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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Lauren Rose swings away. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose swings away. (John Fisken photo)

Munchkin is swinging the bat like a monster.

The Coupeville High School softball squad continues to get lively hitting from freshman catcher Lauren Rose, but even that wasn’t enough to save the Wolves Monday.

Hampered by the loss of hard-hitting slugger Hailey Hammer (out until Friday after being hit in the face by a ball in her team’s previous game), CHS wasn’t able to sustain any offense, falling 6-0 at Bellevue Christian.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 1-3 on the season.

Without Hammer’s formidable pop in the middle of the lineup, a young Coupeville team is working to find a groove at the plate.

“We are still struggling with our batting but are slowly improving,” said Wolf coach Deanna Rafferty.

Rose and fellow frosh Katrina McGranahan both had hard hit singles to lead the limited offensive show.

In the field, the Wolves held up well, with Monica Vidoni standing in for Hammer at third.

Monica held her own,” Rafferty said. “Our defense is improving each game and hopefully our offense can catch up.”

The defensive star for the day was second baseman Jae Levine, who displayed a nimble glove.

She snared a pair of rocket line drives hit right at her, before turning an unassisted double play when she snagged a ball in mid-air and then chased down a runner who had strayed off the bag.

The Wolves return to action Wednesday when they host Lynden Christian. First pitch is 4 PM.

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Lauren Rose was electric Friday, knocking in four runs to spark the Wolves to their first win of the season. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose was electric Friday, knocking in four runs to spark the Wolves to their first win of the season. (John Fisken photo)

The victory was the first as a high school coach for Deanna Rafferty (right), seen here with Robin Cedillo. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   The victory was the first as a high school coach for Deanna Rafferty (right), seen here with Robin Cedillo. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Someone flipped a switch.

A Coupeville High School softball squad that had scored just one run in its first two losses exploded with sustained fury Friday, bashing host Port Townsend to a merry 19-11 tune.

The victory, the first for new coach Deanna Rafferty, puts the Wolves atop the Olympic League standings at a pristine 1-0.

CHS is 1-2 overall and will have five non-conference games before its next league game.

Coupeville came out on fire, took a hit on defense for a bit, then really brought out the big guns against the Redhawks.

The Wolves built a 6-0 lead headed to the bottom of the third, fell behind 9-7 after five, then closed with consecutive six-run innings.

Swinging the bat with conviction, nearly everyone in the lineup was a beast at the plate.

Freshman Lauren Rose led the way, reaching base five times and knocking in four runs, while McKayla Bailey and Hope Lodell chipped in with three RBIs apiece.

Bailey hit a shot to the farthest reaches of the outfield, and might have had an inside the park home run if the ball hadn’t found a hole in the fence. Instead, she accepted a ground rule double.

“We had an overall great offensive game,” Rafferty said.

Katrina McGranahan got the start on the mound and contributed an “award-winning diving catch” before being relieved by the flame-throwing Bailey in the fifth.

The senior hurler promptly struck out a pair of Port Townsend hitters in the inning and got the win when the Wolves rebounded at the plate.

About the only negative for Coupeville was the loss of senior third baseman Hailey Hammer, who took a softball to the head and left the game early.

She’s expected to be back when the Wolves travel to Bellevue Christian Monday.

In her place, freshman Heather Nastali made her varsity debut and “had a couple rough plays but held her own.”

Rafferty came away pleased not only with the result, but the timing of the victory.

“We are incredibly happy with our first win and for it to also be a league game,” she said.

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Madeline Strasburg gets mobbed after blasting a home run. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg gets mobbed after blasting a home run. (John Fisken photos)

Getting stretched with Kacie Kiel.

Getting stretched with Kacie Kiel.

Afraid of the camera? Not likely.

Afraid of the camera? Not likely.

Pursuing a second career as a paparazzi.

Pursuing a second career as a paparazzi.

She is big time. Every time.

Coupeville High School senior Madeline Strasburg, AKA Maddie Big Time, earned that nickname by being at her best when it counted the most.

Feisty as all get out, hilarious, a vocal leader who thumped her teammates on the back in joy at times, and pulled them close and whispered quietly in their ear at others, she is like a walking, talking burst of pure energy.

I have covered a lot of athletes in 25 years of on-again, off-again sports coverage on Whidbey, but Maddie is in the 1% of the most electrifying I have witnessed on a daily basis.

Some athletes hum along, calm and serene, at the same level at all times.

That is not Strasburg.

During her remarkable three-sport (volleyball, basketball, softball) career at CHS, she hit huge lows and huge highs.

When she hit those lows, when she got good and pissed, is when she came flying back like few other Wolves ever have, or ever will.

When that look dropped on her face, you knew butt-whuppin’ time was comin’.

Elbow her? Knee her? Try and make her look bad?

She would crack you in half and then fly by, her glare o’ death replaced by the biggest smile you could possibly imagine.

Last year, during her junior basketball season, she did something I have never seen another high school athlete do.

Right at the tail end of the third quarter, she stole the ball, spun and fired up a buzzer-beater from almost half court that banked off the glass and dropped in.

Cue the Maddie dance to the bench, where she high-fived all of her teammates, her coaches and any spectators wandering by, regardless of whether she knew them or not.

So, great shot. It happens.

Except…

The Wolves then went on winter break and didn’t play another game for almost two weeks.

First game back, end of the third quarter, same time, same place … Maddie Big Time steals the ball, spins, fires from the same freakin’ spot on the court and banks in another buzzer-beater, then runs off screaming like a woman gone wild.

Two impossible shots, from the same place, the same angle, the same moment in the game … two weeks apart.

Damn.

Of course, it wasn’t just basketball.

She would jack home runs over the fence in softball, then spend time on defense hanging out in center field talking (loudly) to herself (and left fielder Haley Sherman, if she wandered too close), keeping up a running commentary on life.

Fearless as an athlete, and one of the quickest to embrace each and every chance to have her photo taken, Miss Strasburg has been a God-send for Coupeville Sports.

As she celebrates a birthday today, the future is limitless for this one.

In the words of John Locke on Lost, “Don’t tell me what I can’t do!!”

I fully believe Maddie will accomplish whatever she desires.

If she doesn’t want to do it, no amount of nagging will get her to change her mind.

But, if she wants something, she will go after it like a heat-seeking missile and woe unto those who are stupid enough to try and stop her.

She is whip smart, she is kind and caring and she has the heart of a lion.

Will she play ball in college? Will she become a coach herself one day (I think she’d be awesome at it)?

Or, will she throw everything away and travel the world, sporting dreadlocks and spreading the gospel of Maddie Big Time to the farthest reaches of the known world, her exuberant laugh trailing her?

Whatever she does, however she does it, she is going to be a huge, raging success. Of this I have no doubt.

And we’ll all look back, one day, and say, we were there at the beginning of the legend.

We were lucky enough to witness a young woman of great talent, grace and style rise up and begin to claim her place.

We were all witnesses to Maddie Big Time, and it was a lot of fun.

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Veronica

Rising softball star Veronica Crownover. (Kelly Crownover photos)

Sarah Wright takes her cuts on the first day of practice. (Kell

Sarah Wright takes her cuts on the first day of practice.

The Venom live!

Sort of.

Last spring and summer, the Central Whidbey Little League Junior All-Star softball squad, AKA The Venom, drilled every regular-season foe by 10+ runs, advanced to the state tourney and finished 18-2.

This year, there’s no team.

With most of the Venom having jumped up to high school ball — three of them, Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose and Hope Lodell, are starting for Coupeville High School as freshmen — there wasn’t enough girls left to field a team.

So, the three remaining members of the championship team, eighth graders Veronica Crownover, Sarah Wright and Tamika Nastali picked up Yuma, Arizona refugee Ema Smith and headed south.

The four Wolves will play for a juniors team out of Langley this year that is coached by Brad and Karen Jaeger.

Adapt. Move on. Keep playing and then reunite with their former Venom teammates next year when they hit the high school.

That’s the plan and they’re sticking to it.

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Hope Lodell scored Coupeville's first run of the season Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Hope Lodell scored Coupeville’s first run of the season Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

Sequim brought out the big boppers.

The 2A school thumped a pair of long home runs Wednesday en route to powering past visiting Coupeville 12-1 in a five-inning softball game.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 0-2 on the young season as they head into an Island rivalry battle at South Whidbey Friday.

CHS freshman hurler Katrina McGranahan put in decent work on the mound for the Wolves, but couldn’t overcome a murderer’s row of hitters.

“It was a little bit of a rough pitching day for Katrina,” said Coupeville coach Deanna Rafferty. “She was pitching solid strikes with some questionable pitch calls by the umpires, but Sequim just had a solid batting line up and were hitting hard.

“Sequim had two out of the park home runs, which would rattle any great pitcher.”

Senior McKayla Bailey, who threw almost every inning for CHS the last two years, made her first appearance as a pitcher this season.

Still working back after shoulder surgery, she came on in relief of McGranahan and gunned down Sequim one-two-three in her inning of work.

Bailey also cracked a double, one of two extra base hits collected by Coupeville.

Hailey Hammer had the other two-base knock, plating fab frosh Hope Lodell with the first Wolf run of the season in the top of the fourth.

“Overall our batting improved immensely from our first game but there is always room for improvement,” Rafferty said.

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