play, 6-8 overall, putting itself a half-game up on Chimacum (3-1, 4-6).

Klahowya is mired in the basement at 0-5, 1-12.

Chimacum hosts KSS May 1, and then travels to Whidbey May 3 for the regular season finale.

The stakes in that match are simple — the winning team hoists a league title banner. Either CHS makes it four straight, or the Cowboys finally break through.

After that comes the league tourney May 7, also in Coupeville.

 

Match 1 (continued from Apr. 17):

Varsity:

1st Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Hailey Sargent 6-0, 6-0

2nd Singles — Nanci Melendrez lost to Maddy Rienks 5-7, 6-4, 6-1

3rd Singles — Megan Behan lost to Anna Wells 6-2, 6-0

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Taylor Bruce/Marianne Maker 6-3, 7-5

2nd Doubles — Claire Mietus/Tia Wurzrainer beat Kelisha Harris/Kristin Powell 6-4, 7-6(7-1)

3rd Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Emma Heckert/Mia Brill 8-3

4th Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Genna Wright beat Rachelle Adams/Angelina Robinson 8-2

 

Match 2:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus lost to Hailey Sargent 6-3, 6-2

2nd Singles — Genna Wright beat Maddy Rienks 7-5, 6-4

3rd Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Anna Wells 6-2, 3-6, 10-7

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Taylor Bruce/Marianne Maker 6-3, 6-0

2nd Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer beat Kelisha Harris/Kristin Powell 6-3, 6-1

3rd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Emma Heckert/Mia Brill 6-3, 6-1

4th Doubles — Zara Bradley/Jillian Mayne beat Angelina Robinson/Helle Larsen 6-3, 6-3

JV:

5th Doubles — Emily Fiedler/Jaimee Masters won 5-3

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In this photo, you ignore the big picture and focus on what’s right in front of you. Coupeville baseball has the same mission. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Friday’s epic baseball showdown just got a little more … epic.

With both of their prior meetings coming down to a single run, very little separates Coupeville and Chimacum as they prep for a 4 PM game tomorrow, Apr. 27.

And now, thanks to an unexpected plot twist, the teams really are dead even.

Chimacum Athletic Director Tony Haddenham cleared up a nagging mystery Thursday, confirming Port Townsend forfeited a Mar. 21 game to the Cowboys.

While no reason has been given for the forfeit, that changes Chimacum’s record from 4-1 in 1A Olympic League play to 5-1, pushing them back into a tie with Coupeville.

The Wolves (11-4 overall) and Cowboys (7-7) essentially control their own destinies, at least until Friday’s game goes final.

Win out across your final three games and you can’t be denied.

Lose Friday, though, and you fall a game back with two to play, and then you’ll need some help, no matter who you are.

Coupeville, which is expected to send ace Hunter Smith to the mound Friday, is seeking a second league crown in the last three seasons.

That would be a fitting farewell present for the baseball program before CHS exits to the new North Sound Conference in the fall.

Chimacum has never finished higher than third in the previous three years of the four-team league.

 

UPDATE (6:30 PM Thursday):

A Port Townsend starter said the game was forfeited because the RedHawks couldn’t field a full lineup that day. 

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   Dane Lucero, here hitting in an earlier game, got the win on the mound Wednesday as Coupeville thrashed Port Townsend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Right where they want to be, in the driver’s seat.

Taking care of business Wednesday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad bushwhacked host Port Townsend 17-6, clinched a playoff berth and moved into sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

With the victory, their fourth straight and eighth in their last nine games, the Wolves soar to 5-1 in conference action, 11-4 overall.

That puts them a half game up on Chimacum (4-1, 6-7) which visits Whidbey Friday for the rubber match in a three-game season series.

The Cowboys won 5-4 in the rain at home two weeks ago, then the Wolves returned the favor 1-0 in the prairie sun Monday afternoon.

Port Townsend (1-4, 1-9) and defending league champ Klahowya (1-5, 2-12) bring up the rear, and neither team can catch Coupeville, guaranteeing the Wolves one of the league’s two playoff berths.

While the RedHawks have only won a single game in the past three years, they’ve pushed CHS this season.

The first time the teams faced, the Wolves eked out a 3-1 win, and Wednesday, Coupeville trailed 4-1 after two innings of play.

CHS had gone down one-two-three in the top of the first, then given up three runs in the bottom half of the inning thanks to a couple of errors and some timely PT base-knocks.

The Wolves got one run back in the second, with Julian Welling plunking a single and coming around to score on a ground-out by Dane Lucero, but the RedHawks immediately answered with a score of their own.

Instead of panicking, Coupeville went to work, ramming home three runs in the third to tie things up, before exploding for five in the fourth and eight in the fifth to wrap things.

The Wolves set the table in the third with a Matt Hilborn single, a Joey Lippo walk, then a double steal from the fleet-footed duo.

With runners in scoring position, Hunter Smith came up big, drilling a two-run single, before coming around to score on an RBI single off of Welling’s smoking-hot bat.

With the game knotted at four, Lucero, who whiffed four, bore down on the mound and held the RedHawks relatively in check the rest of the way.

Not content to sit on a narrow lead, the Wolves super-charged their bats heading into the fourth and promptly began crushing the snot out of the Port Townsend pitching.

Jake Hoagland, who obviously ate his Wheaties, bashed a pair of triples, one in the fourth, one in the fifth, with the first one narrowly missing being a round-tripper.

Coupeville actually had a trio of three-baggers on the day, as Hunter Smith jacked one as well.

With the ball flying off the bats of the Wolves, the RedHawks helped out a bit, juggling balls and letting the speedy Wolves turn singles into two or three bases at a time.

CHS finished with 13 hits, with five different hitters racking up at least two base-knocks apiece.

Hilborn (1B, 1B, 2B) led the attack, while Hoagland (two triples) and Smith (1B, 3B) went deep and Lippo and Welling each collected a pair of singles.

Jake Pease and Lucero rapped singles to round out the hit parade, while Lippo had the web gem o’ the day, spearing a liner at second while on a dead sprint.

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