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   Matt Hilborn was a two-way terror Friday, whiffing all four hitters he faced and delivering a two-run single at the plate. (John Fisken photo)

Whomever decided to start the high school baseball season in March needs to be taken out and shot.

I think I comfortably speak for the limited, but loyal, fan base that watched part or all of Friday’s Coupeville vs. Sequim diamond duel — it’s too freakin’ early for this.

The prairie was damp (but not damp enough to call off the game) and cold (which makes for a lovely combo with damp…) and it took a piece of my soul with every annoying wind gust which shot up my shorts.

Now sure, we could talk about why I was stupid enough to wear shorts (I did have layers of rain-proof coats on top) or we could just ignore that fact, accept I wear shorts 24/7/365 and move on to the game itself.

Game it is, then.

As the fans exchanged the sort of dead-eyed stares common to inmates serving life sentences in prison, the visitors chipped away, racking up a series of shallow, but well-placed, hits en route to knocking off Coupeville 14-4.

Ah, but the 10-run rule — it saved you, right?

It did not.

Sequim took its sweet time getting to that margin, not scoring its final three runs until the top of the seventh, guaranteeing we would play (and watch) a full, nearly three-hour game on the unforgiving prairie.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 0-2, but they have a chance to bounce right back, as they host South Whidbey at 1 PM Saturday — weather permitting.

In the early going Friday, two things looked like a certainty, but neither came to fruition.

It seemed like the rain would pick up enough to possibly wash away the game (or at least delay it), but it wasn’t to be. And Coupeville looked like it would seize the early advantage, but that also wasn’t to be.

CHS starting pitcher Hunter Smith came out en fuego, whiffing the first hitter then picking the second batter off of first base after he singled, rifling a crisp throw neatly into the waiting glove of Kory Score.

The Wolves put their first two hitters on base in the bottom of the first, with Smith beating out an infield single and Joey Lippo reaching on a error.

Two quick outs slowed things down, but Matt Hilborn loaded the bags after being awarded first on an interference call by the plate ump.

Looking to break through with the game’s first RBI, Score rapped a hard shot up the middle, only to see the Sequim second baseman make a nice play to knock it down and throw him out by a step.

Sequim started to turn the game in the second inning, scraping together four runs on a series of hits that found a perfect landing spot, narrowly going over the head of Wolf infielders before biting grass quickly in front of oncoming CHS outfielders.

Smith ended the run with a double play, spearing a soft liner back to the mound, then whirling to double up a runner who had jumped off of third.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s bats took a bit of a break in the second and third, then Sequim dropped a five-spot in the fourth to bust the lead out to 9-0.

Facing a very real chance of being ten-runned, the Wolves fought back with their best offensive work in the bottom of the fourth.

And they did it despite starting with two outs and nobody on base.

Wolf catcher Taylor Consford, who was a rock behind the plate while working with four different pitchers, whacked a solid single to center to kick the comeback off.

After a walk to Smith, a couple of stolen bases and a passed ball, Joey Lippo crunched a chopper that caught infield dirt and kicked high and hard enough to allow him to beat the ball out while both of his teammates crossed home.

Not content to stop there, the Wolves loaded the bases on walks to Clay Reilly and Julian Welling, setting up Matt Hilborn to join Lippo on the RBI express.

The sophomore shortstop laced a two-run single to right field and the rally caps were starting to get turned around.

But Sequim escaped when its right fielder ran down a long blast off of Score’s bat, and Coupeville rarely threatened after that.

The Wolves did get their first two runners on in the sixth, thanks to Smith getting plunked and Lippo eking out a walk.

But a bit of miscommunication on the base-paths resulted in Smith being hung out to dry at home as part of a rally-killing double play.

On the mound, Coupeville’s best work came from pitcher #3, Hilborn, who whiffed all four hitters he faced, using all 23 of his pitches to maximum effect.

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   Valen Trujillo rolled to a 6-0, 6-1 win at first singles Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

They kept the fans on their edge of their seats.

Shuffling its roster to make up for two missing varsity players, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad still came within a shot or two of upending 2A Sequim Thursday.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the visitors made off with a 4-3 win in a squeaker played under surprisingly sunny skies.

Now 0-2 on the young season, after facing two tough non-conference foes, Coupeville is slated to open defense of its Olympic League crown next week when it faces Klahowya.

Thursday, the Wolves dominated the top of the order, grabbing wins at first singles and first and second doubles.

Senior Valen Trujillo, mixing in gorgeous drop shots with powerful ground strokes, romped to a win at #1 singles, then hung around to cheer on lil’ sis Zoe as she captured her first varsity win.

Zoe teamed up with fellow frosh phenom Avalon Renninger to knock off a pair of upperclassmen at #2 doubles in a match that saw slick shot-making from both sides of the net.

It was also a match in which both teams managed to have one player on each team blast their playing partner with a shot during live action.

Trujillo pasted Renninger with a shot at the net, and, while the duo were still giggling over it, Sequim’s Ella Christiansen bopped her partner in the back of the head with a slightly-misjudged overhead.

Other than those two miscues, the battle at second doubles was just that, a battle, as both teams sprinted from side to side, saving shots that appeared to be certain winners.

In the end, though, the fast-rising freshmen, with Trujillo slicing nasty serves and Renninger dominating at the net, were too much for their foes.

Avalon wasn’t the only member of her family to win, as big sis Sage teamed up with Payton Aparicio to remain unbeaten at first doubles.

With Sequim rolling to wins at #3 and #4 doubles, as well as #3 singles, the afternoon’s most important match came at #2 singles.

Foreign exchange student Fanny Deprelle, playing her second match as a Wolf, put up a sustained fight, battling back time and again, before ultimately falling in a second-set tiebreaker.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Izzy Hugenoit 6-0, 6-1

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Katie Wake 6-4, 7-6(7-3)

3rd singlesMaggie Crimmins lost to Emily Bundy 6-1, 6-3

1st doublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Hannah D’Amico/Jessica Dietzman 6-1, 7-6(7-2)

2nd doubles Zoe Trujillo/Avalon Renninger beat Tea Guthun/Ella Christiansen 6-4, 7-5

3rd doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus lost to Amanda He/Ashley Rosales 6-0, 6-1

4th doublesSophie Furtjes/Julie Bucio lost to Courtney Gosset/Amber Dietzman 6-0, 6-2

JV:

5th doublesNanci Melendrez/Rubi Melendrez lost to Sadie Woods/Kayli Prorok 6-3

6th doublesMaggie Crimmins/Jillian Mayne lost to Chloe Goldate/Hannah D’Amico 6-1

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Kiara Contreras, wrecking ball unleashed. (John Fisken photos)

Kiara Contreras, wrecking ball unleashed. (John Fisken photos)

Lily Leedy makes the pass before the Sequim defender completely chomps her head.

   Lily Leedy makes the pass before the Sequim defender completely chomps her head off.

Chelsea Prescott takes the ball strong to the hoop.

Chelsea Prescott takes the ball strong to the hoop.

Having picked a pass out of mid-air, Genna Wright flies towards the other end of the floor. Spoiler alert: she scored on the play.

   Having picked a pass out of mid-air, Genna Wright flies towards the other end of the floor. Spoiler alert: she scored on the play.

The first quarter was a killer.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squad played two games Monday and slow starts crippled any chances the Wolves had of upending visiting Sequim.

Stung 15-2 in the 7th grade game and 13-1 in the 8th grade follow-up, Coupeville eventually fell 39-20 and 33-11, respectively.

The losses dropped the younger team to 1-2, while the older squad tumbled to 0-3.

Coupeville found an unforgiving basket in the early going of the 7th grade game, falling behind 13-0 before Audrianna Shaw broke through with a bucket off a nice drive to the hoop.

Once they escaped the first quarter, the Wolves settled down, essentially playing Sequim even until the final two minutes of the game.

From the start of the second quarter, when Anya Leavell banked home a shot, until the 2:05 mark of the fourth, when Kylie Van Velkinburgh popped a little runner in the paint, CMS was edged just 19-18.

Sequim tossed in the game’s final five points to stretch the final margin out, but, for almost three quarters, Megan Smith’s squad went toe-to-toe with a much-bigger school.

One key was the Wolves ramping up their aggressiveness, exemplified by Kiara Contreras, who went head over tail several times — once narrowly missing smacking her head on a door — chasing after loose balls.

Unfortunately, one of the other times she hit the floor, she didn’t get back up, and had to be helped out of the game, spending the rest of the night with a large ice pack on her leg.

Before she went out, Contreras rattled home four points to tie Leavell for second-best on the Wolves.

Shaw knocked down a team-high eight off of plays where she lowered her shoulder and charged into the fray for buckets, while Samantha Streitler and Van Velkinburgh each popped for a bucket.

Adair DeJesus, Alana Mihill, Lily Leedy, Katelin McCormick and Katelyn Painter also saw floor time, with Leedy especially scrappy on the defensive end of the floor.

In the 8th grade game, the Wolves, who play three 7th grader since they would otherwise have only four girls in uniform, struggled mightily with their shot selection in the first half.

Down 13-1 after the first eight minutes, getting just a single free throw from Chelsea Prescott, CMS added only a Izzy Wells jumper in the second.

Facing a 17-3 deficit coming out of halftime, the Wolves got their offense to work a little better in the second half.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins was their primary weapon, scoring a pair of buckets — one off of a rebound, the other on a breakaway where she slammed the layup home with considerable emphasis.

Coupeville’s best play of the night came from rampaging warrior Genna Wright, who jumped the play like a football safety, speared a pass out of mid-air, then beat the pack to the other end.

Flying a little out of control, she still managed to slam on the brakes at the end of the breakaway, pulled up and knocked down a sweet jumper.

Hoskins paced the Wolves with four, while Prescott (3), Wells (2) and Wright (2) rounded out the attack.

Mollie Bailey, Isabella Velasco and Heidi Clinkscales all chipped in with hustle and hard work.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/MSGBB/20170227-vs-Sequim/

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(Amy King photos)

   The Wolf JV girls celebrate their fifth straight win Thursday night. (Amy King photos)

The Fab Five Frosh are (back, l to r) Tia Wurzrainer, Scout Smith and (front) Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Mathusek and Avalon Renninger.

   The Fab Five Frosh are (back, l to r) Tia Wurzrainer, Scout Smith and (front) Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Mathusek and Avalon Renninger.

Let them play and they will impress you.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad has gotten the short end of the stick this year, as what was a 19-game schedule has morphed into a 15-game affair thanks to rivals frequently failing to pull together a team.

Thursday night, way down in the wilds of Sequim, facing a large 2A school, that wasn’t an issue, and, like usual, the Wolf young guns rose to the occasion.

Freshman Maya Toomey-Stout, AKA “The Gazelle,” came flying out of nowhere to pick off a pass at the buzzer, sealing the deal on a wild ‘n woolly 29-27 CHS victory.

The team’s fifth straight win, it lifts the Wolves to 11-3 heading into Saturday’s home finale against Port Townsend.

A game that featured rough and tumble play (Scout Smith being tackled while on the floor), strong defense and Tia Wurzrainer’s first high school points, it brought a smile to coach Amy King’s face.

“It was a long day but worth it,” she said.

After catching an early ferry, and being crammed onto a bus with the CHS boys, the Wolf girls got to spend time at both a park and the library after arriving in Sequim, then hit the court hopped-up and ready to rumble.

“Here we are at the end of the season. Last road trip. We all knew it was going to be a tough night so it was ‘do our best, play like a team, have confidence and hold our own’,” King said.

Sequim surprised Coupeville with an immediate 2-2-1 trapping press and took control early, rolling out to a 10-7 lead after one quarter.

With a bit of time to adjust, however, the Wolves found their groove and Wurzrainer was one of the first to benefit.

A defensive dynamo who plays with a pass-first attitude on offense, she became the final Wolf JV player to net a bucket this season when she knocked down a shot off of a feed from Toomey-Stout on the break.

“We all went nuts with her shot,” King said.

After that, the game got rough with a capitol R, but the Wolves played through a game of non-calls, elbows and collisions.

“The whole game was rough and just got rougher with every passing minute,” King said. “I was very proud of the girls – they didn’t complain, just toughened up and played through it.”

Coupeville knotted things up at 16-16 going into the break, then pulled away with a 7-6 advantage in the third and a 6-5 edge in the fourth. A suffocating D was the key.

“Our defense was lock-down and a few standouts for me were Tia, Emma (Mathusek), Maya and Avalon (Renninger),” King said. “I think this was Tia’s best defensive game. She really was everywhere.

“Everyone really worked well together, though.

Ashlie (Shank), Maddy (Hilkey) and Brittany (Powers) moved very well together, spacing was nice – talking and helping with direction,” King added. “Nicole (Lester), Sarah (Wright), Ema (Smith) and Ashlie all took turns playing in the post. That was not an easy job … they had a player who just bull-dozed her way through the key and was held pointless.”

Down the stretch both teams adopted a war-like attitude when it came to corralling rebounds or loose balls.

“There were players on the floor on both ends of the court. Going after loose balls, knock the ball loose and everyone was going after it,” King said. “Some rebounding found at least eight players in the key fighting for the ball.

“It was a tad wild.”

Making their best defensive stand in the game’s final minutes, the Wolves held Sequim to a single fourth-quarter basket, then sealed the deal when Toomey-Stout blasted through her own teammate (Scout Smith) to pilfer the game’s final pass.

Wright paced CHS with eight points and seven rebounds, while Powers swished a three-ball for part of her five points.

Ema Smith (5), Renninger (4), Wurzrainer (2), Lester (2), Scout Smith (2) and Hilkey (1) rounded out the scoring.

“These girls have come so far since that first game in early December. Everything about their games have improved,” King said. “It is strange that this is their last road game of the season, but I am so happy to have been a part of their accomplishments.

“Awesome job ladies!”

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Lindsey Roberts

   Lindsey Roberts, here passing out of trouble in an earlier game, had a team-high 11 points and four boards Thursday in Sequim. (John Fisken photo)

Almost every path to success has a few bumps along the way.

For the high-flying Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team, nothing has been able to stop them from adding wins to the ledger the past seven weeks.

Not illness, or injury, or a schedule that had them playing a school-record eight consecutive road games at one point.

10 straight wins, 47 days without a loss.

Until Thursday, when the offense dried up spectacularly in the second half and the Wolves watched host Sequim steal away a non-conference game from out of their clutches.

Up 12-8 at the break on their 2A rivals — who they scorched Monday on Whidbey — Coupeville got hammered 17-4 in the third quarter and fell 31-19.

The loss, the first for the Wolves since way back on Dec. 16 against powerhouse Bellevue Christian, puts CHS at 14-4 heading into their regular season finale Saturday.

Coupeville hosts Port Townsend for Senior Night (3:30 JV/5:00 varsity) and is looking to wrap up a third consecutive 9-0 season in 1A Olympic League play.

Thursday’s game played out, at least in the early going, much like Monday’s match-up — low-scoring and with Coupeville on top.

With Sequim controlling the pace of the game, keeping things sluggish while the Wolves wanted to get out and run, CHS still built a 9-6 lead after one quarter.

Mia Littlejohn opened the scoring with a three-ball, followed by a bucket from little sister Kalia and two from Lindsey Roberts, but the pace of the game was already draining, even with a lead.

“Tonight wasn’t our night. We knew what Sequim wanted to do offensively and that it would be another battle like Monday’s game,” CHS coach David King said. “Even though we scored nine in the quarter it was a struggle on both ends of the court.”

The second quarter “felt like we were watching paint dry,” as the two teams combined for a grand total of five points.

Roberts knocked down her third three-ball of the season to stake the Wolves to a 12-8 lead at the break, but few of the Coupeville players were thrilled with their early performance.

“At halftime, the players weren’t happy with our play,” King said. “We felt like we could turn it up defensively and get our offense going. But Sequim and our play said differently.”

Monday it was Coupeville who took charge in the third and on into the fourth with a brutally efficient defensive stand.

Thursday, it was Sequim senior Adrienne Haggerty, who used her six-foot frame to control play in the paint, then popped outside to drain three-balls as well.

She had just four points at the break, but went off for 12 in the third quarter, five more than Coupeville would score as a team in the entire second half.

While Coupeville has been known for staging late-game rallies this season, the spark wasn’t there on this night.

“In the past we found another gear and made comebacks. There was no late game heroics or a push to get us within striking distance,” King said. “The effort was there, but what the mind was telling the players didn’t translate to the court.

“We played tired, didn’t have our best defensive game,” he added. “And our offense didn’t show up. We did get some open shots throughout the game. Nothing seemed to fall.”

Roberts paced the Wolves with 11 points and four rebounds, while Mia Littlejohn (3), Lauren Grove (2), Kalia Littlejohn (2) and Sarah Wright (1) rounded out the scoring.

Kailey Kellner hauled in four boards, Mikayla Elfrank had two steals and the Wolves got strong supporting play from Allison Wenzel, Tiffany Briscoe, Lauren Rose and Ema Smith.

While he would have preferred to keep the winning streak alive, King has a great appreciation for how this team has rallied around each other and adopted a true “refuse to lose” attitude.

“Despite the loss, I’m pleased with the attitudes of the players. They aren’t happy with the loss and know we still have things to correct,” he said. “Me, who is ultra-competitive and hates to lose, I’ve had to explain that it’s OK to enjoy and win even if we didn’t play up to our own expectations.

“After some games this year the players aren’t happy with our play. How often does one hear that! That is a winning culture and players who expect great things from themselves and the team.”

Now, the focus switches to Saturday, when the Wolves will honor Kellner, Briscoe, Grove and Skyler Lawrence, before setting out to emphatically stretch the league’s longest active winning streak, in any sport, to 27-0.

“Tomorrow is another day. All is not lost. It’s one loss and we prepare for Port Townsend,” King said. “I’m expecting a spirited practice tomorrow and we will be better for it.”

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