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Jacob Zettle

Jacob Zettle

“I wanted to play a sport and baseball looked fun!”

Coupeville High School freshman Jacob Zettle is the kind of athlete every coach looks forward to having on their team.

Bright, outgoing, in love with the game and willing to hustle 24/7 in an effort to get better every game, every practice.

“I am glad I have the opportunity to be on this team,” Zettle said. “I enjoy all aspects of the game.

“I love being able to play with a team of great guys and being coached well,” he added. “It is a sport I really like.”

Having swum in Oak Harbor for three years, this is his first time competing as a Wolf, and he’s already made an impact.

His running catch in right to end an inning against the Blaine JV was hailed by CHS coach Willie Smith as one of the highlights of the season.

While he’s thrilled to make big plays, Zettle won’t stop tweaking his game.

“I feel my strengths are having a good attitude, being eager to learn, giving my all, and being an encourager,” he said. “I thank God for these skills.

“I need to work on all aspects of the game because it is my first season,” Zettle added. “My goal for this season is to get better and stay humble in doing so.”

Away from the ball field, he enjoys his math class (“I like math in general”) and likes to golf, fish, play guitar, do archery and attend youth group at Coupeville’s Living Hope Foursquare church.

He intends to play football in the fall and says the support he gets both at home and while worshiping has been vital to his growth.

“My grandparents, Gary and Suzanne Zettle, have always been there for me and loved me, helping me become who I am today,” he said.

“Pastors Garrett and Sylvia Arnold, Scott, Courtney and Brett (Arnold), along with my younger brother Jerry, have also had important impacts on my life with their counsel, friendship, love and support, helping to make me the young man I am today.”

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Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CHS coaches Willie Smith and Chris Chan

   CHS coaches Willie Smith (goatee) and Chris Chan (sunglasses) celebrate with their squad.

A little post-game campaigning.

A little post-game campaigning.

“Coach, we flipped the switch!”

Coupeville High School senior catcher Carson Risner was overjoyed in the post-game huddle and it was a feeling that ran through every Wolf player and coach on the field.

A game after having their worst meltdown of the season, CHS rose up and played what assistant coach Chris Chan termed “the most complete game they’ve had in the last two to three years,” Thursday, rapping out 14 hits en route to shredding host Cedarcrest 10-2.

The victory, coming against a large 2A school, and former league rival, who entered the game with a 5-1 record, lifted the Wolves to 3-4 on the still young season.

Quickly shaking off the hangover from their collapse against Lynden Christian Tuesday, the Wolves jumped on Cedarcrest from the first pitch.

Crunching three doubles (Cole Payne, Aaron Curtin, Risner) in the first inning, Coupeville shot out to a quick 3-0 lead before its hosts even came up to bat.

Payne and Curtin went back-to-back, before a Kyle Bodamer single set up Risner, who delivered his second two-run hit in as many games.

Quick to prove it wasn’t a fluke, the Wolves threw down three more runs in the second.

Clay Reilly led off with a single and eventually came around to score on an RBI single off the bat of Payne.

After Curtin smashed a single, Bodamer played long ball, walloping a two-run single deep down the left field line to stake the Wolves to a 6-0 lead.

A jubilant CHS coach Willie Smith thoroughly enjoyed the power show from his headquarters in the third base box.

“It put them in a bit of shock as to what was happening,” he said with a chortle.

Coupeville tacked on four more runs in the fourth, kicking things off with back-to-back singles from Hunter Smith and Josh Bayne.

After Payne loaded the bags when Cedarcrest couldn’t handle his intended sacrifice bunt, the Wolves started bringing their runners around in style.

Curtin lashed a run-scoring double, Bodamer notched another RBI with a single, then Risner and Aaron Trumbull capped the afternoon with RBIs of their own.

With the offense booming, the pitching and defense didn’t need to be first-rate, but it was.

CJ Smith went the distance, scattering four hits and striking out four (“He was in total command, working the corners and keeping them in check”), while the guys behind him came through with a variety of inspired plays.

“Our defense was perfect and we received some amazing web gems from a variety of players,” Willie Smith said.

Coupeville had a snappy 1-4-3 double play that started with CJ Smith knocking down a line shot up the middle. Payne snatched it, stepped on second and fired to first to complete the twin-killing.

When the ball cleared the infield, Reilly and Bayne ran everything down, with the duo each making a pair of highlight-reel catches.

Bayne, playing center field on a very roomy field that runs 370 feet in left center, went deep into the alley to make an over-the-shoulder snag to rob a possible triple.

He then followed that up with an even more impressive catch, going to the wall to snare a ball headed for pay dirt.

“Completely took the wind out of them,” Willie Smith said. “That was the defensive play of the year so far and pretty much sealed the deal for us.”

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Clay Reilly swung a hot stick and hauled rear down the line Tuesday, reaching base three times. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Clay Reilly swung a hot stick and hauled rear down the line Tuesday, reaching base three times. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Willie Smith, imparting wisdom, even on days when his players are driving him crazy.

   Willie Smith, imparting wisdom, even on days when his players are driving him crazy.

Willie Smith is getting real tired of riding the roller coaster every day.

“These guys are going to have to decide at some point what kind of team they want to be. They can be very, very good, or very, very bad. It’s up to them, but they’re going to have to decide.”

Suffice it to say that’s the slightly cleaned-up version of what the Coupeville High School baseball guru had to say after agonizing through a cold afternoon on the prairie Tuesday, filled with extreme highs and unbelievable lows that ended with a gut-punch of a 7-6 loss in 10 innings.

The non-conference defeat, coming to a Lynden Christian squad that was assuredly NOT the better team, dropped the Wolves to 2-4.

Over the course of three-and-a-half hours that saw cold, wind, a hint or two of sun, more cold, a hint or two of rain, and a lot more cold, two teams did battle.

But it wasn’t really the Lyncs and the Wolves fighting.

It was more like Coupeville split into two different sides of its psyche and waged a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde show.

It was a performance that threatened to make Smith go prematurely grey, start drinking in the dugout or allow the less-than-stellar umpiring crew to toss him for arguing over two badly blown calls.

Except being ejected would have cost him the chance to coach Thursday at Cedarcrest, and Smith, regaining his boyish sense of humor in the midst of a stormy post-game press conference, readily admitted he was looking forward to skipping out on parent/teacher conferences that day.

Side note: there were more than two bad calls, but a couple were especially grievous. More on that later.

When the Wolves were on Tuesday, they looked stellar.

Aaron Curtin had a game for the ages, smashing four hits, including an RBI double.

He also made a dandy unassisted double play in which he nabbed runners headed to home and third in one wild whirl across the left side of the diamond.

Oh yeah, and he also came on in relief and pitched what should have been six scoreless innings.

Except the cold umps, ankling for an exit, made two lousy calls that resulted in the deciding run coming in on a bases-loaded walk in the 10th.

Toss in the hustle of Clay Reilly, who came up roaring out of the #8 slot in the lineup and reached base three times on the day, as a true positive.

Seven of the nine Wolf starters rapped a hit, and Coupeville built a 3-0 lead on the strength of a two-run single from Carson Risner and a double steal where Curtin scampered home.

But then things darkened, big time, and not just in the sky.

The lead vanished in the fourth as quickly as CHS forgot how to throw to third base.

Cole Payne, who was manning the hot corner in the early going, spent much of the inning sprawling in the dirt trying to snag some God-awful throws from his teammates, while Lynden Christian runners sailed past him.

It didn’t get better from there, as a string of mental errors and questionable decisions doomed the Wolves both in the field and at the plate.

The umps did their best to pick at the scab, calling a runner safe on a play where Risner stepped on home for a presumed force-out, then lost control of the ball only AFTER clearing the plate and starting to make a throw.

With their seeing-eye dog yowling from his perch out in the ump’s car way off in the parking lot, both men in black went against all conventional baseball wisdom (and the rule book), allowing the Lync rally to unfairly continue.

But then, with things looking awful at 6-3, the sun popped back out (for a moment) and Coupeville found its groove again.

Two runs in the fifth, on a bases loaded walk to Hunter Smith and a balk by the Lynden pitcher that sent another runner home, closed the gap to 6-5.

Curtin knotted the game up in the sixth — letting the scoreboard read 6-6-6 — with a ferocious double, but died an agonizing death as the next two Wolf hitters left him hanging in the breeze.

That became the theme in the latter stages, as Coupeville stranded six runners from the seventh through the tenth.

The most soul-shredding was in the bottom of the eighth, when the Wolves juiced the bags with just one out, before meekly surrendering on a called third strike and a soft ground-out back to the pitcher.

Down to their final chance as the sun began to rapidly slide out of sight, CHS shot itself in the foot (again), having two players called out on the same play to kill its hopes.

Smith, bearing the look of a man who had his soul battered for 200+ minutes, was frustrated, angry and peeved. And that’s putting it mildly.

But, like any coach worth his salt, after venting at the team way far away from family, friends and fans (some words traveled with the wind…), he spent most of his post-game time pulling individual players away for a quick moment of one-on-one.

A few quiet words, handshakes, encouragement where it was needed, a fatherly kick in the rear for some, Smith worked each of his players like a psychiatrist.

And you could see in their responses, in the way that say, sophomore Gabe Wynn stared intently at Smith, responding with a firm “Yes, coach” again and again, that his players value the interaction.

Frustration in the moment, but building, reinforcing, molding — the mark of a quality coach who knows his team is capable of big things.

If they decide that’s the way they want to go.

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CJ Smith got the start Saturday and pitched well, but was betrayed by a leaky defense. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   CJ Smith got the start Saturday and pitched well, but was betrayed by a leaky defense. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout was an offensive machine for the Wolf JV in their doubleheader.

Cameron Toomey-Stout was an offensive machine for the Wolf JV in their doubleheader.

When the Coupeville High School baseball squad is good, it’s very, very good.

And when it’s not, well … that’s when the agonized screaming begins in earnest.

There were more lows than highs Saturday, as five errors on “very routine plays” allowed a chunk of unearned runs to scamper home in a 10-4 non-conference loss at Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

The defeat, coming to their former Cascade Conference nemesis, dropped the Wolves to 2-3.

“What’s been very frustrating, and especially this game, is that we make great plays in the field but can’t seem to make the routine plays,” said Coupeville coach Willie Smith. “When we begin to have a more consistent approach and consistent belief in our abilities then we will begin to play to the high level that we have shown we can play at.”

There were moments to make any coach’s heart swell with pride, such as Aaron Curtin making a spectacular dive at third, coming up firing to gun down the runner at first by half-a-step.

The Wolves also put together a Josh Bayne to Aaron Trumbull to Carson Risner relay from right center to first to home to nail a Wildcat at the plate and got a nifty play from Hunter Smith, who threw out a runner from deep in the hole at shortstop.

But those were overwhelmed by a missed fly ball and multiple booted balls in the infield, which allowed ATM to stay alive and eventually open a large lead.

The Wolves answered with eight hits of their own and seemed to be mounting a come-back in the top of the seventh before it sputtered out.

Bayne walked and stole second, Cole Payne singled, then Curtin unloaded a scorching two-run triple.

Kyle Bodamer followed with an RBI single, but the three-run rally died there as a ground-out and a bam-bam play at third ended the day.

JV heads to the border:

The Wolf young guns went their own way, heading out to Blaine, where they were swept 5-4 and 10-3 in a doubleheader.

In the opener, Coupeville got strong pitching from Jonathan Thurston and had the tying run at second in the seventh before falling just short.

The night-cap featured a stellar catch from Jacob Zettle, who snagged a deep drive to right to end an inning.

Josh Poole, Jimmy Myers and Nick Etzell shared pitching duties in game two, while Joey Lippo (three hits, four runs scored) and Cameron Toomey-Stout (four hits, two RBI, two runs) paced the day’s offense.

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We're four games into the season and Aaron Curtin already has two no-hitters. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   We’re four games into the season and Aaron Curtin already has two no-hitters. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The Coupeville High School baseball squad has played four games this season, twice ten-running their opponents and twice being shut out.

Friday it was the more popular of the two options, as the Wolves jumped all over host Port Townsend early, then rode nearly flawless pitching from Aaron Curtin (tossing his second no-hitter of the season) to a 10-0 victory in their Olympic League opener.

The victory left Coupeville sitting atop the league standings at 1-0, 2-2 overall.

And, while the disparity is sort of odd, CHS coach Willie Smith can appreciate it.

“Yeah, you have a problem with that???,” he asked with a huge laugh. “And yes, we either score or we don’t, but as an ever positive and cheery person, I like to think of it as our outscoring our opponents 20-9 in the first four games and not worry about the fact we are just .500 in those games.”

The Wolves didn’t need all those runs with Curtin dealing wicked high, hard cheese.

The senior hurler struck out nine Redhawks while walking just one. The only ball Port Townsend got good aluminum on was hit right at Wolf shortstop Josh Bayne, who snared it for the out.

Curtin has thrown 11 shutout innings over three appearances this season.

“They never really had a chance against him. Aaron was just dominant,” Smith said.

While they might not have needed the offense, the Wolves were still quite happy to capitalize on their chances, drilling Port Townsend for five runs in the first.

Cole Payne spanked an RBI double, Kyle Bodamer whacked a two-run double and senior Carson Risner, playing in his first game since his freshman year, crunched a two-run single.

Not content to sit on its lead, Coupeville tacked on two more in the second when Bodamer’s double squeeze was so successful that both Bayne and Payne were able to stroll home.

Bodamer was an RBI machine, knocking in four, while freshman Jake Hoagland, making his first-ever start, chipped in with three RBIs.

Payne, Bodamer, Risner and Hoagland each had two hits.

“Overall, we came out very focused and executed what we needed to do on offense,” Smith said.

Coupeville will try to keep its hot streak at the plate going when it travels to Everett today to face a familiar foe in former Cascade Conference rival Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

The Wolf JV travels even further, with a date in Blaine.

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