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Marc

   First-year CHS coach Marc Aparicio is one win away from getting his alma mater its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, seen here making a play

   Hunter Smith, seen here making a play in an earlier game, was superb on the mound and at the plate in a 10-2 win at Klahowya Wednesday.

The miracle ride continues.

Every pundit, every poll, every prognosticator said the same thing, and, so far, they’ve all been flat-out wrong.

Klahowya, the defending 1A Olympic League baseball champs, prepared for league play with a tough schedule full of 2A schools and did really well, earning a ranking as high as #3 in the state polls.

Then, they stepped right into the path of an oncoming train called the Wolf Express.

Exploding for seven runs in the sixth inning Wednesday, Coupeville ran away with a 10-2 win on the road and moved within a step of not only dethroning the Eagles, but winning its first baseball league title since 1991.

The Wolves have now taken two straight from Klahowya and sit at 6-0 in league play, 9-8 overall.

That gives them a two-game lead with three to play over the Eagles (4-2, 13-4), while Chimacum (2-4, 5-9) and Port Townsend (0-6, 0-13) root around down in the cellar.

Since it now owns the tiebreaker over Klahowya, Coupeville needs just one win in its final three games to clinch the title and an automatic berth in the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs.

First up is Port Townsend, which visits Whidbey Friday, with the first pitch at 4 PM.

After that comes a trip to Chimacum Monday, May 2 and a home regular-season finale against Klahowya Thursday, May 5.

The Wolves have put themselves in position to do what no CHS diamond squad has in 25 years thanks to one huge reason — their ability to get something out of everyone in the lineup.

“Every player performed when called upon, and we switched things up quite a bit. Next man up!!,” said first-year Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

“The highlight was “team.” Great job had by all of the kids,” he added. “Very proud of them – still have things to work on, but a great win. The kids are on fire!!!”

Coupeville used 14 players in the game, with eight of them scoring.

Sophomore Hunter Smith and freshman Matt Hilborn, who combined for the game’s first run, both crossed the plate twice to pace the attack.

With the game scoreless in the third, Coupeville finally broke through, thanks to some rough defense by the suddenly-rattled Eagles.

After only having one runner in the first two innings, the Wolves got Hilborn aboard on a one-out error by Klahowya’s third-baseman, then brought him around when Smith’s bunt was thrown into the outfield by the Eagle pitcher.

Klahowya countered with its own scratched-out run in the third, but after that could get next to nothing off Smith, who was superb.

Getting the nod on the mound after older brother CJ won the first meeting between the two squads, Hunter, AKA “Captain Cool,” whiffed five Eagles and was rarely in danger.

With Aparicio playing the mad scientist in the dugout, Coupeville took the lead with two runs in the top of the fifth.

Freshman pinch-hitter Dane Lucero eked out a crucial walk, then was replaced with sophomore speedster Nick Etzell, who used “some smart base running” to bust the tie.

“After that small switch our team was on fire,” Aparicio said. “Lots of stolen bases, we had great timely bunts and great base running overall.”

Up 3-1, the Wolves blew the game wide open with a 12-batter, seven-run assault in the top of the sixth.

Hunter Smith, CJ Smith, Kory Score, Gabe Wynn, Clay Reilly, Ty Eck and Hilborn all stamped on home as Coupeville put together its best offensive stretch of the season under the biggest spotlight.

With the game largely on ice, the Wolves went to Julian Welling to slam the door, and the sophomore didn’t fail, working a little of the ol’ Mariano Rivera magic in the seventh.

Perhaps appropriately, the game ended on an unassisted double play from Hunter Smith, the perfect cap to a remarkable game from the rising star.

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Hunter Smith smacked three singles, collected 3 RBi and struck out

   Hunter Smith smacked three singles and collected 3 RBI at the plate Thursday, while also whiffing 10 on the mound. (John Fisken photo)

It was brutal and efficient, just the way it needed to be.

Raining down 11 hits (from eight different batters) the Coupeville High School baseball team rolled to its fourth straight league win Thursday, crushing visiting Port Townsend 15-4.

The win, the fifth in their last seven games, lifted the Wolves to 7-7 overall, 4-0 in the 1A Olympic League.

It also kept them a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (2-1, 11-3) in the race for a league title, and well clear of Chimacum (1-3, 3-8) and Port Townsend (0-3, 0-10).

Thursday’s showdown could have easily been a “trap game,” with CHS coming off of a huge upset of Klahowya only to turn around and face a win-less team.

To Coupeville’s credit, other than one sloppy inning, it never played that way, though.

The Wolves came out with sharp pitching from sophomore hurler Hunter Smith, who whiffed 10 RedHawks, and aggressive hitting from the get-go.

Coupeville scored in every inning, notching three in the first and two more in the second before exploding for a game-deciding eight-spot in the third.

The third-inning burst came at the exact right moment, as the Wolves early 5-0 lead was cut to 5-4 when their defense crumbled a bit in the top of that inning.

Four CHS errors, a lively mix of bobbled balls and throws that skipped away, helped keep the RedHawks alive, and then a huge two-run single back up the middle got the visiting fans in a momentary tizzy.

Hunter Smith was having none of it, however, as the unflappable one calmly ended the inning with another punch-out, stranding two runners.

For an agonizing moment or two, the game tottered on the precipice.

And then the Wolves attacked.

Sending 14 batters to the plate in the third, Coupeville used six walks and five hits in the inning to savage Port Townsend beyond recognition.

Nick Etzell and Hunter Smith drew bases-loaded walks to pad the lead slightly, before CJ Smith stroked a two-run single and Cole Payne lashed an RBI double.

The Wolves weren’t done, though, as Kory Score drove a two-run single to center-field and Clay Reilly looped an RBI single into the gap to stretch the lead all the way out to 13-4.

Running aggressively, even with a large lead, Coupeville tacked on two more runs in the fourth to put the ten-run rule into effect, and with Hunter Smith unhittable down the stretch, there was no hope for the RedHawks.

Coupeville had opened the game with three in the first.

Both Smith brothers came sprinting home when Payne’s bunt was thrown into right field, then pinch-runner Joey Lippo trotted across the plate on a ground-out off the bat of Julian Welling.

The Wolves tacked on two in the second, with Reilly dropping a beautiful bunt single to kick things off.

The junior outfielder stole second, took third on a single from birthday boy Gabe Wynn and came home on a passed ball.

Wynn was plated by Hunter Smith, smashing one of his three singles on the afternoon.

Reilly had two hits, while CJ Smith, Payne, Score, Ethan Marx, Wynn and Lippo all chipped in with one apiece.

While Welling was one of only two starters not to get a hit, that was only because the sophomore third baseman got flat out robbed. Twice.

After his first-inning RBI (which came on an epically long at-bat, as he fouled off pitch after pitch to stay alive), he came within an inch or two of a pair of extra-base hits.

Welling smashed a long shot down the left field line that was somehow run down, then had a wicked liner to third get snared by a RedHawk who jumped at just the right moment.

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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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Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times

   Matt Hilborn, seen here talking to CHS coach Marc Aparicio, reached base three times Thursday as Coupeville held off Chimacum 7-6. (John Fisken photo)

Alone in first place.

That’s where the Coupeville High School baseball squad finds itself after pulling out a nail-biter on the road Thursday afternoon.

Getting key hits in the late going when they needed it most, the Wolves edged host Chimacum 7-6 to improve to 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Coupeville (5-7 overall) sits a half game up on Klahowya (1-0, 9-2), while Port Townsend (0-1, 0-7) and Chimacum (0-2, 2-6) are fighting in the cellar.

The Wolves and Eagles face-off on Whidbey this coming Tuesday, Apr. 19.

Coupeville set itself up nicely for that first-place match-up by staring Chimacum down late.

Having surrendered a four-run lead, the Wolves rallied to score twice in the top of the sixth to retake control of the game.

Freshman Matt Hilborn kicked things off by reaching base on a one-out error, before promptly stealing second.

He then came around to break a 5-5 tie on Hunter Smith’s resounding RBI double.

After CJ Smith moved his lil’ bro over to third, Cole Payne stroked a seeing-eye RBI single for an insurance run that would prove hugely valuable.

Chimacum scrambled for a run in the bottom of the seventh to make things interesting, but Coupeville hurler CJ Smith coaxed a ground-out to Hilborn to cap the win.

Coupeville had looked like it would run away in the early going, plating five in the top of the first, as CJ Smith, Payne, Dane Lucero, Julian Welling and Clay Reilly all zipped across home plate.

After picking up a run of their own in the bottom of the first, the Cowboys put together a four-run rally in the fourth to get back in the game.

“They battled back and we helped them a bit throwing around,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

After that, though, the Wolves were on lock-down, with CJ Smith going the distance with a strong, 105-pitch performance on the mound and his defense stepping up behind him.

Hunter had a great defensive game,” Aparicio said. “Joey (Lippo) and Kory (Score) had solid defense, also.

“It was a great team effort,” he added. “Very proud of the kids for playing strong. Great start to the league games.”

Hilborn and Welling paced the Wolves with two hits apiece, with the freshman third baseman reaching base all three times he came to bat.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith was flawless through four innings Monday, but got stung by a big hit in the fifth. (John Fisken photo)

Things went really, really well … until they went really, really badly.

Through four innings Monday, ace hurler Hunter Smith was humming, Matt Hilborn and CJ Smith were playing inspired defense behind him and the Coupeville High School baseball squad was on its way to its third straight win.

Then one ball dropped in and things fell apart big time.

A one-run lead became a four-run deficit and CHS never recovered, sliding down hill to absorb a 9-1 loss at the hands of visiting Cedarcrest.

The non-conference defeat, coming to one of its former longtime Cascade Conference rivals, dropped Coupeville to 2-2 on the season.

The Wolves will get an immediate chance to bounce back, however, as they host Sequim Tuesday (3:45 PM).

Playing under dark skies that parted and let the sun in for a long spell Monday, Coupeville came out strongly.

Hunter Smith was locked-in, not surrendering a hit until the fourth, and even then it was just a measly single.

Hilborn, playing like a seasoned vet and not a freshman in just his fourth game, was dynamic at third, making a huge throw from deep in the hole for a second-inning out, then spearing a sinking liner at the last second to end the fourth inning.

After rapping out two hits in the first — singles from CJ Smith and Dane Lucero — but stranding both runners, Coupeville broke through in the second to take the lead.

Gabe Wynn walked, took second on a passed ball, then strolled into third when Jake Hoagland lashed a single to dead center.

A moment later both runners were on the move again, as the second base ump called a balk on the Cedarcrest hurler, plating Wynn.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, they couldn’t really break things open, stranding Hoagland in the second, then leaving two more runners on in the third.

Cedarcrest escaped unscathed in the third when their shortstop took off like a rocket, covered half the infield and went airborne, spearing a high foul ball in front of the third base dugout for the final out.

Clinging to a 1-0 lead, Hunter Smith needed to be flawless, and he was, until the fifth.

A walk, a sacrifice bunt that turned into a infield hit when the ensuing throw pulled Lucero off the bag at first and a perfectly executed drag bunt for a true single juiced the bags with no outs for Cedarcrest.

Hunter Smith bore down, striking out two of the next three hitters, though a walk in the middle forced home a run to knot things at 1-1.

Hoping to escape relatively unscathed, Coupeville got stung.

A Cedarcrest batter lofted a long, slicing fly ball towards the corner in right, and though Wolf freshman Ty Eck made a long run for the ball, his leap at the end came up just a fraction short.

The ball spiked downward, caught a little patch of fair territory and shot off, letting all three runners on base come around.

Making matters worse, when the throw back in went astray, the hitter came flying home as well.

Hunter Smith gunned down the next batter to end the rally, but the damage was done.

Unable to get much of anything going offensively after that — CJ Smith reached twice on errors, but that was it — the Wolves gave up another four runs after switching Lucero out for Hunter Smith on the mound.

While he wasn’t happy with the loss, Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio could appreciate what his squad accomplished for four innings against a big 2A school.

Hunter pitched amazing out there,” he said. “Just one bad inning and things kind of spiraled out of control on us.

“We battled strongly, though,” Aparicio added. “Matt did a great job at third and our outfield was very aggressive. I’ll take us trying to dive on a ball with two outs any time.

“I’m very proud of the guys. We’ll get right back at it.”

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