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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Teagan Calkins runs this joint. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bow Down to Cow Town, indeed.

After rampaging through league play on its way to a 9-0 mark this spring, the Coupeville High School softball squad got plenty of love from rival coaches.

Sophomore catcher Teagan Calkins, the two-way terror known as “The Red Dragon,” was tabbed as co-MVP of the Northwest 2B/1B League, while diamond guru Kevin McGranahan was named Coach of the Year.

Calkins was fond of cranking home runs, both of the over-the-fence and inside-the-park variety, while playing superb defense while working with a super-young pitching staff which featured two freshmen and an 8th grader.

Eight other Wolves were honored as well, with five making the First Team in coach voting.

Mia Farris glides in to make the snag.

Those players were juniors Madison McMillan, Taylor BrotemarkleMia Farris, and Jada Heaton, as well as fab frosh Haylee Armstrong.

Her fellow freshman (and cousin), Capri Anter, was joined by 8th graders Adeline Maynes and Sydney Van Dyke as Second-Team All-League selections.

Coupeville went 14-5 overall, reclaimed its conference crown, came within a play or two of advancing to state, and can return every player on the roster next spring.

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Haylee Armstrong epitomized the Spirit of the Wolf. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A season of success ended with awards and praise.

The Coupeville High School softball squad, which went 14-5 and reclaimed the Northwest 2B/1B League title, capped the campaign Saturday with a team banquet.

Sophomore catcher Teagan Calkins was crowned team MVP, while junior third baseman Madison McMillan and 8th grade pitcher Adeline Maynes earned Offensive and Defensive MVP honors, respectively.

Other award winners:

 

Captains:

Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris

 

Most Improved:

Shania Kenney

 

Spirit of the Wolf:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Ava Lucero

 

Wolves (l to r) Taylor Brotemarkle, Bailey Thule, and Shania Kenney enjoy a win. (Photo by Claire Kalwies-Anderson)

 

Varsity letter winners:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Ava Lucero
Adeline Maynes
Madison McMillan
Sydney Van Dyke

 

Participation certificates:

Shania Kenney
Allie Powers
Chelsi Stevens
Danica Strong
Bailey Thule
Mary Western
Melanie Wolfe

The dugout gets rowdy. Sort of. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Grace Roberts

It’s a family tradition.

Grace Roberts, who grew up in Coupeville and is now a freshman at Chelan High School, was recently named a First-Team All-League pick in softball by 1A Caribou Trail League coaches.

She was one of just two freshmen to notch the honor.

Grace, a first baseman/pitcher, joins her cousin, Landon Roberts, who was a First Team pick in baseball in the Northwest 2B/1B League while repping Coupeville’s red and black.

Her older sister, Madeline, was also an All-League player on the softball diamond, honored for her work at shortstop for Coupeville back in 2014, when the Wolves played in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

Chelan, which has a very young team — nine of 13 players were 8th or 9th graders this spring — finished 13-5, splitting a pair of games at the district tourney.

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Teagan Calkins, captured in a reflective moment by her camera-carrying teammate. (Bailey Thule photos)

Bailey Thule can do it all.

She can deliver a hit on the softball diamond or deliver incisive behind-the-scenes pics of her teammates.

The snaps above and below were captured Saturday in Centralia, as Thule and the Wolves battled Toledo at the district tourney.

Allie Powers (left) and Ava Lucero

Kevin McGranahan and Taylor Brotemarkle

Adeline Maynes (left) and Mary Western

Madison McMillan (left) and Melanie Wolfe

Haylee Armstrong

L to r — Lucero, Calkins, Chelsi Stevens, and Maynes.

 

Sydney Van Dyke joins the club.

Shania Kenney flexes.

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Part of a Wolf softball squad which went 14-5 and can return everyone next spring. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Coupeville won the battle, but Toledo won the war.

A very-young Wolf softball squad played the first inning to precision Saturday night at Fort Borst Park in Centralia.

Unfortunately, the winner-to-state, loser-out playoff game went a full seven frames, and the Riverhawks rebounded from a 3-0 deficit to eventually claim an 11-4 victory.

With the win, Toledo, which is 19-6 after going 3-2 in the District 1/4 tourney, is off to the big dance.

Meanwhile, Coupeville, which was required to pop in at the very tail end of another district’s tourney, instead of being fully rewarded for being the #1 team from their own area, finishes 14-5.

The Wolves, who regularly started three 8th graders and two freshmen this season, and have no seniors, can return everyone on their roster.

And, even in defeat, they fought until the final batter, showcasing the hustle and grit which defines Kevin McGranahan’s diamond program.

Saturday’s game pitted a Toledo team which was playing its third game of the day against a Coupeville squad which hadn’t played in a week.

For an inning, at least, the fresher team looked sharper.

Wolf hurler Adeline Maynes, one of those 8th graders, mowed through the Riverhawks in the top of the first, picking up two strikeouts and a groundout to fellow middle school classmate Sydney Van Dyke.

Hefting their bats for the first time since they carved up South Whidbey in the regular season finale May 10, the Wolves immediately stung Toledo.

Taylor Brotemarkle gets medieval on the softball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Haylee Armstrong took the first pitch she saw and ripped it into left field for a single, before Mia Farris clobbered a double in the same direction.

With two runners on and nobody out, Taylor Brotemarkle lofted a precision sac fly to plate the game’s first run, before Madison McMillan went nuclear.

Punching a hole in the dark, foreboding clouds which hung over the field, the junior third baseman cleared the fences with a two-run tater, and Coupeville was up 3-0 just four batters in.

And then the batting display turned off. Big time.

After McMillan’s epic blast, the Wolves went two complete rotations through the lineup — a full 18 batters — before getting another hit.

Van Dyke, Danica Strong, and Brotemarkle eked out walks during that dry spell, but with no base knocks, there were no more runs for a very long time.

It wasn’t until two batters into the bottom of the sixth that Coupeville finally broke the hitless skid, with sophomore catcher Teagan Calkins mashing a fences-clearing home run of her own.

Teagan Calkins goes yard. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Capri Anter accounted for the Wolves final hit, cracking a long single into an opening in the outfield defense in the seventh inning.

But that was it for CHS, as it started with three hits in the first four batters but finished with just five base knocks and three walks total.

That 3-0 lead held up for a bit, with Toledo scratching out a run in the second, then sliding ahead 4-3 thanks to several well-placed hits in the top of the third.

The deficit was still just a run well into the fifth, but that was when the Riverhawks found their groove, peppering the ball around the field and plating six runs to turn a nailbiter into a bit of a runaway.

One final tally in the sixth made it 11 unanswered runs for Toledo, before Calkins walloped her final moon ball of the season to get one back for Coupeville.

“The Red Dragon” then ended her second high school diamond campaign by gunning down a runner trying, and failing, to steal second base, as the Wolves refused to go meekly into the stormy night.

While the loss brings a close to the season, Coupeville’s young guns can exit heads held high.

They went undefeated in Northwest 2B/1B League play, reclaimed their conference crown from Friday Harbor, and held their own against a tough non-league schedule.

Wins against Onalaska, Nooksack Valley, and Sultan were big, and a two-game sweep of next-door neighbor South Whidbey especially sweet.

And, as mentioned, EVERYONE on the roster can come back.

The “core four” — current juniors Farris, Brotemarkle, Jada Heaton, and McMillan — will be seniors next spring, while their younger teammates achieved success early and can continue to grow.

The pitching staff of Maynes, Armstrong, and Anter have four, three, and three seasons remaining respectively, a particular bright spot for one of Coupeville’s most-successful programs year-in, year-out.

Haylee Armstrong fires BB’s. (Claire Kalwies-Anderson photo)

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