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Archive for July, 2016

(John Fisken photos)

“I dare you to run. I double dare you!!” (John Fisken photos)

Allie Lucero

   Yellow Jacket slugger Allie Lucero chops a base-hit, one of two she had on the night.

Gwen Gustafson

  Gwen Gustafson comes flying in to home, a heartbeat behind the arrival of the softball.

Emma Hargrave

Emma Hargrave enjoys her time in the dugout.

Savina Wells

A zing in the air and then another Savina Wells pitch flies past a hapless hitter.

Katy Wells

   Her momma approves. Katy Wells (left) is joined by enthusiastic fellow fans Renae (middle) and Abby Mulholland.

run

Headed for home.

Yellow Jackets

Central Whidbey’s Yellow Jackets, repping their new All-Star uniforms.

The stakes are higher and the photos are snazzier.

Kicking off All-Star play Tuesday night, Central Whidbey Little League’s Minors softball squad battled until the end in a narrow 7-4 loss to visiting Sedro-Woolley.

The first of a best-of-three series, the early evening battle drew the lens of wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers the photos above.

To see more (and possibly purchase one or two for the mantelpiece), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/SB-AllStars-20160705-CWLL-vs-S/

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Savina Wells (Katy Wells photo)

   Savina Wells whiffed 13 batters in All-Star little league action Tuesday night. (Katy Wells photo)

Savina Wells is the Smiling Assassin.

There is rarely a moment on the softball diamond when she isn’t grinning, bopping along to the between-batters music or looking like she is having the greatest time any player has ever had in the history of the sport.

Her fresh ‘n fun attitude keeps her Central Whidbey Little League Minors teammates loose, and the high, hard cheese she hurls from the pitcher’s circle keeps rival batters swinging at empty air.

Perfectly synced up with her Yellow Jackets catcher, Maddie “Mad Dog” Georges, the flame-throwin’ Wells whiffed 13 Sedro-Woolley hitters Tuesday night at Rhododendron Park.

And while a few bobbled balls cost Central Whidbey, as it fell 7-4 to the visitors, the Yellow Jackets emerged still looking very much like winners.

They’ll need to win back-to-back games Wednesday and Thursday (6 PM back at Rhodie) to claim the District 11 championship and punch their ticket to the state tourney in Montesano.

Which is very much in the realm of possibility.

Wells was driving the K-express Tuesday, with eight of her first nine outs coming via punch-outs.

The few times she let her defense get in on the action they acquitted themselves nicely.

Allie Lucero gobbled up grounders at first, while Emma Hargrave pulled off a nice play while fielding a ball deep in the hole between second and first.

Lucero also got the crowd on their feet with her bat, lashing a pair of singles.

The moment which got the biggest reaction, though, came when she absolutely crushed a foul ball that ripped right over the fence along the third-base line like a laser, nailing a fan in the shoulder.

If she had straightened that swing out, Lucero would have been looking at a two-bagger, at the very least.

Instead, she sent a warning to the public at general — I will find you and I will hurt you.

Her endorsement line of autographed ice bags coming soon to a concession stand near you.

After a brief bout of miscommunication by Central Whidbey (no one covered home on a play at the plate) staked Sedro to a 1-0 lead, the Yellow Jackets reclaimed the lead in the bottom of the first.

Staging a two-out rally, Central used a single from Wells, a walk to Lucero and a beautifully-placed bloop single into center-field off the bat of Alena Osborne to plate a pair.

Sedro chipped its way back to a 4-2 lead, despite getting only one hit in the first three innings.

The visitors used a couple of walks and a couple of Yellow Jacket errors to get things going, but Wells refused to break.

At one point she even roared back from a 3-0 count to collect yet another strike-out. That earned an even bigger grin than normal and an extra skip in her step as she charged off the field.

Central Whidbey looked like it was going to have its own breakout in the bottom of the fourth.

Lucero led off with one of her two hits, Osbourne and Sofie Peters reached on errors and things were humming.

With the score trimmed to 4-3 after Lucero scampered home on a delayed steal, the Yellow Jackets were sitting with runners at second and third and nobody out.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the bottom third of the order went down one-two-three to end the brief rally.

Sedro stretched the lead out with two more in the fifth, but Central got out of the inning thanks to Wells dropping another pair of strike-outs before the rival third-base coach was flagged for coach’s interference.

The Yellow Jackets final rally came in the fifth, with Gwen Gustafson wearing a pitch before Wells and Lucero smashed singles.

Smart defensive plays saved the visitors, though, as Sedro gunned down a Central runner at the plate and saw its first-baseman come flying in from the side to snag a high, arcing foul pop-up.

After losing only once in the regular season, the Yellow Jackets faced its toughest competition yet with the onset of All-Star play.

Joining Georges, Gustafson, Wells, Lucero, Osbourne, Peters and Hargrave for postseason play are Chloe Marzocca, Allison Nastali, Vivian Farris, Hope Sinclair and Mia Farris.

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banner

   Help Coupeville High School restore 116 years of athletic history by installing title boards like the ones Oak Harbor has in its gym.

Help us restore Coupeville High School’s rich athletic history!

The Wolves have stood tall on the prairie for 116 years, but you might not know it from looking at the championship banners hanging in the CHS gym.

Currently there are just a handful on display, stuck off in the corner, and they don’t go back beyond 1990.

Even those are far from complete, basically omitting virtually everything the highly-successful Wolf tennis programs have accomplished in the last two decades.

But we’re not here to assign blame.

The past is the past, and we’re looking to the future … while, um, embracing the past.

Working in conjunction with Jim Waller and Keven R. Graves at the Whidbey News-Times, I have spent several months tracking down a far more comprehensive history of what Wolf athletes and teams have accomplished from 1900-2016.

The plan I have spearheaded, and which school administration, the Booster Club and others have joined in on, is to replace the handful of dusty banners.

In their place will rise a gorgeous new display of 109 title boards which will showcase four things — all league and district team titles, top 10 team finishes at state and the school’s 17 individual state titles.

The style of title boards we will use is similar to what our neighbors at Oak Harbor High School currently do, which is depicted in the photo up top.

Using Coupeville colors, league titles will be on white boards, district titles on black and state accomplishments on red.

Once put in place, the title boards will need little upkeep, can be easily (and inexpensively) added to in years to come and will restore a true sense of history to our gym.

Since they will hang on the wall opposite the benches — a much more visible location than the current banner set-up — they will be the first thing seen by Wolf athletes (and their fans), as well as rival teams.

They will offer current athletes something to aspire for, honor the accomplishments of those who came before (in many cases, direct relatives of those now playing) and serve as a warning to those who dare to enter the CHS gym carrying another school’s colors.

The school’s booster club has agreed to pay $2,500 towards the initial expense of having the boards created and installed. They have also set aside funding for adding title boards in years to come.

But, going from zero to 116 years of history is a big jump to make, and we’ll need to raise the remaining money needed. That will fall in the $2,500-$3,000 range.

We want to have these installed before school starts in September, kicking off the 2016-2017 school year with a real bang.

I firmly believe there are enough current and former Wolves out there — athletes, coaches, parents, grandparents, fans — who can, and will, come together to make this a reality.

Please consider joining us on this mission, either with a donation or by sharing this story or the GoFundMe link.

Let’s put the growl back in Wolf Nation in time for opening night.

To join the movement, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/2bzt6x76

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2002

The 2002 Coupeville HS softball squad, which won four of five at state. For a list of who’s who, head to the bottom of this article. (Photo courtesy Jim Wheat)

They were trailblazers who shocked the world.

Today, as we celebrate our 54th induction ceremony for the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we honor a team which reached peaks never seen before, or since, at Coupeville High School.

So, let’s open these hallowed digital walls and welcome, finally (I needed a roster and a pic and it took some digging), the 2002 CHS softball squad.

After this, you’ll find them enshrined together, as a team, at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

And frankly, that’s what they are — legends.

Coupeville High School has 17 individual state titles thanks to cross country and track, but has yet to reach the top of the mountain in a team sport.

No team came closer than the 2002 softball sluggers.

They are one of three Wolf teams to have brought home a 3rd place state trophy, but their feat tops, at least a bit, what those other two teams accomplished.

The 2005 Wolf girls’ tennis team rode one hot doubles team to their trophy in a sport with extremely quirky scoring, while the 1987 CHS baseball team played through an easier format than the softball sluggers.

When Coupeville took the field at state in 2002, having reached the big dance in the school’s very first year of playing fast-pitch softball, the Wolves had to win four straight to win a title.

And they almost did, falling only to eventual champ Adna in their third game.

Rebounding with back-to-back wins to close the tourney, CHS exited with four wins in five games, the most victories achieved in a single state tourney by any Wolf team, in any sport.

Coupeville outscored their foes 28-13, beating Cle Elum-Rosalyn (8-0), Royal (3-2), Okanogan (6-1) and Napavine (11-6) behind the leadership of Sarah Mouw and Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby.

The lone loss, a 4-0 defeat to Adna, a school which has won nine state titles on the softball diamond, was even closer than the score might indicate.

While they may not have gotten the big trophy, those Wolves loom large in CHS history, even now as most of those players break through into their early 30s.

“Without a doubt the best group of coachable athletes I’ve ever worked with,” said Jim Wheat, an assistant coach on that squad who now trains umpires when he’s not calling games himself.

They could hit, for power and precision. They were slick-fielding. They ran the base-paths with authority. They were beasts in the pitcher’s circle.

Mouw was the league co-MVP, going 22-2 as a pitcher on a team which finished 24-3.

She also led the Wolves in hitting, doubles, triples, home runs and RBI.

Backing her up were fellow First-Team All-League players Erica Lamb and Ellsworth-Bagby (a four-time pick) and Second-Team selections Lindsey Tucker and Tracy Taylor.

Along with their teammates they are, arguably, the most successful sports team in the 116-year history of the school, and 99% of that argument is set in stone.

This much we know for 100% — today, 14 years after they made their run, we bring them back together again (at least on the internet.)

Instead of listing them alphabetically, we’re going to put them in the order they appear in the team photo above.

The guy with the #1 is a random WIAA official, but the ones who go in the Hall together, as a team:

2 — Kim Meche
3 — Kristin Gwartney
4 — Erica Lamb
5 — Randy Dickson (head coach)
6 — Sarah Mouw
7 — Tracy Taylor
8 — Jim Wheat
9 — Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby
10 — Laura Crandall
11 — Heather Davis
12 — Angel Black
13 — Andrea Larson
14 — Tara Guillory
15 — Ashley Ginnetti
16 — Samantha Roehl
17 — Caitlin Harada
18 — Carly Guillory
19 — Brooke Croghan
20 — Christine Larson
21 — Lindsey Tucker

Plus, they’re not in the photo, but Bruce Berg and Dale Folkestad.

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CJ Smith, a man for all seasons. (John Fisken, Shelli Trumbull and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   CJ Smith, a man for all seasons. (John Fisken, Shelli Trumbull, Charlotte Young and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Big things sometimes start quietly.

The first time I saw CJ Smith, he suddenly appeared, perched at the end of the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball bench one night, a couple of games into the 2013-2014 season.

Someone in the stands, a fellow player’s dad, said he had just transferred into the school, but no one knew much about him.

As the game went on, CJ (we didn’t even know his name that night) watched the court like a hawk, once in awhile murmuring a question or two to the guy next to him, then nodding, face impassive.

Little did we know at that moment, cloaked in stoic quietness, that we were seeing the birth of one of the best athletes to ever wear the red and black.

Later, we discovered he was a sophomore, and we wouldn’t see him in a game for close to two weeks, as he got up to speed on practices.

When he finally touched the court, wearing a Coupeville uniform for the first time, he didn’t come out screaming, or wildly waving.

He played calmly, coolly, under control, making sharp passes and even sharper cuts.

Captain Cool had arrived, and, for the next two-and-a-half years we got to witness a young man who handles his business as strongly as any Wolf I have witnessed.

CJ, who celebrates a birthday today and graduated from CHS last month, gave us two strong basketball seasons (he sat out his senior season to focus on schoolwork), two superb football campaigns and three dazzling baseball years.

Through it all, he was the picture of composure, a guy who didn’t seem to ever have a butterfly and never, ever flinched away from the big moment.

If he was nervous, if he had self-doubt, CJ hid it well from the fans.

When he was on the mound, whiffing hitters in great gobs, it was nearly impossible to tell if he was up 20-0 or trailing 1-0.

And that calmness, his sense of purpose, always seemed to settle his teammates down around him.

Which was especially helpful during his senior season, when most of his teammates were freshmen and sophomores.

Teaming with senior catcher Cole Payne and his brother, sophomore Hunter Smith, CJ led Coupeville to its first baseball league title in 25 years.

During that run there were many moments when the team could have fallen apart, but it didn’t, thanks in large part to its easygoing mound ace.

That serene spirit flows through CJ’s entire family.

Turns out we got a 5-for-1 deal, with CJ, Hunter and lil’ sis Scout all three-sport stars, while mom Charlotte and dad Chris are superb coaches.

As his prep career played out, Captain Cool was a rock for the Wolves, a talented athlete, but, more importantly, a quality dude through and through.

So happy birthday CJ, and thanks for letting us all be part of the ride for the last three years.

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