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(John Fisken photo)

Left to right, CHS coach Willie Smith and seniors Jake Tumblin, Kurtis Smith, Ben Etzell, Wade Schaef and Morgan Payne. (John Fisken photo)

Sultan just wants the season to end.

As the Turks run out the string on a winless high school baseball campaign, they are the perfect team to help Coupeville recapture that winning feeling.

And the Wolves have taken advantage so far, rolling to back-to-back victories to climb back to .500 as the playoffs loom on the horizon.

Wednesday, it was a 10-3 romp at home for CHS, with sophomore hurler CJ Smith throwing wicked heat and fanning a career-high 10 batters.

Smith scattered five hits, walked just one and dominated the Turks from start to finish.

CJ was very solid on the mound,” said Coupeville coach Willie Smith. “It was great to see him get back in the groove and be dominant on the mound.”

With the pitchin’ poppin’, the Wolf bats came out blazin’ in support.

Jake Tumblin ripped three hits, including a standup double, stole two bases, scored three runs and knocked in a run to kick-start things off at the top of the lineup.

“He is really starting to set the table for our guys and get in a groove offensively for us,” said Willie Smith.

The Wolves jumped on Sultan for four in the third and three more in the sixth to blow things wide open.

In the third Coupeville slapped together four straight hits to chase the Turks starter. Tumblin, Kurtis Smith, Ben Etzell and Aaron Trumbull all had the sweet swing going.

The later rally was started, once again, by leadoff man Tumblin, who slapped a single, then teamed with freshman Clay Reilly, who had walked, on a double steal.

Etzell crushed a two-run double to the deepest, darkest region of center, then scored himself when Sultan bobbled a hard-hit grounder by Josh Bayne.

The Wolves continue a wild, five-games-in-six-days week when they host Granite Falls Thursday in a makeup of a game rained out earlier in the season. Coupeville travels to Sultan Friday, then Lakewood Saturday, before beginning postseason play next week.

Now 8-8 overall, 7-8 in Cascade Conference play, the Wolves will be the #2 seed among league 1A teams for the district playoffs.

South Whidbey clinched the top seed with a 5-4 win over Granite Falls Wednesday.

The Falcons are 11-6 in league play, with one game left to play, and even if CHS swept its final three, the best it could finish would be 10-8 in the Cascade Conference.

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Kurtis Smith charges a ball. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Kurtis Smith charges a ball. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The top spot can still be theirs.

It’s a bit of a long shot, but the Coupeville High School baseball squad can still catch South Whidbey and earn the #1 district playoff seed among 1A schools in the Cascade Conference.

Repeat what they did Monday, when they thumped Sultan 9-0, over the course of the regular season’s final week, and catch a few breaks and it could happen.

Of course, nothing can go wrong.

CHS, now 7-8 overall, 6-8 in league play, will need to take two more from Sultan, win makeup games against Lakewood and Granite Falls, and root for the Falcons (10-6) to lose their final two games.

If all that happens, both Whidbey squads finish 10-8 and the Wolves own the tiebreaker, having won two of three when the squads faced off way back at the start of the season.

If nothing else, Coupeville wants to head into the postseason on a strong note, and it kicked off a five-games-in-six-days stretch with a bang.

Wolf senior hurler Ben Etzell was electric on the mound (again), whiffing 12 and scattering just two hits.

And, for once, his offense backed him up with a ton of runs. No 1-0 pitcher’s duels this time out.

At least once the game reached the fifth inning, when the Wolves blew open a scoreless game.

Wade Schaef (walk), Jake Tumblin (single, stolen base) and Etzell (intentional walk) juiced the bags, then Josh Bayne lashed a two-run single to right center to bust things open.

CHS poured it on after that, with big hits from Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin and Kurtis Smith keying a three-run sixth and four-run seventh.

“It allowed us to win going away and finally put a team away as we should,” said CHS coach Willie Smith. “We are hoping that with four more games this week and playoffs looming next week, that we can use this game to help get us in a groove offensively and we can hit the playoffs running and in good shape.”

Tumblin and Curtin paced the Wolves with two hits apiece while Korbin Korzan collected three steals on the afternoon.

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2014-04-26 Minor AA Angels at Coupeville (2)2014-04-26 Minor AA Angels at Coupeville (96)2014-04-26 Minor AA Angels at Coupeville (25)2014-04-26 Junior SB Angels at Central Whidbey (8)2014-04-26 Junior SB Angels at Central Whidbey (38)IMG_3568If it’s Sunday, it’s photo day.

Travelin’ photo man John Fisken was a busy bee over the weekend, hauling his camera all over the place in pursuit of Central Whidbey athletes hard at work on their chosen sport.

Jump down this page and you’ll see some snappy soccer pics. Look above, and it’s baseball and softball.

Like what you see and want to know where to find more? Jump to the links below.

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf3539463034

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf353947a543

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"Dang it! I was all ready to get feisty with the umps and everything!! Stupid Granite Falls bus drivers..." (John Fisken photo)

“Dang it! I was all ready to get feisty with the umps and everything!! Stupid Granite Falls bus drivers…” (John Fisken photo)

It is crystal clear blue skies on the prairie, with even a hint of honest-to-goodness warmth, but no baseballs will be smacked Friday.

Why, you ask?

Because someone in Granite Falls is an idiot, that’s why.

Despite there being a baseball game scheduled for MONTHS, someone in upper management failed to read their own memo and didn’t schedule a bus to bring the Tigers to Whidbey Island today.

So now the two schools will have to scramble to makeup the final game in the three-game series (Coupeville has taken the first two), since the regular season ends next week.

It’s even more of a pain in the rear for CHS, since they still have a makeup game with Lakewood to get in.

After being rained out twice, that game is tentatively set for Saturday, May 3 in Lakewood.

Coupeville (6-8 overall, 5-8 in Cascade Conference play) also has its final three-game set against Sultan Monday (April 28), Wednesday (April 30) and Friday (May 2) of next week, so the Wolves will likely be playing five games in less than a week.

Local fans in need of their baseball fix tonight can haul butt down the highway to Langley, where the Falcons will go for an unprecedented three-game sweep of Archbishop Thomas Murphy at 4 PM.

Or, you can sit out in the sun and twiddle your thumbs like the Wolves are being forced to.

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Korbin Korzan whiffed four and shut down Granite Falls in relief Wednesday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Korbin Korzan whiffed four and shut down Granite Falls in relief Wednesday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Willie Smith is trapped in his own personal “Twilight Zone.”

A season of great promise has taken more than its share of tumbles off the straight and narrow, and, as his team fell to 6-8 Wednesday, the same day arch-rival South Whidbey shocked ATM for a second straight game, the Coupeville High School baseball guru is getting tired.

“Well, it’s basically a mix between the movie “Groundhog Day” and being Charlie Brown’s teacher,” Smith said “We play the same game over and over and I say the same things, but nothing really changes.”

It resulted in a 6-2 loss at Granite Falls this time, and all but guaranteed the Wolves will be the #2 1A school from the Cascade Conference come playoff time.

South Whidbey is 9-5 in league play and holds a 3.5 game lead over Coupeville (5-8). There is hope, however, as the Wolves have a make-up game against Lakewood, who they’ve beat twice, and three against winless Sultan.

If the two Whidbey schools finish tied, and the Falcons, who have won six straight, would have to cool off for that to happen, Coupeville has the tie-breaker.

The Wolves won two of three against SWHS to open the season.

To make a run over its final five games, CHS will have to find another gear, however.

At times, their pitching has been flat-out brilliant. The rest of their game, not so much.

“We came out, if it is possible, flatter than we did on Monday,” Smith said.

Granite, which got very little offensively against Ben Etzell in a 1-0 win in the team’s first meeting Monday, got to Wolf starter CJ Smith quickly this time.

“They jumped on CJ in the first inning and we committed two errors (on the same play, mind you) and before I could make a change it was 4-0 with just one out,” Willie Smith said. “Unfortunately for CJ, it was a combination of a lack of control and the poor defense behind him that led to his early exit.”

Korbin Korzan came on in relief and kept things close from then on. He whiffed four Tigers while going the rest of the way, delivering a performance that cheered his coach.

“If there was a bright spot for us in this game it was Korban’s effort on the mound,” Willie Smith said. “With each outing he has had this year, he has got stronger and more confident, which is going to be huge for us as we move on in the playoffs.”

Unfortunately, the Wolf offense continued its season-long trend of being its pitchers worst enemy. Lack of run support is killing what has been a generally first-rate pitching corps.

“Offensively, we were less than stellar,” Willie Smith said. “We continue to be our own worst enemies: swinging at bad pitches, watching good pitches go by, and waiting for somebody else to get the big blow.

“Too many of them change their approach at the plate with each plate appearance and that mentality is leading to poor at-bats.”

Coupeville finally got something brewing in the sixth, scoring its runs on a string of singles from Kurtis Smith, Aaron Trumbull, Korzan and Cole Payne.

The rally died too soon, however, as back-to-back strikeouts stranded a pair of runners.

The Wolves put two runners on in the top of the seventh, as well, but couldn’t plate either one, ending the game on a pop up and a fly out.

Josh Bayne was the lone Wolf to collect multiple hits, leading the way with a pair of singles.

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