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   Jae LeVine and the hard-charging Wolf softball sluggers are a pristine 7-0. (John Fisken photo)

Hide the women and children.

There is a wild beast on the rampage and it’s chewing up and spitting out everything that gets in its way.

Crunching hits left and right, the Coupeville High School softball squad is off to the program’s best start in more than a decade, rolling to a perfect record heading into a major clash Wednesday afternoon.

The Wolves, fresh off a 16-2 dismantling of 2A North Mason Tuesday, host Chimacum 3:30 today in a battle for sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

The two-time defending champion Cowboys are 3-0 in league play, 4-1 overall, while CHS sits at 2-0, 7-0.

Coupeville will enjoy home cooking and a damp, windy prairie for their league clash, while Tuesday was all about spending most of the day on the bus.

The round-trip to Belfair gave the Wolves a solid eight-plus hours of listening to the wheels go round and round, but once CHS was on the field, it showed no ill effects.

“It was a long day but the ladies persevered and took care of business,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “We got off the bus and got ready to play and the girls focused and got down to business right away.”

The Wolves piled up a quick three runs in the top of the first, then dropped the hammer with a five-spot the next inning around.

Coupeville beat the snot out of the ball, redirecting North Mason pitching for 12 hits, including a home run from Katrina McGranahan which cleared the center field fence with room to spare.

The Wolf hurler finished with three hits, four RBI, five runs scored (and a stolen base for good measure), while her catcher, Sarah Wright, spanked three hits as well, including a double.

She also had four RBI, while Mikayla Elfrank added two hits, three runs and a steal.

Coupeville got singles from Veronica Crownover, Robin Cedillo, Lauren Rose and Jae LeVine, as seven of nine starters recorded hits.

The only two who were denied base-knocks, Hope Lodell and Tiffany Briscoe, both reached base on walks, with Lodell scampering home to score.

North Mason could do little to rally, with Katrina McGranahan racking up six strikeouts and facing only three batters over the minimum.

“Our pitching overpowered them from the beginning and when they did hit it they were mostly weak infield hits,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Our defense again played strong behind that pitching and kept any possible rallies from starting.”

While the undefeated run is the talk of the town, the Wolves are being careful not to look too far ahead.

“I am extremely proud of these ladies and how they play as a team and for each other, not for themselves,” Kevin McGranahan said. “We are playing good softball and taking it one game at a time.”

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   Mikayla Elfrank is a woman for all positions. Coupeville’s starting shortstop, she can also catch, and, as of Friday, pitch. (John Fisken photos)

   Sarah Wright (left) had three hits, while Nicole Lester thumped a resounding double in a 22-0 win.

Friday was tricky for Kevin McGranahan.

The Coupeville High School softball coach approaches every game, especially league clashes, aiming for a win.

But he also realizes the situation Port Townsend is in, and wanted to be compassionate in how his high-flying team delivered a beat-down while on the road.

He headed home with mixed feelings after watching his undefeated Wolves romp to a 22-0 win, which moved them into a first-place tie with two-time defending Olympic League champ Chimacum.

“I am not proud of the score; I am super proud of all the girls,” McGranahan said. “But I feel like I ran up the score.”

The win lifts Coupeville to 2-0 in league play, 4-0 overall heading into a non-conference home doubleheader with Blaine Monday.

The 2A Borderites will carry a 1-5 record down from the Canadian border.

CHS has four non-conference games before they welcome Chimacum (2-0, 3-1) to town for a first-place showdown.

The Cowboys, who last played Mar. 24, will sit a staggering 17 days before playing Port Townsend and Coupeville on back-to-back days April 11-12.

When Coupeville thumped Port Townsend Friday, they handed the RedHawks their 40th straight loss.

In three games this season, PT has been outscored 58-0 and the road to rebuilding the program is a long one.

Faced with that, McGranahan went all the way down his bench, gave substantial playing time to his freshmen and had two players — Scout Smith and Mikayla Elfrank — pitch for the first time in a varsity game.

At no time was a normal varsity lineup all on the field at the same time and the Wolves downplayed their normal aggressive running style, but the bats still barked, no matter who was swinging.

“We had hot bats again and started early and often,” McGranahan said. “Their pitchers struggled and our hitters were on it when they threw strikes.”

The biggest blow wasn’t intended to happen, but before the coach could call for a bunt from his slugging daughter, Katrina McGranahan “got a rare strike and hammered it.”

The junior basher deposited the ball over the center field fence for a grand slam, marking the second straight game a Wolf has gone yard.

Sarah Wright laced a three-run double to kick off the game, as Coupeville scored in every inning.

After putting up four in the first and three in the second, the Wolves dropped seven more in the third, before coasting home with four-run bursts in the final two innings.

The game was called after five innings due to the mercy rule.

Nine different Wolves rapped out a hit, led by Wright (1B, 2B, 2B) and Katrina McGranahan (1B, 1B, HR) with three apiece.

Lauren Rose and Jae Levine added two hits each, Kyla Briscoe thumped a triple and Nicole Lester whacked a double.

Tamika Nastali, Melia Welling, Emma Mathusek, Mackenzie Davis, Veronica Crownover, Tiffany Briscoe, Hope Lodell and Robin Cedillo all shared time on the field, as well, as CHS went 16 players deep.

“Total team effort and the young girls really shined today,” Kevin McGranahan said.

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   Bundled up against the weather, Hope Lodell was warmed by a huge win Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

Mikayla Elfrank comes up gunning at short.

   Jae LeVine (right), who had three hits, including a game-winning RBI double, celebrates with teammates Veronica Crownover (left) and Melia Welling.

There are victories which define a team, define a season, define a program.

If everything goes according to plan, at some point in the future, the Coupeville High School softball squad will look back at the windy, rainy afternoon of Mar. 29, 2017 and say, “That there, that was the turning point.”

The Wolves won, and a win is always nice.

But it was how they won, and who they beat, that matters most.

For on this wild ‘n wet Wednesday, Coupeville stared down Klahowya, and its leader, two-time Olympic League MVP Amber Bumbalough, and seized its moment, toppling the Eagles 7-6.

The win lifts CHS to 1-0 in Olympic League play, 3-0 overall, pulling them a half game behind two-time defending league champ Chimacum (2-0, 3-1).

Klahowya, to the shock of all, tumbles into the cellar (for the moment) at 0-2, 1-3, a half game behind Port Townsend (0-1, 0-2), a team which is on a 39-game losing streak.

Coupeville won Wednesday by swinging hot bats from the top of the order to the bottom, as eight different players had at least one base-knock.

Included in the 12 hit attack were two doubles (including a game-winning one off the bat of Jae LeVine), two triples and an out-of-the-park home run from senior Tiffany Briscoe that seemed to surprise Briscoe more than anyone else.

Last year, in Kevin McGranahan’s first year as CHS coach, the Wolves were swept by Klahowya, outscored 32-8 across three games.

Wednesday, his team swung hot, played stellar defense, didn’t blink when a five-run lead was erased, rallied late, then closed like stone-cold killers, stranding the tying run at second in the seventh.

The grin on McGranahan’s face may fade sometime before Coupeville’s next game — a road trip to Port Townsend Friday — but it’s doubtful.

“Huge. Huge!! Such a great team win for all of these girls,” he said, and then he smiled, and smiled some more.

The Wolves have fared better against flame throwers than soft tossers, and Bumbalough (“the best we’ll face this year”) can toss wicked heat.

But the cold, wet, windy conditions seemed to bother her at times, and the CHS hitters took advantage.

With their own hurler, Katrina McGranahan, slicing through the Eagle hitters in the early going, the Wolves built a 5-0 lead by putting up runs in each of the first three innings.

In the first, LeVine kick-started things with the first of her three hits, a solidly-whacked single to center.

Wolf catcher Sarah Wright plated her with a two-out RBI single (also to center), then came around to score after a single from Mikayla Elfrank and a hard-hit chopper by Veronica Crownover where the throw to first was dropped.

Coupeville’s defense looked like it would be the biggest story in the second inning, as McGranahan and Elfrank teamed up to pull off an unexpected web gem.

An Eagle slugger ripped a shot back through the pitcher’s circle, but it deflected perfectly off of McGranahan’s glove and right onto the fingertips of the hard-charging Elfrank.

Snagged the madly-bouncing ball, she spun and dropped a rocket of a throw into Crownover’s glove at first for the out.

But, remember, I said “it looked like,” because, with one vicious swing to open the bottom of the second, Briscoe put the spotlight firmly back on the offense.

The senior left fielder, who has been known of late for being an expert in getting hit by the ball (she has a huge welt on her left thigh after being plunked twice Saturday), is primarily a contact hitter.

For one glorious swing, though, it was as if former Wolf slugger Hailey Hammer had been reborn in Briscoe’s body.

Turning on Bumbalough’s heave with unexpected vengeance, Tiffany sent the ball screaming over the fence in left center on a line, almost causing her mom, Amy, to fall off the bleachers.

One of two CHS Class of 2017 athletes to have played a sport all 12 seasons of their high school days (along with Lauren Grove), Briscoe has been a hard-working class act since day one.

Seeing her get mobbed by her teammates at home, with joy and yes, a little shock on her face, was a special moment for all.

But the Wolves weren’t going to stop there, as LeVine cracked a triple in the third, followed by RBIs from Wright and Crownover to run the lead to 5-0.

Klahowya doesn’t fold easily, however.

A veteran team with a star who will be playing college ball one day, the Eagles scraped together three runs in the fourth and another three in the fifth to reclaim the lead.

Coupeville had a marvelous chance in its half of the fourth, getting a lead-off double from speedster Hope Lodell.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Bumbalough bore down and retired the next three hitters herself, making two nimble plays in the field wrapped around a strikeout.

There was no break in Coupeville’s stride, however, as the Wolves scraped out a run in the bottom of the fifth — McGranahan singled and came around to score on a passed ball two batters later — and knotted things back up at 6-6.

In a bid to keep the fans from realizing how chilly it was, the two teams played a high-wire act in the late going.

Elfrank tripled after McGranahan scored, but was thrown out at home trying to score after the initial throw overshot third base.

While the Wolves would have loved the go-ahead run, they endured, as McGranahan gunned down three straight hitters in the sixth to keep everyone on edge.

Facing a two-out, no-one-on-base dilemma in the bottom of the sixth, Coupeville could have been content to move into the seventh in a tied game.

Instead, Lauren Rose popped a seeing-eye single down the right field line, getting the ball to drop in right between two fielders.

Then, as Mouse danced back and forth on the first-base bag, the mightiest mite, the woman so awesome she needs four nicknames, Jae “Flash” LeVine, strode to the plate, twirling her bat over her head.

Hey, that’s how I remember it…

The prairie hushed. Not a cow could be heard mooing.

Only the wailing of former Wolf softball legend Breeanna Messner, home from sunny Cali and forced to remember how cold her home town can be.

And then Joltin’ Jae went and became (even more of) a legend, ripping the hide off the ball, as she sent Bumbalough’s pitch crashing into right-center, plating Rose with the go-ahead (and winning) run.

Peeking out from between her frost-bitten fingers, Messner beamed as LeVine, her prodigy, stood astride second, queen of all she surveyed.

Of course, nothing comes easy, and Klahowya had one last chance to crush a town’s hopes.

Bumbalough (who else?) beat out a one-out infield single in the top of the seventh and moved to second on a steal where she had already popped up before the throw arrived.

Danger loomed, and not just in the really dark clouds out in right field, but Katrina McGranahan was having none of this tomfoolery.

Twice she stared down Eagle hitters, and twice she whiffed them with breaking balls so nasty they might as well have been poison-covered.

At which point the Wolves let loose with a well-deserved celebration, capping it with a full team sing-along.

This day, this moment, they were on top of the world. And justifiably so.

 

To see more photos from this game, pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170329-vs-Klahowya/

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   Robin Cedillo (left) goes high, Jae LeVine goes low and everything works out beautifully as the Wolves snuff out a Vashon rally. (John Fisken photos)

Creepin’ and a crawlin’, Jake Hoagland sneaks back onto the base.

A few rain drops can’t disrupt super fan Sylvia Arnold’s good mood.

Dodging the liquid sunshine, Ethan Marx hauls in a catch.

Katrina McGranahan gets medieval on a sneaky softball.

Twice Saturday, Hunter Smith lashed a two-RBI hit. This is one of those.

   “I am … the law!!” Darren Crownover pretends to watch daughter Veronica crush home runs, but in his mind, he’s doing a Sylvester Stallone as Judge Dredd impression.

No softball escapes Hope Lodell. Ever.

The rain was fallin’ and the camera was clickin’.

Despite fairly miserable Whidbey weather Saturday, Coupeville High School managed to get in both softball and baseball games, sweeping visiting Vashon Island.

Along for the ride, and working both sides of the street, was damp yet plucky paparazzi John Fisken, who was nice enough to kick these pics our way.

To see everything he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

Softball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170325-vs-Vashon/

Baseball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Baseball/20170325-vs-Vashon/

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   Freshman Mackenzie Davis had a pair of RBI singles Saturday and was a defensive spark-plug in her debut as a high school catcher. (John Fisken photo)

Let the hits rain down.

With eight different players getting at least one base-knock Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV softball squad had plenty of offense to keep their faithful fans warm on a cold, chilly afternoon on the prairie.

By the time they were done knocking Vashon Island around, the Wolves had rung up 14 hits, one for every run they scored in a 14-7 win.

The offensive explosion, which included a pair of doubles from Scout Smith and a resounding inside-the-park grand slam off the bat of Veronica Crownover, lifts the young CHS players to 1-0 on the season.

Coupeville actually spotted the visiting Pirates a three-run lead after the first half inning, and still trailed 4-2 headed into the bottom of the third.

Then the fireworks went off.

A nine-run, seven-hit, 15-batter affair, the bottom of the third went on longer than some entire games do. And the Wolf fans wouldn’t have had it any other way.

An infield single from Tamika Nastali and a walk to Kyla Briscoe set the stage, then Wolf catcher Mackenzie Davis started the barrage.

Rifling an RBI single down the first-base line, she dropped the ball flawlessly in front of an oncoming outfielder, kick-starting a run of five straight Coupeville hits.

Melia Welling dumped a ball between the catcher and pitcher and zoomed into first, Nicole Lester whacked a shot to center, Jae LeVine crushed the ball to the same spot (but even deeper) and Emma Mathusek whipped a frozen rope into right-center.

All that was mere prelude, however.

After Smith walked to juice the bags, still with just one out, Crownover turned on a pitch and drove it to the base of the wall in center.

A couple of inches higher and her home run trot would have been conducted at half-speed as someone hopped the fence to retrieve the ball.

Instead, with the ball still in play and her teammates running wild in front of her, Crownover hit the jets and came crashing around third.

As she stamped on home, beating the throw, dad Darren pretended he wasn’t a cop who had just witnessed someone break the speed limit right in front of him.

Up 10-4 at that point, with all the air having been punched out of the Vashon players, Coupeville cruised home, adding a few more runs along the way.

Crownover and Davis both delivered late-game RBI singles, while the Wolves also scored twice off of double steals.

Smith led the hit parade, collecting two doubles and a single. She also collected a pair of walks, successfully reaching base all five times she came to the plate.

Backing her up, LeVine, Crownover, Davis and Nastali had two hits apiece.

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