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Cole Payne (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Cole Payne (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aaron Trumbull

Aaron Trumbull

The uniforms have changed, but the results are the same.

Coupeville High School sluggers Aaron Trumbull and Cole Payne are wearing South Whidbey uniforms this summer, as they moonlight with the Falcons for American Legion baseball, and they’ve already made an impact.

The duo are back with SWHS coach Tom Fallon and his players for the second season.

Last year Morgan Payne, Kurtis Smith and Aaron Curtin joined them, but this year’s legion squad is a younger version than last year.

“We had a senior-laden team last year,” Fallon said. “We’re a little younger, but as long as we’re in there, competing with the bigger squads, I’m happy.”

Many of the programs South Whidbey is facing have varsity vets at every position.

The Falcons are a mix of varsity and JV players, and numbers have fluctuated during a 3-5 start.

South Whidbey has 18 players on the roster, but many of the players, including Payne, are doing double duty with spring football practice.

In a loss to a powerful Mount Vernon squad, the Falcons only suited the minimum nine players.

Trumbull, who will be a senior at CHS in the fall, has played in seven of his team’s games, working both at first and on the mound.

He’s collected three hits, including a triple, and knocked in three runs.

Payne has been limited to just four games by football, but has ably bounced around wherever he’s needed.

Most of his playing time has come behind the plate, but the junior has also worked his mitt at second, short and third.

Two of Payne’s three hits have been doubles, and he’s tied with Trumbull with three RBI.

South Whidbey, which took a pair from Arlington to kick off the season and also nipped Bellingham in a one-run thriller, will get a work-out heading into this coming week, when the season picks up in intensity.

The Falcons are scheduled to play six games during the week.

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Joey LIppo (left) and James Besaw. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Joey Lippo (left) and James Besaw. (Teresa Besaw photos)

Andrew Eaton (left) and Kamren Mebane.

Andrew Eaton (left) and Kamren Mebane.

Sparked by strong defensive play from its Coupeville contingent, the Oak Harbor Babe Ruth baseball squad rolled to its sixth straight win Thursday.

The Wildcats earned a sweep in their two-game series against Anacortes, bouncing their foes 7-3.

James Besaw and Andre Eaton combined on the mound for the win and greatly benefited from the slick glove work shown behind them.

Oak Harbor turned two double plays — the first going from Thomas Anderson to Wolf Joey Lippo to Kamren Mebane, while the second was kicked off by Wolf shortstop Hunter Smith snagging a line drive.

Josh Margraff capped the web gems by pulling off a spectacular sliding catch in right field to close the fifth.

Besaw, who was making his first start, went the first two innings, then turned the ball over to Eaton. Coupeville’s Jake Pease caught both of them, anchoring the team from behind the plate.

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Ben Etzell, throwin' heat during his time as a Wolf. (John Fisken photo)

Ben Etzell, throwin’ heat during his time as a Wolf. (John Fisken photo)

Mike

Etzell and dad Mike, an assistant coach for CHS, have made the baseball journey together.

Ben Etzell went out on top.

The recent CHS graduate capped his high school baseball career Sunday by playing in the All-State Baseball Series in Yakima.

One of 72 seniors invited to the two-day event, he played for Team Adams, which finished as the runner-up in the four-team series.

Adams fell 10-5 to Team St. Helens in the championship game, while Team Rainier drilled Team Baker 11-2 in the consolation final.

Etzell was one of four pitchers used by Team Adams in the championship game.

“It went well,” he said. “It was an amazing experience and it was fun to be teammates with kids I have played against.

“The talent level was ridiculous,” Etzell added. “I would say about 90% of the kids had already signed to play baseball in college next year, so that gives you an idea of the type of players who were there.

Mount Si’s Evan Johnson was tabbed as the offensive MVP while Jordan LaFave of Lake Washington was named defensive MVP.

Etzell now moves on the next stop in his diamond career.

He will be attending Saint John’s University in Minnesota in the fall and hopes to play ball for the school, which is a top NCAA Division III program.

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George Harris

Klahowya three-sport star George Harris.

With Coupeville leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League this fall, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves in the future.

George Harris is a throw-back.

At a time when no Coupeville High School boy has played the core three sports (football, basketball, baseball) the past two years, they will run into at least one new opponent who does just that.

Harris, a junior-to-be at Klahowya Secondary School, doesn’t take any seasons off, and he hopes to be successful in each of them.

“My athletic goals for next season are to letter in each sport and go to the playoffs in each, as well,” he said.

While he gets something out of all of his sports (“What I enjoy is the friendships I build with my teammates and the competition”), Harris picks football, where he plays quarterback and linebacker for the Eagles, as his favorite in a close call.

“My favorite is football because, out of the three, I believe it is the biggest team sport,” Harris said. “To have success your whole team has to be on the same page and stick together like brothers.”

Away from the field, he enjoys boating with friends and is a regular church-goer.

In the same way he treats his teammates as family, Harris draws support and encouragement from those closest to him.

“My mother and father have had the biggest impact on me,” Harris said. “They are both very supportive of me.

“My mom is always there for me to talk to when I am going through something,” he added. “My dad is the person I still play catch with in the front yard and he provides the moral and financial support to play all the sports I do.”

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Ben Etzell (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell gets nasty. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell is going back to Eastern Washington.

Two weeks after playing in the state tennis tourney, the recent Coupeville High School graduate is headed to Yakima this weekend for baseball, after being selected to play in the All-State baseball series.

The doubleheader, which draws the top players from every classification in Washington (1B, 2B, 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A), is set for June 14-15.

Etzell will play for the Adams team in the Saturday game (12 PM) at Yakima County Stadium.

He was one of two players to come out of his feeder games to get the call.

Overlake’s Matt Kaiser was also selected, while South Whidbey’s Colton Sterba and Nick Bennett made the first cut, but were denied an invite to Yakima.

They both were the ones that I would have chosen,” said CHS coach Willie Smith, who coached in the feeder games. “Both high quality players/kids.

“Great honor for Ben and a great way to cap off his high school career, very deserving and earned.”

Etzell, who will be attending Saint John’s University in Minnesota in the fall, will get a chance to play in front of college coaches.

Don Freeman of USA Baseball and Donnie Marbut of Washington State University will speak at a banquet for the players, while the head coaches from Gonzaga, Portland and Washington are also scheduled to be on hand.

During his senior year Etzell was lights-out on the mound and became the first Wolf in any sport to be named league MVP in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

He struck out 15 in one game, threw a no-hitter in another and helped carry Coupeville to its first state tourney appearance in six seasons.

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