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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Marc Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

   Marc Aparicio, seen here hanging out during a JV game, has the Wolf varsity sitting atop the 1A Olympic League at 3-0. (John Fisken photo)

You can admit it, you didn’t see this one coming.

I certainly didn’t.

Only the most diehard of diehard fans, the ones who approach every game with an unblinking faith which borders on mania, would have seen the Coupeville High School baseball team toppling Klahowya Tuesday.

And yet that’s exactly what happened.

Riding strong work on the mound from senior CJ Smith, key hits in the late going and an unflappable defense which bounced back from its few small errors to immediately make spectacular plays, the Wolves blanked the visiting Eagles 2-0.

The win, the fourth in the last six games for CHS, lifts it to 6-7 overall, and, more importantly, a flawless 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

That puts the Wolves a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (1-1, 10-3) and two up on Chimacum (1-2, 3-7) with six league games to play.

Port Townsend (0-2, 0-8), which visits Whidbey Thursday, sits in the basement.

So, how did Coupeville topple a Klahowya squad that came in with seven wins against 2A schools, a team that had rung up 99 runs and not come close to being shutout this season?

By believing in themselves.

“We played smart baseball,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio. “We hit the ball hard and even when we weren’t scoring, we held in there.

“What I was most impressed with was our ability to stay focused,” he added. “At this level, you make some errors, but we recovered, didn’t throw it away and came back with big plays to erase those errors.”

The two teams battled through a scoreless game until the bottom of the sixth, when the Wolves used aggressive work at the plate and on the base-paths to crack things open.

Freshman Matt Hilborn beat out an infield single to kick things off, then Hunter Smith reached on a bunt single.

Except … after much complaining from the Klahoywa bench, the umps changed their mind and said Smith was actually out.

The moment seemed to swing momentum back to the Eagles, but the Wolves refused to play along.

CJ Smith ignored the commotion and promptly drove Hilborn home, then came around to score himself when Julian Welling whacked an RBI single two batters later.

Klahowya opened the seventh by getting its first runner on, but Coupeville refused to break, closing out the inning, and the game, with flawless defensive work.

As he basked in the victory, Aparicio praised his defense, one through nine, with a special shout-out to the work outfielders like Clay Reilly and Ethan Marx put in.

“Our outfield was very strong all the way around today,” he said.

First-baseman Kory Score also pulled off an unassisted double play, snaring a liner and catching a straying runner off of first, while Hilborn slapped on a note-perfect tag at third in which “he tagged the guy right in the face.”

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Kameryn St Onge teamed with Kenzi LaRue for a win at fourth doubles Friday, lifting CHS to a 4-3 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Kameryn St Onge teamed with Kenzi LaRue for a win at fourth doubles Friday, lifting Coupeville’s girls’ tennis squad to a 4-3 league win. (John Fisken photo)

There were wild twists and turns and unexpected detours.

And that was just getting the two teams together for a match.

Once Coupeville and Chimacum finally hit the tennis court Friday, it capped a wild 24 hours.

In a matter of hours Thursday, the match went from being on, to being postponed two weeks due to transportation issues, to being suddenly restored to its original date and time.

So, of course, that’s how the match itself played out, as the Wolves roared to three straight wins, took a step back with three straight losses, then won the match 4-3 on the basis of a victory from a doubles duo seeking its first win of the season.

When Kenzi LaRue and Kameryn St Onge exited their home court bearing a straight-sets win at fourth doubles, they were the final players still on the court.

Did they know they were playing to break a tie and put Coupeville into sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League standings?

I kind of doubt it, since there seemed to be absolutely, positively no tension in their mid-match strut.

Or, they’re just super cool and composed at all times.

One of the two.

With LaRue wildly swatting bugs between points, St Onge skipping across the court after a particularly nice serve, or the duo repeatedly bumping rackets with enough fury to make onlookers think they would bust them, the CHS sophomores finished the day as unexpected stars.

The victory lifts the Wolf netters to 1-0 in league play, 2-3 overall and puts them atop Chimacum (1-1) and Klahowya (0-1) as they seek to defend their league title.

Coupeville came out looking for the rout, as their first two doubles teams were on and off the court in about the time it took their parents to unfold their chairs at court-side.

Toss in a win at second singles for Sydney Autio (over Coupeville Sports favorite non-Wolf athlete, Port Townsend’s eternally-smiling Amelia Breithaupt, who joins Chimacum for tennis) and the Wolves looked unbeatable.

Until, one by one, the remaining three matches still on court all began to go Chimacum’s way.

Stalking along the fence line, Coupeville coach Ken Stange never betrayed any nervousness as the match went from 3-0 to 3-1 to 3-2 to 3-3, but his voice reached a new, low growl as he verbally put the spurs to his final doubles duo.

It worked, with St Onge serving efficiently and LaRue dropping in a couple of sweet winners while their teammates gazed on, offering moral support as the rain clouds started to creep in around the edges.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st SinglesValen Trujillo lost to Sophia Thurston 6-4, 6-3

2nd SinglesSydney Autio beat Amelia Breithaupt 6-4, 6-3

3rd SinglesBree Daigneault lost to Renee Woods 6-3, 6-2

1st DoublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Amy Plastow/Emma Craighead 6-0, 6-1

2nd DoublesMcKenzie Bailey/Jazmine Franklin beat Tessa Rasmussen/Jordyn Johnson 6-1, 6-0

3rd doubles Julianne Sem/Maggie Crimmins lost to Marley Music/Aurora Plunkett 6-1, 6-0

4th DoublesKameryn St Onge/Kenzi LaRue beat Emily Calkins/Alex Solomon 6-2, 6-2

JV:

5th DoublesJulianne Sem/Maggie Crimmins beat Lacey/Natalie 6-0

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Wolf senior leaders Zane Bundy (7) and Connor McCormick (Wendy McCormick photo)

   Wolf senior leaders Zane Bundy (7) and Connor McCormick prepare to take the field Thursday night. (Wendy McCormick photo)

(John Fisken photo)

   The Wolves, like Sebastian Davis here in an earlier game, got tripped up Thursday in pursuit of a win. (John Fisken photo)

Through good times, through bad times, the streak lives on.

Coupeville High School senior Abraham Leyva continued his astonishing run on the soccer pitch Thursday, burying a goal in the back of the net for the ninth consecutive game.

His 14th goal this year — tying his own school single-season scoring record — it wasn’t quite enough, however, as the Wolves fell 2-1 to visiting Port Townsend in a match which came down to the final moments.

“It was a hard-fought game where either team could have come out on top,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson.

The loss, coming in Coupeville’s league opener, dropped the Wolves to 3-5-1 overall.

They sit in a tie with Chimacum (0-1, 1-5), their next opponent, a game off of Klahowya (1-0, 7-1-1) and Port Townsend (1-0, 4-3-1) with five left to play.

The Wolves will have a week to plan for that match-up with the Cowboys, which arrives Thursday, Apr. 21.

Leyva, who now has 39 goals in his three-year CHS career (11 as a sophomore, 14 as a junior), has tallied a score in every Wolf contest this season, with four-goal and three-goal nights, both against Forks.

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose was one of three Wolves to smack a double Thursday in a loss at Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

“Well, we never got off the bus.”

The game after “The Game” proved to be a bit of a downer for the Coupeville High School softball squad and coach Kevin McGranahan.

Two days after battling Lynden Christian, the #1-ranked team in 1A, down to the final out, the Wolves struggled to find a rhythm Thursday and fell 7-4 at Chimacum.

The conference loss drops Coupeville to 6-3 overall, 1-1 in Olympic League play and puts them a half game behind Chimacum (1-0, 5-3), the defending league champs.

Klahowya (0-0, 5-4) and Port Townsend (0-1, 0-5) round out the standings.

While the Wolves played inspired ball against the high-flying Lyncs, something was missing in the first of three meetings with the Cowboys.

“The girls were not their usual selves all game,” McGranahan said.

Umpires with an inconsistent strike zone hurt Coupeville, especially in the early going.

“The girls were disciplined and not swinging at obvious balls being called strikes,” McGranahan said. “We tried to adjust but too little too late and to their credit they didn’t chase the bad pitches like we teach them.”

Lauren Rose lashed a double off the left field fence to pace the Wolf offense, while Hope Lodell and Katrina McGranahan added two-base knocks of their own.

The younger McGranahan also singled and struck out seven Chimacum batters while working in the pitcher’s circle.

Coupeville plays three of its next four at home, starting with a match-up against Klahowya Tuesday, Apr. 19, and the Wolves will look to get back to their winning ways quickly.

“We will regroup and tweak some things and have a few hard practices,” Kevin McGranahan said.

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Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times

   Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times Thursday as Coupeville held off Chimacum 7-6. (John Fisken photo)

Alone in first place.

That’s where the Coupeville High School baseball squad finds itself after pulling out a nail-biter on the road Thursday afternoon.

Getting key hits in the late going when they needed it most, the Wolves edged host Chimacum 7-6 to improve to 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Coupeville (5-7 overall) sits a half game up on Klahowya (1-0, 9-2), while Port Townsend (0-1, 0-7) and Chimacum (0-2, 2-6) are fighting in the cellar.

The Wolves and Eagles face-off on Whidbey this coming Tuesday, Apr. 19.

Coupeville set itself up nicely for that first-place match-up by staring Chimacum down late.

Having surrendered a four-run lead, the Wolves rallied to score twice in the top of the sixth to retake control of the game.

Freshman Matt Hilborn kicked things off by reaching base on a one-out error, before promptly stealing second.

He then came around to break a 5-5 tie on Hunter Smith’s resounding RBI double.

After CJ Smith moved his lil’ bro over to third, Cole Payne stroked a seeing-eye RBI single for an insurance run that would prove hugely valuable.

Chimacum scrambled for a run in the bottom of the seventh to make things interesting, but Coupeville hurler CJ Smith coaxed a ground-out to Hilborn to cap the win.

Coupeville had looked like it would run away in the early going, plating five in the top of the first, as CJ Smith, Payne, Dane Lucero, Julian Welling and Clay Reilly all zipped across home plate.

After picking up a run of their own in the bottom of the first, the Cowboys put together a four-run rally in the fourth to get back in the game.

“They battled back and we helped them a bit throwing around,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

After that, though, the Wolves were on lock-down, with CJ Smith going the distance with a strong, 105-pitch performance on the mound and his defense stepping up behind him.

Hunter had a great defensive game,” Aparicio said. “Joey (Lippo) and Kory (Score) had solid defense, also.

“It was a great team effort,” he added. “Very proud of the kids for playing strong. Great start to the league games.”

Hilborn and Welling paced the Wolves with two hits apiece, with the freshman third baseman reaching base all three times he came to bat.

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