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Coupeville seniors (l to r) Bryce Payne, Dane Lucero, Jake Pease, Matt Hilborn, and Shane Losey are off to the playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’a whole new world.

Fresh off winning its final seven games of the regular-season, the suddenly-surging Coupeville High School baseball squad is playoff-bound.

The Wolves open the double-elimination bi-district tourney Saturday with two games on the road, the first against Meridian.

Win at least one, and the season continues through the next weekend. Drop both, and it’s time to turn in uniforms and prep for the banquet.

A breakdown of what you need to know as we head towards the playoffs:

 

What:

1A Bi-District baseball tournament, featuring nine teams vying for four tickets to state.

District 1 has seven teams in the mix, with four from the North Sound Conference (including Coupeville) and three from the Northwest Conference.

District 2 is represented by two teams from the Emerald City League.

 

When:

May 1-11

 

Where:

Multiple locations.

A play-in game between Lynden Christian and University Prep goes down Wednesday in Lynden.

After that, all games will be played at either Sehome High School or Joe Martin Stadium, both in Bellingham.

 

What’s at stake:

Four teams advance to state, with this tourney filling 25% of the 16-team state bracket.

 

Admission for individual bi-district playoff games:

Adults and students without ASB — $7.00
Students with ASB, children and seniors — $5.00
Preschool children (with paying adult) – Free

 

Team capsules:

 

Coupeville:

Season record: 7-12

League finish: #4 in 1A North Sound Conference

Run differential: 79-126

Seniors: (5) – Matt Hilborn, Shane Losey, Dane Lucero, Bryce Payne, Jake Pease

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 1-11 (1-2 vs. South Whidbey; 0-1 vs. Overlake, Lynden Christian, University Prep; 0-3 vs. Cedar Park Christian, King’s)

Coach: Chris Smith

Mascot: Wolves

 

Cedar Park Christian:

Season record: 17-3

League finish: #1 in 1A North Sound Conference

Run differential: 195-42

Seniors: (7) – Jacob Catey, Epic Csigi, Michael Doyle, Ben Hann, Bret Henson, Ben Hirai, Brandon McClean

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 10-2 (3-0 vs. King’s, Coupeville; 1-0 vs. Lynden Christian, Overlake, U Prep; 1-2 vs. South Whidbey)

Coach: Matt Stevens

Mascot: Eagles

 

King’s:

Season record: 11-9

League finish: #3 in 1A North Sound Conference

Run differential: 115-83

Seniors: (?) – Not available

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 4-7 (3-0 vs. Coupeville; 1-2 vs. South Whidbey; 0-1 vs. U Prep, Overlake, 0-3 vs. Cedar Park)

Coach: Jake Beattiger

Mascot: Knights

 

Lynden Christian:

Season record: 7-13

League finish: #3 of 1A teams in 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference

Run differential: 85-131

Seniors: (2) – Damyn Dykstra, Zach Sipma

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 2-3 (1-0 vs. Coupeville; 1-1 vs. Mount Baker; 0-1 vs. Meridian, Cedar Park)

Coach: Daniel VanderKooi

Mascot: Lyncs

 

Meridian:

Season record: 9-10

League finish: #1 of 1A teams in 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference

Run differential: 86-115

Seniors: (5) – Enrique Gomez, Dylan Hickok, Josh Neeter, Andrew Weg, Brayden Zender

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 3-0 (2-0 vs. Mount Baker, 1-0 vs. Lynden Christian)

Coach: Steve Slesk

Mascot: Trojans

 

Mount Baker:

Season record: 9-11

League finish: #2 of 1A teams in 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference

Run differential: 129-141

Seniors: (7) – Carter Backstrom, Kaleb Bass, Leif Blow, Isaac Gomes, Michael Kentner, Tyler Rosenburg, Jaxon Weathers

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 1-3 (1-0 vs. Lynden Christian, 0-2 vs. Meridian)

Coach: Justin Myers

Mascot: Mountaineers

 

Overlake:

Season record: 14-4

League finish: #1 in 1A Emerald City League

Run differential: 179-79

Seniors: (3) – Jon Campbell, Arlo Rafael Encarnacion, Austin Mell

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 4-3 (1-0 vs. Coupeville, King’s; 2-1 vs. U Prep; 0-1 vs. CPC, South Whidbey)

Coach: Mike Davidson

Mascot: Owls

 

South Whidbey:

Season record: 17-3

League finish: #2 in 1A North Sound Conference

Run differential: 156-46

Seniors: (2) – Jon Bartel, Kody Newman

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 8-3 (2-1 vs. Cedar Park, Coupeville, King’s; 1-0 vs. Overlake, U Prep)

Coach: Tom Fallon

Mascot: Falcons

 

University Prep:

Season record: 8-6

League finish: #2 in 1A Emerald City League

Run differential: 89-66

Seniors: (3) – Gus Coluccio, Owen Morgan, Keenan Van Deusen

Record vs. district tourney qualifiers: 3-4 (1-0 vs. Coupeville, King’s; 1-2 vs. Overlake; 0-1 vs. CPC, South Whidbey)

Coach: Rex Carlin

Mascot: Pumas

 

Bracket:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2913&sport=6

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Sarah Wright cracked an inside-the-park two-run home-run Saturday as Coupeville softball pasted Meridian 11-1. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a message, loud and clear.

Playing under blue skies on the prairie Saturday, the Coupeville High School softball team put visiting Meridian down hard, rolling to an 11-1 win thanks to a hail of extra-base hits.

In the moment, it’s just one win, and a non-conference one at that, but it was a warning to a school the Wolves might face in the playoffs, and a shot in general across the bow of the Northwest Conference.

Now 7-6, after winning for the third time in its last four games, Coupeville first turns its attention to chasing a league title.

The Wolves are nipping at the heels of North Sound Conference leader Granite Falls, and begin a final six-game stretch of regular-season contests with games Monday and Tuesday against cellar dwellers Sultan and South Whidbey.

After that comes the district playoffs, an eight-team double-elimination tourney May 16 & 18, which pits the five NSC teams against the four NWC squads in the pursuit of three tickets to state.

Coupeville has its win against Meridian, and a narrow 9-6 loss at Lynden Christian, but doesn’t face Mount Baker or Nooksack Valley during the regular season.

The game against Meridian was delayed a week by rain, and the weather looked iffy for much of Saturday morning.

But five minutes before the first pitch, the clouds peeled away, the sun came pouring in, followed soon after by a never-ending stream of bubbles from somewhere around the first-base dugout, and the Wolves started flexing their biceps.

In the early going, CHS showed off an uncanny ability to deliver the goods with no room for error, building a lead it would never relinquish.

With Emma Mathusek rocking back and forth at first-base after eking out a walk, the Wolves dropped three consecutive two-out RBI base-knocks, using all three parts of the field.

Sarah Wright smashed a single to center, Mollie Bailey lobbed a single to right, then Veronica Crownover pasted a double to left, leaving Meridian’s pitcher reeling, and trailing 3-0 on the scoreboard.

While the Trojans eventually got out of that jam thanks to a nice snag to rob Nicole Laxton on a liner, things had been set in motion.

Coupeville added another run in the third, on a two-out Crownover RBI single, before smashing things open in the fourth inning.

Scout Smith cracked a majestic, run-scoring double to kick things off, then came around to score herself on a Chelsea Prescott ground-out.

Meridian tried to pull off an inning-ending double play on the ball, but Smith, pulling off some Matrix-style moves, limbo’d under the tag to the delight of her boisterous fan section.

Not only did her heroics add another run to the big board, they kept the inning alive, giving Sarah Wright a chance to go big time.

Coupeville’s catcher got a day off behind the plate, playing third while Bailey caught, so her legs might have been a little more limber than if she had been crouched down all day.

Or maybe she’s just that quick all the time.

Tagging a shot to right field, Wright hit maximum warp speed three steps towards the first-base bag and never let up, crashing around the base-paths for a legit two-run, inside-the-park home run.

Her third tater of the season (the first two cleared the fence) it staked the Wolves to an 8-0 lead and raised the idea of the 10-run mercy rule being visible on the horizon.

It would take a little bit longer to get there, though, as Meridian snuffed out a rally in the fifth.

The Trojans robbed Laxton for a second time, intercepting a missile back up the middle and turning it into a surprise double-play.

The visitors also scraped together a single, lonely run in the top of the sixth, thanks to a couple of walks and a couple of artfully-placed bunts, but Coupeville’s defense remained stingy.

Freshman hurler Izzy Wells, who whiffed five (and drilled one unlucky Trojan with an especially nasty, tear-inducing fastball gone rogue) made a nice play on a liner back to the circle.

Very next pitch, it was Crownover’s turn to snag a hot shot in the air at first-base, and, just like that, Meridian’s scoring was over and done.

While they couldn’t end the game in five innings, the Wolves got the job done in the sixth, plating the first three hitters to approach the plate.

Wells conked a double to left to lead off the frame, bouncing the ball off the wall on one hop, before Smith hammered an RBI single up the middle, and Emma Mathusek got medieval.

Moments before being asked to Prom by CHS baseball star Gavin Knoblich, the Wolf center-fielder thumped an RBI triple and almost (but not quite) made the turn like she wanted to match Wright’s inside-the-park round-tripper.

Mathusek got to come home a moment later, anyway, as Prescott once again put the ball exactly in the right place.

While she didn’t get a base hit on the day, the sophomore shortstop placed both of her RBI ground-outs precisely where the Meridian fielder was unable to nail the runner coming home.

If Mathusek’s slide into home wasn’t as graceful as the one by Smith, it was still pretty dang crowd-pleasing.

Rumbling and stumbling, she did the world’s most-awkward, yet effective, half-cartwheel, reaching back to tap her hand on the plate as she crashed by in a tangle of body parts.

The final run capped a day in which eight of 10 Wolves reached base, six had hits, and six collected RBI’s.

Smith (2B, 1B), Crownover (2B, 1B) and Wright (1B, 1B, HR) led the hit parade, with Mathusek (3B), Wells (2B), and Bailey (1B) all collecting base-knocks.

Chloe Wheeler and Mackenzie Davis both walked, while Prescott racked up two RBI, joining Wright (3), Crownover (2), Smith (2), Mathusek (1), and Bailey (1) as run-producers.

And Laxton, who was flat-out robbed twice of big hits by quick (and lucky) Meridian gloves, and Coral Caveness, in street clothes as she recovers from being drilled in the funny bone a game earlier?

They sung as loudly as anyone in the post-game victory song, smiles stretching across the prairie, basking in the glow of their teammate’s achievements and ready to get some of their own next time out.

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James Wood and Coupeville High School soccer are wading through a tough non-conference schedule. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You take your bumps and bruises, and, hopefully use them as learning lessons.

The Coupeville High School boys soccer squad, still a work in progress, dropped its second-straight non-league game Thursday, falling 4-0 at Meridian.

Both losses for the Wolves, now 1-2 on the season, have come against tough 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference foes.

And the run through that league isn’t quite done yet, as Coupeville travels Saturday to Nooksack Valley

But having a non-league schedule full of big-timers can be a help, as the Wolves want to be sharp when they begin North Sound Conference play.

“We’re still putting the pieces together early in the season,” CHS coach Kyle Nelson said. “We are showing some improvement; trying to get ready for league play next week.”

After the Nooksack game, Coupeville plays eight of its next nine games against league foes.

First up is King’s Mar. 19, then Sultan Mar. 22, with both games on Coupeville’s field.

While the Wolves were shut-out for the first time this season, after racking up 10 goals across their first two contests, Nelson was pleased with how his team responded under duress.

Meridian jumped out to a 3-0 lead at the half, but the Coupeville defense stiffened after the break and the team as a whole gave “a better effort in the second half.”

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Coupeville sophomore Chelsea Prescott collected seven points, five rebounds and three assists on opening night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“They played like it was a track meet, when we wanted it to be more like a tractor pull.”

When Coupeville could slow down the game the way coach David King wanted Tuesday night, the Wolf varsity girls basketball squad held its own with visiting Meridian.

But the Trojans, a tall, quick, highly-efficient squad coming off a 20-win season and a trip to the 1A state tourney, ultimately dictated the pace in both team’s season opener, pulling away for a 60-32 non-conference win.

While the score looks a little lopsided, the Wolves, who were missing a key starter and fielding a roster in transition, hung tough through much of the first half.

Senior captain Ema Smith, who didn’t have enough practices in the books to be eligible on opening night, spent the game keeping stats instead of throwing down on the court.

When she returns to action Saturday, she’ll join a young, fairly raw Wolf team.

Freshman Izzy Wells, sophomore Mollie Bailey and junior Tia Wurzrainer played in a varsity hoops game for the first time Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Chelsea Prescott, Avalon Renninger, Nicole Laxton and Hannah Davidson all moved into much-bigger roles than they had previously played.

With Ema Smith out, that left fellow captains Lindsey Roberts and Scout Smith as the only Wolves on the floor with extensive varsity experience.

And while the veteran duo were front and center all night, Coupeville got immediate contributions from everyone on the roster, something that pleased their coach.

“They didn’t show nerves or jitters, which is nice,” King said. “I’m so pleased with our effort; they don’t back down and give our team and their teammates 100% effort.”

Showing no fear, the Wolves charged right at the heart of the Trojan defense, repeatedly pushing the ball inside as they were hacked by 1,001 hands.

“They took the ball hard to the hole and they didn’t shy away from contact,” King said, with a note of pride in his voice.

Coupeville ultimately shot 28 free throws, making 16 of them, and had more points on charity shots than on field goals until a game-closing put-back on an offensive rebound by Roberts evened the Wolves’ scoring totals.

The first quarter belonged to free throws, and to Prescott, “who kept us in the game in the first half.”

Prescott scored Coupeville’s first five points of the season, capping things with a three-point play the hard way to pull the Wolves within 6-5 with two minutes left in the first quarter.

While CHS never led during the game, it stayed within a bucket of Meridian in the first quarter, with two free throws from Scout Smith cutting the margin to 11-9 headed into the first break.

Moments before those shots, Davidson dropped a beauty of a shot, taking a quick pass from Prescott, then hopping to the side and banking home the ball high off the glass.

Meridian began to pull away in the second quarter, using two runs in which it forced Coupeville to play at a faster speed than it wanted.

That led to some bobbled balls, a few errant passes, and a turnover or three which the Trojans converted into quick buckets.

The first time Meridian started to pull away, the Wolves responded, using a 5-0 surge to cut the margin back down to 21-17 midway through the second quarter.

What would turn out to be Coupeville’s final sustained offensive stand consisted of a Prescott free throw, Laxton ripping a rebound loose and smashing home a bucket and Scout Smith getting artful.

The junior point guard snatched up a ball in the back court, led a merry chase the length of the court, then switched hands at the last second before slapping home a running layup with two Meridian players draped over her back.

And yet, that was one of the few times in which the hack-happy Trojans were NOT whistled for a foul.

While the layup from “Scoutosaurus Rex” brought Wolf fans to the edge of their seats and seemed to signal the night would be a knock-down, drag-out brawl, Meridian had other ideas.

Pushing the gas pedal through the floor, the Trojans used their speed advantage to reel off a 10-0 run over the next 90 seconds or so, shoving the lead into double-digit territory for the first time.

A couple more free throws (what else?) from Roberts and Prescott pulled CHS back within 31-20 at the half, but Meridian used 11-0 and 8-0 surges in the second-half to derail the Wolves.

Prescott, who had a stellar all-around game, zipped a dandy pass to Laxton for a third-quarter bucket, while Roberts banged away inside for six of her team-high eight points in the fourth, but Meridian never flinched.

Which is exactly what you expect from a team crammed full of battle-hardened seniors, most of whom have state tourney experience.

Roberts, who added five rebounds, two steals and a block, passed the first of what should be a seasons-worth of milestones.

Her second point of the night, which came when she drained a first-quarter free throw, made her just the 35th Wolf girls hoops star to reach 300 career points.

Now sitting at 306, she passed Amanda Fabrizi (299) on the all-time scoring list Tuesday, and is coming up fast on Mia Littlejohn (317) and Marie Grasser (321).

Prescott tallied seven points, five rebounds, three assists and a block in support of Roberts, while Scout Smith (5), Laxton (4), Davidson (4) and Renninger (4) also scored.

Coupeville fought hard on the boards, with its eternal Energizer Bunny, Renninger, hauling down a team-high six caroms.

Davidson snagged five rebounds, Laxton collared four and Wurzrainer, transporting her hard-nosed defensive style from the soccer pitch to the hardwood, pilfered two steals.

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Freshman Izzy Wells scored a team-high six points Tuesday as the Coupeville JV girls hoops team kicked off its season against Meridian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Teams coached by Amy King don’t give up.

Regardless of the sport, whether it be volleyball, basketball or softball, that has been a trademark during her run on the sideline at Coupeville schools.

So it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that the Wolf JV girls hoops squad played its strongest ball Tuesday at a moment when many teams would have simply quit.

Closing on a 10-2 run, including scoring the game’s final four baskets, Coupeville couldn’t catch Meridian on opening night, but it did give the visitors something to think about as they exited.

And while the Wolves fell 49-22, the grit showed at the end, with all the points rattled home by freshmen, speaks well for the future.

The late run came largely courtesy three players — Izzy Wells, Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Kylie Van Velkinburgh — who have grown up playing together on SWISH teams.

Wells knocked down three buckets during the final surge, one coming off a put-back on an offensive rebound, while Van Velkinburgh showed off a varied skill set.

On back-to-back plays, she first hauled down a rebound and fed Hoskins for a basket, then swished a long shot from the top that was a millimeter away from being a three-ball.

The strong finish made up some for a hot-and-cold opening act for the Wolves.

Coupeville fell behind 10-3 at the first break, unable to hit a field goal in the first eight minutes.

It got worse, as CHS didn’t hit a shot from the field until the 2:25 mark of the second quarter, when Anya Leavell coaxed a soft runner to drop.

At that point, the Wolves had scraped out seven points, all on free throws, with Hoskins, Mollie Bailey, Kiara Contreras and Kylie Chernikoff all hitting from the charity stripe.

The star of the second quarter was a young woman with a Coupeville connection, who, unfortunately for the Wolves, was wearing a Meridian uniform.

Freshman Malaysia Smith, daughter of former CHS boys basketball coach Anthony Smith, made her high school debut a strong one, carving up the Wolf defense for nine of her game-high 15 points in the second frame.

Leavell netted a long jumper in the third quarter and was the only Wolf to hit from the field until Coupeville’s fourth-quarter run.

Wells paced CHS with six points, Hoskins banked in five and Leavell popped for four, while Contreras (2), Van Velkinburgh (2), Bailey (2) and Chernikoff (1) rounded out the scoring attack.

While they didn’t score on opening night, Lily Leedy, Morgan Stevens, Ivy Leedy and Alana Mihill also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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