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Posts Tagged ‘playoffs’

Abraham

   Abraham Leyva led the Wolves in scoring as a junior, tallying 14 goals. (John Fisken photo)

CHS coach Kyle Nelson has a moment with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad (Shawn Walstad photo)

   CHS coach Kyle Nelson with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad, Ryan Freeman, Isaac Vargas, Oscar Liquidano, Josh Datin, Colin Belliveau and Aaron Wright. (Shawn Walstad photo)

The 1A Olympic League took a hit Saturday.

Two schools hailing from the conference took the pitch for district playoff games and both saw their seasons ended.

Port Townsend fell 2-1 to visiting Cascade Christian, while Coupeville went on the road, only to be bounced 5-2 at Charles Wright Academy.

The dual defeats leaves league champ Klahowya, which will play CWA next, as the lone representative left from the first-year league.

It was the second time the Wolves fell to the Tacoma-based school in a week. They had lost 3-1 at home to the private school rivals on May 2.

This time around CHS got goals from Abraham Leyva (off of an assist from Tanner Kircher) and Sebastian Davis.

With Joel Walstad playing up front, Connor McCormick got the start in net and held his own, making several strong saves.

The loss dropped Coupeville’s final record to 3-11 and brought an end to the run of nine seniors.

The cupboard is not bare, however, as the Wolves can return eight of the ten players who scored this season, including its leading goal collectors in Leyva and Davis.

Junior Zane Bundy, who missed most of the season after an injury, was one of the team’s top scoring threats during his first two seasons, and is also expected back.

Final (unofficial) varsity goal scorers:

Abraham Leyva — 14
Sebastian Davis — 6
Colin Belliveau — 3
William Nelson — 3
Joel Walstad — 3
JT Quinn — 2
Garrett Compton — 1
Tanner Kircher — 1
Loren Nelson — 1
Ethan Spark — 1

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Fueled by breakfast burritos, Carson Risner smacked a double in Saturday's playoff loss. (John Fisken photos)

  Fueled by breakfast burritos, Carson Risner smacked a double in Saturday’s playoff loss. (John Fisken photos)

The game wa sthe final one for Wolf seniors Aaron Trumbull (pictured), Josh Bayne, Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Curtin and Risner.

  It was the final game for Wolf seniors Aaron Trumbull (pictured), Josh Bayne, Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Curtin and Risner.

Baseball can be a cruel game.

Only one team walks off the diamond at the end of the year truly happy and the fate of entire seasons can come down to a handful of what seem at the time like relatively minor plays.

For Coupeville High School, its season ended prematurely Saturday on a sun-drenched prairie, as the Wolves fell victim to chance more than visiting Cascade Christian.

The 1-0 district playoff loss hinged on a ball that bounced off a glove, a minor base-running mistake and an inability to get a bunt down.

Take away a fluky run in the top of the first — the Cougars used a walk, a passed ball and a ground-out to move their batter to third, then brought him home when a chopper took a bad bounce and skittered off of Wolf third baseman Julian Welling’s glove — and we’re still playing.

Both pitchers were largely on-point, with Coupeville senior Aaron Curtin scattering just a pair of meaningless singles, and the Wolf defense making some nice plays to atone for the early error.

CHS ended a brief threat in the second when they trapped a Cougar between second and third in a rundown, then Wolf catcher Carson Risner gunned down a potential base stealer in the third.

The only problem is, there wasn’t much room to breathe and Coupeville couldn’t come up with that one big hit it so desperately needed.

Twice the Wolves pounded out doubles — their only two hits on the afternoon — only to watch in silent horror as the runner died a slow death on the base-paths.

The first time came in the bottom of the second, when Risner swatted a shot to right field and out-hustled the throw back in.

Fueled by breakfast burritos mom Jennie Prince fed him pre-game, the senior had some power to his swing.

Pinch runner Joey Lippo moved to third on a ground-out, but never got to touch home, as the Wolves ended the inning with a ground-out that rolled right straight to the Cascade first baseman.

Going Risner slightly better, Clay Reilly smoked a lead-off double down the left field line to kick-start the third and the stands were rockin’.

Unfortunately, the Wolves never came knockin’ at home, as the visiting pitcher bore down and notched back-to-back strike outs.

After a walk to Josh Bayne put two aboard, Cascade Christian closed out the last major Coupeville threat by snagging a liner off of Curtin’s bat.

The Wolves got the lead-off hitter on base in the sixth, but Cole Payne was erased in a double play when he was trapped too far off of first base when Bayne’s liner was nabbed by the Cougar second baseman.

Coupeville’s last dying breath came in the seventh, when freshman Hunter Smith cranked a one-out shot that seemed to have base hit written all over it.

Instead, a Cougar came flying out of nowhere and latched on to the liner in mid-air for a rolling catch that delighted the large contingent of Cascade fans next to the third base dugout.

With the win, Cascade Christian advances on to the double-elimination portion of districts, while Coupeville ends its season at 9-10.

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Aaron Curtin brings the heat. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Aaron Curtin brings the heat. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin, Josh Bayne and Carson Risner. (Jimmy Myers photo)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Kyle Bodamer, Aaron Trumbull, Aaron Curtin, Josh Bayne and Carson Risner. (Jimmy Myers photo)

In it to win it.

Using a mix of stellar pitching and quality “small ball” offense — two things it will need to have success in the playoffs — the Coupeville High School baseball squad ran away with an 8-1 win Tuesday over visiting Chimacum.

The Senior Night triumph, featuring another first-rate pitching performance from Aaron Curtin, clinched second place in the 1A Olympic League and guaranteed a home playoff game this Saturday for the Wolves.

Now 9-8 overall, 5-3 in league play, Coupeville will try and ruin undefeated Klahowya’s Senior Night Thursday, then welcome Cascade Christian to town for a 1 PM loser-out district playoff game.

Win that game and they advance to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams will qualify for state.

Looking for a bit of revenge against a Chimacum squad they had stumbled against a week ago, the Wolves chipped away, notching a run in the second and another in the third.

Both runs came the same way — a single, a steal of second and then an RBI single.

Small ball at its best.

In the second, it was Hunter Smith setting the table and Aaron Trumbull bringing him home, while Josh Bayne and Carson Risner filled those roles in the second.

With Curtin dang near unhittable — he gave up just one fluky hit through the first six innings — the Wolves put the game away with a burst in the fifth.

The Wolves juiced the bags on a single from CJ Smith, a walk from Cole Payne and a bunt single from Bayne.

The senior speedster was so quick to the bag Chimacum’s pitcher could only shake his head in disbelief after fielding the ball, with a throw being pointless.

Coupeville then started rolling in the runs, without doing anything dramatic, scoring on a wild pitch, an error on a ball hit into the hole at short by Risner and a missed third strike.

“Not a “I need to talk to the hitting coach about how hard they hit it” inning, but some small ball and putting pressure on their defense,” said CHS hardball guru Willie Smith.

The Wolves tacked on three more in the sixth the same way, with Clay Reilly, CJ Smith and Payne scoring on an error, a sac fly and a passed ball.

While Chimacum shot itself repeatedly in the foot, Coupeville took advantage and did collect nine hits.

Bayne and CJ Smith led the way with two base knocks apiece.

Curtin never gave the Cowboys a chance to mount a comeback, whiffing the side twice while racking up nine K’s in a complete game win.

His defense had a hiccup in the seventh, booting a pair of balls to account for Chimacum’s lone run.

Never missing a beat, however, Curtin calmly closed the game out with a final punch-out on a ball so nasty all the Cowboy hitter could do was stand and watch it blow by him for strike three.

To see the playoff brackets, jump over to http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1542&sport=6

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Ryan Freeman (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Freeman performs some mid-air trickery. (John Fisken photos)

The collision with the ball appears to have knocked pa

   The collision with the ball appears to have knocked part of Cody Menges hair off… Josh Datin (right) can only stare in silent horror.

Abraham Leyva sacrifices his noggin for the good of the team.

Abraham Leyva, rock star.

First they need to be good. Then they need to be lucky.

Both parts of the equation go right for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad and it will host its opening playoff game.

A 5-0 loss Monday to visiting Klahowya dropped the Wolves to 2-3 in 1A Olympic League play (3-9 overall) and into third-place in the standings.

But, if CHS upends Port Townsend (3-2) on the road Wednesday in the regular season finale, the two schools will finish in a tie for second place and have split the season series.

If that happens, their fate is decided on the flip of a coin.

Win, and they’re the #2 seed and play at home Saturday, May 9 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League.

Lose, and they’re #3 and hit the road that day to visit the other league’s #2 squad.

Either way, the game will be a loser-out affair.

A victory in their playoff opener and the Wolves advance to the double-elimination portion of districts May 12-16, where two of the remaining four teams would qualify for state.

Klahowya (5-0) assured itself of avoiding a loser-out game with the win Monday, clinching the league title.

But, while they lost, the injury-plagued Wolves did play better in the second half against the Eagles, so you take your positives where you can find them.

“We came out flat in the first half and paid for it quickly,” CHS coach Kyle Nelson said. “The boys regrouped in the second half and played a bit better, only conceding the one goal after half time.”

To see more photos from this game (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8704&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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(Amy King photo)

   Wolves (l to r) Mia Littlejohn, Kailey Kellner, Kacie Kiel and Julia Myers listen to coach David King during a timeout. (Amy King photo)

They went out like champions.

Fighting to the final player Wednesday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad may have lost a game, but they will never be losers.

Falling 50-44 to Seattle Christian in overtime, the Wolves exited the district playoffs and headed home with a final record of 15-7.

That, in itself, is a landmark.

No CHS hoops squad, boys or girls, had won that many games since the 2009-2010 Wolf boys went 16-5.

But that squad failed to win a league title, something these Wolf girls accomplished handily, going 9-0 in Olympic League play to net the school’s first new banner since 2002.

Needing to win to stay alive, Coupeville came out strongly and got a banner game from junior star Makana Stone (21 points, 21 rebounds, six steals and two blocks).

Now, I could talk about the game, but I wasn’t there.

I was back on Whidbey at my “real” job, so I’m going to turn the microphone over to the guy who watched it all play out a few feet in front of him in living color.

In his own (slightly edited) words, CHS coach David King:

The fire in the eyes, the focus in the mind and the determination in the heart. This is what I saw when we stepped into the gym for the game.

I’ve seen this before with other teams, but none more than last night.

Pre-game was more of the same with what this team came to do — play our best game of the season.

They carried these things over to the start of the game and didn’t quit until the final buzzer.

Earlier in the day I had a quick conversation with Makana about how we could come out strong and look to make positive things happen.

As a team we have wanted to press, we have gotten better towards the end of the regular season, but just not completely there.

She mentioned we sometimes come out sluggish to start games and suggested we come out with our press. She said our press gets us going and jump starts our offense.

Any smart coach takes this and runs with it.

As suggested we started in a very aggressive press, got a few steals early in the first that, along with the fire, focus and determination allowed us to jump out to a 15-5 lead after one.

Looking to keep the 10-point lead and increase it going into the second, quickly became an evenly matched quarter due to foul trouble on two of our starters, Julia (Myers) and Makana.

Both went to the bench early in the quarter with three fouls each.

I looked down the bench and every player was ready to step up and contribute.

We rotated Monica (Vidoni), Wynter (Thorne), Mia (Littlejohn), McKenzie (Bailey) and Kailey (Kellner). The great thing is they held their own.

Taking a nine-point lead into halftime was something I would take under the circumstances we were dealt, due to the foul trouble we were in with starters sitting for so long.

Monica scored a bucket on a catch in the post, just outside the foul lane.

She slowly backed her defender down, took her time and turned and scored over her defender. Out of the corner of my eye, I could see (assistant coach) Amy (King) jump out of her seat, fist pumping after that move.

One of Monica’s best scoring plays on the season.

In the third, we just couldn’t get the ball to go through the hoop (falling behind 35-33).

Having two starters on the bench in foul trouble and the momentum in their favor after a strong third, we could have let the game get away from us.

Once again each player that rotated into the game stepped up and contributed. There was no quit with this team.

The quarter was a back and forth game, then the fouls caught up with us again. Julia fouled out with 4+ minutes left and Hailey (Hammer) with 3+.

With a little over a minute left in the game we were knotted at 40-all. Neither team would score in regulation despite a couple of opportunities that just didn’t materialize for us.

We had a steal and a 2-on-1 breakaway that ended in a turnover. An opportunity that just got away from us.

The great thing is, the play was a great effort that just missed.

SC called a time out with about 15 seconds left. This allowed us to regroup and get our defense set. One thing we preach is defense wins games.

During the timeout we talked about this and that each player needed to step up and make one last defensive stand and the players went out and created a turnover.

We battled and stayed close until we lost Makana (who fouled out in overtime.)

Fouls hurt us throughout the game.

When three starters foul out and the free throw discrepancy was 27 for them and 11 for us, it’s tough to swallow as a coach.

I will never blame the refs for a game won or lost; we had our opportunities, we fouled, we turned the ball over and missed some shots or didn’t get out on a shooter.

With that said, we also played our best game of the season.

Every player came ready to play and when called on ready to contribute.

The start of the game, SC probably came out thinking, this should be pretty easy after watching us play on Monday night.

Well, they got the true Coupeville girls basketball team. One that came to play our game and at the end of the night know that if they did that they could walk of the court with No Regret.

For me, this was the most fun I’ve had in three years in coaching a game.

Oh, I’ve enjoyed this season and the others seasons as well. We have had some amazing games, but with how this game played out it was so much fun.

The strong first quarter, the adversity of the fouls, the bench ready to step up, the sticking to the plan heading into the fourth despite losing the lead at the end of the third.

Then playing shut down defense late in the fourth to give ourselves a shot at the end.

The only thing missing was getting the win.

Amy and I are so proud of what these players did as a team this season.

We were led by a very strong senior and upper class group.

The JV team (14-5 overall, 9-0 in league) played with heart all season long and have big shoes to fill.

The success we have had this season will make these players hungrier for next season; I believe they now know what it is going to take to continue what we have started here in Coupeville.

Each year the program has gotten stronger and stronger.

I think players got better tonight and grew up a little.

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