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Jae LeVine, seen here making a play Monday, (John Fisken photo)

   Jae LeVine, seen here making a play Monday, has been scrambling to come up with big plays at second base. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf seniors McKayla Bailey (13), Monica Vidoni (14) and Hailey Hammer (15) were honored before the game. (Mike Lodell photo)

   Wolf seniors McKayla Bailey (13), Monica Vidoni (14) and Hailey Hammer (15) were honored before the game. (Mike Lodell photo)

Sometimes the little things mean the most.

Case in point: the fourth inning Tuesday in an otherwise less-than-memorable Coupeville High School softball game.

Trailing 7-0 to visiting Chimacum in a game they would lose 8-0, the Wolves were challenged by coach Deanna Rafferty to get the game back on track with a 1-2-3 inning.

In fact, she went one better, pledging to buy candy for every one of her players if they did just that.

Boom.

Hope Lodell hauled in a shot to center, then Tiffany Briscoe pulled off back-to-back pretty snags on well-hit balls to left and led the excited charge back to the dugout.

Awaiting them, their coach, huge grin on her face, shook her head and let loose.

“I literally hate all of you right now!!”

Then she laughed and so did her team, and, for a moment, the promise of candy made things that much sweeter.

Ultimately, though, defense would spell doom for the Wolves — in two ways — as they dropped to 5-10 overall, 4-4 in Olympic League play.

The loss guarantees Coupeville will carry the league’s #3 seed into the playoffs.

A hot and cold defense — when they were on, they made several standout plays, but then turned around and booted some routine plays — killed the Wolves.

Not helping matters was Chimacum’s defense, which was on point all game.

Coupeville made good contact with the ball most of the game, but garnered only two late-game hits — a single from Katrina McGranahan and a smash-it-and-hustle double from Hailey Hammer — as the Cowboys swallowed up nearly everything hit their way.

“We hit it well, we just hit it right at them all game,” Rafferty said.

Chimacum, which is still battling Klahowya for the league title, scraped together four runs in the first without really doing much more than talk.

A lot.

The chippy, vocal Cowboys only had one hard-hit ball in the inning — a two-run single into center — but capitalized on Coupeville’s inability to hang on to the ball.

After tacking on another run in the second and two more in the third, Chimacum had little more to do than cruise in with the win.

McGranahan finally broke up the no-hitter with two outs in the sixth, but was left stranded.

Hammer then led off the bottom of the seventh with a shot to right center, legging out the double and beating the throw by a step.

But she too never came around, eventually being picked off of third by the Chimacum catcher to end the game.

In between a stream of bobbled balls, the Wolves did have several nice defensive plays.

Jae LeVine upheld the honor of second basemen everywhere, sprinting around to flag down several balls, including a pop-up near the first base line.

Right fielder Monica Vidoni charged a single and threw out a runner trying to go to second, Lauren Rose dropped a lightning bolt on a Cowboy trying to steal a bag and Hammer alertly gunned down another runner at home after fielding a chopper at third.

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Katrina McGranahan smacked a homer run and three doubles Monday. (John Fisken photos)

   Katrina McGranahan crunched a home run and three doubles Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Robin Cedillo smacked a single, threw a runner out from right field and had the game's most enthusiastic miniature fan club.

   Robin Cedillo smacked a single, threw a runner out from right field and had the game’s most enthusiastic miniature fan club.

Katrina McGranahan may never, ever stop playing softball.

The Coupeville High School freshman has been a busy ball player in recent days, playing for her school squad Friday, then putting in five games over the weekend at a select team tourney in Selah, before returning to play for CHS again Monday.

If anything, the constant flow of games seems to have put her in a groove, as she swung an exceptionally hot bat against visiting Bellevue Christian, cracking a two-run home run and three doubles.

And while her offensive explosion wasn’t enough to lift the Wolves to a win — errors killed them in a 13-4 non-conference loss — she went down fighting.

McGranahan may have the bruises to show for it, too, as she was involved in not one, but two, collisions on the base paths.

The first time, her body, the Viking catcher and the incoming ball all arrived at the same time as she beat the throw home with a desperate dive to cap her inside-the-park homer.

The second time she got nailed in the face while trying to slip under a tag at third.

Both times she limped away but kept on charging, Coupeville’s very own fireball-throwing, big-hit-bashing Energizer Bunny.

McGranahan’s round tripper came on a first inning blast over the right fielder’s head that plated Lauren Rose and knotted the game up at 2-2.

That tie held until the fourth, when what was looking like a 1-2-3 inning suddenly veered off of a cliff Wile E. Coyote-style.

After an opening strikeout, Wolf second baseman Jae LeVine, hauling rear across the diamond, came hurtling out of nowhere to snatch a foul ball in the air behind first base for the second out.

But as quickly as the fan’s roars went up, they died, as Bellevue got lucky, then good.

A walk, a wild pitch, an error, two passed balls, another walk, another error and things slid out of control.

Having gotten lucky, the Vikings then got good, bashing a two-run double and an RBI triple to take a close game and blow it open to the tune of 8-2.

Coupeville, in a bit of a mid-game funk at the plate whenever McGranahan wasn’t cranking away, finally got some more runs on the board in the fifth, but it was too little, too late.

The Wolves final run was a beauty, however, as McKayla Bailey blew up the catcher at the plate, knocking the ball loose at the very last second, before slapping one dirt-encrusted hand on the plate.

It was the second big-time play of the day for the senior sensation.

She also made a gorgeous web gem where she sprinted to her right at shortstop and went airborne, Superman-style, to haul in a rapidly-dropping ball like she was snagging a game-winning touchdown.

A dynamite play in the midst of a team-wide string of errors?

Typical on an odd day where the weather fluctuated wildly, the start of the game was delayed by 50 minutes when no umpires showed up — Wolf center fielder Hope Lodell passed part of the time impressing everyone by doing pull-ups on the dugout roof overhang — and CHS coach Deanna Rafferty got run over in the third base coaches box by a Bellevue player chasing a popup.

As the highs and lows of the day raged around her, ever-sunny Coupeville sophomore Robin Cedillo put together one of the best games of her short career while being cheered on by her exuberant niece Charlotte.

Every time Cedillo did something, whether it was smacking a single in the fourth or gunning down a runner at second from her post in right field to end an inning, the little girl her family calls Charlie went bonkers for auntie Robin.

Adorable proof that, win or lose, your little niece cheering for you is always going to make the day better.

And, as soon as the game ended, and congratulatory handshakes were exchanged, a reminder that these are student/athletes, as Tiffany Briscoe, LeVine and, eventually, Bailey, all took off for the nearby high school, where the National Honor Society induction was about to start.

As Briscoe charged past her teammates, intent on going to the ceremony still in uniform, her teammates, noticing the dirt on her softball pants, razzed her.

“Go roll around some more in the dirt first! You’re not dirty enough!”

LeVine was hot on her heels, and then Bailey, who was supposed to deliver a speech at the event, pulled her equipment together and ambled off the diamond.

“No, I haven’t written the speech. Just gonna make it up as I go,” she said, and then smiled the smile of a true Photo Bomb Queen.

“That’s how I do what I do.”

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Hope Lodell clinched a title for her team with a running, over the shoulder catch in deepest center Sunday. (John Fisken photo)

Hope Lodell clinched a title for her team with a running, over the shoulder catch in deepest center Sunday. (John Fisken photo)

Wolves Hope Lodell, Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Sarah Wright celebrate with their Storm teammates.

   Lodell, Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Sarah Wright celebrate with their Storm teammates. (Photo courtesy Kolby Doerge)

You can’t take the Wolves anywhere without them bringing home a trophy or two.

Four of Coupeville’s best young athletes — CHS freshmen Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Hope Lodell and CMS eighth grader Sarah Wright — went to Selah over the weekend with their select softball squad.

While there, they and their teammates on the Northwest Storm captured first place at a Strikeout Breast Cancer tournament.

And they did it in memorable fashion, with Lodell clinching the championship with a running, over the shoulder catch at the fence in center with the bases loaded.

The quartet’s coach on the Storm, Kolby Doerge, broke down the weekend’s performance of each player exclusively for Coupeville Sports.

McGranahan (P):

Katrina is our main pitcher and had a great championship game. Struck out six Selah Vortex batters.

Her veteran knowledge as a base runner out thinks the opponent. She came up with big steals all weekend, including a rally starter in game one this morning.

Rose (3B):

Played great defense today. 

Third base is very difficult vs. this caliber of play. Bunting is a weapon if they sense a weak infielder.

Bunting her direction is a sure out.

Her speed on the base path is difficult to defend. In a key moment she stole home while the catcher was returning the pitch back to the pitcher.

Wright (C):

Another key anchor on defense.

The level of play that one would find at an ASA tournament is second to none in the state. Having a back stop who can control would-be base stealers gives us a huge advantage.

She is our #4 batter, hitting doubles and triples all weekend. One of our RBI leaders.

Lodell (CF):

Hope provides another layer of defense that helps the team.

Her speed and break on the ball allows her to run down potential hits. That speed is tough on opposing catchers and defenders.

Hope had one of the finest catches in the championship game where only the proper break put her in position to make the game ending over the shoulder catch — bringing the entire team running out to celebrate with her!

They are a fun group to coach!

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Sox (Kelly Crownover photo)

The moment before you go ten-run another foe. (Kelly Crownover photo)

The hits came, before and after the game.

Playing a South Skagit Lightning squad in need of experience, the South Central Sox romped to a 15-5 win Saturday, then stayed around and put in some after-game play to give a new pitcher a chance to face live hitters.

In the regular game, Coupeville’s contingent on the South/Central Whidbey little league team made an impact, with Ema Smith blasting a triple.

Smith and Veronica Crownover added singles, with Crownover and Tamaki Nastali walking multiple times.

Nastali (2), Crownover (2) and Smith (1) combined for five steals, as the Sox took advantage of the Lightning, who were missing their normal starting pitcher.

In the extra play, Crownover continued to swing a hot bat, bashing a double.

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Kailey Kellner knocked in five runs Friday, sparking Coupeville to a 17-6 win. (John Fisken photos)

   Kailey Kellner knocked in five runs Friday, sparking Coupeville to a 17-6 win. (John Fisken photos)

McKayla Bailey, seen here pulling off  a web gem earlier this season, smashed a home run.

   McKayla Bailey, seen here pulling off a web gem earlier this season, smashed a home run.

All the bats came alive.

Kick-started by a home run from longball-lovin’ McKayla Bailey, the Coupeville High School softball squad destroyed host Port Townsend Friday, romping to a 17-6 victory.

The win, called after five innings due to the mercy rule, lifted the Wolves to 5-8 overall, 4-3 in Olympic League play.

It also gave Coupeville a three-game sweep of the Redhawks and guaranteed the Wolves are bound for the playoffs.

First though, they still have six more regular season games to get through, including two more league tilts.

Friday, CHS came out on fire, jumping on Port Townsend for six in the first, then scoring in every inning after that.

The hits came from all slots in the lineup, with Kailey Kellner collecting a career-high five RBI to pace the offensive attack.

Hailey Hammer (4), Katrina McGranahan (3), Lauren Rose (2), Tiffany Briscoe (1) and Bailey (1) all chipped in to the RBI assault, as well.

The sweet swinging success continued to Jasmine Melena, who smacked a solid single over third base in her first at-bat of the season and Jae LeVine, who decided to mix things up and hit left-handed for the first time.

The Mighty Mite eventually went down swinging, but made the pitcher work for it.

“I am incredibly proud of her (Jasmine),” said Wolf coach Deanna Rafferty. “Jae may have struck out, but she stood her ground.”

With Bailey and McGranahan poppin’ strikes from the pitcher’s circle, their teammates didn’t need to do much defensively, but when called upon, stepped up.

“Defensively we had a solid game,” Rafferty said. “The entire infield had a perfectly executed rundown situation finishing with an out.”

The Wolves will try to keep their new winning streak alive with back-to-back home games to kick off the new week.

They welcome Bellevue Christian to town Monday for a non-conference game, then face-off with Chimacum Tuesday.

That game is the rubber match for the two league rivals, who have split their first two games.

Both games kick-off at 4 PM.

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