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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Jae LeVine (John Fisken photos)

   Jae LeVine climbs the staircase to heaven to snare a wayward softball. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   Wolf catcher Cole Payne contemplates backhanding the Chimacum runner for getting home plate all dirty.

Jazmine Franklin

Jazmine Franklin works all the angles on the tennis court.

Katrina

Katrina McGranahan comes in hot, easily beating the throw to second.

guys

   CHS tennis coach Ken Stange (right) alerts the authorities to the presence of the paparazzi.

Joey Lippo

   Using just the power of his mind, Joey Lippo freezes the baseball in midair. The force is strong with this one.

Matt Hilborn

Matt Hilborn pulls a 2-for-1 special, getting a good flex in while firing to first.

Hope Lodell

Hope Lodell, AKA “The Surgeon,” prepares to carve up the next pitch.

That moment right before McKenzie "Killer Kenny" Bailey drills you with the ball.

  That moment right before McKenzie “Killer Kenny” Bailey drills you with the ball.

John Fisken’s camera is currently packed in ice, cooling down.

The wanderin’ photo man hit up Coupeville Monday and went a little wild, snapping pics at four different locations.

Giving his trusty camera no time for a breather, Fisken shot middle school track (scroll down the blog an article or two to find those pics), as well as high school baseball, softball and tennis.

The latter three are represented here, with a smorgasbord of his work.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Softballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11349&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Baseballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11348&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Tennishttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11347&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Mikayla Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank was one of three Wolves, along with Tiffany Briscoe and Robin Cedillo, to pull off web gems Monday in a rough loss. (John Fisken photo)

Some days you need to embrace the small moments.

In terms of the large picture, Monday was the roughest afternoon the Coupeville High School softball squad has had this season.

Absorbing a 19-4 beating at the hands of visiting Chimacum, the Wolves slid to their fifth loss in their last six games and dropped into third place in the 1A Olympic League.

Now 2-3 in league play, 7-6 overall, Coupeville trails Chimacum (4-0, 8-4) and Klahowya (2-1, 7-5).

The Wolves remain in prime position to earn the league’s third and final playoff berth, however, with Port Townsend (0-4, 0-9) firmly mired in the cellar.

Win on Wednesday, when CHS travels to Klahowya, and they’re right back in a tie for second-place.

Chimacum, the defending league champs, teed off on the Wolves, launching laser shots in all directions, using a nine-run explosion in the top of the third to firmly put the game away.

Up until then, it was a nail-biter, thanks to some of those small moments.

In the first inning, both of Coupeville’s corner outfielders came up huge with web gems, helping Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan toss a flawless inning.

On the first batter of the game, left fielder Tiffany Briscoe made a snag over her head while backpedaling, robbing a Cowboy slugger of a blast which seemed to have extra-base hit written all over it.

Not to be outdone, right fielder Robin Cedillo then went her one better, ending the inning by sprinting to her left and snaring a long smash down the line.

Coupeville made it three dynamite plays in four hitters when shortstop Mikayla Elfrank flat-out robbed Chimacum to start the second inning.

The Cowboys cleanup hitter smashed a sharply-hit shot into the gap between short and third, but Elfrank’s glove was too quick, as the slick-fielding sophomore speared the ball an inch above the ground, smothering it for an out.

While Chimacum then started putting the ball where the Wolves weren’t, McGranahan limited the assault to a mere two runs.

Kailey Kellner led off the bottom of the second with a high, arcing double to center and eventually came around to score on a sac fly by Briscoe, setting up what seemed like it would be a back-and-forth affair.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Cowboys rattled off seven hits in the third, all hit with force and flair.

If nothing else, Coupeville can hang its hat on the fact it didn’t lose the game, Chimacum very clearly stepped up and won it.

An RBI ground-out by Wolf catcher Sarah Wright got one run back, and then the freshman moved out from behind the plate to pitch the game’s final two innings.

Coupeville loaded the bags in the fourth, but stranded all three runners, before netting two final runs in the fifth on a sweet two-run single by freshman Veronica Crownover.

Kellner paced the Wolves with two hits, while Crownover and Lauren Rose each delivered one.

While the loss stings, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan was pleased to see his players hold their heads high and keep fighting until the final out.

“They didn’t fall apart out there, which is nice to see,” he said. “That’s what we ask of them, to play 110% in every game, regardless of the score, and they did today.”

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Monica Vidoni

   Wolf grad Monica Vidoni (5) smashed her third college softball home run Sunday. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

She can’t be contained.

Coupeville High School grad Monica Vidoni mashed her third college softball home run Sunday, a solo pinch-hit blast that helped carry Rainy River Community College to a 7-1 win.

The Voyageurs, who swept their twin-bill with Mesabi Range, winning the nightcap 10-6 (Vidoni singled), have won four straight and 10 of their last 12.

RRCC sits at 22-11 with one doubleheader left on its regular season schedule.

Vidoni, a freshman, has seen action in 27 games for the Minnesota-based school this spring, piling up 15 hits, 13 runs, five extra-base knocks (two doubles to go with the three dingers) and nine RBI.

Two of her former teammates are deep into their college seasons, as well.

Hailey Hammer, a freshman at Everett Community College, has played in 17 games for an 11-13 squad.

She has 10 hits, seven runs, five RBI, three walks and a game-winning home run.

Madeline Roberts, a sophomore at Shoreline Community College, has been on the field in 15 games for the Dolphins, who are 10-8.

The slap-hittin’ outfielder has four hits, four runs, four steals, three walks, two RBI and a double on her resume this season.

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

   They may call Lauren Rose “Mouse,” but her cannon of an arm roars like a lion when making the throw from third to first. (John Fisken photos)

Cole Payne

   One cock of the arm from Wolf catcher Cole Payne, and even the most daring of would-be base stealers feel their stomachs drop through their shoes.

Tamika Nastali

Eagle-eyed Tamika Nastali never flinches as she calmly watches ball four arrive.

Joey Lippo

   Joey Lippo’s mom, Connie, will have a mixed reaction to this pic. On the one hand, her son scored. On the other hand, someone has to wash those pants…

Julian Welling

   Julian Welling remains the king of delivering epic facial expressions while firing in the high, hard cheese.

Veronica Crownover

Raise your hand if you just scored, Veronica Crownover.

"Yeah, I don't think so..." Clay Reilly can't be fooled by your weak change-up.

“Yeah, I don’t think so…” Clay Reilly can’t be fooled by your weak change-up.

Jae LeVine

Jae “Flash” LeVine, quicker than a sand storm.

If it’s Saturday, swing away.

Taking advantage of a day off from school, both the Coupeville High School softball and baseball squads hosted non-conference games this weekend.

Bouncing back and forth across the road (while dodging traffic), travelin’ photo clicker John Fisken captured a bit of both games for your viewing pleasure.

The photos above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Softballhttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11316&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Baseball http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11317&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

Like sand between the fingers, this one slipped away.

After bashing the ball with ease most of the afternoon Saturday, the Coupeville High School softball squad suddenly went cold down the stretch, letting visiting Meridian wiggle away with a 10-8 win.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 7-5 heading into the heart of their league schedule.

Coupeville, which is 2-2 and in second place in the 1A Olympic League, plays all three of its conference rivals next week.

The Wolves host Chimacum (3-0) Monday, travel to Klahowya (1-1) Wednesday, then are back on Whidbey to face Port Townsend (0-3) Friday.

Saturday’s tune-up started nicely, with Coupeville scoring in all of the first five innings, but then the bats went cold, as Meridian retired seven of the final eight Wolves.

Tied 8-8 after five, the visiting Trojans picked up a run in the top of the sixth on a hard-hit RBI triple to right, then tacked on an insurance run in the seventh by poking an RBI single over the first-baseman’s head.

After a series of shuffles, Meridian was on its third pitcher at the close of the game, but the strategy worked, as Coupeville’s final two hitters went down on strikes while representing the potential tying run.

Things were much brighter at the start, as the Wolves used timely hits, aggressive base-running and some Trojan miscues to jump out to a 2-0 lead.

Lauren Rose socked a lead-off single to center in the first, stole second and came around to score on a passed ball, then Kailey Kellner brought out the big stick in the second inning.

Crunching a double to left, she alertly picked up another bag when the throw back in sailed over the infielder’s heads. A moment later, she too skipped home on a passed ball as the Meridian catcher struggled in the early going.

From there the game took on a seesaw feel, as the lead shifted back and forth.

Four hits plated three runs for Meridian in the third — and gave it a brief taste of the lead — but Coupeville responded immediately.

A single into the gap between short and third from Katrina McGranahan and a Meridian error on a hard chopper by Sarah Wright set the scene in the bottom of the third, then Veronica Crownover got medieval on the ball.

Unloading a shot to right field that ricocheted off a glove, she ended up at second with a stand-up two-run double that restored Coupeville’s lead to 4-3.

The rally ended too quickly, however, a recurring theme on this day.

While the Wolves scored in each of the first five innings, they also stranded base-runners in all of those innings, and spent much of the day one good swing away from really busting things wide open.

Coupeville stretched the lead to 5-3 in the fourth, with Hope Lodell ripping an RBI single under a mitt.

Lauren Rose, who crossed home with the score, had reached base after an unusual at-bat.

Thinking she had struck out, she grabbed her bat and started back to the bench, only to have coach Kevin McGranahan gently remind her she only had two strikes.

Taking advantage of the new opportunity, “Mouse” unloaded from the very bottom of her toes, smacking a shot to the deepest part of the park with almost enough force to untie her shoelaces.

As the ball hit the ground a millimeter away from the center-field fence with a bang loud enough to wake up any slumbering ducks on the prairie, the mightiest mite of them all tore into third with a stand-up triple.

Waiting for Rose was her coach, who nodded and grinned as his third-baseman looked up at him, blushing a bit, maybe because of the exertion and maybe because of forgetting the pitch count.

The lead wouldn’t hold, though, as a string of Wolf errors swung the pendulum back to Meridian, which used a five-run fifth to surge back in front 8-5.

Unfazed, Coupeville responded with three runs of its own to knot things back up, and there was a genuine sense at that point that you were watching two boxers trade blows, with the KO coming from whomever hit last.

The Wolves rally started with another double from Crownover, followed by four walks and a dropped ball on a play at home.

But Meridian, using three pitchers in the inning, finally found one who worked, escaping from a bases-loaded jam when Wright grounded out on a sharply hit ball.

Little did the Wolves know that, in that moment, the offense was effectively turning off.

Coupeville collected nine hits in the loss, with Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Crownover each notching a pair. Lodell, Kellner and Jae LeVine each had one.

Robin Cedillo had an especially nice catch in right on a long, arcing fly and LeVine was a beast at second, knocking down everything that came her way, to provide stability to a team defense that wildly fluctuated on this afternoon.

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