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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Tiffany Briscoe whacked a triple Monday, one of five extra-base hits in a 19-14 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Tiffany Briscoe whacked a triple Monday, one of five extra-base hits in a 19-14 win. (John Fisken photo)

Have bat. Will bash.

If the Coupeville High School softball players carried business cards, that’s likely what they would say.

All season long, a very young Wolf squad has shown no shyness when it comes to runnin’ ‘n gunnin’ and piling up tons o’ runs.

Monday’s regular season finale was no different.

Blowing the game open with a decisive eight-run burst in the top of the fifth, the Wolves escaped La Conner with a huge 19-14 victory, setting the stage for postseason play.

Now 9-10 on the season, Coupeville, the #3 team from the 1A Olympic League, heads to Sprinker Fields in Spanaway Friday for the West Central District 3 tourney.

The Wolves face Nisqually league #2 Bellevue Christian (10-6) at 6 PM in a loser-out game.

Knock off the Vikings and they stay to battle Olympic League champ Chimacum at 8 PM in the start of the double-elimination portion of the postseason.

Win the opener, which will be the third time Coupeville and BC have played this season (the Wolves won 17-16 in Coupeville and lost 8-1 on the road), and they are guaranteed to return to Spanaway Saturday, regardless of the outcome of game #2.

To take a look at the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1923&sport=15

Looking for a boost headed into the playoffs, the Wolves lit their bats on fire Monday, smacking away for 22 hits.

Kailey Kellner launched a three-run home run, Lauren Rose walloped a solo shot and Katrina McGranahan (triple), Tiffany Briscoe (triple) and Sarah Wright (double) all joined in on the extra-base hit parade.

“Pretty much the whole lineup was hitting today,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan.

For a game that saw 33 runs be plated, it started off deceptively slow, with both teams failing to score a run in the first inning.

Then, the floodgates opened.

The Wolves put together six hits and took advantage of a key La Conner error to open the scoring with five in the top of the second, but then gave the lead right back.

Four in the second and another four in the third staked the Braves to an 8-5 lead and they were still clinging to a 10-7 advantage entering the fifth.

That was when Coupeville decided to get serious, with eight of its nine hitters scoring in the inning.

The Wolves eventually stretched the lead out to 19-12, then coasted home for the non-conference win.

“We made it tougher than it should have been with some errors, but the girls just wouldn’t go away and eventually put the game away with some big bats,” Kevin McGranahan said.

By the time the game was done, all nine CHS starters had scored, with Mikayla Elfrank and Wright stamping on home three times apiece to pace the team.

Rose, Kellner, Jae LeVine, Briscoe, Veronica Crownover and Hope Lodell each scored twice, with Katrina McGranahan the lone Wolf to only score a single time.

The sophomore sensation still saw plenty of action, however, teaming with Wright for a tag-team approach in the pitcher’s circle.

The duo teamed for eight strikeouts on the afternoon.

Back in stride, and with the most wins a Wolf softball squad has had in one season in a very long time, a team with no seniors and just a handful of juniors, will head into the playoffs loose and confident.

“This was a good game to end the season on,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Hopefully we can ride it into districts.”

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Madeline Roberts (left) and Hailey Hammer, reunited on the college softball diamond. (John Fisken photo)

   Madeline Roberts (left) and Hailey Hammer, reunited on the college softball diamond. (John Fisken photo)

The end of the road comes for all athletes.

For former Coupeville High School softball stars Madeline Roberts and Hailey Hammer, this past weekend marked the end of different stages of their college careers.

Roberts, who was on crutches at the end after suffering an injury, marked the end of her two-year run as a Dolphin with Sophomore Night festivities at Shoreline Community College.

Meanwhile, Hammer, a freshman, saw the regular season roll to a close at Everett Community College.

Shoreline is 16-16 overall, 10-10 in league play, while Everett is 16-20, 9-11.

The two teams advance to play in the postseason, though Roberts will likely be out due to a possible ACL injury.

Both Wolf grads put in strong work during their respective seasons, as the duo comprised 50% of Coupeville’s college diamond dandies.

Ben Etzell, a sophomore at Saint John’s University and Monica Vidoni, a freshman at Rainy River Community College, both played in Minnesota this season.

Vidoni’s season is done, while Etzell and the Johnnies baseball squad are off to the NCAA D-3 playoffs later this week.

Hammer is hitting .283 with 17 hits, including a home run and a pair of doubles.

She’s racked up seven RBI, scored nine runs, walked six times and seen action in 24 games.

Roberts has appeared in 21 games, compiling nine hits (including a double), five walks, four steals and three RBI.

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Maya Toomey-Stout (John Fisken photos)

   Maya Toomey-Stout laughs at the idea you would try and take an extra base on her. Laughs. (John Fisken photos)

Chelsea Prescott

   Two hands, every time. Chelsea Prescott, looking ready to star in her own softball instructional video.

Emma Mathusek

Emma Mathusek looks down the street, sees Prairie Center, and aims for it.

"I taught her that!" Ema Smith, unofficial Venom hitting/fielding/pitching/team chanting/sunflower-seed-spittin' coach.

   “I taught her that!” Ema Smith, unofficial Venom hitting/fielding/pitching/team chanting/sunflower-seed-spittin’ coach.

bench

The many moods of the bench, mid-game.

Gazelle

   Toomey-Stout, AKA “The Gazelle,” owner of the fastest feet on The Rock, comes flying home.

Scout Smith

Scout Smith snaps off the big nasty.

team

So serious…

Their skills are as explosive as their uniforms.

Clad in the bright green garb of the Venom, a fast-rising pack of softball sluggers is busy terrorizing rival teams on the diamond this spring.

Rolling to a 6-3 record, Central Whidbey Little League’s Juniors squad has drilled foes to a tasty 138-67 tune so far.

And, when they’re not scoring runs in huge heaps, they’re catching the attention of the paparazzi, as shown by the snappy pics above.

They come to us courtesy of the Diet Coke-fueled John Fisken, who made time in his busy schedule to wander out to the prairie Thursday night.

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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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