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Posts Tagged ‘Morgan Payne’

Morgan Payne (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Morgan Payne ponders the universe. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The injured hand. (Joan Payne photo)

The injured hand. (Joan Payne photo)

A third starter has gone down.

Injuries are starting to wreak havoc with the Coupeville High School baseball squad, which potentially lost senior Morgan Payne for 4-6 weeks after he fractured his hand during practice Tuesday.

The Wolf senior, who anchors the team’s defense at short and third, hurt the third metacarpal bone in his left hand diving for a ball.

He will go in to see an orthopedic doctor as soon as possible, and the hope is to have the bone pinned so it will heal faster, said mom Joan Payne.

Payne’s injury comes on the heels of catcher Jake Tumblin spraining his throwing hand (he’s hitting as a DH but not catching right now) and pitcher Aaron Curtin dealing with a shoulder issue.

While he’s less-than-thrilled with the injuries, CHS coach Willie Smith is not ready to write off the season.

“Time to put the rally hats on, pull on the big boy britches and elevate our game with the rest of our boys,” Smith said.

“Really stinks for Morgan,” he added. “Was really starting to come around and get into a groove both defensively and offensively.”

With the rash of injuries, Coupeville has had to move its swing players up to varsity full-time and is canceling this Thursday’s scheduled JV game at Lakewood.

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Korbin Korzan (Shelli Trumbull photos)

  Korbin Korzan threw three shutout innings Thursday, striking out five. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aaron Trumbull and teammates were all smiles, again, after rapping out 14 hits.

Aaron Trumbull and teammates were all smiles, again, after rapping out 14 hits.

The bats were smokin’.

A long bus trip did nothing to slow down the Coupeville High School baseball squad Thursday, as it banged out 14 hits en route to a 13-0 romp at Concrete.

Scoring in each of the first four innings, while hurlers Ben Etzell and Korbin Korzan combined on a one-hit, 11-strikeout gem, the Wolves made quick work of their non-conference foes, getting off the field in just five innings.

The win lifted Coupeville to 3-1 on the season, with one more non-conference game (Saturday at Nooksack Valley) before it faces off with Cascade Conference biggie Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

Wolf coach Willie Smith came away from Thursday’s game with a huge smile plastered on his face, pleased with every facet of his team’s performance.

“It was a great game for us: pitching, defense, and hitting,” Smith said. “It was great to see us come out and score early and often and hit the ball consistently and hard.

“We played like we were the better team and we never let off the gas until the last out, which was very encouraging.”

Coupeville never offered their former league rivals — from back in the Northwest League days — a chance.

Etzell was nasty from the first pitch, striking out all six hitters he faced.

He turned the ball over to Korzan to start the third, and the junior was spot-on. He whiffed five, while surrendering just one lonely hit.

Korbin really established his fastball and then began mixing in his off-speed pitches,” Smith said. “It was a great outing for him and for us because he can be a major factor for us on the mound if he continues to throw with the confidence and control he’s shown in his two outings so far.”

At the plate, the Wolves hit everything that came their way.

Kurtis Smith, Aaron Curtin and Etzell each rapped out three hits, while Aaron Trumbull and Morgan Payne swatted two apiece. Payne, Etzell and Smith all collected doubles.

Payne was the leader of the pack on the RBI chart with four, while Smith and Etzell both knocked in three.

“We hit the ball throughout our lineup and there wasn’t really any cheap hits,” Smith said. “They were all hit hard and even our outs were hit hard at them.

“I’m pretty excited about where we are at right now and the focus that we have.”

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O'Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

 Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O’Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel went out like the gridiron beast he is.

Three years of sacrificing his lineman’s body on the basketball hardwood came to 99.8% of an end Tuesday night, as The Big Hurt and three fellow Coupeville High School seniors played at home for the last time.

And while their almost-swan song (they have a final road game at Granite Falls Thursday) didn’t end with a win, it ended with a bang.

Or, more aptly, a sonic boom as Streubel launched himself onto the floor in pursuit of a loose ball, knocking three Archbishop Thomas Murphy players out of his way and off their feet as he relentlessly pursued the fumble.

And then, as it has ever been so for three years, the refs called a foul on the biggest kid on the floor for being, well, the biggest kid on the floor.

When Streubel made his final walk back to the bench near the end of a 78-50 loss, the Wolf fans rose and gave him a sustained standing ovation, tribute to a young man who kept on coming back, game after game, loss after loss, for three years.

A guy who has a college football scholarship waiting to sign Wednesday, but would not, could not, leave his friends behind.

Shortly after Streubel fouled out, Wolf coach Anthony Smith pulled his other three seniors so they could exit as a group.

Morgan Payne, one of the hardest working players you will ever see, and the overwhelming choice of Brian Norris and the Bad-ass Party as the next President.

Anthony Bergeron, who in only two years of organized ball went from a polite, soft-spoken diamond in the rough to a high-flying, shot-blocking, point-scoring whirlwind … while still being polite and soft-spoken.

Gavin O’Keefe, who looked like he stepped out of the movie “Hoosiers” and, unfortunately, lost way too much time over the last season-and-a-half to two broken legs.

When he was on the court, he was electric. I wish we could have seen him more.

Playing one of the better teams in the Cascade Conference, the Wolf seniors and their younger teammates never collapsed Tuesday. There was no one big quarter, just a steady drip-drip-drip of ATM baskets that eventually became too much to overcome.

Coupeville stayed within 10 for much of the first half, but every time the Wolves made a mini-run, the visiting Wildcats would answer with two or three buckets in a row off of quick, slashing drives to the hoop.

ATM’s full-court press ruffled Coupeville, as well, forcing 24 turnovers and turning most of them into baskets.

Wolf sophomore Wiley Hesselgrave scored 10 of his team-high 16 in the second half, while Bergeron threw down 11, including a long three-point bomb.

Joel Walstad hit a pair of treys on his way to eight, while Streubel pounded home six and Aaron Trumbull, Matt Shank and O’Keefe each hit for three.

JV loses: In the night’s opening game, Coupeville got 12 from CJ Smith and 11 from Jared Helmstadter, but lost 78-36 in a game that got way out of hand at the end.

Dante Mitchell and Gabe Wynn each popped for four, DeAndre Mitchell banked home three and Oscar Liquidano drained a turn-around jumper off the glass for two.

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