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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Prince (Renae Mulholland photo)

   Jill Prince knocked in a pair with a blast to deep right field Thursday, as the Coupeville Crush rolled to its 10th straight win. (Renae Mulholland photo)

(Katy Wells photo)

Undefeated and lovin’ life. (Katy Wells photo)

Rollin’ right along.

Ten-running everyone they encounter, the Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad has soared to a 10-0 record this season.

Mixing superb pitching with stellar hitting and inspired defense, the Coupeville Crush have more than lived up to their name.

Their latest victim was Oak Harbor Gold, which fell 14-4 Thursday night.

Crush hurlers Kaela Meffert and Izzy Wells combined to shut down the North Enders at the plate, combining for eight strikeouts while getting a little help from their defense.

Audrianna Shaw patrolled third base with a vengeance, gunning down runners, while both pitchers snagged line drives hit right back at them.

Meffert also teamed with catcher Stella Johnson on a bang-bang play at the plate after leaving the pitcher’s circle to play short.

After running down a fly, Meffert wheeled and fired the ball on a bead to nail a runner headed home, pulling off a sweet double play.

Coupeville got all the offense it would need in the first, plating five.

Sofie Martin kicked things off with a gorgeous single, Meffert was drilled by a pitch, then Coral Caveness laid down a picture-perfect bunt.

After a handful of walks kept the runners moving base-to-base, Wells crunched a single to break things open.

The runs kept coming after that, with four in the second (though Abby Mulholland was denied on a steal of home when plate umpire Jim Wheat stood tall and withstood the screams of agony from Crush fans), one in the third and the final four crossing in the fifth.

Jill Prince crushed “an amazing shot to right” to knock in a pair, then came around to steal home herself, while Meffert, Kenna Somes and Bam Ries all collected base knocks.

The final run, which invoked the 10-run mercy rule, came via Johnson, who took one for the team, getting plunked with the bags juiced.

While the Crush was swinging hot, Coupeville coach Mimi Johnson sent a shout-out to Oak Harbor’s pitcher.

“I will say, Macy Oliver has really been working hard on her pitching! She is developing a wicked curve ball!,” she said. “All in all, it was another fun game!”

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Heather Nastali and the Wolves have one game left before starting the playoffs. (John Fisken photo)

   Heather Nastali and the Wolves have one game left before starting the playoffs. (John Fisken photo)

Everything was different this time around.

Different weather conditions. Different field conditions. And, unfortunately, a different outcome on the scoreboard.

Facing off with non-conference foe Bellevue Christian for a second time Thursday, the Coupeville High School softball squad “came out a bit flat and never really recovered,” falling 8-1.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 8-10 and gave them a season split with the Vikings, who they will see again in a week.

As the #3 team out of the Olympic League, Coupeville opens the playoffs May 20 at Sprinker Fields in Spanaway in a loser-out game against the #2 squad from the Nisqually League.

And guess what? That’s BC, which sits at 10-6.

When they play that rubber game, the Wolves will be looking to recreate their success from the first time around, when they triumphed 17-16 in a wild, wind-torn game on their home field.

Thursday, it was considerably hotter, less windy and the two teams played on turf and not grass.

Bellevue jumped out to an early lead, scoring four in the first and two more in the second.

Coupeville finally scraped together a run in the fourth, plating Katrina McGranahan, but the rally fizzled too quickly.

Sarah Wright was nailed at third trying to advance on an error, and back-to-back strikeouts (two of 12 on the day for the Wolves) slammed the brakes on any momentum.

McGranahan, who has been limited of late in the pitcher’s circle as she fought back from an injury, went the distance, whiffing nine.

She also reached base three times, collecting half of Coupeville’s four hits.

Veronica Crownover and Lauren Rose added singles, with Rose punctuating her birthday by pulling off an unassisted double play at third.

The smooth-fielding sophomore snagged a liner, then pounced on a runner straying off the bag in the day’s best pro-Wolf moment.

Before it heads to the postseason, Coupeville has one more non-league game, traveling to La Conner Monday. First pitch is set for 4 PM.

“Would really like to rally the fans to come out and root us on in our last regular season game,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan.

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Chelsea Prescott waits for a throw at second. (John Fisken photos)

Chelsea Prescott waits for a throw at second. (John Fisken photos)

When she wasn't working behind the plate, Mollie Bailey was thumping the ball Thursday, collecting seven RBI in a 23-12 win.

   When she wasn’t working behind the plate, Mollie Bailey was thumping the ball Thursday, collecting seven RBI in a 23-12 win.

Mollie Bailey must really like pizza.

With the promise of free slices if they could upend Anacortes for the first time in four tries this season, Bailey and her Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball teammates came out swinging hot Thursday night.

By the time the CMS 7th grader was done, she had racked up seven RBI, all on legitimate laser shots, and the Venom had run away with a 23-12 victory.

Now 6-3 overall, Central Whidbey, which has outscored its foes 138-67 this season, had come close all three times against league leader Anacortes, but hadn’t been able to get over the top.

That changed Thursday, as the Venom roared out to a huge lead, gave it almost all back, then went run-crazy a second time.

Down 3-0 heading into the bottom of the first, Central Whidbey launched a hit parade.

By the time they were done, the Venom had used eight hits, including a pair of base knocks each from Bailey and Chelsea Prescott and an explosive triple off the bat of Hannah Davidson, to throw down 13 runs in their first at-bats.

Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Mathusek and Scout Smith also collected hits as Central went eight batters deep in the order before recording its first out.

Not content to just hold on to its 13-3 lead and coast to a win, the Venom decided to mix things up by letting Anacortes crawl back into the game.

Three runs surrendered in the second and another six in the third sliced the lead all the way down to 13-12.

Then, as quickly as the offense had turned off during a scoreless second, it turned back on for the Venom.

In fits and spurts.

Prescott thumped a lead-off double in the third, Davidson got drilled in the thigh, then both came around to score to stretch the lead back to three runs.

After that, it was all Venom, as Prescott, who had come on in relief, set Anacortes down in order in both the fourth and fifth.

In the fourth, she got a helping hand from Smith, who gunned down a runner who came too far around the bag on a single, then, in the fifth, it was Prescott’s turn for the web gem of the night.

With two outs, the batter ripped the cover off the ball, sending a line shot right back through the pitcher’s circle.

Coming off of the bat, it had the look and sound of extra bases, except it died a swift death, ripped out of the air by Prescott, who speared the liner, a look of surprise on her face that yes, she was just that good.

“I thought it was going to take my glove off!,” she exclaimed as her teammates mobbed her en route to the bench, a huge smile now having replaced the shocked look.

With their pitching and defense clicking, the Venom pushed across three more in the fourth, then ended the game with five more in the fifth, invoking the ten-run mercy rule.

The final assault on Anacortes’ pitcher started with Melia Welling drawing a walk and Cynthia Rachal reaching on an error.

Toomey-Stout spun a single into the air that hit a wind pocket (on a windless night) and dove to the ground, mocking the shortstop’s attempt to corral it.

After that came a two-run single from Smith, a walk to Prescott, a single from Davidson and then the perfect finale.

Striding to the plate, eyes impassive behind tinted sunglasses, long hair braids slapping her back, Bailey dug in and waited for her pitch.

With runners at the corners and two out, she needed to bring home just Prescott from third to end the game, but went one better.

Absolutely crushing the ball, in the same style older sister McKayla used to do for CHS on this same field, the heir to the Bailey softball throne launched a rocket to left center.

In a different game, or at a different time, it might have been a home run, staying low as it flew through the air and then kicking wickedly as it landed in the deepest, darkest part of the outfield.

But here, with both Prescott and Davidson dancing across the plate to end the game, Bailey calmly loped into second and then stood atop the bag, the queen of the night as her team went bonkers around her.

Bring on the pizza.

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Emma Mathusek lashed four hits Tuesday to spark her little league softball squad. (John Fisken photo)

   Emma Mathusek lashed four hits Tuesday to spark her little league softball squad. (John Fisken photo)

The mood on the bench stayed upbeat, as usual. (Beth Stout photo)

The mood on the bench stayed upbeat, as usual. (Beth Stout photo)

Closer and closer.

The only stumbling block to the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad this season has been Anacortes.

The Venom are 5-3 and have outscored their foes 115-54 so far, but have yet to get past their big-city rivals.

But they’ve cut their deficit from five to two to one, with Tuesday’s 10-9 loss on the road the closest Central has come yet.

They’ll get three more chances this season, with the first coming Thursday (6 PM) on Whidbey in a game played at Coupeville High School’s field.

Battle #3 was a donnybrook, with Venom hurler Chelsea Prescott gunning down eight and not walking a single hitter.

Three unearned runs in the fifth, coming off of “a few mental errors,” tipped the balance in the favor of Anacortes.

Still, Venom assistant coach Connie Lippo was happy with much of what she saw while running the team with head coach Charlotte Young out of town.

“I am very proud of the girls,” Lippo said. “They are going up looking for a hit.

“Running the bases aggressive continues to be a strength and I am seeing them stealing with more confidence.”

Emma Mathusek rapped out four hits to pace the Venom attack, catcher Mollie Bailey “continues to be the rock behind the plate, selling Prescott’s pitches” and two Central players hooked up for the defensive gem of the night.

An Anacortes player blasted a shot to the wall in center, but Marenna Rebischke-Smith came up with the ball smartly and fired it to Maya Toomey-Stout, who promptly wheeled and lasered it to Bailey at the plate to deny a home run.

Maya continues to play fiercely,” Lippo said. “It was epic!”

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Monica Vidoni

Monica Vidoni gives a teammate a lift up. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

Madeline Roberts hangs out with mom Lisa Edlin. (John Fisken photo)

Madeline Roberts hangs out with mom Lisa Edlin. (John Fisken photo)

One season ends, while three others roll on.

Of the four Coupeville High School grads currently playing college softball or baseball, Monica Vidoni was the first to kick her season off, and now she’s the first to reach the finish line.

Vidoni and her Rainy River Community College (Minnesota) teammates wrapped a 28-14 season by playing in the NJCAA Region 13B tourney this past weekend.

The Voyaguers won two games, with their freshman outfielder chipping in with a pair of hits, an RBI and a spectacular, juggling catch.

Vidoni snagged a ball over her head, only to have the ball pop out of her glove. Diving down, she successfully re-snared it.

“It was a scary catch,” Vidoni said with a laugh.

She finished the season with a .310 batting average, 20 hits (including three home runs and two doubles), 12 RBI, 16 runs and seven walks.

The other three Wolf alumni playing college ball — Ben Etzell, Madeline Roberts and Hailey Hammer — started their seasons later than Vidoni and still have games left to play.

Etzell, a sophomore at Saint John’s University in Minnesota, starts the postseason this Thursday.

The Johnnies (25-12) open the MIAC tourney against Hamline University in Cold Spring, Minnesota.

Etzell is 2-1 with 33 strikeouts in 10 games on the mound for Saint John’s, while he has six hits, seven runs, two doubles, four walks and four RBI at the plate.

Hammer, a frosh at Everett Community College (15-17) has four regular season games left in her first campaign.

She has amassed 13 hits (including a dinger), six RBI, eight runs and five walks while fighting through injury trouble.

Roberts, who is closing in on the end of a two-year run at Shoreline Community College, has nine hits, five walks, four stolen bases, four runs and three RBI for a 12-14 squad.

The Dolphins have six games left in their season.

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