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Posts Tagged ‘walkoff win’

Ben Etzell gets mobbed at home after scoring the game-winning run. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ben Etzell (3) gets mobbed at home after scoring the game-winning run. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Senior Night was a beauty.

Playing in front of the home fans for the final time Thursday, Ben Etzell and Co. went out winners, as the seniors carried Coupeville High School to a thrilling 5-4 run-off win over visiting Granite Falls.

The third straight win for the Wolf baseball squad, it lifted CHS to 9-8 overall, 8-8 in Cascade Conference play.

Coupeville travels to Sultan Friday and Lakewood Saturday before kicking off the playoffs Tuesday, May 6.

The victory gave the Wolves at least one win over five of their six league opponents this season (only being swept by ATM), as they make their final journey through the 1A/2A conference.

CHS joins the 1A Olympic League next fall.

Having lost their first two games against Granite, Coupeville decided to make a final stand, and it had everything.

“It had it all: good pitching, bad at-bats, good at-bats, good defense, questionable defense, walk-off win in bottom of the seventh!,” said a jubilant Coupeville coach Willie Smith.

The Wolves, despite strong pitching from Etzell and junior Aaron Trumbull, trailed by a run heading into the bottom of the seventh. That’s when things got dramatic.

Senior catcher Jake Tumblin got the joint jumping when he led off the inning by crushing the cover off the ball, depositing it over the fence in left for a game-tying home run.

Not content to merely settle for the tie and extra innings on a sunny day on the prairie, Coupeville loaded the bags on a single from Etzell and walks to Trumbull and Josh Bayne.

A rattled Granite pitcher then airmailed a pitch past his hapless catcher, allowing Etzell to gallop home and set off the mob scene at home.

“It was a great win, a lot of guys stepped up and played well at big times and of course, it was an enormous moment for our seniors,” Smith said. “I’ve had a lot of senior games in my career but I’m not sure I’ve ever had a more exciting or fitting end to a senior game.

“These seniors have had an amazing ride and I am excited to see what they can continue to do the remainder of the season and in the playoffs!”

Etzell, Tumblin, Kurtis Smith, Wade Schaef and the injured Morgan Payne — all veterans of Central Whidbey’s state champion little league team back in the day — were honored before the game.

Coupeville fell behind early, as several errors contributed to a 4-0 deficit.

Unable to get much offense going, it was a defensive gem that seemed to spark Coupeville’s late rally.

Trumbull struck out a batter in the top of the sixth and Tumblin came up firing from behind home, doubling off the base runner to pull off the inning-ending double play.

With the fire lit, the Wolves jumped on Granite for three in the bottom half of the sixth.

“Up until the sixth, we did not look great at the plate: unbalanced, swinging at bad pitches,” Smith said. “You know, all the things I teach our hitters to do…”

That changed, as Etzell walked, Trumbull whacked a single and Bayne (“who has been doing this all year”) zipped an RBI single up the gut to get Coupeville on the board.

The Wolves then ran Granite into a sticky spot, with Trumbull and Bayne grabbing an extra base before both coming home to score on the rare two-run sac fly from sophomore Cole Payne.

Payne, putting together a “great at-bat,” stayed alive, fought the count to 3-2, then lofted a majestic towering shot to right.

Trumbull scored easily and Bayne, also tagging up, sprinted home after the ball skipped away from the third baseman.

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Josh Bayne had three hits and three RBI Friday. (John Fisken p[hoto)

Josh Bayne had three hits and three RBI Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Aaaaaaaa-goooooooo-nyyyyyyyyyyyy.

Three outs away from a sweep of its season-opening three-game series against arch-rival South Whidbey, the Coupeville High School baseball squad couldn’t get the door all the way slammed.

Instead, they surrendered four runs in the bottom of the seventh Friday, losing 10-9 on a walk-off, two-out, two-run single.

Still, the Wolves, now 2-1 on the season, did win the series and will hold a tiebreaker over the Falcons, the only other 1A school to play baseball in the Cascade Conference. King’s doesn’t play baseball, while the other five league schools are 2A.

Coupeville will hit the road for non-conference games at Concrete and Nooksack Valley next week before returning to league play against the biggest baddie in all the land, Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

The game started slowly Friday, got pretty awesome for a stretch, then slipped away piece by piece.

The Wolves went with sophomore CJ Smith on the mound, and he didn’t have the command he had shown out of the bullpen in a CHS win Thursday.

After a rough first inning, in which he surrendered three runs, he settled down, but trailed 4-0 when he turned the ball over to Wade Schaef in the fourth.

After scraping together a run on an Aaron Trumbull double and Kurtis Smith single, Coupeville seemingly blew the game open with an eight-run fifth inning.

The Wolves used three hits, five walks and a crucial South Whidbey error to amass the runs. Morgan Payne (two-run single) and Josh Bayne (three-run double) delivered the biggest blows.

With Schaef cruising into the sixth inning, Coupeville seemed primed for the sweep, but the plucky Falcons refused to go away.

South Whidbey cut the margin to 9-6 going into the seventh, then jumped on mental errors by the Wolves to get two more in the bottom of the seventh.

Clinging to a 9-8 lead, with runners at second and third and two outs, Coupeville still had a chance to escape.

But it wasn’t to be, as the Falcon cleanup hitter became a hometown hero with a textbook single into left center to score the tying and winning runs.

Bayne paced the Wolves with three hits and three RBI, while Trumbull added two hits and two runs.

While he would have preferred getting back on the bus with a win, CHS coach Willie Smith came away mostly pleased with how his team handled the season-opening series.

“Although we lost, we did take the series and we had a lot of good things happen over the past three games,” Smith said. “We still have some work to do, as we struck out far too much today, mostly looking, and we still need to be able to put a team away when we have them on the ropes.

“But I feel like we put ourselves in a good position league-wise,” he added. “The areas we need to work on are definitely areas which we can fix.”

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