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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

   Veronica Crownover had two hits and three RBI Wednesday as Coupeville mashed Klahowya 15-1, taking the upper hand in the race for a league crown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The mission is simple.

Beat Klahowya twice this season and the Coupeville High School softball squad wins its first league title since 2002.

And now it’s halfway there.

Led Wednesday by the booming bats of junior sluggers Veronica Crownover and Sarah Wright, the Wolves shellacked KSS 15-1 in Silverdale, capturing the first round in a three-game season series.

With the victory, Coupeville improves to 3-1 overall, 1-0 in Olympic League play, while Klahowya falls to 5-2, 0-1.

Conference mates Chimacum and Port Townsend suspended their softball programs during the first week of practice, citing a lack of players, which left only two teams standing in what had been a four-team league.

So now, beat the Eagles Apr. 20 on Whidbey, and the Wolves will exit the Olympic League — CHS joins the new North Sound Conference in the fall — as champs.

The third, and final, regular season meeting between the two schools is Apr. 30 back in Silverdale.

Wednesday Coupeville struck early and late, both times inflicting serious damage.

While Wright “had a monster game,” lashing three hits including a triple while driving in six, and Crownover was hot on her heels with two hits and three RBI, every Wolf contributed.

And I do mean EVERY Wolf, as all nine starters recorded at least one hit and one run as CHS showed remarkable balance.

Coupeville came off the bus swinging from the heels, dropping a three-spot on Klahowya pitcher Amber Bumbalough before she even got properly warmed-up.

Lauren Rose led off with a single, promptly stole second and third, and scored the game’s opening tally when she and Katrina McGranahan, aboard on a walk, scampered home on a two-run single from Wright.

Crownover capped the opening surge with an RBI single of her own, and a rout looked like a distinct possibility.

Bumbalough is a two-time Olympic League MVP and D-1 recruit, though, and she settled down, matching goose eggs with McGranahan from that point on until the top of the fifth.

CHS got back-to-back hits from Scout Smith and McGranahan to lead off the third, but was ultimately stiffed. In the fifth, the Wolves went in a different direction, and it paid off.

This time they had two outs and no one on base, then fired the ignition.

Sophomore sensation Smith, who played superbly against Klahowya as a mere freshman, was just as sharp Wednesday, and ripped one of her three hits on the day to trigger things.

McGranahan followed with a base-knock of her own, before Wright went medieval on the ball, dropping a two-run triple into the farthest reaches of the ballpark.

While a 5-0 lead was nice, the Wolves decided to triple their fun in the top of the sixth, knocking Bumbalough out of the pitcher’s circle en route to a 13-batter, 10-run inning.

Crownover started things, reaching on an error, then came back around to drive home the final nail with a booming double that caused dad Darren to nearly lose his voice with all of his good-natured screaming and caring on.

It’s rare to look at a score-book and see an inning where every player on a team scores, but it was nothing but a gorgeous string of filled-in diamonds in the sixth for CHS assistant coach Justine McGranahan.

Everyone chipped in, with Chelsea Prescott, Emma Mathusek, Hope Lodell and Coral Caveness all collecting their first hits of the game in the inning.

With the game in hand, Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan made sure all 12 girls in uniform saw playing time, with Nicole Laxton, Mollie Bailey and Mackenzie Davis hitting the field in the bottom half of the inning.

Klahowya scraped out a single, solitary run in its half of the sixth to stave off the shutout, but the blowout remained intact.

CHS spread out 15 hits among its nine starters, with Wright and Smith each having a three base-knock afternoon.

Crownover and Katrina McGranahan chipped in with two hits apiece, while Rose, Prescott, Lodell, Caveness and Mathusek each added one of their own.

“Huge win for us and now we are in the drivers seat for the league title,” said Kevin McGranahan. “Now they have to come to us.

Sarah was clutch all day (at bat) and picking a girl off at third. Coral also had a great game, with a big hit off Amber,” he added. “Hang on tight; it is gonna be a wild ride this year.”

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Thora Iverson keeps a watchful eye on the runner. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jake Pease holds the line at third, slapping on the tag.

Sage Renninger perfects the art of Zen tennis.

Chloe Wheeler crunches a hit as she helps propel the Wolves to another win.

Johnny Carlson is comin’ home, mama.

   Wolf netters Kameryn St Onge (left) and Maggie Crimmins are trapped in a chain-link fence of emotion.

You can see Chelsea Prescott’s pitches, but that doesn’t mean you can hit them.

Jered Brown pops in for a quick visit at third. His real destination? Home plate.

Just about everything went right for Coupeville High School athletics Tuesday afternoon.

The Wolves swept to three wins in four games, knocking off a pair of 2A schools in tennis and softball and nabbing a landmark win on the soccer pitch.

Plus, after a lot of rain, the day was dry and somewhat sunny and noted camera bug John Fisken was in town and clicking away.

During his visit to the prairie, the paparazzi hit JV softball, varsity tennis and JV baseball bouts, delivering a smorgasbord of glossy pics.

The photos above are courtesy Fisken, but, if you want to see everything he shot, pop over to:

Baseball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Baseball-2017-2018/2018-03-27-JV-vs-Sequim/

Girls Tennis:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Tennis/2018-03-27-Girls-vs-Granite-Falls/

Softball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2017-2018/2018-03-27-JV-vs-Sequim/

And, when you do, remember, purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes.

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   Freshman Coral Caveness knocked in three runs Tuesday, propelling Coupeville’s JV softball sluggers past 2A Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I couldn’t be more proud of them!”

After watching his JV players come up with inspired play after inspired play Tuesday, Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan was a happy man.

Thrilled that the Wolves rallied to topple visiting 2A Sequim 8-6, but also pleased with the fact that, one through nine, the CHS players all brought their A-game in front of their home fans.

“It was a team win,” McGranahan said. “Took everybody to get it.”

The win lifts the young Wolves to a pristine 2-0 on the season, with their wins coming against Concrete’s varsity and a Sequim JV squad which had big bats and a tough pitcher.

The visiting hurler, staked to an early 2-0 lead after her team scratched out a single run in both the first and second inning, was sharp for five hitters.

Then, with two outs and no one on in the bottom of the second, she made a small mistake which quickly turned into a semi-fatal one.

A pitch got away and smacked solidly into Marenna Rebischke-Smith, landing with the kind of sound one usually associates with a melon, having been dropped off the Empire State building, connecting with the pavement below.

It wasn’t a nick or a ding, but a full-on shot to the chops, and the Wolf bench gasped, then exploded in cheers for Rebischke-Smith taking a nasty shot and not going down.

Her sacrifice seemed to ignite something in the Wolves, as they promptly proceeded to tear the game open, sending eight more hitters to the plate in what turned into an 11-batter, six-run rally.

After Rebischke-Smith scampered to second on a passed ball, she skipped home when Melia Welling tore the hide off the ball on an RBI single to right.

Jenna Dickson also got herself plunked (though not quite as loudly), then Mollie Bailey eked out a walk to juice the bags, setting up freshman Coral Caveness for the first reel of her highlight film.

Lashing a two-run single to straight-away center, she pushed the Wolves ahead 3-2, and the floodgates really opened.

Thora Iverson and Chloe Wheeler plated runners with back-to-back wicked shots off of the gloves of Sequim defenders, Chelsea Prescott walked and another run came around on a wild pitch.

While Sequim finally escaped the inning on a nice defensive snag on a hard-hit grounder off the bat of Nicole Laxton, the damage was done, on the scoreboard and on the psyche of the visitors.

They proved to be a tough band of sluggers, though, scraping together two runs in the fifth and another two in the sixth to knot things back up at 6-6.

Coupeville had runners on in the third (a Rebischke-Smith walk) and fourth (a Wheeler single), but couldn’t re-light their runs-scoring magic.

Until the game was tied, that is, then the Wolves immediately, emphatically answered with a vengeance.

Bailey, who joined the game in the second inning after returning from a musical engagement, led off the bottom of the sixth with a frozen rope of a single.

Perhaps humming a tune to herself, she bolted around to score when Caveness belted the ball off the top of the center-fielder’s glove for a game-busting double.

Sequim almost escaped without any further damage, but Prescott kept things alive by earning a free bag for being nailed in the foot by a pitch.

That set up Laxton, who after ruffling the hair of several of her pint-sized family members (“I love you, too” she told her devoted fan club), went out and was a little less friendly towards the Sequim pitcher.

She smoked a shot over the bag at third, sending Caveness hurtling home with what would prove to be the game’s final run.

While offense earned the big cheers, Coupeville was solid on every front Tuesday afternoon.

Prescott whiffed seven Sequim hitters, while also making a couple of sweet defensive plays on balls hit back near the mound.

Not to be outdone, Welling made a lightning-quick snag on a fast grounder that exploded at her feet over at third, while Iverson had the best play of the game, and it wasn’t even close.

Coupeville’s second-baseman showed off her glove skills and her quick thinking as the Wolves were trying to escape the fifth inning.

A Sequim batter crunched a ball back up the middle, which Prescott partially deflected.

Spinning off her glove, the orb next came in contact with Caveness, who also got a small portion of her glove on the ball, which caused it to skid in the other direction.

With a runner coming in hot, Iverson went to the ground, knocked the careening ball down, landed on it, then had the presence of mind to do The Worm and launch herself to the bag, beating the runner by half a step.

The web gem of a play brought a loud yelp of approval from McGranahan, a roar from the crowd and a small smile from the low-key Iverson.

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Hunter Smith fires BB’s. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Wolf soccer fans (l to r) Julia García Oñoro, Lauren Bayne, Avalon Renninger and Sage Renninger enjoy a day out in the fresh air.

Softball slugging sensation Katrina McGranahan crunches another base-hit.

The Wolf soccer bench showcases all the emotions in the spectrum.

All the comforts of home, at the ballpark.

Axel Partida kick-starts Coupeville’s offensive attack.

   The loudest fans in the park. “The cops are coming, have you heard? The cops are coming, she’s stealin’ third! WOO! WOO!”

   Rusty Bailey is thrilled to be freezing his tushie off sitting on the wind-swept prairie for his 23,782nd softball game as a dad.

John Fisken stayed busy this weekend.

Bouncing between gigs, the noted camera bug hit two Coupeville High School games Friday and another Saturday afternoon.

The photos above, which are a mix of on and off-field action from softball, baseball and soccer, are courtesy him.

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

Softball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2017-2018/2018-03-23-vs-North-Mason/

Boys soccer:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Soccer/2018-03-24-Boys-vs-Klahowya/

Baseball:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Baseball-2017-2018/2018-03-23-vs-North-Mason/

And, keep in mind, any purchases help support college scholarships for CHS student/athletes. So, circle of life.

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   Lauren Rose and Co. are gunning for Coupeville softball’s first league title since 2002. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re punching above their weight class.

Coupeville High School, which sits on the lowest rung of 1A, has played 10 of 18 games this spring against 2A schools.

That, naturally, has skewed the win-loss record a bit, as the Wolves are 4-4 against schools in their own (sorta) weight class, and 3-6-1 when playing teams from a higher berth.

The scheduling disparity will shift (a bit) this coming week, with six of the nine scheduled games against 1A competition, including five happening inside the Olympic League.

Wolf baseball and boys soccer have two conference games apiece, but the biggest thing on the schedule is softball’s visit Wednesday to Klahowya.

With Port Townsend and Chimacum having bailed on softball this season, dropping their teams for a year due to a lack of players, the Olympic League race for supremacy is just a two-team battle.

That means each of the three games the Coupeville diamond women play against Klahowya (Mar. 28, Apr. 20 and Apr. 30) take on a much-bigger emphasis than normal.

The path to hanging a league banner is simple — beat KSS and cue the celebration.

Current standings through Mar. 25:

Olympic League baseball:

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

Olympic League boys soccer:

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

Olympic League girls tennis:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 0-4
Chimacum 0-0 1-3
Klahowya 0-0 0-3

Olympic League softball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 2-1
Klahowya 0-0 4-1

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