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Posts Tagged ‘JV’

Chris Smith fires up his squad during baseball season. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Wolf fans will be seeing a lot of Chris Smith this year.

After making the jump to varsity coach with the Coupeville High School baseball team last spring, he has picked up two new gigs this off-season.

First came the boys basketball JV job, where he will assist new varsity coach Brad Sherman.

And now he’s stepping in as JV volleyball coach, joining second-year varsity coach Cory Whitmore’s staff.

Smith replaces Kristin Bridges, who left the job to welcome her new son.

CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith confirmed the job offer, which should be officially approved at the next school board meeting.

“I’m extremely grateful to Chris and his willingness to step up when our program needed it,” Cory Whitmore said. “He also brings a ton of experience as a coach and a role model.

“He sure will be busy this year!”

A father of three star CHS three-sport athletes (2016 grad CJ, senior Hunter and sophomore Scout), Chris Smith is a 1989 graduate of Brookwood High School in Snellville, Georgia.

He holds a BA in Exercise Science/Physical Therapy from Western Washington University and a Doctorate of Physical Therapy from Andrews University.

Chris Smith also served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1989-1993.

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   Willow Vick took down a pair of 2A foes Monday to win the high jump at the Olympic League JV Championships. (John Fisken photos)

Madison Rixe flies out of the blocks.

   Lincoln Kelley debates what’s more impressive — Vick winning her event or his own luxuriant beard.

Kyle Burnett is in a hurry to get places.

   The secret ingredient in Laurence Boado’s Sno-Kones? Love. Or Red Dye #40. One of those.

Thane Peterson gets epic.

Willow Vick closed out her first year of high school sports humming “We are the Champions.”

The Coupeville High School freshman, who suited up with twin sister Raven in volleyball and track, won the high jump Monday at the Olympic League JV Championships.

Making things better, Willow did it while competing on her home track, as CHS welcomed the other 10 league schools to the biggest event it’s hosted yet at its new track facilities.

The meet brought together seven 2A schools and four 1A schools, with North Kitsap, the biggest school in attendance, winning both team titles.

Coupeville, which had eight athletes competing, finished 7th on the boys side and 8th in the girls battle.

Willow Vick provided most of the Wolf points for the girls squad, out-dueling a pair of North Kitsap foes in the high jump.

She was one of six athletes from 1A schools to win an event, as the much-larger 2A schools captured titles in 25 of 33 events.

Chimacum’s Nina Haddenham (Discus), Ryan Caldwell (200, Shot Put) and Michael Gepitulan (Discus), Port Townsend’s Sierra Ruegg (200, 100 Hurdles) and Klahowya’s Mia Brill (Long Jump) joined Vick to uphold 1A honor.

Complete Coupeville results: 

Girls:

100 — Madison Rixe (8th) 15.52

200 — Rixe (6th) 32.97

Javelin — Jasmine Nastali (No place) DQ

High Jump — Willow Vick (1st) 3-08

Boys:

100 — Kyle Burnett (10th) 13.22 *PR*; Luke Carlson (12th) 13.34 *PR*; Greg Villareal (19th) 13.82

200 — Burnett (6th) 26.87 *PR*; Carlson (9th) 27.41 *PR*; Thane Peterson (17th) 28.71

Shot Put — Keahi Sorrows (5th) 31-02.25

Discus — Sorrows (3rd) 86-09.50; Peterson (5th) 78-02.50

Javelin — Carlson (4th) 92-06; Peterson (10th) 68-00

 

To see more photos from this meet (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Track/20170508-JV-Championships/

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   Wolf slugger Kyla Briscoe had three hits and six RBI Thursday in a 20-1 win. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Bigger is not always better.

Burlington-Edison is a large 2A school, and, according to the most-recent WIAA classification counts, has 840 students to Coupeville’s 227.

Well, CHS apparently got the talented kids…

With everyone in the lineup ripping the cover off the ball, the Wolf JV softball squad demolished their big school rivals 20-1 Thursday in a game which could have easily been far more of a rout.

The only thing containing Coupeville’s offense was a rule that limits JV teams to five runs in an inning.

The Wolves, now 3-1 on the season, reached their run limit in all four innings they hit, recording just three outs along the way.

Yes, that’s correct — Coupeville sent 32 hitters to the plate and 29 of them reached base safely.

Burlington’s pitching staff didn’t walk many batters, but that was largely because the Wolves were too busy smashing the ball to wait around to see four balls.

Kyla Briscoe led the way, collecting a single, double and triple, while collecting a team-high six RBIs.

Hot on her heels was catcher Mackenzie Davis, who ripped three well-hit singles, driving home three even as Coupeville coach Stephanie Henning did her best to keep her players moving just station to station.

Tamika Nastali, Emma Mathusek, Melia Welling, Jae LeVine and Nicole Lester had two hits apiece, while Scout Smith and Hope Lodell settled for one, as Coupeville rolled up 18 base-knocks.

Three different Wolves legged out triples, with Lester and Welling joining Briscoe in the three-bagger club.

Mathusek also had a double, while seven of nine players picked up at least one RBI.

While the offensive explosion was more than enough to carry the day, Wolf pitcher Scout Smith was effective as well, whiffing six.

She also made Burlington a little gun-shy, roughing up back-to-back Tigers.

After drilling a jittery batter in the back of the thigh with a pitch, Smith kept the next hitter from dropping a bunt by zinging the ball (inadvertently) off of the Tiger’s exposed fingers.

From that point on, almost every single Burlington player stayed well away from the plate while hitting.

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   James Vidoni had three hits and three RBI Friday, propelling Coupeville to a 12-8 win. (Melissa Losey photos)

Beautiful day, beautiful win for the Wolf JV.

The prairie was hot, but James Vidoni was hotter.

The Coupeville High School slugger crunched three hits Friday, including a game-breaking two-run single, to spark the Wolf JV baseball team to a 12-8 win over visiting Klahowya.

Coming on the rarest of days, when fans shed nearly every last layer of clothing and openly scorched their milky-white skin under a rare object in the sky we were told is called “the sun,” Coupeville erupted for nine runs during a 15-batter third inning.

The win, coming a day after a narrow loss at South Whidbey, lifts the Wolf JV to 2-5 on the season.

Facing off with an Olympic League rival for the first time this year — neither Chimacum or Port Townsend have JV squads — Coupeville rapped out nine hits.

Starting pitcher Elliott Johnson punched out four singles on mom Mimi’s birthday to pace the attack, while Jake Pease and Gavin Knoblich added singles.

But it was Vidoni who lit the fuse.

“That was great to see James hit like that,” said CHS coach Mike Etzell. “Really got everyone on the team going.”

Vidoni started by launching an RBI double over the head of the Klahowya left fielder in the bottom of the second, plating Knoblich to knot things up at 1-1.

Jump to the bottom of the third and the Wolves were trailing 2-1.

Johnson had whiffed four Eagles, but a seeing-eye single into the gap snuck through, allowing the visitors to (briefly) recapture the lead.

Then the game took a hard turn, and a positive one for Coupeville.

After juicing the bags with no outs on a Johnson single and walks to Pease and Kyle Rockwell, the Wolves started dropping runs at a rapid pace.

Johnny Carlson and Knoblich eked out bases-loaded walks to make it 3-2, before Vidoni cranked a single.

Rockwell scored easily, while Carlson, practically running out of his shoes, pulled off a nifty hop-skip-and-jump ballet move at the plate to avoid a possible tag.

As he dodged the catcher’s mitt, the decently-sized and rabidly pro-Wolf crowd sucked in its collective breath, then exploded in delirium, shock mixing with respect for Carlson’s surprisingly nimble toes.

Two more bases-loaded walks, earned by Cameron Dahl and Shane Losey, stretched the lead to 7-2, before Johnson collected an RBI single, his second base-knock in the inning.

Not to be outdone, Pease lobbed his own two-run single into center to cap the nine-run explosion, effectively sealing the deal for the Wolves.

Klahowya scraped together four runs in the fourth to tighten the game a bit, but Johnson and Pease, who came on in relief, combined to blunt the Eagle attack the rest of the way.

Johnson and Knoblich added RBI singles for Coupeville’s final two runs, while the Wolves played often-inspired defense behind their tag-team pitching staff.

Rockwell pulled off a pair of sweet defensive gems at first base, throwing out a runner headed into second off of a grounder into the hole and later snagging a ball down the line for an unassisted put-out.

Losey erased another Eagle by remaining alert at all times.

A Klahowya runner successfully stole second in the sixth inning, but came off the bag without calling time and Losey, who had taken the throw from Dahl, sprinted up from behind, tagging him out before he realized his mistake.

Coupeville got something from all 11 players on the day’s roster, with Jacob Zettle, Seth Weatherford and Gavin Straub chipping in to the effort.

“Just a good team win for these guys,” said an elated Etzell as he congratulated his players afterwards.

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   Jonathan Thurston struck out nine in four innings Friday, leaving with a 4-2 lead in what turned into a 14-7 win. (John Fisken photo)

A whole lot of runs, a whole lot of screaming.

Playing on a windy, often very chilly Friday afternoon, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad took advantage of an endless stream of walks and errors, drilling visiting North Mason 14-7 in their first game of the season.

With the Wolves piling up 16 walks and the Bulldogs committing 10,904 errors (give or take one or two), the game went more than three hours, eventually being called after five innings because of encroaching darkness.

Before the game ended, fans were treated to a solid pitching outing from CHS starter Jonathan Thurston, who whiffed nine and gave up just two unearned runs in four innings of work.

They were also treated to either the world’s most entertaining, or annoying (depending on your pain tolerance) rival player.

We may never know the name of North Mason’s catcher, but his voice, which ripped across the diamond on every single pitch for 180+ minutes — it was like he was channeling a young Ozzy Osbourne working as a baseball announcer when he was in the dugout — will never be forgotten.

Well played, young sir, well played.

The game he was so deeply committed to started with a quick run in the top of the first for North Mason, and it was a run which set a tone for the next 20.

A Bulldog hitter struck out, but reached base when the pitch got loose and bounced off the backstop.

A pick-off throw went wild to move him to second, then a steal of third was capped by the ensuing throw landing deep in left field while the North Mason runner skipped home.

Luckily for Coupeville, while that style of creating runs continued all afternoon, after that it was the Wolves pulling off the creative scoring.

CHS collected two of its four hits in the first — singles from Joey Lippo and Kyle Rockwell — and combined that with four Bulldog errors and two walks to retake the lead 3-1.

The Wolves added another run in the second, off of an RBI single from Lippo, and the game actually played out as a bit of a pitcher’s duel for three-and-a-half innings.

Then, with Coupeville up 4-2 headed into the bottom of the fourth, things got kooky, to the tune of 15 runs in the next inning and a half.

A whopping 12 batters strolled to the plate in the bottom of the fourth, with six different Wolves reaching on a walk.

Add in four North Mason errors — coming on four consecutive plays — and a string of stolen bases, and Coupeville threw six runs on the (non-existent) scoreboard in the inning.

Without once hitting the ball out of the infield.

Up 10-2 with the bases still juiced and just one out, CHS was rolling, but a strikeout and a force at home kept the Wolves from entering 10-run territory.

Still, they were in solid control of the game … until they weren’t.

With Thurston done for the afternoon, Coupeville hit a rough patch in the top of the fifth, suddenly committing the same kind of wild-eyed errors the Bulldogs had been in love with all game.

Taking advantage of throws sailing from the pitcher’s mound into deep right field, and a missed tag here and there, North Mason picked up a five-spot of its own, tightening things back to 10-7.

The Wolves escaped though, after relief pitcher Lippo teamed up with infielder Nick Etzell to pick two straight runners off of second base, ending the threat.

CHS padded the lead out in the bottom half of the inning, and took long enough doing it to run through the remaining daylight.

Freshman Ulrik Wells punched a single to load the bases, before the Wolves plated four more, three on walks to Elliott Johnson, Cameron Dahl and Jonathan Carlson.

For the game, 14 of the 15 Wolves to see action reached base, with Jake Pease getting on four times, thanks to three walks and a Bulldog error.

Jacob Zettle walked three times, Shane Losey turned two errors and a walk into three trips around the base-paths and Gavin Knoblich reached base twice, while spending his “down” time sprinting from the dugout like a madman every time a foul ball landed within 200 feet of him.

James Vidoni, Gavin Straub and Seth Weatherford rounded out the Wolf roster, with Vidoni and Weatherford collecting walks.

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