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Posts Tagged ‘Klahowya’

   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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   CHS girls tennis, sparked by players like McKenzie Bailey, has been dominant over the past three seasons. (John Fisken photo)

It’s not always about wins and losses, except when it is.

There are many ways to look at the success or failure of a high school sports program — titles, players who move on to compete in college, improvement shown by the current players, size of the fan base and on and on.

But ultimately they play games to decide a winner.

And while we can argue all day long in favor of other things, that’s what sits there in black and white forever.

I acknowledge there are a lot of hidden factors in win/loss records.

Who did you play, for one?

In scheduling, did you punch upwards and maybe absorb losses against bigger schools, AKA “moral victories”, or punch downwards against smaller schools and fluff up the ol’ record a bit?

Did you have one great year and that was enough to balance out some weaker campaigns, or were you consistent, but maybe never reached the mountain top?

A lot of ifs, ands and buts, and to go through all of them would require much more patience and research on my part (and a lot more rambling for you to read).

For the moment, here’s what we’re going with.

I went back through the entire run of the 1A Olympic League, which began with the 2014-2015 school year and is currently heading towards the finish line on Year 3.

I went with each team’s complete record, league and non-league, through games played Apr. 19, 2017.

Spring is obviously not done and winning percentages will change, but, in three of four sports (baseball, girls tennis and boys soccer), the all-time front runner can’t be caught this year.

Softball, which is the closest sport in the Olympic League by far, could change. If so, we’ll talk about that another day.

I went with 10 of the 11 sports Coupeville plays (track win/loss records from dual meets are arbitrary and worthless), so no swimming or wrestling or gymnastics.

And what did I find?

Klahwoya girls soccer, which won a state title in 2015 behind the 1-2 punch of Izzy Severns and McKenzie Cook, has been the most successful program in any sport.

Hardly surprising.

But, as good as the Eagle booters have been, they do not boast the biggest advantage over their league rivals.

When you compare records, both Coupeville girls tennis and girls basketball have a far bigger edge over the second-best school in the league in their sport when you compare winning percentages.

Another interesting tidbit?

Klahowya, which has the best winning percentage as a school, owns the best record in four sports (girls and boys soccer,  volleyball and baseball).

That allows the Eagles to edge out Coupeville (girls basketball, girls and boys tennis), Port Townsend (football, boys basketball) and Chimacum (softball).

But, Klahowya also has the worst record in both girls and boys basketball.

Port Townsend (3) and Chimacum (5) split the other cellar dwellers, while Coupeville is the lone school NOT to have any of its programs mired in last-place.

And one final bit of quirkiness.

In boys basketball, Coupeville and Chimacum have virtually the exact same record over the past three seasons. Same losses and the Cowboys have just one more win.

And yet Chimacum won back-to-back league titles before falling to Port Townsend this winter, piling up league wins while the Wolves were far better against non-conference foes.

You just shrug your shoulders and move on, I guess.

Records from Sept. 2014 to Apr. 19, 2017:

Volleyball:

School W/L Win Pct.
Klahowya 32-19 .627
Chimacum 21-27 .438
COUPEVILLE 18-27 .400
Port Townsend 12-30 .286

Football:

School W/L Win Pct.
Port Townsend 24-7 .774
Klahowya 18-10 .627
COUPEVILLE 9-21 .300
Chimacum 2-27 .069

Girls Soccer:

School W/L Win Pct.
Klahowya 46-10-3 .805
COUPEVILLE 20-21-5 .489
Port Townsend 8-34-3 .211
Chimacum 8-32-1 .207

Boys Tennis:

School W/L Win Pct.
COUPEVILLE 14-16 .467
Klahowya 16-22 .421
Chimacum 2-30 .063

Girls Basketball:

School W/L Win Pct.
COUPEVILLE 46-19 .708
Port Townsend 19-39 .328
Chimacum 20-42 .323
Klahowya 12-46 .207

Boys Basketball:

School W/L Win Pct.
Port Townsend 27-34 .443
Chimacum 20-41 .328
COUPEVILLE 19-41 .317
Klahowya 12-47 .203

Softball:

School W/L Win Pct.
Chimacum 31-19 .620
Klahowya 29-19 .604
COUPEVILLE 24-24 .500
Port Townsend 0-37 .000

Girls Tennis:

School W/L Win Pct.
COUPEVILLE 23-9 .719
Klahowya 12-24 .333
Chimacum 7-22 .241

Baseball:

School W/L Win Pct.
Klahowya 40-10 .800
COUPEVILLE 25-28 .472
Chimacum 14-30 .318
Port Townsend 1-38 .026

Boys Soccer:

School W/L Win Pct.
Klahowya 40-9-4 .792
Port Townsend 19-20-3 .488
COUPEVILLE 11-27-2 .300
Chimacum 4-32 .111

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   Wolf defenders like Teo Keilwitz, seen in an earlier game, held up strongly in the first half Monday. (John Fisken photos)

They hung with the big dogs for a half.

The Coupeville High School boys soccer squad put up a strong fight for the opening 40 minutes Monday, but a rain of second-half goals by host Klahowya proved to be too much to handle.

Trailing just 1-0 at the break, the Wolves fell 5-0 to the Eagles, who won their 17th straight 1A Olympic League game.

The streak is the third-longest across all league sports, trailing just Coupeville girls basketball (27-0) and Klahowya girls soccer (20-0).

With the loss, Coupeville drops to 2-3 in league play, 3-7-1 overall, and slides back into third-place in the standings.

It trails Klahowya (5-0, 7-2-1) and Port Townsend (2-2, 4-4), while holding a game-and-a-half edge (and a tiebreaker) on Chimacum (0-4, 2-6).

The Wolves return home to play three straight on their own field, starting with a visit from Chimacum Thursday.

The regular season ends on the road April 28 at Port Townsend.

Playoff info hasn’t been posted yet, but if things stay as they have in the first two years of the league, the top three schools will advance to districts.

Monday’s clash with the league’s titan was close for a half, then the Eagles took advantage of their speed on turf to blitz the Wolves, who normally play on natural grass.

“After break they came after us a bit harder and were able to put a few goals in to open up their lead,” said Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson.

Still, even in a loss, there were positives for Coupeville.

Ethan Spark, William Nelson and Aram Leyva, among others, had strong shots on goal which were rejected by Klahowya’s keeper, and the Wolves continue to show progress as a team.

“We keep improving and I really liked the effort the boys put out there,” Kyle Nelson said. “We had a few good opportunities and came close to putting in a goal of our own.”

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   Freshman Tia Wurzrainer teamed with Claire Mietus for a straight-sets win Thursday, lifting Coupeville tennis to a 4-3 win against Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

The war begins.

With a pair of first-year players rallying to pull out a victory at fourth doubles Thursday, the Coupeville High School girls tennis team drew first blood against Klahowya.

Winning 4-3 on the road, the Wolves stretched their unbeaten streak in Olympic League play to 12 matches across three seasons.

Coupeville (1-0 in league, 2-3 overall) jumps right back in the bus Friday to go face Chimacum (0-1, 0-4), while Klahowya (1-1, 2-5) will bide its time.

Beginning their quest to win a third-straight league title, the Wolves had to dig down deep Thursday afternoon.

With the match tied at 3-3, Tia Wurzrainer and Claire Mietus were Coupeville’s final hope.

Not that they knew it until after they finished their straights-set win.

“Luckily for them, they did not know that the team score was knotted up,” CHS coach Ken Stange said. “I was very pleased with their performance today. They remained calm and they stayed consistent.”

Coupeville used its depth to pull out the win, taking three of four doubles matches and getting a huge win from Bree Daigneault at third singles.

Bree absolutely destroyed her opponent,” Stange said. “She was consistent and she handled the wind very well.”

Top doubles duo Sage Renninger and Payton Aparicio remained perfect (Renninger is 5-0, having played a match with younger sister Avalon when her partner was on vacation), while Kameryn St Onge and Maggie Crimmins were electric as they bageled their foes.

While the Wolves took three defeats, all were close, with second doubles going a full three sets.

Avalon and Zoe (Trujillo) played a spirited match, but came up just a little bit short,” Stange said. “They are talented freshmen though, and I believe they will flip the scores next time we meet Klahowya.”

With five of six league matches still ahead on the schedule, Coupeville’s three-peat is far from guaranteed, but Stange likes what he’s seen so far.

“As long as our players stay calm and focused, we should be able to defend our league title.”

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo lost to Sydney Jackson 6-2, 7-6(7-5)

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Hailey Sargent 6-3, 6-4

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Hannah Catt 6-1, 6-0

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Taylor Bruce/Mary Ann Marker 6-2, 6-4

2nd doubles Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo lost to Sophie Koveleskie/Maddy Rienks 5-7, 6-2, 6-3

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Anna Wells/Emma Parker 6-0, 6-0

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus beat Kelisha Harris/Kristin Powell 6-1, 6-2

JV:

5th doublesJulie Bucio/Sophie Furtjes beat Angelina Robinson/Rachelle Adams 6-0

6th doublesZara Bradley/Jillian Mayne beat Emma Parker/Emma Heckert 8-1

7th doublesHeather Nastali/Rubi Melendrez lost to Hannah Catt/Anna Wells 5-1

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   Clay Reilly had two hits and two RBIs in Coupeville’s Olympic League opener. (John Fisken photos)

Jake Hoagland takes a cut Wednesday afternoon.

This time they’re going to have to fight from behind.

Last season, the Coupeville High School baseball squad won its first seven league games en route to capturing the program’s first conference title in 25 years.

After falling 7-4 to visiting Klahowya Wednesday, the Wolves will need to write a new script in 2017.

The loss snaps a four-game winning streak for CHS and leaves it 0-1 in Olympic League play, 4-3 overall.

The Wolves sit in a tie with Port Townsend (0-1, 0-3) which it plays Friday in a road game.

Klahowya (2-0, 2-3), the league champs in 2015, are a game up on Chimacum (1-1, 3-2) in the very early going.

Wednesday’s match-up was fairly even in the score-book, with the Eagles holding a slight edge in hits at 11-9.

But while Klahowya didn’t deliver any huge blows, they did consistently chip away at the Wolf pitching staff, scoring in five of seven innings.

After both teams exchanged runs in the first — Hunter Smith singled and came around on an RBI ground-out by Clay Reilly for the Wolves — Klahowya built a 5-1 lead heading into the bottom of the fifth.

Coupeville rallied for three runs to turn things back into a one-run affair, but then stalled out.

Matt Hilborn, Joey Lippo, Reilly and Dane Lucero all delivered singles in the inning, as the Wolves plated all three runs after notching two outs.

For the game, three Wolves — Lucero, Reilly and Kory Score — piled up two hits apiece to pace the offense.

With Smith, their starting pitcher, battling a balky back, Coupeville moved him back to shortstop in the second inning and used Taylor Consford, Julian Welling and Hilborn to finish out the game.

 

To see more photos from this game, pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170329-vs-Klahoway/

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