Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Oak Harbor’

Joey Lippo went 2-for-2 at the plate, pitched caught and ate barbecue Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Joey Lippo went 2-for-2 at the plate, pitched, caught and ate barbecue cooked by his dad, grill master Joe. (John Fisken photo)

(Photo courtesy Marc Aparicio)

   Three schools, one plan to have a united American Legion baseball program. (Photo courtesy Marc Aparicio)

Die-hard Coupeville rooters (l to r) Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Kayla Rose

   Die-hard Coupeville rooters (l to r) Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Kayla Rose were among the first fans to show up. (Joe Lippo photo)

Baseball united the Island.

All three of Whidbey’s high schools came together Saturday in Coupeville, as local coaches kicked off efforts to field two American Legion teams this summer which will feature a mix of Wolves, Falcons and Wildcats.

The joint effort will take the diamond under the banner of the Whidbey Nighthawks and play from late May through July, with most home games in Oak Harbor.

The AA squad (primarily for players ages 16-17) will be led by CHS coaches Marc Aparicio and Cris Smith, while the A squad (14-15) will be run by OHHS hardball gurus.

To get their recruiting message out, Coupeville hosted Oak Harbor and South Whidbey’s JV hardball squads for a day of three-inning games and group barbecue.

And it worked beautifully, as close to 40 players expressed interest in playing this summer by submitting contact info on a preliminary sign-up sheet.

The goal is to have 36 players, split between the two teams. Younger players can play up if their skill set is worthy.

Since the American Legion programs are outside of school, the coaches, players and their families have to take care of transportation, tournament entry fees and other expenses.

Plans are in the works for fundraisers and Coupeville Sports will pass on information as it becomes available.

While the games Saturday won’t go on anyone’s final records, the Wolves still played strongly, winning a 9-7 slug-fest with Oak Harbor before being nipped 2-1 in a pitcher’s duel by South Whidbey.

Game 1:

Coupeville’s offense opened the day en fuego, raining down five runs in the first and another four in the second.

Four straight walks plated a run to open the scoring, then Nick Etzell bombed a two-run single to center to bust things open.

Two more runs scampered home on an error — coming off of a hard-hit ball by Wolf catcher Jake Pease — and the rout was officially on.

The Wolves stretched the lead out to 9-2 thanks to their “ringers,” Hunter Smith and Julian Welling.

The sophomore sluggers, normally varsity players, got some limited field time since they were in attendance for the Legion pitch, and came up with back-to-back epic doubles.

Smith’s blast brought home Shane Losey and Joey Lippo, who had opened the second with consecutive singles (Lippo’s on a beautifully-executed bunt that burrowed into the grass and refused to come back up).

Welling followed with his own laser to plate Smith, and the game was on ice.

Until the Wolf defense tried to give most of the runs back in the third, booting balls left and right and allowing Oak Harbor an opportunity to chip away at the lead.

Finally, CHS pitcher Dane Lucero had seen enough and capped the game himself, whiffing a Cat with the bases juiced.

Game 2:

Things moved quickly, as Welling, Etzell and Matt Hilborn combined to limit the Falcons to three hits.

But while the Wolves rapped out three hits of their own, they stranded the tying and winning runners on base in the bottom of the third, with the final two hitters going down on strike-outs.

Coupeville’s lone run came in the first, when Cameron Toomey-Stout beat out a lead-off infield single, stole second and came around to score when Lippo lashed an RBI single to right-center.

The brief rally ended quickly, however, as Lippo was gunned down by half a step trying to steal second.

The next six straight Wolf hitters came up empty, huge in a radically shortened game, a streak which lasted until Pease chopped a third-inning single.

Read Full Post »

Nick Etzell and Co. will host a three-game tourney this Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

   Nick Etzell and Co. will host a three-game JV baseball tourney this Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout

Cameron Toomey-Stout has helped the Wolf young guns get out to a 4-1 start.

Clear your Saturday.

Coupeville High School’s rampaging JV baseball team has added a three-team home tourney to the schedule, with rematches against both of their Island rivals.

The three-game tourney, which will feature three-inning games, kicks off at 11 AM this Saturday, Apr. 16 at the CHS baseball field.

The tourney will open with Coupeville facing off with Oak Harbor’s C-Team, a week after the two schools split a doubleheader in North Whidbey.

Then, after a match-up between the Wildcats and South Whidbey, the finale will feature the Wolves and Falcons, followed by a barbecue.

Coupeville’s JV squad (4-1 on the season) also hosts Concrete in a regular game tomorrow (Wednesday, Apr. 13).

First pitch is 4:15 PM.

Read Full Post »

Jacob Zettle had himself a Saturday, collecting four hits and four RBI in a doubleheader split. (John Fisken photo)

Jacob Zettle had himself a Saturday, collecting four hits and four RBI in a doubleheader split. (John Fisken photo)

Baseball is a fickle game.

One moment it rewards your efforts with great joy and the next it stabs you in the back and leaves you to bleed out in the street, awash in despair.

OK, that might be a tad dramatic, but after five-plus hours and two games with wildly different results Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad now fully understands the capriciousness of the game.

Having traveled up-Island to face off with Oak Harbor’s C-Team, the Wolves pulled out a win in a 14-11 slug-fest in game one, then fell 6-5 in the conclusion of their doubleheader, sabotaged by a final-inning meltdown.

The split left Coupeville’s young guns at 4-1 heading into a home game Wednesday (4:15 PM) against Concrete.

While the Wolves were mentally heading to the bus with a sweep, they still came out of their split with a 3A school looking pretty good.

Coupeville combined for 15 hits, 12 walks and 13 RBI over the two games, with 11 different players reaching base.

The MVP?

Sophomore Jacob Zettle, who cranked a pair of doubles in game one, then notched a pair of singles in the nightcap, knocking in two runs apiece in each game.

Hot on his heels were freshmen Shane Losey (four RBI, including a three-run single in game one) and Matt Hilborn (three hits on the day while playing shortstop, third, pitcher and catcher at various points.)

Game 1:

The Wolves came out loaded for bear, erupting for five runs in the top of the first as they eventually charged out to a 13-3 lead.

Then, in a late bid to make life interesting for coaches Chris Smith and Mike Etzell, they almost gave it all back.

Before the fans even settled in on the bleachers, CHS was on fire, with catcher Joey Lippo knifing a one-out single up the middle to kick off a run of five straight Wolves reaching base.

Julian Welling rounded first on a throwing error, Dane Lucero chopped an RBI single to left, Hilborn beat out a bunt single and Nick Etzell walked with the bases loaded to force in a second run.

Oak Harbor finally got a second out — one of the few times Zettle would come up empty on his breakout day — but Losey promptly mashed a bases-clearing moon shot to deep right center.

As he clapped his hands at first, having staked Coupeville to a 5-0 lead, the rout was officially on.

With Wolf hurler Hilborn firing BB’s on the mound, CHS tacked on two more runs in the third (including Losey’s fourth RBI of the game on a ground-out) and four in the fourth.

That rally started when football lineman Brenden Gilbert beat the throw to first when a third strike got loose from the catcher’s mitt and featured a walk, two Wildcat errors, two passed balls … and not a single Wolf hit.

Zettle’s two-run double to center in the sixth, a high, arcing shot that brought his fan club to delirium (for the first, but not last time), stretched the lead to 13-3 and tantalized Wolf fans with the idea of the mercy rule being levied.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Oak Harbor stayed scrappy, rallying for two in the bottom half of the inning.

After Cameron Toomey-Stout brought in run #14 for Coupeville with a seventh-inning sac fly, the ‘Cats got more than scrappy, however, scoring six in the final frame.

But, with the tying run on deck, Welling reached deep and found a final strikeout in his arm, applying a hardy punctuation to his team’s win.

Game 2:

After a brief break for hot dogs, the two teams suddenly decided to go away from big sticks and play small ball, with Etzell and his Oak Harbor rival trading zeros for much of the sun-drenched second game.

Trailing 2-1 heading into the top of the fifth (Coupeville garnered its run when Etzell took a pitch to the hip with the bags juiced), the Wolves finally found a way to get to the Wildcat hurler.

Welling tied the game with an RBI single that buzzed down the third-base-line, then Lucero and Hilborn followed with consecutive singles to load the bases.

After the go-ahead run scampered home on a Wildcat error on a ball chopped towards third by Etzell, Zettle capped his stellar day with a rocket of a two-run single to right-center.

Now, if Hollywood was writing the script, that’s where the day would have ended, but reality crept in a bit.

After setting down the first six batters he faced after coming on in relief to start the fifth, Lippo tired in the seventh and Oak Harbor took advantage.

Four walks and an error on a ball overthrown at home gave the Wildcats all they needed to pull back to a tie, and then the home squad got to write their own storybook ending.

Pulling off a note-perfect suicide squeeze to win the game, Oak Harbor’s freshmen pulled off a stunner for their first win in four games this season.

Best stat of the day:

Eight different Wolves collected at least one hit, while Kyle Rockwell (two walks), Cameron Dahl (walk) and Gilbert also reached base.

Best top-of-the-dugout-steps monologue by Chris Smith, which made even the ump smile:

“Guys! Guys!! I don’t care about the runner! Well … I care about him as a person. I’m sure he’s a fine young man and all… I just don’t care about him as a runner. So, person, yes. Runner, no!”

Read Full Post »

Tsunami (Photo courtesy Mimi Johnson)

   Best uniforms in the biz, and now a win for the Tsunami. (Photos courtesy Mimi Johnson)

The history-making scorecard.

The history-making scorecard.

"We're going to Disneyland!!! Oh wait, we got two more games to play? Fine..."

“We’re going to Disneyland!!! Oh wait, we got two more games to play? Fine…”

They came. They saw. They kicked some fanny.

Whidbey Island’s U12 select softball squad, which brings together players from Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, hit the road Saturday and earned its first win of the season.

Playing in Tacoma, the Tsunami whacked Port Angeles 16-11, erupting for seven runs in the fourth inning to blow things open.

All ten players to see action scored for the Whidbey squad.

The Tsunami, now 1-2 on the season, returns to action with two more games Sunday before heading home.

They are coached by Coupeville’s Mimi Johnson and South Whidbey’s Trevor Jones.

Read Full Post »

Oak Harbor's Deja Bunch (20) powers between two Australian defenders. (John Fisken photos)

   Oak Harbor’s Deja Bunch (20) powers between two Australian defenders, en route to two of her six points Tuesday night. (John Fisken photos)

Melbourne's ball-handlers

Melbourne’s slick ball-handlers gave the Wildcat defense trouble all game.

Bryn Langrock

AnnaBelle Whitefoot gets ready to break some ankles.

Melbourne and Oak Harbor, making far-flung friends through hoops.

Melbourne and Oak Harbor, making far-flung friends through hoops.

Yes, yes, we don’t normally cover Oak Harbor, or even acknowledge its existence, but we’re bending the rules this time. Hey, it’s my blog and I can do whatever I want…

The Aussies are here and they’re taking no prisoners.

The Melbourne Mystics, a traveling girls’ basketball squad, hit Whidbey Island Tuesday and handily won their fifth straight game on their American tour.

Running host Oak Harbor (and the refs) ragged, the Mystic sailed to an 80-38 victory.

“Our pressure was sensational,” said Melbourne coach Christian Impey. “We were fast up and down the court.

“I even think the refs found it hard to keep up with the game; it was a good work-out for them,” he added with a good-natured laugh.

Melbourne, which carries two seniors and seven juniors on its roster, mainly plays club ball at home, where they capped 2015 off by winning the title in the Vic Championship Reserves.

That’s the highest level for their age group.

When they’re on their home continent, many of the Mystic players also play for a senior program in the state of Victoria. That team is the Keilor Thunder.

Since setting down in the Northwest corner of America in late December, the Aussies have been busy blitzing the locals.

They opened by winning the Crush in the Slush tourney in Port Townsend, knocking off the host RedHawks, one of Coupeville’s arch-rivals in the 1A Olympic League, and Nooksack Valley.

“Our girls were on fire,” Impey said. “They are a great team and play very tough defense and pressure both ends of the floor.”

After that came wins against Everett (where they dropped 27 in the third quarter) and Cascade, before the Mystic showed up in Oak Harbor.

Melbourne will get perhaps its toughest test Wednesday, when it faces off with always-powerful King’s in Seattle.

From all Coupeville fans, one message in regard to the Knights, who were always a thorn in the rear to the Wolves during the Cascade Conference days — hope you lose, and by a lot.

Go, Australia!

“I have been told that the game is going to be a real tough game and a real challenge, which the girls are really looking forward to and so am I as the coach,” Impey said. “Good luck to both teams; I have complete confidence in our ability to play the game hard and fast.”

Oak Harbor managed to hang with Melbourne for one quarter, but couldn’t match the pace.

Down just 16-9 after the first eight minutes, they were drilled 23-13, 22-10 and 19-6 over the final three quarters of play.

Eight of Melbourne’s nine players scored, with five in double figures.

Stella McRobbie paced the Mystics with 15, while Zoe Kelty knocked down 14, Cassie Favero hit for 13, Alyssa O’Shea popped for 11 and Amy Smith dropped in 10.

Brittany Seit (8), Alex McKellar (5) and Meg McGrath (4) rounded out the Aussie scorers, while Courtney McCormack also saw floor time.

Oak Harbor got scoring from seven players, but failed to get anyone out of single digits.

Janae Payne and Julie Jansen paced the Wildcats with eight apiece, while Deja Bunch (6), Bryn Langrock (5), Hannah Taylor (4), Lexi Jones (4) and AnnaBelle Whitefoot (3) all scored.

While he’s pleased with the winning streak, Impey is also thrilled to get a chance to help his players experience a different world.

“The girls are a great bunch of kids that really train hard, play hard and enjoy their basketball,” he said. “The teams that we have played can vouch for that about them.

“We would like to thank all the teams for their support and taking our girls in and showing them the American life style.”

To see more photos from the Oak Harbor game, pop over to:

http://www.wescoathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10183&league=3&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=18&sport=0

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »