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





























































