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Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin (possibly) snags a nap between pitches. (John Fisken photo)

 Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin (possibly) snags a nap between pitches. (John Fisken photo)

David backhanded Goliath.

Two days after losing a one-run game in extra innings, the Coupeville High School baseball squad returned the favor to Cedarcrest, dumping the host Red Wolves 6-5 in nine innings Wednesday.

It was a win for small teams everywhere, as CHS is the smallest 1A school in the state (225 students in grades 9-11) and Cedarcrest the largest 2A school (691 students) in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

The victory snapped a four-game losing skid, moved Coupeville back into a tie with South Whidbey as the top 1A team in league play (the Wolves own the tiebreaker) and, after three straight shutout losses, brightened CHS coach Willie Smith’s mood considerably.

“We scored our first run on a double play ball,” Smith said. “It wasn’t the greatest way to score, but we haven’t scored a lot lately, so it was nice to have someone over at third to talk to besides myself for a change!”

Aaron Curtin took the mound for the Wolves and blunted nearly every charge Cedarcrest tried to make. He got double plays to end the first two innings and helped carry Coupeville to the lead.

After three and a half games of offensive futility against Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Cedarcrest, CHS finally got the bats going in the top of the fifth.

And they did it in unusual fashion, staging a two-out, no-one-on-base rally.

Ben Etzell walked and stole second, then was plated by a booming double off of the bat of Wade Schaef to get things going. Morgan Payne and Aaron Trumbull followed with RBI singles to open a 4-1 advantage.

After Cedarcrest chipped away the lead, Coupeville reclaimed it in the seventh, again starting with no one on and two down. Trumbull singled, then scampered home on a triple from Kurtis Smith.

Not ready to give up, the hosts staged their own rally in the bottom of the seventh, scoring once to tie things up.

Curtin saved the day, however, gunning down what would have been the winning run with a laser from left to catcher Jake Tumblin, nailing the runner by a good ten feet.

Mimicking the team’s game Monday, when Cedarcrest won 1-0, the visitors again scratched out a run in the top of the ninth to claim the victory.

This time, it was Coupeville’s chance to play hero, as Payne singled, stole second and scored when Cedarcrest muffed a Trumbull grounder to first.

Curtin’s successor on the mound — sophomore CJ Smith, who tossed 3+ “ice in his veins” innings of relief — shut down the Red Wolves in order in the bottom of the ninth to seal the deal.

Etzell put the final stamp on the day, getting the last out on a sensational play where he went deep in the hole to snag the ball.

After a week-plus of offensive struggle, nearly the entire CHS lineup clicked Wednesday. Schaef, Payne, Trumbull and Kurtis Smith each had two hits.

Defensively, the Wolves were nearly flawless, gunning down runners at the plate, turning double plays, making smart choices (Trumbull nailed a runner headed into second) and going the extra step to make the play.

“A great effort, great team win, and a great way to rebound after Monday’s heart-breaker,” Willie Smith said.

The Wolves, now 4-5 overall, 3-5 in league play, wrap their three-game set with Cedarcrest Friday at home. First pitch is 4 PM.

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"I know they're watching you. It's what fans do." (John Fisken photos)

“I know they’re all watching you. It’s what fans do.” (John Fisken photos)

CHS tennis stars Micky LeVine (left) and Sydney Aparicio -- it takes a lot to impress them.

CHS tennis stars Micky LeVine (left) and Sydney Aparicio — it takes a lot to impress them.

Wolf football/basketball coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh is a frequent (and vocal) baseball supporter.

Wolf football/basketball coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh is a frequent (and vocal) baseball supporter.

Alumni alert #1 -- it's former volleyball and basketball player Katie Kiel.

Alumni alert #1 — it’s former volleyball and basketball player Katie Kiel.

JV baseball stud Clay Reilly knows where the camera is at all times.

Freshman baseball stud Clay Reilly knows where the camera is at all times.

Alumni alert #2 -- former Wolf basketball teammates Drew Chan (left) and Caleb Valko.

Alumni alert #2 — former Wolf basketball teammates Drew Chan (left) and Caleb Valko.

Not all the action happens on the field.

That’s why travelin’ photo man John Fisken sometimes lets the camera slide around the other way and capture the folks in the cheap seats.

A mix of current and former Wolf athletes from other sports, parents and die-hard CHS fans, it’s a who’s-who of famous faces.

To see more (and some actual action shots from Monday’s Coupeville vs. Cedarcrest baseball duel) head over to the link below.

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=5954&league=2&page_name=photo_store&school=0&school_year=2013-14&sport=0

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Ben Etzell whiffed 15 Cedarcrest hitters Monday, one of the better performances in CHS history. (John Fisken photo)

Ben Etzell whiffed 15 Cedarcrest hitters Monday, one of the better performances in CHS history. (John Fisken photo)

Impressive, but not a school record.

When Coupeville High School senior Ben Etzell whiffed 15 Cedarcrest batters Monday, it was the most K’s racked up by a Wolf pitcher in several years.

But do a little digging (mainly talking to the right people, since CHS doesn’t have extensive baseball records) and you find some even more impressive numbers.

The king of the mound (as far as we know) is Ray Cook, who carried Coupeville to a district title in 1976 as a junior.

In the final, he set down an astounding 21 batters over 13 innings, winning the game and sending the Wolves to state, where they lost 3-1 to Brewster in the quarterfinals.

I don’t know what’s more impressive — the 21 strikeouts or the fact he pitched all 13 innings, one inning shy of two complete high school games.

Cook was a strikeout fiend, according to Bill Jarrell. He set down 17 over seven innings in another game and whiffed 16 while tossing a perfect game in yet another appearance.

In more recent days, Brad Miller twice topped Etzell’s still-impressive work, according to CHS coach Willie Smith.

Miller gunned down 19 Sultan hitters in 1995, a year after he whiffed 18 Turks. He also recorded 14 K’s against Granite Falls in ’94.

The other Big, Bad Brad — the imposing Brad Haslam — set down 14 against Quilcene in 1990, then teamed with Frank Marti and Todd Brown to whiff 15 Winlock hitters in a 1991 regional game.

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Ben Etzell (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell whiffed 15 Cedarcrest batters Monday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

If there weren’t children reading this blog, this is where we would put the profanity…

On an absolutely perfect day for baseball on the prairie Monday, with sun, blue skies, no wind — real shirt sleeves, almost feel like it’s July kind of weather — the Coupeville High School baseball team came 99.9% of the way to grabbing a season-defining win.

But it didn’t.

Ben Etzell was all kinds of nasty on the mound, striking out 15 Cedarcrest batters over eight super-sized innings, but his team’s inability to put together an offensive charge of their own left him high and dry, sitting on the bench in the ninth, only able to watch as the Wolves fell 1-0.

The extra-innings loss, coming at the hands of the biggest 2A school in the Cascade Conference, was Coupeville’s fourth straight.

After jumping out to a 3-1 start to the season, the 1A Wolves (now 3-5 overall, 2-5 in league play) have gone deadly cold at the plate against the league’s top two 2A teams.

Coupeville garnered just one run in a three-game sweep by Archbishop Thomas Murphy, and were shutout for the third straight game Monday.

The Wolves had a beautiful chance in the bottom of the sixth to break the scoreless streak and give Etzell the lead heading out to win the game in the 7th.

Morgan Payne led off with a long single to left, the team’s first hit since an Aaron Trumbull single in the second. Unfortunately, he was quickly picked off.

Undaunted, Coupeville juiced the bags on a single from Wade Schaef, having Etzell plunked (the second of three times the senior was nailed by a pitch at the plate) and then getting an infield single from Jake Tumblin, whose speed flustered Cedarcrest’s shortstop into making a hurried throw.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the visitors went to the bullpen and their reliever went all Mariano Rivera on the Wolves, whiffing Trumbull and Aaron Curtin with straight heat.

The two teams kept the scoreless tango going through the regulation seven innings and on into extra time.

Tumblin gunned down a Cedarcrest runner at second in the eighth, off of a pitch-out craftily called by CHS coach Willie Smith.

The Red Wolves responded right back, with their center-fielder, who had been limping, chasing down a moon ball launched by Tumblin in the bottom half of the inning.

Seriously favoring one leg afterwards, he was removed by his coach and dragged his leg into the dugout, slamming his mitt off the bench as his teammates and fans cheered his gutsy play.

In a game where one play was all it was going to take to win, Cedarcrest finally found the right combo in the top of the ninth.

With Etzell having been pulled after tossing close to 120 pitches, Schaef came on in relief. After a walk and a strikeout, he gave up a booming double to Cedarcrest’s #9 hitter, then a sac fly to straight-away center for the game’s only run.

Coupeville had one final shot at redemption in the ninth.

Curtin led off by smashing a shot to the wall in left, but the Cedarcrest outfielder made a spectacular diving, rolling catch for the out.

Maybe.

Since his back was to the field when he went down, it was hard to tell if he really caught it or merely trapped it, and when he raised the ball, it was in his OTHER HAND, not his glove hand.

Did he flip it from glove to throwing hand, or pick it up off the ground?

The second base ump stayed firm to his call that it was a catch, while the crowd, spurred on by rabid super fan Brian Norris, booed lustily while Willie Smith had an animated chat with the home plate ump.

Down to their final out, the Wolves got a spark from sophomore Cole Payne, who whacked a hit to right and scooted to second when the ball went between the fielder’s legs.

With the tying run at second, Kurtis Smith spanked a hard chopper off the infield dirt and came within a step of beating the throw to keep the game alive.

Cedarcrest’s first baseman was just long enough to outstretch the speedy Wolf senior, however, the ball disappearing into his mitt a fraction of a heartbeat before Smith’s foot hit the bag.

Coupeville travels to Duvall Wednesday for a rematch, then welcomes Cedarcrest back to Whidbey Friday. After that, the league opponents left on the schedule start getting easier.

If nothing else, Etzell’s performance will go down as one of the better ones seen on the CHS diamond.

He recorded his first six outs via the strikeout and whiffed at least one batter in each of his eight innings. Willie Smith couldn’t say off the top of his head whether the 15 K’s were a school record, but they are certainly the most in recent memory.

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Carlie Rosenkrance zips along in a race. (John Fisken photos)

Carlie Rosenkrance zips along in a race. (John Fisken photos)

Korbin Korzan lays out for a catch.

Korbin Korzan lays out for a catch.

Wolf goalie Connor McCormick clears the ball.

Wolf goalie Connor McCormick clears the ball.

Madeline Strasburg comes up firing.

Madeline Strasburg comes up firing.

Grey Rische has places to go.

Grey Rische has places to go.

Jimmy Myers snags a fast-falling ball.

Jimmy Myers snags a fast-falling ball.

Softball stars (l to r) McKayla Bailey, Robin Cedillo, Emily Licence and Erin Josue, endure the cold to cheer on their baseball counterparts.

Softball stars (l to r) McKayla Bailey, Robin Cedillo, Emily Licence and Erin Josue, endure the cold to cheer on their baseball counterparts.

Jose Marcos triggers the offense.

Jose Marcos triggers the offense.

It all starts again.

We arrive at Monday and a new week stretches out in front of Coupeville High School’s sports teams, a chance to keep a hot streak alive or regroup and charge back into the fray.

Unless you play tennis or golf, than you just get to wait.

The Wolf girl netters (3-2) are on a very long break right now (they last played a match Mar. 26 and don’t return to action until April 15), as is CHS golfer Christine Fields (Mar. 27-April 14).

But, the other four sports — baseball, softball, track and boys’ soccer — are all busy this week, mainly on the road.

Baseball (3-4) kicks off a three-game series with Cedarcrest at home today (4 PM), then travels to Duvall Wednesday and Thursday (JV), before playing host again Friday.

Softball (2-3) hits the road for a doubleheader at Archbishop Thomas Murphy Tuesday, before a non-conference game at Meridian Thursday.

Soccer (3-2) gets on the bus to face the #1 team in the Cascade Conference, ATM, Tuesday, then hosts the last-place team, Granite Falls, Friday (4 PM JV/6 PM varsity).

And, finally, after a two-week break of its own, the Wolf track team travels to Cedarcrest Thursday for a three-team meet that will also include Lakewood.

To get you in the mood, we present the medley of photos above. It’s a new week, let the butt-whuppin’ commence.

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