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Posts Tagged ‘rainout’

CHS baseball coach Steve Hilborn awaits sunnier days. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mother Nature has entered the chat.

The season opener for Coupeville High School baseball was washed away Saturday, as a planned trip to Blaine was called off before the Wolves could hit the road.

The official prognosis: a night of steady rain left the Borderites field unable to host a game.

No word yet on whether the non-conference clash will be rescheduled.

For now, the Wolf diamond men turn their attention to their planned home opener, which is set for Tuesday, Mar. 18.

Meridian is slated to come to Cow Town for that rumble, with the first pitch set for 4:00 PM.

If Mother Nature agrees.

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CHS tennis ace Mary Milnes loves the sunshine, but she’d also love to get to play a real match. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Avalon Renninger gets limbered up for dropping wicked backhands.

Cecilia Camarena is one of several Wolves ready to make their hard-court debut.

Emily Fiedler is ready to lunge into a new season.

Girls tennis still exists at Coupeville High School.

It might not seem that way recently, as the netters have been largely relegated to the sidelines while other Wolf spring sports programs garner the spotlight.

A rain-out cost CHS tennis an early-season non-conference match, and, by the time they take the court Wednesday, Mar. 27, hosting King’s in the season and league opener, other sports will have a huge head start.

Barring weather issues or other shenanigans, boys soccer will have seven games under their belt, baseball will be playing its seventh game that same day, softball will have six games on the win/loss record, and even track and field will have two meets in the books.

With very few non-league options out there this spring, the Coupeville netters have a pared-down nine-match schedule, facing each of their four North Sound Conference foes — South Whidbey, Friday Harbor, King’s and Granite Falls – twice.

So, the pics above are both a reminder Wolf netters are still hard at work, and that soon, they will get to play someone other than their own teammates.

Hopefully.

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Wolf junior Korbin Korzan is primed for a run at a state title. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Wolf junior Korbin Korzan is primed for a run at a state title. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Only rain can slow down the Wolf express.

The falling wet stuff pushed back Coupeville High School’s baseball district playoff game set for this afternoon.

Instead the Wolves (11-9) will head off Island early Friday, with Lynden Christian joining them at Blaine’s Pipeline Fields for a 4 PM game.

The winner of that district semifinal advances to play the winner of South Whidbey/Friday Harbor 4 PM Saturday and is guaranteed a berth at tri-districts.

If Coupeville falls short against the Lyncs, they will still be alive in the double-elimination tourney and would play Nooksack Valley at Meridian High School Saturday (12 PM) in a loser-out game.

Win that and the Wolves are tri-district bound and will close Saturday afternoon in the 3rd place/4th place game (4 PM) against one of three teams (Meridian, South Whidbey and Friday Harbor).

Four of the eight teams at districts advance on, and Blaine and Mount Baker were bounced from the loser semifinals Thursday, leaving six teams standing at this point.

District bracket:

http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=6&tournament_id=1232

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Bree

  Wolf catcher Breeanna Messner longs for the sound of an ump saying two words — “Play ball!” (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Roberts

Madeline Roberts unleashes a laser throw while playing in the hole at shortstop.

Hammer

  Hailey Hammer stretches to haul in a throw at first. The rain-outs have given the junior power hitter a chance to continue recovering from an ankle injury.

At this rate, they’re going to play every single day, without fail, in the last weeks of the season.

The sporadic rain falling on Washington state timed it perfectly again Tuesday, knocking the Coupeville High School softball team out of commission before the Wolves could come close to touching the field.

This time it was a trip to Sultan, and Coupeville (sporting a shiny 1-0 record) was turned back 10 minutes after departing the ferry.

The Wolves and Turks will try and make-up the game Wednesday.

It’s the third game CHS has lost to weather.

The season opener at Port Townsend was called off after that school’s infield went underwater, and no one seems to know if the non-conference game will be made up.

Then came a rain-out of a trip to Everett to play Archbishop Thomas Murphy. That game will be made up April 8 as part of a road doubleheader … unless it’s still raining.

The on-again, off-again weather has hurt the softball squad worse than all of the other Coupeville squads combined, as tennis (4), baseball (4, counting a JV game), track (2) and boys’ soccer (2 with Tuesday night’s home game against Cedarcrest) all having played more than once.

The lone time the Wolf softballers actually got to swing away, they bashed league and Island rival South Whidbey, leaving them tied for second in the Cascade Conference with Sultan (1-0 in league, 2-0 overall), a half game behind Granite Falls (2-0, 2-1).

After the (hoped for) make-up game at Sultan Wednesday, Coupeville’s next three games are scheduled for home.

Cedarcrest comes in Thursday, Mar. 27, followed by Lakewood (Mar. 31) and Granite Falls (April 2).

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