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Posts Tagged ‘Cascade Christian’

Kory Score, seen here in an earlier game, had one of Coupeville's two hits Tuesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Kory Score, seen here in an earlier game, had one of Coupeville’s two hits Tuesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

You can’t say Marc Aparicio doesn’t have a positive outlook on life.

All season long, the first-year Coupeville High School baseball coach has remained on an even keel, through big wins and tough losses.

So, having watched his squad suffer through its worst game of the season Tuesday, while playing on the biggest stage yet, he stayed on message.

“Every setback is a set-up for a comeback.”

The Wolves will need a bounce-back to keep their season going, with a 13-0 loss against Cascade Christian, in a district playoff game held at Curtis High School, putting them in must-win mode.

Coupeville (10-11 on the season) heads to Charles Wright Academy in Tacoma Thursday (4 PM) to meet Seattle Christian (11-9) in a loser-out game.

Win and the Wolves return to Curtis HS Saturday (12 PM), with a chance to punch their ticket to state.

To follow the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

The Wolves will be back at full strength Thursday after playing minus starting shortstop Hunter Smith against Cascade Christian.

With its lead-off hitter MIA thanks to a one-game suspension (fallout from an ejection for arguing balls and strikes in the regular season finale), Coupeville shuffled the lineup slightly Tuesday.

Sophomore Julian Welling got the nod on the mound, with staff ace CJ Smith sliding to short to cover for his brother.

Things started out halfway decent, with both teams coming up scoreless in the first.

Cascade Christian punched a single, but Welling ended the inning with a strikeout, then the Wolves put two runners on in their half of the inning.

A single from CJ Smith and a walk to Gabe Wynn seemed like a promising start, but CHS left two aboard and it would prove to be the most sustained offensive attack the Wolves would mount the entire game.

The Cougars exploded for seven runs in the top of the second, stringing together five hits and taking advantage of several Coupeville errors.

Miscues bit the Wolves in the rear all afternoon, as several more errors in the fourth led to another six runs being plated.

At the same time, Coupeville had little success at the plate, with only a Kory Score single and a pair of third-inning walks to its credit after the first inning.

Score’s base knock in the fourth was immediately followed by three straight Wolves being punched out on strikes.

One bright spot at the tail end of the game came from sophomore hurler Nick Etzell, who retired four batters on eight pitches after coming on in relief.

As he headed home, Aparicio was already looking towards the future, while perhaps ruing his choice of pregame meals.

“I think we determined our bad luck started when I ate a hot dog off the ferry,” he said. “I don’t recommend it. Not sure how long it had been sitting there.

“Glad to have that one behind us. Looking on to the next game.”

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Cole Payne and fellow Wolf veterans will get a chance for revenge in their playoff opener. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Cole Payne and fellow Wolf veterans will get a chance for revenge in their playoff opener. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

One year and one day.

That will be the gap between playoff baseball games waged by Coupeville and Cascade Christian.

May 9, 2015, the Cougars brought an end to Willie Smith’s coaching career, sending the longtime CHS hardball guru into retirement after beating the Wolves 1-0 on Whidbey.

Now, the two teams meet again this Tuesday, May 10, only this time on a neutral field, and without the specter of a loss ending a season hanging over things.

Coupeville (10-10 on the season) is the #1 seed from the 1A Olympic League, having won its first baseball league title in 25 years.

Because of that, the Wolves skipped the one-and-done round this year and start districts off in the double-elimination portion.

Cascade Christian (10-6) survived a loser-out game Saturday, when it nipped Chimacum 2-0.

The Cougars and Wolves tangle at 4 PM Tuesday at Curtis High School in University Place.

The winner advances to the district championship May 12 against either Nisqually League champ Vashon Island (13-4) or Seattle Christian (11-8), which eliminated Klahowya 10-1 Saturday.

To take a gander at the district playoff bracket and ponder the different ways Coupeville could win two games and advance to state, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Cascade Christian and Coupeville are fairly similar, at least stat-wise.

The Cougars (ranked #25 by ScoreCzar) have outscored foes 84-58 (5.25-3.63 per game), while the Wolves (#26 in the latest computer tally) sit at 109-94 (5.50-4.70).

Coupeville will be down a man, though, as sophomore lead-off hitter Hunter Smith has to serve a one-game suspension for being ejected in the season finale for arguing balls and strikes.

Wolf baseball moms are planning a send-off for the team Tuesday. Tentative plans have it set for 11:30 AM in front of the CHS gym.

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"Rally" Ally Roberts floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. (John Fisken photos)

  “Rally Ally” Roberts floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo charges down the line.

Valen Trujillo (2) charges down the line.

It was a swan song, yes, but it was a beautifully played one.

It may be hard to tell just from the score, but Thursday night, deep in the heart of Puyallup, the very-young Coupeville High School volleyball squad put together its best match of the season.

The only problem is, host Cascade Christian gave them absolutely no margin for error, whatsoever.

The Cougars, a hard-hitting squad with a roster heavy in senior snipers, rallied from a late first-set deficit and eliminated the Wolves from the district playoffs in straight sets.

The 25-20, 25-11, 25-12 victory propels Cascade Christian into the double-elimination final four Saturday, a step away from the state tourney, while Coupeville wrapped its season at 6-10.

That’s a huge step forward from last season, when the Wolves went 1-11 and missed the playoffs.

This year, with nine of 14 players who saw varsity action being freshmen or sophomores, CHS made huge strides under the direction of Breanne Smedley, Heidi Wyman and Ashley Herndon.

That was evident from the start Thursday, as the Wolves easily shrugged off any early jitters from being on their biggest stage.

Opening with a service blast off of the fingertips of senior co-captain Sydney Autio, the Wolves launched into an epic rally with their private school foes on the very first point of the night.

Keeping the ball alive several times with lunging hustle plays, Coupeville forced the Cougars into a huge error — one of their players flat-out whiffed on a potential spike — and claimed the early 1-0 lead.

Unfortunately, that would be just about the only error Cascade Christian would make all evening.

A very-efficient, seasoned squad, the Cougars rarely missed on serves or put-aways, handing Coupeville virtually no free points.

What the Wolves got, they earned the hard way.

And they did earn a lot in the early going, using their own power show to stake themselves to a 17-15 lead late in the set.

Sophomore Katrina McGranahan was on fire, soaring gracefully into the clouds on a number of plays, her long arms forming an impenetrable defensive fence as she controlled the net.

Joining her was the freshman phenom, Emma Smith, who made her second straight playoff start and celebrated getting her braces off earlier in the day by launching one spike for a winner that cracked off the Cougar logo on the floor and chipped off some serious paint.

Cascade Christian was nearly flawless on service return, but crafty Valen Trujillo flummoxed them at one point, dropping in a service ace that dropped neatly between two Cougars and skipped away at the last second.

McGranahan stuffed a kill, Ally Roberts lopped off a few arms with a put-away of her own and Kyla Briscoe dropped the hammer to push Coupeville to its two-point margin.

But then that whole “let’s play practically perfect” mode switched on for Cascade Christian and the Cougars rolled off a 10-3 run to close the opening set.

The hosts power, which came from a number of players, surfaced during the run, as the Cougars launched knee-shaking spikes from all directions, with most of the hits coming from several steps back from the net.

The final two sets were not as close, at least in terms of points scored, but they did feature a break-out performance from sophomore Hope Lodell.

She flew around like a woman possessed all match and drew raised eyebrows of approval from her coaches, who were looking to the future, and liking what they saw.

Coupeville also, as it has all season long, refused to bend, even when down.

Trujillo ran out of the gym and halfway into the parking lot (or at least it seemed that way) to keep the ball alive at one point, and the Wolves ended up winning a point that a fraction of a second before had seemed all but over.

Time and again, CHS surprised the Cougars, who improved to 12-4 with the win, and, to their credit, the Cascade Christian fans and players responded with a show of respect to the Wolves.

Though, let’s just say it, the Coupeville student section, led by guys like Brenden Gilbert and Zane Bundy, was much noisier and a lot more creative this season than their private school counterparts were Thursday.

But, the Cougars were classy, so let’s give ’em that.

As the clock ticked down on the season, and the high school careers for seniors McKenzie Bailey and Autio reached an end, there were some tears.

But they were the tears of warriors, young women who truly left it all on the court this season and just wanted one more chance to show how far they have traveled from the first point of the season to the last.

Win or lose, the Wolf spikers played with fury and precision, and their future has rarely looked as bright as it sparkles right now.

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Fueled by breakfast burritos, Carson Risner smacked a double in Saturday's playoff loss. (John Fisken photos)

  Fueled by breakfast burritos, Carson Risner smacked a double in Saturday’s playoff loss. (John Fisken photos)

The game wa sthe final one for Wolf seniors Aaron Trumbull (pictured), Josh Bayne, Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Curtin and Risner.

  It was the final game for Wolf seniors Aaron Trumbull (pictured), Josh Bayne, Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Curtin and Risner.

Baseball can be a cruel game.

Only one team walks off the diamond at the end of the year truly happy and the fate of entire seasons can come down to a handful of what seem at the time like relatively minor plays.

For Coupeville High School, its season ended prematurely Saturday on a sun-drenched prairie, as the Wolves fell victim to chance more than visiting Cascade Christian.

The 1-0 district playoff loss hinged on a ball that bounced off a glove, a minor base-running mistake and an inability to get a bunt down.

Take away a fluky run in the top of the first — the Cougars used a walk, a passed ball and a ground-out to move their batter to third, then brought him home when a chopper took a bad bounce and skittered off of Wolf third baseman Julian Welling’s glove — and we’re still playing.

Both pitchers were largely on-point, with Coupeville senior Aaron Curtin scattering just a pair of meaningless singles, and the Wolf defense making some nice plays to atone for the early error.

CHS ended a brief threat in the second when they trapped a Cougar between second and third in a rundown, then Wolf catcher Carson Risner gunned down a potential base stealer in the third.

The only problem is, there wasn’t much room to breathe and Coupeville couldn’t come up with that one big hit it so desperately needed.

Twice the Wolves pounded out doubles — their only two hits on the afternoon — only to watch in silent horror as the runner died a slow death on the base-paths.

The first time came in the bottom of the second, when Risner swatted a shot to right field and out-hustled the throw back in.

Fueled by breakfast burritos mom Jennie Prince fed him pre-game, the senior had some power to his swing.

Pinch runner Joey Lippo moved to third on a ground-out, but never got to touch home, as the Wolves ended the inning with a ground-out that rolled right straight to the Cascade first baseman.

Going Risner slightly better, Clay Reilly smoked a lead-off double down the left field line to kick-start the third and the stands were rockin’.

Unfortunately, the Wolves never came knockin’ at home, as the visiting pitcher bore down and notched back-to-back strike outs.

After a walk to Josh Bayne put two aboard, Cascade Christian closed out the last major Coupeville threat by snagging a liner off of Curtin’s bat.

The Wolves got the lead-off hitter on base in the sixth, but Cole Payne was erased in a double play when he was trapped too far off of first base when Bayne’s liner was nabbed by the Cougar second baseman.

Coupeville’s last dying breath came in the seventh, when freshman Hunter Smith cranked a one-out shot that seemed to have base hit written all over it.

Instead, a Cougar came flying out of nowhere and latched on to the liner in mid-air for a rolling catch that delighted the large contingent of Cascade fans next to the third base dugout.

With the win, Cascade Christian advances on to the double-elimination portion of districts, while Coupeville ends its season at 9-10.

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Abraham Leyva scored twice Wednesday, netting Coupeville's first goals of the season. (John Fisken photo)

   Abraham Leyva scored twice Wednesday, netting Coupeville’s first goals of the season. (John Fisken photo)

Forward progress.

It didn’t get the win it wanted, falling 3-2 in overtime to visiting Cascade Christian Wednesday, but the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad did break through.

Junior Abraham Leyva punched in a pair of first-half goals to snap a scoreless streak that had plagued the Wolves through the first three games of the season.

Unfortunately, CHS couldn’t make a 2-1 halftime lead hold up and fell to 0-4 in non-conference play.

The deciding goal came with about a minute left to play in the overtime period.

While the loss stung, the progress in all aspects of the game cheered CHS coach Kyle Nelson.

“The boys continue to improve,” he said. “Our defensive effort and passing game was much better.

“We will continue to work hard in practice and look to get our first victory Saturday.”

The Wolves return to action with a home game against Forks that day.

In a reversal of the normal order, varsity plays first at 1 PM, followed by the JV at 3.

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