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Archive for March, 2014

Micky LeVine, urban legend.

Micky LeVine, urban legend.

Micky LeVine will knock a girl out.

Now, you may be surprised to hear that, since the Coupeville High School junior seems like a pretty easy-going young woman who usually is wearing a smile.

Add on that she seems like a devoted older sister to younger siblings Jae and Izzy, and she doesn’t fit the classic profile of a brawler.

But mess with one of her soccer teammates, and the petite one will unleash the wrath of freakin’ God upon your head.

Her enduring moment on the pitch — and she’s had a ton of big ones playing for both CHS and the Whidbey Islanders GU18 select squad — came when she felt one of her girls had been unnecessarily roughed up by a rival team.

Out came the fists, like Wolverine popping the claws, and LeVine offered to drop-kick the entire other squad, and the ref as well, into tomorrow.

Rarely has a yellow card been more appreciated by a player’s coach and teammates.

Interesting fact: the other team immediately stopped trying to push the Islanders around.

And thus a nickname was born.

Well, at least in my mind, it was. Who knows if anyone else calls Ms. LeVine “Two Fists?”

They should, though.

Today, as she celebrates her 17th birthday — rumor has it that her arrival forced mom Joline to skip out early on an episode of “Days of Our Lives” — Micky is a justly-celebrated soccer and tennis standout.

She’s a bright, shining star who deserves her moment in the spotlight.

Just don’t get between her and her birthday cake, that’s all I’m sayin’. Cause she has two fists, and she knows how to use ’em.

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Makana Stone, she's quick. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone, she’s quick. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Grove ran a leg on two winning relay teams Thursday.

Freshman Lauren Grove ran a leg on two winning relay teams Thursday.

Sylvia Hurlburt is hopping for joy over her team's performance.

Sylvia Hurlburt is hopping for joy over her team’s performance.

She’s not slowing down any time soon.

Coupeville High School sophomore Makana Stone is starting off her second track season the same way she did her first one — kickin’ butt and takin’ names.

Thursday, she and her teammates were in Sultan for a four-team meet and the swift one captured victories in all four of her events.

She cruised to first in the 100 and 200, then teamed with junior Marisa Etzell, fellow sophomore Sylvia Hurlburt and freshman Lauren Grove to capture both the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relay races.

On the boys side of the battle, Wolf senior Nick Streubel out-flung teammate Dalton Martin to claim the discus title, the only event win for Coupeville.

With a thin roster, the 1A Wolves finished fourth in both team competitions, behind 2A schools Lakewood, Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Sultan.

Complete results:

GIRLS:

100 — Makana Stone (1st) 13.57; Sylvia Hurlburt (9th) 14.16; Marisa Etzell (13th) 14.41; Dananecious Maxie (19th) 15.82; Merle Fitzenhagen (20th) 15.88; Sophia Jebrail (27th) 16.98

200 — Stone (1st) 27.33; Hurlburt (6th) 29.43; Lauren Grove (7th) 29.60; Etzell (8th) 29.81; Fitzenhagen (15th) 32.55; Maxie (16th) 33.12

800 — Julianne Sem (5th) 3:27.03

1600 — Erin Rosenkranz (5th) 6:16.49

3200 — Rosenkranz (5th) 13:52.40

4 x 100 Relay — Etzell, Stone, Hurlburt, Grove (1st) 53.21

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Stone, Hurlburt, Etzell (1st) 1:51.58

Shot Put — Skyler Lawrence (6th) 26-09.50; Heni Barnes (9th), 25-04; Joye Jackson (11th) 21-06; Julia Felici (12th) 20-09.50

Discus — Barnes (4th) 80-03; Lawrence (11th) 59-07; Jebrail (12th) 56-03; Jackson (13th) 53-00, Felici (15th) 41-09

Javelin — Barnes (10th) 72-02; Lawrence (12th) 69-07; Felici (23rd) 53-02; Jebrail (27th) 49-01; Fitzenhagen (29th) 47-03; Sem (32nd) 38-00.

Long Jump — Grove (3rd) 14-04.75; Jebrail (14th) 11-02

BOYS:

100 — Lathom Kelley (6th) 12.20; Brandon Kelley (8th) 12.34; Jared Helmstadter (10th) 12.46; Sebastian Davis (16th) 12.79; Ryan Griggs (18th) 12.97; Matt Shank (20th) 13.03; Dalton Martin (21st) 13.08; Alex Prudnikov (24th) 13.21

200 — L. Kelley (4th) 24.38; Helmstadter (5th) 25.14; B. Kelley (7th) 25.34; Stephen Edwards (11th) 27.07; Prudnikov (12th) 27.15

400 — Davis (6th) 58.73; Manuel Lopez Santillana (8th) 59.91

800 — Jake McCormick (4th) 2:26.06

300 Hurdles — B. Kelley (4th) 45.73

4 x 100 Relay — Helmstadter, L. Kelley, Shank, B. Kelley (2nd) 46.94; Griggs, Martin, Davis, Prudnikov (4th) 48.77

4 x 400 Relay — Edwards, Lopez Santillana, McCormick, Helmstadter (4th) 4:03.86

Shot Put — Nick Streubel (2nd) 43-06; Nick Weatherford (12th) 33-06; Joey Edwards (17th) 30-10.50

Discus — Streubel (1st) 129-00; Martin (2nd) 121-10; Edwards (10th) 85-11; Weatherford (20th) 67-01

Javelin — Shank (5th) 121-10; Davis (7th) 114-07; Weatherford (10th) 106-10

High Jump — Griggs (4th) 5-04; L. Kelley (6th) 5-02

Long Jump — Edwards (8th) 16-05.75; Griggs (10th) 15-05.75

Triple Jump — Edwards (4th) 33-06.25; Shank (5th) 32-05.50; Prudnikov (6th) 32-04.75

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"Fear the putter, fools!!"

“All your trophies are mine, mortals!!”

Six for six.

Coupeville High School’s lone golfer, junior Christine Fields, had to wait while baseball, softball, track, girls’ tennis and boys’ soccer all got a chance to play this spring.

Rain-outs washed away her first two scheduled matches, as she and South Whidbey, who she trains and travels with, never got to face Overlake and Bush.

Thursday, the rain finally parted for her, and guess what? Just like the other five CHS sports, she opened with a win in her first go-round.

Playing at the Battle Creek Golf Course, Fields carded a 26 over nine holes, using modified Stableford scoring, edging South Whidbey’s Rosie Portillo (25) to take the individual crown.

The Falcons, who also got a 21 from Tara Moore, thumped host Archbishop Thomas Murphy 81-41 to capture the team title.

Fields can’t win any team titles — since she doesn’t have four other teammates wearing the red and black who would help her pick up points.

But winning an individual title first time out bodes well as she attempts a run at qualifying for the state tourney for a third consecutive season.

She’ll next tee it up, weather permitting, Monday, March 31, when Cedarcrest comes to Whidbey and visits the Useless Bay Golf and Country Club.

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Korbin Korzan (Shelli Trumbull photos)

  Korbin Korzan threw three shutout innings Thursday, striking out five. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aaron Trumbull and teammates were all smiles, again, after rapping out 14 hits.

Aaron Trumbull and teammates were all smiles, again, after rapping out 14 hits.

The bats were smokin’.

A long bus trip did nothing to slow down the Coupeville High School baseball squad Thursday, as it banged out 14 hits en route to a 13-0 romp at Concrete.

Scoring in each of the first four innings, while hurlers Ben Etzell and Korbin Korzan combined on a one-hit, 11-strikeout gem, the Wolves made quick work of their non-conference foes, getting off the field in just five innings.

The win lifted Coupeville to 3-1 on the season, with one more non-conference game (Saturday at Nooksack Valley) before it faces off with Cascade Conference biggie Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

Wolf coach Willie Smith came away from Thursday’s game with a huge smile plastered on his face, pleased with every facet of his team’s performance.

“It was a great game for us: pitching, defense, and hitting,” Smith said. “It was great to see us come out and score early and often and hit the ball consistently and hard.

“We played like we were the better team and we never let off the gas until the last out, which was very encouraging.”

Coupeville never offered their former league rivals — from back in the Northwest League days — a chance.

Etzell was nasty from the first pitch, striking out all six hitters he faced.

He turned the ball over to Korzan to start the third, and the junior was spot-on. He whiffed five, while surrendering just one lonely hit.

Korbin really established his fastball and then began mixing in his off-speed pitches,” Smith said. “It was a great outing for him and for us because he can be a major factor for us on the mound if he continues to throw with the confidence and control he’s shown in his two outings so far.”

At the plate, the Wolves hit everything that came their way.

Kurtis Smith, Aaron Curtin and Etzell each rapped out three hits, while Aaron Trumbull and Morgan Payne swatted two apiece. Payne, Etzell and Smith all collected doubles.

Payne was the leader of the pack on the RBI chart with four, while Smith and Etzell both knocked in three.

“We hit the ball throughout our lineup and there wasn’t really any cheap hits,” Smith said. “They were all hit hard and even our outs were hit hard at them.

“I’m pretty excited about where we are at right now and the focus that we have.”

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McKayla

McKayla Bailey pitched well despite taking a shot off the leg that caused her knee to swell as the game went on. (John Fisken photos)

Emily Coulter, seen here in an earlier game, had the most entertaining moment of the afternoon, doing an interpretive dance after being beaned. (John Fisken photo)

Emily Coulter had the most entertaining moment of the afternoon, doing an interpretive dance after being beaned.

They didn’t go down easy. That’s for sure.

Things were stacked against the Coupeville High School softballers Thursday from the start.

A lack of playing time, with the schedule shredded by frequent rain-outs. Three freshmen in the starting lineup. A key star (Madeline Strasburg) out with illness while another one (Breeanna Messner) was playing, but got sicker as the game went on.

Tack on a hard shot off the leg of hurler McKayla Bailey, which caused the junior’s knee to balloon up and make it harder for her to plant her weight when she threw.

Plus, we can always fall back on the fact CHS is the smallest 1A school in the state, while visiting Cedarcrest is the largest 2A school in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

And yet, with all that going on, the Wolves scrapped and scraped and rode the booming bat of Hailey Hammer and took a 3-1 lead into the top of the seventh.

Unfortunately, that’s when the clock struck midnight for Cinderella, as Cedarcrest rallied to score three runs and claim a 4-3 victory.

At that point, any talk of moral victories goes out the window, and the cold hard fact is Coupeville drops to 1-1 on the season.

A game that started with just one umpire (the second guy showed up in the bottom of the second) and a dazzling burst of sunshine-tinted blue sky — a welcome change for a Wolf squad that has had three road games rained out — ended like a punch to the stomach. That’s the truth.

But, if you go back and look at what came before, the positives far outweigh the negatives.

Coupeville got big time hits from Hammer, who knocked in all three of her team’s runs.

With best friend (and former teammate) Bessie Walstad home from college to root her on, the junior twice drove home runners with hard knocks.

In the bottom of the third, she laced a shot under the third baseman’s glove to score Madeline Roberts, who had beaten out a bunt single, stole second and frazzled the Cedarcrest pitcher by dancing back and forth on every play.

Hammer struck again in the bottom of the fifth, launching a moon shot that came inches from clearing the left field fence for a three-run home run.

Roberts, on via the bunt again, and Messner, who beat out an infield single, both scored on the play.

Defensively, the Wolves were crisp for six innings.

Freshman Tiffany Briscoe, making her debut as a starter in place of Strasburg, twice hauled in long bombs to right.

Emily Coulter (who entertained the crowd with her exuberant dance o’ pain after being hit in the flank by a pitch) made a strong dive to backhand and corral a hard-hit ball up the middle.

Messner gunned down a runner trying to steal second and Roberts was on everything, including hauling in a liner that was several feet above her head.

The wheels only came off in the seventh, with several balls getting past Wolf defenders.

Bailey struck out one and twice got outs on come-backers to the mound, but Cedarcrest used three hits and a fielder’s choice to put together its one-out rally to take the lead and the game.

Coupeville returns to action with three games next week, all on Whidbey Island. The Wolves host Lakewood (Monday, Mar. 31) and Granite Falls (Wednesday, April 2), before traveling to South Whidbey Friday, April 4.

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