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Leo Rodriguez hauls in a pop fly. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been like two seasons in one.

A rebuilding Coupeville High School baseball squad struggled in the early going but has found its groove of late.

Sweeping a home doubleheader against Concrete Tuesday, winning 12-1 and 9-1 over the visiting Lions, the Wolves have now won five of their last six.

CHS sits at 5-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 5-7 overall, with another home twin bill on the schedule for Saturday afternoon.

That tilt will be against non-conference foe Forks, with games set for 2:00 and 4:00 PM.

Steve Hilborn’s hardball squad had trouble finding a consistent offensive spark while losing its first six games.

Now, the Wolves are living large on the basepaths, racking up 22 hits and 13 walks against Concrete.

How the day played out:

 

Game 1:

Freshman Carson Grove was dealing on the mound, whiffing eight and surrendering just two hits across five innings of work.

Looking to give their young gun some room to rumble, the Wolves pushed runs across in all four innings in which they hit, before the game was mercy-ruled after Concrete went down in the top of the fifth.

Coupeville netted three runs in the bottom half of the first, with Camden Glover launching what would be a blistering performance at the plate.

The junior slugger drilled a two-run single to center field to get things going, then came around to score on a passed ball.

From there, the Wolves added four tallies in the second, two in the third, and three more in the fourth.

Glover, Riley Lawless, and Trent Thule each delivered RBI singles, before CHS mixed things up by garnering three straight runs on RBI groundouts.

With its runners operating with precision, Coupeville forced Concrete to take the sure out at first each time, with Grove, Jesus Madrigal, and Landon Roberts bringing their teammates around to score.

While the offense was poppin’ and the pitching was on point, the defense was superb as well.

Wolf catcher Jayden Little nailed a runner trying to score, pegging the ball to Grove, who applied the tag to the umpire’s liking on one wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am play.

Riley Lawless awaits the throw.

 

Game 2:

While Coupeville steadily pulled away in the opener, the Wolves spent much of the nightcap with a lot less breathing room.

CHS did plate three runners in the top of the first — they were the “road” team for game #2 — with Glover picking up the fifth of his six RBIs on the day.

But from there, the teams played scoreless ball all the way until Concrete scraped out a run in the bottom of the fifth to cut the lead to 3-1.

That would be as close as the Lions would get, however, as Wolf hurlers Coop Cooper and Glover combined to strike out 19 batters while throwing a no-hitter.

Coupeville tossed three runs on the board in the sixth to stretch the margin out to 6-1, before adding three more in the seventh to set the final score.

Little and Cooper delivered the big hits during the late run, both cracking run-scoring doubles, while Glover’s bat continued to blaze like it had been crafted by the devil himself.

 

Where the Wolves sit:

With the sweep, Coupeville (5-3) stays just two games back of first-place Mount Vernon (7-1) in the NWL standings, with four conference games left.

The Wolves close the season May 6 and 8 with games against those Hurricanes.

Camden Glover delivered an explosive performance Tuesday afternoon.

 

Tuesday stats:

Coop Cooper — Two singles, two doubles, one walk
Camden Glover — Six singles, one walk
Carson Grove — One single, two walks
Riley Lawless — Two singles, three walks
Jayden Little — One single, one double, two walks
Jesus Madrigal — One walk
Landon Roberts — Four singles, one triple
Trent Thule — One single, three walks
Chris Zenz — One single

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Carson Grove runs the offense. (Parker Hammons photos)

The third quarter was a killer.

Take that away and the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team wins by six points Friday in La Conner. Put it back in, and the Wolves lose by three.

Unfortunately for CHS players and fans, all 32 minutes count, so the road warriors fell 45-42.

The loss gives the two JV teams a split in their season series, after Coupeville won the first meeting in Cow Town (also by three points) and drops the Wolves to 4-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-7 overall.

Now, the young guns have a week off, before concluding their season at home next Friday, Feb. 7 in a tilt with Friday Harbor.

The rumble in La Conner was a tightly contested one all night, just like the first time around.

With Easton Green popping for five points in the first quarter, Coupeville went to the opening break tied 9-9, then surged ahead 21-16 by the half.

The game took a bad turn for the Wolves, however, as a 13-4 La Conner advantage in the third put the visitors back on their heels.

From a 25-25 tie midway through the third, CHS found itself down 36-25 early in the fourth frame.

While the Wolves closed on a frantic 17-9 run, spurred by big buckets from Mahkai Myles, La Conner had just enough left in the tank to hold on for the win.

Myles finished with a season-high 14 points to pace Coupeville, with Sage Arends banking in nine and Green knocking down eight.

Davin Houston (4), Malachi Somes (3), Carson Grove (2), and Riley Lawless (2) rounded out the scoring attack, while Nathan Coxsey, Khanor Jump, Liam Blas, Jayden Little, and Kyle McCrimmon also saw floor time.

Kyle McCrimmon charges into action.

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Carson Grove pops a shot. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Buckets continue to rain down.

Coupeville High School basketball teams have combined to play 30 games during the first section of the 2024/2025 season, compiling 1,185 points.

Chase Anderson is your front runner, but as the calendar prepares to flip, there’s still more than half the season left to play.

Where things sit through Dec. 30:

 

Varsity – Girls
(9 games)

Katie Marti – 55
Mia Farris – 51
Teagan Calkins – 49
Haylee Armstrong – 32
Danica Strong – 29
Madison McMillan – 27
Jada Heaton – 21
Lyla Stuurmans – 21
Tenley Stuurmans – 15
Capri Anter – 4

 

JV – Girls
(6 games)

Adeline Maynes – 62
Haylee Armstrong – 46
Ava Lucero – 21
Lexis Drake – 16
Tenley Stuurmans – 15
Capri Anter – 14
Sydney Van Dyke – 14
Ari Cunningham – 10
Chelsi Stevens – 6
Marin Winger – 5

 

Varsity – Boys
(9 games)

Chase Anderson – 160
Jack Porter – 66
Hurlee Bronec – 60
Camden Glover – 59
Hunter Bronec – 53
Landon Roberts – 32
Johnny Porter – 18
Malachi Somes – 6
Carson Field – 2
Easton Green – 2

 

JV – Boys
(6 games)

Davin Houston – 52
Easton Green – 26
Carson Grove – 26
Liam Blas – 25
Riley Lawless – 21
Mahkai Myles – 21
Malachi Somes – 18
Sage Arends – 11
Nathan Coxsey – 10
Jayden Little – 2
Kyle McCrimmon – 2

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Clean windows are coming your way.

Three Coupeville High School baseball players are filling their summer days by operating a booming business.

Camden Glover, Nathan Coxsey, and Carson Grove comprise Whidbey Window Washers, which is out to corner the market on delivering crystal clear panes.

The trio are also available for lawn mowing, weeding, and dump runs.

For more info, you can contact them at (360) 320-8902 or ndcoxsey@gmail.com or check them out on Facebook at:

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61563911098138

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Johnny Porter reached base three times Monday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“That’s the future of Coupeville baseball right there.”

Wolf JV diamond coach Jon Roberts, like the fans in the stands Monday, came away impressed with the pitching performance of 8th grader Carson Grove.

While the CHS bullpen couldn’t hold the lead, letting visiting South Whidbey slip away with a 6-3 win, the first five innings were a testament to the bright future of one of Coupeville’s youngest players.

With the Wolves playing their first JV game of the season, Grove, who has also seen time both on the mound and at second base for the high school varsity squad, proved to be the star attraction.

After giving up back-to-back infield singles to open the game, he held South Whidbey hitless, striking out five and exiting with a 2-1 lead.

The Falcons scratched out that lone run in the top of the first, but Grove emphatically ended things with a K and a groundout to shortstop Jack Farrell.

Coupeville had opportunities to knot the game up in both the first and second, but stranded runners.

Johnny Porter crunched a two-out double to right in the first, but couldn’t get past third, while two walks and a Farrell single went for naught in the second as South Whidbey gunned down a runner at third.

With Grove holding the visitors in check, Coupeville finally broke through, tying the game in the third, before going ahead in the fourth.

The first run was thanks to the nimble baserunning of Aiden O’Neill, who walked, stole two bags, then shot home on a passed ball to make it 1-1.

CHS claimed the lead at 2-1 in the fourth when Aidyn McDermott and Jayden Little stroked back-to-back base knocks, with the latter of those crashing down deep in left field.

Grove wrapped up his five innings of work by stranding two runners in the top of the fifth, ending his pitching performance with a crowd-pleasing strikeout.

South Whidbey broke through after his departure from the mound, scoring two in the sixth to retake the lead at 3-2, then pushing three across in the seventh after Coupeville retied the game.

Like O’Neill before him, Jack Porter provided run #3 for the Wolves thanks to a walk, two stolen bases and a mad dash to home when a pitch hit dirt and kicked away from the Falcon catcher.

Down to their final out, with no one aboard in the bottom of the seventh, Coupeville almost pulled off yet another comeback.

O’Neill eked out a free pass the hard way, followed by Grove and Johnny Porter being plunked to juice the bags.

The stage was set for a potential grand slam walk-off win, but it wasn’t to be.

South Whidbey went back to the bullpen and their fourth and final pitcher, freshman Ian Leon, ended the game with a strikeout as an already cold prairie turned downright dank and dark.

The two JV teams were originally slated to play again Wednesday, this time on the South end, but that was scratched at the last second due to transportation issues.

 

Monday stats:

Jack Farrell — One single
Carson Grove — One walk
Jayden Little — One single, two walks
Aidyn McDermott — One single, one walk
Aiden O’Neill — Two walks
Jack Porter — One walk
Johnny Porter — One double, two walks
Dylan Robinett — One walk

 

UPDATE 4/30: 

Wednesday’s game is back on, but in Coupeville.

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