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Posts Tagged ‘JV’

Jonathan Thurston got the start in game one of Saturday's JV baseball tourney. (John Fisken photos)

   Jonathan Thurston got the start in game one of Saturday’s JV baseball tourney. (John Fisken photos)

JV coach Chris Smith gets his game face on.

JV coach Chris Smith gets his game face on.

Gotta make the gas count.

Having traveled down to the South end of the Island Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad played two games, then went into extra innings in the nightcap just for good measure.

The young guns lost both games, falling 7-1 to South Whidbey before being nipped on a ninth-inning walk-off hit against Cedar Park Christian, but 16 innings of late-season baseball is invaluable as a learning tool.

Game one was a one-sided pitcher’s duel, as the Falcon hurler scattered three hits and whiffed eight Wolves.

CHS hurlers Jonathan Thurston and Joey Lippo were decent, but not as sharp as their rival.

“We never really got going,” said Wolf coach Chris Smith. “Positive note — only one error in the game, which came in the sixth as a dropped third (strike) where we could not record the out.”

That inability to hold on to third strikes would haunt the Wolves all afternoon, as it happened twice more in the second game, with the final time allowing CPC to remain alive and tie up the game.

“Aside from that, we were flawless defensively,” Smith said.

CPC took advantage of a short porch and launched a pair of home runs to break the game open.

Julian Welling, Hunter Smith and Nick Etzell teamed up to share the pitching duties in the nightcap, combining for 10 K’s.

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(Laurie Black photos)

Jimmy Myers digs in. (Laurie Black photos)

Jake Hoagland is ready for his close-up.

Jake Hoagland is ready for his close-up.

Makin' nice with the guy behind the plate.

Makin’ nice with the guy behind the plate.

Nick Etzell: Bunt Master

Nick Etzell: Bunt Master

Ben Olson

Ben Olson (12) was not aware that cameras were allowed inside the dugout…

They lost, but they went down swinging.

The young guns on the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad couldn’t match up to host Klahowya Wednesday, getting ten-runned 16-6, but, before they did, the Wolves did some damage at the plate.

They plated four in the third and got big blows from Jake Hoagland and Brenden Gilbert, who each socked a triple.

Hoagland actually turned his blow into an unofficial inside the park home run due to “some help from the defense and some aggressive base coaching at third,” CHS coach Willie Smith said with a chuckle.

The Wolf freshman reached base three times, collecting another hit and a walk, while Jimmy Myers walked twice.

Jonathan Thurston came on in long relief after Coupeville’s starter was roughed up in the first and kept things close, whiffing seven over five innings.

The Wolves return to action with a tournament at South Whidbey today.

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Lauren Grove (John Fisken photos)

   Having gotten properly stretched in the early days of practice, Lauren Grove and Co. are now a lean, mean, rebounding machine. (John Fisken photos)

Mattea Miller

   Mattea Miller, dreaming of the night she’d score 10, snag five boards, block two shots and make off with two steals. That night turned out to be Friday.

Low on players, high on talent.

Despite starting the night with just six active players — making for a very thin bench, with only Brisa Herrera around to keep coach Amy King company at tip-off — the Coupeville High School girls’ JV squad rebounded like a rabid pack of Wolves Friday and held off visiting Darrington 26-20.

The victory evened the squad’s record at 1-1 on the season.

Missing key players Lauren Rose, Tiffany Briscoe and Skyler Lawrence, Coupeville didn’t offer King many options. Turns out she didn’t need them.

After a tentative start, the Wolves ran the Loggers off the floor in the middle part of the game, outscoring Darrington 18-4 over the course of the second and third quarters.

The decisive run was fueled by a passion for boards, as CHS combined to haul in 34 of them.

Kailey Kellner was top gun, snatching 10 rebounds, while Kyla Briscoe (8), Allison Wenzel (6), Lauren Grove (5) and Mattea Miller (5) all got their hands on a fair share of caroms as well.

When they weren’t gathering in boards, the Wolves were redirecting Darrington’s shots.

CHS rejected seven attempts, led by Kellner, who said no-no-no to three Logger tries.

Miller paced Coupeville in the scoring column, hitting a pair of long-range three point bombs en route to a game-high 10 points.

Kellner banged away for seven, Grove popped for six and Briscoe notched the first points of her short high school career with three.

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Maggie Crimmins prepares to unleash "The Knuckler." (Justine McGranahan photos)

   Maggie Crimmins prepares to unleash “The Knuckler.” (Justine McGranahan photos)

Jae

Wolf libero Jae LeVine (in red) gives her team a pep talk.

Maggie Crimmins is tricky.

The Coupeville High School freshman volleyball player serves underhanded, and why not? She’s deadly that way.

With her serves taking wicked spins and moving in a completely different manner than expected, visiting Friday Harbor was unable to master Crimmins Thursday night.

The Wolf JV spikers won 15 points off of her serves — almost double that of any other CHS server — as they romped to a 25-15, 25-7, 25-18 non-conference win.

The victory evened their record at 1-1.

Crimmins display of serving artistry came over the final two sets, with the Wolves scoring six points on her serve in the second set and nine in the third.

Coupeville was strong at the line all night, winning nine points apiece off of serves by Payton Aparicio, Lauren Grove and Hope Lodell.

The Wolves jumped out to big leads in all three sets, had momentary burps in the first and third, and were lights out in the second.

Along the way, they got masterful plays from almost everyone on the floor.

Katrina McGranahan was a force of nature at the net, while Brittany Powers and Grove were everywhere, getting hands on almost every ball remotely in their vicinity.

Kameryn St Onge, Mackenzi Valko and Sophia Hassapis chipped in with hustle, Allison Wenzel had two beautiful tip plays to win points and Grove, Kayla Rose and Jae LeVine closed out the sets at the service stripe.

LeVine, as is her fashion, then did a quick happy dance after Friday Harbor failed to return her match-ending serve.

Dance on, Jae, dance on.

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Clay Reilly, strikeout king and photo bomber. (John Fisken photo)

Clay Reilly, strikeout king and photo bomber. (John Fisken photo)

They finally got back on the field, plus got fed.

So, even if the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad ultimately lost its season finale Friday, falling 12-7 at Sultan, it was a feel-good loss.

“Great game for our boys,” said Wolf coach Willie Smith. “Ended up losing, but oh, what a game!”

The mere fact they were playing was a bonus, as injuries to a thin CHS varsity roster forced the last two JV games to be cancelled. With several JV players being called on for varsity time, there simply wasn’t enough bodies to field a full nine.

But this day they saw the field and put on a show, earning a bevy of nicknames from the ol’ ball coach.

On the mound, Johnny “Just give me the ball, coach” Thurston started and threw three solid innings, with a mix of “fastballs, curveballs, and menacing smiles.”

Jimmy “Mix and match” Myers, making his pitching debut, and Clay “Rack ’em up and mow ’em down” Reilly came on in relief, with Reilly throwing straight heat in his first mound duty in seven years.

At the plate, Myers kicked things off, smoking an RBI double that plated Thurston.

The Wolves then got run-happy in the sixth, scoring six more.

Tim “The Terminator” Goss walked and scored on an RBI single from Gabe Wynn.

Jake Davis crunched a two-run single and Goss, in a return to the plate, stroked an RBI single of his own.

With the JV game being played after the two school’s met in a varsity game, it was a long afternoon in the Sultan sun. Afterwards, the locals stepped up and fed everyone, which impressed Smith.

“Great day, two great games, then the Turks fed the boys with a barbecue in a show of class and sportsmanship and sent us on our way.”

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