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Posts Tagged ‘Dane Lucero’

   Dane Lucero picked up Coupeville’s lone RBI in a 3-1 loss Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Oak Harbor’s James Besaw (left) hangs out with Coupeville’s (l to r) Taylor Consford, Jonathan Thurston, Clay Reilly and Joey Lippo. (Teresa Besaw photo)

Razor-thin.

That was the margin between the Coupeville High School baseball squad and its foes Friday night.

Playing in their opening game at the Grays Harbor 4th of July Bash, the Wolves outhit and were slicker on defense than the Washington Rush Blue Elite.

But, in the end, the travel ball squad nipped them in the one category which truly matters, outscoring Coupeville 3-1.

The Wolves return to action Saturday afternoon, when they play the Avengers 17U squad at Olympic Stadium.

The three-day, 12-team tourney, which runs June 30-July 2, moves into bracket play Sunday.

Facing off with the Rush, who have a local connection on their roster in the form of Oak Harbor High School senior James Besaw, Coupeville held a 5-4 advantage in hits and were fairly flawless on defense.

“We played a good error-free game,” said CHS coach Chris Smith. “I was very proud of the way we composed ourselves and competed.”

Wolf hurlers Jonathan Thurston and Joey Lippo combined to keep the Rush at bay most of the evening, with a three-run third inning the only ding in the armor.

Thurston whiffed four in five innings of work before turning the hill over to his teammate.

At the plate, Clay Reilly led the way with a pair of hits while Hunter Smith, Dane Lucero and Nick Etzell added base-knocks.

Lucero picked up an RBI, bringing home Coupeville’s lone run in the top of the fourth.

The Wolves manufactured their score by getting lead-off hitter Taylor Consford on base via an error, followed by hits from Reilly and Lucero.

CHS had scoring opportunities in each of the first three innings, but was unable to seal the deal.

In the first, the Wolves got a two-out single from Reilly, only to see him gunned down on an ensuing steal attempt.

An inning later, Matt Hilborn wore one for the team, getting plunked and scrambling down to first before the sting wore off.

A double play ball erased the threat, however.

Etzell came the closest to scoring until Consford stamped on home, getting all the way around third base in the top of the third.

After stroking a single, the Wolf senior moved to second on a sac bunt from Kyle Rockwell, then made a play for home on a single off the bat of Smith.

The Rush came up strong on D, though, catching Etzell on his way home, with the play set up by a throw from Besaw in right field.

Coupeville’s rivals netted all three of their runs in the bottom of the third, a time period when they garnered three of their four hits on the game.

Besaw lined out to second his first time up, then was hit by a pitch the second time he faced off with Thurston.

In a bit of an oddity, there were two Oak Harbor players on the field, as Besaw’s Wildcat teammate, Donny Kloewer, is playing with Coupeville this summer.

Toss in Consford, a former OHHS player who transferred to CHS and played for the Wolves as a senior this spring, and it was an old school reunion.

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   Dane Lucero, seen in an earlier game, threw a complete game and drilled three hits Wednesday as Coupeville rolled to a 12-2 win. (John Fisken photo)

It was the perfect cap to the league season.

With nine of 14 players rapping out a hit Wednesday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad rolled host Port Townsend 12-2 to claim its fourth win in the past five games.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 6-3 in Olympic League play, 11-8 overall.

CHS finishes second behind Klahowya (8-1, 10-5) and well ahead of Chimacum (3-5, 5-7) and Port Townsend (0-8, 0-13), who still have a game to play against each other.

The Wolves wrap the regular season Thursday with a trip to Langley to face non-conference foe South Whidbey (4 PM), before opening the playoffs with a home game May 9 against Bellevue Christian.

While everyone chipped in Wednesday, sophomore hurler Dane Lucero was the focal point, tossing a complete game and giving up no earned runs while using just 60 pitches.

He greatly aided his cause at the plate, going 3-3 with two doubles, a single and a walk.

Taylor Consford and Clay Reilly backed Lucero up with two hits apiece (Reilly crunched a double), while Hunter Smith, Aiden Crimmins, Joey Lippo, Kory Score, Nick Etzell and Matt Hilborn each added a base-knock.

Coupeville put the game away early, jumping out to a 7-0 lead after an inning and a half of play and never looked back.

The game was cracked open with a five-run second inning, a rally that started with two outs and no one on base.

After the RedHawks whiffed the first two Wolves, CHS responded with a string of hits, a couple of walks and a timely error off of a shot bashed by Lippo.

That plated two, coming on the heels of a two-run single from Consford and an RBI hit by Reilly.

Port Townsend scraped out two runs of its own in the second, but Coupeville put the hammer down, scoring three in the fourth and another two in the fifth to end the game early thanks to the mercy rule.

In the fourth, the Wolves got back-to-back RBI doubles from Lucero and Reilly, before Lippo slapped a hit to plate another run.

Lucero put Coupeville over the top in the fifth with his final hit, a two-run single.

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   Dane Lucero went the distance Friday, tossing a three-hit gem in a 9-1 win at Port Townsend. (John Fisken photo)

Maybe Dane Lucero is the new CJ Smith.

Like the former Wolf ace, Lucero, a Coupeville High School sophomore, adopts an easy-going style on the mound, disguising his emotions beneath a placid exterior.

Add in the fact he’s been virtually untouchable when taking the ball this season, and the comparisons grow.

Friday, Lucero was flawless for much of the game, with especially effective moments at the beginning and end, pitching the Wolves to a 9-1 win at Port Townsend.

The conference victory, coming in Chris Smith’s debut as varsity head coach, lifts Coupeville to 1-1 in Olympic League play, 5-3 overall.

CHS sits in a tie with Chimacum (1-1), a game off of Klahowya (2-0), with seven league clashes left on the schedule.

Port Townsend (0-2) is currently mired in the cellar.

Smith, who moved up from his position as JV coach after Marc Aparicio resigned Thursday due to work conflicts, got stellar stuff from his hurler.

Lucero retired the first nine RedHawk hitters, faced the minimum batters through four innings, and closed the game by striking out the side in the seventh.

He scattered three hits and two walks, was never in trouble, and whiffed six batters total.

“We had solid pitching from Dane,” Smith said. “We played solid, error-free, defense behind him.

“Defensively, Matt Hilborn (SS) and Joey Lippo (2B) were sharp making a number of plays behind Dane. Good, clean baseball game.”

Coupeville gave Lucero plenty to work with, with six players combining to rap out nine hits as the Wolves scored in five of seven innings.

The Wolves plated two in the first, three in the second and another in the third as they built a 6-0 lead.

Another run in the top of the sixth stretched the margin to 7-0, and, after Port Townsend scraped out its only run in the bottom of the inning, CHS added two more in the seventh.

In a game where eight of Coupeville’s nine hits were singles, the biggest blow was an RBI triple off the bat of senior Taylor Consford.

Matt Hilborn, Julian Welling and Consford had two hits apiece, Jake Hoagland, Lucero and Jake Pease also punched singles and Lippo pilfered home off of a double steal.

The Wolves play five of their next six against non-conference foes (facing Chimacum at home April 12), then make their playoff run with six straight league games to close the regular season.

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   Jake Hoagland made a sensational late-game catch in deep left field Monday to preserve Coupeville’s win over 2A Bremerton. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland walked on to the Coupeville High School baseball diamond Monday a mere mortal.

He sprinted off it a bonafide legend.

Running full-tilt, glove out, carrying the hopes and dreams of every fan in attendance, the CHS junior made a sensational catch along the line in deep left field, saving a game that the Wolves, somehow, against all reason, won.

It’s not easy for a small 1A school to beat a large 2A school like Bremerton, and the odds get even more remote when your team gets no-hit and the visitors load the bases not once, not twice, but four times — twice with no outs.

And yet, somewhere just past 6 PM Monday, in one of the most improbable wins ever seen on the prairie, Coupeville danced off with a 2-1 non-conference victory.

The second straight win for the Wolves, it lifts them to 2-2 on the season.

How they got there is a testament to guts, sheer will power, poise in the spotlight and a whole lot of luck.

In other words, the kind of story the Wolf faithful will still be talking about when these players return for their 20-year reunion.

It’s a tale of three pitchers who bent, but didn’t break.

A defense that came up with big plays, and then capped it with one of the greatest snags ever pulled off by a guy in a Coupeville uniform.

It’s Nick Etzell salsa dancing around the catcher, Joey Lippo running for home like a mad man and Kory Score using every inch of his towering frame not once, but twice, to pull off web gems that make a coach’s heart flip-flop in joy.

In the end, it’s the tale of a team that flat-out refused to lose, and, by doing so, made a dramatic statement to all their future foes.

We will find a way. We will always find a way.

The game started with the debut of an escape artist, as Coupeville hurler Dane Lucero loaded the bags in the top of the first before half of the fans had even settled into their seats.

Channeling the inner calmness shown so often in the past by former Wolf pitcher CJ Smith, Lucero didn’t seem to notice, or at least didn’t seem to acknowledge, the danger he was in.

Suddenly tossing BB’s, the Wolf sophomore whiffed back-to-back Knights, then got the #6 hitter to whack a soft liner towards the gap between second and first.

Coupeville’s second-baseman, Lippo, was coming hard from the left side, but first-baseman Score, easily Coupeville’s tallest infielder, reached up, up and away and speared the ball over his head to preserve the shutout.

Lippo immediately repaid his teammate by scoring the first run of the game in the bottom half of the inning.

After getting plunked by a wayward pitch, he went to second when Clay Reilly walked, then tore around third and plated himself on a fielder’s choice by Lucero.

Bremerton blunted any further rallying by catching Reilly a step off of third, but the damage was done, and Lucero had a run to work with.

And one run was all he would need.

Lucero had runners on in every inning, but denied Bremerton at every opportunity.

After stranding a runner at first in the second inning, he had runners at second and third in the third inning, but escaped by punching out a Knight hitter on a change-up, one of seven strikeouts he recorded on the afternoon.

Cue the fourth and cue the hint of trouble (again), as Bremerton used a pair of walks and two dropped balls, which allowed a strikeout victim to reach first, to juice the bags.

Stifling a small yawn, Lucero reared back, whiffed the next two hitters, then got a third to hit a towering can of corn that Lippo retreated under and snared in shallow right-center.

Desperate to pad its 1-0 lead, Coupeville came out aggressive in the bottom of the fourth, and it paid off.

After Lucero eked out a walk, Nick Etzell bolted from the bench to pinch-run and immediately went to work.

He stole second, threw off the Bremerton hurler enough that the Knight pitcher was called for a balk — sending Etzell to third — then skipped home on a sac fly off the bat of Matt Hilborn.

The throw came in hot, but pulled the catcher slightly to the left of the base-path, and an alert Etzell twisted his body into a pretzel to evade the tag, stamping home plate as he did so.

Boasting a 2-0 lead — still without an official hit in the book — Coupeville went from the low-key Lucero to the big, bad bull himself, Julian Welling, in the fifth.

Striding on to the field after missing some time with arm issues, the Wolf junior brought the heat, and continued Lucero’s balancing act.

Loading the bags, he got out of it by ramming the ball right down the ensuing batter’s throats, striking out two of the final three sluggers to keep Bremerton scoreless.

The Knights weren’t going to go down easily, however, as they again loaded the bases in the sixth, finally notching a run when Welling came a wee bit too inside and plunked a Bremerton hitter who, it could be argued, made very little effort to get out of the way.

With the visitor’s dugout suddenly rockin’, and Welling exiting after pointing at his elbow, CHS coach Marc Aparicio turned to Hilborn to close out a third game.

At that exact moment, deep in left field, Hoagland snapped to attention, pointed up at a twinkling light in the heavens above and silently mouthed, “I’m gonna be just like that, a bright, shining star.”

Hey, I was there! You weren’t! If I say it happened just that way, who are you to disagree?

The pitch left Hilborn’s arm, bat met ball and a towering fly that was descending dangerously fast went screaming into the great wide open.

Find pay-dirt, and the odds of that happening were tremendous, and two, possibly three runs score.

On a day when Coupeville couldn’t buy an official hit, that had doom written all over it.

Except a hero was being born, a legend being crafted with every stride, as Hoagland raced towards the rapidly-falling ball.

A half-muted wail started to rise from the bleachers, as every Wolf fan sucked in their breath and prayed to whomever or whatever they pray to, and then all the pent-up emotion came rushing out in one scream of pure, unadulterated joy as ball met glove and glove held on for dear life.

If Lucero is low-key, Hoagland ain’t far behind, but the power of his smile beaming across the prairie as he hustled in to get properly roughed-up by his joyous teammates told the tale.

Something deep inside Bremerton died at that moment, and it showed in the seventh, as Hilborn gunned them down one-two-three, perhaps while humming “Enter Sandman” to himself.

Two K’s, wrapped around Score stretching out to his full height (6’2 or so) to pull down a throw at first and the improbable, memorable celebration was on.

The reality is, dark skies, moderately cold weather and a threat of rain limited the crowd, but years from now, everyone in Coupeville will claim to have been there to see this game unfold.

And hey, in spirit they were.

Every time Lucero danced with the devil in the pale moonlight and escaped, every time Welling burnt a fastball into Taylor Consford’s catchers mitt, and, especially, in the moment Hoagland became a bright, shining star, every Wolf, past, present and future, was smiling down on that diamond.

One team, one town, one unbelievable win.

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Brenden Gilbert

   Brenden Gilbert lashed a key RBI single as Coupeville’s JV edged La Conner 9-8 Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Dane Lucero (John Fisken photo)

   Dane Lucero, seen here in an earlier game, saved the game with an alert defensive play on the mound.

It ended with a bang.

To the joy of the road fans, that bang was the ball smacking in to Wolf pitcher Dane Lucero’s glove and staying put, wrapping a wild game that finished minutes before the sun set Friday.

As Lucero snatched a La Conner liner out of midair and squeezed it tightly for the final out, stranding the tying run 90 feet from home, the rest of the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad went bonkers behind him.

And why not?

Having held on for a 9-8 win, the young Wolves are now a flawless 3-0 on the season.

They’ll get a chance to quickly test that, with a JV-only doubleheader in Oak Harbor Saturday (11 AM) against the Wildcats C-Team, which is 0-2.

Playing a four-inning game in La Conner, Coupeville built a big lead, gave it all almost back, pulled back ahead, then weathered a final storm (and a scoreboard operator who took nearly an hour to credit the Wolves with what turned out to be the winning run).

For one half inning, the CHS young guns looked like world beaters, raining down six runs in the top of the first.

Taking advantage of a wild Brave hurler, who plunked two of the first three batters he faced, the Wolves scored twice on wild pitches and another time on a bases-loaded walk to Cameron Toomey-Stout.

Lucero lofted a sac fly to plate another run, while Nick Etzell and Brenden Gilbert also delivered RBI hits.

Etzell lashed a shot down the third-base line that hooked and hooked and hooked some more, but somehow hit pay dirt a millimeter inside fair territory, skipping away for a standup double.

While Gilbert’s base knock wasn’t as dramatic, it was pretty, a frozen rope to dead center for an RBI single.

After Lucero retired La Conner on just three pitches in the bottom half of the inning, garnering two ground-outs and a fly-out before Joey Lippo, making his season catching debut behind the plate, even got settled, the game looked like a blow-out.

It wasn’t to be, though.

First, the scoreboard operator went AWOL (maybe on a dinner run?), failing to post Coupeville’s sixth run until moments before the end of the game, then La Conner started to rally.

Five runs in the second made things tight, and let the locals think they were in a tie game.

As suddenly as both offenses exploded, they went largely silent, other than Julian Welling beating out an infield single for the Wolves, only to take a header over the first-base bag and bounce his noggin off the infield.

He was more sheepish than seriously hurt, however.

“Oh, it was sooooo nice that it entertained all you guys,” he said, with a deep sigh, a grin and much eye rolling as he obtained an ice pack later.

Coupeville stretched its lead back out to 9-5 with three runs in the top of the fourth, all of them coming home on passed balls, as a new, but no less wild, La Conner pitcher threw the ball everywhere but his catcher’s glove.

Lucero, Etzell and Cameron Dahl trotted home with the decisive runs.

With the sun dipping and both teams agreeing to end the game after four innings, the Wolves decided to make coach Chris Smith sweat things out a bit.

A single, a double, a walk and an error brought home one run, but a pop-up and a huge strike-out fired by Lucero seemed to mute things.

La Conner had something left, though, with the potential final batter cracking a two-run single up the middle to pull the Braves within a run.

With their fans suddenly, finally, making some noise to rival the always-boisterous Wolf cheering section, La Conner swung from the heels with runners at the corners.

Bat hit ball, a roar went up and BOOM, Lucero alertly flipped his mitt skyward, snatched the liner and a second, much louder, roar went up from Coupeville’s side of the bleachers.

Undefeated and on to Oak Harbor.

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