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Avery Parker waits for the downbeat to hit. (Jackie Saia photos)

Let the musical notes hit the ceiling!

Coupeville High School and Middle School students presented the spring choir performance, under the leadership of Casie Grevè, with the singers knocking it out of the park.

The pics seen above and below come to us courtesy Jackie Saia.

Cami (left) and Sydney Van Dyke are part of a potent Coupeville lineup which has outscored foes 71-10 through the first five games. (Julie Wheat photo)

Haylee Armstrong can slam a door shut.

The Coupeville High School junior delivered two noteworthy catches in center field late in Thursday’s softball game on Friday Harbor, before coming in to retire six of the eight hitters she faced as a pitcher to seal a 7-1 victory for the Wolves.

Coming on the heels of a 17-3 home win over the same foe a day earlier, the season sweep of a key rival gets Aaron Lucero’s sluggers to 2-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-0 overall.

Thursday’s royal rumble went in a different direction than Wednesday’s prairie blowout.

For one thing, it was nothing but blue skies above Friday Harbor. Almost spring-like.

For another, the Wolverines managed to escape without getting severely dinged in any inning like they did Wednesday, even holding CHS scoreless in three frames.

Still, the Coupeville bats had their moments, with seven hitters combining to rap out 13 base-knocks, including five of the extra-base variety.

The Wolves got on the board in the top of the first when catcher Teagan Calkins crashed another inside-the-park homerun — “The Red Dragon” also hammered a four-bagger Wednesday — followed by an RBI double from starting pitcher Adeline Maynes.

The fireball-chuckin’ sophomore whiffed nine across five-plus innings of work, only getting into a bit of trouble in the sixth.

With Coupeville playing cleaner defense than it had a day before, Friday Harbor wasn’t able to push a runner across until the bottom of the sixth, and then, only one.

By that time, the Wolves were up 7-0, having added three runs in the second and a single tally in both the fourth and sixth.

The second-inning onslaught started with 8th grader Cami Van Dyke lashing a missile of a single off a glove.

From there, CHS piled up a double to left from Armstrong, a single from Sydney Van Dyke, and a two-run double to deep right field off the bat of Chelsi Stevens.

The run in the fourth came courtesy some smart base-running from the wise old vet, as Calkins crashed into third on a single by Stevens, then snuck home when she caught the Friday Harbor defense not paying attention.

In the sixth it was back to the big hit bonanza, with a Calkins double and a Capri Anter triple creating Coupeville’s final run.

Haylee Armstrong is on a tear this season. (Jackie Saia photo)

On a day when everyone in the Wolf lineup made a solid contribution, Armstrong delivered the exclamation point.

She made a catch on the run heading for the wall in center, then two batters later came charging towards the infield to snag a rapidly falling ball before it could touch grass.

When Friday Harbor opened the sixth with a pair of singles and a walk, Aaron Lucero decided to change things up, moving Maynes to second base and tapping his arm to bring his version of Mariano Rivera out of the bullpen.

If the bullpen was located in center field.

Armstrong came skipping in, slapped on her face mask, practiced a mean mug or two, then revved her arm up to turbo mode, striking out five of the eight hitters she stared down, before getting the game’s final out on a fly ball.

With Coupeville’s aces combining for 14 strikeouts, the gauntlet has been laid.

Adeline did great and Haylee came in with the heat,” Aaron Lucero said. “Great duo. Great job all the way around.”

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — One single, one triple
Haylee Armstrong — Two singles, one double
Teagan Calkins — One double, one home run
Ava Lucero — One walk
Adeline Maynes — One single
Chelsi Stevens — One single, one double, one walk
Cami Van Dyke — Two singles, one walk
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, one walk

Eyeballing another victory. (Jackie Saia photo)

Coop Cooper loves the taste of sweet, sweet victory. (Jackie Saia photos)

Big-time players make big-time plays.

In related news, Aiden O’Neill and Coop Cooper fully embrace the spotlight.

The duo came up with huge plays in the game’s final inning Thursday, propelling the Coupeville High School baseball squad to a come-from-behind 10-8 victory on Friday Harbor.

The victory, the second in as many days against one of their true die-hard rivals, lifts the Wolf diamond men to 2-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-1 overall.

It didn’t come easily, but that just makes the taste of victory even sweeter.

In a game where the two teams exchanged leads all afternoon, Coupeville capped a nearly three-hour rumble by breaking an 8-8 tie in the top of the seventh, before holding on for desperate life in the bottom half of the frame.

With the score knotted up, the Wolves had Leo Rodriguez on third and Chase Anderson bouncing on second with two outs when Cooper ambled to the plate.

Picking his moment, the CHS senior walloped a game-busting two-run double, picking up his second extra-base hit of the game, and giving sophomore hurler Carson Grove a lead to hold onto heading to the mound in the bottom half of the inning.

Friday Harbor thought it had the potential for a comeback of its own, getting the first two batters aboard before a Wolverine sent a long shot soaring to deep left field.

Aiden O’Neill is an assassin at the plate and in the field.

Enter O’Neill, the ultimate gamer, a dude who has fought through numerous injuries with grace and grit over the last four years while playing football, basketball, and baseball for the Wolves.

That he was on the field after the pain he has endured is an accomplishment.

But O’Neill isn’t here to just stand around and watch the grass grow.

He’s here to dazzle and delight and make dang sure you’ll remember his name long after he graduates and his younger siblings are following in his massive footsteps.

So, baseball went airborne like a missile. And the unflappable O’Neill promptly went to work.

In the words of CHS assistant coach Jon Roberts:

Aiden made a Sports Center catch! Absolutely pounded ball to deep left field, he got on his horse, chased it down and launched himself.

“Horizontally stretched out as far as he could and made the catch, came up, threw it to shortstop as a cut, who threw it to second base to tag out the advancing runner. Double play!

“I’m telling you, it was an absolute holy shit play! (Assistant coach) Morgan (Payne) knocked the scorebook out of my hand up into the air and I caught it like I was going after a touchdown catch!”

While two outs on one play were huge, the Wolves needed three to clinch the W.

To which the young guy, one Carson Grove, looked at his veteran teammates and said “I got this, old dudes. Sit down.”

And promptly punched out the final batter, recording his third strikeout in three innings of relief work to set off the celebration.

The wild finale capped a game which veered back and forth from the start.

Coupeville got on the board with two runs in the top of the first, with a double from Anderson followed by an impressive collection of errors, balks, and wild pitches from the home team.

But as quickly as they had the lead, the Wolves gave it back, surrendering four in the bottom half of the frame, with their own errors stinging.

Not to worry, things were just getting started, however.

CHS shot back ahead 6-4 in the second with its own four-run burst, with a bunt single(!) from Rodriguez the deadliest hit, before the rivals went back to flicking each other with jabs.

Trent Thule: “Pardon me ladies, I have to go hurt the baseball now.”

Friday Harbor cut the margin to 6-5, Coupeville answered with an RBI single from O’Neill to get back to 7-5, the Wolverines cinched things up at 7-7, then Trent Thule punched an RBI single to plate Grove and make it 8-7.

But since everyone loves a bit of angina, it couldn’t be that simple.

Pushing a run across in the bottom of the sixth to get even one final time, Friday Harbor had two runners on with just one out.

Refusing to buckle, Grove responded by whiffing a perplexed Wolverine, then getting another one to weakly bounce the ball back to the mound for a good old-fashioned 1-3 putout at first.

Cue the magic and the mania of the seventh inning and cue another win for Steve Hilborn’s Coupeville hardball heroes, who are proving to be nicely resilient.

 

Thursday stats:

Chase Anderson — Two singles, one double
Coop Cooper — Two doubles, two walks
Camden Glover — Four walks
Carson Grove — One walk
Riley Lawless — Two walks
Aiden O’Neill — One single
Leo Rodriguez — One single, two walks
Trent Thule — One single, two walks

Davin Houston, ready to rock ‘n roll. (Marquette Cunningham photos)

Marquette Cunningham knows how to multitask.

The Coupeville High School senior is busy tearing up the track oval this spring but also is able to keep his camera clicking between events to capture his teammates and coaches in behind-the-scenes pics.

A man of many talents.

And your photographer, Marquette Cunningham, modeling the latest fashion.

Khanor Jump unleashes the shot-put last season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Does he get a day off? Not likely.

Does he want a day off? Probably not likely, either.

Coupeville High School sophomore Khanor Jump is staying busy as the latest track and field season unfolds, competing both for the Wolves and as a one-man wrecking crew.

Sunday, he went down to the Evergreen State College in Olympia to fling the hammer in an event which drew competitors from multiple schools.

Jump’s top throw went 100 feet, two inches, and he has broken triple digits each time out while participating in two of the three hammer series events held this spring.

His PR in the event is 117-02.

The hammer throw is not generally part of regular season meets in Washington state, so throwers have to follow their own path, with a season-long series which culminates in a state championship separate from the one offered by the WIAA.

Jump finished 22nd at the hammer throw state championships as a freshman, second-best for a 9th grader.