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Posts Tagged ‘Matt Hilborn’

   Wolf catcher Taylor Consford had two hits Friday, but Coupeville fell to Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

Slip-sliding away.

Coupeville’s chances of repeating as Olympic League champs in baseball took a shot to the ribs Friday, and while its hopes aren’t dead, they’re getting closer to flat-lining.

A rough fifth inning in which the Wolves surrendered five runs with two outs allowed host Klahowya to break open a close game and make off with an 11-6 win.

The loss, the second in as many games against the Eagles this season, drops Coupeville to 2-2 in league play, 7-7 overall.

That leaves the Wolves in a second-place tie with Chimacum (2-2, 4-4), two-and-a-half games off of Klahowya (5-0, 6-3).

Port Townsend (0-5, 0-7) is firmly stuck in the cellar.

CHS still has time to rally, with five league games left on the schedule, but to keep the Eagles from regaining the title they won in 2015, the Wolves will absolutely have to finish with a better record.

By taking the first two games of the three-game season series, Klahowya holds a tiebreaker over Coupeville should they finish with identical records.

The Wolves jumped out to an early lead Friday, scoring a run in the first on a double by Hunter Smith and an RBI single by Clay Reilly, but their hosts never blinked.

Klahowya rallied for three in the bottom half of the opening inning, then plated another run in the second to build a 4-1 lead.

Coupeville twice cut the margin back to one, first at 4-3, then at 5-4 heading into the bottom of the fourth.

The Wolves picked up two runs in the third — Taylor Consford drilled a double to score Matt Hilborn, then came around himself when the Eagles booted a ball hit by Reilly.

Kory Score reached on an error in the fourth, moved up on a steal and a single off of Joey Lippo’s bat, before shooting across home on a passed ball and the game looked like it would come down to a single play.

Then, things kind of fell apart.

After answering with their own run in the fourth, the Eagles exploded for a ten-batter, five-run fifth to bust the game wide open.

All the damage came after there were two outs, as a deadly mix of walks, Wolf errors and a balk or two conspired to doom the visitors.

Coupeville rallied for two in the top of the seventh, on RBI singles by Consford and Reilly, but it wasn’t enough.

The Wolves did manage to pile up 10 hits, with Hilborn and Consford collecting two apiece, but Klahowya hurler Dylan Zuber managed to spend most of the afternoon getting out of trouble while suffering minimal damage.

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   “Sweet sassy molassy, that’s some good baseball!!” CHS coach Chris Smith channels the excitement of a one-run win. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf hurler Dane Lucero fires some BB’s on his way to seven K’s in four innings of work.

A meeting on the mound draws a large turnout.

Taylor Consford unleashes the cannon.

   Veteran hardball guru Mike Etzell keeps the exterior calm, but inside he’s shouting like a madman.

Matt Hilborn (5) dances a saucy tango at third.

There was plenty of excitement on the prairie Monday afternoon.

Big plays came from all directions as the Coupeville High School baseball squad stunned 2A Bremerton 2-1 in an all-timer.

Along for the ride was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who delivers the pics above.

To see everything he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes and encourage him to return to Cow Town), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170320-vs-Bremerton/

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   Matt Hilborn was a two-way terror Friday, whiffing all four hitters he faced and delivering a two-run single at the plate. (John Fisken photo)

Whomever decided to start the high school baseball season in March needs to be taken out and shot.

I think I comfortably speak for the limited, but loyal, fan base that watched part or all of Friday’s Coupeville vs. Sequim diamond duel — it’s too freakin’ early for this.

The prairie was damp (but not damp enough to call off the game) and cold (which makes for a lovely combo with damp…) and it took a piece of my soul with every annoying wind gust which shot up my shorts.

Now sure, we could talk about why I was stupid enough to wear shorts (I did have layers of rain-proof coats on top) or we could just ignore that fact, accept I wear shorts 24/7/365 and move on to the game itself.

Game it is, then.

As the fans exchanged the sort of dead-eyed stares common to inmates serving life sentences in prison, the visitors chipped away, racking up a series of shallow, but well-placed, hits en route to knocking off Coupeville 14-4.

Ah, but the 10-run rule — it saved you, right?

It did not.

Sequim took its sweet time getting to that margin, not scoring its final three runs until the top of the seventh, guaranteeing we would play (and watch) a full, nearly three-hour game on the unforgiving prairie.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 0-2, but they have a chance to bounce right back, as they host South Whidbey at 1 PM Saturday — weather permitting.

In the early going Friday, two things looked like a certainty, but neither came to fruition.

It seemed like the rain would pick up enough to possibly wash away the game (or at least delay it), but it wasn’t to be. And Coupeville looked like it would seize the early advantage, but that also wasn’t to be.

CHS starting pitcher Hunter Smith came out en fuego, whiffing the first hitter then picking the second batter off of first base after he singled, rifling a crisp throw neatly into the waiting glove of Kory Score.

The Wolves put their first two hitters on base in the bottom of the first, with Smith beating out an infield single and Joey Lippo reaching on a error.

Two quick outs slowed things down, but Matt Hilborn loaded the bags after being awarded first on an interference call by the plate ump.

Looking to break through with the game’s first RBI, Score rapped a hard shot up the middle, only to see the Sequim second baseman make a nice play to knock it down and throw him out by a step.

Sequim started to turn the game in the second inning, scraping together four runs on a series of hits that found a perfect landing spot, narrowly going over the head of Wolf infielders before biting grass quickly in front of oncoming CHS outfielders.

Smith ended the run with a double play, spearing a soft liner back to the mound, then whirling to double up a runner who had jumped off of third.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s bats took a bit of a break in the second and third, then Sequim dropped a five-spot in the fourth to bust the lead out to 9-0.

Facing a very real chance of being ten-runned, the Wolves fought back with their best offensive work in the bottom of the fourth.

And they did it despite starting with two outs and nobody on base.

Wolf catcher Taylor Consford, who was a rock behind the plate while working with four different pitchers, whacked a solid single to center to kick the comeback off.

After a walk to Smith, a couple of stolen bases and a passed ball, Joey Lippo crunched a chopper that caught infield dirt and kicked high and hard enough to allow him to beat the ball out while both of his teammates crossed home.

Not content to stop there, the Wolves loaded the bases on walks to Clay Reilly and Julian Welling, setting up Matt Hilborn to join Lippo on the RBI express.

The sophomore shortstop laced a two-run single to right field and the rally caps were starting to get turned around.

But Sequim escaped when its right fielder ran down a long blast off of Score’s bat, and Coupeville rarely threatened after that.

The Wolves did get their first two runners on in the sixth, thanks to Smith getting plunked and Lippo eking out a walk.

But a bit of miscommunication on the base-paths resulted in Smith being hung out to dry at home as part of a rally-killing double play.

On the mound, Coupeville’s best work came from pitcher #3, Hilborn, who whiffed all four hitters he faced, using all 23 of his pitches to maximum effect.

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Senior Jonathan Thurston is one of several Wolf pitchers who will be counted on to help replace graduated staff ace CJ Smith. (John Fisken photos)

   Senior Jonathan Thurston is one of several Wolf pitchers who will be counted on to help replace graduated staff ace CJ Smith. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, a First-Team All-League pick last year as a sophomore, will anchor CHS on the mound and in the infield.

   Hunter Smith, a First-Team All-League pick last year as a sophomore, will anchor CHS on the mound and in the infield.

Last year they shocked the world. This year they have a bulls-eye on their chest.

Coming off its first league title in 25 years, the Coupeville High School baseball squad will look to keep the good times going in year two under coach Marc Aparicio.

“Our long term varsity goal this season is to win state,” Aparicio said. “Our JV goal is to support the varsity goal and to build a strong long-term future for our baseball program.

“Our short term goal is to win one game at a time.”

Coupeville returns almost every varsity player from a season ago, though two losses — CJ Smith and Olympic League MVP Cole Payne — are huge.

Smith was the team’s undisputed pitching ace, a serene strikeout artist who held his team together through good times and bad, while Payne was a rock behind the plate, a catcher who combined a potent bat with solid defensive skills.

On the mound, the Wolves won’t necessarily try to replace CJ Smith with just one hurler.

Younger brother Hunter Smith, himself an All-League pick as a pitcher, returns for his junior campaign, and he’ll have plenty of help as CHS “has about eight very good pitchers to try and replace CJ.”

Those include junior Julian Welling, senior Jonathan Thurston and sophomore Matt Hilborn, who was a First-Team All-League pick as an infielder in 2016.

“We are very fortunate this year to have a lot of kids that want to pitch,” Aparicio said.

Payne’s replacement will likely come in the form of Taylor Consford, a senior who transferred from Oak Harbor.

He was a starter for the 3A Wildcats last season, playing in 17 games and collecting five RBIs.

Other key returning players include catcher Jake Pease, infielders Kory Score, Dane Lucero, Joey Lippo and Nick Etzell and outfielders Clay Reilly, Gabe Wynn, Jake Hoagland and Ethan Marx.

The Wolves have also picked up a collection of new players, some of whom might start to contribute right away.

“Our freshman class is small, but all the players are looking very good so far,” Aparicio said. “A good fit to our already solid team.

“We will work hard this year to play as a team – play for the team and not as an individual.”

For Coupeville to repeat as league champs, it will need to scale Klahowya, which won in 2015, Chimacum and a Port Townsend squad that should be resurgent after an 0-16 year in which it never got to play at home thanks to field issues.

“Our league competitors will certainly put up a fight this year, as they did last year,” Aparicio said. “However, we’re confident we will go beyond league play.

“This is what we are practicing for.”

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Matt Hilborn

   Matt Hilborn has the ball in his sights, but a BC defender arrives at the same time. (John Fisken photos)

The ball is jarred skyward.

The ball is jarred skyward.

Fly...

Fly…

Fly...

Fly…

Fly away.

Fly away.

But wait...

But wait…

The man...

The man…

The myth...

The myth…

The legend...

The legend…

Cameron Toomey-Stout is here to save the day.

Cameron Toomey-Stout is here to save the day.

"And I'm outta here." A broken play, a huge bounce, an alert player and a 67-yard reception.

   “And I’m outta here.” A broken play, a huge bounce, an alert player and a 67-yard reception.

It was the play of the year.

Seen here for the first time in all its flip-book glory, thanks to John Fisken, is a wild series of events that somehow, against all odds, worked 100% in favor of the Coupeville High School football squad.

Playing on the road against Bellevue Christian in an extremely tight game, with a 100-year storm supposedly on its way (spoiler: it wasn’t), the Wolves needed a miracle.

And they got it.

With quarterback Hunter Downes sent to the bench for a play by an over-zealous ref, Hunter Smith took the snap and fired a pass to Matt Hilborn.

The BC defender and the ball arrived at the same time, causing the football to kick upwards, seemingly a lost opportunity for the Wolves.

Except … Cameron Toomey-Stout, tracking the play the whole way, appeared out of nowhere to snatch the ball in mid-air, then turned it into a 67-yard dash to daylight that dropped jaws throughout the stadium.

In a season that saw records broken and The Bucket come back to Cow Town after Coupeville mashed arch-rival South Whidbey, the Smith-to-Hilborn-to-ToomeyStout miracle stands tall.

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