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Posts Tagged ‘Cole Payne’

CJ Smith (John Fisken photos)

   CJ Smith, seen here covering the bag at third in an earlier game, tossed another gem on the mound Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   Cole Payne’s fleet feet delivered a 2-1 win to the Wolves, raising them to 5-0 in league play.

Don’t stop believin’.

Rallying for two runs late Monday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad pulled out another win, toppling visiting Chimacum 2-1 and clinching at least second-place in the 1A Olympic League.

With the victory, the Wolves (5-0 in league, 8-8 overall) stay atop the conference, one game up on Klahowya (4-1, 13-3) with four to play.

The Wolves and Eagles meet twice more, starting with a meeting at Klahowya Wednesday.

After that, Coupeville closes the regular season at home Friday against Port Townsend (0-5, 0-12), on the road at Chimacum (1-4, 4-9) May 2, and then, finally, at home against Klahowya May 5.

Regardless of how those games play out, CHS will finish ahead of both the Cowboys and RedHawks.

While Chimacum could still finish with the same record as Coupeville, the Wolves now own the tiebreaker.

The stakes are simple from this point.

Win a league title, something no Coupeville baseball squad has done since 1991, and the Wolves start in the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs May 11.

Finish second and CHS hosts a loser-out game May 7 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League.

Either way, six teams will play at districts, with two advancing to state.

To get an early look at the brackets, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1906&sport=6

Coupeville stayed on target Monday thanks to another stellar outing from senior hurler CJ Smith and some timely work at the plate.

Smith went the distance, fanning nine and surrendering just a single run in the fifth inning.

Still, for quite some time, that seemed like it might be enough to stop the Wolves, as they stranded a number of runners and were bedeviled by some odd calls.

That changed in the bottom of the sixth, when Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith gave his older brother a reprieve, plating Clay Reilly to tie the score at one apiece.

Buoyed by the run, CJ Smith held Chimacum down in the seventh, capping things with a final punch-out.

Tied going into the bottom of the seventh and final regular inning, Coupeville had nothing to lose (worst scenario? extra innings) and got adventurous.

With Cole Payne at third and Reilly at the plate, the Wolves went for broke and it worked.

Getting a good jump, Payne intended to steal home, only to have his teammate provide the perfect cover by rapping the ball in the direction of first base.

With Coupeville’s senior catcher hurtling for the plate, Chimacum had no play and meekly tossed Reilly out as the winning run scored.

Cue the celebration. And continue the march to history.

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Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling abused the Klahowya pitcher twice, once with the Stare O’ Death, then by ripping an RBI single. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith keeps a laser focus as he drops a bunt.

Kory Score

Kory Score provides a tall target at first.

Cole Payne

“Go, man, go!” Wolf coach Marc Aparicio sends Cole Payne flying for home.

Clay Reilly

   Lurking among the dandelions, Clay Reilly is in the right spot at the right time to rob Klahowya of a hit.

Smith

Smith pulls out his best hurdler moves as he flies into first.

The best in the biz.

After shocking Klahowya on Tuesday afternoon, the Coupeville High School baseball squad sits atop the 1A Olympic League with a perfect 3-0 record.

Wandering around, snapping pics as the action unfolded, was paparazzi John Fisken, and the photos above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11280&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Joey Lippo

   Professor Joey Lippo teaches Baseball 101: always use two hands when fielding. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith

CJ Smith sends some dirt flying while patrolling second base.

Nick Etzell

Wolf hurler Nick Etzell reaches deep inside to impress the radar gun.

Clay Reilly

  Eyes locked on the incoming pitch, Clay Reilly prepares to execute a textbook sacrifice bunt.

Jacob Zettle

Jacob Zettle gets enterprising to avoid the rain.

Cole Payne

“My name’s Cole Payne and I … am … here … to bring … the PAIN!!”

Jake Pease

Jake Pease sets up the target.

Julian Welling

  Can you smell the heat coming off of Julian Welling’s fastball? You will in a second or two.

James Vidoni

  James Vidoni gets down, real down, as a wild Falcon hurler tries to take his head off.

Major League Baseball returned Sunday, but diamond action has already been underway for weeks on Whidbey.

Saturday brought an Island rivalry clash in Langley between Coupeville and South Whidbey — the schools split, with the Wolves winning JV and the Falcons varsity — and travelin’ photo man John Fisken was there to click away through the mist.

The photos above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11107&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=17&sport=0

JV — http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11106&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=17&sport=0

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Ty Eck scored the game's 25th and final run Wednesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Wolf freshman Ty Eck scored the game’s 25th and final run Wednesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Senior catcher Cole Payne knocked in five runs, including the game winner.

   Senior catcher Cole Payne knocked in five runs, including the game winner, and was a rock for his young pitchers.

This one got wild.

If you left midway through Wednesday’s non-conference baseball game between Concrete and Coupeville, you’re going to read most of this article and be like, “What the heck?!?!”

What started as a pitcher’s duel on the sun-drenched prairie turned into a slugger’s brawl in which the Wolves lost a seven-run lead in the final inning, but still came back to hand new coach Marc Aparicio his first win.

Riding a walk-off RBI single from senior catcher Cole Payne — his fifth RBI of the day — Coupeville escaped with a 13-12 victory that left the overflow crowd happy while evening the team’s record at 1-1.

Payne’s pinpoint hit, which sliced beautifully into center field and would have likely cleared the bases if more runs had been necessary, capped a topsy-turvy afternoon.

With freshman hurler Dane Lucero blanking Concrete over the first three innings, Coupeville built a narrow 2-0 lead and fans seemed to be in for a low-scoring affair.

The Wolves eked out a run in the first, off of two Lion errors and two walks, then tacked on a run in the third when Lucero scampered home on a passed ball.

Concrete scratched their way back into things, however, scoring three in the top of the fourth, two after what everyone originally thought was the third out.

An RBI double had sliced the lead to 2-1, but with runners at second and third and two outs, a Lion hitter topped the ball and was tossed out at first.

Only he wasn’t, as after both teams had left the field, the umps conferred and brought them back on, deciding the ball had never been fair in the first place.

Given a reprieve, Concrete promptly ripped a two-run double down the left field line to snatch the lead away.

Joey Lippo replaced Lucero on the mound to start the fifth, and with the ump calling a tight strike zone, walked home another run to let the Lions stretch their lead out to 4-2.

Then, in the snap of a finger, the Wolf offense suddenly became Murderers’ Row, drilling Concrete for five runs in the fifth, then another five in the sixth.

Coupeville sent 19 batters to the plate across the two innings, with Payne crunching a two-run single one inning, then topping that with a two-run double the next time up.

Lucero, Lippo, Gabe Wynn and Matt Hilborn all knocked in runs with hits, while the final two Wolf runs in the surge scored on a throwing error.

Cruising at 12-5, just three outs away from closing out a romp, Coupeville decided to even things up by suddenly forgetting how to play defense, at least for half an inning.

Three errors and a balk by the previously fairly-stable Wolves opened the door, and Concrete burst through in style, tacking on four hits as they cut the lead to 12-11.

Coupeville came within inches of closing the game on a double play, but after forcing a runner at second for out #2, the ensuing throw to first base hit the dirt and skipped over the waiting glove for error #4 in the inning.

That allowed the tying run to shoot home, sending Concrete players into hysterics and emotionally sucker-punching the pro-Wolf crowd.

And yet, Coupeville never blinked.

Payne, one of only two senior starters for the Wolves, immediately settled down his freshman pitcher (Hilborn) and they got out of the inning.

Then, as he headed to the bench, he commanded his team to go win in the bottom of the seventh.

They listened.

Three straight walks put Ty Eck, Hunter Smith and CJ Smith perched on the bags with no outs and Payne strode to the plate, ready to claim the same legendary status once owned by big brother Morgan.

Staring down the Concrete pitcher, Cole jumped on a pitch and wrote the perfect ending, launching the ball into the dying sun.

As the ball caught grass, Eck stomped on home and the crowd went bonkers with a mix of joy and relief, the middle Payne kid strolled around first and into Wolf lore.

Cole, what a great game he had,” Aparicio said. “Not just at the plate, either. He called a really good game and talked to his pitchers when they were struggling and got them focused.

“I’m really proud of him.”

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Jimmy Myers, seen here last season, teamed with Lilan Sekigawa for a key win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Jimmy Myers, seen here last season, teamed with Lilan Sekigawa for a key win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

It was a day of grit, topped by joy and music.

Getting a spark from Cole Payne, who won a three-set thriller less than 24 hours after thinking a shoulder injury might sideline him, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad routed host Klahowya 6-1 Friday.

The win lifted the Wolves to 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play and may have already clinched them a league title banner.

With one more match-up against the Eagles Oct. 9, Coupeville, which beat Klahowya 5-2 earlier in the season, has already guaranteed that it has dethroned the defending league champs.

The only lingering question is whether the Wolves (3-2 overall) will still have to go through the joint Chimacum/Port Townsend program to claim the title.

Chimacum skipped out on the first scheduled match because of a lack of players, and there is still no word on whether the Wolves and Cowboys will meet one, two or three times … or never.

For the moment, having knocked off the Eagles in style, the Wolves headed home and found themselves serenaded as if they had won the title.

A musician on the ferry drew the attention of the Coupeville players, and the atmosphere topped off a day filled with wins and pizza.

“We are on the ferry and we hear a violin playing. We all go over and sit to listen,” said Wolf doubles ace Jared Helmstadter. “Great music. Nice way to relax and think of the good and wonderful things we have in this world.

“Just a great time with a bunch of good guys. Great way to celebrate a win for Coupeville!”

Scores from Friday:

Varsity:

1st singles — Sebastian Davis beat Trask 6-0, 6-0

2nd singles — Connor McCormick beat Schoening 7-5, 6-1

3rd singles — Cole Payne beat Swaney 3-6, 6-3, 11-9

1st doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Haga/Fite 6-3, 6-0

2nd doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Short/Short 7-5, 6-2

3rd doubles — Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa beat Winters/Cook 6-3, 6-1

4th doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter beat Hytinen/Wasburg 6-1, 6-2

JV:

5th doubles — Nick Etzell/Garrett Compton lost 7-5

6th doubles — Nile Lockwood/Aiden Crimmins won 6-1

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