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Matt Hilborn and Co. sit atop the 1A Olympic League standings as of today. (John Fisken photos)

   Matt Hilborn and Co. sit atop the 1A Olympic League standings as of today. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf goalie Connor McCormick has back-to-back shutouts on the pitch.

Wolf goalie Connor McCormick has back-to-back shutouts on the pitch.

Robin Cedillo and her fellow softball sluggers have won five straight.

Robin Cedillo and her fellow softball sluggers have won five straight.

Now, things get serious.

Spring Break is done (and the rain is back, at least for a bit) and most Coupeville High School spring sports teams start wading into league play full-force starting this week and next.

So, it’s an ideal time to scan the standings and see how the Wolves are standing at the moment.

Spoiler: They’re sitting pretty good. Pretty, pretty, pretty good.

Now, I’m only running standings for three (baseball, softball, soccer) of the five CHS teams, since trying to decipher the track and tennis standings are pointless.

Ignore the Olympic League web site, which is riddled with errors for both sports.

In the real world, the Wolf netters are 1-2 with two matches — a 3-1 lead over Granite Falls and a 3-3 tie with Klahowya — still hanging open, waiting to be finished.

And the track squad?

Somehow the Olympic League web masters have the Wolf boys at 0-2, despite the fact they WON a four-team meet at South Whidbey.

Which would account for THREE wins.

Anyways…

Semi-solid standings, with 1A Olympic League records followed by overall records:

SOFTBALL:

Coupeville 1-0, 6-1
Chimacum 0-0, 4-2
Klahowya 0-0, 5-3
Port Townsend 0-1, 0-4

BASEBALL:

Coupeville 1-0, 4-6
Chimacum 0-0, 2-4
Klahowya 0-0, 6-2
Port Townsend 0-1, 0-6

BOYS SOCCER:

Coupeville 0-0, 2-4-1
Chimacum 0-0, 1-4-0
Klahowya 0-0, 5-1-1
Port Townsend 0-0, 2-2-1

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Wolf catcher Joey Lippo holds on to the ball with a death-grip during a collision at the plate. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf catcher Joey Lippo holds on to the ball with a death-grip during a collision at the plate. (John Fisken photos)

Shane Losey

The baseball thought it was getting away. Shane Losey has other ideas.

James Vidoni

  A pitch after being dusted off by the Wildcat hurler, James Vidoni settles back in to the box.

Nick Etzell

Nick Etzell can throw it. Doesn’t mean you can hit it.

Brenden Gilbert

Brenden Gilbert discovers all good things come to those who wait.

Julian Welling

If you can’t stand the heat, get out of Julian Welling’s kitchen.

Mound meeting

CHS coach Chris Smith (in red) holds a meeting of the minds.

Matt Hilborn

Matt Hilborn survives a dust storm to get the out.

It was a freakin’ heat wave.

The weather was so nice Saturday, Coupeville and Oak Harbor easily put in five plus hours of JV baseball, with the two squads splitting games.

Now, as some of us ponder sun burns on a Sunday morning, the rest of you can take a gander at some of the many snappy pics taken by wanderin’ photo man John Fisken.

If you like his work and want to see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11168&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Jacob Zettle had himself a Saturday, collecting four hits and four RBI in a doubleheader split. (John Fisken photo)

Jacob Zettle had himself a Saturday, collecting four hits and four RBI in a doubleheader split. (John Fisken photo)

Baseball is a fickle game.

One moment it rewards your efforts with great joy and the next it stabs you in the back and leaves you to bleed out in the street, awash in despair.

OK, that might be a tad dramatic, but after five-plus hours and two games with wildly different results Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad now fully understands the capriciousness of the game.

Having traveled up-Island to face off with Oak Harbor’s C-Team, the Wolves pulled out a win in a 14-11 slug-fest in game one, then fell 6-5 in the conclusion of their doubleheader, sabotaged by a final-inning meltdown.

The split left Coupeville’s young guns at 4-1 heading into a home game Wednesday (4:15 PM) against Concrete.

While the Wolves were mentally heading to the bus with a sweep, they still came out of their split with a 3A school looking pretty good.

Coupeville combined for 15 hits, 12 walks and 13 RBI over the two games, with 11 different players reaching base.

The MVP?

Sophomore Jacob Zettle, who cranked a pair of doubles in game one, then notched a pair of singles in the nightcap, knocking in two runs apiece in each game.

Hot on his heels were freshmen Shane Losey (four RBI, including a three-run single in game one) and Matt Hilborn (three hits on the day while playing shortstop, third, pitcher and catcher at various points.)

Game 1:

The Wolves came out loaded for bear, erupting for five runs in the top of the first as they eventually charged out to a 13-3 lead.

Then, in a late bid to make life interesting for coaches Chris Smith and Mike Etzell, they almost gave it all back.

Before the fans even settled in on the bleachers, CHS was on fire, with catcher Joey Lippo knifing a one-out single up the middle to kick off a run of five straight Wolves reaching base.

Julian Welling rounded first on a throwing error, Dane Lucero chopped an RBI single to left, Hilborn beat out a bunt single and Nick Etzell walked with the bases loaded to force in a second run.

Oak Harbor finally got a second out — one of the few times Zettle would come up empty on his breakout day — but Losey promptly mashed a bases-clearing moon shot to deep right center.

As he clapped his hands at first, having staked Coupeville to a 5-0 lead, the rout was officially on.

With Wolf hurler Hilborn firing BB’s on the mound, CHS tacked on two more runs in the third (including Losey’s fourth RBI of the game on a ground-out) and four in the fourth.

That rally started when football lineman Brenden Gilbert beat the throw to first when a third strike got loose from the catcher’s mitt and featured a walk, two Wildcat errors, two passed balls … and not a single Wolf hit.

Zettle’s two-run double to center in the sixth, a high, arcing shot that brought his fan club to delirium (for the first, but not last time), stretched the lead to 13-3 and tantalized Wolf fans with the idea of the mercy rule being levied.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Oak Harbor stayed scrappy, rallying for two in the bottom half of the inning.

After Cameron Toomey-Stout brought in run #14 for Coupeville with a seventh-inning sac fly, the ‘Cats got more than scrappy, however, scoring six in the final frame.

But, with the tying run on deck, Welling reached deep and found a final strikeout in his arm, applying a hardy punctuation to his team’s win.

Game 2:

After a brief break for hot dogs, the two teams suddenly decided to go away from big sticks and play small ball, with Etzell and his Oak Harbor rival trading zeros for much of the sun-drenched second game.

Trailing 2-1 heading into the top of the fifth (Coupeville garnered its run when Etzell took a pitch to the hip with the bags juiced), the Wolves finally found a way to get to the Wildcat hurler.

Welling tied the game with an RBI single that buzzed down the third-base-line, then Lucero and Hilborn followed with consecutive singles to load the bases.

After the go-ahead run scampered home on a Wildcat error on a ball chopped towards third by Etzell, Zettle capped his stellar day with a rocket of a two-run single to right-center.

Now, if Hollywood was writing the script, that’s where the day would have ended, but reality crept in a bit.

After setting down the first six batters he faced after coming on in relief to start the fifth, Lippo tired in the seventh and Oak Harbor took advantage.

Four walks and an error on a ball overthrown at home gave the Wildcats all they needed to pull back to a tie, and then the home squad got to write their own storybook ending.

Pulling off a note-perfect suicide squeeze to win the game, Oak Harbor’s freshmen pulled off a stunner for their first win in four games this season.

Best stat of the day:

Eight different Wolves collected at least one hit, while Kyle Rockwell (two walks), Cameron Dahl (walk) and Gilbert also reached base.

Best top-of-the-dugout-steps monologue by Chris Smith, which made even the ump smile:

“Guys! Guys!! I don’t care about the runner! Well … I care about him as a person. I’m sure he’s a fine young man and all… I just don’t care about him as a runner. So, person, yes. Runner, no!”

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Brenden Gilbert

   Brenden Gilbert lashed a key RBI single as Coupeville’s JV edged La Conner 9-8 Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Dane Lucero (John Fisken photo)

   Dane Lucero, seen here in an earlier game, saved the game with an alert defensive play on the mound.

It ended with a bang.

To the joy of the road fans, that bang was the ball smacking in to Wolf pitcher Dane Lucero’s glove and staying put, wrapping a wild game that finished minutes before the sun set Friday.

As Lucero snatched a La Conner liner out of midair and squeezed it tightly for the final out, stranding the tying run 90 feet from home, the rest of the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad went bonkers behind him.

And why not?

Having held on for a 9-8 win, the young Wolves are now a flawless 3-0 on the season.

They’ll get a chance to quickly test that, with a JV-only doubleheader in Oak Harbor Saturday (11 AM) against the Wildcats C-Team, which is 0-2.

Playing a four-inning game in La Conner, Coupeville built a big lead, gave it all almost back, pulled back ahead, then weathered a final storm (and a scoreboard operator who took nearly an hour to credit the Wolves with what turned out to be the winning run).

For one half inning, the CHS young guns looked like world beaters, raining down six runs in the top of the first.

Taking advantage of a wild Brave hurler, who plunked two of the first three batters he faced, the Wolves scored twice on wild pitches and another time on a bases-loaded walk to Cameron Toomey-Stout.

Lucero lofted a sac fly to plate another run, while Nick Etzell and Brenden Gilbert also delivered RBI hits.

Etzell lashed a shot down the third-base line that hooked and hooked and hooked some more, but somehow hit pay dirt a millimeter inside fair territory, skipping away for a standup double.

While Gilbert’s base knock wasn’t as dramatic, it was pretty, a frozen rope to dead center for an RBI single.

After Lucero retired La Conner on just three pitches in the bottom half of the inning, garnering two ground-outs and a fly-out before Joey Lippo, making his season catching debut behind the plate, even got settled, the game looked like a blow-out.

It wasn’t to be, though.

First, the scoreboard operator went AWOL (maybe on a dinner run?), failing to post Coupeville’s sixth run until moments before the end of the game, then La Conner started to rally.

Five runs in the second made things tight, and let the locals think they were in a tie game.

As suddenly as both offenses exploded, they went largely silent, other than Julian Welling beating out an infield single for the Wolves, only to take a header over the first-base bag and bounce his noggin off the infield.

He was more sheepish than seriously hurt, however.

“Oh, it was sooooo nice that it entertained all you guys,” he said, with a deep sigh, a grin and much eye rolling as he obtained an ice pack later.

Coupeville stretched its lead back out to 9-5 with three runs in the top of the fourth, all of them coming home on passed balls, as a new, but no less wild, La Conner pitcher threw the ball everywhere but his catcher’s glove.

Lucero, Etzell and Cameron Dahl trotted home with the decisive runs.

With the sun dipping and both teams agreeing to end the game after four innings, the Wolves decided to make coach Chris Smith sweat things out a bit.

A single, a double, a walk and an error brought home one run, but a pop-up and a huge strike-out fired by Lucero seemed to mute things.

La Conner had something left, though, with the potential final batter cracking a two-run single up the middle to pull the Braves within a run.

With their fans suddenly, finally, making some noise to rival the always-boisterous Wolf cheering section, La Conner swung from the heels with runners at the corners.

Bat hit ball, a roar went up and BOOM, Lucero alertly flipped his mitt skyward, snatched the liner and a second, much louder, roar went up from Coupeville’s side of the bleachers.

Undefeated and on to Oak Harbor.

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Julian Welling had a pair of doubles and knocked in two runs in an 8-0 win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling had two hits and two RBI in an 8-0 Coupeville win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

CJ Smith had a new target Friday, but came through with the same old results.

Throwing to younger brother Hunter Smith instead of normal starting catcher Cole Payne, who was out with an injury, the Coupeville High School senior hurler tossed a four-hit, six-strikeout, complete-game shutout in La Conner.

The 8-0 non-conference baseball win was the second victory in the last three games for the Wolves and raised their record to 4-6 at the halfway point of the regular season.

While the Coupeville offense kicked in hard during the latter stages of the game, providing him with some breathing room, CJ Smith didn’t really need it.

Pitching on girlfriend Sylvia Hurlburt’s birthday, he retired 16 of the final 17 hitters he faced.

After letting La Conner get a pair of base runners in both the first and second, CJ Smith recorded the final out of the second inning on a come-backer.

From that point on he was all but flawless, giving up just an infield single in the fifth, while retiring the side in order in the third, fourth, sixth and seventh innings.

With Payne sidelined by a shoulder injury suffered in practice, Hunter Smith swapped out his infielder’s glove for a catcher’s mitt and matched his big bro in playing flawlessly.

He pounced on a little nubber that hit in front of the plate and skipped to the side, snaring the ball and whipping a throw to Kory Score at first in one fluid motion to kick off the third, bringing an ooh or two from an overflow Wolf fan section.

Proving they travel better than any other school, Coupeville hardball fanatics outnumbered La Conner’s hometown fans, and they got some bang for their buck early.

CJ Smith and Julian Welling crunched back-to-back one-out doubles in the top of the first, giving the Wolves the only run they would need on the day.

The Braves soft-tossing lefty starter managed to escape after that, though, and kept a pitcher’s duel going until the fourth inning, when Coupeville pounced on La Conner errors to tack on a second run.

Score led off with a hard shot down the third-base line that the Braves fielder juggled for an error, before Clay Reilly was nailed with an errant pitch and Dane Lucero laid down a sacrifice bunt to move the runners to second and third.

Wolf freshman Matt Hilborn then rapped a one-hopper into the hole at short for a fielder’s choice that plated Score.

Up 2-0, and even though he didn’t need it, Coupeville decided to bestow presents upon CJ Smith, breaking the game open with two more runs in the fifth and four in the sixth.

Joey Lippo lofted a pinpoint single to center to kick off the fifth, eventually coming around to score on a throwing error several batters later.

Welling slapped an RBI single up the middle to cap the inning, before the Wolves really went wild in the sixth.

A single from Lucero, a gorgeous drag bunt for a hit from Hilborn and an error that put Gabe Wynn on first juiced the bags with no outs.

After that, it was wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am, as Cameron Toomey-Stout lofted a sac fly to plate Lucero, Hunter Smith lashed an RBI single to send Hilborn home and CJ Smith knocked in Wynn and his brother with a two-run double to right.

Coupeville closed the game in style, with the Smith brothers working in tandem to wrap the seventh.

Hunter Smith tracked down an errant pop up behind home, before CJ Smith collected his final K, punching out the Brave hitter with some nasty heat.

The final out?

Poetic, as it was a slow chopper back to the mound, giving CJ plenty of time to pocket the ball, turn and lob it to Score before strolling off the field and out to a birthday dinner with the patiently waiting Hurlburt.

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