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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Tiffany Briscoe (John Fisken photo)

Tiffany Briscoe rips a base hit. (John Fisken photo)

Let ‘er rip.

Coupeville High School softball sluggers will be swinging for the fences Mar. 11, in a bid to help better fund their program.

But before they take part in the team’s “1st Semi-Annual Hit-A-Thon” they’re out and about now, snagging donations.

You can sponsor a player or players and take your chances on their power with the bat or make a flat donation starting at $20.

During the Hit-A-Thon, each Wolf player will take 15 cuts at the plate, with their top two blasts (in fair territory) being added together for fundraising purchases.

So, if your favorite player were to park a ball 150 feet and another 200 feet, and you had pledged 10 cents per foot, you’d be coughing up $35 to keep CHS softball prospering.

You can also get in on the action yourself.

Pony up $5 and you can step into the batter’s box and get 10 swings of your own after the players have wrapped up their version of the home run derby.

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CHS grad Monica Vidoni needs a helping hand to get to Florida to play college softball.

   CHS grad Monica Vidoni (left) needs a helping hand to get to Florida to play college softball.

Have a buck or two? Help send a former Wolf from snowy Minnesota to sunny Florida.

Monica Vidoni, a 2015 Coupeville High School grad, and her Rainy River Community College softball squad are scheduled to play seven games from Mar. 4-7 in Titusville.

The trip, which opens the season for the Voyageurs, is funded largely by the players ability to raise funds, so Vidoni has set up a GoFundMe to raise her share.

Rainy River currently has only the minimum nine players on its roster, so every player has to step up or the team stays home.

Vidoni has played volleyball, basketball and softball both of her years at RRCC.

To see her fundraiser, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/rrcc-florida-funraiser

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Hope "The Surgeon" Lodell, getting ready to carve up anyone who dares step to her. (John Fisken photos)

   Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell, getting ready to carve up anyone who dares step to her. (John Fisken photo)

Lodell, at work and rest.

Lodell, at work and rest. (Fisken and Lodell family photos)

Like Heath Ledger in "A Knight's Tale," Lodell will rock you. (Mike Lodell photo)

Like Heath Ledger in “A Knight’s Tale,” she will rock you. (Mike Lodell photo)

Put on your hip waders, because I’m about to gush.

There is no finer athlete at Coupeville High School right now than Hope Lodell, both in raw physical skill and character.

Miss Lodell, who turns 17 today, is the rare Wolf athlete who I have literally known since the moment they popped into the world.

I knew her parents, Mike and Rebecca, as well as her older brother, Noah, long before Hope showed up on Jan. 10, 2000, and I have been lucky enough to have seen her grow up into a truly remarkable young woman.

Toss out the sports (we’ll come back to them in a few moments) and this is an extraordinary human being, in every way.

Hope is a walking, talking ray of sunshine every day, one of the warmest, friendliest, most outgoing people you will ever know.

She shows compassion and love to all those around her, and it is returned.

Brainy, driven, a young woman with a laser focus who wants to become a surgeon one day, she excels in the classroom and out of it.

When I say she has extraordinary raw physical skills, it extends far beyond the playing field.

Lodell is the kind of person who will do a headstand and walk around on her hands for long periods of time, or fire off a string of pull-ups on the CHS softball dugout to pass the time during a rain delay.

Put her in a uniform and she is a fireball.

Personally, I miss watching her rampage around the basketball court, causing havoc, but she’s strong-willed and if she’s chosen volleyball and softball as her art forms these days, who am I argue?

On the diamond, she is a slap-hitting artiste who can also pull the bat back and unleash holy heck on opposing hurlers, blasting epic home runs with a flick of her mighty, mighty biceps.

A speed demon who runs the bases extremely well, she essentially plays all three outfield spots for Coupeville, even though she starts in center field.

More than once (like two or three hundred times) I’ve witnessed Hope chase down balls deep in left or right field — without breaking a sweat — or come crashing in to spear a ball over an infielder’s head.

Put her on a volleyball court, and she has worked her way into being a truly deadly weapon.

This fall, she was a crucial part of a Wolf squad that put together the program’s best season in a decade-plus, and Lodell attacked from all angles.

A big hitter up front, when played there, she teamed up with Valen Trujillo to anchor Coupeville’s serve return game, and when she served herself, it was (violent) poetry in motion.

Not only did she set a single-season record for aces, her mark eclipsed what had been the previous Wolf CAREER record.

Jumping, twisting, hopping, unleashing rockets that were rarely returned (and then generally straight into the net or out of play), Hope was like a gunfighter, stalking main street, every serve being put up at high noon.

As she celebrates her birthday today, Lodell is pure class, a young woman who lights up this world in her own unique fashion.

Hopey, you are as good as it gets, and everyone that has been blessed to know you and see your life unfold so far thinks the world of you.

I have no doubt this is but the very tip of all you will do with your skill and passion.

One day, after the entire world has come to realize just how truly awesome you are, as an athlete, as a braniac, as a kind, caring woman, those of us who were here at the start will just nod and say, “Yep, told you so.”

I hope you know how much we all think of you, how much we respect you, how thrilled we are to see you taking over the world.

Happy birthday to my favorite Wolf.

May you never stop finding new arenas to conquer, Hope.

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Hannah Benway, lighting up the prairie. (John Fisken photos)

Hannah Benway, lighting up the prairie. (John Fisken photos)

Firing rockets on the diamond.

Firing rockets on the diamond.

Hannah Benway ran a billion miles last spring.

As a newcomer to the Coupeville High School softball squad, one of her duties was to head out of the dugout in pursuit of foul balls that ended up lodged in the nearby field or under parked cars at the trailer park across the street.

Usually all the younger players split the duties, but Benway was too quick, and efficient, for them all.

A softball would go the wrong way and a millisecond later (if that) Hannah would come flying around the outside of the dugout, scattering fans as she sprinted by, epic grin on her face.

She was uncanny in tracking down every last wayward orb, but what was even more remarkable was how much fun she seemed to be having.

Instead of treating it as a duty she had to accomplish, a right of passage for a younger player, she embraced it the same way she embraced every moment she had in a softball uniform — full-tilt.

“I told her some of the other girls can share the job, but she just looks at me and says, nope, I got it,” CHS coach Kevin McGranahan said with a chuckle. “Great kid!”

Coupeville has a roster deep in softball sluggers who play select ball, young women with considerable experience and skill, so Benway, as a bench player, didn’t get much playing time.

When she did, she rose to the moment with the same bright spirit and seize-the-day attitude, and was hailed with the Most Improved award at season’s end.

Whether working with the school’s cheerleaders, or excelling in her non-sports life, where she’s a singer and guitarist, audio visual tech and classroom brainiac, Benway approaches everything with an open heart and a welcoming smile.

In a world where people spend a lot of time fighting, she is a beacon of hope and light — a kind, considerate, sweet-natured young woman who lights up the prairie.

Hannah is tougher than you might think at first, fiercely loyal to her family and friends, but warm and open to all.

She is one of the best we have, and I hope as she celebrates her birthday today, she fully realizes how highly others think of her.

Happy cake day, Miss Benway.

May it, and every day, be worthy of your awesomeness.

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Jasmine (left) and Tamika Nastali at work. (John Fisken and Beth Nastali photos)

Jasmine (left) and Tamika Nastali at work. (John Fisken and Beth Nastali photos)

The day, and the world, belongs to the twins.

Coupeville High School sophomore sensations Tamika and Jasmine (Jazzy) Nastali, who celebrate a joint cake day today, are two of the brightest shining stars living in our town.

Superb athletes — Tamika rakes on the softball diamond while Jasmine is a fleet-footed wonder on the track oval — the duo, like older sister Heather, are also really incredible young women in other parts of life as well.

The Nastali twins are smart, kind, caring, friendly, effervescent even.

Very supportive of each other, and of their many family members, Tamika and Jasmine reflect extremely well on parents Beth and Robert.

There is little doubt the titanic twins are going to accomplish big things, both on the athletic stage and off.

The best thing we can all do right now is get in good with them and hope they remember the small people after they’ve hit the big time.

So happy birthday, Nastali sisters.

You make our small town a much better place with your presence, and we, the fans, want to wish you the best on your birthday, and every day.

May you continue to dazzle the world for a very long time to come.

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