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Posts Tagged ‘Kory Score’

Luke Carlson had a pair of sacks Wednesday, as the Coupeville JV played for the first time in a month. (John Fisken photo)

   Luke Carlson had a pair of sacks Wednesday, as the Coupeville JV played for the first time in a month. (John Fisken photo)

If no one else will play you, turn to Olympic.

The 2A Trojans, nestled down in Bremerton, are the only one of Archbishop Thomas Murphy’s final six scheduled varsity foes not to have forfeited.

And Wednesday, Olympic’s C-Team came to the rescue of the Coupeville JV, giving the Wolf young guns their first live opponent in a month.

After beating La Conner way back on Sept. 9, CHS had four straight foes (Nooksack Valley, Charles Wright, Vashon Island and Port Townsend) decline to play a JV game, mainly due to lack of players.

Enter Olympic, which stepped in for the RedHawks and garnered themselves an extra game in the process.

Playing their sixth game of the season, while Coupeville’s JV took the field for only the third time, a well-oiled Olympic squad ran away with a 44-14 win.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-2, with the hope they will get three more games in the final month of the season.

Coupeville is scheduled to host JV games against Bellevue Christian (Oct. 17) and Klahowya (Oct. 24), before hitting the road Nov. 7 to face Cascade Christian.

There’s no game on Halloween, as Chimacum only has a varsity team.

While the Wolves lost at Olympic, JV coach Ryan King was just happy to get his team back on the field.

“I was really impressed how we played in the second half,” he said. “We started off slow in the first half and then really turned it around in the second.”

Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout was the headliner, cracking the 100-yard barrier on the ground while rushing for a touchdown.

Fellow frosh Andrew Martin also found pay-dirt, while Wolf QB Dawson Houston hooked up with Jake Hoagland on a two-point conversion pass to round out the scoring.

Houston’s biggest play through the air came when he found Kory Score on a 37-yard pass play.

Luke Carlson, Toomey-Stout, Hoagland and Martin led the Wolf defense, with Carlson bringing down the Olympic quarterback on sacks twice.

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Wolf first baseman Kory Score takes a break while waiting for a pitching change. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf first baseman Kory Score takes a break while waiting for a pitching change. (John Fisken photo)

Kory Score

Coupeville’s new clean-up hitter pauses for a selfie.

Soccer purists like to call their sport “the beautiful game,” but Kory Score is pretty sure they’re mistaken.

For the Coupeville High School junior, baseball is now, and has always been, the real winner when it comes to sports achieving true beauty.

“What I enjoy about baseball is the fact that it’s the most beautiful sport to watch, unlike basketball or football, where everyone is bashing on each other and is all sweaty,” Score said. “Baseball has become part of my life and has found a special part in my heart that I like to call home.

“I’ve grown up to love the sport because of all the fun I can have with all the guys I’ve played with and also how fun it is to just win.”

Score, who currently mans first base for the Wolves, picked up the game at age five “because my mom basically pushed me into the sport.”

And, while he’s played other sports over the years, with stints as a basketball and football player (he’s considering a return to the gridiron in the fall), the diamond has always captivated him.

He presents a tall target at first, which helps his fellow infielders greatly when they’re firing on the move, but Score would like to pack on a little more muscle to his lanky frame at some time.

“My strengths are definitely out in the field, working the ball defensively, as I’m more of a taller, thinner, and quicker first baseman than most,” Score said. “I’ve got a little power and muscle behind me, but that’s an area that I’d like to work on that ties into batting.

“My hitting is good and I can hit the ball farther than most,” he added. “But if I put a little more meat on my bones, just imagine how much farther that ball could go.”

A very-young Wolf squad sits at 3-6, but have been competitive in most of their losses.

They are atop the 1A Olympic League currently, having savaged Port Townsend 9-0 in the only league game played this season.

“My goals for this season are to have fun and win, win, win,” Score said. “I’ve always loved to win, so making this new coach (Marc Aparicio) proud and possibly going to state his first year as a coach would be amazing.”

Away from the diamond, he enjoys working out and “just trying to get outside as much as possible on this rainy Island.”

A “Star Wars” fan (“nothing surpasses them”) who can often be found on his XBox or listening to music by bands such as Bullet For My Valentine and Miss May I, Score picks chemistry and pre-calculus as his favorite school subjects.

“I want to move on in the future to major in astronomy because the stars and everything out there just fascinate me.”

Score has spent much of his life on the move, bouncing from Coupeville to Minnesota (he’s lived in Blooming Prairie and Owatonna at separate times), back to Coupeville, to Oak Harbor and once again back to Central Whidbey.

Having rejoined many of his friends from elementary and middle school in time for his junior year at CHS, he hopes to finish his high school days as a Wolf, with an eye on garnering a college baseball scholarship before he’s done.

Wherever he’s been, one woman has always been there for him, and he greatly appreciates everything she has meant to him.

“Definitely the person that’s made the biggest impact on me throughout my entire life is my mom,” Score said. “She’s shown me how strong she is and how much of a role model a girl can be to a boy.

“My mom has never stopped fighting for me and my brother and sister and always pushes through to give us the best life we can have and currently do have,” he added. “The main thing I’ve learned from my mom is to never quit; giving up isn’t the Score way!”

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