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(Paula Peters photo)

   Yellow Jackets players (l to r) Hope Sinclair, Gwen Gustafson and Vivian Farris will be playing in their All-Star tourney next week. (Paula Peters photo)

Want to get out of the house?

Then I have a job for you. Or, actually, several jobs.

Central Whidbey Little League is hosting two All-Star tournaments next week at Rhododendron Park and is looking for volunteers to help make things sail along smoothly.

The league needs people for scoring, concessions and field prep from July 5-9.

Tournaments in play will be 9-10 softball and 10-11 baseball.

If you’re interested in giving back to your community, call Mariah Knoblich at (360) 632-6846 or email her at mariahknoblich@yahoo.com.

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CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

   CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

He’s gone, but not forgotten.

Three weeks after he graduated from Coupeville High School, Cole Payne received one final honor for his baseball playing skills.

The standout catcher, who was earlier honored as the 1A Olympic League MVP, was named as a First-Team All-State player Tuesday.

Payne follows in the footsteps of former teammate Ben Etzell, who nailed the same honor as a pitcher in 2014.

The award comes courtesy the Washington State Baseball Coaches Association.

After leading the Wolves to their first baseball league title in 25 years, Payne was the lone Whidbey Island player named to the All-State team.

The complete 1A squad:

First-Team:

Henry Cheney (Charles Wright)
McKabe Cottrell (Freeman)
Ashton Dulfer (Vashon)
Luke Gleasman (Chelan)
Brayden Hale (Medical Lake)
Skyler Jump (Hoquiam)
Matt Kelleran (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Cole Payne (Coupeville)
Blaine Ross (Zillah)
Nate Rossine (Kiona-Benton)
Kaleb Strawn (Tenino)
Gabe Tolrud (Connell)
Kylan Touch (Aberdeen)
Isaac Wersland (Cle Elum)

Second-Team:

Thomas Butler (University Prep)
Peter Dudunakis (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Tyler Fox (Cascade Christian)
Trystan Garland (Connell)
Dalton Hawk (Cle Elum)
Chase Kuhnert (Lakeside – Nine Mile Falls)
Ryan Long (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Jack Paukert (Freeman)
Lino Rivera (Kiona-Benton)
Joel Rodriguez (Eatonville)
Blake Vandel (Cascade-Leavenworth)
Cory Wagner (Medical Lake)

Coach  of  the  Year:

Steve  Hall (Vashon)

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Julian Welling lays down the law: "There had better be cake! That's all I'm saying..." (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling lays down the law: “There had better be cake! That’s all I’m saying…” (John Fisken photos)

"Wait, there is cake, right?"

“Wait, there is cake, right?”

"There is cake!!!!!!! It's mah birthday!!! Dance all day and party all night!!!"

   “There’s cake!!! It’s mah birthday!!! Dance all day and party all night!!!” (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Julian Welling is one of the best athletes at Coupeville High School, hands down.

A slugger on the baseball diamond and a ferocious hitter on the gridiron, JoJo, who will be a junior in the fall, is the real deal, a talented guy with size, strength and a motor that runs hot and heavy.

But, if you want to know what separates him from the pack, what truly makes him special, you have to step back and watch him when he’s NOT playing.

Watch him when he’s in the stands, cheering on his lil’ sis, Melia, during her little league games.

Playing for the Venom, who went 13-3 this spring in Juniors action, Melia, who had very little experience coming in, made huge strides at the plate.

As her confidence built, boosted in large part by very vocal encouragement from her brother, she became much more aggressive at the plate and started ripping some liners.

The biggest blow came against South Whidbey, when she launched a game-busting two-run double to left that caused Julian to come unglued.

Bouncing on the top row of the stands, waving his blanket left and right, big bro bellowed “That just made my day, Melia!!”

The grin that split his sister’s face as she rocked back and forth while astride second base didn’t leave for the remainder of the game.

At which point Julian came flying around the side of the dugout to grab her in a bear hug and carry her off like a trophy he had just won.

It’s moments like that which make Welling, who celebrates a birthday today, one of the true bright spots in Wolf Nation.

He is as friendly and outgoing as anyone wearing the red and black these days, a fun-loving big kid who charges into battle with a grin on his face and light-hearted mischief in his heart.

Welling is also, though, a true standup guy, a young man who showed a lot with how he conducted himself during what could have been a negative time at the start of this year’s baseball season.

A person can complain when things don’t go their way or they can, day in and day out, show their coaches, in big ways and small ways, why they deserve to wear that uniform.

When Julian made his season debut, taking the ball in relief in his first game, he was being rewarded for not taking the easy way out.

For standing up and acting like a man when it mattered, even if that stung at times.

So, when I think of Welling, I absolutely acknowledge his talent.

But I really hail him for the person he is — the proud big brother who dotes on his sister, the fun-loving entertainer and the guy who admits mistakes, then turns them into positives.

A lot of people are good athletes.

Julian is much more than that, and as a Wolf fan, I am glad I can claim him as one of our guys.

Happy birthday, Mr. Welling.

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Gavin

  Gavin Knoblich, well-dressed man about town. (Photos courtesy Mariah Knoblich)

"Hey, mom! Mom! MOM! Mom mommy mom mom mom!"

“Hey, mom! Mom! MOM! Mom mommy mom mom mom!”

Aaron Wright no longer anchors the line for the Coupeville High School football squad, but his impact lingers long after he hung up the uniform.

As Gavin Knoblich prepares for his freshman year at CHS, one which will kick off with him taking his own place on the gridiron, Wright’s words and actions spur him on.

Aaron, he set an example for me to push myself to be like,” Knoblich said. “He taught me how to do more than go through the motions.”

A strong player at the middle school level, Knoblich intends to be a three-sport athlete for the Wolves, playing football, basketball and baseball.

While he enjoys all three, spring will herald the return of his favorite pastime.

“Baseball (is my favorite), because it’s the first sport I took seriously,” Knoblich said. “And I found I had some athletic ability.”

He wants to make an impact right out of the gate (“I want to have a chance to be starting JV in any of my sports”), but knows there’s always room for growth.

“I enjoy the accomplishment of learning,” he said. “I like the time I spend with my friends working on something fun together.”

Knoblich loves to be in the thick of things, and fire up his teammates.

While that’s a huge plus, he also realizes he needs to know when to go loud and proud, and when to dial it back and keep a calm head.

“I’m always trying to think ahead. I’m always trying to be positive for my teammates,” he said. “My weakness is my composure – my inner voice in the back of my head.”

Helping him find his center is mom Mariah, who has a huge impact on his day-to-day life.

“My mom, she is always there to calm me,” Knoblich said. “She gets me where I need to go, and she always smiles for me.”

Whether it’s camping and hunting with his dad Clint or hanging out at the beach and riding dirt bikes with friends, he has a reliable support group.

Along with his mother, his grandparents step up big to help anchor things.

“My Grammy and Poppy. They make things so easy by always helping my mom,” Knoblich said. “Getting me places when my mom can’t, and they always have awesome dinners for us.”

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Birthday buddies Matt Hilborn (left) and Risen Johnson put in work. (John Fisken photos)

   Birthday buddies Matt Hilborn (left) and Risen Johnson put in work. (John Fisken photos)

They are big reward athletes.

Risen Johnson and Matt Hilborn, who share a birthday today, are both guys who dance on the line between huge success and huge failure, but, more often than not, pull it off for the win.

Hilborn, who just wrapped his freshman baseball season at Coupeville High School by being tabbed as an All-League selection, compiled some astounding plays at third base for the Wolves.

Quick to charge the ball, quick to believe he could make any throw, even when the throw was going to have be a laser launched while Hilborn’s body twisted in mid-air, he had some slick glove moves.

Like most younger players, he had his ups and his downs, but when he was up he showed you just what rival coaches appreciated so much.

A key part of the first Coupeville baseball squad to win a league title in 25 years, Hilborn, who is also a rising star on the gridiron, has a bright future for the red and black.

Johnson, by contrast, just wrapped his run at CHS, graduating with the Class of 2016 a few weeks back.

Before he went, he gave us two electrifying seasons on the basketball hardwood, pulling off moves that few, if any, Wolves have ever been able to accomplish.

A point-scoring machine (and an underrated defender), Johnson could pull up and nail the jumper over outstretched arms.

But more often than not, he preferred to get his buckets by employing a heapin’ helpin’ of Showtime.

Ripping down court, slicing ‘n dicing backpedaling defenders, gliding through the air and somehow getting the ball to drop off the backboard when he threw it up through a maze of arms at the last second, he was flat-out fun to watch.

A soft-spoken fashion plate off the court, Risen always played with great joy, and the only downside is we didn’t get a full four years from him.

Maybe he’ll grow a beard and sneak back into school disguised as a foreign exchange student…

Except one whirlin’, twirlin’, eyeball-poppin’ display of mad hoops skills and everyone would know the truth. Oh well.

For now, we’ll just thank Risen for making the last two years a regular thrill show and wish him and Matt a happy joint cake day.

May your birthdays be as exciting as your style of play.

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