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Being awesome is hard work, and now Maddie Big Time must replenish!! (Robert Bishop photos)

 Being awesome is hard work, and now Maddie Big Time must replenish!! (Robert Bishop photos)

"We're going to Disneyland ... uh ... I mean, coming back to Sedro-Woolley!!!"

“We’re going to Disneyland … uh … I mean, coming back to Sedro-Woolley!!!”

Maddie Big Time crushed another home run to the deepest, darkest part of the field, Emily Coulter swung a mean bat and the Coupeville High School softball squad split its first two games at the 1A district softball tourney Friday in Sedro-Woolley.

After dropping a 15-7 fireworks display to Lynden Christian, the Wolves rebounded to drill Meridian for the second time this season, winning 6-2 and guaranteeing themselves two more playoff games.

CHS, now 5-16, returns to the Janicki Playfields today to face Nooksack Valley (9-12) at noon.

Win and they’re tri-district bound and play in the 3rd/4th place game at 2 PM. Lose the opener and they play for 5th place, and the last spot at tri-districts, at 2 PM.

In a weird wrinkle, if Coupeville finishes 5th, they would host their first tri-district game May 21.

Of course, the focus for the Wolves will be on winning two Saturday and putting themselves one step deeper into the postseason. If they swing the bats like they did Friday, when eight starters had a hit, that’s a strong possibility.

While there were contributions from all sides, junior Madeline Strasburg and sophomore Emily Coulter were the superstars on this day.

Both players collected four hits over the two games, with Maddie Big Time eyeballing the Lynden pitcher and then crushing a grand slam over the center field fence.

When freshman Emily Licence delivered a two-run double of her own, the Wolves had a six-spot in the first inning and looked like they would run away from the Lyncs.

Then things got funky.

After having its first 10 batters reach base, Coupeville only got three of its next 20 hitters aboard. The final 11 hitters all went down, and Lynden took advantage of a ton of Wolf errors to surge for seven runs in the sixth to put the game away.

Digging down deep, the Wolves immediately bounced back, with Coulter swinging the hot stick in game two.

She bashed three hits, knocked in a pair of runs and was a holy terror on defense at second, and Coupeville came alive behind her.

The Wolves knocked Meridian’s pitching around for 11 hits, with Strasburg and Madeline Roberts each contributing a pair. Breeanna Messner, Hailey Hammer, McKayla Bailey and Haley Sherman each chipped in with a base knock as well.

While Strasburg’s moon shot was the eyeball-grabber, Coupeville also bashed its share of two-base hits, with Sherman, Bailey and Strasburg all doubling.

Maddie Big Time had a pair, because, well, she’s Maddie Big Time.

Coupeville coach David King was pleased with most of what he saw on the day.

“We had great balance throughout and players stepping up with getting big hits,” King said. “Monica (Vidoni) played well in right and made a couple of tough catches on fly balls. Bree, Hailey and Madi Roberts played their solid games and I’m looking forward to them stepping up more today.

McKayla pitched well and had really good control in both games,” he added. “She had her change up working well in game two and getting either strike outs or weak grounders for outs.”

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Freshman third baseman Emily Licence and her teammates are playoff bound. (John Fisken photos)

  Freshman third baseman Emily Licence and her teammates are playoff bound. (John Fisken photos)

Catcher Breeanna Messner is one of three seniors heading into their final postseason. She's joined by Haley Sherman and Madeline Roberts.

  Catcher Breeanna Messner is one of three seniors heading into their final postseason. She’s joined by Haley Sherman and Madeline Roberts.

It doesn’t matter how they got it. They got it.

With the news that South Whidbey lost 12-2 at Archbishop Thomas Murphy Tuesday afternoon, the Coupeville High School softball squad officially nailed down a #1 seed for this weekend’s 1A District 1 tourney.

While the Wolves also lost their regular-season finale, falling 14-4 to Cascade Conference champ Granite Falls, they held a tiebreaker, having beaten their Island rivals two out of three games this season.

Both Coupeville and South Whidbey, which fielded rosters dominated by younger players, finished 4-15 overall, 3-15 in the 1A/2A league.

District play is set for Friday, May 16 and Saturday, May 17 at Janicki Fields in Sedro-Woolley.

CHS will be the home team in its first game (4 PM) and will face off against the #4 team from the Northwest Conference. Win or lose, they will play again at 6 PM that day.

If the Wolves win at least one game, they will return on Saturday to play for a spot at tri-districts May 21-24.

Five of the eight teams in the district tourney advance, and there is a slim shot Coupeville could host a home playoff game.

To do that, CHS would need to finish 5th at districts. That team hosts the #5 team from District 3 May 21, while all other tri-district games would be back at Janicki Fields.

Of course, Coupeville would like to finish higher than fifth at districts, and one plus is now they will be playing schools closer in size.

The Wolves, who represent the smallest 1A school in the state, went 3-1 against other 1A schools this season, adding a non-conference win over Meridian to their mastery of South Whidbey.

A 1-14 mark against the five 2A schools in the league is what hurt Coupeville’s win-loss record.

And, while they couldn’t keep up with the league champs Tuesday, who hammered 16 hits, including three triples, the Wolves did take a step forward after a rough game Monday.

“We did a few things better,” said Coupeville coach David King. “But not enough.

“Defensively we had both physical and a few mental errors. We just aren’t playing fundamental defense,” he added. “We have two days to fix our defense and get back to making good contact when hitting.”

McKayla Bailey led the way at the plate for the Wolves, crunching a double.

Playoff bracket (check back, as they’ll be updating it soon):

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=15&tournament_id=1198

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Madeline Roberts (John Fisken photo)

Madeline Roberts is not to be trifled with. (John Fisken photo)

Well, it’s a race. Sort of…

Despite doing everything possible to give it away, the Coupeville High School softball squad is still clinging to the 1A/2A Cascade Conference’s #1 playoff seed for 1A schools.

Even after committing eight errors en route to getting bounced 10-0 at Lakewood Monday in the next-to-last regular season game.

The Wolves, now 4-14 overall, 3-14 in league play, are tied with South Whidbey, which lost its last game by forfeit after its only pitcher was injured in a play at the plate.

Coupeville, which owns the tiebreaker, having taken two of three from South Whidbey, closes the season in Granite Falls Tuesday, playing a 16-2 squad.

The Falcons face Archbishop Thomas Murphy … if they found a pitcher.

If the Wolves want to play much beyond Tuesday — they’re guaranteed at least two playoff games — they’ll need to dig down and come up with a better effort than what they displayed against Lakewood.

With rare exception, Coupeville was flat, and flat-out bad.

Eight errors in the field, a pair of Lakewood home runs, with the final one a shot to center that invoked the 10-run mercy rule in the sixth, and an anemic offense all conspired to deflate any Wolf hopes.

CHS never got a runner past second, accumulating just singles from Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg and Breeanna Messner. All three base knocks came in different innings.

The host Cougars answered with eleven hits, including four of the extra-base variety. Terah Barrio and Jennaka Larson both launched balls over the outfield fence for Lakewood.

Even in the midst of what was likely its worst game of the season, Coupeville did find one bright spot.

With two runners on and one out, senior shortstop Madeline Roberts speared a liner and tagged the runner, who had broken from the bag, for a wham-bam double play to end an inning.

She actually went for the triple play, trying to nab the runner coming off of first as well, before realizing she already had three outs in the inning.

While that was the rare ray of sun on a gloomy day, tomorrow is always another day. At least that’s CHS coach David King’s mindset.

“The great thing is, we get to board the bus tomorrow and see if we can take out our aggression at Granite Falls.”

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Current CHS basketball/softball coach David King, in his playing days.

Wolf basketball/softball coach David King, back in his early playing days. (Photo courtesy Amy King)

Still teeing it up.

Still swingin’ away. (John Fisken photos)

And there's a glove to go with that bat.

And there’s a glove to go with that bat.

You can’t teach the fundamentals if you haven’t learned them yourself.

So it’s a good thing Coupeville High School softball coach David King grew up with a bat in his hands, learning the secrets of all the diamond games from an early age.

Once a diamond King, always a diamond King.

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Jae LeVine, here scoring in an earlier game, played sparkling defense Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

Jae LeVine, here scoring in an earlier game, played sparkling defense Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Roberts makes plays like this all game, every game.

Madeline Roberts makes plays like this all game, every game.

Red hot, then ice cold.

That was the pattern the Coupeville High School softball squad followed Wednesday afternoon at Cedarcrest, jumping out to a quick lead, but unable to hold on to it in a narrow 4-2 loss.

Now 4-13 overall, 3-13 in Cascade Conference play, the Wolves dropped into a tie with Island rival South Whidbey in the battle for the 1A/2A league’s #1 playoff seed for 1A schools.

Coupeville holds the tiebreaker, having taken two of three from the Falcons, and both squads have two regular season games left to play.

The Wolves travel to Lakewood Friday to play a team they’ve beaten this year, then close out at Granite Falls against the top team in the league.

It looked like CHS might be on its way to its fifth win of the season when they came out guns blazin’ in the top of the first Wednesday.

Three straight hits — singles to left from Breeanna Messner and Hailey Hammer and a thunderous two-run double to left center off the bat of McKayla Bailey — got things jumping.

Madeline Strasburg followed with a hard-hit grounder that the Cedarcrest shortstop snagged but threw wildly on, putting runners at the corners.

Aiming for a big inning, Coupeville coach David King gave Strasburg the steal sign, only to see her gunned down on “a perfect throw.”

After that, much of the offense dried up, with just singles from Madeline Roberts and Hammer after that.

Strasburg came close to firing things up again when she launched a shot to left in the third, only to watch in frustration as the Cedarcrest outfielder laid out going down the line and made a spectacular catch several feet off the ground.

Coupeville went three up and three down the final three innings, killing any chance of a comeback.

The host Red Wolves got their runs with a surge of their own in the first, using four consecutive hits, including a pair of doubles, to plate three.

Cedarcrest tacked on an insurance run in the third, and then it was a scoreless pitcher’s duel the rest of the afternoon.

Bailey struck out five and didn’t walk a hitter, while the Wolves played spotless, often inspired defense behind her.

Coupeville catcher Messner nailed a runner trying to steal second, while all three outfielders (Haley Sherman, Strasburg and Monica Vidoni) pulled off gorgeous snags on tricky balls hit their way.

The infielders were just as active, with Jae LeVine making a “great backhanded grab” on a hot ball up the middle and Emily Licence teaming up with LeVine for a bang-bang force-out play at second after snagging a grounder.

While the record may not reflect it, the Wolves have rarely been blown out this season, fighting down to the final inning in most of their losses.

A little more consistency at the plate would go a long way to balancing things out.

“Offensively we are still trying to find a rhythm and consistency,” King said. “We have a good inning, then we cool off quickly and can’t get things going again.

“We are playing better on defense and McKayla with her pitching has kept us in games,” he added. “We are right there in our games; once we start having good at bats throughout a seven-inning game, these close games we aren’t winning will start putting us in the win column.”

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