
Wade Schaef scored Coupeville’s only run Monday, plated by a Josh Bayne double. (Shelli Trumbull photo)
“We certainly are capable of beating them.”
That’s how Coupeville High School baseball coach Willie Smith is looking at the situation after game one of a three-game series against the beast of the Cascade Conference, Archbishop Thomas Murphy.
Monday, the Wolves took a 1-0 lead into the bottom of the fifth, but couldn’t quite close the deal. A combination of questionable calls, a bit of nerves by CHS and a couple of clutch plays from ATM propelled the host Wildcats to a 5-1 victory.
The loss dropped Coupeville to 3-2 overall, 2-2 in league play. ATM is 5-2, 5-0.
For four innings, Wolf starting pitcher Ben Etzell was throwing a beautiful game. Up to that point, he had whiffed eight ATM batters while surrendering just a pair of singles.
Then, things fell apart a little.
A flubbed grounder and a double put two men on base, before ATM knotted the game on a bloop single.
Enter the umps (without their seeing eye dogs). Exit reason.
An apparent force out at second was denied, when the ump called the runner safe, leaving the bags juiced.
A bases-loaded walk forced home the go-ahead run, then ATM capitalized on a long foul ball (“by about a foot and a half”) that was waved fair, allowing two more runners to scoot home.
While he wasn’t thrilled with the calls, Smith has been in the game too long to blame the loss on the arguable decisions alone.
“While it would seem those two judgement calls cost us, and they certainly didn’t help, we should have never been up by just one at that point in the game,” he said. “So I don’t believe, or use those calls as an excuse for why we lost.”
Coupeville had runners on second base in each of the first four innings, yet only got one man across home plate. The lack of a big hit at a key moment was a killer.
“So, for me and for our team, we didn’t put the bat on the ball and capitalize on opportunities when we needed to and they did and that was the difference in the game,” Smith said. “For us, it’s about being able to capitalize on opportunities and putting more pressure on them then they can on us.”
The Wolves scored their lone run in the fourth. Wade Schaef garnered a two-out walk and scooted home on a booming double into the right-center gap from Josh Bayne.
Etzell also had a double for CHS, and struck out nine while throwing a complete game.
The two teams pick things up again Wednesday, when ATM comes to Whidbey. First pitch is at 4 PM.




















































