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Posts Tagged ‘CJ Smith’

Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

One’s old enough to be the others dad … barely.

But while Jerry Helm and CJ Smith have an 18-year age gap, they share a lot in common, and not just a birthday.

One is a former Wolf star, the other a current one, and both have never been content with playing just one sport, or ever going half-speed.

Helm was a standout football, basketball and track athlete who also dabbled in baseball for a bit, while Smith has helped revive the “traditional” three-sport athlete at CHS.

After moving to Coupeville in the middle of his sophomore year, CJ, who will be a senior in the fall, has played football, basketball and baseball.

In the two previous years, not a single Wolf boy played all three traditional sports, with soccer, track and tennis luring away a number of athletes.

CJ, and younger brother Hunter, led the charge to change that during the school year that just ended, reviving memories of a time when it was common.

The comparisons between the two go deeper than just being multi-sport stars, however.

Both Jerry and CJ carry themselves with a quiet confidence, content to let their actions speak louder than their words.

That calmness and inner fire has led Helm through a meteoric rise in Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue and it allows Smith to very closely resemble outgoing Wolf star Aaron Curtin, another self-contained young man who prefers athletic success to scrambling to pose in pre-game photos.

I have a great deal of respect for how both of the birthday boys conduct themselves.

If you’re looking for sports role models, old school (well, not that old…) and new school, you can’t go wrong with Helm and Smith.

As they celebrate their joint cake day, united by the calendar, their success at CHS and their low-key style, we want to wish them both the best.

Happy birthday, gentlemen, and thank you for being class acts every day.

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CJ Smith, your 2014-2015 Coupeville Sports Athlete Supreme. (John Fisken photos)

   CJ Smith, your 2014-2015 Coupeville Sports Athlete Supreme. (John Fisken photos)

Julia Myers, second in the voting but first in the hearts of Judy Nation.

Julia Myers, second in the voting but first in the hearts of Judy Nation.

Past winners Nick Streubel and Amanda Fabrizi.

Past winners Nick Streubel and Amanda Fabrizi.

CJ Smith destroys polls.

The Coupeville High School junior — and his fervent fan club — outlasted, outwitted and outvoted the field (again), sweeping to victory in Coupeville Sports 3rd annual battle to be named Athlete Supreme.

Smith, who played football, basketball and baseball for the Wolves in 2014-2015, edged out soccer/basketball star Julia Myers with a strong second-half performance.

With 24 hours left in the 3.5-day voting period, Myers held a razor-thin two-vote advantage, but Smith stormed back to win 4,253-3,514.

Overall, 15,385 votes were cast, with Jacki Ginnings (1,660), Matt Shank (1,066) and Valen Trujillo (940) rounding out the top five.

With the win, Smith joins past winners Nick Streubel (2012-2013) and Amanda Fabrizi (2013-2014) in winning an award that has no real trophy (yet) but gets you about seven seconds of fame.

Now, the only question remaining, can CJ defend his crown as a senior and become the first repeat winner in Athlete Supreme history, or is there a Wolf out there preparing to take him down?

To do so, you’ll need two things — a strong athletic year (you’re more likely to be nominated if you play multiple sports) and a really fast voting finger.

To see the complete results and vote totals for all 16 contestants, pop over to:

https://coupevillesports.com/2015/05/17/let-the-insanity-begin/

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Aaron Curtin brings the heat. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Aaron Curtin brings the heat. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin, Josh Bayne and Carson Risner. (Jimmy Myers photo)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin, Josh Bayne and Carson Risner. (Jimmy Myers photo)

In it to win it.

Using a mix of stellar pitching and quality “small ball” offense — two things it will need to have success in the playoffs — the Coupeville High School baseball squad ran away with an 8-1 win Tuesday over visiting Chimacum.

The Senior Night triumph, featuring another first-rate pitching performance from Aaron Curtin, clinched second place in the 1A Olympic League and guaranteed a home playoff game this Saturday for the Wolves.

Now 9-8 overall, 5-3 in league play, Coupeville will try and ruin undefeated Klahowya’s Senior Night Thursday, then welcome Cascade Christian to town for a 1 PM loser-out district playoff game.

Win that game and they advance to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams will qualify for state.

Looking for a bit of revenge against a Chimacum squad they had stumbled against a week ago, the Wolves chipped away, notching a run in the second and another in the third.

Both runs came the same way — a single, a steal of second and then an RBI single.

Small ball at its best.

In the second, it was Hunter Smith setting the table and Aaron Trumbull bringing him home, while Josh Bayne and Carson Risner filled those roles in the second.

With Curtin dang near unhittable — he gave up just one fluky hit through the first six innings — the Wolves put the game away with a burst in the fifth.

The Wolves juiced the bags on a single from CJ Smith, a walk from Cole Payne and a bunt single from Bayne.

The senior speedster was so quick to the bag Chimacum’s pitcher could only shake his head in disbelief after fielding the ball, with a throw being pointless.

Coupeville then started rolling in the runs, without doing anything dramatic, scoring on a wild pitch, an error on a ball hit into the hole at short by Risner and a missed third strike.

“Not a “I need to talk to the hitting coach about how hard they hit it” inning, but some small ball and putting pressure on their defense,” said CHS hardball guru Willie Smith.

The Wolves tacked on three more in the sixth the same way, with Clay Reilly, CJ Smith and Payne scoring on an error, a sac fly and a passed ball.

While Chimacum shot itself repeatedly in the foot, Coupeville took advantage and did collect nine hits.

Bayne and CJ Smith led the way with two base knocks apiece.

Curtin never gave the Cowboys a chance to mount a comeback, whiffing the side twice while racking up nine K’s in a complete game win.

His defense had a hiccup in the seventh, booting a pair of balls to account for Chimacum’s lone run.

Never missing a beat, however, Curtin calmly closed the game out with a final punch-out on a ball so nasty all the Cowboy hitter could do was stand and watch it blow by him for strike three.

To see the playoff brackets, jump over to http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1542&sport=6

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Wolf hurler CJ Smith delivered a strong pitching performance Wednesday (Shelli Trumbull photo)

CJ Smith delivered a strong pitching performance Wednesday, one that made a teammate yell “That was filthy!” after a strikeout. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

CJ Smith was magnificent, but it wasn’t quite enough.

Despite a stellar game from the junior hurler, the Coupeville High School baseball squad came up just short of upending the #1 team in 1A Wednesday, falling 3-1 to visiting Klahowya in a game that could have easily gone the other way.

With Smith dealing on the mound (“That was filthy!” screamed one of his teammates after a nasty strikeout), the Wolves, now 7-8 overall, 3-3 in Olympic League play, had their chances.

“One of the better pitching performances we’ve had this season,” said CHS coach Willie Smith. “CJ mixed it up, never lost his composure and really kept them guessing.

“He stepped up big for us, as he has done all season.”

Unfortunately, the Eagles (14-0, 5-0) managed to find just a few chinks in Coupeville’s armor and exploit them for the few runs they would need.

Klahowya cracked a scoreless tie in the third, using a single, a passed ball and an error — on a play where the Wolf fielder had a tough read on the ball with the runner moving right in front of him.

The Eagles then added two in the fourth, taking advantage of a blown rundown play.

Coupeville had the runner nailed, but the player who was supposed to backup the play failed to cover the bag, letting the dead-in-the-water Eagle slide into second as another runner shot across home plate.

A long, corkscrew RBI single that landed just a fraction inside the left field foul line plated Klahowya’s final run.

But while the visitors scratched out a few runs, CJ Smith recovered each time and bore down, refusing to let the Eagles break out a big inning.

Helping him were three standout defensive plays.

Wolf catcher Carson Risner threw out a runner trying to steal second to kick the game off, Aaron Curtin made a spectacular sliding catch in left and Josh Bayne notched an impressive double play.

Bayne corralled a shot to center, then came up firing, gunning down a lollygagging Klahowya runner who had drifted way too far off of first to admire his teammate’s moon-ball.

While their defense was generally solid, the Wolves struggled at the plate, garnering just one hit.

It was a well-hit single to center from lead-off hitter Cole Payne in the first inning, and it would be their only base knock.

Payne and Bayne each walked twice, with Payne eating dirt after being plunked on the brim of his batting helmet by a wild pitch, but that was it for a very limited offensive attack.

Coupeville’s lone run came in the sixth, when Payne zipped home on a squeeze play.

Unfortunately, the Wolves left runners stranded at second and third with an inning-ending strikeout, one of 11 whiffs they absorbed in the game.

Still, pushing the state’s #1 team in a game where one play could have changed the outcome was a huge step back up after Coupeville’s previous game, when they fell to a previously winless Chimacum squad.

“We played with the right attitude today,” Willie Smith said. “Now we need to keep that going.”

With three regular season games left — one each against league rivals Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya — the Wolves want to hold onto the #2 seed out of the conference, which would give them a home playoff game May 9.

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That moment when Katrina McGranahan realizes she's just won the game. (John Fisken photos)

That moment when Katrina McGranahan realizes she’s just won the game. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Trumbull gets ready to operate on the defense.

Aaron Trumbull, about to get medieval on the pitcher’s fanny.

The Surgeon operates. Hope Lodell, having put the pedal through the metal, makes a spectacular catch in the deepest, darkest part of centerfield.

   The Surgeon operates. Hope Lodell, having put the pedal through the metal, makes a spectacular running catch in the deepest, darkest part of center-field.

McKenzie Bailey (right) supports big sis McKayla, who was making her first start in the pitcher's circle

   McKenzie Bailey (right) supports big sis McKayla, making her first start of the season in the pitcher’s circle. Kacie Kiel (left) is just there cause she loves cameras.

Aaron Curtin watches an RBI double fly off his bat.

Aaron Curtin watches an RBI double fly off his bat.

It's not really a game until the ever-scrappy Jae LeVine gets half the infield on her jersey.

It’s not really a game until the ever-scrappy Jae LeVine gets half the infield on her jersey.

Dear baseball, you're about to get smashed. Sincerely, Gabe Wynn.

Dear baseball, you’re about to get smashed. Sincerely, Gabe Wynn.

"Ooh, you better run. Not gonna beat my gun, though!!" Hailey Hammer drops the boom.

“Ooh, you better run. Not gonna beat my gun, though!!” Hailey Hammer drops the boom.

The action was hoppin’ on the diamonds.

Both the Coupeville High School softball and baseball squads came away with victories against visiting Chimacum Thursday, putting the Wolves alone atop the Olympic League standings in both sports.

Baseball was off the field fairly quickly, as CJ Smith tossed an 8-0 shutout.

Softball took a bit longer, winning a war of attrition 22-21 when freshman Katrina McGranahan delivered a walk-off two-out three-run double in the bottom of the seventh.

John Fisken was in town for most of the activity, and the photos above are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes) pop over to:

Softball — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8528&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=183&sport=0

Baseball — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8535&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

P.S. — Use coupon code EB85284962 before May 1 and you’ll get 15% off your purchase.

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