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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

   Maggie Crimmins and CHS tennis swept two league matches this week to claim control of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let the jockeying begin.

In a week where many teams were beset by the never-ending rain, two of the four Olympic League races we’re tracking had changes at the top of the standings.

In baseball, Chimacum, which has never finished higher than third in the previous three seasons of the conference, jumped past Coupeville and into first-place.

A one-run win put the Cowboys a game up on the Wolves, but there’s still two-thirds of the league season to play — including two more bouts between these very two teams.

Over on the tennis courts, not a single league match had been played prior to this week.

That’s changed, and with back-to-back wins at the tail end of the week, the Coupeville netters staked a solid claim to being a favorite to win a fourth straight crown.

While softball (Coupeville) and boys soccer (Klahowya) didn’t change leaders, none of the races are anywhere close to being decided yet, ensuring several more weeks of excitement.

Maybe.

Softball, thanks to the unique challenges raised by Port Townsend and Chimacum abandoning their programs this season due to a lack of players, could be settled five days from now.

If CHS beats Klahowya Friday at home, the Wolves, with wins in the first two of three games the squads will play, will clinch their first softball title since 2002.

An Eagle upset (Coupeville won 15-1 Mar. 28 and weather has kept KSS sidelined since that day) and the championship would come down to an Apr. 30 meeting in Silverdale.

And, speaking of upsets, the most unexpected score came from the world of baseball, where Port Townsend shocked Klahowya 6-2 Friday.

The win snapped a 48-game losing skid for the RedHawks, who last won Apr. 9, 2015, and sent the Eagles, the defending champs, crashing into the cellar.

My, oh my.

Current standings through Apr. 15:

Olympic League baseball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 3-0 5-5
COUPEVILLE 2-1 7-4
Port Townsend 1-3 1-6
Klahowya 1-3 2-8

Olympic League boys soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 4-0 7-2-1
COUPEVILLE 3-1 4-4-2
Port Townsend 1-3 1-6-0
Chimacum 0-4 0-6-0

Olympic League girls tennis:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 2-0 3-5
Chimacum 0-1 1-6
Klahowya 0-1 1-5

Olympic League softball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 7-3
Klahowya 0-1 5-2

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   Nicole Laxton, here making a play in a home game, had a spectacular diving catch Saturday as Coupeville whacked Friday Harbor 13-4. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves had six days to think, to plan, to prep, to refine their swings.

Pity Friday Harbor.

Aggressively bouncing back from their weakest offensive afternoon of the season, the Coupeville High School softball squad smashed 17 hits Saturday, decimating their hosts to a happy tune of 13-4.

The resounding non-conference victory, which came a week after a doubleheader sweep at the hands of Forks, lifts the Wolves to 7-3.

CHS has one more tune-up, a road trip to La Conner, next Thursday, Apr. 19, before playing its biggest game in 16 years.

The Wolves host Klahowya Apr. 20, and a win would clinch Coupeville softball’s first league crown since 2002.

Accomplish that and CHS will carry the #1 seed out of the Olympic League to districts in May.

As league champs, they would open the playoffs in the double-elimination round, needing two wins in three games to punch a ticket to the state tourney.

All of that is still fairly far down the road, however, and, on this day, all the Wolves were concentrating on was whacking the snot out of the ball.

Mission, accomplished.

“So, the weather let us play today and we came out swinging,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “All in all, it was a good solid game and both teams played good defense, but we played error-free and they didn’t, and we hit better than them all day.

“Good day trip to the islands and a great lunch after the game, followed by ice cream of course. On to La Conner!”

Coupeville had at least one base-knock in six of seven innings, with seven doubles and a triple along the way.

And yet the game was semi-close for two innings.

The Wolves scratched out a run in the first, with Scout Smith reaching base, swiping second, taking third on a passed ball, then flashing home on a sac fly from Katrina McGranahan.

But the rally stopped there, as they stranded Sarah Wright after she doubled, and CHS couldn’t get Veronica Crownover off of first after she led off the second with a single.

Things took a dramatic turn in the third, however, as Coupeville started to mash the ball big-time, with the first seven hitters reaching base.

11 batters, four hits and six runs later, Friday Harbor escaped with their lives intact (barely), but the Wolves were up 7-0 and everyone’s fates were sealed.

The Wolves juiced the bags with Rose reaching on an error, Smith singling and McGranahan wearing a pitch.

From there it was a revolving door of RBI’s.

Wright lashed a single, Chelsea Prescott walked to force in a run, Crownover launched a two-run double, then Hope Lodell got artistic and dropped the ultra-rare RBI bunt.

Rose came back around to close the scoring with an RBI on a ground-out, and, by that time, Friday Harbor’s collective hopes and dreams were fully shattered.

The host Wolverines managed to finally get on the board in the bottom of the third, scratching out two runs, but Coupeville had an immediate response.

RBI doubles by the scorching-hot Wright and Crownover in the top of the fourth stretched the lead back out to 9-2, then CHS turned on the web gem show.

Nicole Laxton, who came on to give Mackenzie Davis some rest, immediately made an impact.

The junior whacked a shot to right in her first at-bat, then she turned the volume to 12 on a spectacular running, diving snare on a well-hit ball while playing left field.

Snagging the rapidly-descending orb, Laxton speared it with her glove, then held on through the crash back to Mother Earth, earning rapturous applause from her teammates, coaches and hardy road fans.

On another play, fab frosh Mollie Bailey, also a mid-game replacement, made a superb throw from right to Smith, who gunned it on to Wright.

The Wolf catcher caught the ball, dropped and defended the plate like a lioness guarding her cubs.

That prevented Friday Harbor from plating any runners, and gave Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan the chance to escape one of her few jams.

The Bailey-to-Smith-to-Wright connection paid off again later in the game, this time with the throw nailing an incoming runner at the plate.

After shocking the world by not scoring in the fifth or sixth, despite several more hits, Coupeville found its run-scoring mojo again in the top of the seventh.

Rose and Smith kick-started things again, with the former poking a ball off a glove, while the latter froze all nine defenders with a note-perfect bunt that dropped and promptly dug a hole to China.

That set up the big boppers, and they were swinging for the fences.

McGranahan lashed a two-run triple before Wright and Crownover (who else?) mashed RBI doubles, with all three Wolf sluggers narrowly missing home runs on their epic blows.

Coupeville got hits from seven of the 11 girls who played, led by Wright, who was a perfect 5-5 with three doubles and two singles.

Crownover had four hits (including three doubles), while Smith (1B, 1B), Lodell (1B, 1B), McGranahan (1B, 3B), Prescott (2B) and Rose (1B) rounded out the extraordinarily-deep hitting attack.

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   Chloe Marzocca and the Central Whidbey Little League Minors softball team are on an early-season roll. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Hammerheads are out for blood.

Thumping teams everywhere they play, the Central Whidbey Little League Minors softball squad is leaving a trail of mauled foes in their wake.

The latest to fall was NW White, which was blown out 18-6 at Volunteer Park in Oak Harbor in a game which “wasn’t as close as the score.”

The Hammerheads split pitching duties between Chloe Marzocca, Mia Farris and Taylor Brotemarkle, who put a final stamp on the game by whiffing all three batters she faced.

“The team was very clean in the field and on the bases,” said CWLL coach Fred Farris. “Everyone contributed.”

Central racked up six hits, with Madison McMillan leading the way with two base-knocks.

Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, Katie Marti and Mayleen Weatherford each added a hit, with Marti and Farris collecting two RBI apiece.

Brotemarkle walked three times, McMillan pilfered three stolen bases and Teagan Calkins filled up the stat sheet with three runs, three steals and two walks (both times being plunked by pitches).

The Hammerheads got something from everyone, with Naosha Rose, Sydney Wallace, Brooke Van Velkinburgh and Hayden Daniel all scoring.

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Melia Welling smacked a double Thursday, one of 10 hits as the Coupeville JV softball squad routed Concrete’s varsity. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Their bats were smokin’.

Pounding out 10 hits Thursday, including a home run from freshman pitcher Chelsea Prescott, the Coupeville High School JV softball squad drilled Concrete’s varsity 20-6.

The road win, which came in five innings thanks to the mercy rule, lifts the Wolf young guns to a pristine 3-0 on the season.

After winning its first two on its home field, Coupeville proved a bus ride would be no deterrent.

The Wolves jumped on Concrete for six runs in the first, eventually stretched the lead out to 11-0, then cruised in for the win.

The biggest blow, Prescott’s tater, came in the first inning, capping a run of four straight Wolves to reach base.

Coral Caveness kicked off the day by reaching on an error, Thora Iverson walked and Mollie Bailey singled before Prescott laid down the law with one booming swing of her super-charged bat.

If Concrete thought the destruction was done at that point, the Lions were sadly mistaken.

While there were no more round-trippers after Prescott’s moon launch, the Wolves picked up four doubles.

The first came from Nicole Laxton in the fourth inning, then CHS got back-to-back-to-back two-baggers in the fifth from Marenna Rebischke-Smith, Melia Welling and Chloe Wheeler to put a final stamp on things.

The Wolves, who have outscored their foes 37-14, had a sizzling on-base-percentage of .700 on the day.

Prescott (HR, 1B) and Caveness (two singles) led the hit attack, while Bailey, Laxton, Rebischke-Smith, Welling, Wheeler and Mackenzie Davis all collected a base-knock of their own.

The only Wolves not to collect a hit, Thora Iverson and Jenna Dickson, were still plenty busy.

The duo each reached base twice thanks to walks and Concrete errors, with Iverson coming around to score twice and Dickson stamping on home plate once.

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   “He’s too fast! We need some duct tape to keep this thing on his head!!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I dare you to run! Seriously, just try me, girl! I’ll make your whole family cry!!”

Bringin’ the heat on Opening Day.

Put the ball in play and let the runs rain down.

“I’m a ballet dancer in my other life…”

Runnin’ for the spotlight.

   “It’s a deal. You hit a homerun, and we’ll use your idea and install a soft serve ice cream machine in the dugout.”

Safe at home and the celebration begins.

Ready or not, little league is back.

While some might argue the second week of April is a wee bit early for Opening Day, Central Whidbey Little League lucked out Monday, enjoying blue skies.

The league’s minors softball and baseball squads opened play at Rhododendron Park and both teams came away with fairly one-sided victories over North Whidbey teams.

Baseball zinged to a 10-1 win, while softball went wild on the base paths, racking up 17 steals in an 11-3 win.

The Hammerheads softball squad got strong work in the pitcher’s circle from Chloe Marzocca and Taylor Brotemarkle, while Teagan Calkins “was a vacuum behind the plate,” according to coach Fred Farris.

Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, Hayden Daniel, Marzocca, Brotemarkle and Brooke Van Velkinburgh all collected base-knocks, with McMillan leading the way with two hits.

Van Velkinburgh had the best play of the night, though, as she blasted a single off a pitch that bounced to the plate.

Not content to pad her ball-strike count, she stepped forward and smartly whacked the ball, serving notice that defenses better not sleep on her.

Mayleen Weatherford, Jada Heaton, Sydney Wallace, Naosha Rose, Katie Marti and Liza Zustiak all came around to score after getting on base thanks to walks.

While the Opening Day action was playing out, intrepid photo ace John Fisken bounced between diamonds to capture photos.

The pics above are courtesy him, but are just the tip of the iceberg.

To see everything he shot (and perhaps purchase some glossies for grandma) pop over to:

Softball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Little-League-baseball-and-softball/CWLL-Minor-BB-2018-04-09/

Baseball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Little-League-baseball-and-softball/CWLL-Minor-SB-2018-04-09-vs-NWLL/

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