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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Melia Welling rapped out three hits Thursday night. (Joey Lippo photo)

   Melia Welling rapped out three hits and reached base five times Thursday night. (Joey Lippo photo)

The bottom of the order was on fire.

The 7-8-9 hitters for the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad collected six of their team’s nine hits Thursday, more than doing their share.

And while the Venom eventually fell 19-14 to visiting Anacortes in a wild (and sometimes weird) game, that’s a huge positive going forward.

Now 1-2 on the young season, Central got its biggest offensive push Thursday from Marenna Rebischke-Smith, Melia Welling and Willow Vick.

Welling rapped out three hits and reached base all five times she stepped to the plate (also scampering to first on a walk and an error), while Rebischke-Smith collected two gorgeous hits.

The first was a two-run single up the middle, while the second was a long, looping liner over the first baseman’s head that cleared its target, then quickly dove and bit grass before an Anacortes outfielder could track it down.

The Coupeville Middle School 8th grader had a strong all-around game, also making two really nice snags on fly balls hit to deep center-field.

Rebischke-Smith tracked down both balls and smothered them in mid-flight to the delight of her fan section.

Vick swung a nice stick herself, with an RBI single during a five-run first inning for the Venom.

Up 5-2 after one, Central Whidbey hit a rough patch in the second, as a string of errors forced Venom hurler Scout Smith to face 16 hitters in the inning.

Putting up 10 runs before Rebischke-Smith ended the onslaught with one of her web gems, Anacortes seemed to have the game on ice.

Even an injury mid-way through the inning, when an Anacortes runner plowed awkwardly into the bag at second and spent several minutes on her back, couldn’t slow down the visitors.

But the Venom fought back, picking up an RBI on a second-inning ground-out from Mollie Bailey before erupting for six in the fourth.

Six walks, three passed balls and a dropped ball at home helped the cause, while speedster Maya Toomey-Stout swung the big stick, bashing a two-run single to knot things up at 12-12.

With darkness approaching (the game was shortened to six innings) and the Venom players tiring (the game went two-and-a-half-hours), Anacortes took advantage, however, using a pair of two-run, inside-the-park home runs to reclaim the lead and make off with the win.

Hannah Davidson tied Welling, also reaching base five times (two singles, three walks), while Scout Smith and Chelsea Prescott eked out three walks apiece.

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Nicole Lester made her varsity softball debut Thursday as the Wolves rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

   Nicole Lester made her varsity softball debut Thursday as the Wolves rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

“It was good to see the girls back to their old selves.”

After hitting a brief rough spot in the schedule, the Coupeville High School softball squad bounced back with a fury Thursday afternoon, pleasing coach Kevin McGranahan.

Taking full advantage of a young Port Townsend program mired in the midst of a 30-game losing streak, the Wolves, as politely as possible, thrashed the RedHawks 24-6.

The win snaps a three-game skid for Coupeville and lifts them to 7-4 overall, 2-2 in 1A Olympic League play.

With Klahowya (1-1, 6-5) falling to Chimacum (3-0, 7-4) Thursday, the Wolves move back up into second place with more than half the league season left to play.

Facing a school which hasn’t won a softball game since April of 2014, Coupeville rained down runs.

The Wolves plated 10 in the first, then another eight in the second, forcing their coach to curtail his team’s running and find ways to keep the game moving as quickly as possible to its foregone conclusion.

He was able to swap players around and have them work at new positions, give daughter Katrina some time off in the pitcher’s circle and offer Nicole Lester her first start.

The freshman responded just the way her coach was hoping, turning on a pitch and smacking a sharp ground-ball on her first at-bat.

As a team, the Wolves were able to walk a fine line — they needed a win to get their mojo back, but didn’t want to unnecessarily embarrass their hosts.

“Port Townsend is a rebuilding team, but it was good to play them and let the girls just have fun and get back to the basics and play ball,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Everyone on the team contributed today and played well.

“The bats were on fire and we went station to station after the first inning trying to keep the scoring to a minimum.”

Katrina McGranahan carried the biggest bat, whacking two triples and a pair of singles while driving in six runners.

The Wolves collected five doubles on the day, with Mikayla Elfrank leading the way with a pair. Sarah Wright, Kailey Kellner and Jae LeVine also got in on the extra-base parade.

Wright and LeVine had three hits apiece, while Lauren Rose collected a pair of singles and Tamika Nastali beat out “a beautiful bunt.”

Veronica Crownover, Robin Cedillo, Tiffany Briscoe and Hannah Benway all collected base knocks, as well.

Katrina McGranahan (one hit and nine strikeouts in three innings) and Wright (two hits and four K’s) made for a formidable duo in the pitcher’s circle.

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You do not run on Jae "Flash" LeVine. Ever. (John Fisken photo)

You do not run on Jae “Flash” LeVine. Ever. (John Fisken photo)

Tiffany Briscoe

   Tiffany Briscoe comes up firing from right field, dropping the hammer on a straying runner.

Heather Nastali

Heather Nastali smoothly scoops up a wandering softball while patrolling left.

Katrina McGranahan

   Heat, heat and more heat is what Katrina McGranahan’s pitching arm has to offer rival sluggers.

Mikayla Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank can already taste the double she’s about to blast. Spoiler alert: it came about two feet away from being a home-run.

team

Wolf third-baseman Lauren Rose (5) calls the team meeting to order.

Their intensity matched the sunshine.

Playing under summer-like conditions (anyone remember a few games back when the diamond was nailed by a winter windstorm?), the Coupeville High School softball squad brought their A-game Tuesday.

That carried over to their photo skills, where, as usual, they made superb targets for wanderin’ camera man John Fisken.

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:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11273&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Coupeville Crush players pick up tips while watching college softball. (Renae Mulholland photos)

   Coupeville Crush players pick up tips while watching college softball. (Renae Mulholland photos)

Too quick for you.

   Too quick for you. Central Whidbey’s softball sluggers have been scoring runs in bunches this season.

The farm system is in great shape.

Central Whidbey Little League’s top softball squads, which are preparing the players who will one day star for Coupeville High School, both put in strong work Tuesday.

The Coupeville Crush, the league’s Majors team, improved to 4-0 with its fourth straight rout, thrashing Oak Harbor Purple 21-4.

Meanwhile, the Venom fell behind early in Anacortes, then stormed almost all the way back before being nipped 11-9 in Juniors play.

The Crush, who have been ten-running (and then some) foes this year, got stellar work in the pitcher’s circle from Stella Johnson and Izzy Wells.

Johnson, making her pitching debut for mom/coach Mimi, struck out three, while Wells whiffed six in relief.

Coupeville’s bats put the game away quickly, with five in the first.

After scraping out a single run in the second, the Crush went ballistic in the third inning, raining down death and destruction on Oak Harbor en route to slapping 15 runs on the scoreboard.

“Third inning was crazy!! So proud of these girls!!,” said a jubilant Mimi Johnson afterwards.

The Venom (1-1), playing on the road for the first time, fell behind early, giving up seven runs in the bottom of the first.

After that, however, they settled down and won the scoring battle over the final six innings of play, while hurlers Scout Smith and Chelsea Prescott kept Anacortes largely in check.

Prescott thumped a two-run home run while Maya Toomey-Stout whacked a sweet double to lead the offensive attack.

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Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

It’s a learning process.

Fielding a team without a single senior, with almost all of its key players freshmen or sophomores, the Coupeville High School softball squad is still very much a work in progress.

The early days of the season were a heady time, as the rally caps came out often en route to a 6-1 start.

Now, after taking a 7-1 loss at home to Klahowya Tuesday, the team’s third straight defeat, the Wolves are experiencing the bumps in the road.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 6-4 overall, 1-2 in league play and the Wolves slid into third-place in the 1A Olympic League standings.

Defending champ Chimacum (2-0, 6-4) sits on top, with Klahowya (1-0, 6-4) and Port Townsend (0-2, 0-6) sandwiched around Coupeville.

The Wolves, though, will have a strong opportunity to get back to their winnings ways, as they travel to Port Townsend Thursday, where they will try and add to the RedHawks two-year, 29-game losing streak.

If nothing else, the hits should come easier than they did Tuesday.

Klahowya hurler Amber Bumbalough, who was named the league MVP as a freshman, is continuing to roll in her second season of high school ball, and she was scorching as usual.

Coupeville, a fairly strong-hitting team, couldn’t get a base knock off of her until the fifth inning, when Tiffany Briscoe whacked a single to left.

Coming on the heels of a walk to Mikayla Elfrank, that gave the Wolves two on with nobody out, and a familiar pattern seemed to be emerging.

Fall behind early — in this case 4-0, largely on the basis of a three-run triple — then rally right back into the game.

Only, on this day, an alert Klahowya coach sprang from the dugout and got the hit negated on a technicality.

When Briscoe had entered the game, replacing Tamika Nastali in the second inning, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had forgotten to declare the change to the ump.

So, instead of a single, Coupeville was given an out.

“That’s on me, not Tiffany,” McGranahan said. “She did a great job up there, I just made a mistake. My mistake all the way.”

Coupeville finally got an official hit (or two) off Bumbalough in the sixth, when Lauren Rose lashed a lead-off liner to center field, followed by a gorgeous bunt single off of the bat of Hope Lodell.

“The Surgeon” dropped the ball neatly in front of and to the side of the Klahowya third-baseman, then burned down the base path to beat the throw by half a step.

The Wolves netted their lone run in the inning, with Rose scampering home on a fielder’s choice ground-out by Sarah Wright, but the rally died too quickly for the local fan’s liking.

Klahowya put the game away for good in the seventh, with an RBI triple, followed by a two-run dinger that cleared the fence.

With the game slipping away, Elfrank refused to go down easy.

Capping a solid all-around game, the sophomore sensation crushed a lead-off double in the seventh, pounding the ball about a foot short of a home-run.

Her big blow, combined with several nifty web gems at short, caught her coach’s eye.

Mikayla played strongly,” McGranahan said. “She was a rock for us; always nice to see.”

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