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   Coupeville senior Joey Lippo had two hits Monday, including a two-run single during a seven-run rally. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two different types of foes, two different kinds of results.

When Coupeville has faced fellow 1A teams this season, they’ve blasted them.

And, when the team in the other dugout has hailed from a large 2A school, the Wolves have fought until the final batter, but taken the narrowest of defeats.

Monday it was a big-school rival, Bremerton, and Coupeville couldn’t hold on to a five-run lead, falling 9-8 on the road.

“Another tough loss in a one-run game. Again another opportunity to work on mental toughness and our resilience as a team,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith. “We are not defined by our losses but in the manner in which we played and what we learned from it.

“We played well as a team and fairly error free,” he added. “Unfortunately, we just stranded more runners on the bases then they did.”

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 2-2 on the season, heading into another match-up with a 2A school, North Mason, this Friday at home.

Five of Coupeville’s 20 regular-season games will be against 2A schools, and while that may put a ding in its win-loss record, playing against bigger schools could help the Wolves grow as a team.

CHS has shown resiliency against their big-school rivals, and Monday was a prime example of that.

Trailing 2-0 headed to the top of the fourth, the Wolves must have found the magic elixir to rub on their bats, because they started smoking.

Raking eight hits in the inning, including a pair of singles from Jake Pease, Coupeville exploded for seven runs, forcing Bremerton to call on its bullpen.

The big blows were an RBI double from Kyle Rockwell and a two-run single off the bat of Joey Lippo, but everyone in the lineup was dialed in.

Jake Hoagland started things with a base-knock, with Gavin Knoblich, Matt Hilborn and Dane Lucero also connecting for a hit in the inning.

The share-and-share alike philosophy carried over to the bench as well, with Jacob Zettle coming in to pinch-run and promptly scoring.

Bremerton wasn’t going away though, chipping away for three runs of its own in the bottom half of the inning to cut the lead back down to 7-5.

While the Wolves added a solitary run in the fifth, with Nick Etzell walking and coming around to score on a grounder by Hilborn, BHS was now in full come-back mode.

Four runs in the bottom of the fifth reclaimed the lead for the host team, and, after that, Bremerton’s bullpen closed out the game strongly.

Coupeville swung the bats well in the loss, with all nine starters recording a hit.

Pease led the way with three singles, Lippo added two base-knocks, and Hilborn, Hunter Smith, Hoagland, Rockwell, Knoblich, Etzell and Lucero joined the hit parade.

Smith was a force on defense as well, robbing a Bremerton hitter with a nice diving catch on a liner back up the middle.

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   Jake Hoagland made a sensational late-game catch in deep left field Monday to preserve Coupeville’s win over 2A Bremerton. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland walked on to the Coupeville High School baseball diamond Monday a mere mortal.

He sprinted off it a bonafide legend.

Running full-tilt, glove out, carrying the hopes and dreams of every fan in attendance, the CHS junior made a sensational catch along the line in deep left field, saving a game that the Wolves, somehow, against all reason, won.

It’s not easy for a small 1A school to beat a large 2A school like Bremerton, and the odds get even more remote when your team gets no-hit and the visitors load the bases not once, not twice, but four times — twice with no outs.

And yet, somewhere just past 6 PM Monday, in one of the most improbable wins ever seen on the prairie, Coupeville danced off with a 2-1 non-conference victory.

The second straight win for the Wolves, it lifts them to 2-2 on the season.

How they got there is a testament to guts, sheer will power, poise in the spotlight and a whole lot of luck.

In other words, the kind of story the Wolf faithful will still be talking about when these players return for their 20-year reunion.

It’s a tale of three pitchers who bent, but didn’t break.

A defense that came up with big plays, and then capped it with one of the greatest snags ever pulled off by a guy in a Coupeville uniform.

It’s Nick Etzell salsa dancing around the catcher, Joey Lippo running for home like a mad man and Kory Score using every inch of his towering frame not once, but twice, to pull off web gems that make a coach’s heart flip-flop in joy.

In the end, it’s the tale of a team that flat-out refused to lose, and, by doing so, made a dramatic statement to all their future foes.

We will find a way. We will always find a way.

The game started with the debut of an escape artist, as Coupeville hurler Dane Lucero loaded the bags in the top of the first before half of the fans had even settled into their seats.

Channeling the inner calmness shown so often in the past by former Wolf pitcher CJ Smith, Lucero didn’t seem to notice, or at least didn’t seem to acknowledge, the danger he was in.

Suddenly tossing BB’s, the Wolf sophomore whiffed back-to-back Knights, then got the #6 hitter to whack a soft liner towards the gap between second and first.

Coupeville’s second-baseman, Lippo, was coming hard from the left side, but first-baseman Score, easily Coupeville’s tallest infielder, reached up, up and away and speared the ball over his head to preserve the shutout.

Lippo immediately repaid his teammate by scoring the first run of the game in the bottom half of the inning.

After getting plunked by a wayward pitch, he went to second when Clay Reilly walked, then tore around third and plated himself on a fielder’s choice by Lucero.

Bremerton blunted any further rallying by catching Reilly a step off of third, but the damage was done, and Lucero had a run to work with.

And one run was all he would need.

Lucero had runners on in every inning, but denied Bremerton at every opportunity.

After stranding a runner at first in the second inning, he had runners at second and third in the third inning, but escaped by punching out a Knight hitter on a change-up, one of seven strikeouts he recorded on the afternoon.

Cue the fourth and cue the hint of trouble (again), as Bremerton used a pair of walks and two dropped balls, which allowed a strikeout victim to reach first, to juice the bags.

Stifling a small yawn, Lucero reared back, whiffed the next two hitters, then got a third to hit a towering can of corn that Lippo retreated under and snared in shallow right-center.

Desperate to pad its 1-0 lead, Coupeville came out aggressive in the bottom of the fourth, and it paid off.

After Lucero eked out a walk, Nick Etzell bolted from the bench to pinch-run and immediately went to work.

He stole second, threw off the Bremerton hurler enough that the Knight pitcher was called for a balk — sending Etzell to third — then skipped home on a sac fly off the bat of Matt Hilborn.

The throw came in hot, but pulled the catcher slightly to the left of the base-path, and an alert Etzell twisted his body into a pretzel to evade the tag, stamping home plate as he did so.

Boasting a 2-0 lead — still without an official hit in the book — Coupeville went from the low-key Lucero to the big, bad bull himself, Julian Welling, in the fifth.

Striding on to the field after missing some time with arm issues, the Wolf junior brought the heat, and continued Lucero’s balancing act.

Loading the bags, he got out of it by ramming the ball right down the ensuing batter’s throats, striking out two of the final three sluggers to keep Bremerton scoreless.

The Knights weren’t going to go down easily, however, as they again loaded the bases in the sixth, finally notching a run when Welling came a wee bit too inside and plunked a Bremerton hitter who, it could be argued, made very little effort to get out of the way.

With the visitor’s dugout suddenly rockin’, and Welling exiting after pointing at his elbow, CHS coach Marc Aparicio turned to Hilborn to close out a third game.

At that exact moment, deep in left field, Hoagland snapped to attention, pointed up at a twinkling light in the heavens above and silently mouthed, “I’m gonna be just like that, a bright, shining star.”

Hey, I was there! You weren’t! If I say it happened just that way, who are you to disagree?

The pitch left Hilborn’s arm, bat met ball and a towering fly that was descending dangerously fast went screaming into the great wide open.

Find pay-dirt, and the odds of that happening were tremendous, and two, possibly three runs score.

On a day when Coupeville couldn’t buy an official hit, that had doom written all over it.

Except a hero was being born, a legend being crafted with every stride, as Hoagland raced towards the rapidly-falling ball.

A half-muted wail started to rise from the bleachers, as every Wolf fan sucked in their breath and prayed to whomever or whatever they pray to, and then all the pent-up emotion came rushing out in one scream of pure, unadulterated joy as ball met glove and glove held on for dear life.

If Lucero is low-key, Hoagland ain’t far behind, but the power of his smile beaming across the prairie as he hustled in to get properly roughed-up by his joyous teammates told the tale.

Something deep inside Bremerton died at that moment, and it showed in the seventh, as Hilborn gunned them down one-two-three, perhaps while humming “Enter Sandman” to himself.

Two K’s, wrapped around Score stretching out to his full height (6’2 or so) to pull down a throw at first and the improbable, memorable celebration was on.

The reality is, dark skies, moderately cold weather and a threat of rain limited the crowd, but years from now, everyone in Coupeville will claim to have been there to see this game unfold.

And hey, in spirit they were.

Every time Lucero danced with the devil in the pale moonlight and escaped, every time Welling burnt a fastball into Taylor Consford’s catchers mitt, and, especially, in the moment Hoagland became a bright, shining star, every Wolf, past, present and future, was smiling down on that diamond.

One team, one town, one unbelievable win.

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Lauren Grove

  Wolf junior Lauren Grove (right) is off to state in three events. (Mindy Grove photo)

(Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

   The fastest 4 x 400 relay team in District 3 is (l to r) Henry Wynn, Danny Conlisk, Jared Helmstadter and Jacob Smith. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Danny Conlisk

Conlisk gets mobbed in the CHS tent after winning the 800. (Eileen Stone photo)

You’re going to state. And you’re going to state. And … heck, everyone’s going to state!

Just about.

Even with Makana Stone opting out of the 800 and sprinter/jumper Lathom Kelley hobbled by a nasty hamstring injury, the Coupeville High School track and field team knocked it out of the park Saturday.

Led by a school record from Jacob Smith in the 200 and titles in three boys races — 200, 800 and 4 x 400 — the Wolves punched a ton more tickets to state at Day 2 of the West Central District 3 meet in Bremerton.

The small public school also outlasted its bigger private school rivals, with the boys finishing 2nd in the team standings in a 9-team field.

The girls claimed fourth.

Combined with its efforts from Friday, Coupeville will send 15 athletes to Cheney May 26-28 for the 1A championships, and they will compete across 18 events.

Six Wolves — Smith, Stone, Dalton Martin, Lindsey Roberts, Sylvia Hurlburt and Lauren Grove — lead the way, having each qualified in three events.

Martin was the first to lock down a slot Saturday, finishing second in the shot put.

After that came wins from Conlisk (800) and Smith (200), before the duo teamed up with Henry Wynn and Jared Helmstadter to crush the final relay of the meet.

With a top three performance needed (#4 goes as an alternate) to earn a magic ticket, Grove (3rd in the 200), Chris Battaglia (3rd/high jump), Hurlburt (4th/200) and Allison Wenzel (4th/javelin) also jumped on the fun train.

Conlisk, just a freshman, passed several foes in the final 200 meters to win his race, while Smith, a sophomore, shattered the school record to get atop the podium.

His time of 22.59 seconds is the third-fastest run in 1A this season.

Stone, who had entered the day owning one of the fastest 800 times in the state, passed on the event so she could run the anchor leg in the 4 x 400 for the first time this season.

It was a bid to bring along three more of her Wolf teammates with her to state, but it came up a bit short despite Stone thundering down the backstretch.

Still, she helped the 4 x 4 squad knock 20 seconds off its previous best.

Kelley, one of the most insanely talented, yet snake-bit, athletes to ever wear the red and black, ended his high school career on a muted note.

Having injured a hamstring when he skidded on a jump in heavy rain during sub-districts last weekend, he had limited mobility.

Proving to be a fighter until the end, though, Kelley insisted on traveling down to cheer on his teammates and gritted his way through several long jump attempts.

On a weekend when many of his fellow Wolves saw their dreams of qualifying for state come true, he stood tall alongside them.

Win or lose, in the end, one team.

Complete Day 2 results:

GIRLS:

200 — Lauren Grove (3rd) 26.88 *PR*; Sylvia Hurlburt (4th) 26.96 *PR*

300 hurdles — Mckenzie Meyer (6th) 54.36 *PR*

4 x 400 relay — Meyer, Abby Parker, Madison Rixe, Makana Stone (5th) 4:33.01

Javelin — Allison Wenzel (4th) 85-10; Naika Hallam (5th) 79-09

BOYS:

200 — Jacob Smith (1st) 22.59 *PR* *School record*

800 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 2:09.30

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (2nd) 45-04

4 x 400 relay — Smith, Henry Wynn, Jared Helmstadter, Conlisk (1st) 3:36.82

Long Jump — Mitchell Carroll (6th) 18-04.50 *PR*; Lathom Kelley (7th) 14-08

High Jump — Chris Battaglia (3rd) 5-04 *PR*; Jordan Ford (5th) 5-00; Connor Thompson (5th) 5-00

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Wolf speedsters Lauren Grove (left) and Sylvia Hurlburt stand united. (Deb Smith photos)

Wolf speedsters Lauren Grove (left) and Sylvia Hurlburt stand united. (Deb Smith photos)

Jacob Smith (left) tells Nick Etzell

Jacob Smith (left) tells Nick Etzell (hat) and Grey Rische, “I’m gonna go run really, really fast.”

"TOLD YA!!!!!!!!"

“TOLD YA!!!!!!!!”

They had the wins, and, even though they didn’t have enough places to carry the day, they put on a big show.

Despite boasting less than half the student body of league rival Klahowya, the Coupeville High School girls’ track team came dangerously close to capturing a team title at Saturday’s Sub-District meet in Bremerton.

Riding the crest of eight wins, including a sweep of the relays and sprints, the Wolves finished second to the Eagles, who used far superior depth to eke out a 97-74 win.

Port Townsend and Chimacum trailed far behind.

On the boys side, Port Townsend claimed top honors, followed by Klahowya, Chimacum and Coupeville.

Like all track meets, however, the real focus was on individual accomplishment, with top three finishers earning a berth to next weekend’s district meet, the last stop before state.

Wolves who finished fourth in their event may still live on, as well, once all the numbers come in.

If their time/throw was better than the #5 result from the Nisqually League, they will also move on.

As it stands now, Coupeville will advance eight girls and four boys in individual events, plus two relay teams.

Coupeville got two wins from zippy junior Makana Stone (200, 400) and one apiece from Sylvia Hurlburt (100), Skyler Lawrence (Shot Put), Lauren Bayne (High Jump) and Lauren Grove (Triple Jump).

The Wolves also swept the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 (Grove, Hurlburt, Stone, Marisa Etzell), while Dalton Martin claimed Coupeville’s lone boys title in the discus.

Complete CHS results:

GIRLS:

100 — Sylvia Hurlburt (1st) 13.34; Lauren Grove (4th) 14.24; Delaney Armstrong (7th) 15.46

200 — Makana Stone (1st) 26.97; Hurlburt (2nd) 27.57 *PR*; Marisa Etzell (3rd) 28.28 *PR*; Armstrong (8th) 32.24

400 — Stone (1st) 1:00.69

800 — Abby Parker (3rd) 2:47.27

3200 — Lauren Bayne (3rd) 13:10.19 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Grove, Hurlburt, Stone, Etzell (1st) 52.14

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Hurlburt, Stone, Etzell (1st) 1:49.93

Shot Put — Skyler Lawrence (1st) 29-07.75; Alexxis Otto (5th) 24-01.00; Naika Hallam (7th) 20-03.25

Discus — Lawrence (2nd) 86-11 *PR*; Otto (4th) 74-11 *PR*; Armstrong (6th) 49-05

Javelin — Hallam (3rd) 78-11; Lawrence (4th) 74-07; Allison Wenzel (6th) 71-03; Parker (7th) 63-07

High Jump — Bayne (1st) 4-04 *PR*

Triple Jump — Grove (1st) 27-03.00

BOYS:

100 — Jared Helmstadter (5th) 12.07; Jacob Smith (7th) 12.25

200 — Helmstadter (3rd) 24.18 *PR*; Smith (7th) 25.24

110 Hurdles — Jesse Hester (3rd) 22.83

300 Hurdles — Hester (4th) 51.74

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (2nd) 39-00

Discus — Martin (1st) 133-05; Mitchell Losey (8th) 79-01

Javelin — Losey (5th) 115-00 *PR*; Grey Rische (8th) 97-09

High Jump — Connor Thompson (2nd) 5-04

Triple Jump — Thompson (2nd) 37-08 *PR*

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