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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Kyla Briscoe sweeps up a ball at first. (John Fisken photos)

Kyla Briscoe sweeps up a ball at first. (John Fisken photos)

Monica

Monica Vidoni sends a screamer back towards the pitcher.

Hope

Hope Lodell comes crashing in from center field to snag a ball.

Rafferty

Wolf coach Deanna Rafferty peppers a few balls to her team during warmups.

McKayla

   McKayla Bailey, coming back from shoulder surgery, works on fine-tuning her throwing motion.

Kat

The Terminator unleashed, as freshman Katrina McGranahan lets loose with wicked heat.

team

Jae LeVine is the thoughtful centerpiece of a moment with the team.

Hailey

That moment when Hailey Hammer realizes she’s about to be drilled.

It begins.

A new era for Coupeville High School softball kicked off Monday, with a new coach (former OHHS player Deanna Rafferty) and six underclassmen in the starting lineup.

There were some nifty plays, and a few Opening Day jitters, but travelin’ photo man John Fisken was there to catch the best of the best and his pics reside above.

To see more (purchases help fund scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8288&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=22&sport=0

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Katrina McGranahan, seen here during select softball play, sparkled on Opening Day for CHS.

   Katrina McGranahan, seen here during select softball play, sparkled on Opening Day for CHS. (John Fisken photo)

Katrina McGranahan kicked off her high school softball career with a bang.

The Coupeville High School freshman hurler struck out the first batter she faced Monday, one of 11 K’s she would record on Opening Day, putting together a strong outing.

Even though she was undone by too many fielding errors and a lack of run support, with the Wolves falling 11-0 to former Cascade Conference rival Sultan, the future is bright for a young woman who could grow into being The Terminator in the pitching circle.

Katrina did amazing, especially for a freshman pitcher,” said Coupeville coach Deanna Rafferty. “I’m incredibly happy with how she threw.”

McGranahan got the call because senior McKayla Bailey, who threw nearly every inning for the Wolves last season, is coming off of shoulder surgery.

She started at shortstop and, while Rafferty plans to work Bailey back into the pitching rotation, she doesn’t want to fully do so until the time is right.

Coming off of a stellar run with a Central Whidbey Little League Junior All-Star squad that went 18-2 last summer, McGranahan is familiar with the CHS diamond and seemed at ease from the first pitch.

Picked as a co-captain with Bailey, she tore through the first and pulled her squad out of the fire in the second.

With the bases juiced after a pair of fielding errors, McGranahan shut Sultan down.

First she snagged a come-backer and nailed the lead runner at the plate for the second out, then she sent the next batter down on strikes, with the final one slamming into catcher Lauren Rose’s glove with an audible pop.

Rose and McGranahan, two of four freshmen to start in game one (with center fielder Hope Lodell and first baseman Kyla Briscoe), were in sync and did their best to hold things together all game.

It mostly worked, but the Turks took advantage of some first-game jitters, turning a string of Coupeville errors into three runs in the top of the third.

Even then, McGranahan held tough and the game was close until Sultan put together a four-run rally in the sixth to break things open.

The rally might not have happened if an umpire’s questionable call hadn’t opened the floodgates.

The Turks lead-off hitter in the inning tried to stretch a single into a double, only to be gunned down by a laser throw from Wolf right fielder Monica Vidoni.

Only the ump ruled the runner safe, vaguely calling baseline interference on Coupeville.

Given a second chance, Sultan took advantage and stretched the lead out well beyond what their star hurler, Shelby Jeffries, would need.

An often overpowering veteran pitcher, she whiffed 18 Wolves and was only nicked for base hits by Bailey and Hailey Hammer.

While Coupeville had very little offensive momentum, Rafferty was pleased with the fight she saw in her very young team.

“They made good contact with the ball, all of them,” she said. “They let nerves get the best of them a little, facing a tall, strong player, but I’m proud of what they did.

“We’ll work to get better before the next game.”

After a four-year run as a player at Oak Harbor High School, this was Rafferty’s first game as a softball coach.

“It’s a whole different game. A lot more multitasking; it’ll take some time to get used to,” she said. “But I’m glad there’s room for improvement, for the team and me.”

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Hailey Hammer puts pen to scholarship paper. (Linda Hammer photos)

Hailey Hammer puts pen to scholarship paper. (Linda Hammer photo)

Hammer in her natural habitat.

Hammer in her natural habitat.

Get ready Everett. The thunder is coming to town.

Coupeville High School senior softball slugger Hailey Hammer will be packing up her booming bat after graduation and taking her high-powered offensive game to the next level.

She has signed a letter of intent to play at Everett Community College next year, becoming the second Wolf in as many years to net a college softball scholarship.

Hammer follows in the footsteps of former teammate Madeline Roberts, who is currently a freshman at Shoreline Community College, one of Everett’s rivals in the Northwest Athletic Conference.

By choosing Everett, Hammer is also following in the footsteps of older brother Hunter Hammer, who was a successful track thrower and basketball player at the school.

For Hailey, the chance to become a Trojan was an easy one.

“It has been one of my tops since the beginning,” she said. “It’s close to home, runs in the family, with Hunter going we’ve made several trips over there and I loved the staff and coaches there.

“It was a great experience trying out for the team and I was ecstatic when they offered me a spot with a scholarship.”

Before she goes, though, she has one last high school season to play.

The Wolves are scheduled to kick off their softball season Monday against Sultan (4 PM), though that might be dicey with all the rain that fell Sunday.

But, eventually, the season will kick off and it will be Hammer’s 12th as a varsity player at CHS.

She has been the rare player to be a varsity fixture in three sports (volleyball, basketball, softball) for all four years of high school.

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Jared Helmstadter, Makana Stone and McKenzie Bailey (pink) threaten to break the door down. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Jared Helmstadter, Makana Stone and McKenzie Bailey (pink) threaten to break the door down … with their charisma. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Payton

Wolf freshmen (l to r) Payton Aparicio, Sage Renninger and Lauren Bayne hang out.

Bayne

Josh Bayne (lefts) gets dangerously close to Aaron Curtin.

Oscar

The Three Musketeers, (l to r) Lucas Etzell, Oscar Liquidano and Colin Belliveau.

Dalton

Helmstadter leans in while Dalton Martin gets intense.

Abby

Abby Parker (right) strikes a pose.

Monica

Monica Vidoni (red jacket) and fellow seniors hold down the big table.

Logan

Logan Martin, the setup/cleanup master.

Give them free food and they will come.

Virtually every athlete affiliated with a sport at Coupeville High School poured into the school Friday night for a retreat put on by the Coupeville Booster Club and Proactive Coaching.

Hanging around, camera in hand, to document the goings-on, was Booster Club bigwig/baseball mom Shelli Trumbull, who provides us with the pics that reside above.

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Nick Dion (right) was told there would be cake. Why else would he show up for soccer practice on his birthday? (John Fisken photos)

   Nick Dion (right) was told there would be cake. Why else would he show up for soccer practice on his birthday? (John Fisken photos)

Jae LeVine gets some advice from CHS softball coach Deanna Rafferty.

Jae LeVine gets some advice from CHS softball coach Deanna Rafferty.

Lathom

Lathom Kelley (38) and Makana Stone thunder down the stretch, while Jared Helmstadter (middle) prepares to blow them both away.

Jake Hoagland

Jake Hoagland, Jedi baseball player, able to catch the ball with his eyes shut.

Ken

   Wolf tennis coach Ken Stange: “I can hit this ball so hard it’ll take out that eagle on top of the Crockett Barn! Can so!!!!”

Jose

Jose Castro works his foot magic.

Allison

Allison Wenzel charges for the line, an explosion of color signalling her arrival.

McKayla

   McKayla Bailey appears to be watching the incoming softball. But she ALWAYS know where the camera is. Just trust me on that one.

Spring sports are just around the corner.

Practice has been going for almost two weeks, and the first taste of real competition hits this Saturday.

The Wolf baseball squad hosts Blaine (1 PM) on the windiest, coldest field known to man, while a stone’s throw away at the same time the CHS boys’ soccer team will play South Whidbey and Lake Stevens in a jamboree.

To get you ready, here’s eight spiffy John Fisken photos from the early days of practice, headed up by Nick Dion, who celebrates his 16th birthday today.

A scholar and an athlete, and a pretty good guy in general, here’s to Nick and the rest of the Wolves as they head into a new season bright with promise.

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