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Posts Tagged ‘1A playoffs’

Christine Fields

Christine Fields rips a tee shot. (John Fisken photos)

Christine Fields (John Fisken photo)

“I’m coming for all your state titles!!”

Survive and move on.

That’s the mantra for Coupeville High School junior golfer Christine Fields as she navigates the postseason for the third time.

A two-time state qualifier (she finished 8th as a freshman and 15th as a sophomore), she’s cleared two out of the three hurdles to getting back to the pristine championship golf course at Lake Spanaway.

First Fields rallied on the back nine at the Cascade Conference championships, carding a 40 to sail in with an 88 for her travel around the links.

That nailed down a top-five finish and should earn her All-Conference honors once again.

Then she did just well enough at Sub-Districts Wednesday in Bellingham to punch her ticket to Tri-Districts, the last stop before state.

Made the cut!,” Fields said. “Shot a 101, but who cares, I’m moving on!!”

Tri-Districts will be May 20 at Gold Mountain Golf and Country Club and state is May 28-29.

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(John Fisken photo)

Cole Payne drops down a bunt in an earlier game. Saturday he smashed a double. (John Fisken photo)

A little sputter at the end.

Playing for the fifth time in six days, as it raced the clock to wrap up a rain out-plagued regular season, the Coupeville High School baseball squad finally ran out of gas Saturday.

Back on the bus less than 24 hours after a trip to Sultan, the Wolves rolled into Arlington and suffered a 12-4 loss, as the 2A Cougars managed to steal one game out of the three-game season series.

The loss snapped a four-game winning streak for Coupeville and brought its record to 10-9 overall, 9-9 in Cascade Conference play.

It was the final baseball game CHS will play in the 1A/2A league, as the school makes the jump to the 1A Olympic League in the fall.

In their final go-around, the Wolves took games from five of six league opponents.

They finished two games off of South Whidbey (12-7, 11-7) in the race for the top 1A playoff seed and will start the double-elimination district playoffs on the road Tuesday.

Sophomore Cole Payne swung the big bat for CHS Saturday, bopping a double, while Josh Bayne and Wade Schaef shared mound duty.

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Aaron Wright and the Wolves are postseason bound after all. (John Fisken photo)

Aaron Wright and the Wolves are postseason bound after all. (John Fisken photo)

Playoffs? Yes, we are talking playoffs.

Thanks to a wrinkle in the agreement between District 1 athletic director’s, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer team is postseason bound after all.

The Wolves (5-8-2) wrap their regular season with Senior Night Monday against King’s, and that was supposed to be it.

With three 1A schools playing in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, the top two teams were guaranteed playoff spots, and Coupeville was edged out for those berths by South Whidbey and King’s.

BUT … Friday Harbor WOULD have been the #6 seed out of the Northwest Conference, only the Wolves went 1-0-1 against them in non-conference play.

And, the way the rules are written, CHS then gets to steal away Friday Harbor’s playoff berth.

So, the Wolves live on and will travel to Mount Baker Wednesday, May 7 (4 PM kickoff) to face off with the NWC’s #1 squad.

“It’s a great opportunity for us,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “From everything I can find out about Mount Baker, we should match up well with them.”

It’s a loser-out game and if Coupeville wins, they advance on to play May 9 and possibly May 10.

Four of the eight teams from districts will advance on to tri-districts.

A playoff bracket can be found here (Wolves will be NWC #6):

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=9&tournament_id=1254

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Kurtis Smith charges a ball. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Kurtis Smith charges a ball. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The top spot can still be theirs.

It’s a bit of a long shot, but the Coupeville High School baseball squad can still catch South Whidbey and earn the #1 district playoff seed among 1A schools in the Cascade Conference.

Repeat what they did Monday, when they thumped Sultan 9-0, over the course of the regular season’s final week, and catch a few breaks and it could happen.

Of course, nothing can go wrong.

CHS, now 7-8 overall, 6-8 in league play, will need to take two more from Sultan, win makeup games against Lakewood and Granite Falls, and root for the Falcons (10-6) to lose their final two games.

If all that happens, both Whidbey squads finish 10-8 and the Wolves own the tiebreaker, having won two of three when the squads faced off way back at the start of the season.

If nothing else, Coupeville wants to head into the postseason on a strong note, and it kicked off a five-games-in-six-days stretch with a bang.

Wolf senior hurler Ben Etzell was electric on the mound (again), whiffing 12 and scattering just two hits.

And, for once, his offense backed him up with a ton of runs. No 1-0 pitcher’s duels this time out.

At least once the game reached the fifth inning, when the Wolves blew open a scoreless game.

Wade Schaef (walk), Jake Tumblin (single, stolen base) and Etzell (intentional walk) juiced the bags, then Josh Bayne lashed a two-run single to right center to bust things open.

CHS poured it on after that, with big hits from Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin and Kurtis Smith keying a three-run sixth and four-run seventh.

“It allowed us to win going away and finally put a team away as we should,” said CHS coach Willie Smith. “We are hoping that with four more games this week and playoffs looming next week, that we can use this game to help get us in a groove offensively and we can hit the playoffs running and in good shape.”

Tumblin and Curtin paced the Wolves with two hits apiece while Korbin Korzan collected three steals on the afternoon.

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Tears and laughs mixed as the CHS girls' hoops squad came together in the locker room after their loss Friday. (Amy King photo)

Tears and laughter mixed as the CHS girls’ hoops squad came together in the locker room after their loss Friday. (Amy King photo)

Wolf seniors Breeanna Messner (left) and Amanda Fabrizi. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf seniors Breeanna Messner (left) and Amanda Fabrizi. (John Fisken photo)

In the end, they simply ran out of gas.

Playing less than 24 hours after an emotional, one-point win at home that ended with their classmates charging the floor in celebration, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team had to turn around and ride on a school bus to the Canadian border Friday afternoon.

Once they got to Blaine to play their third district playoff game in four days, whether it was tired legs, tired minds, tired spirits or a combination of all three, the Wolves couldn’t quite pull off another miracle.

Despite rallying in the fourth, they fell 50-40 to the host Borderites, ending their season at 10-13, a win short of advancing to tri-districts and prolonging the hoops careers of seniors Breeanna Messner and Amanda Fabrizi.

“Tonight just wasn’t meant to be,” said CHS coach David King. “We started flat and couldn’t break out of it. We didn’t have a bounce in our step on defense and couldn’t find a rhythm on offense.

“After an emotional win last night, the travel up North may have had a hand in our start to the game.”

Well-rested after not having to travel, Blaine came out crisp and took advantage of Coupeville’s tiredness, running out to a 16-7 lead after one quarter.

The Borderites continued to build their lead, eventually ballooning out to a 45-22 margin heading into the fourth.

It was then, at a moment when most teams would have just rolled up and headed back to the bus, that Coupeville suddenly surged, closing the game on a 18-5 run.

With Fabrizi pumping in nine of her game-high 19 in the quarter, the Wolves cut into the lead but were too far back to fully catch up before time ran out on them and their season.

Before they went, though, the Wolves staged a perfect farewell for their senior leaders.

With less than two minutes to play, Kacie Kiel set up Messner and Fabrizi on back-to-back plays and the captains both swished three-point bombs on the final shots of their stellar high school hoops careers.

“The most fitting ending for two outstanding basketball players,” King said. “Even though we lost, a perfect ending with both of our seniors leading the way and knocking down their last shots!”

Kiel also got her first technical after scrapping with a Blaine player while fighting for a loose ball on the ground.

“Nothing intentional, the girl was on her and she just wanted her to get off,” King said.

“She just couldn’t let me be the only one on varsity to get a technical this year,” he added with a laugh.

Makana Stone pumped in 10 points to back Fabrizi’s 19, while also snagging six boards and rejecting four shots. Julia Myers and Madeline Strasburg both popped for four, while Messner tacked on three to round out the scoring.

Strasburg, back after missing Thursday’s playoff game with an illness, snatched five rebounds while Myers collected four. Kiel handed out five assists and Monica Vidoni came off the bench to register a pair of blocked shots.

The Wolves jumped in wins, from six in King’s first year at the helm to 10 this season. They had the most wins of any of the six varsity hoops squads (Coupeville, South Whidbey, Oak Harbor) on Whidbey Island in 2013-2014.

While the loss of Messner and Fabrizi will be huge, the example they set should fuel those who return next season when CHS, the smallest 1A school in the state, moves from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to a 1A-only division of the Olympic League.

Bree and Amanda are true leaders and others will have huge shoes to fill next year and beyond,” King said. “Amanda has stepped up this year and has really increased her scoring and has been a good compliment to Makana. Her scoring has helped us win games.

Bree has been do whatever it takes to help this team win,” he added. “Returning players need to emulate the dedication, hard work and relentless drive to get better. Team came first for them, over individual stats.”

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