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Archive for the ‘Little League’ Category

"Glove, don't fail me now!!" (Patrick Kelley photo)

“Glove, don’t fail me now!!” (Patrick Kelley photo)

I’m not saying this is the greatest little league photo ever taken.

That one sits over at https://coupevillesports.com/2013/07/02/possibly-the-greatest-little-league-photo-ever/. Case closed.

But this one is still pretty great.

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The future of Wolf sports -- l to r, McKenzie, Molly and McKayla Bailey. (Donna Bailey photo)

     The future of Wolf sports — left to right, McKenzie, Mollie and McKayla Bailey. (Donna Bailey photo)

The third Bailey sister is just as awesome as the first two.

Mollie Bailey, lil’ sis of Coupeville High School athletic superstars McKayla (soccer, basketball, softball) and McKenzie (volleyball, basketball, tennis), is making a name for herself as a softball player.

One of two Central Whidbey players on a North Whidbey 9/10 Little League All-Star softball squad (along with Chelsea Prescott), Mollie is now state-bound after she and her teammates captured a district title.

The Whidbey team erased a five-run deficit to smack Sedro Woolley 17-7 Monday to snare the District 11 title.

Now they head to La Center July 13-20 for the state tournament, which will mean a lot of driving for mom Donna, as she tries to bounce between events. McKayla is playing in Canada in her own softball extravaganza at the same time.

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The season, like this Rice Crispie treat, was delicious. (Melissa Losey photo)

The season, like this Rice Krispie treat, was delicious. (Melissa Losey photo)

Contributed by Joe Lippo.

In the end, it was not to be.

Sedro Woolley overpowered Central Whidbey in the only finals game to be played, 17-1. That’s not to say that they didn’t have help, but there is no reason to write about it here and sully an otherwise fantastic season for the boys from Coupeville.

Central finishes second overall in District 11 play, and perhaps more important, they can say that they are Island County’s best Majors baseball squad.

This is the deepest into any tournament any Majors team from Central Whidbey has gone that anyone can remember, and it was a great year for a lot of these kids overall.

There were five kids who hit their first ever home run this season, and I know I keep beating this one into the ground, but this is perhaps the biggest, most important hurdle for a young baseball player.

There were shutouts pitched, fences hit, impossible comebacks (including one between the Coupeville squads where one came back from 11 runs down to force a tie as the game was called for darkness), blown saves, great saves, running catches, diving catches, backhand catches, digs, jumps, slides, dives, pick-offs, strikeouts, bats thrown, batters hit, bases stolen and plays that made fans from either team gasp in awe.

We had an instance where a boy got his very first hit and very first catch in the outfield in the same game.

We had the boys drifting over to cheer on the girls softball after their game ended and vice versa.

These boys are also getting old enough to know when the umpire blows a call and they take them to task for it (however briefly).

Some quips (and I wish I had these on tape):

“He got me in the chest after my foot hit the bag.”

“Are you kidding me?”

“No, seriously, he was out.”

“Can I challenge that?”

“The base moved, I should be safe” (Ump says “you are”, kid says “Oh, ok”)

“This isn’t softball.”

“Can I get my coach out here?”

“You weren’t even looking!”

Nobody was ejected from the game for misconduct. There was laughter, tears, face-palms, high fives, low fives, hugs, coaches censoring themselves, fans NOT censoring themselves, offers of glasses to umpires, sweat, blood, Gatorade, Powerade, Kool-Ade and even a little drool from stuffing in too much gum/jerky/seeds.

I don’t know what the Majors are going to look like next year with a lot of these kids moving to Juniors (where everything changes), but then again, this author will be contributing mostly Juniors baseball and softball articles to this blog.

And now, my All-Star is passed out on the couch, and I think there’s room for me over there.

See you soon…

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Led by Murderers Row (l to r, Joey Lippo, Kyle Rockwell, Jake Pease, Ty Eck and Julian Welling) Central Whidbey knocked North Whidbey out of the little league playoffs 6-4 Friday.

   Led by Murderers Row (l to r, Joey Lippo, Kyle Rockwell, Jake Pease, Ty Eck and Julian Welling) Central Whidbey beat North Whidbey 6-3 Friday. (Joe Lippo photos)

Eck delivers for the Island champs, who will face Sedro Woolley in the district championships.

Eck delivers for the Island champs, who will face Sedro Woolley in the district championship.

Contributed by Joe Lippo.

Central Whidbey dropped the puck against North Whidbey waaaay out in Sedro Woolley to see who would go to the Finals. Also at stake, since South Whidbey had been eliminated, was bragging rights to being the best team on Whidbey.

Coach Bob Brown won his fourth straight coin toss, resulting in the Central Whidbey boys being the home team, giving Coach Brown a 1.000 average on coin tosses.

Ty Eck started the evening on the mound for the Coupeville squad, and did well, allowing few hits and only one run.

In the bottom of the first, Central Whidbey found something that had been missing from the earlier innings of past games: Their bats.

Eck started it off with a sharply hit ball right back to the pitcher, who immediately fired it over the first baseman’s head, allowing Eck to take second base.

He was advanced to third on a Julian Welling single. Joey Lippo followed with his own single, scoring Eck and advancing Welling to second. Shane Losey kept the hit parade going, scoring Welling. Bryce Payne stroked a double to deep center, with Lippo and Losey crossing the plate. Matt Hillborn came within six feet of joining Murderers Row with a double.

The rally came to an end with the final out of the first inning, and the Central boys were up 4-1.

Eck continued on the mound, pitching well and allowing only one run while retiring the rest of the batters on the side. Central followed suit with no runs, and the second inning ended with the home team clinging to a two-run lead.

Kyle Rockwell replaced Eck to start the third, and encountered some slight difficulty finding his groove while walking a batter and getting a little wild before settling down and firing strikes.

Nevertheless, the boys from the North End scratched out another run, inching closer to their rivals in the middle of the Island, closing the gap to just one run before Rockwell retired the side and chased the North Whidbey defense back onto the field.

The first batter for Central was Welling, who told this author that he was “going to concentrate on getting the bat on the ball.” He did so by smashing a solo home run over the center field fence so far that the FAA threatened to have the ball registered for flight.

Rockwell retained the ball for the fourth inning, and retired the side quickly. Just as quickly, it was the fifth inning as the Coupeville squad couldn’t make anything happen.

Speaking of making things happen, the fans from Central were starting to feel it. Just a little.

With the aforementioned fifth inning upon us, Payne came to the mound, and thoroughly confused the batters with a combination of speed, curves, change-ups and other assorted high stinky cheese, sitting them down as fast as they came to the plate.

North Whidbey had a lone base runner, who was stranded as Jake Pease gloved a fly ball to right field for the inning-ending out.

In the bottom half of the frame, that same guy, who had struggled a bit in his last two trips to the plate, hit a ball into right for a single. Then Welling hit a shot down the third base line, which had Pease blowing through Coach Brown’s signal to hold up, then pulling up as he realized what he did halfway to home, then deciding to go for broke at the behest of the screaming fan base.

He was safe at home as the throw hit him in the back before it could reach the catcher. The inning ended just like that, and Central was three outs away from victory.

Payne wasn’t out of pitches, so he stayed in until his 20th pitch, which resulted in two outs and nobody on.

Saving him for Saturday’s game, he was pulled and replaced with Lippo.

Lippo walked the first batter he faced, then buckled down and started throwing good strikes. The North Whidbey batter smacked a slow roller to first, and Losey came off the bag to field it. Lippo wisely covered first base, and gloved the last out of the game on the toss from Losey.

The Central squad is now headed to the Finals, and has earned Island wide bragging rights, at least until next season.

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Central Whidbey basks in the glow of the win. (Joan Payne photos)

Central Whidbey basks in the glow of the win. (Joan Payne photos)

Bryce Payne takes a victory lap.

Bryce Payne takes a victory lap.

Nick Etzell swings from the heels.

Nick Etzell swings from the heels.

Read it and weep, Oak Harbor.

Read it and weep, Oak Harbor.

Another day, another win, another step closer to Spokane.

Claiming Island supremacy, the Central Whidbey Little League 11/12 All-Stars eliminated North Whidbey 6-3 Friday at the district tourney, advancing to the championship.

Now 3-1 in postseason play, the Coupeville diamond men will need to beat Sedro Woolley (3-0) twice to win the title. That first chance will come Saturday. Triumph there and they return for a winner-take-all contest Sunday.

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