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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

   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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   Sarah Wright makes it official, stamping on home after blasting a two-run home run at the district tourney. (John Fisken photos)

   CHS football legend Paul Messner (rockin’ the impressive beard) and family made the trip off-Island to watch the Wolves play.

Wolf center-fielder Hope Lodell vacuums up another fly ball.

  In the year of the long ball, Katrina McGranahan crushes yet another moon shot.

CHS assistant coach Ron Wright fears not the sunburn (likely) headed his way.

Lauren Rose, your friendly neighborhood Terminator.

   Head coach Kevin McGranahan enjoys the show (and the knowledge that, unlike Wright, his head is shielded from the sun).

Kyla Briscoe gets the rally caps going.

After a season of rain, rain and more rain, the finale was soaked in sun.

Playing four games (and 33 innings) in 26 hours at the West Central District 3 tourney in Tacoma, the Coupeville High School softball sluggers finally had reason to use sunblock.

They also had plenty of opportunities to get their close-ups, as busy bee paparazzi John Fisken popped in while bouncing from locale to locale Saturday, shooting Whidbey Island athletes competing in postseason action.

The pics above are courtesy him.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170520-Playoff-vs-Bellevue-Christian/

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   Sarah Wright, seen with uncle Rob Smith, had four hits in Coupeville’s season-ending 10-inning loss Saturday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Wright)

   With two wins at districts, the Wolves finished 19-5, second-best record in program history. (Sean Davis photo)

They did not disappoint. Ever.

In the moment, there will be sadness, of what could have been if they had found that elusive final out.

Of a trip to state, a chance to keep this miracle season alive for another week, to keep on chasing dreams across the softball diamond.

But just because it ended Saturday, after a brutal stretch of four games, two of which went to extra innings, in 26 hours — 33 innings of sun-baked softball in the wilds of Tacoma, with every last pitch flung by one amazing young woman known as Katrina “Killer Kat” McGranahan — doesn’t mean all they accomplished will fade anytime soon.

Yes, the Coupeville High School softball squad saw its season ended by a 7-6 loss in 10 innings to Bellevue Christian (which allowed the Vikings to join Chimacum in claiming a ticket to state).

But even falling an out short — the Wolves had led 5-4 with two outs and no one on in the seventh, only to give up a game-tying home run — this CHS squad, which can return seven of nine starters, will stand tall in any history written about Wolf Nation.

This team, with 14 players who went every step of the way, from the first day of rain-spattered practice, when no one was watching, to the last day under a white-hot spotlight (or was that just the blazing sun?) in front of an overflow crowd, was always something special.

And, win or lose, that does not change.

Coupeville split two games Saturday at the West Central District 3 tourney, eliminating Seattle Christian 8-3 in the morning before engaging a 16-2 Vikings squad in a memorable death match.

In a tourney where none of the other five teams played more than three games or 22 innings, these Wolves fought through four games (playing two back-to-back Friday with no break AFTER a 90-mile bus trip).

They went to nine innings to eliminate Vashon in the opener, 10 innings against BC in the finale, 33 innings total, in which they wrote a remarkable tale of perseverance, of never backing down, never taking the easy way out.

Finishing 19-5 (having only lost to Chimacum and BC), the 2017 Wolves had the second-best record in program history, trailing only the 2002 squad, which went 24-3 en route to claiming 3rd place at state.

“I am super proud of these young women and the heart they have shown these past few days,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, words echoed by all Wolf fans.

“In the end, we fell a run short of a trip to state, but the team left everything on the field and has absolutely nothing to hang their head about. We played our best and the district knows that Coupeville is here and ready to assume the throne.”

Coupeville loses three seniors to graduation, two of whom, second-baseman Jae LeVine and left fielder Tiffany Briscoe, bowed out at Sprinker Fields.

Right fielder Robin Cedillo, who made key contributions to the squad’s run, including a huge RBI single to spark a late-season win over 2A Sequim, also departs.

But, while three-time Olympic League champ Chimacum gets absolutely gutted by graduation this year, the Wolves can return everyone but their #2 and #8 hitters, with plenty on the bench (led by fab frosh Scout Smith, who sparkled at districts).

There is also plenty in the pipeline, with every Central Whidbey Little League softball team currently romping through win-heavy seasons behind talented players like Izzy Wells, Coral Caveness and Mollie Bailey.

Not to mention the expected return to the softball diamond of Chelsea Prescott, currently playing Babe Ruth baseball as an eighth-grader.

Like Michael Jordan, who had to endure knockdowns at the hands of the grizzled Detroit Pistons known as the Bad Boys before rising up to win six championships, these Wolves are primed for true greatness.

If they do, when they do, we will look back at the 2017 squad, and see where it began.

And what we will see, either today in the immediate aftermath, or down the road, is a team that never, ever stopped fighting — a group that had stars, but played always as a team, each young woman giving all she had, then finding something more.

The tale of their final day on the diamond this season is full of huge highs, and one or two lows.

Game 1:

Having split two games Friday, knocking off Vashon before immediately re-taking the field in Tacoma to face a well-rested BC squad, the Wolves had their backs to the wall.

After a brief burp at the start, they responded with a vengeance.

Trailing Seattle Christian 3-0 headed into the top of the third Saturday, Coupeville blew the game wide open with a five-run assault on the Warrior pitching staff.

It started thanks to solid work by the unsung Briscoe, who has been a rock for the Wolves during her four-year run in the red and black.

Wearing a pitch after being plunked for the 437th time this season (give or take one or two), she lit a fire, and her teammates responded.

Tamika Nastali, Lauren Rose and Smith (subbing for a briefly-injured LeVine) stroked back-to-back-to-back singles and the runs were flying home.

The Wolves tacked on another run in the sixth, as Hope Lodell reached on an error and came around to score on another base-knock off of the bat of Rose, then closed the game with a bang.

Or, make that two bangs, as Katrina McGranahan and Mikayla Elfrank slammed seventh-inning home runs over the outfield fence, taking the final bit of air out of Seattle Christian.

Game 2:

Unlike Friday, there was a two-hour gap between games Saturday, and the Wolves had a chance to eat before facing BC for a second time.

The game started with competing blasts, as Viking slugger Genna Walker bashed a two-run home run in the top of the first, before Wolf catcher Sarah Wright responded with her own two-run moon shot in the bottom half of the inning.

Coupeville then made a bid to seize control of the game, getting to BC hurler Katie Pippel for three runs in the bottom of the second to open a 5-2 lead.

A walk to Veronica Crownover, bunt singles from Lodell and Nastali and a key Vikings error helped keep the Wolf rally alive.

Pippel settled back down after that though, and faced just two batters over the minimum from the third through ninth innings.

Coupeville’s best shot at adding a run came in the fifth, when Wright drilled a shot that sent McGranahan scampering for home.

It wasn’t to be, however, as a superb throw nailed the Wolf pitcher at the plate in a bang-bang play.

Bellevue got a run back in the third and another in the sixth, but Coupeville’s defense denied them more, with Elfrank gunning down a runner at the plate and outfielders Briscoe, Lodell and Nastali running down several long bombs.

Clinging to a 5-4 lead entering the top of the seventh (and presumably final) inning, the Wolves looked to be in lock-down mode.

A pop-up to Lodell and a ground-out to Elfrank set the stage, and CHS was one slim out from the promised land.

Unfortunately, Bellevue’s final hope rested on the longball-lovin’ Walker, and she found a brief chink in the armor of a very-tired McGranahan, belting her second homer of the game.

Showing immense courage under fire, the Wolf hurler never blinked, immediately coming back to get the third out, then retiring BC in order in the eighth and ninth.

Under softball’s quirky answer to trying to end extra innings games, from the ninth inning on, both teams were given a runner at second to start things.

In the ninth, the Vikings bunted that runner to third, only to see Coupeville end the threat emphatically.

Nastali pulled in a fly for out number two, then fired a cannon shot to Wright, who dove and tagged the incoming runner to complete an inning-ending double play.

The Wolves suffered a reverse denial in their half of the inning, with the Vikings getting a double play of their own to strand the potential winning run at third.

BC finally broke through in the tenth, getting two runs on RBI hits from Walker (who else?) and Annie Whitton, forcing the Wolves into a must-win situation.

And they almost pulled it off.

McGranahan ripped an RBI single to plate Rose, cutting the lead to 7-6, before Wright followed her with a base-hit to put the tying and winning runs on base.

A passed ball moved the runners to second and third with one out, but Pippel, one of the best pitchers in 1A ball, rose to the moment, getting the final two outs on a strikeout and hard-hit chopper to second.

Coupeville finished its four-games-in-26-hours run — starting at 4 PM Friday and ending shortly before 6 PM Saturday — with 30 hits.

Rose, Wright and Lodell paced the Wolves with six base-knocks apiece, while Nastali and McGranahan both had four.

The onslaught was rounded out with a hit each from Elfrank, Smith, Crownover and Briscoe.

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Hope Lodell had four hits across two playoff games Friday. (John Fisken photo)

The dream lives.

After escaping a wild and wacky opening day at the West Central District 3 softball tournament, Coupeville High School has a simple plan for day two.

Win two straight games and the Wolves are headed back to state for the first time since 2014.

CHS, which sits at 18-4 after splitting a pair of games Friday, plays Seattle Christian (9-7) in a loser-out game at 11:15 AM Saturday at Sprinker Fields in Tacoma.

Win and the Wolves play the loser of the championship game between Chimacum (11-4) and Bellevue Christian (16-1) at 3:15 PM for 2nd place and District 3’s final slot to the state tourney.

If it does play twice Saturday, Coupeville will at least have a reasonable break between games.

On day one, the Wolves, after a 90-mile drive on a school bus, played two extra innings in their opening game, rallying in the bottom of the ninth for a walk-off 10-9 win over Vashon Island.

Having already gone past the projected start time for game two, they hopped on to a different field without any real break and ran into a fresh Bellevue Christian squad.

Trailing just 4-3 heading into the fifth, Coupeville ran out of energy a bit in the late going, eventually falling 9-3.

The Wolves Olympic League rivals, Chimacum and Klahowya, both faced Seattle Christian, with very different results.

Klahowya was bopped 10-3 in a loser-out game, while the Cowboys emulated Coupeville by going to extra innings, falling behind, then rallying for a walk-off win.

Chimacum scored twice in the bottom of the eighth to beat the Warriors 9-8.

For Coupeville, two very different games.

Game 1:

Facing off with a team they whomped 13-5 in the regular season, the Wolves looked to be headed for a similar finish, jumping out to a 7-1 lead after five innings.

Using a lot of walks, smart base running (Mikayla Elfrank scored from first on a play where she stole second, then kept on going when the throw was airmailed), and a couple of well-timed hits, Coupeville was cruising.

The knockout punch came in the bottom of the fifth, when the Wolves put together three bases-loaded walks and a booming two-run double off the bat of Lauren Rose to plate five runs.

Things were peachy, until they weren’t.

Vashon suddenly found a bit of a groove at the plate, scoring three in the sixth and another three in the seventh, while Coupeville went cold.

Rose played a key role on defense, gunning down a runner at the plate in the sixth, while Tamika Nastali chased down a troublesome fly to stop the bleeding in the seventh.

Tied 7-7, the two teams battled through a scoreless eighth (Vashon stranded a pair of runners while CHS went 1-2-3), then exchanged body blows in the ninth.

Thanks to a quirky softball rule that’s intended to help end games, both teams started the inning with a “free” runner at second, and both teams brought that runner around.

Vashon tacked on another run, exiting the top of the ninth having scored eight unanswered runs to take a 9-7 lead.

Enter “The Surgeon.”

With the bases juiced and one out in the bottom of the ninth, Hope Lodell ripped a two-run single to tie the game and give Coupeville new hope.

The Wolves capitalized immediately, as Tiffany Briscoe and Nastali drew back-to-back walks.

The first one re-loaded the bags, while the second one sent the Coupeville bench and fans into hysterics, as it forced in the game-winning run.

Rose and Lodell paced the Wolves in the opener, both rapping a pair of hits, while Veronica Crownover, Sarah Wright and Nastali added a base-knock apiece.

Game 2:

Making an immediate u-turn and returning to the diamond, the Wolves ran into Bellevue Christian’s well-rested Katie Pippel, one of the most successful pitchers in the state.

Going 1-2-3 in both the first and second against her, Coupeville fell behind 3-0, then rallied in the third.

It started with a bunt single off of Lodell’s bat, followed by a walk to Briscoe and another bunt single, this one by Rose.

A passed ball plated Coupeville’s first run, before Wolf pitcher Katrina McGranahan smoked a two-run single off of her rival to knot the game back up.

Pippel escaped the inning, getting Wright to ground-out, but CHS had her back on the ropes in the fourth.

A walk to Elfrank and another single from Lodell had the Wolves feeling good, only to see the inning end suddenly when a liner to shortstop turned into a double play.

Coupeville was still just one play away, though, trailing only 4-3 heading into the bottom of the fifth.

It was then, for the first time, that one team looked like it was playing in its 14th inning with no break, while the other team was not.

BC tagged McGranahan for four hits in the bottom of the fifth, scoring four to turn a taut game into a bit of a runaway.

That sucked a bit of the life out of the Wolves, and Pippel retired the final seven hitters in order.

Lodell finished with two hits for the second straight game, while Rose and McGranahan added Coupeville’s other two base-knocks in the nightcap.

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