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Posts Tagged ‘CJ Smith’

Ally Roberts, kickin' butt and takin' ribbons at the Puyallup Fair. (Jennifer Roberts photo)

  Ally Roberts, kickin’ butt and takin’ ribbons at the Puyallup State Fair. (Jennifer Roberts photo)

Brothers CJ (left) and Hunter Smith get their game face on in the hours leading up to their first football game at CHS. (Charlotte Smith photo)

Brothers CJ (3) and Hunter Smith get their game face on in the hours leading up to their first football game at CHS. (Charlotte Smith photo)

It’s the look of excellence.

Whether in town or on the road, Coupeville High School athletes are lookin’ fresh and confident Friday morning.

On The Rock, it’s all about football, as the Wolves prepare to host arch-rival South Whidbey (7 PM kickoff) in the season opener.

Among the players counting down the hours until the Battle for The Bucket are CHS junior CJ Smith and lil’ bro, Hunter, a frosh.

The Smith family moved to town in the middle of the school last year and CJ had an impact in basketball and baseball, but this will be the first time the brothers suit up in the red and black as football players.

Way down the road, at the state fair in Puyallup, one of the younger members of a long-time Coupeville sports family is unleashing her athletic prowess.

Wolf sophomore Ally Roberts is taking a break from the CHS volleyball squad to continue her run as a horse rider extraordinaire.

She’ll be competing in multiple events this weekend, but we couldn’t wait and had to show you how she did in her first event at state.

Simple answer: she’s kickin’ some fanny.

And why not? It’s the Coupeville way.

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CJ Smith goes hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photo)

CJ Smith goes hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photo)

Smith prepares to run wild on the basepaths. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Smith prepares to run wild on the basepaths. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Kacie Kiel (right) was the runner-up in the 33-athlete poll and fought hard to the end, as she always does. (Fisken photo)

  Kacie Kiel (right) was the runner-up in the 33-athlete poll and fought hard to the end, as she always does. (Fisken photo)

The “Face of the Future” belongs to CJ Smith.

Smith, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School in the fall, held off a hard-charging Kacie Kiel and 31 other contestants to win our 48-hour orgy of voting madness.

His reward — he’ll hold down the banner photo across the top of this blog through Jan. 1.

In the end, 34,719 votes were cast, with Smith topping the field with 7,290 votes (21%), edging out Kiel (5,869) and Makana Stone (4,684).

Skyler Lawrence and Zane Bundy rounded out the top five.

After moving to town midway through his sophomore season, Smith flashed signs of brilliance on the basketball court for the Wolf JV boys’ hoops squad.

Then he played a substantial role on the CHS baseball squad, which made it all the way to the state tourney.

Quick on the base paths and fluid in the field, Smith played several infield slots and eventually became the team’s #2 pitcher as the season wore on.

To see the complete results of the poll, jump over to:

https://coupevillesports.com/2014/06/22/vote-til-your-fingers-drop-off/

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(John Fisken photo)

Left to right, CHS coach Willie Smith and seniors Jake Tumblin, Kurtis Smith, Ben Etzell, Wade Schaef and Morgan Payne. (John Fisken photo)

Sultan just wants the season to end.

As the Turks run out the string on a winless high school baseball campaign, they are the perfect team to help Coupeville recapture that winning feeling.

And the Wolves have taken advantage so far, rolling to back-to-back victories to climb back to .500 as the playoffs loom on the horizon.

Wednesday, it was a 10-3 romp at home for CHS, with sophomore hurler CJ Smith throwing wicked heat and fanning a career-high 10 batters.

Smith scattered five hits, walked just one and dominated the Turks from start to finish.

CJ was very solid on the mound,” said Coupeville coach Willie Smith. “It was great to see him get back in the groove and be dominant on the mound.”

With the pitchin’ poppin’, the Wolf bats came out blazin’ in support.

Jake Tumblin ripped three hits, including a standup double, stole two bases, scored three runs and knocked in a run to kick-start things off at the top of the lineup.

“He is really starting to set the table for our guys and get in a groove offensively for us,” said Willie Smith.

The Wolves jumped on Sultan for four in the third and three more in the sixth to blow things wide open.

In the third Coupeville slapped together four straight hits to chase the Turks starter. Tumblin, Kurtis Smith, Ben Etzell and Aaron Trumbull all had the sweet swing going.

The later rally was started, once again, by leadoff man Tumblin, who slapped a single, then teamed with freshman Clay Reilly, who had walked, on a double steal.

Etzell crushed a two-run double to the deepest, darkest region of center, then scored himself when Sultan bobbled a hard-hit grounder by Josh Bayne.

The Wolves continue a wild, five-games-in-six-days week when they host Granite Falls Thursday in a makeup of a game rained out earlier in the season. Coupeville travels to Sultan Friday, then Lakewood Saturday, before beginning postseason play next week.

Now 8-8 overall, 7-8 in Cascade Conference play, the Wolves will be the #2 seed among league 1A teams for the district playoffs.

South Whidbey clinched the top seed with a 5-4 win over Granite Falls Wednesday.

The Falcons are 11-6 in league play, with one game left to play, and even if CHS swept its final three, the best it could finish would be 10-8 in the Cascade Conference.

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CJ Smith, seen here playing the infield in an earlier game, got the complete game win on the mound for the Wolves Friday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   CJ Smith (4), seen here playing the infield in an earlier game, got the complete game win on the mound for the Wolves Friday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

"Run like you wanna make your momma proud, Trumbull!!"

“Run like you wanna make your momma proud, Trumbull!!”

“Speed kills, baby, and we have speed!!”

Coupeville High School baseball coach Willie Smith was ecstatic after the finish of Friday’s thriller against visiting Lakewood, and why not?

Using their fleet feet, and a timely hit or two, his Wolves had just exploded for three runs in the bottom of the seventh to steal a huge 6-5 win.

The victory, the second straight over a 2A biggie, lifted the Wolves back to .500 at 6-6.

They are 5-6 in Cascade Conference play and hot on the heels of South Whidbey for the #1 playoff seed among the league’s 1A schools.

“It was a great testament to the character of this team and the ability of our team to rise up to the challenge of this game!,” Smith said.

With the game on the line, Coupeville made every play count.

Trailing 5-3 and down to their final at-bat, the Wolves put two runners on via a Lakewood error and a walk. Both runners (sophomore CJ Smith and junior Josh Bayne) are quick, and they took advantage of a jumpy Cougar defense.

Jake Tumblin, a speed demon himself, laid down a bunt and beat the pitcher’s throw.

But, instead of just holding on to the ball and accepting a bases-loaded situation, the Lakewood hurler tried to nail Tumblin going into first and accidentally uncorked a throw past the first baseman and down the right field line.

Running full tilt, Smith and Bayne came around to score on the error, knotting the score up.

Tumblin promptly made a bid to win the game in electrifying fashion, stealing home on the next play, but was nipped at the plate by an alert throw.

Instead of settling for the tie and heading into extra innings, Coupeville staged a second rally.

Wade Schaef walked, Ben Etzell blasted a single and Aaron Trumbull reached on a Lakewood error to juice the bases. With two outs, it was then time to go to Church.

Junior Aaron Curtin, who has been battling through a shoulder issue, delivered the sermon and it was a winning one, jacking an RBI single back up the middle to set off the pandemonium on the prairie.

It was the perfect capper to a strong all-around game for Coupeville.

CJ Smith tossed a complete game, whiffing six and giving up just four hits.

With Tumblin’s recent hand injury still preventing him from catching, his back-up, sophomore Cole Payne, was a beast, throwing out four potential base stealers.

CJ was cool as a cucumber on the mound,” Willie Smith said. “Mixing up pitches and keeping their hitters off-balance throughout the game.”

Coupeville’s speed on the base-paths flustered Lakewood all game, with five of the first six runs being plated thanks to Cougar errors.

Tumblin, Ben Etzell (who paced the Wolves with two hits) and Trumbull represented the early game runs.

The game also marked the varsity debut of freshman Clay Reilly, who got his ticket to the big time punched by a string of injuries to CHS starters.

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Not event the wind and cold could slow down CHS softball players (l to r) Robin Cedillo, Emily Licence and Erin Josue, who hooted and hollered for their fellow freshmen. (JOhn Fisken photos)

    Not even the wind and cold could slow down CHS softball players (l to r) Robin Cedillo, Emily Licence and Erin Josue, who hooted and hollered for their fellow freshmen. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne fields a chopper at third.

Cole Payne fields a chopper at third.

Softball sensation McKayla Bailey wonders why she can no onger feel her fingers and toes.

  Softball sensation McKayla Bailey wonders why she can no longer feel her fingers and toes.

What do you say about a game like this? As little as possible.

Spring break was on, but the Coupeville High School JV baseball team got taken back to school Thursday, pounded 18-1 by visiting Archbishop Thomas Murphy on a brutally cold, windy day on the prairie.

There were a few highlights for the Wolves, such as Aaron Trumbull blasting through the ATM first baseman who tried to block his passage on the base-paths, dropping him like a middle linebacker crushing the quarterback.

Freshman Gabe Wynn notched Coupeville’s lone RBI, on a sacrifice fly, while CJ Smith paced the offense with a pair of hits, including a booming double into right field.

Trumbull, Clay Reilly and Cole Payne each collected singles. Aiden Crimmins eked out a walk and Jonathan Thurston (who had the loudest fans, thanks to CHS freshmen girls) reached on an error when the ATM pitcher and catcher nearly collided on a pop-up into the gusty wind.

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