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Archive for the ‘Little League’ Category

Emily Licence prepares to shatter the hopes and dreams of another pitcher. (John Fisken photos)

Emily Licence prepares to shatter the hopes and dreams of another pitcher. (John Fisken photos)

Hope Lodell (left) and Mia Littlejohn sprint in to join the celebration after winning districts.

Hope Lodell (left) and Mia Littlejohn sprint in to join the celebration after winning districts.

Katrina McGranahan comes up firing at short.

Katrina McGranahan comes up firing at short.

Lauren Rose is a vacuum at third, terminating anything that comes her way.

Lauren Rose is a vacuum at third, terminating anything that comes her way.

Sarah Wright

   Sarah Wright, two seconds away from sending the ball to the deepest, darkest regions of center field.

Somewhere inside the dust storm is Bella Northup, who safely made it back to third.

  Somewhere inside the dust storm is Bella Northup, who safely made it back to third.

McGranahan listens to dad Kevin and happily heads for home.

McGranahan listens to dad Kevin and happily heads for home.

Quick, go find those vuvuzela horns.

Coupeville softball fans can send their unbeaten Central Whidbey Little League Juniors All-Star squad off to the state tournament in style Friday afternoon.

The Venom, who boast a 17-0 record and have beaten every opponent by 10+ runs this season, will be meeting at the CHS field at 3 PM before departing for Shoreline.

That gives fans, family and townsfolk the chance to make some noise on the prairie and give their warriors an emotional boost as they hit the road.

Central Whidbey opens the eight-team, double-elimination tournament with a game against Ridgefield 4 PM Friday.

The Fun Police will not be on the premises, so noisemakers are welcome. Cow bells, unite!

**And to see more photos (and possibly purchase some for sending to the grandparents), pop over to:

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf3544f8ef79

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Lauren Rose and assistant coach Ron Wright celebrate. (Photos courtesy Justine McGranahan)

 Lauren Rose and Venom assistant coach Ron Wright celebrate. (Photos courtesy Justine McGranahan)

The happiest bench in the world includes

The happiest bench in the world includes (l to r) Robin Cedillo, Tamika Nastali, Rose and Sarah Wright.

Coupeville’s softball future is bright.

In the same spring that the CHS sluggers went to the state tournament for the first time in 12 years, two of Central Whidbey’s little league squads have duplicated the feat.

The Sizzlin’ Sisters, Central’s 9/10 squad (which has a couple South Whidbey girls), is off to Asotin, on the Idaho border, for their state tourney this weekend.

At the same time, the Venom, the 17-0 Juniors squad (13/14) is off to Shoreline to lay down a beatin’ on opposing pitchers.

If you live in Cow Town, or have any loyalty to it, no matter where you reside, perhaps consider kicking in a sawbuck or two to help keep the dream alive.

Both teams could use a helping hand and have fundraisers launched on GoFundMe.

To take a look (and possibly loosen your wallet) skip over to:

Sizzlin’ Sisters — http://www.gofundme.com/b0kpvo

Venom — http://www.gofundme.com/b9p38s

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Mia Littlejohn, breakin' ankles. (John Fisken photo)

Mia Littlejohn, breakin’ ankles. (John Fisken photos)

Sarah Wright comes up firing.

Sarah Wright comes up firing.

Rising track stars (l to r) Emma Smith, Maddy Hilkey and Lindsey Roberts. (Sherry Roberts photo)

Rising track stars (l to r) Emma Smith, Maddy Hilkey and Lindsey Roberts. (Sherry Roberts photo)

Something special is in the air.

That is the feeling I have after spending the last two nights watching the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors All-Star softball squad just beat the livin’ snot out of North Whidbey in back-to-back games to win a district crown.

Oak Harbor has a bigger base to draw from, more families, more athletes. Their schools are bigger, they play at a higher level, they are expected to be the rulers of the Island.

It didn’t matter this week. It doesn’t matter, ever.

Other than one talented young woman from South Whidbey, Bella Northup, 10 of the 11 players on the 17-0, state tourney-bound Venom are Cow Town through and through.

And they are something to behold.

It is more than just talent, which they absolutely have. It is a team-wide confidence, aggressiveness, a belief in themselves and in each other.

They do not step on to the field to compete. They come to beat you and beat you hard.

But it’s also joy.

This group of girls, primarily young women who will be freshmen at Coupeville High School in the fall, loves to be on that playing field. Whether during practice or in games, they come alive when they step between the lines.

And this is where it gets better.

They almost all play multiple sports, from volleyball and basketball to softball, down the line. It’s the same in every sport — they exude joy, confidence and passion and they play as a unit, friends on and off the field.

What they remind me of the most is a group of young women who put together the most recent golden age of Coupeville sports, the female athletes at CHS in the late ’90s and early 2000’s.

Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby. The Mouw sisters. The Black sisters. The Lamb sisters. And a ton of others.

Most of the banners that hang in the CHS gym were put up by those young women, talented, incredibly hard-working athletes who went to state in every sport they played on a regular basis.

The closest the Wolves have ever come to a state title came 12 years ago, when CHS won four of five games (losing a squeaker to the eventual state champ, Adna) and finished third in the 1A softball tourney.

Since that time, there have been good, sometimes very good, Wolf athletes. But never another golden age.

This group — Katrina McGranahan, Sarah Wright, Lauren Rose, Hope Lodell, Veronica Crownover and all of their teammates, plus other young female stars from other sports like Lindsey Roberts, Reed Richards and Kalia Littlejohn — seems to herald something we haven’t seen in a while.

There is a depth of talent. A desire that burns deeply. A joy in putting away your phone and going outside and playing, organized sports or just throwing down hoops on an empty playground.

It’s a crapshoot, of course.

Families move, priorities can change, real life may intrude.

This group may move through together and become stronger as they do so, or be splintered in a shockingly short time.

Golden ages are rare, really rare.

But, as I watched this group of girls flying around the field, reveling in their talent and friendship, embracing each other and the joy that comes with being good — being proud, not cocky, but justifiably proud, of yourself and your teammates for being good — one thing seems crystal clear.

A new golden age could be dawning in Cow Town.

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The hottest bat in all the land belongs to Sarah Wright (right), seen here with fellow CMS athletic superstar Lindsey Roberts. (Sherry Roberts photo)

The hottest bat in all the land belongs to Sarah Wright (right), seen here with fellow CMS athletic superstar Lindsey Roberts. (Sherry Roberts photo)

The champs.

The champs.

Sarah Wright is on a mission.

A mission to personally beat the stitching right out of every softball thrown her way, that is.

Swinging a sizzlin’ bat that can’t be slowed down, much less stopped, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors All-Star softball catcher pounded rival North Whidbey into submission practically by herself Tuesday.

Collecting five hits — including three doubles — Wright drove in six runs as she and her undefeated Venom teammates romped to a 17-6 victory, clinching a trip to this weekend’s state tournament.

Now a pristine 17-0, and having won every game by 10 or more runs, Central Whidbey will kick off the double-elimination, eight-team season-capper Saturday in Shoreline.

Their opening foe will be Ridgefield, a town whose softball pitchers are currently huddled in the corner, crying at the idea of facing Wright and her high-powered teammates.

If they approach the plate at state with the intensity and precision shown in their two-game sweep of North Whidbey to capture the District 11 title, the Venom will be hard to beat.

Regardless of how many times North Whidbey flipped their hurlers around, Central Whidbey was locked in, rolling up runs in each of the five innings played Tuesday.

Hope Lodell, Bella Northup and Katrina McGranahan each knocked in two runs apiece in support of Wright, and the Venom ran wild on the base-paths, racking up a number of runs when they forced North Whidbey into crucial throwing errors.

Central Whidbey opened in typical style, scoring four in the top of the first.

Playing as the road team on their home field after losing a coin flip, the Venom jumped on North Whidbey’s pitcher quickly.

Lodell eked out a lead-off walk, then Lauren Rose scampered to first after nimbly dropping a bunt that hit the dirt and immediately started digging its way to China.

After a fielder’s choice put runners at the corners, Wright strode to the plate for the first time and began her reign of pain, slicing a two-run double to straight-away center.

An RBI single from Northup, who shot a liner over the second baseman’s head, and a bases loaded walk to Heather Nastali staked McGranahan to a 4-0 lead before she took the pitcher’s mound.

It was at that point that Central Whidbey showed a brief moment of weakness in a season marked by nothing but strength and more strength.

Two bad throws — where the ball was airmailed over the intended glove by several feet — allowed North Whidbey to put together its own four-run first, tying things up.

It was just a brief bump in the road, however, as the Venom threw down five more runs in the second and kept pressing the gas pedal through the floor.

Everything went Central Whidbey’s way in the second, as they scored three of the runs after what should have been the third out.

When the North Whidbey catcher dropped a third strike on Emily Licence, she took off like a shot and not only made it safely to first but watched in satisfaction as a teammate trotted home when the ensuing throw went deep into right field.

That set up Lodell, who, two batters later, made visiting CHS co-coach Amy King a prophet.

With the speedy Venom lead-off hitter flexing her guns in the afternoon sun, daring the pitcher to try and slip one past her, King whispered “left center is wide open.”

Boom!

Lodell, who will be a freshman at CHS in the fall, turned on the pitch and cracked a laser shot to left center, plating two and sending dad Mike Lodell into a screaming frenzy the likes of which had not been seen … since his daughter’s previous at-bat.

It was a sound that would be repeated as Central Whidbey closed out the game and punched its ticket to state.

Battling the gusty wind that plagued the game, Venom first baseman Veronica Crownover made a nifty snag on a high pop-up to start the bottom of the fifth.

After that, all that was left was for McGranahan to collect the final two outs via strikeout, and she did so by dealing her highest, hardest cheese of the afternoon.

The golden spring of Coupeville softball continues, with the Venom becoming the third squad to advance to state.

The Sizzlin’ Sisters, Central Whidbey’s 9/10 team, are off to Asotin this weekend, while the CHS squad made it to state for the first time in 12 seasons this spring.

Two members of the Wolf squad — Licence and Robin Cedillo — are on the Venom roster and will be making their second trip to a state tourney this spring.

 

State tourney bracket:

http://www.littleleaguewa.org/washington-state-little-league-tournaments/bracket/521-Junior-Softball-State

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Katrina McGranahan (middle) and Emily Licence (John Fisken photo)

Katrina McGranahan (middle) and Emily Licence team up for a bang-bang play at second. (John Fisken photo)

Do you believe in Hope?

You’d better, because Hope Lodell and her teammates on the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors All-Star softball squad are for real.

Flashing big bats and slick defensive moves, the Venom crushed visiting North Whidbey 14-2 Monday to move within a game of advancing to state.

Now a flawless 16-0 on the season, Central Whidbey will go for the knockout punch against their Island rivals 6 PM Tuesday at the Coupeville High School softball field.

If the unexpected happens, the two squads will return Wednesday for a winner-take-all third game.

The chances of that happening are somewhere between remote and never-gonna-happen.

Central Whidbey has been a juggernaut this season, routinely blitzing opponents and ending games early thanks to the ten-run mercy rule.

Monday was no different, as the Venom came out swinging from the heels and never let up.

Central drew first blood when Katrina McGranahan crushed a long two-out double to right in the top of the first, then strolled home when North Whidbey bobbled both the throw back in and the catch.

When Sarah Wright followed her to the plate and whacked a stand-up triple to straight away center, it looked like the Venom would be going for their ten runs all in the first.

It wasn’t to be, however, as North Whidbey escaped without any further damage, and then dodged again in the second, after Central put its first two runners on.

Clinging to just a one-run lead, Central turned to its cleanup hitter and Wright responded.

With Lauren Rose and McGranahan on base, the CMS 8th grader unleashed a liner into the gap for a two-run triple, then came around to score herself on a wild pitch two batters later.

The Venom effectively blew the game wide open in the fourth, plating eight and spraying the ball all over the field.

Rose conked a two-run double, McGranahan and Veronica Crownover smashed two-run singles and Wright collected another RBI on a single that just about ripped the cover off the ball.

Central built the lead to 14-0 in the fifth, with Crownover and Emily Licence driving home runs, and, after that it was all academic.

Which didn’t mean it wasn’t electric.

Venom hurler Bella Northup, who, unfortunately, is the only Central player who will be suiting up for Island rival South Whidbey as a high school player, and not Coupeville, had the high, hard cheese goin’ strong.

Whiffing seven, she was virtually unhittable and sailed along until the fifth, when she tired a bit, and a string of walks and an error allowed North Whidbey to get on the board.

Even then Central stayed strong, closing the door with a bang.

Lodell, patrolling center field with a ruthless intensity, jumped out of her shoes to snag a one-out liner, then smartly doubled off a straying runner to complete the game-ending double play.

The play brought an overflow crowd, which included former CHS softball legends Breeanna Messner and Bessie Walstad and current players like Tiffany Briscoe, to its feet.

The roar heard round the prairie washed over Lodell and her team (McGranahan, Rose, Tamika Nastali, Heather Nastali, Wright, Crownover, Northup, Mia Littlejohn, Licence and Robin Cedillo), which briefly celebrated and then moved on to thoughts of Tuesday.

Another win in the books, perfection rolls on.

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