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Posts Tagged ‘baseball’

Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling abused the Klahowya pitcher twice, once with the Stare O’ Death, then by ripping an RBI single. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith keeps a laser focus as he drops a bunt.

Kory Score

Kory Score provides a tall target at first.

Cole Payne

“Go, man, go!” Wolf coach Marc Aparicio sends Cole Payne flying for home.

Clay Reilly

   Lurking among the dandelions, Clay Reilly is in the right spot at the right time to rob Klahowya of a hit.

Smith

Smith pulls out his best hurdler moves as he flies into first.

The best in the biz.

After shocking Klahowya on Tuesday afternoon, the Coupeville High School baseball squad sits atop the 1A Olympic League with a perfect 3-0 record.

Wandering around, snapping pics as the action unfolded, was paparazzi John Fisken, and the photos above are courtesy him.

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=11280&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Wolf freshman Shane Losey reached base four times Tuesday, keying Coupeville's comeback. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf freshman Shane Losey reached base four times Tuesday, keying Coupeville’s comeback. (John Fisken photo)

No quit in the young guns.

Down by five runs in the sixth, with the clock ticking down thanks to a waiting ferry, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad rallied to force an 11-11 tie at Klahowya Tuesday afternoon.

While it could technically count as a loss, since the Wolves had to sprint to the bus before the Eagles got a chance to hit in the bottom half of the inning, this is Coupeville Sports, not Klahowya Sports.

We’re calling it a tie.

“We had a pretty good game,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith. “We sure left on a high note, knowing that we battled back to tie things up.”

The Wolves fought back all afternoon, after the Eagles opened the first with a six-run bang.

Jonathan Thurston took over on the mound for Wolf starter Ty Eck, who was forced from the game in the second by a hurting knee, and struck out eight batters over 3 2/3 innings of work.

Coupeville chipped away relentlessly at the lead, plating one in the second, four in the third and another in the fifth before the big five-run rally in the sixth.

The offense came from everyone in the lineup, with freshman Shane Losey sparking the attack, reaching base all four times he came to the plate.

Eck thumped a key two-run double and scored three times while Jake Pease scratched out three walks and crossed home twice.

Cameron Toomey-Stout (walk, single), Nick Etzell (walk, error), Brenden Gilbert (errors), Aiden Crimmins (walk, error) and Kyle Rockwell (walks) all reached base twice apiece, as the Wolves took advantage of whatever they were offered.

“We managed to frustrate the other team and their coach to no end,” Smith said with a laugh. “Nothing spectacular, but we figured out a way to keep ourselves relevant in this game.”

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Marc Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

   Marc Aparicio, seen here hanging out during a JV game, has the Wolf varsity sitting atop the 1A Olympic League at 3-0. (John Fisken photo)

You can admit it, you didn’t see this one coming.

I certainly didn’t.

Only the most diehard of diehard fans, the ones who approach every game with an unblinking faith which borders on mania, would have seen the Coupeville High School baseball team toppling Klahowya Tuesday.

And yet that’s exactly what happened.

Riding strong work on the mound from senior CJ Smith, key hits in the late going and an unflappable defense which bounced back from its few small errors to immediately make spectacular plays, the Wolves blanked the visiting Eagles 2-0.

The win, the fourth in the last six games for CHS, lifts it to 6-7 overall, and, more importantly, a flawless 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

That puts the Wolves a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (1-1, 10-3) and two up on Chimacum (1-2, 3-7) with six league games to play.

Port Townsend (0-2, 0-8), which visits Whidbey Thursday, sits in the basement.

So, how did Coupeville topple a Klahowya squad that came in with seven wins against 2A schools, a team that had rung up 99 runs and not come close to being shutout this season?

By believing in themselves.

“We played smart baseball,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio. “We hit the ball hard and even when we weren’t scoring, we held in there.

“What I was most impressed with was our ability to stay focused,” he added. “At this level, you make some errors, but we recovered, didn’t throw it away and came back with big plays to erase those errors.”

The two teams battled through a scoreless game until the bottom of the sixth, when the Wolves used aggressive work at the plate and on the base-paths to crack things open.

Freshman Matt Hilborn beat out an infield single to kick things off, then Hunter Smith reached on a bunt single.

Except … after much complaining from the Klahoywa bench, the umps changed their mind and said Smith was actually out.

The moment seemed to swing momentum back to the Eagles, but the Wolves refused to play along.

CJ Smith ignored the commotion and promptly drove Hilborn home, then came around to score himself when Julian Welling whacked an RBI single two batters later.

Klahowya opened the seventh by getting its first runner on, but Coupeville refused to break, closing out the inning, and the game, with flawless defensive work.

As he basked in the victory, Aparicio praised his defense, one through nine, with a special shout-out to the work outfielders like Clay Reilly and Ethan Marx put in.

“Our outfield was very strong all the way around today,” he said.

First-baseman Kory Score also pulled off an unassisted double play, snaring a liner and catching a straying runner off of first, while Hilborn slapped on a note-perfect tag at third in which “he tagged the guy right in the face.”

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Joey Lippo went 2-for-2 at the plate, pitched caught and ate barbecue Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Joey Lippo went 2-for-2 at the plate, pitched, caught and ate barbecue cooked by his dad, grill master Joe. (John Fisken photo)

(Photo courtesy Marc Aparicio)

   Three schools, one plan to have a united American Legion baseball program. (Photo courtesy Marc Aparicio)

Die-hard Coupeville rooters (l to r) Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Kayla Rose

   Die-hard Coupeville rooters (l to r) Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Kayla Rose were among the first fans to show up. (Joe Lippo photo)

Baseball united the Island.

All three of Whidbey’s high schools came together Saturday in Coupeville, as local coaches kicked off efforts to field two American Legion teams this summer which will feature a mix of Wolves, Falcons and Wildcats.

The joint effort will take the diamond under the banner of the Whidbey Nighthawks and play from late May through July, with most home games in Oak Harbor.

The AA squad (primarily for players ages 16-17) will be led by CHS coaches Marc Aparicio and Cris Smith, while the A squad (14-15) will be run by OHHS hardball gurus.

To get their recruiting message out, Coupeville hosted Oak Harbor and South Whidbey’s JV hardball squads for a day of three-inning games and group barbecue.

And it worked beautifully, as close to 40 players expressed interest in playing this summer by submitting contact info on a preliminary sign-up sheet.

The goal is to have 36 players, split between the two teams. Younger players can play up if their skill set is worthy.

Since the American Legion programs are outside of school, the coaches, players and their families have to take care of transportation, tournament entry fees and other expenses.

Plans are in the works for fundraisers and Coupeville Sports will pass on information as it becomes available.

While the games Saturday won’t go on anyone’s final records, the Wolves still played strongly, winning a 9-7 slug-fest with Oak Harbor before being nipped 2-1 in a pitcher’s duel by South Whidbey.

Game 1:

Coupeville’s offense opened the day en fuego, raining down five runs in the first and another four in the second.

Four straight walks plated a run to open the scoring, then Nick Etzell bombed a two-run single to center to bust things open.

Two more runs scampered home on an error — coming off of a hard-hit ball by Wolf catcher Jake Pease — and the rout was officially on.

The Wolves stretched the lead out to 9-2 thanks to their “ringers,” Hunter Smith and Julian Welling.

The sophomore sluggers, normally varsity players, got some limited field time since they were in attendance for the Legion pitch, and came up with back-to-back epic doubles.

Smith’s blast brought home Shane Losey and Joey Lippo, who had opened the second with consecutive singles (Lippo’s on a beautifully-executed bunt that burrowed into the grass and refused to come back up).

Welling followed with his own laser to plate Smith, and the game was on ice.

Until the Wolf defense tried to give most of the runs back in the third, booting balls left and right and allowing Oak Harbor an opportunity to chip away at the lead.

Finally, CHS pitcher Dane Lucero had seen enough and capped the game himself, whiffing a Cat with the bases juiced.

Game 2:

Things moved quickly, as Welling, Etzell and Matt Hilborn combined to limit the Falcons to three hits.

But while the Wolves rapped out three hits of their own, they stranded the tying and winning runners on base in the bottom of the third, with the final two hitters going down on strike-outs.

Coupeville’s lone run came in the first, when Cameron Toomey-Stout beat out a lead-off infield single, stole second and came around to score when Lippo lashed an RBI single to right-center.

The brief rally ended quickly, however, as Lippo was gunned down by half a step trying to steal second.

The next six straight Wolf hitters came up empty, huge in a radically shortened game, a streak which lasted until Pease chopped a third-inning single.

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Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times

   Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times Thursday as Coupeville held off Chimacum 7-6. (John Fisken photo)

Alone in first place.

That’s where the Coupeville High School baseball squad finds itself after pulling out a nail-biter on the road Thursday afternoon.

Getting key hits in the late going when they needed it most, the Wolves edged host Chimacum 7-6 to improve to 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Coupeville (5-7 overall) sits a half game up on Klahowya (1-0, 9-2), while Port Townsend (0-1, 0-7) and Chimacum (0-2, 2-6) are fighting in the cellar.

The Wolves and Eagles face-off on Whidbey this coming Tuesday, Apr. 19.

Coupeville set itself up nicely for that first-place match-up by staring Chimacum down late.

Having surrendered a four-run lead, the Wolves rallied to score twice in the top of the sixth to retake control of the game.

Freshman Matt Hilborn kicked things off by reaching base on a one-out error, before promptly stealing second.

He then came around to break a 5-5 tie on Hunter Smith’s resounding RBI double.

After CJ Smith moved his lil’ bro over to third, Cole Payne stroked a seeing-eye RBI single for an insurance run that would prove hugely valuable.

Chimacum scrambled for a run in the bottom of the seventh to make things interesting, but Coupeville hurler CJ Smith coaxed a ground-out to Hilborn to cap the win.

Coupeville had looked like it would run away in the early going, plating five in the top of the first, as CJ Smith, Payne, Dane Lucero, Julian Welling and Clay Reilly all zipped across home plate.

After picking up a run of their own in the bottom of the first, the Cowboys put together a four-run rally in the fourth to get back in the game.

“They battled back and we helped them a bit throwing around,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

After that, though, the Wolves were on lock-down, with CJ Smith going the distance with a strong, 105-pitch performance on the mound and his defense stepping up behind him.

Hunter had a great defensive game,” Aparicio said. “Joey (Lippo) and Kory (Score) had solid defense, also.

“It was a great team effort,” he added. “Very proud of the kids for playing strong. Great start to the league games.”

Hilborn and Welling paced the Wolves with two hits apiece, with the freshman third baseman reaching base all three times he came to bat.

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