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Posts Tagged ‘Cedarcrest’

   Dane Lucero rapped a two-run single to kick things off Saturday, as Coupeville rallied to knock off 2A Cedarcrest. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Julian Welling had the last laugh.

The Coupeville High School senior was stung by Cedarcrest Saturday, but quickly rebounded and hit the visitors twice as hard, lifting his squad to a thrilling win in extra innings.

Unable to completely slam the door on the 2A Red Wolves in the late going as a relief pitcher, Welling responded by drilling a walk-off RBI single as Coupeville roared back to win 7-6 in eight innings.

The victory, the fourth straight for the Wolves, lifts them to 7-3 headed into the biggest game of the season.

That comes Wednesday, when Coupeville, 2-0 in Olympic League play, travels to Chimacum (1-0) to face the Cowboys in a game which will give the winner sole possession of first place in conference action.

CHS will arrive for that game on a high, both from its current winning streak, and the flamboyant style in which said streak stayed alive against all odds.

Twice rallying from a run down, with the second time coming in extra innings, Coupeville showed grit and resilience against a large 2A school which was riding high with a 6-3 mark entering Saturday.

The Wolves rep one of the smallest 1A schools in the land, but have acquitted themselves nicely against much-bigger rivals this season, going 2-2 against 2A foes.

Saturday’s game was a tense, back-and-forth affair, with the teams changing leads multiple times, but neither squad able to pull away.

Coupeville’s biggest lead came at 2-0 when it plated a pair of runners in the bottom of the first inning.

Matt Hilborn and Joey Lippo were aboard on a walk and a bunt single and busy tormenting the Cedarcrest hurler when he slipped up and delivered a juicy one to Dane Lucero.

Taking full advantage, the Wolf junior ripped a two-run single to open the scoring and raise the tantalizing possibility of a blowout on the horizon.

It wasn’t to be, however.

Instead, Cedarcrest knotted things at 2-2 in the second, then, after CHS scraped out a run in the bottom half of the inning on a Nick Etzell double followed by a Hilborn single, the two teams traded goose eggs until the fifth.

Coupeville had a magnificent opportunity in the third, loading the bags with no outs, only to have three consecutive hitters promptly punched out on strikes.

When Cedarcrest slipped two runs across in the fifth to retake the lead at 4-3, that third-inning kerfuffle looked even worse, but hope would not die on this day.

The Wolves packaged doubles from Hilborn and Hunter Smith around a free pass to Lippo in the sixth to snatch the lead right back, sending themselves charging out for the top of the seventh up 5-4.

The simple route would have been to retire the visitors 1-2-3 and head in with the win, beating the rain and getting out of the wind.

Welling likes to court danger, though, and Cedarcrest seized a glimmer of hope, using three extra-base hits and an error to plate one in the seventh to tie and one in the eighth to take the lead.

It was a moment fit for a lesser team, and a lesser player, to crumble.

Not on this day, and not this player and team.

Welling, like all good-hearted people, is a fervent fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and knows deep in his soul what it takes to be a champion.

Toss in his teammates, even those who … ugh … root for the SeaSlugs, and you have a band of warriors who have been tested in the fires and have launched Coupeville baseball to its best start in a decade by refusing to go down easy.

Inspired by a few quiet words of wisdom from the hardball whisperer, AKA coach Chris Smith, the Wolves stepped to the plate in the bottom of the eighth looking not for a mere tie, but an outright win.

Hilborn played patient, eking out a walk to get a man aboard with one out, then Lippo got dramatic.

Swinging on a full count, he lashed a laser, and came within a step of winning the game on one swing.

While Hilborn cruised home with the tying run, Lippo was held to a triple, and not a game-winning two-run home-run, only because his tootsies outran his head.

When his helmet came off and stayed behind as his body continued on, high school rules dictated he had to stop at the last base he hit, planting him firmly at third while he waited for his wayward head-protection to be returned to his noggin.

That small stickler of a rule gave Cedarcrest one last gasp of air, but, two batters later, it was payback time.

Strutting to the plate, waggling his bat like a rampaging Viking heading off the boat and looking for a new English village to conquer, Welling was a feel-good ending come to life for Wolf Nation.

And forget about a little blooper or a shallow single.

This was winning time and Welling blew the cover off the ball, giving Lippo enough time to stroll home, both hands holding his helmet firmly on his head, if he had wished.

In a different situation it would have been a two-bagger, but all that was needed was a quick step on first for the single, and cue the celebration among the cold, wind-lashed Wolf faithful.

For those who stayed for the entire game, they saw Coupeville spread out 10 hits among eight batters.

Lippo (1B, 3B) and Hilborn (1B, 2B) led the way, while Etzell and Hunter Smith had doubles.

Welling, Lucero, Jake Hoagland and Kyle Rockwell added singles.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith was flawless through four innings Monday, but got stung by a big hit in the fifth. (John Fisken photo)

Things went really, really well … until they went really, really badly.

Through four innings Monday, ace hurler Hunter Smith was humming, Matt Hilborn and CJ Smith were playing inspired defense behind him and the Coupeville High School baseball squad was on its way to its third straight win.

Then one ball dropped in and things fell apart big time.

A one-run lead became a four-run deficit and CHS never recovered, sliding down hill to absorb a 9-1 loss at the hands of visiting Cedarcrest.

The non-conference defeat, coming to one of its former longtime Cascade Conference rivals, dropped Coupeville to 2-2 on the season.

The Wolves will get an immediate chance to bounce back, however, as they host Sequim Tuesday (3:45 PM).

Playing under dark skies that parted and let the sun in for a long spell Monday, Coupeville came out strongly.

Hunter Smith was locked-in, not surrendering a hit until the fourth, and even then it was just a measly single.

Hilborn, playing like a seasoned vet and not a freshman in just his fourth game, was dynamic at third, making a huge throw from deep in the hole for a second-inning out, then spearing a sinking liner at the last second to end the fourth inning.

After rapping out two hits in the first — singles from CJ Smith and Dane Lucero — but stranding both runners, Coupeville broke through in the second to take the lead.

Gabe Wynn walked, took second on a passed ball, then strolled into third when Jake Hoagland lashed a single to dead center.

A moment later both runners were on the move again, as the second base ump called a balk on the Cedarcrest hurler, plating Wynn.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, they couldn’t really break things open, stranding Hoagland in the second, then leaving two more runners on in the third.

Cedarcrest escaped unscathed in the third when their shortstop took off like a rocket, covered half the infield and went airborne, spearing a high foul ball in front of the third base dugout for the final out.

Clinging to a 1-0 lead, Hunter Smith needed to be flawless, and he was, until the fifth.

A walk, a sacrifice bunt that turned into a infield hit when the ensuing throw pulled Lucero off the bag at first and a perfectly executed drag bunt for a true single juiced the bags with no outs for Cedarcrest.

Hunter Smith bore down, striking out two of the next three hitters, though a walk in the middle forced home a run to knot things at 1-1.

Hoping to escape relatively unscathed, Coupeville got stung.

A Cedarcrest batter lofted a long, slicing fly ball towards the corner in right, and though Wolf freshman Ty Eck made a long run for the ball, his leap at the end came up just a fraction short.

The ball spiked downward, caught a little patch of fair territory and shot off, letting all three runners on base come around.

Making matters worse, when the throw back in went astray, the hitter came flying home as well.

Hunter Smith gunned down the next batter to end the rally, but the damage was done.

Unable to get much of anything going offensively after that — CJ Smith reached twice on errors, but that was it — the Wolves gave up another four runs after switching Lucero out for Hunter Smith on the mound.

While he wasn’t happy with the loss, Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio could appreciate what his squad accomplished for four innings against a big 2A school.

Hunter pitched amazing out there,” he said. “Just one bad inning and things kind of spiraled out of control on us.

“We battled strongly, though,” Aparicio added. “Matt did a great job at third and our outfield was very aggressive. I’ll take us trying to dive on a ball with two outs any time.

“I’m very proud of the guys. We’ll get right back at it.”

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Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CHS coaches Willie Smith and Chris Chan

   CHS coaches Willie Smith (goatee) and Chris Chan (sunglasses) celebrate with their squad.

A little post-game campaigning.

A little post-game campaigning.

“Coach, we flipped the switch!”

Coupeville High School senior catcher Carson Risner was overjoyed in the post-game huddle and it was a feeling that ran through every Wolf player and coach on the field.

A game after having their worst meltdown of the season, CHS rose up and played what assistant coach Chris Chan termed “the most complete game they’ve had in the last two to three years,” Thursday, rapping out 14 hits en route to shredding host Cedarcrest 10-2.

The victory, coming against a large 2A school, and former league rival, who entered the game with a 5-1 record, lifted the Wolves to 3-4 on the still young season.

Quickly shaking off the hangover from their collapse against Lynden Christian Tuesday, the Wolves jumped on Cedarcrest from the first pitch.

Crunching three doubles (Cole Payne, Aaron Curtin, Risner) in the first inning, Coupeville shot out to a quick 3-0 lead before its hosts even came up to bat.

Payne and Curtin went back-to-back, before a Kyle Bodamer single set up Risner, who delivered his second two-run hit in as many games.

Quick to prove it wasn’t a fluke, the Wolves threw down three more runs in the second.

Clay Reilly led off with a single and eventually came around to score on an RBI single off the bat of Payne.

After Curtin smashed a single, Bodamer played long ball, walloping a two-run single deep down the left field line to stake the Wolves to a 6-0 lead.

A jubilant CHS coach Willie Smith thoroughly enjoyed the power show from his headquarters in the third base box.

“It put them in a bit of shock as to what was happening,” he said with a chortle.

Coupeville tacked on four more runs in the fourth, kicking things off with back-to-back singles from Hunter Smith and Josh Bayne.

After Payne loaded the bags when Cedarcrest couldn’t handle his intended sacrifice bunt, the Wolves started bringing their runners around in style.

Curtin lashed a run-scoring double, Bodamer notched another RBI with a single, then Risner and Aaron Trumbull capped the afternoon with RBIs of their own.

With the offense booming, the pitching and defense didn’t need to be first-rate, but it was.

CJ Smith went the distance, scattering four hits and striking out four (“He was in total command, working the corners and keeping them in check”), while the guys behind him came through with a variety of inspired plays.

“Our defense was perfect and we received some amazing web gems from a variety of players,” Willie Smith said.

Coupeville had a snappy 1-4-3 double play that started with CJ Smith knocking down a line shot up the middle. Payne snatched it, stepped on second and fired to first to complete the twin-killing.

When the ball cleared the infield, Reilly and Bayne ran everything down, with the duo each making a pair of highlight-reel catches.

Bayne, playing center field on a very roomy field that runs 370 feet in left center, went deep into the alley to make an over-the-shoulder snag to rob a possible triple.

He then followed that up with an even more impressive catch, going to the wall to snare a ball headed for pay dirt.

“Completely took the wind out of them,” Willie Smith said. “That was the defensive play of the year so far and pretty much sealed the deal for us.”

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Wade Schaef looks in for the sign. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Wade Schaef looks in for the sign. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Well, it was a change of pace.

After back-to-back one-run games decided only after playing extra innings, Coupeville and Cedarcrest closed out their three-game baseball series Friday with a relative romp.

Unfortunately for Whidbey fans, it was the visitors who ran away with the game, bunching together a bevy of hits and way too many Wolf errors on their way to capturing a 9-3 victory.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 4-6 overall, 3-6 in Cascade Conference play.

The good news is the smallest 1A school in the state is now done with playing the biggest of the big boys, having wrapped their series with league leaders Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Cedarcrest.

Those two schools are a combined 18-4 in league play while Coupeville’s remaining opponents — Lakewood, Granite Falls and Sultan — are a combined 9-18.

The first time the Wolves and Cedarcrest met on Whidbey this season, they went nine innings and finished with a 1-0 game. That wasn’t the case Friday.

After falling behind 2-0 quickly, Coupeville scored three in the bottom of the first to reclaim the lead.

The visitors, behind the hot bat of senior Nick Bowersock, who smacked three hits, blew things open with two in the third and fourth and three more in the fifth.

The Red Wolves collected nine hits off of CHS hurlers Josh Bayne and Wade Schaef, but were greatly helped by five Coupeville errors.

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Wiley Hesselgrave scored five Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave scored five Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

It was raining Tuesday, in a most unpleasant manner.

With three-point bombs dropping from the heavens seemingly every few seconds, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team got quickly run off the floor at Cedarcrest.

By the time the host Red Wolves were done hitting for 12 treys, they had put a 72-39 hurting on their visitors.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 2-11 overall, 0-8 in Cascade Conference play.

The Wolves remain two games behind South Whidbey (2-11, 2-6) for a 1A playoff berth, with six league games to play, including an all-Whidbey showdown in Langley Jan. 28.

Cedarcrest (9-5, 6-2), which used a 24-9 surge in the first quarter to put the game on ice, had seven different players hit from behind the three-point stripe. Alex Paulsen netted three, while three teammates each connected twice.

Coupeville, which failed to net a single three-pointer, battled back, playing even in a 12-12 fourth quarter.

The Wolves were paced by 12 points from Aaron Trumbull and 11 from Anthony Bergeron.

Nick Streubel tossed in eight, Wiley Hesselgrave hit for five, Matt Shank banked home a bucket and Gavin O’Keefe rounded out the scoring stats with a free throw.

In JV action, Cedarcrest piled on the points late to stretch the final score out to 65-30.

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