Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘1A vs. 2A’

   Lauren Bayne offers Danny Conlisk some advice before he wins the 400. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

They persevered and triumphed.

Battling bus fatigue, the elements and big schools, the Coupeville High School track squads acquitted themselves well at a four-team meet Thursday in Port Angeles.

Facing off with a pair of 2A teams (Sequim and their hosts), as well as 1A Olympic League rival Port Townsend, the Wolves collected five wins and 33 PRs.

In the team races, the CHS boys finished second to Sequim, while the Wolf girls finished fourth, but just a few points off of second-place.

Port Angeles cruised to the girls title.

Coupeville took dual wins in the 100, with freshman Maya Toomey-Stout and junior Jacob Smith the fastest in all the land (or at least at that particular stadium).

Joining them in bringing home individual titles were Chris Battaglia (shot put), Mitchell Carroll (triple jump) and Danny Conlisk (400).

The Wolves got PRs from 21 different athletes, with Aurora Zanardi and Gabe Carlson leading the way with three career-bests apiece.

Complete CHS results: 

Girls:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (1st) 13.39 *PR*; Ashlie Shank (11th) 14.67; Aurora Zanardi (12th) 14.73 *PR*; Madison Rixe (14th) 15.28; Kiara Burdge (15th) 15.66 *PR*

200 — M. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 27.92 *PR*; Lindsey Roberts (3rd) 28.56; Rixe (10th) 33.95

800 — Lauren Bayne (5th) 2:55.27; Lucy Sandahl (6th) 2:55.51 *PR*; Abby Parker (8th) 3:05.86

1600 — Sandahl (5th) 6:13.35 *PR*; Raven Vick (9th) 7:07.26

100 Hurdles — Roberts (2nd) 16.50

300 Hurdles — Mckenzie Meyer (2nd) 56.73

4 x 400 Relay — Bayne, Meyer, Natalie Hollrigel, Shank (4th) 5:04.05

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (3rd) 27-02; Charlotte Langille (6th) 24-08.75; Emma Smith (8th) 24-08; Alexxis Otto (11th) 23-08; Ema Smith (13th) 20-11

Discus — Langille (5th) 77-01 *PR*; Otto (6th) 74-06; Emma Smith (8th) 72-01; Allison Wenzel (11th) 69-01; Lawrence (13th) 68-02

Javelin — Naika Hallam (2nd) 82-10; Wenzel (3rd) 80-05; Parker (5th) 73-06; Vick (7th) 68-05; Jasmine Nastali (11th) 58-10; Burdge (13th) 56-00

High Jump — Bayne (2nd) 4-06

Pole Vault — Meyer (2nd) 6-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Zanardi (2nd) 14-02 *PR*; Roberts (3rd) 14-01; Shank (7th) 12-07.50 *PR*; Ema Smith (8th) 12-04.50 *PR*

Triple Jump — Zanardi (5th) 29-00 *PR*

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 11.50, Jacob Martin (3rd) 12.13 *PR*; Jean Lund-Olsen (4th) 12.37 *PR*; Greg Villareal (10th) 13.46 *PR*; Kyle Burnett (12th) 13.50; Gabe Carlson (14th) 13.90 *PR*; Andrew Martin (15th) 14.02 *PR*; Ryan Labrador (18th) 15.20 *PR*

200 — J. Martin (3rd) 24.56 *PR*; Lund-Olsen (5th) 25.13 *PR*; Burnett (12th) 27.29; Villareal (13th) 27.36 *PR*; Thane Peterson (14th) 28.60 *PR*

400 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 52.58 *PR*; J. Smith (2nd) 52.99 *PR*; Henry Wynn (5th) 59.29 *PR*; Chris Battaglia (7th) 1:00.92 *PR*

800 — Carlson (4th) 2:28.06 *PR*

1600 — Wynn (4th) 5:31.83; Jakobi Baumann (6th) 5:45.86; Carlson (7th) 5:47.29

3200 — Baumann (8th) 13:10.42

Shot Put — Battaglia (1st) 36-08.50 *PR*; Labrador (5th) 33-00; Keahi Sorrows (6th) 31-03; Grey Rische (9th) 29-08

Discus — Battaglia (2nd) 98-09; Rische (4th) 97-06 *PR*; Peterson (7th) 78-01; Ariah Bepler (8th) 77-11 *PR*; Labrador (9th) 72-01; Sorrows (12th) 71-03

Javelin — J. Martin (2nd) 121-08; Battaglia (3rd) 116-08; Rische (7th) 102-08; Carlson (8th) 96-07 *PR*; Bepler (10th) 87-08; A. Martin (11th) 86-06 *PR*; Peterson (14th) 67-07

High Jump — Bepler (4th) 5-04 *PR*

Pole Vault — Carlson (7th) 6-06

Long Jump — J. Martin (2nd) 18-09.50; Mitchell Carroll (3rd) 18-04; Bepler (4th) 17-00.25; Cameron Toomey-Stout (9th) 15-09; Baumann (12th) 14-02

Triple Jump — Carroll (1st) 40-03

Read Full Post »

   Joey Lippo, seen bunting in an earlier game, and the Coupeville offense were largely shut down Monday by Sequim’s pitchers. (John Fisken photo)

The fourth inning was great.

Everything else on either side, not as much, however.

Only able to get the offense clicking during one brief spurt Monday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad fell 9-3 at Sequim.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 6-6 on the season.

It was the second time CHS faced Sequim this season, and, while the score was slightly better (the Wolves lost 14-4 at home Mar. 17), they still struggled with their 2A foes.

“We couldn’t stop them from scoring,” said Wolf coach Chris Smith. “And they controlled us and kept us off balance in all but one inning.”

During that fourth inning Coupeville sent nine batters to the plate, brought three around, but left the bags juiced.

Things started off with a resounding triple off the bat of Clay Reilly.

Singles from Dane Lucero and Matt Hilborn, wrapped around an RBI ground-out by Kory Score and two Wolf hitters — Julian Welling and Jake Hoagland — reaching on errors, kept the good times rolling.

Other than that, though, the Wolf offense sputtered.

Through the first three innings, Coupeville only had two base runners, with Welling drilling a single and Hunter Smith walking.

Then, after the fourth inning breakout, the final 10 CHS hitters went down in order.

Sequim, by contrast, never had a breakout inning, but steadily chipped away at the Wolf hurlers.

The hosts put up a two-spot in the first, then added three in the third and a solo run in both the fourth and fifth, before capping things with two more in the sixth.

Coupeville used three pitchers, with Taylor Consford (3), Jonathan Thurston (3) and Hilborn (1) combining for seven strikeouts.

Read Full Post »

   William Nelson, seen here in an earlier game, had a dazzling would-be assist Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The score didn’t tell all.

A look at the scoreboard, which was faithfully updated by always hard-working team manager Peytin Vondrak, showed the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad fell 6-0 to visiting Port Angeles Friday night.

The non-conference loss, coming against a much-larger school, drops the Wolves to 3-6-1, while the victorious Roughriders rise to 7-3.

The fourth, and final, game against a 2A opponent this season (CHS was 1-2-1 playing above its weight class), it sets Coupeville up for the stretch run.

That starts Monday, when the Wolves hit the road to face Klahowya, the first of five straight league games to close the regular season.

Coupeville (2-2 in league play) sits in third-place in the four-team 1A Olympic League, a half game off of Port Townsend (2-1).

Two-time defending champs Klahowya (3-0) and Chimacum (0-4) round out things.

While they didn’t knock off Port Angeles, the Wolves were much more competitive than the score might indicate.

CHS pushed the attack, especially in the first half, with several players getting decent cracks at the net.

Ethan Spark came within an inch or two of knocking in the game’s first goal barely a minute into the game, only to have the Port Angeles keeper come up with a strong save.

The shot was set up by an absolutely gorgeous little backwards chip from William Nelson, who split two defenders, juked them out of their shoes, then nonchalantly popped the ball over his shoulder to his waiting teammate.

Whether it resulted in a goal or not, it was one of the prettiest-looking assists you’re likely to see on a high school soccer field.

Fab frosh Aram Leyva had a nice crack at the net six minutes later, while Spark launched a long cannon shot that looked like it might skip in shortly afterwards.

Unfortunately, neither shot got a lucky bounce, and the Roughriders demonstrated why they are a very hard team to score on, repeatedly shutting down Coupeville opportunities at the last moment.

Port Angeles has only surrendered 10 goals in 10 games.

Take away the four they gave up in a season-opening loss to powerful Franklin Pierce, and the Roughrider defenders have been in lock-down mode.

“I’m not disappointed with our play,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “We had a tough opponent, a quality team, and they just don’t give up many goals.

“We had some quality shots, though,” he added. “We were dangerous at times and put up a good effort.”

Port Angeles knocked in its first goal in the game’s fifth minute, then Coupeville held the Roughriders scoreless for a 20-minute stretch.

Wolf goalie Dewitt Cole pulled off back-to-back saves on the same play, knocking down a shot, then rolling back up off the turf to track down and snare the ball as a rival player tried to knock the rebound home.

Port Angeles, which passed with a great deal of precision, sending people flying out ahead of the defense, then dropping the ball out on the attack, eventually broke through, however.

Three goals in the final 16 minutes of the first half, with the final one coming during stoppage time, gave the Roughriders a 4-0 lead at the break.

The second half played out more like a chess match, with a lot of artful passing and backpedaling.

Port Angeles tacked on goals in the 54th minute and again mere seconds before the ref whistled the match dead.

Brian Roberts, who stalked the goal in the second half for Coupeville, had several nice saves, while Wolf defenders Axel Partida, Uriel Liquidano and Teo Keilwitz scrapped tooth and nail until the final whistle.

Play got a bit rough down the stretch, with booters on both sides of the ball taking hard hits.

On the attack, Brandon Jansen rocked a Roughrider who probably had 25 pounds on him, knocking his burlier foe airborne and sending him into an unintentional cartwheel which left him dizzy ‘n dazed.

Leyva went down, and stayed down for a bit, but remained in the game, while Spark and Nelson imparted a series of carefully-placed elbows to the mid-sections of various Port Angeles players.

Read Full Post »

   Bree Daigneault beat Beyonce Monday. Seriously. OK, maybe not THAT Beyonce, but certainly a Beyonce. (John Fisken photo)

Dangerously close.

For the second time this season the Coupeville High School girls tennis team faced a 2A school, and for the second time the scrappy Wolves came within a single match of upending their big school rivals.

In the end, however, Olympic, like Sequim before it, escaped Whidbey with a narrow 4-3 non-conference win.

The loss, coming in Coupeville’s first match in 11 days, drops the Wolves to 0-3 on the season.

After having a big gap between live opponents, the Wolves are hoping to get in a lot of competitive tennis this week.

CHS is scheduled to hit the road twice, with trips Tuesday to Granite Falls and Thursday to Port Angeles.

The two-time 1A Olympic League champs don’t open defense of their most recent title until April 13-14, when they play Klahowya and Chimacum back-to-back.

By then, if the schedule holds, the Wolves should be battle-hardened, having played six of their first seven matches against 2A opponents.

Monday, CHS got wins at first and third doubles and third singles.

Coupeville’s top doubles duo, juniors Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger, remain flawless at 3-0 this season.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo lost to Chiarra Droell 6-0, 6-2

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Marissa Nemeth 6-0, 6-3

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Beyonce Oresceko 6-1, 6-1

1st doublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Karli Taylor/Sydney Troy 6-3, 6-4

2nd doubles Zoe Trujillo/Avalon Renninger lost to Sarah Polsin/Brooklyn Horo 6-1, 6-0

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Gimalaine Estepa/Jemina Estepa 6-3, 6-0

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Jillian Mayne lost to Maddie Tofts/Maddie Bonk 7-5, 6-2

JV:

5th doublesSophie Furtjes/Julie Bucio lost 6-0

6th doublesClaire Mietus/Heather Nastali lost 6-2

7th doublesNanci Melendrez/Rubi Melendrez tied 4-4 (match called for ferry)

8th doubles Zara Bradley/Julie Bucio lost 6-0

Read Full Post »

   Jake Hoagland made a sensational late-game catch in deep left field Monday to preserve Coupeville’s win over 2A Bremerton. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland walked on to the Coupeville High School baseball diamond Monday a mere mortal.

He sprinted off it a bonafide legend.

Running full-tilt, glove out, carrying the hopes and dreams of every fan in attendance, the CHS junior made a sensational catch along the line in deep left field, saving a game that the Wolves, somehow, against all reason, won.

It’s not easy for a small 1A school to beat a large 2A school like Bremerton, and the odds get even more remote when your team gets no-hit and the visitors load the bases not once, not twice, but four times — twice with no outs.

And yet, somewhere just past 6 PM Monday, in one of the most improbable wins ever seen on the prairie, Coupeville danced off with a 2-1 non-conference victory.

The second straight win for the Wolves, it lifts them to 2-2 on the season.

How they got there is a testament to guts, sheer will power, poise in the spotlight and a whole lot of luck.

In other words, the kind of story the Wolf faithful will still be talking about when these players return for their 20-year reunion.

It’s a tale of three pitchers who bent, but didn’t break.

A defense that came up with big plays, and then capped it with one of the greatest snags ever pulled off by a guy in a Coupeville uniform.

It’s Nick Etzell salsa dancing around the catcher, Joey Lippo running for home like a mad man and Kory Score using every inch of his towering frame not once, but twice, to pull off web gems that make a coach’s heart flip-flop in joy.

In the end, it’s the tale of a team that flat-out refused to lose, and, by doing so, made a dramatic statement to all their future foes.

We will find a way. We will always find a way.

The game started with the debut of an escape artist, as Coupeville hurler Dane Lucero loaded the bags in the top of the first before half of the fans had even settled into their seats.

Channeling the inner calmness shown so often in the past by former Wolf pitcher CJ Smith, Lucero didn’t seem to notice, or at least didn’t seem to acknowledge, the danger he was in.

Suddenly tossing BB’s, the Wolf sophomore whiffed back-to-back Knights, then got the #6 hitter to whack a soft liner towards the gap between second and first.

Coupeville’s second-baseman, Lippo, was coming hard from the left side, but first-baseman Score, easily Coupeville’s tallest infielder, reached up, up and away and speared the ball over his head to preserve the shutout.

Lippo immediately repaid his teammate by scoring the first run of the game in the bottom half of the inning.

After getting plunked by a wayward pitch, he went to second when Clay Reilly walked, then tore around third and plated himself on a fielder’s choice by Lucero.

Bremerton blunted any further rallying by catching Reilly a step off of third, but the damage was done, and Lucero had a run to work with.

And one run was all he would need.

Lucero had runners on in every inning, but denied Bremerton at every opportunity.

After stranding a runner at first in the second inning, he had runners at second and third in the third inning, but escaped by punching out a Knight hitter on a change-up, one of seven strikeouts he recorded on the afternoon.

Cue the fourth and cue the hint of trouble (again), as Bremerton used a pair of walks and two dropped balls, which allowed a strikeout victim to reach first, to juice the bags.

Stifling a small yawn, Lucero reared back, whiffed the next two hitters, then got a third to hit a towering can of corn that Lippo retreated under and snared in shallow right-center.

Desperate to pad its 1-0 lead, Coupeville came out aggressive in the bottom of the fourth, and it paid off.

After Lucero eked out a walk, Nick Etzell bolted from the bench to pinch-run and immediately went to work.

He stole second, threw off the Bremerton hurler enough that the Knight pitcher was called for a balk — sending Etzell to third — then skipped home on a sac fly off the bat of Matt Hilborn.

The throw came in hot, but pulled the catcher slightly to the left of the base-path, and an alert Etzell twisted his body into a pretzel to evade the tag, stamping home plate as he did so.

Boasting a 2-0 lead — still without an official hit in the book — Coupeville went from the low-key Lucero to the big, bad bull himself, Julian Welling, in the fifth.

Striding on to the field after missing some time with arm issues, the Wolf junior brought the heat, and continued Lucero’s balancing act.

Loading the bags, he got out of it by ramming the ball right down the ensuing batter’s throats, striking out two of the final three sluggers to keep Bremerton scoreless.

The Knights weren’t going to go down easily, however, as they again loaded the bases in the sixth, finally notching a run when Welling came a wee bit too inside and plunked a Bremerton hitter who, it could be argued, made very little effort to get out of the way.

With the visitor’s dugout suddenly rockin’, and Welling exiting after pointing at his elbow, CHS coach Marc Aparicio turned to Hilborn to close out a third game.

At that exact moment, deep in left field, Hoagland snapped to attention, pointed up at a twinkling light in the heavens above and silently mouthed, “I’m gonna be just like that, a bright, shining star.”

Hey, I was there! You weren’t! If I say it happened just that way, who are you to disagree?

The pitch left Hilborn’s arm, bat met ball and a towering fly that was descending dangerously fast went screaming into the great wide open.

Find pay-dirt, and the odds of that happening were tremendous, and two, possibly three runs score.

On a day when Coupeville couldn’t buy an official hit, that had doom written all over it.

Except a hero was being born, a legend being crafted with every stride, as Hoagland raced towards the rapidly-falling ball.

A half-muted wail started to rise from the bleachers, as every Wolf fan sucked in their breath and prayed to whomever or whatever they pray to, and then all the pent-up emotion came rushing out in one scream of pure, unadulterated joy as ball met glove and glove held on for dear life.

If Lucero is low-key, Hoagland ain’t far behind, but the power of his smile beaming across the prairie as he hustled in to get properly roughed-up by his joyous teammates told the tale.

Something deep inside Bremerton died at that moment, and it showed in the seventh, as Hilborn gunned them down one-two-three, perhaps while humming “Enter Sandman” to himself.

Two K’s, wrapped around Score stretching out to his full height (6’2 or so) to pull down a throw at first and the improbable, memorable celebration was on.

The reality is, dark skies, moderately cold weather and a threat of rain limited the crowd, but years from now, everyone in Coupeville will claim to have been there to see this game unfold.

And hey, in spirit they were.

Every time Lucero danced with the devil in the pale moonlight and escaped, every time Welling burnt a fastball into Taylor Consford’s catchers mitt, and, especially, in the moment Hoagland became a bright, shining star, every Wolf, past, present and future, was smiling down on that diamond.

One team, one town, one unbelievable win.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »