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Korbin Korzan (13) flies into the bag as a South Whidbey player goes airborne in pursuit of a badly-overthrown ball. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Korbin Korzan (13) flies into the bag as South Whidbey’s Ricky Muzzy goes airborne in pursuit of a badly-overthrown ball. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CHS baseball guru Willie Smith works his magic. "Maybe you guys win, or maybe you get to walk back to Coupeville..."

   CHS baseball guru Willie Smith works his magic. “Maybe you guys win, or maybe you get to walk back to Coupeville…”

Winning pitcher Ben Etzell gets congrats from a teammate.

Winning pitcher Ben Etzell (middle) gets congrats from a teammate.

Josh Bayne tiptoes along the baseline, daring the pitcher to run him back to the bag.

  Josh Bayne tiptoes along the baseline, daring the pitcher to run him back to the bag.

No ball gets past the vacuum that is Morgan Payne.

No ball gets past the vacuum that is Morgan Payne.

Etzell flings some high, hard cheddar.

Etzell flings some high, hard cheddar.

Shelli Trumbull is just an insurance agent in her spare time.

Her true calling is as a baseball photographer, stalking son Aaron and his Coupeville High School teammates, clicking away and documenting  their exploits on the diamond.

The Wolves kicked off a new season Monday with a come-from-behind 8-4 thriller over arch-rival South Whidbey, and, once again, the fastest clicker in the biz was on hand — having made the long drive to Langley — to provide you with photos hot off the presses.

Maybe tell her thank you the next time you see her. That would be nice.

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Josh Bayne, seen here last season, got Coupeville's first RBI of the new season Monday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Josh Bayne, seen here doing a home run trot last season, got Coupeville’s first RBI of the new season Monday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Timing. It’s all about timing.

Breaking out of an early-game funk, the Coupeville High School baseball squad exploded for five runs in the fifth inning Monday, propelling themselves to a huge come-from-behind 8-4 win over arch-rival South Whidbey.

The Opening Day victory was sweet for multiple reasons.

One, it came on the road. Two, it showed the Wolves are resilient. Three, it was the kind of game where nearly everyone on the field chipped in with a key play.

Oh yes, and did I mention they beat their closest rivals and the only other 1A school playing baseball in the Cascade Conference? Cause that’s kind of a big deal, every day and in every way.

The two schools will get back at it twice more this week with games in Coupeville Wednesday and back in Langley on Friday. Coupeville will also host South Whidbey Thursday in the lone meeting between the program’s JV teams.

The first win didn’t come easily, however. The Falcon hurler kept the Wolves off-balance by mixing up speeds, while his support crew tagged CHS starter Ben Etzell for three runs in the third.

Etzell was in lock-down mode after that, scattering a couple of meaningless singles and eventually throwing a complete game.

Coupeville finally found its groove at the plate in the top of the fifth, with a walk from Korbin Korzan and a single from Cole Payne setting the table.

Josh Bayne immediately took advantage, lashing an RBI single to right center, then the South Whidbey defense helped the Wolf cause with a couple of key errors.

Unable to field choppers off the bats of Jake Tumblin and Morgan Payne, the Falcons threw the ball away twice, letting in three unearned runs.

Etzell and Aaron Curtin rapped RBI singles in the seventh to top off the Wolf scoring.

While he was happy to get back on the bus with a win, CHS coach Willie Smith can see areas his squad needs to work on as it goes forward.

“This was a good game for us,” Smith said. “Not only for the win over South Whidbey, but because we were able to come back to win it on their home field and with us not really hitting on all cylinders offensively.

“We will definitely need to do a better job of adjusting at the plate,” he added. “But we did a great job of taking advantage of some miscues and capitalized on our speed and some timely hits.”

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YOur 2014 CHS softball squad. (Amy King photo)

 Your 2014 CHS softball squad. Back (l to r): McKayla Bailey, Breeanna Messner, Tiffany Briscoe, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg, Haley Sherman. Front: Erin Josue, Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine, Madeline Roberts, Emily Licence, Emily Coulter. (Amy King photo)

Cue the rain. Cue the wind. It’s time for spring sports on Whidbey.

Did you really think the gentle, balmy, blue sky-drenched weather that we’ve seen the last week would last into the start of the actual seasons?

Oh, you sad, sad fool…

Well, weather or not, the 2014 spring sports season — the last one for Coupeville High School in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference — officially kicks off today, when the Wolf boys’ soccer squad hosts a jamboree (2 PM) at Micky Clark Field.

Lake Stevens and South Whidbey are in town, the event officially puts a stamp on Kyle Nelson’s hiring as Wolf coach (replacing the retired legend, Paul Mendes), and it will go on, regardless of weather.

Soccer doesn’t stop for anything short of a hurricane, and then it depends on what category of hurricane we’re talking about.

The lone CHS golfer, two-time state meet qualifier Christine Fields, was actually supposed to kick off the new season Friday, but excess rain caused a scheduled match at Useless Bay Golf and Country Club between South Whidbey, Overlake and the Lone Wolf to be postponed.

Monday, weather permitting, the season will move into being a full-on reality, with baseball traveling to South Whidbey, softball hopping across to Port Townsend and girls’ tennis welcoming Port Townsend to town.

Tuesday, Friday Harbor comes to Coupeville for soccer and tennis, Fields and her Falcon traveling mates go to Bush and softball squares off at home with arch-rival South Whidbey and its new coach.

Get your bets in now. How many games will be postponed and rescheduled due to weather in ’14?

I’m saying 71, and I feel pretty confident in that number.

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Wolf baseball gurus Willie Smith (left) and Chris Tumblin (right) will be working a little overtime this season. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  CHS baseball gurus Willie Smith (left) and Chris Tumblin (right) will be working a little overtime this season. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Thursdays are for baseball, too.

While the Coupeville High School varsity squad generally plays on a Monday-Wednesday-Friday schedule, a larger turnout has allowed the Wolves to field a JV team for the first time in several seasons.

That squad is scheduled for six games so far (the varsity plays 20), with one game each against the other Cascade Conference schools who play baseball.

King’s doesn’t field a team.

There’s a chance the schedule might expand, if other games are found.

If not, the JV baseball schedule as of today, with first pitch at 4 PM for each game:

Thurs-Mar. 20 South Whidbey
Thur-April 3 ATM
Thur-April 10 @ Cedarcrest
Thur-April 17 @ Lakewood
Thur-April 24 @ Granite Falls
Thur-May 1 Sultan

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The present and the future of CHS baseball.

The present and the future of CHS baseball.

Batter up.

Batter up.

Swing away.

Swing away.

They were bundled up, but they were playing baseball.

Spring has come to Whidbey — sort of — as Coupeville High School baseball players hit the field Saturday to give back to the next generation of ball players.

Working with players from Central Whidbey Little League, where many of the current Wolves grew up playing baseball and won a state title in 2010, the high schoolers held a skills clinic on their diamond.

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