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Posts Tagged ‘Jake Hoagland’

   Coupeville High School senior Jake Hoagland whacked an RBI double Saturday at the Battle of the Bats in Sumner. (John Fisken photo)

The Wolves stayed on the field a lot longer this time around.

Getting an immediate rematch with Honda Baseball at Battle of the Bats, Coupeville High School put up a much better fight Saturday than it did a day before.

While they still fell 9-4 at Sumner High School to the Bellevue select team, which boasts two former MLB players among its alumni, that was markedly better than Friday’s three-inning 15-0 loss.

This time around, the Wolves were tied 4-4 into the bottom of the fourth inning and stayed on the field until the game was called in the sixth inning due to a two-hour limit on games.

Now 1-2 on the weekend, CHS closes the tourney with a Sunday morning game at Bellarmine Prep against the PBC Zips, a select team from Seattle.

Having split two games in pool play Friday, the Wolves entered bracket play seeded #15 out of 25 teams, which set up the unexpected rematch with Honda Baseball.

After falling behind 4-0, Coupeville rallied in the top of the third, turning three hits into four runs of its own.

Gavin Knoblich started things off by eking out a walk.

The CHS sophomore moved to second on a sac bunt by Jake Pease, then scampered home when Matt Hilborn crunched an RBI double.

A walk to Joey Lippo kept things going, before Dane Lucero (a two-run single) and Jake Hoagland (an RBI double) came through with big base-knocks.

Hoagland tried to keep the fire burning extra bright, but was nailed at third while trying to stretch his hit into a triple.

While he departed the field, he took a rival with him after accidentally blowing up the guy’s ankle on the bang-bang play.

Coupeville had two more chances after its big rally, getting doubles from Thomas Anderson in the fourth and Lippo in the fifth.

Both blows turned out to be one-time shots, however, as both Wolf runners were left stranded on base.

Honda Baseball chipped away against CHS hurlers Austin Boesch, Jonathan Thurston and Hilborn, breaking through for two runs in the fourth and three more in the fifth.

The select squad, which will have a chance to play for a title in its bracket Sunday, has been in business since 1988.

There is an extensive list of players who went on to play college ball listed on the team’s web site, with its greatest claims to fame being pitchers John LeRoy and Sean White.

LeRoy had a cup of coffee with the Atlanta Braves in 1997 and can boast a MLB win on his resume, while White appeared in 105 games for the Seattle Mariners from 2007-2010.

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Wolf hurler Hunter Smith deals heat. (John Fisken photos)

   Using his long wingspan to full advantage, Kory Score makes an ideal target at first.

   Jake Hoagland had a stellar season as a junior, and will be counted on to be a key part of next year’s squad.

Nick Etzell is ready to slap the tag on an incoming Viking.

Sweet-swinging sophomore Matt Hilborn cranks a shot.

Having snagged a wayward ball, Dane Lucero comes up firing at third.

   A flashback to glory days, as Chris (left) and Drew Chan swing by the diamond they once saw on a daily basis.

The high school baseball season came to an end Tuesday, but the memories, and the photos, will live forever.

John Fisken swung by and nabbed these pics during Coupeville’s playoff bout with Bellevue Christian — a 2-1 pitcher’s duel that fell to the “bad guys” — and was nice enough to send them our way.

To see a ton more photos he shot this season (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball

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Jake Hoagland tears up yardage after a reception. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland tears up yardage on a return. (John Fisken photos)

Jake

Hoagland patrols the outfield for the Wolves.

Hoagland gives teammate Cameron Toomey-Stout a ride. (LIsa Jenne photo)

Giving teammate Cameron Toomey-Stout a post-game lift. (Lisa Jenne photo)

Jake Hoagland is just a good guy.

That towers above everything else, even above his on-field accomplishments as a football and baseball player.

The Coupeville High School junior, who celebrates a birthday today, has become a key part of two Wolf squads.

But, if he were a jerk, we might appreciate his athletic skills without truly rooting for him.

In Hoagland’s case, there’s no doubt — we root for him because of the athlete he is, but more importantly, the young man he has become.

Coming from a cop family, he has learned well under the care of parents Jim and Lisa.

Jake comes across as a hard-worker, but also one who is kind and considerate to others, a solid friend and teammate.

In short, a good guy.

And it’s good, very good, to be a good guy in a world where the number of them are limited.

As he hits his cake day today, we, the fans, want to wish him all the best and thank Jake for putting such a positive spin on Wolf Nation.

Happy birthday, Mr. Hoagland!

May this one, and all the ones to come, be worthy of your awesomeness.

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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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Jake Hoagland (John Fisken and Lisa Jenne photos)

   The multi-talented Jake Hoagland being … talented. (John Fisken and Lisa Jenne photos)

The kid can wail.

He can also play ball on all sorts of different ball-fields, he’s got some pep in his step and comes across as a genuinely nice guy.

So, for all those reasons, and many more, we take a moment to wish Jake Hoagland a happy cake day.

The Coupeville High School sophomore, now a two-sport (football, baseball) star who has been known to dabble in the band arts as well, hits his birthday today.

It’s the big 1-6 and I’m sure he’s probably got plenty of things to do besides sit around and listen to me go on and on about his good qualities.

Well, simmer down there buddy. It’s my blog and I’ll jabber on for as long as I want to.

But there’s cake to be gotten to!!!!!!!! Yeah, yeah, yeah…

Anyways, Jake, much like the law enforcement professionals doing double duty as his parents (Jim and Lisa) has always seemed like a stand-up guy.

On the field, regardless of the sport, he is one of those quiet players who let their hustle and work ethic do the talking for them, while off the gridiron and diamond, he seems like the epitome of laid-back calmness.

Put a sax in his hands, and he’s equally talented, one of the true bright lights in the CHS band.

But now, since he’s probably got better things to do with his time, let’s wrap this up and let him go.

From all of us here at Coupeville Sports, have a great birthday, Jake.

You make your parents, your school and your town look good, young Mr. Hoagland. Keep on keepin’ on.

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