Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Gavin Knoblich’

   It was then, late in the third inning of a mid-season game, that Gavin Knoblich began to contemplate the meaning of the universe. (John Fisken photos)

Hawthorne Wolfe streaks for home.

“Are you ready for the high, hard cheese, son? No, no, you’re not.”

“Get on my bat, ball!!”

Chelsea “Cool Rider” Prescott gets ready to slash.

“I believe I can fly and … crud.”

Well, I can’t read a schedule.

Somehow I missed the fact the Central Whidbey Babe Ruth baseball team was playing at home Tuesday, less than a mile from my house.

Thankfully, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken is more on top of things, and these pictures, captured as the Wolves bounced North Whidbey in a game called short by darkness, are courtesy him.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170516-Babe-Ruth-Coupeville-vs-North-Whidbey/

Read Full Post »

Gavin

  Gavin Knoblich, well-dressed man about town. (Photos courtesy Mariah Knoblich)

"Hey, mom! Mom! MOM! Mom mommy mom mom mom!"

“Hey, mom! Mom! MOM! Mom mommy mom mom mom!”

Aaron Wright no longer anchors the line for the Coupeville High School football squad, but his impact lingers long after he hung up the uniform.

As Gavin Knoblich prepares for his freshman year at CHS, one which will kick off with him taking his own place on the gridiron, Wright’s words and actions spur him on.

Aaron, he set an example for me to push myself to be like,” Knoblich said. “He taught me how to do more than go through the motions.”

A strong player at the middle school level, Knoblich intends to be a three-sport athlete for the Wolves, playing football, basketball and baseball.

While he enjoys all three, spring will herald the return of his favorite pastime.

“Baseball (is my favorite), because it’s the first sport I took seriously,” Knoblich said. “And I found I had some athletic ability.”

He wants to make an impact right out of the gate (“I want to have a chance to be starting JV in any of my sports”), but knows there’s always room for growth.

“I enjoy the accomplishment of learning,” he said. “I like the time I spend with my friends working on something fun together.”

Knoblich loves to be in the thick of things, and fire up his teammates.

While that’s a huge plus, he also realizes he needs to know when to go loud and proud, and when to dial it back and keep a calm head.

“I’m always trying to think ahead. I’m always trying to be positive for my teammates,” he said. “My weakness is my composure – my inner voice in the back of my head.”

Helping him find his center is mom Mariah, who has a huge impact on his day-to-day life.

“My mom, she is always there to calm me,” Knoblich said. “She gets me where I need to go, and she always smiles for me.”

Whether it’s camping and hunting with his dad Clint or hanging out at the beach and riding dirt bikes with friends, he has a reliable support group.

Along with his mother, his grandparents step up big to help anchor things.

“My Grammy and Poppy. They make things so easy by always helping my mom,” Knoblich said. “Getting me places when my mom can’t, and they always have awesome dinners for us.”

Read Full Post »

Daniel Olson, seen here last spring, has been on point for the Oak Harbor Babe Ruth baseball squad. (John Fisken photo)

   Daniel Olson, seen here last spring, has been on point for the Oak Harbor Babe Ruth baseball squad. (John Fisken photo)

The Gunslinger rules the land.

Daniel Olson (my former “manager” at David’s DVD Den) is one of several Coupeville athletes traveling up-Island this spring to play with Oak Harbor’s Babe Ruth baseball squad.

Ulrik Wells and Gavin Knoblich, who will be freshmen at CHS in the fall, are also on the team, while Olson, bound for 8th grade at CMS, is dazzling on the mound.

Firing BB’s from the hill, Olson torched Mount Vernon in his most recent game, tossing a three-hitter in a 15-3 romp.

He whiffed six, including taking down the side in order on just 13 pitches in the second inning.

Knoblich made a running shoestring catch in the same game, stranding two runners, as Oak Harbor avenged a one-run loss against the same squad two days earlier.

Oak Harbor is wrapping up its regular season and then heads off to the postseason, where a state champ will be crowned July 13 in Ephrata.

Read Full Post »

Mason Grove (Mindy Grove photo)

  Mason Grove (1) gets congratulations from his lil’ bro. (Mindy Grove photo)

Trystan

   Gavin Knoblich (72), Trystan Ford (74) and assistant coach Ron Wright confer during a break in the action. (Lisa Schlesner-Ford photos)

(Lisa Schlesner-Ford photos)

Having survived a mud bowl, the Wolves celebrate.

They were back in action, and hard at work.

A week after postponing a game due to a lack of eligible players, the Coupeville Middle School football squad returned Wednesday, taking the long ride down to Forks.

Once they got to the town that former CHS football coach Ron Bagby once owned as a young gridiron warrior, the Wolves battled through a mud bowl, falling 34-14.

Jean Lund-Olsen grabbed the spotlight, scoring a touchdown and snaring a pair of sacks on defense.

Not to be outdone, Mason Grove opened the scoring for Coupeville with a touchdown of his own, then tacked on PAT runs after both scores.

Sean Toomey-Stout was a beast on both sides of the ball, while the Wolf line — led by Trevor Bell, Trystan Ford and Gavin Knoblich, operated with great efficiency.

Coupeville returns to action next Wednesday, Oct. 28, when it travels to Port Townsend.

Read Full Post »

Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photo)

   Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photos)

CMS coach Bob Martin

   CMS coach Bob Martin (red hat) and his staff meet with their players after the game.

There is a wild beast stalking the sidelines.

Coupeville Middle School eighth grader Sean Toomey-Stout isn’t the biggest football player on the field, but he never stops attacking.

Quick, nimble, explosive and fearless, prone to pulling off highlight reel moves just like older brother Cameron, he was the main attraction Wednesday afternoon.

While Toomey-Stout’s heroics weren’t enough to lift the Wolves to a win — CMS fell 27-0 to visiting Stevens, a school that boasts 600+ students — his play, especially in the second half, gave Coupeville fans something to holler about.

After surrendering all 27 points in the first half, the Wolves clamped down on defense after the break, hitting with more aggression the further into the game they got.

Toomey-Stout single-handedly changed Stevens flow, forcing the visitors to go four and out on a series in which the rampaging Wolf made four consecutive tackles in the back field.

The most bone-crunching of the smack-downs came on an aborted pitch, as Toomey-Stout arrived at the exact moment the startled Stevens rusher felt the ball start to graze his fingertips.

A millisecond later, he was flat on his back, and asking if anyone saw the bus that had just flattened him.

Not content to star on just one side of the ball, Toomey-Stout followed up his defensive stand with Coupeville’s best offensive play of the game.

Taking a pitch from Wolf quarterback Dawson Houston, Sean the Shifty went on a twisty rampage, bolting through and around almost all 11 would-be tacklers before finally being hauled down 42 yards from where he started.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s lack of a battering ram in the red zone prevented them from scoring on the drive, as the Wolves stalled out at the five-yard line after Toomey-Stout’s rampage.

Stevens, however, had a battering ram. Well, more than just one.

Their running backs and a chunk of their line looked like they were already in high school, and they spent the early stages of the game just running straight at, and straight through, Coupeville’s undersized defenders.

With several players already dinged up, and others forced to play out of position, the Wolves opened the game tentative, before getting their second wind and an injection of steel into their collective spines.

The first jolt came from Toomey-Stout (who else?), but then Gavin Knoblich, Trystan Ford, Trevor Bell and Jean Lund-Olsen all stepped up with strong defensive plays of their own.

Houston, when he had time to set up and throw, looked sharp on several heaves, with his best target being Toomey-Stout.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts