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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Daniel Olson fires the ball in during warm-ups. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Teamwork at its finest.

   Xavier Murdy comes up firing from behind the plate for Coupeville’s Babe Ruth baseball squad.

The brain trust, hard at work.

“Just try and throw it past me, bud, just try…”

Cody Roberts brings the heat.

The (very bright) future of Wolf softball.

Hawthorne Wolfe sets off a dust storm as he slides in with a run.

He wanders here, he wanders there, camera always at the ready.

Tuesday night the sound of ball hitting bat drew John Fisken to the Coupeville High School ball fields, where he snapped the pics seen above.

The photos capture two Central Whidbey Little League teams, a Babe Ruth squad in action against Anacortes and Majors softball players and coaches in their down time.

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Senior hurler Katrina McGranahan will carry the softball into the pitcher’s circle for Coupeville at districts this weekend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two wins from Richland.

That’s where the Coupeville High School softball team finds itself, as it preps for this weekend’s four-team, double-elimination district tourney.

Capture two victories without taking two losses, and the Wolves punch their ticket to the state tourney, earning a trip back to Eastern Washington.

The last time CHS softball went to the big dance was 2014, in David King’s final season as coach.

Now, after coming within a single strike of getting there last season, the Wolves are back to make another run under Kevin McGranahan, and with a little better set-up than a year ago.

Then, they faced a loser-out game in the first round, had to play game two mere seconds after game one finished and were on the diamond for four games in less than 24 hours.

This time around, Coupeville is guaranteed two games (and a decent break in the middle) Friday, and will only play one game, if any, Saturday.

A look at all the pertinent details:

 

The bracket:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2610&sport=15

 

The location:

Lacey-Thurston County Regional Athletic Complex
8345 Steilacoom Road SE
Lacey, WA

http://www.ci.lacey.wa.us/city-government/city-departments/parks-and-recreation/regional-athletic-complex

 

Admission prices:

Adults and students w/o ASB — $8
Students (with ASB) — $5
Elementary (under 12) — $4
Senior citizens (62+) — $5
Preschool (with parent) — free

 

Team capsules:

 

COUPEVILLE

Season record: 11-7

League finish: #1 in Olympic League

Run differential: 169-108

Record vs. district tourney foes: 3-1 (3-0 vs Klahowya, 0-1 vs Vashon)

Coach: Kevin McGranahan

Mascot: Wolves

Last trip to state: 2014

Best finish at state: 3rd in 2002

 

BELLEVUE CHRISTIAN

Season record: 15-5

League finish: #1 in Nisqually League

Run differential: 189-95

Record vs. district tourney foes: 3-1 (all vs Vashon)

Coach: Ryan Kelly

Mascot: Vikings

Last trip to state: 2017

Best finish at state: 3rd in 2016

 

KLAHOWYA

Season record: 10-6

League finish: #2 in Olympic League

Run differential: 111-73

Record vs. district tourney foes: 1-3 (0-3 vs Coupeville, 1-0 vs Vashon)

Coach: Jodie Gagnon

Mascot: Eagles

Last trip to state: 2004

Best finish at state: Never placed; won one game in 2003 tourney

 

VASHON ISLAND

Season record: 8-10

League finish: #2 in Nisqually League

Run differential: 131-145

Record vs. district tourney foes: 2-4 (1-3 vs BC, 1-0 vs Coupeville, 0-1 vs Klahowya)

Coach: Heather Jurs

Mascot: Pirates

Last trip to state: 1991 (slow-pitch)

Best finish at state: Lost both games they played in ’91

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Jenna Dickson leads off our collection of spring sports portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Zach Ginnings

Alex Jimenez

James Vidoni

Mason Grove

Dawson Houston

Ben Smith

Ivy Leedy

Time for a little spring cleaning.

As the season winds down, I’m going through head shots snapped by John Fisken and trying to make sure 99.3% of them get used.

The eight above, covering softball, baseball and boys soccer, are ones that, for whatever reason, had yet to see the light of day.

Before you ask, there are no tennis pics because it’s a smaller team and I already used all their head shots.

And track? It’s a bigger team and no one snapped head shots, so I can’t use something I never had.

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Sophomore second-baseman Scout Smith is in the top four in eight of 11 offensive categories. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Turn the page, it’s time to start a new season.

As the Coupeville High School softball team prepares for the district tourney, which goes down May 18-19, one thing hangs around, though.

That’s the stats piled up by the Wolves through the first 18 games of the season.

With the postseason coming up fast, a look at the latest sweet statsy stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

 

Hitting:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
C. Caveness 37 10 9 4 3 7 .243 .300
H. Lodell 54 11 15 3 1 2 4 4 .278 .339
E. Mathusek 36 7 10 3 5 8 .278 .381
S. Smith 64 23 22 3 3 4 15 .344 .391
L. Rose 42 18 12 2 1 5 10 5 .286 .423
C. Prescott 54 20 14 1 2 4 5 11 .259 .322
M. Davis 23 4 4 2 3 3 .174 .296
K. McGranahan 60 29 27 1 3 1 14 9 16 .450 .548
M. Bailey 20 8 6 1 1 4 5 .300 .417
V. Crownover 61 15 28 7 3 4 19 .459 .482
S. Wright 67 22 25 5 3 2 1 1 26 .373 .382
N. Laxton 19 2 4 1 5 .211 .286

 

Pitching:

Player W/L ERA Gms CG SO Hits Runs BB K IP BF
K. McGranahan 9-4 3.07 16 10 3 84 68 33 81 89 421
S. Smith 2-3 9.00 6 1 31 40 9 6 21 120
C. Prescott 0-0 3.50 1 3 1 2 2 12

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Scout Smith had a double and three RBI Friday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

In the moment, this one stings.

When you’re repping an itty-bitty 1A school, playing on the road against a large 2A school, and hold the lead for much of the afternoon, losing a game in the final moment is not what you planned for, hoped for, or fought to accomplish.

So, in the moment, falling 7-6 to Port Angeles Friday, with the tying and winning runs coming in on a wild play in the bottom of the seventh, is a killer for the Coupeville High School softball squad.

But as bad as it stings, and it surely does, you don’t want to forget what the Wolves have accomplished, and what heights they can still achieve.

CHS finished the regular season 11-7 despite a patched-together schedule which had them playing 10 of 18 on the road and a third of their games against 2A schools.

They also swept Klahowya to claim the Olympic League title, their first conference crown since 2002.

That sends them to the West Central District 3 playoffs May 18-19 as a #1 seed, two wins from a trip to state.

The key for the Wolves will be to spend the next week focusing on everything that has gone right, not allowing a few down moments to consume their thoughts.

While tweaks are always necessary — Coupeville has uncharacteristically struggled on defense in recent games, while its big bats are in a bit of a slump — the team is in prime position to make a playoff run if the players embrace their destiny.

Districts are played on turf fields, while the Wolves have spent the regular season on grass, so the squad will head to NAS Whidbey this coming week to get in practice time on the different surface.

When they look for positives from Friday’s game, they can point to a sweet catch in left by Nicole Laxton, who elevated to snare a long drive right before it cleared her head.

The way Mackenzie Davis came charging out of the far dugout on foul balls over the backstop, then floored it, cleats clattering on asphalt to beat Roughrider rivals time and again who had a shorter distance to run, but a lot less heart.

Mollie Bailey’s funky drumming, as the fab frosh kept up a lively beat with her drum sticks when not in the game.

Or they can study Scout Smith’s at-bats, as she was the lone truly consistent Wolf at the plate against PA.

First time up, a note-perfect bunt which set up the game’s opening run.

Second time, a thunderous two-run double which shot down the line in left field and curled inwards at the last possible moment to tear a chunk out of fair territory.

Third time, an RBI ground-out to stretch Coupeville’s lead out to its largest margin.

Where the Wolves did have issues Friday was in keeping a consistent offensive attack going, and then preventing the Roughriders from scraping their way back into the game.

CHS got on the board in the first thanks to a little luck and some nice hustle from Lauren Rose.

The senior shortstop led off the game by slapping a liner that banged off a glove for an error, took second when the throw skipped past the first-baseman, then scooted to third on Smith’s bunt.

Perched on third, Rose bounced up and down, then shot home on a passed ball, making the local scoreboard operator get to work early.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s offense stalled out for a bit after that, and the Wolves fell behind 2-1 after two innings.

A triple to right from Kiana Watson-Charles, the first of two epic blasts from the PA sophomore, was big.

But a successful double steal by the Roughriders and a ball airmailed into right by Coupeville on another play were the real killers.

The Wolves fought back in the third, putting together their one sustained offensive attack of the game.

It started when freshman Coral Caveness out-hustled a throw to first after PA dropped a third strike.

After Emma Mathusek reached on a fielder’s choice in which PA’s only choice was to look one way, then the other, then hold the ball, CHS got back-to-back two-baggers from Rose and Smith.

Smith’s blast gave Coupeville the lead, before an RBI ground-out from Sarah Wright staked the Wolves to a 5-2 lead.

With Katrina McGranahan humming in the pitcher’s circle — she finished with 10 strike-outs — CHS held the Roughriders scoreless in the third and fourth.

Mathusek singled and came around on Smith’s run-scoring ground-out to push the lead to 6-2 heading into the bottom of the fifth.

That, though, was when Watson-Charles took over the game.

She mashed the stuffing out of the ball, driving a two-run home-run over the left-field fence to cut the margin to 6-4, then came on to pitch.

Retiring all six Wolves she faced across the sixth and seventh innings, Watson-Charles gave PA a fighting chance, and the Roughriders jumped on the opportunity.

They plated a run in the sixth to cut the lead to 6-5, but CHS escaped further damage when first-baseman Veronica Crownover made a nimble, unassisted put-out on a hot grounder for the third out.

There was no escape in the seventh, however.

PA used a single, a Coupeville error (on a hard-hit ball by Watson-Charles) and a walk to load the bags with one out, then won the game on the kind of shot you usually see on a pool table.

The ball came off a Roughrider bat and skittered wildly past the pitcher’s circle as the tying run charged home.

In the rush to make the play, Coupeville’s throw home skipped wild, as well, allowing the winning run to also tap the plate.

In the immediate aftermath, it was a rough way to lose the regular-season finale.

But, this is a talented Wolf team, full of players capable of great things. Their moment is still there, waiting to be seized.

“This was a tough game for us,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “We have a lot of things to work on this week and we will definitely give districts our best.”

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