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Posts Tagged ‘Aaron Curtin’

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Left to right, Aaron Curtin, Ken Stange and Ben Etzell.

Etzell gets intense.

Etzell gets intense. (John Fisken photos)

Curtin

Curtin charges into action.

One door closed, but another is swinging wide open.

A day after ending their baseball season with a nail-biter loss to Rochester at the state tournament, Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin will be back on the tennis court Sunday, getting ready for another crack at a title.

Etzell, a Coupeville High School senior, and Curtin, a junior, qualified for the boys’ tennis state tourney back in the fall.

They then put their rackets away for months, as tennis is staggered in Washington, with some schools playing in the fall and other in the spring.

But, just because they won’t be coming straight off a regular season run, don’t count out the Wolf duo.

“Only having the short week to prepare for state isn’t optimal, but I’m keeping a few things in mind: Aaron and Ben are both extremely talented athletes who gracefully transition from sport to sport, throughout the year,” said CHS coach Ken Stange.

“They had an up and down regular season but something happened at districts, though. They simply raised their games to a level neither of them had ever achieved. They amplified their strengths and they shored up their weaknesses,” he added. “It seemed like a flick of a switch. I was astounded by their display of dominance.”

Stange even went so far as to say the young guns might have taken out the seasoned pros who rule the Island courts. Heresy!

“On that day, I think they could have beaten Cliff Horr (my mega-talented doubles partner) and myself!”

Etzell and Curtin will hit the state tourney in Yakima May 30-31 as the #2 seed from their quad-district. They originally claimed third, but slid up a seed when the champs lost a player to a season-ending injury.

While the Wolf duo both sliced a finger while opening cans of tennis balls during quad-districts, they have both long ago healed.

Curtin injured his shoulder during the baseball season, but refrained from pitching during the second half and seems to be ready to go.

“Traditionally, the teams from our quad, which covers the entire I-5 corridor, have fared well at state,” Stange said. “I like our chances of making it to the semis, and hopefully the finals.

“The defending state champs, twins from Charles Wright, will likely be in the other half of the draw,” he added. “So we wouldn’t have to face them until the final.”

Basically, it’s super hero time.

Aaron is Plastic Man and Ben is Superman!,” Stange said. “They are in great shape after an extended baseball season. They also have a certain X factor.

“There are no stats to show how a couple of guys can gut it out and will themselves to do some unnatural things on the court,” he added. “They will tune up their shots, play a few practice matches against some of the Island’s finest players, they will go to Yakima, and they will play their butts off.

“Hopefully, we come home with some hardware!”

While it will be Etzell and Curtin’s first trip to state as netters, their coach has twice taken Wolf girls on the trip. He, for one, is ready and rarin’ to go.

“I am stoked,” Stange said. “This is the best chance any of my players have had at earning a medal. It should be fun!”

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Morgan Payne (Shelli Trumbull)

Senior Morgan Payne is all smiles after his team advanced to state. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Assistant coach Chris Tumblin and Kurtis Smith, who won a state title together in little league, enjoy another diamond delight.

  Assistant coach Chris Tumblin and Kurtis Smith, who won a state title together in little league, enjoy another diamond delight.

"We're going to Anacortes!" Cause no one wants to go to Castle Rock. No one.

“We’re going to Anacortes!” Cause no one wants to go to Castle Rock. No one.

Sometimes third place is better than second.

With two wins in two games at tri-districts Saturday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad clinched its first trip to state since 2008, and, better yet, will get to start fairly close to home.

The Wolves (14-10) slipped past Overlake 1-0 in eight innings and then swatted Life Christian 6-3 to run their record against fellow 1A schools to a shiny 6-2.

As the third-place team from tri-districts, Coupeville will open the state tourney in Anacortes Saturday, May 24.

The Wolves will face Rochester (16-6) in a loser-out game. Win and they advance to play the survivor of Cedar Park Christian (18-2) and Hoquiam (15-8) for a chance to make the final four in Yakima.

Cascade Conference rival South Whidbey lost 5-2 to CPC to finish second and will have to travel further, heading down to Castle Rock to play Tenino.

Win that and the Falcons face the winner of Life Christian and Woodland.

If the two Whidbey schools meet for a fifth time this season (they’ve split the first four meetings), it will be in Yakima and both schools will be guaranteed a state banner.

The Wolves are flying high on an emotional wave right now.

After gutting out the win over Overlake — scoring the winning run in the bottom of the eighth when a Kurtis Smith single scored Jake Tumblin — Coupeville jumped on Life Christian early.

The Wolves used a two-run double from Aaron Curtin and RBI singles from Aaron Trumbull and Cole Payne to stake hurler CJ Smith to a quick 4-0 lead.

Despite taking a shot off the shins at one point, he made it stand up.

After Life Christian scraped its way back into the game at 4-3, CHS scored two in the sixth to slam the door.

The game’s final ball was a chopper to Josh Bayne, who made the throw to second and kept Coupeville’s second-half charge going strong.

The Wolves are 4-1 in the playoffs this season after going 0-2 a season ago.

State brackets:

http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=6&tournament_id=1251

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CJ Smith, seen here playing the infield in an earlier game, got the complete game win on the mound for the Wolves Friday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   CJ Smith (4), seen here playing the infield in an earlier game, got the complete game win on the mound for the Wolves Friday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

"Run like you wanna make your momma proud, Trumbull!!"

“Run like you wanna make your momma proud, Trumbull!!”

“Speed kills, baby, and we have speed!!”

Coupeville High School baseball coach Willie Smith was ecstatic after the finish of Friday’s thriller against visiting Lakewood, and why not?

Using their fleet feet, and a timely hit or two, his Wolves had just exploded for three runs in the bottom of the seventh to steal a huge 6-5 win.

The victory, the second straight over a 2A biggie, lifted the Wolves back to .500 at 6-6.

They are 5-6 in Cascade Conference play and hot on the heels of South Whidbey for the #1 playoff seed among the league’s 1A schools.

“It was a great testament to the character of this team and the ability of our team to rise up to the challenge of this game!,” Smith said.

With the game on the line, Coupeville made every play count.

Trailing 5-3 and down to their final at-bat, the Wolves put two runners on via a Lakewood error and a walk. Both runners (sophomore CJ Smith and junior Josh Bayne) are quick, and they took advantage of a jumpy Cougar defense.

Jake Tumblin, a speed demon himself, laid down a bunt and beat the pitcher’s throw.

But, instead of just holding on to the ball and accepting a bases-loaded situation, the Lakewood hurler tried to nail Tumblin going into first and accidentally uncorked a throw past the first baseman and down the right field line.

Running full tilt, Smith and Bayne came around to score on the error, knotting the score up.

Tumblin promptly made a bid to win the game in electrifying fashion, stealing home on the next play, but was nipped at the plate by an alert throw.

Instead of settling for the tie and heading into extra innings, Coupeville staged a second rally.

Wade Schaef walked, Ben Etzell blasted a single and Aaron Trumbull reached on a Lakewood error to juice the bases. With two outs, it was then time to go to Church.

Junior Aaron Curtin, who has been battling through a shoulder issue, delivered the sermon and it was a winning one, jacking an RBI single back up the middle to set off the pandemonium on the prairie.

It was the perfect capper to a strong all-around game for Coupeville.

CJ Smith tossed a complete game, whiffing six and giving up just four hits.

With Tumblin’s recent hand injury still preventing him from catching, his back-up, sophomore Cole Payne, was a beast, throwing out four potential base stealers.

CJ was cool as a cucumber on the mound,” Willie Smith said. “Mixing up pitches and keeping their hitters off-balance throughout the game.”

Coupeville’s speed on the base-paths flustered Lakewood all game, with five of the first six runs being plated thanks to Cougar errors.

Tumblin, Ben Etzell (who paced the Wolves with two hits) and Trumbull represented the early game runs.

The game also marked the varsity debut of freshman Clay Reilly, who got his ticket to the big time punched by a string of injuries to CHS starters.

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Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin called a good game Thursday, as CHS pitchers (John Fisken photo)

  Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin called a good game Thursday, then chipped in at the plate with two hits and three stolen bases. (John Fisken photo)

Church was in session Thursday, and the sermon was all about denial.

Coupeville High School hurler Aaron “Church” Curtin was flingin’ smoke, and backed by an opportunistic defense, he shut down visiting South Whidbey to a 6-1 tune.

The second straight win over their Island arch-rivals, it lifted the Wolves to a glossy 2-0 on the young season and clinched the tie-breaker between the only two 1A schools playing baseball in the Cascade Conference.

While Coupeville still has another 18 regular season games to play, 16 in league play (including a game in Langley Friday), it doesn’t hurt to know that, if it comes down to it, the Wolves will have an edge when playoff berths are decided.

“Well, it certainly helps, but we still need to finish ahead of them in league, so a long ways to go until it’s completely secured,” said a low-key CHS coach Willie Smith.

If Curtin keeps pitching like he did in his first outing of the season, following on the heels of strong work from Ben Etzell in the opener, it’s just going to get better for Coupeville.

Aaron pitched a heckuva game,” Smith said.

Curtin struck out six over six innings and effectively scattered five hits, spacing them out where they did little damage.

When the Falcons did get bat on ball, the Wolf defense was ready.

Etzell went airborne to snag a screaming liner, then doubled a runner off of second for an inning-ending double play.

Then Wade Schaef topped him with “an ESPN highlight reel play,” laying out on a dead run to grab a liner at his shoestrings, snatching away a huge hit at a time when CHS was clinging to a one-run lead.

Schaef also swung a huge bat for the Wolves, crunching a double and knocking home three runs.

The whole lineup clicked, with Korbin Korzan thumping a double and Jake Tumblin racking up two hits and three stolen bases. Korzan, Tumblin and Morgan Payne each had an RBI, while Etzell and Josh Bayne also collected steals.

Coming into the season, pitching was a strong suit for the Wolves, with Etzell, Curtin, Aaron Trumbull, Bayne, Schaef and others forming a strong staff. But that staff may be even deeper than thought.

Sophomore CJ Smith, who transferred to Coupeville during basketball season, made his debut on the mound in the seventh and closed the game with a bang. Facing the top of the order for the Falcons, he retired them one-two-three on just eight pitches.

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