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Posts Tagged ‘Charles Wright Academy’

   Coupeville High School baseball coach Chris Smith surveys the field in Tacoma Saturday afternoon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   The Wolves were eliminated from the playoffs a game short of state, but, at 15-6, had their best season in more than a decade.

One trip too many.

Making its third trip to the wilds of Tacoma in a five-day span, the Coupeville High School baseball squad finally ran out of steam.

Despite playing error-free ball and getting strong work on the mound from Hunter Smith and Dane Lucero, the Wolves fell 8-3 Saturday to Charles Wright Academy and were eliminated from the district playoffs.

CWA, which rebounded to win two straight after being drilled 10-0 by CHS in the opening game of districts, joins Bellevue Christian in advancing to the state tourney.

The Tarriers may have beat the Wolves, but they have their work cut out for them next weekend, facing last year’s 1A state runner-ups, Cedar Park Christian (Bothell).

The loss drops Coupeville’s final record to 15-6, which is still the best mark the program has achieved in more than a decade.

The Wolves, who won their second Olympic League title in three years, had at least one runner on in five of seven innings, but couldn’t land the KO punch to CWA hurler Blake Nygren.

The Tarrier junior gave up two-out singles to Smith in the first and Jake Pease in the second, but squirmed away unharmed both times.

Smith was more than matching him, blowing through the first six CWA hitters.

The game took a turn in the top of the third, however, as Charles Wright connected on a lead-off double, then delivered four straight two-out hits, plating three runners.

Coupeville got one back in the bottom of the inning, thanks to Nick Etzell being plunked by a pitch, then coming around to score on a two-out RBI single off of Smith’s bat.

That base-knock was the last time the Wolves would touch Nygren for some time, though, as CHS went 11 batters between base-hits.

Other than Pease wearing a pitch in the fourth, Coupeville got nothing going offensively in the fourth through sixth.

The same wasn’t true for CWA, however, as the Tarriers, after going meekly in the fourth and fifth, found their groove in the top of the sixth.

Using a mix of well-placed hits and walks, Charles Wright tacked on five runs to turn a 3-1 nail-biter into an 8-1 romp.

Dane Lucero came on in relief of Smith, who whiffed seven, and got the Wolves out of the sixth, then pitched the seventh.

The CHS junior retired four of the five hitters he faced, surrendering just a walk.

Down to their final outs, the Wolves showed the never-say-die attitude which marked their entire season.

Senior Jake Hoagland led off with a single, Coupeville’s first hit since Smith’s RBI single back in the third, then scored when Pease reached on an error.

The final run of the season came courtesy senior second-baseman Nick Etzell, who lofted a sac fly.

That was it for the Wolves, however, with their turbo-charged run coming to an end on a ground-out to third.

CWA out-hit Coupeville 9-4 on the afternoon, and the Tarriers had four extra-base hits while the Wolves were limited to singles.

Smith delivered two of those, with Pease and Hoagland adding the other base-knocks.

CHS, which joins the new North Sound Conference next year, had a great run under coach Chris Smith, who was in his first full season running the program.

Three of the Wolves four regular-season losses were by a single run, with two of those coming to 2A schools. They also were a perfect 8-0 at home.

That was one prairie win for every senior on the roster, as Coupeville graduates Smith, Etzell, Hoagland, Julian Welling, Joey Lippo, James Vidoni, Kyle Rockwell and Jacob Zettle.

The cupboard is far from bare though, as the Wolves can return current juniors Lucero, Pease, Matt Hilborn and Shane Losey, as well as sophomores Gavin Knoblich and Jered Brown.

Freshman Daniel Olson made his varsity pitching debut in the league-clinching game, while junior Ty Eck was on the opening day varsity roster before a nagging football injury prevented him from playing.

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   Jake Pease crunched a pair of hits Tuesday as Coupeville thrashed Charles Wright 10-0 to open the playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The old streak is dead. Long live the new streak.

Jumping aggressively on Charles Wright Academy early, and never letting up, the Coupeville High School baseball squad rolled to a 10-0 win Tuesday in its district playoff opener.

The win, coming on a neutral field at Foss High School, snaps a five-game playoff losing streak for the Wolves and puts them a game away from punching their ticket to state.

Coupeville, which is 15-4 and has won 12 of its last 13 games, travels to Charles Wright Academy Thursday to face Bellevue Christian in the West Central District 3 title game.

The Vikings, the #1 seed out of the Nisqually League, drilled Chimacum 13-1 Tuesday and are 12-6 on the season.

After knocking off CWA, the Wolves now have two shots to advance to state for the first time since 2014.

Beat BC Thursday and it’s a done deal.

Lose Thursday and CHS heads to Curtis High School Saturday for a winner-to-state, loser-goes-home 2nd place bout.

That game would pit the Wolves against the survivor of Thursday’s Chimacum vs. CWA game.

For the moment, though, that’s all ahead and the focus is strictly on the Wolves breaking through and writing a different tale in the playoffs.

After winning four of five playoff games to start the 2014 postseason, Coupeville had dropped its last five under three different coaches.

CHS was eliminated 2-1 by Rochester in the first round of state in ’14, then fell 1-0 to Cascade Christian at districts in 2015, the final game of Willie Smith’s stellar, two-decades career as ball coach.

Marc Aparicio’s squad fell 13-0 to Cascade Christian and 6-1 to Seattle Christian in his one full season at the helm in 2016.

Current coach Chris Smith lost 2-1 to Bellevue Christian after taking over midway through the 2017 season, but evened his playoff record Tuesday afternoon.

“We were loving it!,” the jubilant coach said. “The guys were hunting big game.”

Coupeville dominated in every facet of the game, outhitting the Tarriers 11-4, playing error-free ball in the field and getting a concise, powerful performance from starting hurler Hunter Smith.

The senior staff ace used just 76 pitches across six innings, whiffing five and never giving up more than one base-knock per inning.

The Wolves, on the other hand, came out swinging the big bats and never let up.

Matt Hilborn led off the game with a sharp single, and CHS plated four runs in the top of the first to effectively put the game on ice.

Hunter Smith launched a one-out triple to bring Hilborn around, then scampered home himself on an RBI single by Julian Welling.

Capping things off, Jake Pease, returning from an injury, followed a Dane Lucero single with a game-busting two-run double.

The Wolves pressed their advantage at the plate all afternoon, though Charles Wright managed to somehow escape the third inning unscathed even after surrendering three hits, including a moon shot of a double off of Welling’s bat.

CHS tacked on a run in the fourth, with Joey Lippo singling, swiping second and coming around on an error, then the Wolves closed things out with a bang in the sixth.

Nick Etzell, who, like Pease, is returning from an injury, kicked things off with a single.

After that came a string of walks, a nicely-hit two-run single from Lucero, then a bunch of jumpy moments for the Tarrier hurler.

Capping what was a truly awful day for the CWA program, the final run came home not on a hit or a walk, but on a balk that allowed Lucero to stroll in from third.

Coupeville spread its offense out, with eight different Wolves collecting a hit.

Welling and Pease led the way, with a single and double apiece, while Hunter Smith had his three-bagger and Lucero collected a pair of singles.

Hilborn, Lippo, Jake Hoagland and Etzell rounded out the hit parade with a base-knock apiece, while Kyle Rockwell and Gavin Knoblich chipped in with solid defense.

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   Mikayla Elfrank and her CHS volleyball teammates are one win from advancing to the state tourney. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

So, you’re saying we have a chance?

Yes, yes, I am.

Flying high at 12-2, with its most wins in a season since 2004, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad sits one win away from advancing to state for the first time since this year’s seniors were in kindergarten.

To make that dream come true, the Wolves need one win in two matches Saturday at the district tourney in Tacoma.

Action kicks off at 11 AM at Charles Wright Academy, with Coupeville playing Bellevue Christian.

That’s a rematch of an early-season tussle, where the Vikings gave the Wolves their only loss this season against a 1A school.

Get revenge, and Coupeville is state-bound, after first returning to the same court at 5 PM for the district title game, which will decide seeding.

Lose the opener, and not all hope is gone, as the Wolves would hit the court at 3 PM in a loser-out, winner-to-state third-place battle royal.

Their foe would be the loser of a 1 PM match-up between tourney host Charles Wright and Cascade Christian.

Unlike last year, when Coupeville hosted the district tourney and action unspooled on two separate courts, CWA only has one court.

As you count down the hours until Volleyball-ageddon ’17 (while chewing your fingernails to a nub), here’s some info to occupy your brain cells.

What: West Central District 3 volleyball playoffs.

When: Saturday, Nov. 4

Where: Charles Wright Academy in Tacoma (7723 Chambers Creek Road W.)

Admission (good for all day):

$8 Adults/Non-ASB
$5 Students with ASB
$5 Sr. Citizens (62+)
$4 Elementary

 

Team capsules:

 

Coupeville:

Season record: 12-2

League finish: #1 in Olympic League

Vs. district foes: 0-1 (Lost to BC)

Sets W/L: 36-6

Coach: Cory Whitmore

Mascot: Wolves

Seniors: 7

MaxPreps ranking: #27 in 1A

 

Bellevue Christian:

Season record: 11-4

League finish: #2 in Nisqually League

Vs. district foes: 3-2 (Beat CP, 2-0 vs. CC, 0-2 vs. CWA)

Sets W/L: 36-14

Coach: Jenna Bronson

Mascot: Vikings

Seniors: 2

MaxPreps ranking: #19 in 1A

 

Cascade Christian:

Season record: 9-5

League finish: #3 in Nisqually League

Vs. district foes: 1-3 (0-2 vs. BC, 1-1 vs. CWA)

Sets W/L: 30-20

Coach: Kayla Pedretti

Mascot: Cougars

Seniors: 7

MaxPreps ranking: #32 in 1A

 

Charles Wright Academy:

Season record: 11-4

League finish: #1 in Nisqually League

Vs. district foes: 3-1 (2-0 vs BC, 1-1 vs CC)

Sets W/L: 36-15

Coach: Mindy McGrath

Mascot: Tarriers

Seniors: 4

MaxPreps ranking: #14 in 1A

 

To see the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2444&sport=10

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   Matt Hilborn ripped off a 12-yard scoring run Friday, his second touchdown of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was a rough one to sit through for many, many reasons.

A spectacularly inefficient refereeing crew derailed any sense of momentum Friday night, raining down a never-ending stream of penalty flags and stretching out the Coupeville vs. Charles Wright Academy football game well beyond its recommended running time.

To their credit, the refs weren’t one-sided.

To their discredit, they were just flat out stinky on both ends of the field, though they ultimately stung the Wolves worse.

And frankly, Coupeville’s gridiron players didn’t respond tremendously well, allowing frustration to seep in as they watched a one-score game rapidly slip away and turn into a 52-20 defeat.

The loss, coming in the Olympic/Nisqually League opener for both teams, drops the Wolves to 2-2 overall, 0-1 in league play.

There was a moment, late in the first half, when it looked like Coupeville was in control of the game.

Rallying from a 13-0 deficit, the Wolves broke through on an electrifying 68-yard touchdown pass from Hunter Downes to Cameron Toomey-Stout.

It came on a fourth-and-eight from their own 32-yard line, with Downes double-clutching, then rifling a shot into the great unknown on which his speedy receiver outran a CWA defender to snag the ball in full stride.

A play later, Wolf senior Hunter Smith picked off the Tarrier QB for the second time — his first interception allowed Smith to break a tie with Josh Bayne and claim the CHS career record for picks — and Coupeville was starting to roll.

Downes marched the Wolves 68 yards down the field, mixing passes to Smith and Toomey-Stout with a run by Matt Hilborn and a crucial face mask penalty by Charles Wright.

Coupeville was sitting first and goal at the eight-yard line, ready to retake the lead and carry all the momentum into halftime.

But it wasn’t to be, as a short run by Sean Toomey-Stout was stuffed at the five, then three straight passes fell incomplete.

At which point, everything which could go wrong for Coupeville did.

It started with Sean Toomey-Stout, Coupeville’s leading tackler on defense this season, getting dinged up and spending the rest of the game on the sideline undergoing concussion protocol.

Then the refs got nasty, issuing three consecutive penalties on the Wolves, allowing CWA enough life to stage a miracle last-second drive and tack on a score on the first half’s final play.

While the refs shocked everyone by not throwing a single flag in the third quarter — don’t worry, they would make up for it in spades in the fourth — Charles Wright’s running game, personified by Asher Shakoor-Asadi, did more than enough damage on its own.

The silky-smooth Tarrier junior busted off two more touchdown runs, giving him four on the night, and a 27-0 third quarter surge crushed every last Wolf hope.

Coupeville didn’t go down without a fight, getting touchdown runs in the fourth from Downes and Hilborn, but that was small consolation.

The flags flew in flurries in the fourth, Smith was blatantly robbed of a touchdown reception by a ref whose seeing-eye dog promptly slunk out of the stadium in shame, and then the Wolves took a late sucker punch.

Junior Chris Battaglia, who is #2 on the team both in rushing yardage and tackles, was ejected when a tackle which went high was questionably ruled a punch.

That’s a double whammy, since an ejection in high school play results in the player being suspended for a game.

Barring a successful appeal — and WIAA rules make it virtually impossible to win, going as far as not allowing teams to present video proof of the ref being wrong — Battaglia will miss next Friday’s game at Vashon Island.

By the end the game was well out of hand, both on the scoreboard and with the zebra’s inability to understand their own rule book.

Much time was spent with the reffing crew huddled together arguing/debating/trying to correct blatant mistakes and it was beyond tiring.

“There’s another flag on the field” vied with “oh lord, they’re not talking again, are they” as two minutes on the game clock frequently translated into 10 minutes on people’s watches.

In the mash-up of emotion at the end — coaches on both sidelines were visibly upset at times, though genuine anger ruled on Coupeville’s sidelines by the final gun — a few strong plays by role players might have been missed.

Lineman Kyle Rockwell, making his debut, earned praise from an otherwise beyond-frustrated CHS coach Jonathan Atkins, and Jean Lund-Olsen showed no quit.

A botched Wolf running play on the next-to-last play of the night turned into a fumble which Charles Wright almost brought back for a game-capping 80-yard defensive touchdown.

Lund-Olsen though, sprinting full tilt from one end of the field to the other, caught the shocked Tarrier and slung him to the turf at about the two-yard line.

On a long, frustrating, angry night, it was an unexpected positive note for the Wolves, a sign that, even with the world conspiring against them, they’ll keep on fighting.

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   CHS coach Ken Stange and netters (l to r) Zoe Trujillo, Valen Trujillo, Sage Renninger, Payton Aparicio, Fanny Deprelle and Avalon Renninger. (Amy Trujillo photo)

They fought until the final ace.

Facing strong private school competition Thursday, Coupeville High School’s tennis players acquitted themselves nicely at the West Central District III tourney at the Sprinker Tennis Center in Tacoma.

The Wolves, who matched Vashon Island with a tourney-best six competitors, claimed second place in the team standings.

Tourney host Charles Wright Academy, which won both singles and doubles titles, edged Coupeville 23-12 for the team title.

Vashon (7), Klahowya (3), Cascade Christian (3) and Chimacum (0) rounded out the field.

Wolf juniors Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger came within a match of punching their ticket to state, falling in the championship match.

The first loss of the season for the duo, it shouldn’t overshadow their season.

Renninger went 14-1 this year, Aparicio 13-1, and their second-place finish at districts was a serious jump from fifth as sophomores.

With District 3 getting only one slot to state in both singles and doubles, they are the alternates to state if something should befall the champs between now and next weekend.

Senior Valen Trujillo capped her stellar four-year run with the Wolves with a second-straight third-place finish in singles, winning the final three matches of her career.

The trio was joined at districts by foreign exchange student Fanny Deprelle and freshman phenoms Zoe Trujillo and Avalon Renninger.

Complete district results:

Singles:

Valen Trujillo

Lost to Lizzie Maciejewski (Vashon Island) 6-4, 6-1
Beat Sydney Jackson (Klahowya) 8-3
Beat Hailey Sargent (Klahowya) 8-2
Beat Grace Jung (Cascade Christian) 8-2

Fanny Deprelle

Lost to Alexis Schorno (Charles Wright Academy) 6-1, 6-0
Lost to Hannah Nelson (Vashon Island) 9-8(5)

Doubles:

Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger

Beat Beka Lematua/Lizzie Sutherland (Vashon Island) 7-5, 6-4
Beat Heidi Xu/? Wang (Charles Wright Academy) 7-5, 7-5
Lost to Laney Schorno/Mei Ge (Charles Wright Academy) 6-4, 6-2

Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo

Lost to Laney Schorno/Mei Ge (Charles Wright Academy) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Yulia Fiala/Tobin Vaughan (Vashon Island) 8-4

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