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Posts Tagged ‘Port Townsend’

   Julian Welling was a force at the plate and in the field Friday, propelling Coupeville into sole possession of first-place in the Olympic League (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Julian Welling was unstoppable.

A game after being beaned three times, the Coupeville High School senior first-baseman rebounded Friday to slay visiting Port Townsend with both his booming bat and his nimble feet and glove on defense.

Sparked by Welling, the Wolves overcame a viciously cold prairie wind and an umpire with a fairly creative strike zone to topple the pesky RedHawks 3-1.

The win, Coupeville’s third in the past four games, lifts them to 2-0 in Olympic League play, 5-3 overall.

It also gives them sole possession of first-place, a half-game up on Chimacum (1-0).

Defending champ Klahowya (1-2) and Port Townsend (0-2) hold down the bottom slots at the moment.

Friday’s game wasn’t totally what was expected, but a win is a win, especially one that keeps you as the top dog.

Port Townsend entered the day on a 46-game losing streak, dating back to Apr. 9, 2015, but it hung tough, scoring first and leading into the bottom of the third.

The RedHawks scraped out three hits on the afternoon and two of them came in the opening frame.

Toss in a walk and a Wolf dropping a fly ball while on the run, and the visitors exited the inning with a single, solitary run.

Which was kind of huge for Port Townsend, as it’s only the fifth one they’ve scored in as many games this season.

Meanwhile, Coupeville couldn’t get its own offense untracked, alternating between eking out some walks and putting the ball into the air, where it died a swift death in the merciless wind.

It wasn’t until the bottom of the third that the Wolves finally found a way to keep the ball on the ground, and it immediately paid dividends.

With Nick Etzell and Joey Lippo aboard on walks, CHS managed to move them into scoring possession with two outs, then caught a break when a wild pitch sent Etzell scrambling home with the tying run.

The hitter at the plate, one Mr. Welling, then broke his team’s hit-less streak, cranking an RBI single over the bag at third.

While Coupeville’s rally died promptly afterwards, the Wolves had an extra bit of pep in their step with a 2-1 lead, and they shut Port Townsend down the rest of the way.

After tossing three innings and striking out four, Dane Lucero gave way to relief ace Matt Hilborn, who buzzed through four fairly drama-free innings while matching his predecessor’s K-count.

He got a little help, though, with Jake Pease making a running catch in left, snagging the ball as it caressed the laces on top of his shoes.

Then there was Welling, who twice made sensational snags on potentially wayward throws at first, both times recovering to put a tag on the RedHawk runner trying to get by him.

The first one was a nice bang-bang play, while the second was pure artistry, as he had to make the play while down on his knees in the dirt.

“He made two great plays for us on defense, and, in a close ball game, that was huge,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith.

Welling also tossed another run on the pile, stroking his second RBI single in the fifth.

His rocket back up the middle, which hit the grass hard, bit off a chunk and shot into center, plated Hunter Smith, who smashed a lead-off double to left-center after narrowly missing a home run a pitch before.

Coupeville finished with five hits, with Welling’s pair of singles and Smith’s double being joined by singles off of the bats of Kyle Rockwell and Hilborn.

While it was a bit of a step back after the Wolves had smashed pitching the past couple of games, it was enough to nab a win, and that was what Chris Smith was most interested in seeing.

“Our bats were a little flat today for whatever reason, and we had trouble finding the grass in the middle of the field for awhile,” he said with a small smile. “But we adapted, and did what we needed to do in the situation.

“It’s a nice thing to see that we can go out there and play and adjust to whatever the situation might be.”

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   Wolf defender Axel Partida sports a shiner Tuesday after CHS boys soccer beat Port Townsend in a rough-and-tumble affair. (Photo courtesy Partida)

They broke through, but not without a fight.

Riding a hat trick from sophomore Derek Leyva, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad knocked off host Port Townsend 3-1 Tuesday, the first time the Wolf booters have beaten the RedHawks in the four-year run of the Olympic League.

The hard-fought victory, which lifts the Wolves to 2-1 in conference action, slides CHS into sole possession of second-place behind Klahowya (3-0).

Port Townsend (1-2) and Chimacum (0-3) bring up the rear at the moment.

Coupeville, which sits at 3-2-1 overall, hadn’t beaten Port Townsend in a boys soccer game since 2012.

The schools were in different conferences back then, and since uniting in the Olympic League in 2014, the RedHawks had won all seven meetings, outscoring the Wolves 23-7.

That includes shutting out Coupeville in three meetings last season.

This time around, the Wolves have added Leyva, who transferred to Coupeville for his sophomore year.

With his three goals Tuesday, two of which came in the first half, he has 13 scores in six games.

That pulls him within seven of cousin Abraham Leyva’s single-season Wolf boys scoring record of 20 goals.

None of his goals came easy Tuesday, as Port Townsend brought the heat, with frequent back-and-forth action erupting between the two teams.

“It was a lil’ tussle fest,” said Wolf senior defender Hunter Downes, as he described a game that came close at times to breaking into a full-on brawl.

Teammate Axel Partida finished the game with an impressive shiner after taking one nasty shot, but also emerged with the win, which makes even a black eye a little easier to deal with.

His coach, Kyle Nelson, generally remains the very picture of calm and cool while patrolling the sidelines. But just because the outer surface is placid doesn’t mean his insides aren’t roiling.

“It became quite a battle,” he said. “They missed a penalty kick opportunity and we put it away with five minutes left.

“It was an exciting game, and gave me a few more grey hairs.”

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   While school officials scramble to replace six cancelled softball games, Wolves like freshman Chelsea Prescott prep for the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Rip up the schedule.

Four days into spring sports, the world of high school softball has come undone, as two of Coupeville’s three 1A Olympic League foes have announced they won’t field teams this season.

Port Townsend, which is on a 51-game losing skid dating back to 2014, and Chimacum, which has won three straight conference crowns, seemed to be polar opposites.

But now the two schools are united in their inability to piece together workable rosters.

It’s not the first time Chimacum has had to skip a season, as the Cowboys did so right before joining the Olympic League.

Last year’s team, which gave Coupeville its only regular season losses and went to the state tourney, had a senior-heavy roster.

Chimacum Athletic Director Tony Haddenham told the Peninsula Daily News Thursday night there is a “lack of adequate numbers to field a team this year.”

Port Townsend and Chimacum chose not to join together to form one team for the season. Doing so would have required the schools to combine their enrollment, pushing them into competing at the 2A level in softball.

The late-breaking decision by the RedHawks and Cowboys to not play leaves Coupeville, in its final season in the Olympic League, with just one conference rival still standing — Klahowya.

The Wolves and Eagles play three times and that trio of games will decide the league crown.

Coupeville travels to Silverdale Mar. 28 and Apr. 30, while Klahowya visits Whidbey Apr. 20.

In previous seasons, three of the four league teams have made the playoffs, so it would seem likely both the Wolves and Eagles are postseason-bound no matter how their seasons play out.

The loss of six league games, especially at this late date, made it hard for Coupeville to pull together a complete 20-game schedule, but Wolf Athletic Director Willie Smith is a man of miracles.

The Wolves, who jump to the new six-team North Sound Conference next fall, have already filled five of the six cancellations and have one more possibility on deck.

Forks, which was coming to Whidbey on a Saturday, has agreed to play a doubleheader as opposed to the one game previously scheduled.

Coupeville has also added a second game against both South Whidbey and Sequim, both at home, and a home-and-away series with Port Angeles.

Smith is currently working on adding a game with Sultan, which would get Coupeville back to a full 20 games, albeit it with just three league contests.

 

The updated Coupeville HS softball schedule as of Mar. 2:

Sat-Mar. 17 @ South Whidbey — 1:00
Fri-Mar. 23 North Mason — 4:00
Sat-Mar. 24 @ Vashon Island — 1:00
Wed-Mar. 28 @ Klahowya — 4:15
Fri-Mar. 30 Port Angeles — 4:00
Mon-Apr. 2 @ Blaine (Doubleheader) – 1:00
Fri-Apr. 6 Meridian — 4:00
Sat-Apr. 7 Forks (Doubleheader) — 1:00
Sat-Apr. 14 @ Friday Harbor — 12:00
Thur-Apr. 19 @ La Conner — 4:00
Fri-Apr. 20 Klahowya — 4:00
Sat-Apr. 21 @ Lynden Christian — 4:30
Fri-Apr. 27 South Whidbey — 4:00
Mon-Apr. 30 @ Klahowya (*) — 4:15
Thur-May 3 @ Sequim — 4:00
Wed-May 9  Sequim — 4:00
Fri-May 11 @ Port Angeles — 3:30

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   Port Townsend girls basketball coach Scott Wilson, one of the real good guys in the business, is retiring. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes it’s good to emerge from the Coupeville bubble and acknowledge players and coaches from some of our rival schools.

Port Townsend is losing a good one, as Scott Wilson is reportedly stepping down as girls basketball coach.

A former longtime newspaper man, with the Port Townsend Leader, Wilson has been a class act on and off the court.

During Coupeville’s four-year run in the Olympic League, it would be hard to find a rival coach, in any sport, who set a better example.

For three straight years, the Wolf girls basketball squads went 9-0 in conference play, before Wilson and the RedHawks finally got a bit of revenge in 2017-2018.

Port Townsend won two of three against Coupeville this season, unseated the Wolves as league champs and went on to beat Cascade Christian in the playoffs, advancing to the regional round of the state tourney.

Wilson deserves a lot of credit for the way his teams played, and the way the young women under his leadership handled themselves.

Whether they were being pounded on by the Wolves, or pulling off the big pay-back, the RedHawks handled themselves with class.

That comes down from their coach, who always struck me as a smart, caring man — one of the real good guys in the prep sports world.

With Coupeville jumping to the new North Sound Conference next school year, the Wolves and RedHawks will no longer be league rivals.

But, with the two schools sitting fairly close to each other and having a good working relationship, it’s very likely we’ll still see the two of them meet up for non-conference tilts.

If so, it’ll be odd not to see the sage Wilson patrolling the sidelines for Port Townsend.

As he exits, just a quick thank you and a fond farewell from Wolf Nation.

You might not have worn Coupeville’s colors, but you’ll always be welcome here, Coach.

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   With Genna Wright cleaning the boards with a fury Friday, the Coupeville JV girls crushed Port Townsend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Put ’em down and put ’em down hard and fast.

That was the goal for the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad Friday as it faced off with very-overwhelmed Port Townsend.

Mission accomplished, as the Wolves, behind the hot shooting touch of frosh phenom Mollie Bailey, jumped out to a 13-0 lead, then strolled home for a 28-6 win.

The victory lifts the CHS young guns to 3-4 in Olympic League play, 7-10 on the season, and gives them the most wins of any of the four Wolf hoops teams this winter.

Port Townsend’s JV is very much a work in progress, with many of its players unable to breach the withering Wolf defense.

Nicole Lester slapped home a rebound a few seconds into the game, effectively ending things, though the two teams continued to play so the paying fans would get their money’s worth.

With Bailey dropping home a pair of first-quarter buckets, one on a fall-away jumper, the other on a runner off of a break, Coupeville went to the first break up 11-0.

Tack on another Lester bucket, this one set up by a zinger of a pass from Tia Wurzrainer, and the game looked much like the two previous times the Wolves and RedHawks faced.

But there was a new wrinkle, as the Port Townsend JV, which didn’t score until the fourth quarter in the last meeting, tickled the twines just two minutes or so into the second quarter this time around.

It might not have been much, and was quickly answered by a soft jumper from Wurzrainer, a three-ball off the fingertips of Bailey and a stop ‘n pop jumper from Ashlie Shank, but it was still a nice moment for the still-growing RedHawks.

Up 22-4 at the break, Coupeville decided to give fans a chance to head to the snack bar or bathroom in the third.

In a rarity I’m not sure I’ve ever witnessed at the high school level before, the squads combined to rim out 247 shots (give or take one or two) and score a combined ZERO points in the third.

Then it was back to Bailey knocking down jumpers and calmly cruising back down court, small smile slightly acknowledging the screams of her rabid fan base, and we were done.

The freshman sharpshooter finished with 11 points, while Wurzrainer, Lester and Genna Wright each tallied four.

Maddy Hilkey (3) and Shank (2) also scored, while Kylie Chernikoff was a one-woman wrecking crew on the boards, and Spanish sensation Julia García Oñoro came dangerously close to scoring her first American points.

Drawing an explosion of cheers from her teammates, García Oñoro pulled down a rebound and, maybe for the first time since she hit these shores, immediately shot right back up and tried to knock down the shot.

While her bucket wouldn’t drop, the foreign exchange student was battered around the head by a pair of RedHawk rivals and earned two free throws.

Trying to stay composed as varsity star Sarah Wright hollered her name, García Oñoro had both charity shots pop back up and out, as the basketball gods refused to play fair.

Still, her shy smile as she was mobbed by teammates and congratulated by CHS coach Amy King afterwards, was worth far more than two points.

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