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   Wolf catcher Sarah Wright smashed a fences-clearing home-run Friday, propelling CHS softball to a huge league win. (John Fisken photo)

What a difference a year makes.

Clearing a major psychological hurdle, the Coupeville High School softball squad knocked off host Klahowya 5-2 Friday, its second straight win over the Eagles this season.

The victory lifts the red-hot Wolves to 3-1 in Olympic League play, 10-1 overall.

That ties the 2002 squad for the best record by a CHS softball team through 11 games.

It also pulls the Wolves within a game of two-time defending league champ Chimacum (4-0, 6-1), the only team to beat Coupeville this season.

The second of three games with the Cowboys comes on the road next Friday, Apr. 28.

The Wolves have non-conference games against Lynden Christian (6-7) Saturday and Meridian (2-9) Monday and a league clash with Port Townsend (0-4, 0-6) Wednesday before the shootout at the Chimacum corral.

For a (very small) moment, though, CHS can bask in a reversal of fortune against Klahowya and two-time league MVP Amber Bumbalough.

Last year, a very-young Wolf squad was swept by the Eagles, losing 7-1, 9-1 and 16-6.

This year, a still-young (they often start seven underclassmen) but more-seasoned Coupeville team has broken the hex, helping drop Klahowya to 1-3 in league, 4-4 overall.

After winning their first meeting by one run, the Wolves came out Friday and controlled every aspect of the game.

“This was a huge win. We dominated from start to finish,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “We played error-free softball and just completely dominated them.”

Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan won her individual dual with Bumbalough, tossing a two-hitter while whiffing eight Eagles.

At the same time, Coupeville mashed 12 hits, including a solo home-run over the fence in right-center off of the bat of sophomore slugger Sarah Wright.

It was the eighth tater whacked by a Wolf this season, with Wright becoming the sixth different starter to hit a round-tripper.

CHS ripped hits up and down the line-up, collecting at least two base-knocks in each of the first five innings as it built a 5-0 lead.

After stranding two runners in the first, the Wolves broke through in the second, scoring the game’s first run off of a double from Veronica Crownover and a single off the bat of Hope Lodell.

Wright went ballistic in the third, launching a two-out moonshot to make it 2-0, and that seemed to open the floodgates.

Mikayla Elfrank followed with a single, went to second on a passed ball, scooted to third on an overthrow, then scored when the Eagles booted a ball hit by Crownover.

Four hits in the fourth — singles from Tiffany Briscoe, Robin Cedillo, Lauren Rose and McGranahan — plated two more.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s pitching ace was throwing her best game of the season.

McGranahan blitzed through the first 11 Klahowya hitters, not allowing a base-runner until Bumbalough poked a two-out single in the fourth.

Just to keep everyone on their toes, the Wolf hurler promptly plunked the next Eagle, then got out of the inning unscathed when she induced a ground-out to Elfrank.

Staring down her rivals, McGranahan mowed down Klahowya one-two-three in the fifth and sixth, had a wee bit of trouble in the seventh when the ump narrowed their strike zone, then closed the game with a bang.

First she got a key ground-out to Jae LeVine, then reared back and whiffed the game’s final hitter, catching them looking at strike three.

Crownover (two doubles), McGranahan, Wright and Briscoe had two hits apiece, while Cedillo, Rose, Elfrank and Lodell all chipped in with singles, as eight of nine starters collected hits on the afternoon.

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   Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell carved up La Conner for three hits Thursday, including one which nearly ripped off the pitcher’s leg. (John Fisken photo)

It was a weird game.

But it was a win, and in the end, that’s what matters most.

Piling up 18 hits, with every starter recording at least one base-knock, the Coupeville High School softball squad crushed visiting La Conner 19-9 Thursday afternoon.

The non-conference victory, called in the sixth inning thanks to the mercy rule, lifts the Wolves to 9-1, matching the best start in program history.

With a big Olympic League showdown coming Friday at Klahowya, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan tried to keep his #1 pitcher, daughter Katrina, out of the pitcher’s circle.

It mostly worked.

The younger McGranahan had to make a first-inning cameo, then took over the game for good late in the fourth inning as #2 hurler Sarah Wright struggled with her control.

Normally Coupeville’s starting catcher, Wright did not give up a hit and whiffed five Braves while in the circle, but frequent walks made her life tougher than she wanted.

La Conner drew first blood, plating six during a long, drawn-out top of the first.

The Braves collected their one and only hit — a two-out, two-run single to right off of McGranahan — but everything was set up by five walks.

Not missing a beat, Coupeville went right to work in the bottom half of the inning, and did it in a completely different style.

Bashing away, the Wolves piled up nine runs of their own, off of nine legitimate hits.

CHS got hits from its first four batters — consecutive singles by Lauren Rose, Jae LeVine, McGranahan and Wright — to score two runs, then tacked on two more on a passed ball and an overthrow at third.

Sensing La Conner’s spirit breaking, Hope Lodell tried to actually physically break the Braves hurler, whacking a single sharply off of her leg.

Beware when “The Surgeon” says she’s ready to operate on you…

Having tenderized their prey, the Wolves went right back to beating her pitches senseless.

Tiffany Briscoe thumped a two-run double to tie things at six, Tamika Nastali and Rose added singles, then McGranahan topped things off with a long triple.

Given the lead back, Wright was far more effective the rest of the way, and she got a bit of help from her defense.

Playing short, McGranahan pulled off an unassisted double play, spearing a soft liner, then hopping on second to nab the straying runner.

Coupeville continued to add to its lead, adding two in the third — an RBI double from LeVine and an RBI single from McGranahan — two more in the fourth and a solo run in the fifth.

The fourth-inning runs came courtesy a two-run double by Rose.

Heading into the bottom of the sixth up 14-9, Coupeville got playing time for all of its bench players and took advantage of a change in pitcher to close out the game by playing take-your-base, La Conner style.

The Wolves, after only sitting around long enough to draw two walks in the first five innings, were super patient as La Conner’s reliever issued eight more free passes in the final inning.

Emma Mathusek knocked in a run on a nicely hit grounder, while both Nicole Lester and Mackenzie Davis forced home runs with bases-loaded walks.

Lester’s came a bit more painfully, as she got plunked, which caused the Wolf baseball players in attendance to scream their support for her willingness to wear the pitch.

Rose led the hit attack, whacking three singles and a double, while Lodell (three singles) and McGranahan (two singles and a triple) had three base-knocks apiece.

LeVine (a single and double), Wright (two singles), Mikayla Elfrank (double), Tiffany Briscoe (double), Nastali (single) and Veronica Crownover (single) rounded out the assault.

Coupeville got all 16 players on its roster into the game, with Kyla Briscoe scoring a run while pinch-running, as well as Scout Smith, Robin Cedillo and Melia Welling getting at-bats.

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The best there ever was, and the team that’s chasing their records.

Separated by 15 years, but united by drive and desire.

Every time Katrina McGranahan stares down a batter from the pitcher’s circle, Hope Lodell chases down a fly in the gap, or Veronica Crownover crushes a ball so hard it leaves a dent, they are mirroring the most successful team in Coupeville High School history.

The high-scoring 1969-1970 boys basketball squad is arguably the most dominant ever to wear CHS uniforms, but the 2002 Wolf softball sluggers achieved heights never seen, before or since.

An 8-0 start, then later a 12-game winning streak, before finishing with four wins in five games at the state tourney to finish 24-3 and owners of a 3rd place trophy.

And all of that in the program’s first year playing fast-pitch.

This season, Coupeville has slapped foes around, winning its first seven games en route to an 8-1 start.

Heading into a three-games-in-three-days test this weekend (Thursday at home vs. La Conner, Friday at Klahowya, Saturday at home vs. Lynden Christian), the current Wolves have matched the best start in program history.

Only now they’ll need to rip off 12 straight wins — pushing their win streak to a program-record 13 — to stay even with the 2002 sluggers, who opened 20-1.

No pressure…

The numbers are equal — 16 players and five people on the coaching staff, including volunteers — both bash the ball and are led by a core of successful, veteran three-sport athletes.

That being said, there is one huge difference between the 2002 and 2017 squads, and it’s not just the fact the ’02 players wore shorts as part of their uniforms.

Her name is Sarah Mouw, and, with all due respect to the current sluggers, none of you are Sarah Mouw … yet.

When she and her family (including lil’ sis and future track state champ Amy) moved from Iowa to Cow Town right before her senior year, CHS sports took a giant leap.

I would argue (and win the argument) no transfer student has ever impacted sports in Coupeville the way Sarah Mouw did.

Meshing her talents with holdovers like Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Tracy Taylor and Erica Lamb (all perennial All-Conference players in multiple sports), she led CHS to state three times during the 2001-2002 school year.

Volleyball, basketball and softball all won league titles with Mouw leading the way, with basketball (6th) and softball both achieving the best finishes at state in the history of those programs.

When the Wolves took the diamond that spring, everything was in flux.

The Northwest Conference switched from slow-pitch to fast-pitch, and the two teams which had dominant pitchers, Coupeville and Archbishop Murphy, dominated.

Mouw and ATM hurler Kristen Linscott, who went on play college ball for Claremont Mudd Scripps, were co-MVPs, while the Wolves landed four other players on All-Conference teams.

Ellsworth-Bagby (SS) and Lamb (OF) were First-Team picks, with Ellsworth-Bagby a four-time honoree, while Lindsey Tucker (2B) and Taylor (OF) were Second-Teamers who should have been First-Teamers.

Randy Dickson rounded out the awards, being tabbed as Coach of the Year, an honor he shared with assistants Kim Meche and Jim Wheat and volunteers Dale Folkstad and Bruce Berg.

As the 2002 team reaches its 15-year anniversary, a look back at its season for the ages reveals how dominant the Wolves were.

CHS beats Sultan 24-5 — The first fast-pitch game in school history is a rout, as the Wolves torch the Turks for 11 runs in the fourth inning. Mouw and Ellsworth-Bagby combine for five RBIs.

CHS beats La Conner 11-1Mouw and freshman hurler Heather Davis combine to toss a one-hitter.

CHS beats Concrete 9-1Taylor goes 3-3, while Mouw tosses a no-hitter.

CHS beats ATM 6-5 in 8 innings — The only extra-innings game of the year, as the Wolves rally for two in the bottom of the seventh, then win on a walk-off RBI single from Lamb.

CHS beats ATM 6-5 — Different game, same score. This time Coupeville takes an early lead, then holds on for the win.

CHS beats Sequim 11-5 — Six straight wins.

CHS beats Orcas 20-1Davis is in the circle and throws her own no-hitter.

CHS beats Friday Harbor 3-2 — A thriller lifts the Wolves to 8-0.

Lamb, Christine Larson (her bloop single is the only CHS hit) and Tucker touch home as Coupeville builds a lead early, before things get dicey at the end.

Having surrendered a run in the sixth, the Wolves give up another in the seventh and Friday Harbor has the tying run at third with one out. Then disaster (almost) strikes.

A Mouw pitch gets past catcher Brook Croghan, but she alertly tracks the ball down and flips it back to her pitcher for a bang-bang play at the plate. The Wolves get the call, then Mouw mows down the final batter for her 13th K of the afternoon.

ATM beats CHS 5-1 — The first fast-pitch loss in school history arrives in game #9, as Linscott whiffs 12 Wolves.

CHS beats Friday Harbor 12-5 and 18-2 — The big bounce-back, as the Wolves rampage to a doubleheader sweep.

Total freakin’ domination, as Wolves rap out 33 hits. Lamb collects four hits, five steals and two RBIs in game two, while Mouw, Croghan, Ellsworth-Bagby and sweet-swingin’ Carly Guillory all have three-hit games.

CHS beats ?, ? and ? — The Whidbey News-Times somehow misses reporting on three games and I don’t have a time machine.

CHS beats Orcas 24-3 Ellsworth-Bagby drops in four hits as the Wolves improve to 14-1. It’s feast or famine, as Coupeville gets 11 runs in the first, none in the second, then 12 in the third.

CHS beats La Conner 11-1Mouw with three hits and three RBI.

CHS beats Concrete 11-1Lamb with three hits, Croghan triples.

CHS beats Concrete 19-5Larson whacks two triples and misses a third only because she doesn’t see Dickson waving her in and stops at second.

Tucker, Ellsworth-Bagby and Mouw all collect three-baggers as well as Wolves bring the pain and reach 17-1.

CHS beats La Conner 18-8 — Wolves wrap the regular season with a 23-hit barrage. Tucker is high woman with four.

CHS beats Seattle Christian 12-4 — Coupeville opens Tri-District play by swatting a big city squad.

CHS beats University Prep 4-0 — The win which clinches the first trip to state in program history. 20-1 and 12 straight heading into match-up #4 with ATM…

ATM beats CHS 8-0Dickson rests Mouw (who will pitch all five games at state), while ATM keeps Linscott in the circle.

CHS beats Cle Elum 8-0 — Wolves make a flawless debut at the state tourney.

CHS beats Royal 3-2 — Showcasing its grit, Coupeville rallies for three runs in the bottom of the fifth after falling behind 2-0 and moves into the state semifinals.

Adna beats CHS 4-0 — Wolves stay close, but fall to the eventual state champs, who go on to shred ATM 6-1 in the final.

It’s the sixth of seven state titles for Adna softball (1987, ’90, ’92, ’94, ’95, 2002, ’15). The Pirates just miss in 2016, losing by a run in the championship game.

CHS beats Okanogan 6-1 — No back-to-back losses for the 2002 Wolves.

CHS beats Napavine 11-6 — Trailing 6-1 late, Coupeville rallies for 10 runs in the fifth as Kristin Gwartney lights the fuse with a key two-run single.

The 2002 Wolf squad, which also included Laura Crandall, Angel Black, Andrea Larson, Ashley Ginnetti, Samantha Roehl and Caitlin Harada, set a standard which hasn’t been touched since.

Taking into account we’re missing three games, they outscored foes 247-80.

But, through the first nine games of the season, the 2017 squad is scoring at a better rate than the 2002 team, with a 99-91 edge.

Though, this year’s team has also surrendered more runs (49-30), so it’s a bit of a toss-up.

After Mouw, Ellsworth-Bagby and Taylor graduated in 2002, Wolf softball took a few steps back.

Coupeville finally made it back to state in 2014, when this year’s seniors — Jae LeVine, Robin Cedillo and Tiffany Briscoe — were freshman playing for David and Amy King, but the Wolves went two-and-out.

But now, this season, a squad which starts four juniors and two sophomores, is off to a historic start, tying the 2002 unit for the best-ever record through nine games.

Can they keep it going? Can Kevin McGranahan’s young guns join Mouw and Co. as immortals?

Only time will tell. Swing away.

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   When she’s not messing with the cameraman, Katrina McGranahan is among the team leaders in nearly every offensive category. (John Fisken photos)

   Lead-off hitter Lauren Rose tops Coupeville in walks and is #2 in runs scored and #3 in stolen bases.

A stellar start begins at the plate.

The Coupeville High School softball squad has rolled out to an 8-1 start on the season, and a lot of the credit goes to the Wolf hitters, who are beatin’ the crud out of the ball.

Thanks to their coaching staff faithfully updating MaxPreps, we can give you a window into those stats.

PS — Softball is the only CHS spring sport that has stats online, so it’s not like I’m purposefully ignoring the other teams.

They’re just not as on top of the ball currently as the diamond queens.

The stats:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
Cedillo 12 3 3 1 4 1 .250 .438
Lodell 24 7 7 1 1 5 7 .292 .414
LeVine 33 11 13 1 2 5 8 .394 .474
K. Briscoe 1 2 1 1 2 2 2 1.000 1.000
Mathusek 1 1 1.000
Nastali 13 2 2 2 1 .154 .312
Smith 2 1 1 1 .000 .333
Rose 27 18 8 1 1 5 13 4 .296 .525
T. Briscoe 20 5 2 1 1 4 4 .100 .333
Davis 1 1.000
McGranahan 28 19 14 2 1 3 7 5 19 .500 .576
Welling 1 1 .000 .500
Elfrank 28 11 13 2 3 1 6 6 8 .464 .559
Crownover 27 6 12 3 1 1 1 8 .444 .483
Wright 34 11 16 4 2 3 20 .471 .514
Lester 2 1 1 1 1 1 .500 .667

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   After a season of rain and wind, Mackenzie Davis is just happy to see the sun again. (John Fisken photos)

Tamika Nastali dares you to run on her gun.

   Veronica Crownover (14) is about to get mobbed after blasting a home run over the center field fence.

   Wolves (l to r) Hope Lodell, Lauren Rose and Sarah Wright enjoy post-game cupcakes.

Rose might have enjoyed hers a little too much…

Freshman Scout Smith gazes into her bright future.

   Seniors (l to r) Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine and Tiffany Briscoe hang out with coach Kevin McGranahan.

Friends forever.

Saturday was prime time.

The sun emerged, delivering a true spring-like day, the Wolf softball sluggers bashed Friday Harbor, cupcakes were eaten, flowers were given out to player’s moms and wandering photo man John Fisken made an appearance in Cow Town.

The photos above are courtesy him.

To see more of what he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170415-vs-Friday-Harbor/

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