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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   The batter ordered the high, hard cheese and Julian Welling is ready to deliver it piping hot. (John Fisken photos)

Connor McCormick

Airborne and elastic, CHS goalie Connor McCormick covers the entire net.

Mikayla Elfrank

   Hungry for another big hit, Mikayla Elfrank carries a big bat and knows how to use it.

Jacob Martin

 Jacob Martin auditions for the role of the T-1000 in the next “Terminator” film.

HUnter Smith

  Don’t try anything, cause Hunter Smith has his eye on you. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Tamika

   Tamika Nastali is aiming for the fence. Yep, the one way out there in center field. (Fisken photos)

Payton

Doubles ace Payton Aparicio reaches to the heavens as she unleashes a serve.

Uriel

Uriel Liquidano (3) keeps his foe as far away as possible.

Sylvia

   Currently sitting as the fastest 4 x 200 girls relay team in 1A, it’s (l to r) Sylvia Hurlburt, Makana Stone, Lindsey Roberts and Lauren Grove.

Friday was lovely.

Sunny, no rain, maybe just a ripple or two of breeze across the prairie.

So, of course, there was absolutely, positively no spring sports games scheduled for today.

As opposed to Wednesday, when Coupeville High School softball waged war while being lashed by gale force winds for three hours.

Such is life for athletes playing outside on a rock in the water in March.

Since we didn’t have any live action to report on, here are a collection of photos showcasing all five CHS sports teams, just to remind you what they look like when in action.

Why? Why not.

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Jae LeVine (John Fisken photos)

   Jae LeVine can’t keep her eyes open in the wind, but her glove always knows where to be to make the play. (John Fisken photos)

Kyla Briscoe

   Wolf volleyball/basketball ace Kyla Briscoe, the only fan even remotely warm on this day.

Veronica

   Fighting the wind all the way, CHS first baseman Veronica Crownover stretches out to haul in a throw headed towards Oak Harbor.

Ashley and Maddy

 Wolf spikers Ashley Menges (left) and Maddy Hilkey miss being in a heated gym.

Katrina

   If the catcher and ump could open their eyes in the heart of the gale, they’d see Katrina McGranahan crushing the ball.

Kellner

  Wolf mom Jennifer Kellner: “Remember how warm the gym was during basketball season?”

Rose

Lauren Rose’s papa: “YES, sweet lord, YES, I do!!!!!!!!!!!”

Sarah

   Adjusting for winds of 200+ MPH (at least…), catcher Sarah Wright takes a chance on throwing the ball back to the pitcher’s circle.

Bessie

“It’s like freakin’ Acapulco out here!!!!”

It was not pleasant on the prairie Wednesday.

While there was not a drop of rain to be found, the wind roaring down from straightaway center field was even more brutal than normal.

And it never, ever let up as Coupeville and Bellevue Christian played the longest game of the spring.

And yet, very few Wolf faithful departed until the end of a mind-boggling 17-16 come-from-behind, how-did-that-happen CHS win.

To prove it, we have a selection of wind-swept pics from travelin’ photo man John Fisken (who did leave before the final run…) to document the inner steel of Coupeville’s players and fans.

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=11014&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Lauren Rose stamps on home for one of the 33 runs scored Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose stamps on home for one of the 33 runs scored Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

Fighting through harsh wind (but no rain)

   Fighting through harsh wind (but no rain), the Wolves prepare to claim their one true destiny.

If you weren’t there, this is going to seem a bit like a fairy tale.

And, if you were, your brain is probably still a bit frozen and sluggish, so you’d probably believe just about anything right now.

But I swear, it really happened. All of it.

Playing in non-stop, icy cold, gale force winds (which deposited a fair amount of infield dirt into the mouths of fans), the Coupeville High School softball squad somehow found another miracle Wednesday in what is shaping up to be a season chock full of miracles.

Trailing by seven runs heading into the bottom of the sixth against visiting Bellevue Christian, the Wolves pulled off a stunner, rallying to knock off the Vikings 17-16 in eight innings.

The non-conference win, as improbable, unlikely and ultimately satisfying as any in memory on the prairie, lifted the never-say-die sluggers to an impeccable 4-1 on the season.

Now of course, the question lingers: are the Wolves, who have shown a penchant for storming from behind, good or lucky?

I say both.

They are young (not a senior on the roster), they are talented, they seem to have no nerves, they play as a team, picking each other up during rough moments while celebrating joyous moments by holding spontaneous group hugs, and they feed on other school’s mistakes.

Trailing 15-8 entering the sixth, very cold, a bit desperate after frittering away two-run leads twice, Coupeville could have quietly packed things in and headed home for dinner.

Except this team doesn’t begin to think that way.

Waiting until they had two outs (and two runners on base), the Wolves then reeled off five straight RBI hits, plating six runners and pulling back within 15-14.

Heather Nastali started things, slapping an RBI single up the middle, then Lauren Rose, Mikayla Elfrank and Katrina McGranahan went rat-a-tat-tat with their own run-producing base knocks.

Sarah Wright, the freshman catcher who plays like a seasoned vet, her raucous encouragement for her teammates reverberating across the prairie, closed the surge by crunching a two-run single that tore off a hunk of second base as it skittered into the outfield.

Bellevue Christian, suddenly flailing wildly, reloaded the bags, but escaped (seemingly) inducing a ground out to end the inning.

Except, the game had turned, and turned convincingly.

The Vikings looked miserable, they looked frazzled, they looked stunned, they looked like they wanted to be anywhere else but trapped on the frozen tundra the locals were passing off as a prairie.

And the Wolves jumped on them and devoured them whole.

First CHS took BC down 1-2-3 for the first (and only time) on the afternoon in the top of the seventh, with McGranahan reaching deep for a last bit of fire in her pitcher’s arm.

Then Coupeville dodged the biggest bullet yet.

With Jae “Flash” LeVine running for Veronica Crownover, who had started the bottom of the seventh with a gorgeous single into the gap, Bellevue had what should have been the KO punch.

Rose lashed a one-out liner down the first-base line, the Viking fielder snagged it in mid-air as LeVine started to break for second, and we were one second away from an unassisted, Coupeville-crushing double play.

Only, LeVine, the Mighty Mite herself, sacrificed her spine, throwing her body back to the bag in mid-stride and somehow, improbably, staying alive.

Which is all Elfrank needed, as the sophomore sensation made boyfriend Jordan Ford’s voice go up three octaves as he screamed like a madman when she immediately doubled LeVine home to tie the game.

Now, this being a game like no other, played in conditions that made grown men cry (starting with me…), there was no way it could end immediately.

The Viking third-baseman, who had taken a shot to the hand earlier in the game, somehow went deep into the hole two batters later to throw Wright out by a step, preventing attempt #1 at a walk-off hit and sending us to extra innings.

With both teams playing the eighth under tie-breaker rules (teams started with a runner at second), Bellevue eked out a run to re-take the lead.

At which point Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell decided to make a bid for automatic, early induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Fighting through the swirling winds in center field, Lodell snagged a high, arcing shot for the second out of the inning, then unleashed a cannon shot that nearly ripped Wright’s glove off her hand at home.

She held on though, even through a pop that sounded like someone had decided to go duck-hunting on the prairie, and slapped the inning-ending tag on a Viking runner who meekly collapsed in a pile and stayed down.

Roaring like a wild woman, Wright charged into a pile of her teammates as Lodell sprinted in to join the giddy melee.

Now, let’s stop for a moment and remember, Coupeville was still down a run.

Not that it mattered, because Bellevue took the field looking like the walking dead.

When you face the team of destiny and fail to land the knockout punch, you know, deep in your heart, the bell is about to toll for thee.

And, of course, it did, because this is a fairy tale come true.

Coupeville juiced the bags, thanks to a dropped ball at third (divine providence) and some crafty base-running, before Tamika Nastali and LeVine brought home the tying and winning runs with back-to-back bases-loaded walks.

As joy swept the land, as bitterly cold fans staggered around hugging each other (mainly for warmth), as the Wolves danced on the field and the Vikings stared into a dark abyss that even a stop at McDonald’s wouldn’t fix, one thing was certain.

Call it fate.

Call it destiny.

But call it amazing.

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Kailey Kellner

   Kailey Kellner: Killer … with a heart of gold. (John Fisken, Sylvia Hurlburt, Amy King photos)

The first day she stepped into the Coupeville High School gym, she looked hesitant, shy, a little lost.

Having just jumped from England to a cow town in the middle of a prairie on a rock in the Pacific Northwest, Kailey Kellner had her whole world shook up midway through her freshman year.

Now, a little more than two years later, it is hard to think of a Wolf sports world that does not include her.

Kellner, who celebrates her 17th birthday today, has blossomed into a stone-cold killer on the basketball court, a three-ball droppin’ assassin who will fly into the paint in pursuit of rebounds and drop a girl on her butt when needed.

Running along side Makana Stone and Mia Littlejohn, she was a captain, a leader, a role model for a very young Wolf hoops team, which just happened to take the program back to state for the first time in a decade this season.

But it’s not just basketball for Kailey.

She’s become a strong softball player, who can pull off a slick unassisted double play, whack a key hit in crunch time and pick up her teammates with her bench chatter.

As the volleyball manager, she kept things humming smoothly, a word for one player, a hug for another, a playful slap on the back of the head for yet another.

Kellner was welcomed with open arms by her new coaches and teammates (playing for Amy King, who creates a true family atmosphere, was the perfect introduction to her new town and school) and the transformation has been phenomenal.

Her smile lighting up the entire gym, Kailey has become part of the very fabric of Wolf Nation. A very important, very treasured part.

Goofing off for the cameras with her friends or droppin’ daggers on the athletic stage, she has proven to be a truly amazing young woman, and watching her grow, not only in athletic skill, but as a person, has been fun.

She’s far from done, and I’m pretty certain the best is yet to come.

Families come and families go, and every once in awhile, we luck out and win the lottery.

Kailey walked into that gym a complete unknown.

The day she walks out, she will do so as one of the best we have been blessed to witness.

Her skills are becoming legendary.

Kailey’s soaring spirit, the loveliness of her soul, though? That tops whatever she might do with a basketball or a softball bat in her hands.

Happy birthday, Miss Kellner. Thank you for giving us the chance to come along for part of your journey.

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Tsunami (Photo courtesy Mimi Johnson)

   Best uniforms in the biz, and now a win for the Tsunami. (Photos courtesy Mimi Johnson)

The history-making scorecard.

The history-making scorecard.

"We're going to Disneyland!!! Oh wait, we got two more games to play? Fine..."

“We’re going to Disneyland!!! Oh wait, we got two more games to play? Fine…”

They came. They saw. They kicked some fanny.

Whidbey Island’s U12 select softball squad, which brings together players from Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, hit the road Saturday and earned its first win of the season.

Playing in Tacoma, the Tsunami whacked Port Angeles 16-11, erupting for seven runs in the fourth inning to blow things open.

All ten players to see action scored for the Whidbey squad.

The Tsunami, now 1-2 on the season, returns to action with two more games Sunday before heading home.

They are coached by Coupeville’s Mimi Johnson and South Whidbey’s Trevor Jones.

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