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Madeline Roberts digs the long ball. (Jay Roberts photo)

Madeline Roberts digs the long ball. (Jay Roberts photo)

Bessie Walstad put a stamp on a four-year, three-sport  run by hammering seven hits in the district tourney. (John Fisken photo)

     Bessie Walstad put a stamp on a four-year, three-sport run by hammering seven hits in the district tourney. (John Fisken photo)

They went down swinging hard — with their slap-hittin’ lead-off hitter blasting a ball over the fence — but, in the end, the Coupeville High School softball squad couldn’t quite keep the magic alive long enough to get to the next level of the playoffs.

A 9-5 loss to Blaine at Janicki Fields in Sedro Woolley Saturday eliminated the Wolves after three hard-fought games at the 1A District 1 tourney. The only Coupeville team to win a playoff game this spring, it fell one win shy of advancing to tri-districts.

But it wasn’t for a lack of effort, as the Wolves rapped out 13 hits in the finale, with eight of their nine hitters getting at least one base knock.

Senior Bessie Walstad had three hits, putting together a 7-for-9 playoff performance in her final moments as a high school athlete, while junior Madeline Roberts, the mightiest mite of them all, socked a two-run shot over the left field fence.

It wasn’t quite enough, however, as both Cascade Conference schools fell by the same score Saturday (South Whidbey lost to Lynden Christian) and were swept out of the tourney.

The Northwest Conference nabbed all four berths to tri-districts, with Nooksack Valley, Mount Baker, Blaine and Lynden Christian advancing.

The Wolves weren’t out-played, out-hustled or out-hit, but Blaine was able to get key plays when they needed them.

“This team never gave up, played solid defensively once again along with good pitching. They battled until the very end,” Coupeville coach David King said. “McKayla (Bailey) said it well after the game. Blaine had to earn the win with how well we played.

“What she said was so true,” he added. “We put everything together in this game. They just had some clutch hits we couldn’t get.”

Coupeville opened strongly, scoring two in the top of the first. Breeanna Messner ripped a double to left to kick things off, before singles from Walstad, Maria Rockwell and Hailey Hammer plated the runs.

Messner then figured prominently in the game’s best defensive play, a bang-bang double play. Hold on, though, you might need a diagram to fully comprehend what went down.

Fielding a ball, Roberts airmailed a shot to Hammer at third, who relayed it to Messner at home as a runner rounded the bag and headed home. The ball got away from Messner for a moment, but the runner panicked and headed back to third. Then, things got wild.

Messner to Hammer back to Messner to catch the runner coming home, then, on her knees, the Wolf catcher zipped a picture-perfect strike back to Hammer to nab the trailing runner headed into third.

“It was a 7-5-2-5-2-5 double play, executed well,” King said, after he stopped hyperventilating.

The hyperventilating started again when Roberts followed a single by Haley Sherman (her second of the game) by morphing from a slap hitter into a long ball lover, launching a deep blast that cleared the fence in left. Chasing it down for the family trophy case was dad Jay Roberts.

Down 9-4 headed into its final at-bats, Coupeville finished with pride.

Walstad singled in her final high school at-bat, then fellow senior Rockwell earned a base on balls in her swan song, before Bailey crushed an RBI single to net the Wolves’ final run.

While a loss wasn’t in his game plan, King came away pleased with the beautiful final weekend put together by his seniors (“These two will be missed for the many things they bring to the team”), and the promise of a team that will return virtually every starter.

A team plagued by rain-outs like no other, which forced them to play three double-headers, permanently washed out a non-conference game against Meridian and have a scheduled home game against ATM turned into a road contest, was far better than its 6-16 record might indicate.

When they were on, they were a hit-machine. And even when they were off, they were a play or two away from taking wins in at least half of their losses.

“We have seasoned players coming back next year with eight players getting regular playing time this year,” King said. “They have seen what it takes to compete and how to make adjustments. They need to look at playing summer ball and maybe going to a camp.”

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trumbull2trumbull8trumbull5trumbull10trumbull1Skagit Valley College got quite the deal when Alexis Trumbull decided to play softball for them.

Not only did they get a talented player, but when the Coupeville High School grad joined the squad they got a two-for-one special. Mom Shelli set up shop as SVC Softball Mom on Facebook and gave the team its own unofficial team photographer.

Having gone through the 500 or so photos she just uploaded from the Cardinal’s most recent games (I kid you not), I can tell you there are a ton of great ones on there.

But, you’ll have to go see for yourself, as this is Coupeville Sports, and not SVC Sports, so the ones I plucked out all feature the young Ms. Trumbull.

Cause Alexis is the pride of Coupeville, and, if the other young women who play for SVC (some pretty talented athletes) wanted to be seen on a regular basis on this here blog, they should have had the foresight to graduate from our high school.

So now they know, and can go start work on that time machine.

For non-Alexis photos, check out https://www.facebook.com/pages/SVC-Softball-Mom/482594041789791?fref=ts

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Bessie Walstad (left), one of two CHS seniors with Maria Rockwell, delivered two huge doubles Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Seniors Bessie Walstad (left) and Maria Rockwell delivered huge two-run doubles Friday. (John Fisken photo)

They survived day one.

After taking a tough 2-0 loss to Lynden Christian in a pitcher’s duel Friday in a 1A District 1 playoff game at Janicki Fields in Sedro Woolley, the Coupeville High School softball squad pulled off a stunner in its second game to keep its postseason hopes alive.

Trailing 4-0 to Meridian in a loser-out game, the Wolves erupted for five runs in the fifth inning, then held on for a 5-4 victory.

The runs came on a five-hit explosion, with three of the hits being doubles.

Now 6-15, Coupeville returns to Sedro Woolley Saturday for a loser-out game at 12 PM against Blaine.

Win that and they’re in the 3rd/4th place game at 2 PM against the winner of South Whidbey and Lynden Christian and are guaranteed a trip to tri-districts.

With their season on the line, the Wolves got a huge lift from sophomore hurler McKayla Bailey. The game one starter, she came back to pull double duty after Meridian jumped on starter Maria Rockwell for all of its runs in the first inning.

With Bailey virtually untouchable, Coupeville finally found its offensive mojo again and backed her up with one big inning.

Haley Sherman kick-started things by reaching on an error, before Chevy Reyes cranked a short pop-up towards first base that drew three defenders before hitting the Meridian catcher and bouncing out of her grasp.

After a single from Madeline Roberts juiced the bags, Bessie Walstad cranked a ball that missed being a grand slam by five feet, driving in two runners and igniting the Wolf bench.

“The bench was outstanding and loud,” said Wolf coach David King. “When we were hitting, it was nonstop chatter!”

Before Meridian could recover, Coupeville blew the game open with another two-run double, this one from Rockwell, then an RBI double from Hailey Hammer.

“The excitement and confidence the team had in the fifth was something to see,” King said. “We play a tough team tomorrow, but if we keep that confidence up, I will take our team any day of the week against any team.”

The opening game was a classic pitcher’s duel, as Bailey matched Lynden Christian’s hurler almost pitch for pitch.

After gunning down the first nine hitters in order, Bailey ran into a sticky spot in the fourth, when two singles and an error loaded the bases with no outs. It turned out to be no problem, however, as her defense rose to the occasion.

Hammer snuffed back-to-back ground balls to third, nailing the lead runner at home on both plays. Then Sherman ran down a line drive to center to help Coupeville escape the inning unscathed.

Unfortunately, the Wolves just flat out weren’t getting anything to land where the defense wasn’t in their times at bat. Singles by Roberts and Walstad were all CHS generated, and both runners were left hanging.

Lynden Christian finally broke through with a run in the fifth, then added an insurance run in the seventh.

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IMG_1275IMG_1270IMG_1280IMG_1273IMG_1281We’re going in the dugout for a different look.

You’ve seen plenty of action shots from in-game action, but now Coupeville High School softball coach Amy King takes you behind the scenes with these rare photos.

It’s the Wolves unplugged and carefree.

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Elena Jimenez Guerra, looking cheerful as always, with teammates Sydney Aparicio (left) and Breeanna Messner. (Amy King photo)

      Elena Jimenez Guerra, looking cheerful as always, with teammates Sydney Aparicio (left) and Breeanna Messner. (Amy King photo)

“Go Maria! You got this!! Go Madi!! You got this, babe!!!”

There is no better support crew on the Coupeville High School softball bench than Spanish foreign exchange student Elena Jimenez Guerra. She may be new to the sport, but she has picked up the game’s chatter like a pro.

“She is our best cheerleader in the dugout, throwing out the cheers in her great accent,” said Wolf coach Amy King. “She is talking the entire game, cheering and encouraging to her entire team.”

When she’s not yelling for her girls, she’s the first to charge out of the dugout at home games in pursuit of fouled-off balls that have ended up in the bushes or the trailer park across the street from the field. Between innings, she enthusiastically fires balls back-and-forth with her team’s left fielder, to keep them limbered up.

Jimenez Guerra has seen some limited playing time — she played an inning in right in her team’s regular season finale Thursday at Sultan — but has taken full advantage of her opportunities at the plate and in the field.

For Amy King and her husband, co-coach David King, the Spanish Sensation has been a most welcome part of their squad.

“She was brand new to the sport and has really come a long ways with her hitting, fielding and throwing,” Amy King said. “Not an easy sport really to throw yourself into for a single season, but she has worked hard, kept a great attitude and been a nice addition to the team.”

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