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Posts Tagged ‘Ethan Marx’

Ethan Marx (John Fisken photos)

   Ethan Marx fires in a ball while patrolling the outfield during a CHS baseball practice. (John Fisken photos)

Genna Wright

Genna Wright, surveying her kingdom.

They’re keeping the family business strong.

Ethan Marx and Genna Wright, who celebrate a joint birthday today, are both the youngest in families with a strong Coupeville athletic tradition.

Marx, who just days ago delivered a three-run double to propel the Wolf baseball squad to its first league title in 25 years, follows on the heels of older sister Haley, a star soccer and basketball player at CHS.

Wright is the latest in a long line of super-talented folks from her family, a diverse group that includes a host of older siblings and cousins.

She’s only a 7th grader, and is the youngest birthday celebrator we’ve featured in this series, but she’s already turning heads.

A fiery, fun-lovin’ competitor, no matter the sport (and she plays just about everything plus spends a considerable amount of time on the slopes), Genna takes most closely after older sister Sarah.

Both play at 120 MPH, crashing around and through teammates when necessary and are a lot of fun, on and off the court.

Marx may be a little quieter, but he’s just as dedicated, and, obviously, doesn’t shy away from the spotlight of the big stage.

As the duo hit their cake day, we just want to take a moment to wish them both happy birthday and all the best for their (very bright) futures.

You’re both legacies, and you’re upholding that legacy extremely well.

Good on you.

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Ethan Marx

   Ethan Marx socked a two-out, three-run double Friday, sparking Coupeville to a 10-0 win and its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photo)

One of us was smart enough to get Sylvia Hurlburt to run around and have everyone sign a line-up card to commemorate the moment. (David Svien photo)

   A little slice of autographed prairie history, thanks to Sylvia Hurlburt. (David Svien photo)

CJ Smith

   CJ Smith, seen here in an earlier game, was unflappable Friday, whiffing 10 and shutting out Port Townsend. (Fisken photo)

Now, you’re gonna think I’m making this up, but it really, truly happened.

As I pulled my hunk o’ junk car into the parking lot at the Coupeville High School baseball field Friday afternoon, the final song playing on the radio was “We are the Champions.”

Seriously. No, seriously.

As the soaring strains of Freddy Mercury poured out the window and swirled away into the suddenly gusty prairie wind, there was no doubt.

Today was gonna be historical.

Now, of course, there was an actual baseball game yet to be played, one which would prove surprisingly competitive for long enough to make local fans feel their collars tighten around their necks, but the radio gods had spoken.

And their will be done, apparently, because somewhere around 5:30 PM West coast time, having drilled Port Townsend 10-0, the Wolves were exactly that — champions … of the world.

Or, at the very least, of the 1A Olympic League, which is all the world Coupeville needs right now.

A flawless 7-0 in league play, 10-8 overall, the Wolves will hang a league championship banner in baseball for the first time since 1991.

There are two games left on the regular season schedule — a road game at Chimacum (2-5, 5-10) Monday, then the home finale against Klahowya (5-2, 14-4) Wednesday — but they are largely academic.

Win, lose or draw, Coupeville is the #1 seed out of the Olympic League and automatically advances to the double-elimination part of the district tourney May 10-14.

Two victories there and they’re off to state.

But before they could focus on that, the Wolves had to put the hammer down on a pesky RedHawks squad that is going through a season from Hell.

Win-less, and unable to play a single home game this season due to the condition of its field, Port Townsend came to Whidbey with nothing to lose, and one shot at making things seem semi-alright for a day at least.

Pull the upset, prevent Coupeville from clinching, punch a hole in the soul of Wolf Nation — that was the unspoken goal.

And, for 20 minutes or so, the RedHawks looked as good as they have looked at any point this season.

They weren’t scoring against unflappable Wolf hurler CJ Smith, but they also weren’t giving up any runs, playing spotless defense and keeping the game scoreless into the bottom of the third.

Coupeville had a shot at changing the numbers on the (suddenly functioning) scoreboard in the first, when Hunter Smith slapped a lead-off single to right, then took two bags on a sac bunt by his big brother.

But he died at third, metaphorically speaking of course, when Cole Payne’s towering pop fly was snagged and then the RedHawk first baseman made an eye-popping mid-air snag on a laser off of the bat of Julian Welling.

Port Townsend had runners on in each of the first three innings, but CJ Smith, who may be the calmest Wolf to ever toe the pitching rubber at CHS, stranded them each time.

His pitches popping in Payne’s glove, he punched-out six RedHawks on strikeouts, while lil’ bro Hunter backed him up with the defensive play of the game.

With a runner at first and no outs in the top of the third, Hunter Smith went so deep into the hole at short he could practically touch the fence behind third base, snared a hot shot, and, spinning like a ballet dancer, fired to second to nail the runner by less than a step.

Not content to stop there, Hunter then went out in the bottom of the inning and created the only run his brother would need to win.

With two outs and no one on base, the junior Smith beat out an infield single, stole second, stole third, then scampered home when his quicksilver moves flustered the RedHawk catcher into skipping his throw to third into left field.

Port Townsend, to its credit, didn’t collapse, and juiced the bags in the fourth, even after Wolf third baseman Matt Hilborn made a stunning throw to nail the lead-off hitter.

All eyes turned towards CJ Smith, who was so calm, he looked like he was asleep on the mound.

Now, it is possible emotions roil deeply through the senior, that he is a bubbling cauldron of anxiety. If he is, he has hidden it beautifully for three years.

Boom. Strike one. Slight movement of the eyes.

Boom. Strike two. Slight twitch of the mouth.

Boom. Strike three. Inning over.

The faintest whisper of a smile, 99.4% hidden by keeping his head down, cap tilted against what was now steady gusts of wind rumbling across the prairie.

Having escaped from the precipice, Coupeville decided it was time to stop giving its fans a collective coronary and truly embrace its destiny.

Cue the Hollywood ending.

A one-run lead, bases loaded, two outs in the bottom of the fourth and your #8 hitter at the plate.

Pinch-runner Ty Eck bounced on third base (he was running for Welling, who cracked a one-out single to right), Kory Score glared at the pitcher from second (he reached on an error) and Clay Reilly (a walk) leisurely drifted off of first.

Enter Ethan Marx and exit the final hope for the RedHawks.

Launching a bomb to straight-away center field that sliced through the wind gusts, then rode one sideways at an opportune moment, the junior cleared the bases and etched his name into Wolf lore.

With some room to breathe at 4-0 (though his demeanor never changed) CJ Smith was brutal in the top of the fifth, inducing a grounder to Score at first, then cracking off K’s #9 and #10.

The bottom of the fifth perfectly encapsulated two seasons going in different directions.

Needing six runs to force an early end to the game via the 10-run mercy rule, Coupeville sent nine batters to the plate and every one of them reached base safely.

Hunter Smith’s third single of the game launched things, Payne’s two-run single up the gut sealed things, and yet the runs kept coming.

An RBI single from Score made it 7-0, a hard shot off a glove from Reilly plated #8, an infield single from Dane Lucero that burrowed into the grass and refused to come back out sent #9 home and then 25 years of championship drought ended on one swing.

Hilborn, a mere freshman, swatted a chopper into the gap between second and first, sending Gabe Wynn barreling across home and the dream was a reality.

As the Wolves stormed the field, as their fans celebrated in the stands, as news began to flash across town and then across the USA, thanks to our modern digital world, the prairie breeze continued to blow.

And, if you listened carefully, you could hear it written on the wind.

“We are the champions … of the world!!”

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Birthday trio (clockwise from top left) Ethan Marx, Maddy Neitzel and Dawn Brock.

Birthday trio (clockwise from top left) Ethan Marx, Maddy Neitzel and Dawn Brock. (John Fisken and Dawn Brock photos)

Three days, three birthdays, triple the birthday cake (I assume).

Wolf Nation is on constant cake alert for a couple of days, as two Wolf athletes and a soccer mom who is one of the school’s most vocal supporters, all hit milestones.

Saturday, it’s CHS sophomore Ethan Marx, who has played tennis and baseball and is following in the successful footsteps of big sis Haley.

He’s already making his own name, however, nabbing Most Improved when the Wolf netters handed out awards in the fall.

Roll into Sunday and Dawn Brock, the ultimate soccer homer (and I mean that in a good way), celebrates.

She’s given Coupeville two strong soccer players, Nathan and Tanner Kircher, but it’s her vocal stylings that truly set her apart.

Loud ‘n proud, and fiercely devoted to her all of her soccer guys (whether they be blood relatives or not), she can scare a ref and spur on her team at the same time, without missing a beat.

If other CHS athletic teams were smart, they’d rent her services for their games.

Cause no one (and I mean NO ONE) out cheers Ms. Brock.

With Monday, school will be back in session and our birthday trifecta will come to a close with the coronation of irrepressible cheer sensation Maddy Neitzel.

The Wolf junior jumped into cheer this year feet first and made a huge splash.

She might not be the biggest, but she cheers from her heart, and that part of her is epic-sized.

Whether flying through the air or working the sidelines, Maddy is a burst of sunshine on even the drizzliest, foggiest Friday night and the Wolves are lucky to have her.

Even when she wasn’t cheering in uniform, she always showed up for basketball games with Jazmine Franklin, there to support their friends like Wiley Hesselgrave and Ryan Griggs as they played.

Neitzel, Brock and Marx are involved in different sports, but all three are united by their love for what they do.

They represent Coupeville well, and I hope their birthdays are as great as they are.

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CJ Smith, about to take off for another stolen base. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CJ Smith, about to take off for another stolen base. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Ethan Marx cleared the bases with a three-run single in the first Saturday.

Ethan Marx cleared the bases with a three-run single in the first Saturday.

Cole Payne slams the door shut on the Falcons.

Cole Payne slams the door shut on the Falcons.

It was over quick.

The Coupeville High School JV baseball squad came out swinging the big sticks Saturday morning, pounding away for seven runs in the first two innings on its way to an 8-5 win over visiting South Whidbey.

The home game, coming on a cold, crisp, thankfully non-windy day on the prairie, was the first of the season for the young Wolves, and the first JV baseball game in several seasons for CHS.

With a pack of freshmen having turned out this year, Coupeville coach Willie Smith has two squads for the first time in the last four seasons.

And, with all of the varsity players on hand to offer frequent and vocal encouragement to their younger counterparts, the continued growth of the CHS program took another big step forward.

The offensive attack was on-point from the first batter for the Wolves, as sophomore Cole Payne thumped a lead-off double to straight-away center field.

After a passed ball moved Payne to third, he skipped home on an RBI single from CJ Smith, who promptly stole second himself. Walks to Kyle Bodamer and Clay Reilly juiced the bags, and then the runs really started coming.

Gabe Wynn slapped an RBI single up the middle to give Coupeville a 2-1 lead, then fellow frosh Ethan Marx unloaded with a shot down the right field line, clearing the bases.

The third guy coming home, Wynn hit the ground hard, sliding around a sweeping tag from the Falcon catcher and smacking his hand emphatically on the plate with his team’s fifth run.

The Wolves added two more in the second, when junior Korban Korzan crunched an RBI double, then later scored on a passed ball. Wynn capped the scoring in the fourth with an RBI on a sacrifice fly.

With CHS not having a full nine-man JV roster, Korzan and fellow junior Aaron Trumbull came down from the varsity to get brief stints in on the mound. The duo combined with freshman Jonathan Thurston and Payne to share mound time.

Payne, channeling his inner Mariano Rivera, slammed the door shut in the seventh. With the bases loaded, he recorded back-to-back strikeouts to end the threat and earn the save.

The game marked the high school debut of Wynn, Thurston, Reilly, Marx, Jimmy Myers and Aiden Crimmins.

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