Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Willie Smith’

Senior Aaron Curtin leads a strong pack of returning Wolf hurlers. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Senior Aaron Curtin leads a strong pack of returning Wolf hurlers. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Sophomore Clay Reilly (white hat)

   Sophomore Clay Reilly (white pants) is a favorite to win a starting outfield job. (John Fisken photo)

Heading off into the great unknown.

That’s where the Coupeville High School baseball team finds itself as it enters a year of transition.

The Wolves, coming off a trip to the state tourney in 2014, lost six starters, including the Cascade Conference MVP in Ben Etzell, and are opening play in a new league.

But, even with the loss of so many starters (catcher Jake Tumblin, shortstop Morgan Payne and the entire outfield — Wade Schaef, Korbin Korzan and Kurtis Smith — also departed), this is not a team bereft of talent.

Far from it.

With a solid core of players led by several seniors who played on Central Whidbey’s state champion team back in their little league days, the Wolves are actually fairly set at most positions.

“We have great leadership with our seniors,” said CHS coach Willie Smith. “They’ve been through the rigors of playing at a high level and against strong competition and I’m counting on that experience to help the younger guys to quickly acclimate their games.”

While Etzell’s presence on the pitching mound will be missed, Coupeville brings back three top-level hurlers in seniors Aaron Curtin and Aaron Trumbull and junior CJ Smith.

“With three returning starting pitchers, I’m pretty excited every time we take the mound,” Willie Smith said. “Curtin could be a dominant pitcher and Trumbull and CJ are very good as a two and three pitcher.”

When they’re not on the mound, the trio will join senior shortstop Josh Bayne in anchoring the infield.

Trumbull plays first, CJ Smith second and Curtin holds down third when not pitching.

Junior Cole Payne, who saw time behind the plate last season, slides in to replace Tumblin at catcher, while senior Kyle Bodamer and sophomore Clay Reilly are early favorites to nab two of the outfield slots.

Freshman Hunter Smith is also in play, both as a pitcher and outfielder.

Regardless of how the lineup breaks down, or whether it stays the same from game to game, Coupeville should have an ability to score.

“The top of our hitting order should be very solid and I feel like we have good team speed,” Willie Smith said. “We aren’t going to be big boppers, but if our veteran guys can be consistent in their approaches and hit the ball like they’re capable of, we should be able to produce some runs.”

Along with players coming and going, the biggest change for the Wolves is the jump from the 2A/1A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League.

Coupeville’s league games will drop from 18 to 9 (three apiece against Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum) under the new set-up, but that also gives the Wolves a chance to play a very competitive non-league schedule.

Having shed 15 games against 2A schools, the new schedule will give CHS a chance to be battle-tested against fellow 1A schools come postseason play.

“My goals are very similar to last year: we want to get in the playoffs, get to the state tourney and win some games there,” Willie Smith said. “As successful as we were last year, the last game still stings for me and the boys are feeling confident in their ability to get back and move along further.

“Klahowya has a very strong team returning (all nine starters back) from a team that lost in the first round of the 2A regionals, so they will be a strong test for us to see where we’re at,” he added. “I’m not really concerned/worried about the Oly League; it’s where I started, where I grew up, and so I’m pretty familiar with the schools.”

Ultimately, everything comes down not to who they play, but what the Wolf players do themselves. That’s always been a big part of the Wolf baseball guru’s message since the day he took the job.

“We did lose a lot from last year, but we also built a strong foundation for our program and there is a strong core returning from last year,” he said. “We will have to stay injury free and our young guys will need to step up; but, unlike past years when we’ve lost such a strong group, our young guys won’t need to carry the team, they will just need to compliment our team and stay within themselves.

“The other positive for us is that a lot of these guys have had success in other sports this year and that confidence should help us through some tough spots,” Willie Smith added. “I’ve been very impressed with the work ethic and hustle of our kids so far.

“The older guys are doing an amazing job with the young guys, coaching and encouraging them and the young guys have been very receptive. It’s a very positive, energetic group that likes to have fun and has also been willing to put in the time to really work to improve.”

Read Full Post »

Makana Stone glides up-court, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

The greatest scorer in CHS girls' basketball history, Brianne King.

The greatest scorer in CHS girls’ basketball history, Brianne King.

The history of CHS girls' basketball lives on in these books. If anyone sees a copy in the CHS library, let me know. (Greg Oldham photo)

History lives in these books. (Greg Oldham photo)

Makana Stone is gunnin’ for the legends.

As the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad prepares for the district playoffs, the Wolf junior is enjoying one of the best scoring seasons in recent memory.

But, since CHS is notoriously spotty in keeping track of its sports history — outside of the snazzy wall of track records — one wonders where she stands.

While anything before the 1990’s resides in a giant black hole at this point, we were able, with the help of former Wolf coaches Willie Smith and Greg Oldham, to track down most of the “golden era” (late ’90s to mid-2000’s) of Coupeville girls’ basketball.

And, what that shows is Stone (with 331 points in 20 games) has currently put together the 7th best scoring mark in the last two decades.

With her average sitting at 16.6 a game — third-best by a Wolf player in that time period — she could make a serious run up the chart if Coupeville stays alive in the playoffs for any duration.

The Wolves (15-5) are guaranteed two games at districts, and could pick up a third.

Win two and they advance to regionals with the dream of being the first CHS hoops squad to return to state since 2005-2006.

The honor roll of Wolf scorers as we know it (and, as soon as this hits print, maybe we’ll hear from someone who has score-books from the glory days of Marlene Grasser that’ll blow these away):

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg

2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8

3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8

4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4

5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1

6) Ann Pettit (1997-1998) 363/25/14.5

7) Makana Stone (2014-2015) 331/20/16.6 avg

Also of note: Lexie Black had 295 in 26 games in 2004-2005.

Plus, King tossed in 275 during her freshman year of 1999-2000, giving her 1,549 points during her splendid career.

We’re 99.2% sure that’s a school record.

Read Full Post »

Wolf baseball guru Willie Smith is shocked to discover he

   Wolf baseball guru Willie Smith, back at the scorekeeper’s table and highly tempted to steal the microphone and intone “Balls … balls.” (John Fisken photos)

sophomores

  Sophomores, makin’ their parents proud. Left to right, the always-stylish Jimmy Myers, Jonathan Thurston, Uriel Liquidano and Aiden Crimmins.

cheer

   Wolf cheerleaders (l to r) Camilla Rische, Ciera St Onge, Elizabeth Bishop and Jovanah Foote, already full of pep hours before the game.

cheer back

And repping the night’s Black Out theme.

msbb

Middle school basketball stars cheer on their older counterparts.

still going

“We’re here all night, baby!!”

"They broke my camera..."

“They broke my camera…”

Sometimes the cameraman likes to wander.

You can only snap so many shots of basketball players at work before you need to shake things up a bit and spin the clicker towards the audience.

Fueled up by dangerously-high levels of Diet Coke, travelin’ photo man John Fisken delivered these snaps from Wednesday night’s home hoops doubleheader.

Bask in the glow.

Read Full Post »

Josh Bayne, seen here last season, had big hits on defense and big catches on offense Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Josh Bayne, seen here last season, had big hits on defense and big catches on offense Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Willie Smith was on fire Friday. The refs, not so much.

Coupeville High School’s baseball coach, who doubles as the PA announcer for Wolf football games, was at the top of his game as he called the match-up between visiting Sequim (his alma mater) and his current employers.

One finger operating his tunes, sending bursts of AC/DC and Guns ‘N Roses out into the early evening air in a bid to rouse a sleepy crowd, he kept the zingers coming.

Even over the course of a game that clocked in at a minute shy of three hours, he never faded.

The guys in black and white, whose habit of throwing one, two, three and sometimes four flags on seemingly every other play, were a bit more of a drag on a night when 2A Sequim (eventually) bounced 1A Coupeville 40-18.

By the time the refs had finished marching off 122.5 yards in accepted penalties against CHS, the Wolves probably felt like they were playing 11-on-16 most of the night.

Though actually, even then, they didn’t play all that badly.

Josh Bayne and Jacob Martin laid down earth-shattering tackles, where they caught Sequim players in mid-stride and lifted them airborne before planting them face-first into the turf.

Toss in fumble recoveries by Lathom Kelley and Gabe Wynn, a blocked PAT by Matt Shank, and a back-pedaling over-his-shoulder interception by Bayne (AKA “Joshsome,” which rhymes with Awesome, courtesy of the man behind the mic) and the Wolf defense put up some big plays.

And we still haven’t talked about the moment when Sequim felt the true impact of “The House of Bayne” after the Wolf senior chased down a receiver and punched the ball out of his hands at the one-yard line, turning a sure-thing touchdown into a turnover.

“Our defense was strong. They got some big hits and, to a man, played hard all night,” said Coupeville assistant coach Orson Christensen.

Coupeville started the first meeting between the two schools since 1930 (Willie Smith’s freshman year?), with Bayne’s interception blunting Sequim’s opening drive.

The Wolves then drove half the field before settling for a 27-yard field goal from Joel Walstad to take what turned out to be their only lead of the game.

A second quarter marred by (what else) penalty flags galore killed Coupeville, as Sequim busted open a close game. Up 7-3 after one, they scored three times in the second 12 minutes to go into the locker room up 27-3.

The final score was a dagger through the heart, as a fourth down at the Sequim 21 blew up in Coupeville’s face when Walstad’s pass was picked off and returned for a 79-yard TD with just eight seconds left on the clock.

Knocking some of his papers off the press box table in the excitement, Willie Smith caught them on the way down.

“I’m like a cat … well, sometimes I’m like a really old cat rolling over after a nap … but still a cat.”

Inspired by his words of wisdom perhaps, Coupeville staged a mini-rally in the second half, ripping off two touchdowns.

Walstad, who was under pressure all night, but avoided it most of the time, hit Bayne for a 15-yard scoring strike, before “Machine Gun” Kelley crashed in for a six-yard scoring run.

The extra point attempt after Kelley’s score threatened to blow up on Coupeville, but quick thinking and nimble fingers saved the Wolves.

When the snap skidded into the grass in front of the holder, Bayne, he snared it and flipped it to Walstad, who cut his foot swing in mid-stride, whirled to the left and lobbed it to CJ Smith, who rumbled home for two points.

Back within two scores, Coupeville’s offense stalled out, however, and Sequim tacked on a late score to stretch the final margin.

Even at the end, however, the refs were still throwing flags (including nailing CHS for an “audible profanity”), causing Willie Smith’s right hand man, clock-operator supreme Joel “The Ice Cream Man” Norris, to get a bit agitated.

“Don’t stop the clock! I’ve got dinner reservations!!” became his mantra over the final, flag-infested half hour.

On the field, Walstad went down firing, completing 21 of 45 passes for a career-high 272 yards (he has 524 yards through two games).

He also spread the wealth, with five receivers hauling in catches. CJ Smith snagged five for 96 yards, followed by Bayne (5-86), Ryan Griggs (4-56), Kelley (4-21) and Martin (3-13).

With the ball flying so much in an effort to cut into Sequim’s lead, Coupeville ran the ball far less than normal, with Bayne (eight carries for 46 yards) the standout.

On defense, Bayne (8 tackles), Oscar Liquidano (7) and Wynn (7) led the way, while Kelley, who missed the opener against South Whidbey, returned to record four tackles and a team-high 10 assists. Martin (6 tackles), Aaron Wright (4) and Shank (3) chipped in.

The Wolves (1-1) return to action Friday, Sept. 19 when they host Chimacum (5:30 kickoff) in their first-ever Olympic League game.

The Cowboys are 0-2 after losing 27-8 to Forks.

Read Full Post »

Wolf seniors (l to r) Kurtis Smith, Wade Schaef, Jake Tumblin, Ben Etzell and Morgan Payne, with coach Willie Smith. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Wolf seniors (l to r) Kurtis Smith, Wade Schaef, Jake Tumblin, Ben Etzell and Morgan Payne, with coach Willie Smith. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

"You're never gonna beat me, Tumblin. I am lightning unleashed!!"

“You’re never gonna beat me, Tumblin. I am lightning unleashed!!”

Everyone in a Coupeville baseball uniform made an impression.

All four Wolf seniors playing in the 1A/2B/1B All-State feeder games in Bellingham Monday had big moments, topped by Ben Etzell claiming the Al Evans Award and being nominated for the All-State series.

Etzell, who was joined on the 10-man nomination list by South Whidbey’s Colton Sterba and Nick Bennett, got the win on the mound in game two.

His Nationals squad won 3-0 after being nipped 3-2 in the opener by a squad of Whatcom County’s best.

Etzell will learn in the next week if he’s been selected to head to Yakima for the June 14-15 series, which brings together players from all of Washington state’s classifications.

“It’s based loosely on this game, but more on his season stats, so he should have a pretty strong case,” said Coupeville coach Willie Smith.

Smith, who coached the Nationals team along with his CHS assistants, had his moment in the sun, as well.

“I beat (assistant coach) Chris Tumblin in a race to get a ball, which is not surprising since I am a superior athlete and quick as a cat,” Smith said with a laugh. “He tried to exploit his lower proximity to the ground but it was all for naught!

“The games were pretty good as well!”

In addition to Etzell, who tossed three shutout innings, “hit the ball well, and was a vacuum at third base,” fellow Wolf seniors Jake Tumblin, Wade Schaef and Kurtis Smith all stepped up big time.

The fifth Wolf senior, Morgan Payne, was sidelined by his recovery from a broken hand.

Tumblin, normally a catcher, also saw action at second base and “was pretty darn good making all his plays hit to him, including a great over the shoulder running catch in short center.”

He also smacked a pair of hits, while Kurtis Smith “threw a runner out at second base by about ten feet who had foolishly tried to run on him” and Schaef “made probably the play of the two games when he went on a full sprint into the left center gap and dove to snare a for sure double.”

“Overall, the boys represented themselves and the Wolves very well and got quite a few compliments from the director of the game on how solid they were,” said a proud Willie Smith. “It was a great day and a lot of fun.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »