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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Coupeville 8th grader Haylee Armstrong made big plays in both the varsity and JV high school softball games Tuesday. (Photo courtesy Michelle Armstrong)

“It was a beautiful day for softball.”

Playing the nightcap in a twin bill Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV softball team made an impressive debut for coach Katrina McGranahan.

With three 8th graders in the lineup, and another two girls who had never played the sport before this year, the Wolves still knocked off visiting Darrington 8-5.

The game was a three-inning affair, with Coupeville closing out the game in the top of the third behind relief ace Haylee Armstrong, who ended things with a dramatic, bases-loaded strikeout.

Flinging nasty heat, the Wolf 8th grader, who earlier launched a line drive triple in Coupeville’s varsity win, heralded the bright future of CHS softball.

Armstrong and fellow 8th grader Capri Anter combined to stifle the Darrington hitters, while classmate Melanie Wolfe made it three middle schoolers dominating on the diamond before even attending classes on the high school side of campus.

While the Wolf varsity played its 10th game of the season, this was the first chance Coupeville had to play a JV foe.

“We were excited,” McGranahan said. “Many of the players on this team are young both in age and in softball experience, and they all did spectacular.”

Darrington struck for three runs in the top of the first, but Coupeville responded immediately, and with a cold fury.

The Wolves plated five runners in the bottom of the inning, and the only thing which kept the number that low was the five-runs-per-frame rule used in JV games.

All eight hitters to register an at-bat reached base, with freshman Teagan Calkins delivering the biggest blow.

Playing shortstop after working behind the plate in the varsity game, the fab frosh conked a two-run double, while sophomores Mia Farris, Chloe Marzocca, and Jada Heaton all ripped singles.

Armstrong, Anter, and newcomers Bailey Thule and Layla Heo collected walks, while Wolfe had her at-bat end prematurely when a wild pitch brought in Coupeville’s fifth run.

Darrington got two runs in the top of the second to briefly knot things back up at 5-5, but Farris and Heaton snuffed out any hopes of a Logger rally with alert catches on liners.

The Wolves scored what would prove to be the winning run in the bottom of the second, as Armstrong walked, stole second, and whipped around the basepaths to score on a beautifully crafted bunt single by Farris.

Just to make sure, Calkins provided a pair of insurance runs.

Turning around and hitting lefty to increase her danger, she smacked a two-run single into a gap, giving her four RBI’s in just two at-bats.

Darrington tried to make things interesting in the final inning, loading the bases thanks to a couple of walks and a rocket shot to third.

Anter almost pulled off an amazing snag on that wicked liner, which came in hot and ready to knock out some teeth.

The Wolves escaped unscathed, however, with Calkins, back behind the plate, grabbing a wild pitch as it bounced off the back stop and whirling to tag the incoming Logger runner, who instantly regretted her choices in life.

That set up Armstrong, striding around the pitcher’s circle, slapping the ball deep into her glove, then whipping the high, hard cheese past flailing hitters.

“I was really happy with Haylee’s pitching!” said McGranahan, who, once upon a time was Coupeville’s ace pitcher across four stellar seasons.

“I haven’t seen her pitch before and I was pleasantly surprised,” she added. “With a little more work she can be a great pitcher!”

McGranahan also praised the play of Thule and Heo, who are both new to the game.

Layla is a foreign exchange student from South Korea and has never touched a softball before and she held her own in left field,” McGranahan said.

“She did what she was taught and stopped the balls going to her and got them into her cut person.

“I’m so proud of her and how far her softball skills and abilities have come.”

Thule, whose snapped photos have frequently appeared in the pages of Coupeville Sports this school year, is now front and center herself, and shows great growth.Bailey played center field for us today and again is an individual who has never played the game of softball, but she got on base twice!” McGranahan said.

“She was able to work a walk for her first at bat which helps build her confidence at the plate, but the real confidence booster was when she hit a ball to right field!

“I don’t think I’ve heard our dugout cheer so loud before!”

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — One single, one walk
Haylee Armstrong — Two walks
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double
Mia Farris — Two singles
Jada Heaton — One single
Layla Heo — One walk
Chloe Marzocca — One single, one walk
Bailey Thule — One walk

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Maya (left) and Allie Lucero celebrated their 18th birthday Saturday with a win on the softball diamond. (Photo courtesy Jess Lucero)

The weather? Wicked.

The score? Divine.

Buffeted by goosebump-inducing prairie winds Saturday — but no rain — the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad cracked visiting Concrete.

Taking advantage of 20 walks, three well-placed hits, and several errors by the Lions, the Wolves strolled to a 20-0 win in a game called after three innings due to the mercy rule.

The victory, coming in a game which was originally supposed to be played in Concrete, lifts Coupeville to 3-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-4 overall.

Facing a rebuilding Lions team which is led by former Wolf JV coach Stephanie Henning, CHS did everything possible to not run up the score, while trying to get off the field and escape the brutal breeze.

All 14 Wolves who picked up a bat reached base in the rout, while 8th grader Haylee Armstrong chipped in with stellar defense.

Saturday’s game started as a road affair, then turned into a homestand for Coupeville, thanks to the weather forecast being (slightly) better for Whidbey than it was for Concrete.

While the hardy Wolf fans screamed in silent agony as the prairie lived up to its reputation of often making diamond teams feel like they’re playing in the middle of a cyclone, some were happy to see the game play out.

“I can’t feel my face!” (Jennifer Marzocca photo)

CHS aces Allie and Maya Lucero celebrated their 18th birthday during the win, while fellow senior Gwen Gustafson was flawless in the pitcher’s circle.

Facing the minimum nine batters across her three-inning stint, she whiffed seven Lions and recorded one of the two other outs on a comebacker.

Gwen was on fire today, throwing BBs from the circle,” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan. “She was too much for the Concrete hitters.”

Coupeville put the game away quickly, tossing nine runs on the scoreboard in the bottom of the first, another eight in the second, then hitting the three-inning mercy rule when Mia Farris cranked an RBI single to score foreign exchange student Layla Heo.

That was one of three base knocks for the Wolves, with fellow sophomores Madison McMillan and Taylor Brotemarkle joining Farris on the hit parade.

Concrete, which is winless this season, is scrambling to improve, and having a former Coupeville coach in charge of the program is a big advantage.

“They are a very, very young team and inexperienced,” McGranahan said. “But I give them credit for fielding a team and never quitting, and having smiles on their faces.

“Glad to see Concrete back on the field, with a good head coach,” he added. “Stephanie will get them back on track.”

Coming off the win, the Wolves have a busy week ahead of them.

They host Darrington Tuesday, Apr. 11, then travel to La Conner Apr. 13 and Onalaska Apr. 15. That last trip will be for a doubleheader.

 

Saturday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Taylor Brotemarkle
— One single, two walks
Teagan Calkins
— Three walks
Mia Farris
— One single, two walks
Gwen Gustafson
— One walk
Jada Heaton
— One walk
Layla Heo
— One walk
Allie Lucero
— Two walks
Maya Lucero
— One walk
Chloe Marzocca
— One walk
Madison McMillan
— One single, two walks
Melanie Navarro
— One walk
Sofia Peters
— One walk
Bailey Thule
— One walk

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Freshman catcher Teagan Calkins smacked two hits Thursday, while also playing strong defense behind the plate. (Jackie Saia photo)

Iron sharpens iron.

So, you play a strong non-conference schedule and the on-field battles with good teams will help you hone your own skills.

But it also means you may take some losses along the way, especially if your team is stocked full of younger players still finding their way.

Such is the case for this year’s edition of the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad, which played an 8th grader, a freshman, and five sophomores Thursday against visiting Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

And while the Wolves also had five seniors in the lineup, that group lost a season-and-a-half to the pandemic at the start of their high school run.

It makes for an interesting science experiment for CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, who saw his team make some very good plays Thursday, and some far less noteworthy ones.

By the time the nearly three-hour game, full of prairie wind and rain, was done, Coupeville absorbed a 15-5 loss.

But the non-conference defeat, which drops the Wolves to 4-4 on the season, didn’t become a blowout until the latter stages and went the full seven innings.

Cedar Park was only ahead 4-1 entering the top of the fifth but broke through for another 11 runs across the final three frames.

A series of Wolf errors, mixed with balls which rode the gusty winds to find holes in the defense, hurt late, but Coupeville never gave up.

Mia Farris and Haylee Armstrong, patrolling the outfield while trying to stay upright in the wind, both tracked down hard-hit balls and made solid catches while on the run.

Equally adept at reading the swirling gusts was freshman catcher Teagan Calkins, who twice fired off her face mask and sprinted to the backstop to snatch foul balls out of the air for crucial outs.

Combining defense with grit, Wolf relief pitcher Gwen Gustafson — shortly after being drilled in the leg with a hot liner back up the middle — flung herself forward to spear a bunt attempt which went airborne instead of to the ground.

To go along with its often-inspired defense, Coupeville racked up five hits and 14 walks, with Madison McMillan and Taylor Brotemarkle being plunked by wayward fastballs.

The Wolves had runners aboard every inning but came up just short of breaking things wide open.

Sometimes it was CPC making strong defensive plays — picking a straying runner off of third or turning a double play on a wicked Farris liner which was two inches away from being an extra-base hit.

Other times, it was Coupeville stopping itself, as the Wolf hitters went chasing after pitches out of the strike zone.

“Don’t help her out!” McGranahan cautioned his sluggers, but some bad pitches proved to be too enticing, and CHS ended every inning with runners still aboard.

Farris tapped home with Coupeville’s first run in the bottom of the third by getting creative.

The sophomore sensation walked, stole second by a mile, then scooted to third on a passed ball and sailed home on a wild pitch.

The Wolves picked up a run in the fifth, with Maya Lucero lashing a two-out RBI single that plated Calkins, then scored two more in the sixth.

Starting that mini rally with two outs and no one on base, CHS picked up a single from Calkins and a walk from Brotemarkle, before McMillan crunched a two-run double to center.

Coupeville’s final run came in the seventh, with Farris punching an RBI single into a gap, sending Jada Heaton hustling home.

The Wolves have a chance to get right back in a winning groove with a Northwest 2B/1B League clash Saturday against winless Concrete.

Originally scheduled to be a road game, it’s been moved to Coupeville, which has a slightly better weather forecast that day.

First pitch is 1 PM.

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — Two walks
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one walk
Mia Farris — One single, one walk
Jada Heaton — Three walks
Allie Lucero — Three walks
Maya Lucero — One single, two walks
Madison McMillan — One double, one walk
Melanie Navarro — One walk

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Morgan Batchelor, racking up strikeouts as a pitcher and hittin’ dingers at the plate. (Photo courtesy Olivia Batchelor)

Week 29 belongs to Whidbey Island.

Softball stars who play to the South and North of Coupeville were named Thursday to the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association Athlete of the Week list.

South Whidbey senior Morgan Batchelor and Oak Harbor sophomore Haylee Burleigh were among those selected as athletes from 4A-1B were honored.

Batchelor was hailed for her work on the diamond against Concrete Mar. 29, where she hit for the cycle and tossed a no-hitter, whiffing seven Lions.

Burleigh drew notice for her work at shortstop over a three-game span, as she was flawless in the field.

A two-way star like Batchelor, the Wildcat also pounded out four hits, including a triple, and stole four bases.

To read more about Whidbey’s softball sensations, and the other athletes honored this week, pop over to:

https://www.wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=347

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Madison McMillan, a terror on the basepaths, home or away. (Jackie Saia photo)

Write everything down in pencil, not pen.

The ever-shifting spring sports schedule is moving again, with road games Saturday for the Coupeville High School softball and baseball teams now being home rumbles.

That’s because the weather forecast for Whidbey is (slightly) better than the one for Concrete.

The games are set to go down on the prairie with 1:00 PM starts.

To make up for the change, the second meetings between Coupeville and Concrete on the diamond will flip the other way.

Games set for Apr. 25 will morph from home games to road games for the Wolves.

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