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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Three-sport star Anya Leavell. (Photo courtesy Sarah Leavell)

“Sports make me feel good about myself.”

Whether it’s volleyball, basketball or softball, Coupeville 7th grader Anya Leavell embraces the opportunity each sport presents, both as a way to stay fit and a way to express herself.

“I enjoy being an athlete because I feel thrilled and excited before and during my games,” she said. “I love having to look forward to something.”

While she enjoys softball, where she’s currently playing for a Central Whidbey Little League juniors squad which has a home game Wednesday (6 PM) at the CHS diamond, the other two sports are her passion.

“Basketball and volleyball are my favorite sports because I’m super competitive,” Leavell said. “Basketball makes me feel good about myself because I feel accomplished every time I make a basket.

“I also love volleyball because it’s kind of a calmer sport that settles me down,” she added. “It’s like a stress reliever.”

Leavell, who enjoys indie and pop music (“It gets me in a good mood”) and Tim Burton flicks (“I like an eerie movie”), already has height and natural skills.

Now she wants to take the advice she gets from her coaches, mesh it with hard work, and see just how far it can eventually carry her.

“My goal for my high school sports career is to earn my spot as a true star athlete and team leader and to work on staying positive,” Leavell said.

Like all young athletes, her game is a mixture of strengths and areas she’d like to hone.

“My strengths would be my defense and stealing in basketball,” Leavell said. “Something I should work on would be to keep my head up if I make a mistake. I can always work harder to fix it.

“My volleyball strength is serving, but I need to work on not being so hard on myself,” she added. “My softball strengths are hitting and trying new positions.”

As she finds her groove in each sport, Leavell has received guidance from a number of coaches, something she embraces.

“My SWISH basketball coach, Coach V (Dustin Van Velkinburgh), has helped me improve my basketball skills so much and I am grateful for him,” she said. “My softball coaches, Mimi (Johnson) and Connie (Lippo), boost my confidence in making me a better player.

“I’d also like to thank my school basketball coach, Coach (Megan) Smith, for helping me learn new plays and helping me be part of the team.”

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   Name a sport and CMS 7th grader Audrianna Shaw has played it. (Submitted photo)

Boredom is not part of Audrianna Shaw’s daily routine.

The ever-busy Coupeville Middle School 7th grader jumps between four sports (she plans to trim it down to three by high school) and enjoys them all.

“I like being an athlete because with practices and games you can never be bored and you can always stay fit,” Shaw said.

She plays volleyball and basketball through CMS, as well as youth soccer and little league softball, with plans to shed volleyball once she hits CHS (since it would conflict with soccer in the fall).

Put her on the softball diamond, where she swings a strong bat and wields a slick glove at third for the Central Whidbey Adrenaline juniors squad, and she comes into her own.

“My favorite sport has always been softball,” Shaw said. “It’s my favorite because of the competitive nature and how you must rely on teammates for success.”

As she assesses her skill-set, she’s realistic but firmly set on becoming the best she can be.

Most of all, she wants to be part of a group which leaves behind its own solid piece of the Wolf legacy.

“As of right now I don’t think I have strengths,” Shaw said. “I would like to work on all areas so I can be a very well-rounded athlete.

“You know the banners hanging in the gym for all the sports?,” she asked. “I want my team and I to have one hanging up there someday.”

Away from the field or court, Shaw “loves listening to music, relaxing and hanging out with my friends in my spare time,” while also staying focused on “keeping my grades up.” Math and history are her favorite classes.

Whether in the classroom or playing a sport, she draws support from friends and family, something for which she’s very grateful.

“My mom has always been there to drive me to games and practices. She has always been there to cheer me up if we lost and motivate me,” Shaw said. “Also my teammates, because they are always very supportive.”

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   Abby Mulholland (left) with cousin, and Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer, Kendra O’Keefe. (Renae Mulholland photo)

Abby Mulholland is part of Coupeville sports royalty.

Her relatives, whether they played as an O’Keefe (or, back in the day, simply as a Keefe), are stocked full of Wolf legends, many of whom are enshrined in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

It’s a big legacy, but one the eternally-upbeat Mulholland is eager to live up to as she prepares to start her 8th grade year at Coupeville Middle School in the fall.

A three-sport star (volleyball, basketball and little league softball), Abby is a young woman for all seasons, but hoops will always have a slightly larger piece of her heart.

“My favorite sport is basketball because of the fast pace, teamwork and adrenaline,” Mulholland said.

“I enjoy the challenge of competition and I believe in teamwork.”

She has “a decent basketball shot,” which uncle Ryan O’Keefe, noted hardwood sage, is helping her perfect, and Mulholland is always eager to fine-tune her skills, regardless of the sport.

“Areas to work on are jump spiking, serving, my speed … my goals are to make it on varsity (in high school) and continue these sports,” she said. “To cheer on my teammates and just have fun.”

Mulholland has a strong support crew and she’s grateful for the many different ways in which they help.

“My dad, who shoots around with me and helped with my basketball shot; Miss (Casie) Dunleavey helped me with serving,” Mulholland said. “Izzy Wells and Genna Wright helped with my confidence, and my mom is my biggest cheerleader.

“(Little League) coach Mimi Johnson inspired me to do better.”

When she’s not playing a sport, Mulholland enjoys her history class and playing trumpet, as well as drawing, photography and trips to Disneyland.

Favorite movies include The Sandlot, Planes, Trains and Automobiles and the Pirates of the Caribbean series and she makes her parents, radio station veterans, proud by enjoying a wide variety of music, from Queen to The Chainsmokers.

While she’s still young and her athletic career stretches far ahead of her, one thing is for sure — on the playing field or off, Mulholland is solid gold.

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   Kylie Van Velkinburgh (right) gets all up in the ball-handlers grill. (John Fisken photos)

Using her long reach to pull in a throw at first.

The future is now. Stop by Coupeville Middle School and meet the next generation of Wolf stars before they make the jump to high school.

Kylie Van Velkinburgh is the next link in a family with a strong athletic tradition.

Dad Dustin was a multi-sport star during his time as a Wolf and now dispenses wisdom as a coach, while mom Jessica was a national-level gymnast back in the day.

And hot on Kylie’s heels are three younger siblings who all are already well ahead of the athletic curve for their ages.

But, in this moment, as she wraps up the final days of 7th grade and plays for the Central Whidbey Little League juniors softball squad, she is the Van Velkinburgh getting the most buzz.

Tall and graceful, Kylie is an athlete for all seasons, playing volleyball, basketball and softball. Though she might switch it up a bit once she hits high school.

“I plan to stay with all of these, but I might want to try cheer at one point of course,” Van Velkinburgh said. “For football (season), because I would rather give up volleyball than basketball.

“Basketball is and always has been my favorite sport, because I’ve been playing since before I can remember and it’s how I’ve made most of my friends and one of the biggest reasons I’m so close to my dad.”

Having fun with her teammates has always been a big draw, regardless of the sport.

“What I enjoy most about being an athlete is spending time with my team and becoming a family while creating amazingly strong bonds,” Van Velkinburgh said.

“I don’t have many physical strengths as an athlete, but I feel that I work great with a team and I love to help and work with other people.”

When she’s not on the field or court, Van Velkinburgh enjoys hanging out with friends, and, like a good coach’s daughter, knows hard work is what will carry her to future success.

“My goals for high school sports are to be a strong player that gets well-earned playing time!”

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   Katrina McGranahan (top) is joined by (l to r) Maya Toomey-Stout, Mitchell Carroll and Lindsey Roberts. (Maria Reyes and John Fisken photos)

Life is made up of moments.

Today, as we open the doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re going to immortalize four such pieces of time, and the athletes who crafted them.

So, let’s pay tribute to Lindsey Roberts, Mitchell Carroll, Maya Toomey-Stout and Katrina McGranahan for crafting events which, after this, will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Pop up there, scroll down past Athletes, Coaches and Contributors, stop on Moments, and viola, there they’ll be, forever alive on the internet.

And in the memories of those who created them.

Our first two moments came at this year’s West Central District 3 track and field championships, though one of the two has a footnote (which we’ll get to in a second.)

But we start at districts, where Roberts, a CHS sophomore, and Carroll, a senior, chose the same meet to smash school records which were set before either of them were born.

Roberts sailed through the 100 hurdles in 15.97 seconds, knocking Jess Roundy (16.06) off the track big board, where her name had resided since 1999.

When Lindsey’s name goes up to replace Jess, it will give the speedy supernova her third appearance on the board, as she’s already a member of 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relay units which own school records.

With half her career ahead of her, Roberts is tied with Chad Gale (long jump, 110 and 300 hurdles) for most school records, two shy of Makana Stone (200, 400, 4 x 1, 4 x 2, 4 x 4) for total track board dominance.

Carroll exits having won a 5th place medal in the triple jump Friday at the 1A state track and field championships, while also ensuring his name will live on (at least for a bit) at the entrance to Coupeville’s gym.

In our second Hall o’ Fame-worthy moment, he sailed 43 feet, three inches at districts, knocking Virgil Roehl (42-11.50 in 1994) off the record board.

The change erases the last touch of the ’90s from the male side of the Wolf record book, as all the records now are either holdovers from the ’80s or were set between 2000-2017.

Not content to stop, though (this is that footnote), Carroll erupted for a jump of 43-11.75 at state, adding eight-plus inches to his record and ensuring it has just that much more chance to live as long as Roehl’s mark did.

Our third magic moment isn’t really one moment, but we can fudge things a bit since it’s very much a milestone.

Toomey-Stout, AKA “The Gazelle,” is on her way to putting her name up on the record board, having come dangerously close to busting school records in the 100 and 4 x 2 in her first go-round.

What she did accomplish though is nothing short of amazing, as she became the first Wolf girl in the 117-year history of the high school to qualify for and compete in four separate events at one state meet.

Bouncing from event to event in the blazing Cheney sun, Toomey-Stout ran in the 100, 200, 4 x 1 and 4 x 2, and was still bouncing sky-high at the end of her first (but I doubt last) trip to state.

For our final Hall-worthy moment, we step away from track and head to the softball diamond.

McGranahan has been pouring in strikes for the Wolf sluggers since she first stepped inside the CHS pitcher’s circle three seasons ago.

Her junior campaign was her finest though, as she used her arm and booming bat to lead Coupeville to a 19-5 record, the second-best mark in program history.

Along the way, she faced six teams which made it to state — South Whidbey, Lynden Christian, Sequim, Friday Harbor, Chimacum and Bellevue Christian — blitzing four and battling to the final out with the final pair.

We could talk about the frequent out-of-the-park home runs, the electrifying strikeouts, the steals (she has wheels to go with her strength, leading the team in pilfered bags) and her quiet leadership skills.

But today we honor McGranahan for a moment which stands as a testament to her inner strength.

Having made a 90+ mile trip with her teammates to Tacoma for the district playoffs, she threw every pitch for the Wolves across four games in little more than a day.

Coupeville split those four contests, two of which went to extra innings, falling a single out short of state in a 10-inning battle royal with BC in the tourney finale.

The Vikings went on to win twice at state, the best showing of any Wolf foe to make the big dance.

By the time she was done, her throbbing arm encased in a cool-down mechanism, McGranahan had hurled pitch after pitch, racking up 33 innings in just under 26 hours.

None of the other five teams at districts played more than three games, and Killer Kat’s pitching duties included a tourney-opening nine-inning win over Vashon, followed by a second game against a fresh BC squad literally five minutes later.

The Wolves had time only to walk from one field to the other, with no food or water break, as the start time for the second game had already passed thanks to game one going to extra innings.

Every one of Coupeville’s players put in supreme effort during districts, overcoming illness, injury, fatigue and heat in their quest to get to Richland.

But McGranahan deserves a special tip of the cap, since, as pitcher, she was literally the focal point of every single moment on defense.

While still finding time to clear the fences yet again with a home run in a win over Seattle Christian.

Time and again, Katrina reached down and found something maybe even she didn’t know was there, and her performance stands with the best the softball program, and her school, has seen.

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