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Madison McMillan cranked a game-changing three-run home run Sunday, keeping Whidbey’s state title hopes alive. (Jackie Saia photos)

Adyson Morales whiffed seven batters for the Inferno.

I assumed something went wrong with my phone.

Working on my sister’s farm Sunday, I peeked once to see how the Whidbey Island All-Star juniors softball team was doing in its loser-out game at the state tourney in Vancouver.

The answer: the Inferno were scuffling, held to three singles and no runs through five innings, and trailing South Hill of Puyallup 5-0.

Three hours later, I grabbed my phone, saw that the GameChanger app was claiming Whidbey had won 19-10, preserving its hopes of a state title, and thought I had tapped on the wrong game.

But it was true. All true.

Really. Seriously. Really.

Staging one of the great comebacks in Whidbey youth athletic history, the Inferno unleashed a tsunami in the final two innings, raining down 19 runs on 21 hits, including nine of the extra-base variety.

Better still, 13 of those runs, including a game-changing out-of-the-park three-run home run from Coupeville’s Madison McMillan, came with the Inferno just a single out away from being eliminated.

South Hill needed 21 outs to stay alive and move on to face Mukilteo Monday night in another loser-out game, but got to 20 outs and then promptly imploded.

Or, more accurately, Whidbey dropped a nuclear bomb on their foes hopes and dreams, creating a beautiful ballet of death and destruction on the diamond.

“That was nuts,” said mentally-exhausted Inferno coach Fred Farris. “Greatest sports moment I’ve been a part of, or frankly ever watched.

“I’m speechless!”

You can sum the first five innings of the game up by simply saying, “Not much was working for Whidbey.”

Maybe still reeling a bit from a one-run loss to Camas Saturday in their tourney opener, the Inferno couldn’t get anything started.

Savina Wells and Loto Tupu whacked singles in the second inning, only to be stranded, and that was almost the full extent of Whidbey’s offensive output until late.

But big bats can stay quiet only so long, and the Inferno finally broke through.

Trailing 5-0 heading into the top of the sixth inning, Whidbey got a one-out single from Taylor Brotemarkle, then started to find its usual free-flowing groove.

After not getting a single extra-base hit up until then, the Inferno unloaded for five doubles in the inning, with Payton Ludemann, Adyson Morales, Wells, McMillan, and Tupu all bashing the ball.

That allowed Whidbey to scrape together six runs and take their first lead of the game at 6-5, but it was a lead which vanished almost as quickly as it came.

South Hill bounced right back to slap four runs on the scoreboard in the bottom half of the frame, regaining the upper hand at 9-6, and things looked dire.

A strong defensive play, with Brotemarkle rifling a throw off a one-hopper to right, and Mia Farris making “an incredible stretch” to haul in the throw at first, kept the damage from being worse.

But things weren’t looking good in the top of the seventh and final inning, as two of Whidbey’s first three hitters went down.

Haylee Burleigh poked a single to left to put one runner aboard, but the end of the season, and the little league careers of many of the Inferno players, seemed a mere moment away.

Who knew that final moment would stretch out into eternity?

With everything hinging on her, Coupeville catcher Teagan Calkins — an artful photographer, a quick cross country runner, and a high-achieving student — ambled to the plate.

And thus began the Ragnarok which would reduce South Hill to a pile of rubble.

Calkins whacked a single to center to keep the game going, Wells followed with an RBI single to short to cut the lead to 9-7, then McMillan got epic.

Swinging the hammer of the gods, one of Coupeville’s best and brightest mashed the kind of dinger which can define a career, and launch years of future softball excellence in her home town.

Boom, 10-9 Inferno — game over on the spot, essentially, even if the two teams played on for a while longer.

Her coach, who has seen a lot of games in a lot of sports in his time, was suitably impressed.

Madison hit it WAY over the fence,” Fred Farris said. “The girls really fed off that.

“It was probably five foot fair and 20 feet over the foul pole, and still climbing!”

There were still 10 more hits, and another nine runs to score before the inning came to an end, and it was artistry, pure artistry.

One out from elimination, the Inferno responded with 13 consecutive hits, with Calkins, Wells, McMillan, and Layla Suto collecting two base-knocks apiece during the streak.

The run only came to an end when Mia Farris was drilled by a pitch, one of two times Whidbey players were plunked on the afternoon, but by then, South Hill was dead and buried.

The Puyallup nine did scrape out one run in the bottom of the seventh, but couldn’t mount a rally against Wells, who was on in relief of Morales.

Whidbey’s pitchers combined for nine strikeouts on the afternoon, with Morales netting seven of those.

Calkins and Wells finished with four hits apiece to pace the Inferno, with McMillan thumping three and collecting a game-high six RBI.

Burleigh (2), Morales (2), Suto (2), Tupu (2), Brotemarkle (2), Mia Farris (1), Ludemann (1), and Katie Marti (1) also garnered hits, with Jada Heaton and Lilly Norman rounding out Whidbey’s roster.

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After a tough loss, the Whidbey Island All-Star juniors softball squad is ready to sprint back into action at the state tourney. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They can still win a title.

Saturday’s opener at the state tourney in Vancouver didn’t end the way the Whidbey Island All-Star juniors softball squad wanted, as it lost a late lead and fell 12-11 to Camas.

But the big dance is a double-elimination tourney, and with short memories and blazing bats, the Inferno can fight their way back.

The road to redemption begins Sunday afternoon, when Whidbey plays a loser-out game against South Hill Little League of Puyallup.

Win there, and the Inferno return to action Monday.

Keep coming out on top and they could play all the way through July 15.

It won’t be an easy path at this point, with Whidbey needing six straight wins across five days to claim a state title.

But, if the Inferno come out like they did for the first four-and-a-half innings Saturday, it’s not an impossible dream.

Facing the tourney hosts, Whidbey jumped on Camas early, building a 4-0 lead after an inning and a half, eventually stretching the lead all the way out to 10-4 headed into the bottom of the fifth.

Haylee Burleigh got things started early, whacking a triple to right in the top of the first, before scooting home on an RBI single off the bat of Savina Wells.

Madison McMillan followed Wells to the plate, bopping a run-scoring double to center, and the Inferno were heating up.

A double from Loto Tupu and a single to short from Adyson Morales set the table in the second, with Payton Ludemann bringing both of her teammates around to score on a shot to right.

Up 4-0 and cruising, Whidbey hit a brief bump in the bottom of the second, however, allowing Camas to crawl back in the game and tie things up.

But, as quickly as the hosts showed a bit of life, the Inferno returned to issuing a beat-down.

Three runs in the third, and another three-spot in the fourth, while Wells was firing BB’s from the pitcher’s circle, put Whidbey in a pleasant position.

The Inferno were getting contributions from everyone on the roster — 11 of 13 players collected a hit in the opener — and many of the base-knocks were of the extra-base variety.

Coupeville’s Katie Marti crunched an RBI double in the third, while Oak Harbor’s Layla Suto and Tupu crashed back-to-back one-out three-baggers in the fourth.

And there could have been more.

Up 10-4, the Inferno stranded Tupu at third, starting their only dry stretch of the afternoon — a run of nine straight batters who went down from the end of the fourth inning through the start of the seventh.

Given a reprieve, Camas dug deep and scratched out five runs in the bottom of the fifth to get all the way back to 10-9.

The fatal blow was a bases-loaded triple from Papermaker slugger Kallie True, but the Inferno  promptly picked her off third to end the inning and strand the tying run.

Camas had found its groove, unfortunately, and pushed two more runs across in the bottom of the sixth to claim the lead for the first time all day.

Though trailing 11-10, Whidbey came up huge on defense for a second-straight inning, with McMillan pulling off an unassisted double play on a liner to third to end the bleeding.

Down to their final two outs, the Inferno proved plucky and then some.

Bringing an end to her team’s run of nine straight outs, Tupu whacked a one-out single, with Taylor Brotemarkle following with a hit of her own.

Getting crafty, Whidbey used a bunt to bring the tying run home, with Morales artfully using her bat to drop the ball with perfection.

A Ludemann single loaded the bags, but this time it was Camas which escaped, as it pulled off its own double play on a liner, with the ball flying to first base this time around.

The Inferno came a single out from sending the game to extra innings, only to see the Papermakers drop in the game-breaking hit in the bottom of the seventh.

True singled, stole second, went to third on a fielder’s choice, then came home with the winning run on a walk-off RBI single from Ainsley Schweitzer.

Whidbey’s hit parade was led by Tupu, who collected three base-knocks, including a double and triple.

Burleigh, Wells, McMillan, and Brotemarkle each had two hits, while Teagan Calkins, Suto, Morales, Marti, Ludemann, and Lilly Norman netted one apiece.

Jada Heaton and Mia Farris rounded out the active roster, with Heaton collecting Whidbey’s lone walk on the afternoon – courtesy of getting hit by a pitch.

Wells went the distance for the Inferno, whiffing five, with 80 of her 127 pitches being strikes.

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Lilly Norman hauls in a pitch as Whidbey Island wins the district crown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The (softball) revolution will be televised.

Or streamed, at least.

The Whidbey Island All-Star juniors softball team, which features a mix of Coupeville and Oak Harbor players, opens the state tournament Saturday in Vancouver.

First game for the District 11 champion Inferno is at 4 PM, with host Camas, from D-4, as the opponent.

Play continues through July 15, when the state champ will be crowned.

The bracket:

Washington State Girls Junior League Softball (district4wa.com)

To watch the stream:

WA State Girls Junior Softball (2021) | Nest

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Sofia and Mike Peters have formed a strong daughter/father coaching duo this season. (Photo courtesy Paula Peters)

Like father, like daughter.

As the Central Whidbey Little League minors softball squad has progressed this season — it started with only four girls with prior experience, yet has earned a trip to state — a unique coaching experience has played out.

The team’s coaching staff includes a father/daughter combo, with Mike and Sofia Peters working together to help shape the future of Coupeville’s diamond dandies.

The duo have worked together before, but in coach-player mode, with Mike helping shepherd Sofia and her teammates from rookie ball through juniors.

Now that his daughter is a high school player — she was a sophomore on this year’s CHS squad, which went a pristine 12-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play — the relationship is different, yet still just as close.

“We still talk the game all the time,” Mike Peters said. “When coaching Sofia, it was more sharing the knowledge and guiding her to help herself and the team.

“Coaching with Sofia is more of a collaboration,” he added. “I enjoy listening to some of my phrases I used when I coached her, that she now tells her players.”

Coming off her first season on the high school diamond — the pandemic cancelled her freshman campaign — Sofia Peters has adapted quickly to the other side of the coach/player relationship.

It’s a natural progression for her as she follows in her father’s footsteps, and one she would like to continue.

“I love softball and I really want to go to college to be an elementary school teacher,” she said. “So I thought coaching young softball players would be a really good way for me to be involved with both.

“I’m definitely going to coach again, whether it’s after, or during my own playing career,” Sofia added. “This was so fun and I really loved being out there coaching, and helping the girls learn and succeed.”

As the CHS junior-to-be has adapted to the role, it’s made for a lot of proud papa moments.

“Watching Sofia teach other players,” has been the best part for Mike Peters as the season has progressed.

“She actually takes the time with each player, no matter their playing level,” he added.

Seeing younger players make the same progress which she has shown on the diamond is huge, Sofia Peters said.

“The best part of coaching for me has been two things. One being seeing how the girls have developed and changed from our very first practice till now.

“And two is when a player gets excited because they finally did the thing they have been working on doing,” she added. “That can be anywhere from pitching a perfect strike to remembering to creep in the infield.”

As her first season as a coach nears its end, Sofia Peters is aglow with her player’s successes, and wants her young charges to depart with more softball knowledge than they had when they arrived at the first practice.

“Honestly, I hope they learn literally anything from me,” she said. “It could be something to do with actually playing or just about life in general.

“But, if I had to be specific it would be that practicing how you play really matters.”

Coaching has given Sofia Peters a different view of the game, allowing her to better appreciate what her dad and other coaches have tried to teach her.

“There are a few differences in coaching with my dad than playing for him, but the main one that comes to mind is when I was playing for him he always told me what to do,” she said. “And told me how I should play.

“But coaching with him, that’s what he wants me to do for the girls. He wants me to be a role model and he wants me to teach them what he taught me.”

The CWLL minors squad has benefited from a deep coaching bench this season, led by Aaron Lucero and Lark Gustafson.

Sofia Peters, Ana Valencia, and Scott Maynes have also helped, with Mike Peters stepping in to help as the team heads to state.

Lucero has a prior commitment which will prevent him from accompanying his team to Auburn for the big dance, but he’s left the team in capable hands.

For Mike Peters, the goal is to continue building on what has already been accomplished.

“With a young team, to move forward in team sports it is a combination of coaching and girls who want to learn,” he said. “Aaron creates a program that is easy to follow and learn from.

“It is a consistent program. His motto is “the little things,” Mike Peters added. “The girls for the most are growing from that.

“(We just want to) play our game. Minimize little league mistakes as we call it. Make the other team beat you. Just don’t make it easy for the other team.

“Biggest message I can give the team — enjoy the moment.”

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The excitement is palpable. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Playoff action dominates the diamond.

North Whidbey Little League hosts a series of district tournaments over the next week, with play going down at its fields on Bayshore Drive in Oak Harbor.

The photo above, capturing the pomp and pageantry of player introductions, comes to us from John Fisken.

To see actual action pics, and possibly purchase some glossies for grandma, pop over to:

BB 2021-06-30 NWLL All-Stars vs Burlilngton – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

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