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   Lead-off hitter Lauren Rose leads CHS in walks and is #2 in at-bats, runs and stolen bases. (John Fisken photo)

   Jump back to 2012 and several of today’s Wolf softball stars like Katrina McGranahan (red shirt) were getting their start with the Dirt Devils. (Darren Crownover photo)

Forget about league MVP. Katrina McGranahan should be in the argument for All-State consideration.

The Coupeville High School junior pitcher, who has led the Wolves to a 17-3 record heading into the playoffs, is red-hot this season.

Among athletes whose coaches submit stats to MaxPreps, McGranahan sits in the top 10 among all 1A players in seven different categories.

In four of those she’s in the top 10 for the entire state, regardless of classification.

McGranahan’s resume:

Strikeouts (#1 in 1A, #9 in state)
Wins (#1 in 1A, #2 in state)
ERA (#6 in 1A)
Home runs (#4 in 1A)
RBI (#2 in 1A, #8 in state)
Runs (#3 in 1A)
Stolen bases (#2 in 1A, #3 in state)

And she’s not the only member of the high-flying Wolves to be posting big stats.

Junior shortstop Mikayla Elfrank is #7 in 1A in both home runs and stolen bases, while junior third-baseman Lauren Rose is #5 in runs and #7 in stolen bases.

Sophomore catcher Sarah Wright rounds out the top 10 appearances, currently sitting #5 in 1A in RBIs.

Coupeville opens the district playoffs May 19 against Vashon Island. While you’re waiting, a look at season-to-date offensive stats:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
Cedillo 21 5 5 1 6 3 .238 .448
Lodell 57 13 17 1 9 7 10 .298 .385
LeVine 63 21 20 2 5 10 11 .317 .419
K. Briscoe 5 6 2 1 1 4 6 4 .400 .727
Mathusek 6 2 1 3 1 .167 .444
Nastali 29 6 8 1 5 2 .276 .417
Smith 16 10 4 1 8 1 .250 .368
Rose 65 31 23 2 1 13 17 11 .354 .482
T. Briscoe 39 9 7 2 1 2 8 8 .179 .373
Davis 3 2 2 4 .571
McGranahan 63 34 32 3 5 4 21 9 37 .508 .575
Welling 5 2 1 2 2 .200 .500
Elfrank 60 21 23 6 4 3 13 11 18 .383 .486
Crownover 58 13 25 5 1 2 6 13 .431 .492
Wright 71 17 30 6 2 1 5 6 27 .423 .468
Lester 8 1 3 1 1 2 2 .375 .545

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   Freshman Scout Smith made several superb defensive plays Wednesday during a doubleheader sweep of 2A Sequim. (John Fisken photos)

   Mikayla Elfrank can beat you with her bat, glove or arm, something Sequim will never forget.

It started with thunder and lightning and ended with Dairy Queen.

Powered by a phenomenal performance from slugging shortstop Mikayla Elfrank, the Coupeville High School softball squad completed a doubleheader sweep of 2A Sequim which took a week, and two towns, to play.

Six days after game one was suspended by a sudden storm on Whidbey, the Wolves hit the road Wednesday and arrived on the mainland just in time to catch the arrival of the carnival to town.

Oh yeah, and they also pulled off 5-3 and 4-3 wins, while Elfrank cranked two home-runs to straight-away center (on separate days in different towns), collected seven RBIs, and got a gift certificate for creamy ice cream goodness from the rival coach.

The wins lift Coupeville to 17-3, the second-best record in program history, heading into postseason play.

The Wolves open the district playoffs May 19 against Vashon Island, a team they roughed up 13-5 earlier this season.

As they chase the 2002 CHS sluggers, who went 24-3 and finished 3rd at state, this year’s squad, which had eight underclassmen in the starting lineup Wednesday, has beaten every team except one.

They are 0-3 against Olympic League champ Chimacum and 17-0 against the world.

That includes going 5-0 against two teams, Klahowya and Sequim, which gave those Cowboys (9-4) two of their four losses.

Facing off with Sequim, a strong squad which claimed second in the 2A division of the Olympic League, Coupeville used a similar strategy in both games — big hits to jump on top early, then stellar defense and lights-out pitching from Katrina McGranahan to slam the door shut.

Game One (4-3 win):

This started in Coupeville May 4, then stopped after two innings, with the Wolves pounding the snot out of the ball on their way to a 4-0 lead.

Distant thunder and lightning caused a never-ending series of delays on Senior Night, and the game never re-started.

While it could have been called off, both coaches agreed they wanted to finish and made a gentleman’s agreement to do just that.

Before the delay, Elfrank crushed a grand-slam to straight-away center (that became a really long three-run single after she inadvertently passed teammate Sarah Wright at second) and Robin Cedillo spanked an RBI single.

Jump ahead six days, and the game, which was actually played second Wednesday, morphed from a hit-fest into a pitcher’s duel.

Sequim scraped out two runs in the fourth and another in the sixth to make things tense, but the Wolf defense withstood the challenge.

Freshman Scout Smith, in the lineup for Cedillo, who didn’t make the trip Wednesday, threw out not one, but two runners in the sixth from her position in right field.

Both were smart plays that serve as a testament to lessons learned growing up as a coach’s daughter.

On the first one, she snagged an errant throw over first and fired a laser to Elfrank covering the bag at second, cutting down the runner.

Smith then closed the inning with a nifty double play, pulling in a long fly, before nabbing a Sequim player who neglected to go back and tag up before trying to advance from second to third.

Clinging to a one-run lead in the seventh inning, Coupeville closed with a bang, as McGranahan collected her eighth strikeout, before Hope Lodell and Kyla Briscoe pulled in long fly balls.

The final blow was a high winder to deep left and had danger written all over it, but Briscoe, subbing for big sis Tiffany, who was back home taking AP English Lit tests, played the drifting ball to perfection, then got rushed by her jubilant teammates.

Game Two (5-3 win):

Wednesday’s regularly-scheduled game started off awfully similar to the one interrupted by lightning.

Jae LeVine ripped a single to right, Wright got plunked with a pitch and then Elfrank strode to the plate, twisting the bat in her hands like a woman about to rip it in half.

Before the game the Sequim coach had joked with the Coupeville players, telling them he’d buy a Blizzard for any Wolf who successfully crushed a ball off of the carnival rides being set up behind the outfield fence.

Elfrank was a woman on a mission.

Jumping on the very first pitch she saw from the same hurler she had homered off of six days earlier, she whacked the ball a country mile and the resulting clang when the ball hit pay-dirt left little doubt — ball had met carnival ride.

I’m calling it. Two consecutive pitches from the same rival pitcher — six days and two towns apart — and two consecutive bombs to straight-away center cement Elfrank as one of the most electrifying players to ever wear the red and black.

But she wasn’t done.

Next trip to the plate, in the top of the third, Elfrank dropped an RBI single to right, using her bat like a pool cue to place the ball into a small patch of open grass.

So, to recap — over the course of three consecutive at-bats against the same pitcher, but in two towns with a six-day delay between plate appearance #1 and #2, she went 3-3 with a home run that wasn’t because of a quirk, a home run that dented a carnival ride and seven RBI.

But she wasn’t done.

With the bat yes, as Elfrank didn’t reach base again Wednesday, but she also has a superb glove and a cannon for an arm.

Case in point, the bottom of the sixth.

Sequim had chipped away at the lead, cutting it from 4-0 to 4-3 and had the tying run at third with two outs.

The batter cranked a hard-hit shot deep into the hole, and was flying down the line as her teammate headed home, ready to celebrate.

Elfrank, though, was in super-human mode, snagging the ball on the move, then spinning and firing while falling backwards into short left-field.

The ball zipped on a line, the runner leaned, all of Sequim held its collective breath, Wolf first-baseman Veronica Crownover reached as far as her 5-foot-11-and-three-quarters-inch frame would allow and time stopped for a moment.

To my right, Rod Serling, host of The Twilight Zone, appeared, calmly saying “You are traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination…”

And my dream came true.

Ball met mitt a split-second before spikes hit bag and the field ump punched the air, signalling the out with so much energy the entire diamond rocked like the epicenter of an earthquake.

Coming on the heels of two earlier gems — a catch at her shoestrings by center fielder Lodell and Wright ignoring hurt fingers to throw out a runner at third — Elfrank to Crownover to save the game was the perfect cap.

Sequim’s hitters seemed to know it too, as they meekly hit three pop-ups in the seventh, one each to Lauren Rose, Elfrank and LeVine.

Over the course of the two games, Coupeville racked up 14 hits, with 10 different hitters getting at least one.

Elfrank led the way with her three big blows, while Rose and LeVine had two singles apiece.

Tamika Nastali might have had the most satisfying base-knock.

After missing on two bunt tries, she pulled the bat back on the very next pitch and crushed a hard-hit liner down the right-field line that landed with a smack and brought her bench to its feet.

As his players celebrated around him, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had the look of a man who would enjoy his bus ride back to Whidbey.

“This is the kind of test we wanted before the playoffs, and we passed,” he said with a satisfied smile. “Their confidence is soaring, and that is great to see.”

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   Nicole Lester and Co. poked 13 hits and eked out 15 walks Tuesday in an 18-4 JV win. (John Fisken photo)

Different city, same results.

Capping their season with an exclamation point, the Coupeville High School JV softball sluggers drilled host Burlington-Edison 18-4 Tuesday afternoon.

The win gives the young Wolves a two-game sweep of their 2A opponents and raises their final record to 4-1.

Much like the first time the squads faced — a 20-1 romp in late April in Cow Town — Coupeville had its way with the Tiger pitching staff.

The Wolves crunched 13 hits, led by Emma Mathusek’s four base-knocks, while also picking up 15 walks.

Every one of the nine players Coupeville took on its road trip ended up on base, with Scout Smith a perfect 5-of-5 with three singles and two walks.

Mathusek hammered a triple to go with three singles, Kyla Briscoe punched out three singles and Nicole Lester, Melia Welling and Tamika Nastali added hits of their own.

Working the pitching for all they could get, Jae LeVine (4), Mackenzie Davis (4) and Veronica Crownover (1) accounted for nine walks between them.

With the score running wild, and B-E fairly inexperienced, Coupeville’s coaches were careful to mix things up to keep things competitive.

Starting hurler Scout Smith opened and closed, but gave way mid-game to a pair of first-time pitchers.

Mathusek, a freshman, and LeVine, a senior swinging down from varsity for a day to give the JV enough players to field a team, made their debut in the circle.

By the time she was done, LeVine played five different positions on the day, pitching, catching and doin’ time at every infield spot except third.

While he’s always happy with a win, CHS varsity coach Kevin McGranahan had plenty of other things to be appreciative of after this road trip.

“We stayed after and scrimmaged them for two more innings, so we got our money’s worth today,” he said. “The other coach praised our girls for their sportsmanship and being classy.

“That’s always great to hear from opposing coaches.”

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   Katrina McGranahan whacked a single and a triple Wednesday at Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

They were right there on the edge of the dream.

Six outs away from beating Chimacum for the first time in three tries this season and clinching a share of the Olympic League crown, the Coupeville High School softball team had success slip through its fingers.

The Cowboys, a disciplined, veteran team which thrives on capitalizing on the smallest mistakes, rallied for six runs in the bottom of the sixth inning Monday, upending the visiting Wolves 7-2.

The loss drops Coupeville to 6-3 in league play, 15-3 overall.

The Wolves, who are undefeated against teams which don’t have the word Cowboys on the front of their jerseys, close the regular season with a non-conference doubleheader Wednesday at Sequim.

CHS, which finished second in the Olympic League — its best showing in the three-year history of the conference — opens the district playoffs May 19.

Chimacum (7-1, 9-3) clinches its third straight league title, a testament to the six seniors it honored in post-game festivities.

While Shanya and Mechelle Nisbet are the undisputed leaders of the Cowboys, it was one of the other seniors, Kelle Settje, who delivered the coup de grâce.

The Cowboy outfielder looped a two-run single into right, dropping the ball into a narrow patch of open grass, to turn a 2-1 Wolf lead into a 3-2 Chimacum advantage.

Settje’s blow came after a throwing error and a walk put the first two Cowboy hitters in the sixth on base.

Up until then, the home town hitters had experienced little luck against Coupeville hurler Katrina McGranahan, who gave up a run in the first, then started throwing up zeroes on the scoreboard.

Whiffing six and helping herself with her glove — she pulled off a nifty double play to close the second, snagging a popup and doubling a straying runner off of first — McGranahan was in fine form all day.

She had a two-hitter headed into the sixth, even while dealing with a home plate ump with a shall we say, “creative” strike zone.

That was when things fell apart a bit, and the well-seasoned Cowboys took advantage, mixing well-placed base-knocks, a Wolf miscue or two, and at least one blatant howler of a call by the man in blue to plate six in the inning.

It was an emotional killer, as the Wolves had held on to their lead since the top of the second, and were playing stellar ball.

If there was any downside to the first five-and-a-half innings, it was Coupeville once again had Chimacum on the ropes, but couldn’t deliver the knockout punch.

Much as in their last clash with the Cowboys, the Wolves had runners on base all day long, but found a game-busting hit — which has come so frequently against other teams — elusive.

The first inning is a perfect example.

After opening the game with consecutive singles from Lauren Rose, Jae LeVine and McGranahan (Rose nimbly side-stepped Mechelle Nisbet at the plate to score the opening run), CHS was on fire.

Add a walk to cleanup slugger Sarah Wright and the Wolves had the bases juiced with no outs, a hit away from really punching Chimacum in the gut right out of the gate.

Except it didn’t happen.

A popup, a strikeout and a hard ground-out which Shanya Nisbet gobbled up stranded all three runners, setting a tone for the rest of the game.

Coupeville did score one more, plating Tiffany Briscoe in the second.

The senior left-fielder walked, went to second on a passed ball, took third on a fielder’s choice and scampered home when Rose chopped a ball off the first-baseman’s glove.

But Rose, sitting at first with just one out, was left on base, and the Wolves stranded eight base runners on the day.

Coupeville put people on base in six of seven innings, but three times saw runners at third unable to come around.

The final one was McGranahan, who lashed a two-out triple to right in the top of the seventh in a bid to prolong the game.

The Wolves finished with seven base-knocks, as LeVine (two singles), McGranahan (single, triple) and Hope Lodell (two singles) had two hits apiece.

Rose rounded out the hit parade with a single.

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Dalton Martin (left) hangs out with the brain trust. (Abbie Martin photo)

Still rackin’ up those numbers.

As we head through the first week of May, former Wolf stars continue to pile up stats in the world of college softball, baseball and track.

A peek in on how the Fab Five are doing (in alphabetic order):

Ben Etzell — A junior at Saint John’s University in Minnesota, he’s the main man in the bullpen for a Johnnies baseball team sitting at 25-11 headed into the playoffs.

He’s 3-1 with five saves, a 2.37 ERA and 28 strikeouts and is holding opposing teams to a .194 batting average.

Currently, he sits #1 on the team in saves and appearances (17) and #2 in ERA and K’s.

For his three-year career, he’s 9-2 with seven saves and 76 strikeouts while pitching in 36 games.

Hailey Hammer — A sophomore at Everett Community College, where she’s hitting .322 in 30 games for a 12-22 softball squad.

She has 28 hits, including a double, triple and three home runs, 20 RBI, 14 runs and 13 base on balls.

That puts her #3 on the team in RBI and hits and #4 in batting average.

Dalton Martin — A freshman at Everett Community College, where he’s throwing the discus.

Saturday, he finished 10th in the event at the Ken Shannon Invitational at the University of Washington’s outdoor track facility.

The meet reunited him with U-Dub freshman Jose Padilla, who won the discus toss.

Padilla, who hails from Chelan, and Martin finished 1st and 2nd at the 1A state track and field meet last spring as high school seniors.

Aaron Trumbull — A freshman at Olympic Community College, where he’s played in 16 games for an 11-23 team.

His claim to fame this season has been his work with the glove, where he’s recorded 42 put-outs and three assists while playing first base.

He’s one of only three Olympic baseball players to boast an error-free 1.000 fielding percentage, but he’s far in front of the other two guys, having played 45 innings to their combined two innings.

Monica Vidoni — A sophomore at Rainy River Community College in Minnesota, where the Voyageurs are 21-15.

She’s played in 29 games for the softball sluggers, collecting 17 hits, including three doubles, on her way to a .340 batting average.

Also has 14 RBI, 11 runs, seven walks and four steals.

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