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Posts Tagged ‘Landon Roberts’

Coupeville baseball stars Chase Anderson (12) and Landon Roberts catch up with Ryan Lange, who coached them in little league. (Jon Roberts photo)

Don’t get used to them wearing purple and gold.

Coupeville diamond men Chase Anderson and Landon Roberts suited up for Oak Harbor’s U15 baseball squad this weekend, but it was a temporary move, not a permanent one.

Both Wolves will be back in red and black when school starts, but, for a game or two, they played as Wildcats.

Oak Harbor was visiting Ellensburg for a hardball tourney and had a couple of open spots on its roster.

Needing something to fill their early July days, Anderson and Roberts agreed to be mercenaries for the Wildcats.

With help from the Wolf duo, Oak Harbor claimed a pair of ten-run mercy-rule wins, before losing a close one 4-0 and tying 8-8 in its finale, victim of the tourney’s two-hour limit on games.

Roberts held down first base and left field for the Wildcats, with Anderson pulling time at shortstop and on the mound.

The sophomore-to-be went the distance on the bump in game two, shutting down his foes across six innings to earn the win.

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Wolf baseball stars Landon Roberts (left) and Chase Anderson, fueling up for the day. (Jon Roberts photo)

They’re on a pizza-eating tour of Eastern Washington.

Coupeville High School athletes are spending some of the first days of summer hanging out at Gonzaga University, picking up pointers to help fine-tune their games.

The Wolf boys’ basketball team will be in Drew Timme land — no word on whether coach Brad Sherman grew a mustache for the trip — this weekend for a hoops team camp.

Two Cow Town stars made the trip a little earlier, with Landon Roberts and Chase Anderson attending the Zags Baseball Prospect Camp.

The event, aimed at Class of 2025 and 2026 athletes, attracted a strong group of diamond dogs who hailed from multiple states.

Players arrived from Texas, California, Idaho, and Montana, among others.

All in attendance worked with Gonzaga coaches, picking up defensive and offensive instruction, plus nabbing a session with the school’s strength and conditioning coach.

Coupeville’s best enjoy the smell of college baseball grass. (Jon Roberts photo)

Toss in pizza, talks laying out NCAA rules and recruiting info, and then a nine-inning game with coaches from other colleges eyeballing the action.

Anderson, who is headed into his sophomore year at CHS, took the mound, tossing two innings.

The lanky hurler whiffed four, while Roberts, an incoming junior, worked a frame in right field, then another at first base.

The Wolves switched up after that, with Roberts also working two innings on the bump, striking out a pair of rivals, while Anderson lurked in left field.

At the plate, Roberts walked, struck out, and lashed a laser to second base which was inches away from being a hit.

Anderson collected a base-knock, earned a free pass, and lofted a long fly out to cap things.

“Overall, this was an amazing day of baseball for these boys,” said Wolf Dad, and Coupeville coach, Jon Roberts.

“Most of these kids, we will see at D1 level teams in three years!”

Now, it’s off to the lake for a day, before a slight zig to meet back up with their basketball teammates at Gonzaga.

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Aiden O’Neill came up huge in the final moments Wednesday in a summer ball win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

God’s chosen sport was in full bloom Wednesday night.

Basketball, of the early summer variety, was on the schedule, and Coupeville High School’s boys’ hoops squads were in action on their home hardwood.

Hosting Island rivals Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, the Wolves won two of three, pulling out a thriller in the JV game and splitting a pair of varsity tilts.

Ultimately, summer ball, with each game boasting two 20-minute halves with a running clock until the final 120 seconds, is more about improvement and growth than wins and losses.

“The boys are playing well together,” said CHS varsity coach Brad Sherman.

“And it’s summer, so we’re getting to see new groups play together and try some new stuff. It’s fun!”

The Wolves, who return most of their roster from this past winter, are scheduled to play in a variety of scrimmages and tourneys this summer, as well as attend a team camp at Gonzaga University.

 

How Wednesday’s games played out:

 

JV:

Coupeville scored the final six points to pull out a 37-36 win in a game with Oak Harbor where it led by eight early, then trailed by five late.

Down 36-31 with the clock running out, the Wolves had no room for error.

So, they played to perfection.

Jack Porter rolled down the baseline to knock down a bucket, before CHS clamped down on defense.

Oak Harbor was called for a crucial offensive foul with 36 ticks remaining — a Wildcat bowling over a Wolf defender with a resounding crunch — and Coupeville responded.

Aiden O’Neill buried a three-ball to knot the game at 36-36, his second trey in the game’s final moments, then came back around to knife the Wildcats with a game-icing free throw with six seconds on the clock.

The furious finale capped a game of extremes, as Coupeville rolled early, only to see Oak Harbor crawl back into the game behind a hail of three-balls.

Hunter and Hurlee Bronec had the hot touch early, combining for seven points as the Wolves built a 9-1 lead.

The Wildcats didn’t break however, closing the half on a 13-4 run, with a pullup jumper right before halftime pushing them out in front 16-15.

Coupeville trailed for much of the second half, briefly knotting things at 26-26 before Oak Harbor once again threatened to pull away for good.

O’Neill’s late heroics, which also included a note-perfect pass to set up Hunter Bronec for a key layup, kept the Wolves alive, with everything going exactly to script in the waning moments.

Jack Porter paced CHS with a game-high 14 points, with Hunter Bronec (8), O’Neill (7), Hurlee Bronec (4), Landon Roberts (2), and Mikey Robinett (2) also scoring.

Yohannon Sandles, Johnny Porter, and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Varsity Game #1:

Blowout city, as Coupeville came out hot and never cooled off, thumping South Whidbey 47-23.

The Falcons actually scored the first bucket of the game, before the Wolves unleashed hardwood hell on their neighbors.

Logan Downes poured in 13 of his game-high 18 points during a game-busting 26-7 run, which also featured a couple of sweet buckets off the fingertips of Cole White and a beautiful hustle play by William Davidson.

The cerebral big man slid between a pair of Falcons to snatch away a rebound, before pivoting and firing a gorgeous outlet pass to Chase Anderson, who was so far ahead of the defense South Whidbey needed binoculars to watch the ensuing layup.

William Davidson, eyeballing the cameraman, is an invaluable role player. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Up 26-13 at the half, the Wolves went deep into their bench, while continuing to push their advantage.

Downes singed the nets on a corner three-ball, after pulling off a shimmy-and-go move which left his defender parked six rows up into the bleachers.

After that, he left the scoring up to the young guns fighting for roster spots, with Jack Porter and Hunter Bronec spilling sweat while dominating in the paint.

White finished with eight to back up Downes and his 18, while Anderson dropped in six points.

Nick Guay (4), Porter (4), Bronec (4), Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Davidson (1) rounded out the scoring, while Zane Oldenstadt and Ryan Blouin were aggressive on defense.

 

Varsity Game #2:

Coupeville’s top squad returned to the floor mere moments after wiping out South Whidbey, while Oak Harbor’s main crew was fresh and playing for the first time.

Ultimately, that proved to be the difference, as the Wildcats held on for a 55-48 win.

The visitors don’t have much height, but they are quick, and threatened to bust the game open early.

Trailing 24-12 and scrabbling a bit, Coupeville rediscovered its mojo, closing the first half on a 10-0 tear.

Downes and White combined to provide the offensive fireworks, while Davidson generated the loudest audience reaction of the night after drawing a charge down low.

Coupeville actually knotted the game up at 24-24, only to have its final bucket waved off for being a fraction too late.

Instead, the Wolves came out of the very-short halftime break down two and hung tough even as they begin to exhibit tired legs down the stretch.

The biggest killer in the second half was an inability to string together buckets, as CHS only notched back-to-back baskets once in the final 20 minutes.

That gave the Wildcats a bit of breathing room, and time and again, Oak Harbor hit shots when it needed them most, holding off its scrappy small-school rivals.

Blouin peppered the net for a pair of three-balls late, while White and Downes each made the twine jump on a long shot of their own.

Unfortunately, for Downes, his three-ball, coming on the game’s final play, was waved off like Davidson’s buzzer beater in the first half, falling victim to being .000001 of a second too late.

The Wolf senior-to-be still finished with a team-high 21 points, while White banked in 11 and Blouin knocked down eight.

Guay and Anderson rattled the rims for four apiece to finish off the attack.

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Sophomore Landon Roberts is one of 11 Wolf baseball players to letter this spring. (Morgan White photo)

The seniors shall lead the way.

Coupeville’s two oldest players brought home hardware Friday night, with Scott Hilborn and Jonathan Valenzuela topping the list as Wolf baseball handed out season-ending awards.

Hilborn was tabbed as the team’s Defensive Player of the Year and was honored for playing all four years, while Valenzuela earned Offensive Player of the Year.

They were joined by junior Cole White (Wolf Pack Leader Award), sophomore Jack Porter (Most Improved), and freshman Chase Anderson (Dirtbag Award) in receiving varsity honors.

JV awards went to Johnny Porter (MVP), Aidyn McDermott (Dirtbag Award), Skylar Sand (Most Improved), and Matthew Gilbert (Wolf Pack Leader Award).

Fab frosh Camden Glover smokes a hit down the left field line. (Morgan White photo)

 

Varsity letter winners:

Chase Anderson
Peyton Caveness
Coop Cooper
Camden Glover
Scott Hilborn
Aiden O’Neill
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter
Landon Roberts
Jonathan Valenzuela
Cole White

 

Participation certificates:

Piotr Bieda
Jayme Carranza
Myca Clarkson
David Dominici
Jaje Drake
Jack Farrell
Parker Fuller
Marcelo Gebhard
Matthew Gilbert
Ethan Gill
Aidyn McDermott
Skylar Sand
Yohannon Sandles
Seth Woollet

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A day after his birthday, Landon Roberts whiffed three batters in an inning of work on the mound. (Morgan White photo)

The ferry waits for no man.

Even if they’re in the middle of playing a baseball game.

That’s a cold, hard fact for people who live on islands, so Saturday’s JV baseball game between visiting Coupeville High School and host Orcas came to an early end after three innings.

That allowed the Vikings to hold on for a 5-2 win against a young Wolf squad just finding its rhythm.

“All in all, we are happy to get a few innings in before we had to abruptly call the game,” said CHS coach Jon Roberts.

“I truly wish we could have played at least five innings. I think we could have clawed our way back into it.

“However, we will never know if that would be true.”

The Wolves, now 0-4-1 on the season, started strongly, scoring two runs in the top of the first.

All three of Coupeville’s hits came in that inning, with Marcelo Gebhard and Jack Farrell ripping singles and Aidyn McDermott crunching a double.

Both runs came in on a fielder’s choice off the bat of Seth Woollet, while the inning ended when Orcas gunned down a runner headed home.

“An exciting start!” Jon Roberts said. “The opposition pitcher had just played the field on varsity. We were making contact and scoring runs.”

Unfortunately for Coupeville, its first-inning hits would be its only base knocks in the game, though the Wolves did draw three walks across the final two innings.

Orcas only recorded one hit on the afternoon but took advantage of a series of free passes to push four runs across in the first, and another one in the second.

CHS mixed its pitchers, with Yohannan Sandles getting the start, before Myca Clarkson and Landon Roberts followed him to the mound.

The final two hurlers both whiffed three Vikings apiece.

Coupeville’s JV returns to action next Thursday, April 27, when it travels to Darrington.

 

Saturday stats:

David Dominici — One walk
Jack Farrell — One single
Marcelo Gebhard — One single
Matthew Gilbert — One walk
Aidyn McDermott — One double
Skylar Sand — One walk
Yohannon Sandles — One walk

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