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Ethan Marx

   Ethan Marx socked a two-out, three-run double Friday, sparking Coupeville to a 10-0 win and its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photo)

One of us was smart enough to get Sylvia Hurlburt to run around and have everyone sign a line-up card to commemorate the moment. (David Svien photo)

   A little slice of autographed prairie history, thanks to Sylvia Hurlburt. (David Svien photo)

CJ Smith

   CJ Smith, seen here in an earlier game, was unflappable Friday, whiffing 10 and shutting out Port Townsend. (Fisken photo)

Now, you’re gonna think I’m making this up, but it really, truly happened.

As I pulled my hunk o’ junk car into the parking lot at the Coupeville High School baseball field Friday afternoon, the final song playing on the radio was “We are the Champions.”

Seriously. No, seriously.

As the soaring strains of Freddy Mercury poured out the window and swirled away into the suddenly gusty prairie wind, there was no doubt.

Today was gonna be historical.

Now, of course, there was an actual baseball game yet to be played, one which would prove surprisingly competitive for long enough to make local fans feel their collars tighten around their necks, but the radio gods had spoken.

And their will be done, apparently, because somewhere around 5:30 PM West coast time, having drilled Port Townsend 10-0, the Wolves were exactly that — champions … of the world.

Or, at the very least, of the 1A Olympic League, which is all the world Coupeville needs right now.

A flawless 7-0 in league play, 10-8 overall, the Wolves will hang a league championship banner in baseball for the first time since 1991.

There are two games left on the regular season schedule — a road game at Chimacum (2-5, 5-10) Monday, then the home finale against Klahowya (5-2, 14-4) Wednesday — but they are largely academic.

Win, lose or draw, Coupeville is the #1 seed out of the Olympic League and automatically advances to the double-elimination part of the district tourney May 10-14.

Two victories there and they’re off to state.

But before they could focus on that, the Wolves had to put the hammer down on a pesky RedHawks squad that is going through a season from Hell.

Win-less, and unable to play a single home game this season due to the condition of its field, Port Townsend came to Whidbey with nothing to lose, and one shot at making things seem semi-alright for a day at least.

Pull the upset, prevent Coupeville from clinching, punch a hole in the soul of Wolf Nation — that was the unspoken goal.

And, for 20 minutes or so, the RedHawks looked as good as they have looked at any point this season.

They weren’t scoring against unflappable Wolf hurler CJ Smith, but they also weren’t giving up any runs, playing spotless defense and keeping the game scoreless into the bottom of the third.

Coupeville had a shot at changing the numbers on the (suddenly functioning) scoreboard in the first, when Hunter Smith slapped a lead-off single to right, then took two bags on a sac bunt by his big brother.

But he died at third, metaphorically speaking of course, when Cole Payne’s towering pop fly was snagged and then the RedHawk first baseman made an eye-popping mid-air snag on a laser off of the bat of Julian Welling.

Port Townsend had runners on in each of the first three innings, but CJ Smith, who may be the calmest Wolf to ever toe the pitching rubber at CHS, stranded them each time.

His pitches popping in Payne’s glove, he punched-out six RedHawks on strikeouts, while lil’ bro Hunter backed him up with the defensive play of the game.

With a runner at first and no outs in the top of the third, Hunter Smith went so deep into the hole at short he could practically touch the fence behind third base, snared a hot shot, and, spinning like a ballet dancer, fired to second to nail the runner by less than a step.

Not content to stop there, Hunter then went out in the bottom of the inning and created the only run his brother would need to win.

With two outs and no one on base, the junior Smith beat out an infield single, stole second, stole third, then scampered home when his quicksilver moves flustered the RedHawk catcher into skipping his throw to third into left field.

Port Townsend, to its credit, didn’t collapse, and juiced the bags in the fourth, even after Wolf third baseman Matt Hilborn made a stunning throw to nail the lead-off hitter.

All eyes turned towards CJ Smith, who was so calm, he looked like he was asleep on the mound.

Now, it is possible emotions roil deeply through the senior, that he is a bubbling cauldron of anxiety. If he is, he has hidden it beautifully for three years.

Boom. Strike one. Slight movement of the eyes.

Boom. Strike two. Slight twitch of the mouth.

Boom. Strike three. Inning over.

The faintest whisper of a smile, 99.4% hidden by keeping his head down, cap tilted against what was now steady gusts of wind rumbling across the prairie.

Having escaped from the precipice, Coupeville decided it was time to stop giving its fans a collective coronary and truly embrace its destiny.

Cue the Hollywood ending.

A one-run lead, bases loaded, two outs in the bottom of the fourth and your #8 hitter at the plate.

Pinch-runner Ty Eck bounced on third base (he was running for Welling, who cracked a one-out single to right), Kory Score glared at the pitcher from second (he reached on an error) and Clay Reilly (a walk) leisurely drifted off of first.

Enter Ethan Marx and exit the final hope for the RedHawks.

Launching a bomb to straight-away center field that sliced through the wind gusts, then rode one sideways at an opportune moment, the junior cleared the bases and etched his name into Wolf lore.

With some room to breathe at 4-0 (though his demeanor never changed) CJ Smith was brutal in the top of the fifth, inducing a grounder to Score at first, then cracking off K’s #9 and #10.

The bottom of the fifth perfectly encapsulated two seasons going in different directions.

Needing six runs to force an early end to the game via the 10-run mercy rule, Coupeville sent nine batters to the plate and every one of them reached base safely.

Hunter Smith’s third single of the game launched things, Payne’s two-run single up the gut sealed things, and yet the runs kept coming.

An RBI single from Score made it 7-0, a hard shot off a glove from Reilly plated #8, an infield single from Dane Lucero that burrowed into the grass and refused to come back out sent #9 home and then 25 years of championship drought ended on one swing.

Hilborn, a mere freshman, swatted a chopper into the gap between second and first, sending Gabe Wynn barreling across home and the dream was a reality.

As the Wolves stormed the field, as their fans celebrated in the stands, as news began to flash across town and then across the USA, thanks to our modern digital world, the prairie breeze continued to blow.

And, if you listened carefully, you could hear it written on the wind.

“We are the champions … of the world!!”

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Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for your self. (David Svien photos)

   Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for yourself. (David Svien photos)

The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS -- How many of those phone numbers are still good?

   The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS — How many of those phone numbers do we think are still good?

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Today is about today, but it’s also about yesterday and tomorrow.

When the Coupeville High School baseball team takes its home field this afternoon to face Port Townsend (4 PM), the Wolves have a rare opportunity.

Coupeville enters the day at 6-0 in the 1A Olympic League, 9-8 overall and ranked #9 in the most recent state poll.

The RedHawks, who have had to play their entire season on the road thanks to problems with their home field, are 0-6, 0-13.

Go out there, put the hammer down, and the Wolves will bring their school its first baseball league title since 1991.

25 years is a long time.

Fashion changes. Music changes. Hairstyles change.

The entire world, from how we watch movies to the fact you’re reading this on a computer, phone or some other newfangled device never thought of in ’91 is proof of that.

The oldest players on this Coupeville squad weren’t even a twinkle in their parents eyes the last time something like this happened on the prairie.

And when it does (and I said WHEN and not if), these Wolves, from CJ Smith to Jake Hoagland, from Cole Payne to Clay Reilly, and all of their teammates and coaches, will freeze a moment in time.

Forever.

I know, when you’re 15, 16, 17, 18, everything is about today and not down the road, and little I say now is likely to sink in. I get it.

These Wolf players will celebrate in the moment, as Coupeville’s girls basketball and girls and boys tennis teams have done over the past two years when they won titles. It will be big for them.

But it will be bigger later. I promise.

A decade down the road, 25 years down the road, when you’re pushing 30 and coming back for your 10-year reunion or when you’re crawling into your early 40’s, it will mean so much more.

When you return to the CHS gym and look up on the wall and show your own children the banner, you have no clue right now how much that is going to matter.

Time will change all of you.

Some will achieve great things, some may fall hard. Hopefully more of the former, less of the latter.

But you win today, and this moment will truly live for all time.

On the gym wall, and in your own hearts and minds.

And yes, I get the argument that sports are not everything, that how you do in the classroom right now will likely affect your life more than whether you get a bunt down or throw out a runner at home.

They are semi-valid arguments, and I understand why some people won’t want you to spend the rest of your life marinating in your “glory days.”

And I would tell you to tell those people to blow it out their rears.

You have worked hard, as individuals, as a team, to get to this moment. It should be treasured.

It is not the final destination, certainly, and there are many prizes ahead waiting to be vied for, and won.

But today can be, should be, a moment you will have forever.

Play with confidence, embrace the spotlight, carry yourself with pride. Execute, execute, execute. Win the day and step into history.

What you are about to achieve is something relatively few teams in Coupeville have, in baseball or any sport.

Live out the words of The Sandlot (another thing from before you were all born…).

“Remember kid, there’s heroes and there’s legends. Heroes get remembered but legends never die.”

Walk on that field this afternoon heroes. Walk off legends.

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Marc

   First-year CHS coach Marc Aparicio is one win away from getting his alma mater its first baseball league title since 1991. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, seen here making a play

   Hunter Smith, seen here making a play in an earlier game, was superb on the mound and at the plate in a 10-2 win at Klahowya Wednesday.

The miracle ride continues.

Every pundit, every poll, every prognosticator said the same thing, and, so far, they’ve all been flat-out wrong.

Klahowya, the defending 1A Olympic League baseball champs, prepared for league play with a tough schedule full of 2A schools and did really well, earning a ranking as high as #3 in the state polls.

Then, they stepped right into the path of an oncoming train called the Wolf Express.

Exploding for seven runs in the sixth inning Wednesday, Coupeville ran away with a 10-2 win on the road and moved within a step of not only dethroning the Eagles, but winning its first baseball league title since 1991.

The Wolves have now taken two straight from Klahowya and sit at 6-0 in league play, 9-8 overall.

That gives them a two-game lead with three to play over the Eagles (4-2, 13-4), while Chimacum (2-4, 5-9) and Port Townsend (0-6, 0-13) root around down in the cellar.

Since it now owns the tiebreaker over Klahowya, Coupeville needs just one win in its final three games to clinch the title and an automatic berth in the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs.

First up is Port Townsend, which visits Whidbey Friday, with the first pitch at 4 PM.

After that comes a trip to Chimacum Monday, May 2 and a home regular-season finale against Klahowya Thursday, May 5.

The Wolves have put themselves in position to do what no CHS diamond squad has in 25 years thanks to one huge reason — their ability to get something out of everyone in the lineup.

“Every player performed when called upon, and we switched things up quite a bit. Next man up!!,” said first-year Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio.

“The highlight was “team.” Great job had by all of the kids,” he added. “Very proud of them – still have things to work on, but a great win. The kids are on fire!!!”

Coupeville used 14 players in the game, with eight of them scoring.

Sophomore Hunter Smith and freshman Matt Hilborn, who combined for the game’s first run, both crossed the plate twice to pace the attack.

With the game scoreless in the third, Coupeville finally broke through, thanks to some rough defense by the suddenly-rattled Eagles.

After only having one runner in the first two innings, the Wolves got Hilborn aboard on a one-out error by Klahowya’s third-baseman, then brought him around when Smith’s bunt was thrown into the outfield by the Eagle pitcher.

Klahowya countered with its own scratched-out run in the third, but after that could get next to nothing off Smith, who was superb.

Getting the nod on the mound after older brother CJ won the first meeting between the two squads, Hunter, AKA “Captain Cool,” whiffed five Eagles and was rarely in danger.

With Aparicio playing the mad scientist in the dugout, Coupeville took the lead with two runs in the top of the fifth.

Freshman pinch-hitter Dane Lucero eked out a crucial walk, then was replaced with sophomore speedster Nick Etzell, who used “some smart base running” to bust the tie.

“After that small switch our team was on fire,” Aparicio said. “Lots of stolen bases, we had great timely bunts and great base running overall.”

Up 3-1, the Wolves blew the game wide open with a 12-batter, seven-run assault in the top of the sixth.

Hunter Smith, CJ Smith, Kory Score, Gabe Wynn, Clay Reilly, Ty Eck and Hilborn all stamped on home as Coupeville put together its best offensive stretch of the season under the biggest spotlight.

With the game largely on ice, the Wolves went to Julian Welling to slam the door, and the sophomore didn’t fail, working a little of the ol’ Mariano Rivera magic in the seventh.

Perhaps appropriately, the game ended on an unassisted double play from Hunter Smith, the perfect cap to a remarkable game from the rising star.

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(Clipping courtesy Keith Jameson)

   On this very day, 37 years ago, Coupeville shocked King’s and their all-world freshman to win the Cascade League hoops title. (Clipping courtesy Keith Jameson)

You know those championship banners that DON’T hang in Coupeville High School’s gym?

One of them was literally won on this very day.

Yep, 37 years ago, on Feb. 9, 1979, Steve Whitney hit a soft 16-foot jumper, off a pass from Keith Jameson, to lift the CHS boys hoops squad to a 55-53 win over King’s Garden.

The victory over the private school power — these days known simply as King’s — and their all-world freshman Joe Buchanan, clinched the Cascade League title for Coupeville.

It also kicked off a wild postseason that saw the Wolves advance all the way to the state tourney, where they beat Montesano 62-51 in the middle of three games.

That win matched the 1975-1976 Wolves and remains one of only two times that a Coupeville boys hoops squad has won a game at the big dance.

But first they had to get past their biggest nemesis, King’s.

They did so by surviving Buchanan, a legendary prep athlete who played two years at King’s and two at O’Dea, before suiting up in college at Notre Dame.

When he chose the Fighting Irish, he passed up on college scholarships from Syracuse and Duke, who had just hired a new coach named Mike Krzyzewski, who badly wanted the guy they called Jo-Jo.

Coach K survived the snub, giving Buchanan’s intended scholarship to future NBA star Johnny Dawkins and setting off on a career that has seen five NCAA titles, two Olympic gold medals and the college record for wins by a D-1 coach.

Buchanan, on the other hand, had a rougher time after high school.

Injuries and illness (a mysterious spinal virus) hampered his high school career and ended his hoops career prematurely, just shy of the NBA glory that once seemed to be his birthright.

That night against Coupeville, though, he was electrifying, according to all accounts, scoring 18 and putting King’s in position to win.

But, he was also a freshman, and the Wolves were a veteran, wily bunch ready to take advantage of any mistakes he made.

Trailing 51-49 with 2:15 to play (at a time when there was no shot clock in high school ball), Coupeville opted not to foul, but to wait for King’s freshman ball-hander to crack under the strain of trying to run the clock out.

And he did, throwing away a pass that Whitney snatched out of the air and took end-to-end for a game-tying layup.

Buchanan answered by roaring right back down-court, only to see his jumper catch rim and bounce off into the hands of Whitney, who was everywhere as usual.

Coupeville, unlike King’s, proved very adept at milking the clock, running 60 of the game’s remaining 68 seconds off the clock before Whitney whirled and tickled the twines with a shot that caught nothing but net.

The Knights had one final chance, but Roy Marti knocked the ball away and teammate Joe Whitney pulled the loose ball in and cradled it for dear life.

The come-from-behind win featured five Wolves scoring, with Steve Whitney (18), Wade Ellsworth (17) and Marti (14) hitting for double figures.

Jameson, who wheeled and dealed setting up the Wolf offense and rebounding ace Joe Whitney each banged home a bucket, while Coupeville out-rebounded King’s 39-20.

Also on that squad? Current Coupeville School Board big wig Chris Chan.

Ellsworth, who didn’t know at the time he would one day have two daughters (April and Ashley) who would follow in his footsteps as Wolf athletic stars, was also involved in a small, but very important moment.

With King’s up 38-37 going into the fourth, King’s coach Larry Skogstad got whistled for a technical during the break between quarters.

Ellsworth, who himself picked up three technical fouls in a game against Concrete earlier that season, nailed both ensuing free-throws, points which turned out to be huge later on.

37 years later, to the day, no championship banner hangs in the CHS gym (yet…), but let’s take a moment to remember a night when the Wolves stood on top of the basketball world.

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Jared Helmstadter is a super hero in his other life. (Wendy McCormick photos)

  Jared Helmstadter is a super hero in his other life. (Wendy McCormick photos)

Jimmy

   Wolf netters (l to r) Lilan Sekigawa, Grey Rische, Jimmy Myers and Nick Blalock enjoy some quality time with their #1 fan.

Connor McCormick pulled out the day's toughest match at #2 singles. His win officially claimed the league title for the Wolves.

   Connor McCormick pulled out the day’s toughest match at #2 singles. His win officially claimed the league title for the Wolves.

We are the champs!

We are the champs … of taking photos.

Clear some space on the gym wall, cause there’s a new title banner going up.

Following in the footsteps of their feminine counterparts, who ruled the 1A Olympic League in the spring, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis team ascended the mountain top Wednesday.

Thrashing visiting Chimacum 6-0, the Wolves (5-3 overall) capped a 4-0 run through league play, replacing last year’s champ, Klahowya, atop the heap.

Now, all eyes turn to CHS administration, who are hopefully on the phone, getting their order in.

The title banner, which will join ones raised last school year by the girls’ basketball and girls’ tennis programs, will be the first one hoisted by a Wolf boys’ team in any sport since 2002.

Now, of course, there is the small matter of the netters having won a string of titles during that time, when they were competing in two and three-team leagues.

Those titles were won and should be honored on the CHS gym wall, but have never been. But that’s an argument for another day.

Wednesday, it was all about a new group of players putting the punctuation mark on their title, and they did so with ease.

Playing in front of a spartan crowd (take away family members, a girlfriend or three and a small contingent of the media and the number of people witnessing history was ridiculously low), the Wolves drilled Chimacum.

Coupeville rolled to straight sets wins in all of its matches, with the exception of third singles.

That match, once it finally made it to an open court, was a brawl between Nick Etzell and Emmett Erickson, the lone Port Townsend player to travel and play with Chimacum.

Erickson took the first set 7-5, but Etzell, slapping away with conviction, had turned things around and was about to serve for the second set up 5-4 when the ferry beckoned.

The match went into the record books as a draw, once the idea of leaving Erickson behind to finish up the match, then find his own way home, was voted down … barely.

Officially, the point which captured the day’s win, and the title, for Coupeville, came from #2 singles player Connor McCormick.

The smooth-hitting, never-ruffled senior dug down deep to pull out his win, barely beating #4 doubles duo Lilan Sekigawa and Jimmy Myers off the court.

Even though they started their match later, Sekigawa and Myers turned the power show on and almost caught their teammate, who was deep into a war of attrition.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singles — Sebastian Davis beat Jonny Rogers 6-1, 6-2

2nd singles — Connor McCormick beat Chris Sevilla 7-5, 7-6(7-1)

3rd singles — Nick Etzell drew with Emmett Erickson 5-7, 5-4

1st doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin beat Sean Miller/Zac Smith 6-0, 6-1

2nd doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Ryle Gapitulan/Nate Miller 6-1, 6-4

3rd doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter beat Connor Cottier/Cayden Sevilla 6-2, 6-1

4th doubles — Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa beat Jack Meissner/Tibersio Brennan 6-1, 6-0

JV:

5th doubles — Nile Lockwood/Garrett Compton trailed Gapitulan/N. Miller 4-3 (ferry)

6th doubles — Nick Blalock/Aiden Crimmins lost to S. Miller/Smith 6-1

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