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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Coupeville gets a rematch with Bellevue Christian Thursday, but this time with starting goalie Connor McCormick. (John Fisken photo)

   Coupeville gets a rematch with Bellevue Christian Thursday, but this time with starting goalie Connor McCormick. (John Fisken photo)

Time for the big payback.

After wrapping their regular season Tuesday with a hard-fought 4-0 loss to two-time 1A Olympic League champ Klahowya, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad is postseason bound.

Their first opponent and possibly their second? Both familiar foes.

The Wolves (5-8-1) host Bellevue Christian (5-7-1) Thursday at Oak Harbor’s stadium (6 PM) in a loser-out district playoff game that offers a chance at redemption.

The two schools met in a non-conference game Mar. 30, and while the Vikings won 7-4 in Coupeville that day, the Wolves were playing without starting goaltender Connor McCormick.

The senior was serving a one-game suspension after receiving a red card in a game the day before for an inadvertent handball.

If Coupeville wins Thursday, they’ll advance on for another crack at revenge, with a road game Saturday at Kentridge High School against Vashon Island (8-2-4).

That’s the team the Wolves were playing when McCormick was ejected for preventing “an obvious chance to score,” when his hand connected with the ball as he was scrambling to get back in the goalie box with six minutes to play.

Backup goalies Jose Marcos and Tanner Kircher stepped in and held Vashon scoreless through the end of regulation and overtime as the two teams eventually accepted a 1-1 draw.

If Coupeville knocks off both Nisqually League teams, it advances to the double-elimination round of districts May 10-14. Two wins there would qualify them for state.

While CHS doesn’t charge admission for regular season soccer, the postseason is a different beast.

Prices for Thursday’s game at OHHS:

Adults and students without an ASB — $8

Middle school/high school students (with ASB) — $5

Elementary school students (under 12) — $4

Senior citizens (62 and over) — $5

Preschool (with parent) — free

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Hope Lodell lashed a pair of hits Monday in Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

Hope Lodell lashed a pair of hits Monday in Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

There’s two ways to look at Monday.

The first take is the easy one, which is the Coupeville High School softball squad fell 14-4 at Chimacum, allowing the Cowboys to clinch back-to-back league titles.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 3-5 in the 1A Olympic League — guaranteeing they will finish third behind Chimacum (7-0, 11-4) and Klahowya (4-2, 9-6) but ahead of Port Townsend (0-7, 0-12) — and 8-8 overall.

But even at what could seem like a down moment, the positives continue to outweigh the negatives for an extremely young Coupeville squad.

Despite having no seniors and featuring five starters who are freshmen or sophomores, the Wolves have racked up their most wins in a season in some time.

And, even in losses like the one on Monday, they continue to fight until the final out.

“We lost today, but the score is definitely not a good representation of how we played,” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan. “We had them on the ropes, as their coaches were talking about changing pitchers, but she always wiggled out of it.”

Coupeville got on the board first and trailed just 6-4 heading into the bottom of the fifth, but that was when the floor fell out from beneath it.

“We were playing them tight and then a few little errors happened and caused a big inning,” McGranahan said.

The Wolves mounted a decent offensive attack, with Hope Lodell, Katrina McGranahan and Sarah Wright each bashing out a pair of hits, while Veronica Crownover added a single and Lauren Rose walked four times.

Coupeville had the bags juiced in both the first and second, but came away with just a single run each time.

“We just couldn’t get the hit or tough out we needed to put the game away,” Kevin McGranahan said.

Even in a loss, though, the diamond guru hasn’t lost faith in his team, which continues to show growth each time out.

“Just keep believing in these girls,” he said. “They are playing their hearts out and will only get better.”

The Wolves have three regular season games left, a home league game Wednesday (3:30) against Klahowya, then road games at Bellevue Christian and La Conner before heading off to the playoffs.

Since the team has no seniors to honor on what would normally be Senior Night, the players are planning to have a fan appreciation day Wednesday.

“They want it to be a thank you to the fans and community for the support throughout the season,” Kevin McGranahan said. “This is a testament to the character this group of young ladies (this TEAM) has.

“I really don’t know what they have planned, but, whatever it is, it is from their heart.”

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CJ Smith had one of the few hits for Coupeville Monday in a 3-0 loss. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   CJ Smith had one of the few hits for Coupeville Monday in a 3-0 loss. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Seven steps forward, one step backward.

A game after they clinched their first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad came out a bit flat Monday afternoon.

Call it a hangover loss.

Unable to generate much offense, the Wolves fell 3-0 at Chimacum, taking their first league defeat under first-year head coach Marc Aparicio.

Now 7-1 in the 1A Olympic League, 10-9 overall, CHS will wrap its regular season with a home game against Klahowya Wednesday.

Win or lose, the Wolves open district play May 10 at Curtis High School.

They’ll also play May 12 and possibly May 14 and will need two wins to advance to state.

To see the playoff bracket, hop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Facing off with a foe they had beaten by a single run in each of their first two meetings, Coupeville got stung early Monday.

Chimacum plated all three of its runs in the first inning, using a couple of singles and two Wolf errors to do their damage.

It was the only time all afternoon the Cowboys had much going at the plate, but it turned out to be enough, as Coupeville struggled offensively.

“We played well, but couldn’t get the bats working,” Aparicio said.

Coupeville went down in order three times, and only managed to get more than one runner on in the same inning twice in the game.

Singles from CJ Smith and Cole Payne in the first went for naught, while a brief fourth inning rally sputtered out as quickly as it began.

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Ethan Marx

   Ethan Marx socked a two-out, three-run double Friday, sparking Coupeville to a 10-0 win and its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photo)

One of us was smart enough to get Sylvia Hurlburt to run around and have everyone sign a line-up card to commemorate the moment. (David Svien photo)

   A little slice of autographed prairie history, thanks to Sylvia Hurlburt. (David Svien photo)

CJ Smith

   CJ Smith, seen here in an earlier game, was unflappable Friday, whiffing 10 and shutting out Port Townsend. (Fisken photo)

Now, you’re gonna think I’m making this up, but it really, truly happened.

As I pulled my hunk o’ junk car into the parking lot at the Coupeville High School baseball field Friday afternoon, the final song playing on the radio was “We are the Champions.”

Seriously. No, seriously.

As the soaring strains of Freddy Mercury poured out the window and swirled away into the suddenly gusty prairie wind, there was no doubt.

Today was gonna be historical.

Now, of course, there was an actual baseball game yet to be played, one which would prove surprisingly competitive for long enough to make local fans feel their collars tighten around their necks, but the radio gods had spoken.

And their will be done, apparently, because somewhere around 5:30 PM West coast time, having drilled Port Townsend 10-0, the Wolves were exactly that — champions … of the world.

Or, at the very least, of the 1A Olympic League, which is all the world Coupeville needs right now.

A flawless 7-0 in league play, 10-8 overall, the Wolves will hang a league championship banner in baseball for the first time since 1991.

There are two games left on the regular season schedule — a road game at Chimacum (2-5, 5-10) Monday, then the home finale against Klahowya (5-2, 14-4) Wednesday — but they are largely academic.

Win, lose or draw, Coupeville is the #1 seed out of the Olympic League and automatically advances to the double-elimination part of the district tourney May 10-14.

Two victories there and they’re off to state.

But before they could focus on that, the Wolves had to put the hammer down on a pesky RedHawks squad that is going through a season from Hell.

Win-less, and unable to play a single home game this season due to the condition of its field, Port Townsend came to Whidbey with nothing to lose, and one shot at making things seem semi-alright for a day at least.

Pull the upset, prevent Coupeville from clinching, punch a hole in the soul of Wolf Nation — that was the unspoken goal.

And, for 20 minutes or so, the RedHawks looked as good as they have looked at any point this season.

They weren’t scoring against unflappable Wolf hurler CJ Smith, but they also weren’t giving up any runs, playing spotless defense and keeping the game scoreless into the bottom of the third.

Coupeville had a shot at changing the numbers on the (suddenly functioning) scoreboard in the first, when Hunter Smith slapped a lead-off single to right, then took two bags on a sac bunt by his big brother.

But he died at third, metaphorically speaking of course, when Cole Payne’s towering pop fly was snagged and then the RedHawk first baseman made an eye-popping mid-air snag on a laser off of the bat of Julian Welling.

Port Townsend had runners on in each of the first three innings, but CJ Smith, who may be the calmest Wolf to ever toe the pitching rubber at CHS, stranded them each time.

His pitches popping in Payne’s glove, he punched-out six RedHawks on strikeouts, while lil’ bro Hunter backed him up with the defensive play of the game.

With a runner at first and no outs in the top of the third, Hunter Smith went so deep into the hole at short he could practically touch the fence behind third base, snared a hot shot, and, spinning like a ballet dancer, fired to second to nail the runner by less than a step.

Not content to stop there, Hunter then went out in the bottom of the inning and created the only run his brother would need to win.

With two outs and no one on base, the junior Smith beat out an infield single, stole second, stole third, then scampered home when his quicksilver moves flustered the RedHawk catcher into skipping his throw to third into left field.

Port Townsend, to its credit, didn’t collapse, and juiced the bags in the fourth, even after Wolf third baseman Matt Hilborn made a stunning throw to nail the lead-off hitter.

All eyes turned towards CJ Smith, who was so calm, he looked like he was asleep on the mound.

Now, it is possible emotions roil deeply through the senior, that he is a bubbling cauldron of anxiety. If he is, he has hidden it beautifully for three years.

Boom. Strike one. Slight movement of the eyes.

Boom. Strike two. Slight twitch of the mouth.

Boom. Strike three. Inning over.

The faintest whisper of a smile, 99.4% hidden by keeping his head down, cap tilted against what was now steady gusts of wind rumbling across the prairie.

Having escaped from the precipice, Coupeville decided it was time to stop giving its fans a collective coronary and truly embrace its destiny.

Cue the Hollywood ending.

A one-run lead, bases loaded, two outs in the bottom of the fourth and your #8 hitter at the plate.

Pinch-runner Ty Eck bounced on third base (he was running for Welling, who cracked a one-out single to right), Kory Score glared at the pitcher from second (he reached on an error) and Clay Reilly (a walk) leisurely drifted off of first.

Enter Ethan Marx and exit the final hope for the RedHawks.

Launching a bomb to straight-away center field that sliced through the wind gusts, then rode one sideways at an opportune moment, the junior cleared the bases and etched his name into Wolf lore.

With some room to breathe at 4-0 (though his demeanor never changed) CJ Smith was brutal in the top of the fifth, inducing a grounder to Score at first, then cracking off K’s #9 and #10.

The bottom of the fifth perfectly encapsulated two seasons going in different directions.

Needing six runs to force an early end to the game via the 10-run mercy rule, Coupeville sent nine batters to the plate and every one of them reached base safely.

Hunter Smith’s third single of the game launched things, Payne’s two-run single up the gut sealed things, and yet the runs kept coming.

An RBI single from Score made it 7-0, a hard shot off a glove from Reilly plated #8, an infield single from Dane Lucero that burrowed into the grass and refused to come back out sent #9 home and then 25 years of championship drought ended on one swing.

Hilborn, a mere freshman, swatted a chopper into the gap between second and first, sending Gabe Wynn barreling across home and the dream was a reality.

As the Wolves stormed the field, as their fans celebrated in the stands, as news began to flash across town and then across the USA, thanks to our modern digital world, the prairie breeze continued to blow.

And, if you listened carefully, you could hear it written on the wind.

“We are the champions … of the world!!”

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Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for your self. (David Svien photos)

   Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for yourself. (David Svien photos)

The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS -- How many of those phone numbers are still good?

   The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS — How many of those phone numbers do we think are still good?

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Today is about today, but it’s also about yesterday and tomorrow.

When the Coupeville High School baseball team takes its home field this afternoon to face Port Townsend (4 PM), the Wolves have a rare opportunity.

Coupeville enters the day at 6-0 in the 1A Olympic League, 9-8 overall and ranked #9 in the most recent state poll.

The RedHawks, who have had to play their entire season on the road thanks to problems with their home field, are 0-6, 0-13.

Go out there, put the hammer down, and the Wolves will bring their school its first baseball league title since 1991.

25 years is a long time.

Fashion changes. Music changes. Hairstyles change.

The entire world, from how we watch movies to the fact you’re reading this on a computer, phone or some other newfangled device never thought of in ’91 is proof of that.

The oldest players on this Coupeville squad weren’t even a twinkle in their parents eyes the last time something like this happened on the prairie.

And when it does (and I said WHEN and not if), these Wolves, from CJ Smith to Jake Hoagland, from Cole Payne to Clay Reilly, and all of their teammates and coaches, will freeze a moment in time.

Forever.

I know, when you’re 15, 16, 17, 18, everything is about today and not down the road, and little I say now is likely to sink in. I get it.

These Wolf players will celebrate in the moment, as Coupeville’s girls basketball and girls and boys tennis teams have done over the past two years when they won titles. It will be big for them.

But it will be bigger later. I promise.

A decade down the road, 25 years down the road, when you’re pushing 30 and coming back for your 10-year reunion or when you’re crawling into your early 40’s, it will mean so much more.

When you return to the CHS gym and look up on the wall and show your own children the banner, you have no clue right now how much that is going to matter.

Time will change all of you.

Some will achieve great things, some may fall hard. Hopefully more of the former, less of the latter.

But you win today, and this moment will truly live for all time.

On the gym wall, and in your own hearts and minds.

And yes, I get the argument that sports are not everything, that how you do in the classroom right now will likely affect your life more than whether you get a bunt down or throw out a runner at home.

They are semi-valid arguments, and I understand why some people won’t want you to spend the rest of your life marinating in your “glory days.”

And I would tell you to tell those people to blow it out their rears.

You have worked hard, as individuals, as a team, to get to this moment. It should be treasured.

It is not the final destination, certainly, and there are many prizes ahead waiting to be vied for, and won.

But today can be, should be, a moment you will have forever.

Play with confidence, embrace the spotlight, carry yourself with pride. Execute, execute, execute. Win the day and step into history.

What you are about to achieve is something relatively few teams in Coupeville have, in baseball or any sport.

Live out the words of The Sandlot (another thing from before you were all born…).

“Remember kid, there’s heroes and there’s legends. Heroes get remembered but legends never die.”

Walk on that field this afternoon heroes. Walk off legends.

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