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Posts Tagged ‘Ben Etzell’

Wolf tennis coach Ken Stange and his doubles warriors, Aaron Curtin (center) and Ben Etzell. (Ed Curtin photo)

  Wolf tennis coach Ken Stange and his doubles warriors, Aaron Curtin (center) and Ben Etzell. (Ed Curtin photo)

It was a trip.

From windswept, rainy days on The Rock in October to sunny days in the “Palm Springs of Washington” (AKA Yakima) this week, Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin went out swinging for the top.

The Coupeville High School duo went further than any Wolf boys’ tennis players in memory, winning one of their three matches at the 1A state tourney Friday.

While they didn’t bring home a medal, it was still an auspicious showing for a duo who had been concentrating on baseball, not tennis, less than a week ago.

“Considering that they had four days to prepare, once baseball ended, I’m happy with the result,” said Wolf coach Ken Stange. “Aaron and Ben were the only CHS athletes to compete at the state level in two events — and they did it all in less than a week!”

Etzell and Curtin qualified for state in the fall, then had to wait six months for the chance to play in the big dance.

Some 1A schools play boys’ tennis in the spring, others in the fall in Washington, but state is saved for the end of the school year.

The Wolf duo opened against Neil Campbell and Jedi Main of Naches Valley and fought hard in a narrow 6-3, 7-6(7-4) loss that dropped them into the losers brackets.

“The first match was a doozy — within reach,” Stange said. “They rocked it in the second match!”

With their backs against the wall, Etzell and Curtin drilled Daniel Sonnichsen and Fletcher Rickabaugh of Liberty Bell 6-3, 6-1. They then fell 6-2, 6-3 to Pranav Harikrishnan and Keshav Ummat of Overlake, who were both state meet vets.

If Coupeville had won its third match, the Wolves would have played for fifth place Saturday.

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Ben Etzell (left) and Jake Tumblin are among five Wolf seniors who will depart. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Ben Etzell (left) and Jake Tumblin are among four Wolf seniors who will play in the feeder games for the All-State series. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Four Coupeville High School senior baseball players will get at least one more afternoon on the diamond.

While the Wolves wrapped their season after being knocked out of the state playoffs, Ben Etzell, Wade Schaef, Jake Tumblin and Kurtis Smith have been picked to play in the 1A/B feeder games for the All-State series.

The four, and the CHS coaching staff, will travel to Joe Martin Field in Bellingham Monday, June 2.

There will be two seven-inning games played, with the first kicking off at 5 PM.

After the doubleheader, six to 10 players will be nominated for possible selection to the All-State games, which will bring players together from 4A, 3A, 2A, 1A and B schools in Yakima June 14-15.

Etzell is scheduled to pitch in the first game, and both he and Tumblin are in the lineup for both games. Smith and Schaef are set to play in game two.

Coupeville coach Willie Smith and his staff will run the American team, which will also include South Whidbey seniors Nick Bennett and Colton Sterba.

Mount Baker coach Quinn Lesage will skipper the National team.

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Ben Etzell (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell gets nasty. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Ben Etzell gets mobbed at home after scoring the game-winning run. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Etzell (3) gets mobbed at home after scoring a game-winning run.

They cracked the glass ceiling on the way out the door.

Playing in the final season of an eight-year run in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, Coupeville High School finally got a major show of respect from league coaches with the selection of Wolf senior Ben Etzell as the baseball MVP.

It was the first time a CHS player had been picked as the league MVP in any sport by the conference.

Coupeville, the smallest 1A school in the state, is moving to the 1A Olympic League in the fall.

Etzell, who was dominant on the mound, striking out 15 batters in a game and tossing a no-hitter in another, helped lead CHS to a state tournament appearance, its first in several seasons.

“Very well deserved and he worked very hard to get there,” said Wolf baseball coach Willie Smith. “Also a nice reflection on his teammates and how good they were behind him.”

A chunk of those teammates were honored as well, with five other teammates being honored in All-Conference voting.

Seniors Jake Tumblin (C) and Kurtis Smith (OF) and juniors Josh Bayne (IF) and Aaron Trumbull (IF) were all named Second Team All-Conference, while sophomore CJ Smith (P) made honorable mention.

“The five others were all well-deserved as well,” Willie Smith said. “A great representation of our team this year.”

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curtin

Left to right, Aaron Curtin, Ken Stange and Ben Etzell.

Etzell gets intense.

Etzell gets intense. (John Fisken photos)

Curtin

Curtin charges into action.

One door closed, but another is swinging wide open.

A day after ending their baseball season with a nail-biter loss to Rochester at the state tournament, Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin will be back on the tennis court Sunday, getting ready for another crack at a title.

Etzell, a Coupeville High School senior, and Curtin, a junior, qualified for the boys’ tennis state tourney back in the fall.

They then put their rackets away for months, as tennis is staggered in Washington, with some schools playing in the fall and other in the spring.

But, just because they won’t be coming straight off a regular season run, don’t count out the Wolf duo.

“Only having the short week to prepare for state isn’t optimal, but I’m keeping a few things in mind: Aaron and Ben are both extremely talented athletes who gracefully transition from sport to sport, throughout the year,” said CHS coach Ken Stange.

“They had an up and down regular season but something happened at districts, though. They simply raised their games to a level neither of them had ever achieved. They amplified their strengths and they shored up their weaknesses,” he added. “It seemed like a flick of a switch. I was astounded by their display of dominance.”

Stange even went so far as to say the young guns might have taken out the seasoned pros who rule the Island courts. Heresy!

“On that day, I think they could have beaten Cliff Horr (my mega-talented doubles partner) and myself!”

Etzell and Curtin will hit the state tourney in Yakima May 30-31 as the #2 seed from their quad-district. They originally claimed third, but slid up a seed when the champs lost a player to a season-ending injury.

While the Wolf duo both sliced a finger while opening cans of tennis balls during quad-districts, they have both long ago healed.

Curtin injured his shoulder during the baseball season, but refrained from pitching during the second half and seems to be ready to go.

“Traditionally, the teams from our quad, which covers the entire I-5 corridor, have fared well at state,” Stange said. “I like our chances of making it to the semis, and hopefully the finals.

“The defending state champs, twins from Charles Wright, will likely be in the other half of the draw,” he added. “So we wouldn’t have to face them until the final.”

Basically, it’s super hero time.

Aaron is Plastic Man and Ben is Superman!,” Stange said. “They are in great shape after an extended baseball season. They also have a certain X factor.

“There are no stats to show how a couple of guys can gut it out and will themselves to do some unnatural things on the court,” he added. “They will tune up their shots, play a few practice matches against some of the Island’s finest players, they will go to Yakima, and they will play their butts off.

“Hopefully, we come home with some hardware!”

While it will be Etzell and Curtin’s first trip to state as netters, their coach has twice taken Wolf girls on the trip. He, for one, is ready and rarin’ to go.

“I am stoked,” Stange said. “This is the best chance any of my players have had at earning a medal. It should be fun!”

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Ben Etzell (left) and Jake Tumblin are among five Wolf seniors who will depart. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Ben Etzell (left) and Jake Tumblin are among five Wolf seniors who will depart. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Junior Aaron Curtin still has a year left to to pitch and play third.

Junior Aaron Curtin still has a year left to pitch and play third.

So close. So very, very close.

Too many stranded runners came back to bite the Coupeville High School baseball squad in the rear Saturday morning in its state tournament game against Rochester.

Unable to find that one big rally, the Wolves fell 2-1 and saw their season come to a close at 14-11.

After leaving runners at third base in both the first and second innings, Coupeville broke through in the top of the fifth to net its lone run.

Ben Etzell, who had shut Rochester down from the mound, thumped a double and came around to score on a single from Aaron Trumbull.

The Warriors immediately struck back, however, scraping together a run in the bottom of the fifth and another in the sixth.

The damage in the sixth could have been worse, but Wolf catcher Jake Tumblin gunned down a potential base stealer and Etzell ended the inning on a strike out.

Coupeville had had a chance to reclaim the lead in the top of the sixth, loading the bases.

Josh Bayne reached on an error, Korbin Korzan beat out a bunt and Tumblin walked, but Rochester escaped when it got Kurtis Smith on a blooper for the third out.

In the seventh, with its season hanging in the balance, CHS went one-two-three.

Even though they didn’t reach their goal of traveling to Yakima for the Final Four, the Wolves had the most successful season in the four-year run of seniors Etzell, Tumblin, Smith, Wade Schaef and Morgan Payne.

“These boys had an amazing run, and an incredible journey from four years ago to today,” said Coupeville coach Willie Smith. “It is quite a special bunch with a lot of great personalities and huge hearts!”

Coupeville went 4-2 in the playoffs, finishing second at districts and third at tri-districts.

After playing mostly 2A competition in their final swing through the Cascade Conference, they finished 6-3 against fellow 1A teams.

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