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District champs, and still undefeated heading into the state tourney. (Kerry Western photos)

Roll on, mighty Wolves, roll on.

Beating visiting Sedro-Woolley 10-0 for the second night in a row, the Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball team cleared a major hurdle Tuesday night in Oak Harbor.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 14-0 on the season, gives them the District 11 title, and sends them on to the state tourney.

The big dance goes down July 1-9 in Vancouver, with Central Whidbey slated to open play against the winner of District 5, which reps the lower corner of Eastern Washington.

Here’s the state bracket, just waiting for teams to be plugged in:

Click to access 2023_LLSB_State_Bracket_1.0.pdf

Tuesday night, the Wolves went for the clincher in their best 2-of-3 district rumble, and once again came up big against a tough foe.

Walks were key, as Central Whidbey racked up a ton, but the Islanders also got base-knocks from Kennedy Strevel, Chelsi Stevens, and Cassandra Powers.

The Wolves pushed three runs across in the first to snatch the lead, before tacking on two more in the third, four in the fourth, and a final tally in the fifth to push the game into mercy-rule territory.

“We were very disciplined tonight against a pair of good Sedro pitchers,” said Central coach Aaron Lucero.

“Hats off to Sedro, they came out looking to fight and made some big plays,” he added. “We had bases loaded in the first three or four innings and we just couldn’t put it away.”

Stevens launched “an absolute laser shot with the bases loaded and two outs” that might have broken the game open early, only to see Sedro’s outfielder make “a fantastic grab” to save runs.

The Wolves never backed down, however, continuing to put the pressure on their foes.

“Great job by our ladies to just keep chipping away,” Aaron Lucero said. “Putting the ball in play, aggressive base-running, and hustle, got it done for us offensively.”

Strevel and Adeline Maynes both tapped home plate twice for the Wolves, while Sydney Van Dyke, Stevens, Olivia Martin, Cameron Van Dyke, Emma Cushman, and KeeAyra Brown also scored.

Basking in the afterglow of sweet victory.

Mary Western, Ava Lucero, Selah Rivera, Samantha Antonio, and Allie Powers also played for Central Whidbey.

Maynes returned to the pitcher’s circle for Central Whidbey and was in lock-down mode most of the game, whiffing eight.

She got big-time help on defense from her catcher, Ava Lucero, who made the defensive play of the night for the final out.

Sedro had the bases jammed with two outs and was desperate to keep the game going when a wild pitch ran away from the waiting glove.

Responding instantly, Ava Lucero scrambled to the backstop, sliding on one knee to snatch the ball off the ground and fire it back to Maynes, who slapped the game-ending tag on an incoming runner.

Now, it’s off to the big stage for the Wolves, with their coach ready to hit the open roads for another long trip.

“Really proud of these players on a truly undefeated season,” Aaron Lucero said. “They showed a lot of grit.”

On to the next challenge!

 

Want to help the Wolves make their trip to state?

You can support the 14 girls — 12 from Coupeville, and one apiece from Oak Harbor and South Whidbey — two ways.

Checks made out to Central Whidbey Little League can be mailed to P.O. Box 222, Coupeville, WA 98239.

Or use Venmo to send money through Wolf Mom Kelly Powers, who can be found at https://account.venmo.com/u/Coupeville2029.

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Chelsi Stevens and her Central Whidbey Little League softball squad are halfway to winning a district title. (Kristi Stevens photo)

They’re halfway to the promised land.

The Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad kept its unbeaten streak alive Monday, thrashing Sedro-Woolley 10-0 in the District 11 playoff opener.

Playing in Oak Harbor, the Wolves combined timely hits, a keen eye at the plate, and the overpowering pitching of Adeline Maynes to push their record to 13-0 on the season.

Central Whidbey now has two chances to punch its ticket to the state tourney.

Game #2 of the best-of-three district royal rumble is Tuesday on the fields next to the John Vanderzicht Memorial Pool, with first pitch set for 6:00 PM.

If Sedro stays alive, a winner-take-all game #3 would be Wednesday, same location, same time.

The state tourney goes down in Vancouver July 1-9.

Monday’s game was close for a bit, with the Wolves pulling away to end things early thanks to the 10-run mercy rule.

Central Whidbey put up three runs in the bottom of the first, went scoreless in the second, then slapped on a fourth tally in the third.

Two more runs in the fourth frame stretched things out to 6-0, before a four-run uprising in the bottom of the fifth put a bow on things.

“Team was very resilient and battled every inning,” said Wolf coach Aaron Lucero.

“Had some hiccups I attribute to a few weeks layoff, but we kept fighting and never backed down,” he added. “Big game jitters. Sedro was a tough opponent and made some good plays.

“Luckily we had solid pitching, baserunning, and put pressure on the defense every opportunity we could.”

Sedro’s offense was never able to get much going, as Maynes went the distance in the pitcher’s circle, retiring 12 hitters via a strikeout.

She also scored three times, with seven different Wolves tapping home plate.

Sydney Van Dyke came around twice, while KeeAyra Brown, Emma Cushman, Kennedy Strevel, Ava Lucero, and Cameron Van Dyke also made the scoreboard operator earn their (likely nonexistent) paycheck.

Chelsi Stevens, Allie Powers, Samantha Antonio, Mary Western, Cassandra Powers, Selah Rivera, and Olivia Martin also saw playing time for the Wolves.

“Very proud of these young women,” Aaron Lucero said.

“Told them at the end of the game our work isn’t over and need to come out tomorrow ready to play ball.”

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Jada Heaton digs in under the bright lights. (Jennifer Heaton photos)

They’re making some noise on the diamond.

A year after failing to win a game at the National Softball Association state tourney as a 16U team, the Whidbey Island Thunder moved up a division and split four games against top-level competition.

The joint venture between Coupeville and Oak Harbor, with a couple of Sedro-Woolley players tossed into the mix, finished 7th in a 16-team 18U field.

The Whatcom Wolverines claimed top honors, edging Fury Black 2-1 in the championship game.

“Overall, extremely proud of the girls,” said Thunder coach Matt Suto.

“The girls battled through blood, sweat and bruises to make this weekend a successful one for themselves and our program.”

The Thunder? Smacking base hits and collecting plushies everywhere they go.

After making the trip eastward to the Tri-Cities, the Thunder joined 111 other teams, stretched out across six age levels.

Whidbey Island opened play Friday by nipping the Heat 4-3.

“Girls held it together on a late inning drive to secure victory,” Matt Suto said. “Defense stepped up under pressure to help (pitcher Grace) Swenson get the victory.”

Strong glove work was a key all weekend, with four Thunder players — Jada Heaton, McKayla Smith-Day, Teagan Calkins, and Layla Suto — posting 1.000 fielding percentages.

Saturday was a long day, with the Thunder falling 7-1 to WA Avengers Salas, before bouncing back to knock off Freedom Fastpitch 6-2.

That victory was keyed by a three-run bomb off the bat of Jaymie Kallio.

Trailing 2-0 in the bottom of the fourth, the Thunder launched a two-out rally, with six straight batters reaching safely.

Madison McMillan got things started with a single down the right field line, before Swenson walked, and Ramona Ryder, who hit .714 in the tourney, lashed a base-knock.

That set up Kallio, who launched her dinger to dead center, followed by Loto Tupu mashing a double and Lilly Norman slapping a single to put an exclamation point on a five-run rally.

“The girls never gave up and pushed each other to make plays and came out on top,” Matt Suto said.

Softball phenoms (l to r) Taylor Brotemarkle, Layla Suto, Jada Heaton, and Madison McMillan navigate the parking lot in cushy shoes. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

After playing under the lights Saturday night, the Thunder had to come right back in the early hours of Sunday, closing their tourney run with a 10-0 loss to CC Breeze.

“Couldn’t get the bats woken up after shutting down the fields the night before,” Matt Suto said. “But it was a total team effort.

“When girls numbers were called, they came in to play, whether it was pitching, running, or anything.”

After a break, the Thunder get right back it, traveling to Surrey, British Columbia for the Futures Select tourney July 6-10.

 

Weekend stats:

Haylee Armstrong — One walk
Taylor Brotemarkle
— One single, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one double
Jaymie Kallio — One single, one double, one home run
Allie Lucero — One single
Madison McMillan — Three singles, one double, one walk
Lilly Norman — One single, two walks
Ramona Ryder — Five singles
McKayla Smith-Day — One walk
Layla Suto — Three singles
Grace Swenson — One single, two walks
Loto Tupu — One double, one walk

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Have bats, will bash. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two victories away from a big-time road trip.

The Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad carries an undefeated 12-0 record into the District 11 tourney, which runs June 26-28 at Oak Harbor’s Volunteer Park.

The Wolves — featuring 12 Coupeville girls, plus one additional postseason player from both South and North Whidbey — clash with Sedro-Woolley in a best 2-of-3 series.

The games, played on the Juniors field next door to the John Vanderzicht Memorial Pool, kick off at 6:00 PM each night.

Whichever team emerges from the royal rumble holding the district trophy advances to the state championships in Vancouver.

That tournament is July 1-9.

Central Whidbey spent the regular season bashing the living snot out of the softball, scoring in double digits in each of its 12 wins, with two of those coming against Sedro-Woolley.

The Wolves got contributions from everyone on the roster — at the plate, in the field, and from the pitcher’s circle.

Staff ace Adeline Maynes, one of five Wolves likely making their final little league run as they can play high school ball next spring as 8th graders, was lights out all season when flinging heat.

Coupeville coaches, however, are taking the long view, not letting their players get too infatuated with their stellar stats.

You still have to perform if you want to advance.

“I’ve impressed upon our players that it’s a brand new season with postseason play,” Aaron Lucero said.

“While I’m pleased with the result of the work the players have put in thus far, our work is just starting, and we cannot take anyone lightly.

“We have to continue execute on the little things.”

 

Central Whidbey’s playoff roster:

Samantha Antonio
KeeAyra Brown
Emma Cushman
Ava Lucero
Olivia Martin
Adeline Maynes
Allie Powers
Cassandra Powers
Selah Rivera
Chelsi Stevens
Kennedy Strevel
Cameron Van Dyke
Sydney Van Dyke
Mary Western

 

With such a quick turnaround between districts and state, the Wolves are scrambling to raise money to help with the hoped-for trip to Vancouver.

If you’re interested in helping out, checks made out to Central Whidbey Little League can be mailed to P.O. Box 222, Coupeville, WA 98239.

Or you can also use Venmo to pay Wolf Mom Kelly Powers at  https://account.venmo.com/u/Coupeville2029.

If the Wolves don’t make it to state, any money raised will go to help CWLL programs.

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Madison McMillan (right) crunched a home run Sunday, impressing teammate Jada Heaton. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Everything was clicking.

The glove work was nearly impeccable. The pitching was overpowering.

And the bats? They were booming.

Putting together a rock-solid run Sunday, the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U softball squad rolled to its first tourney title of the season.

Cruising to 10-5 and 13-0 victories, the sluggers, who feature seven Coupeville players, were Silver Bracket champs at the School’s Out Invite in Mount Vernon.

“I couldn’t be more proud of the girls and this win,” said head coach Matt Suto. “It was a total team effort all weekend, and every player contributed.

“The girls absolutely tore the cover off the ball and played stellar defense behind great pitching from Grace Swenson.”

The flame-throwing hurler, one of two Sedro-Woolley players on the roster, was in control all day.

After blitzing through the Sparks in Sunday’s opening game, Swenson was 99.2% perfect in the championship tilt against the Venom Elite.

She faced just 10 hitters across three innings of work, with the Thunder ending the finale early thanks to the mercy rule.

Nine of those Venom batters went down meekly, with three striking out, and the lone player to reach base did so painfully after getting plunked by the imposing Swenson.

Coupeville’s Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Sedro-Woolley ace Grace Swenson played strongly all weekend. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

Whidbey broke the championship game open early, slapping five runs on the board in the bottom of the first.

Cranking out the hits, the Thunder got base knocks from Taylor Brotemarkle, Layla Suto, Madison McMillan, Swenson, Loto Tupu, and Jaymie Kallio, and didn’t stop there.

Three more runs in the second — fueled by three hits after they were working with two outs — stretched the lead to 8-0, then Whidbey coasted in for the win.

Layla Suto put a final punctuation mark on things with a resounding double back up the middle, coasting into second base as the Venom coach trudged across the field to surrender to his Thunder counterparts.

The semifinal game was a little closer than the championship game, but not by much.

Whidbey jumped out to a 7-0 lead, ringing up three runs in the top of the first and another four in the second frame to build a lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

The opening assault came thanks to a barrage of extra-base hits, with Brotemarkle and McMillan crunching doubles, while Layla Suto smoked a three-bagger to deep right field.

The coach’s daughter, coming off of an impressive freshman season at Oak Harbor High School, came back around to crack a double an inning later.

Before the Sparks could recover their mojo, the very next hitter, Coupeville’s longball-lovin’ Madison McMillan, went deep.

Belting a home run to dead center, the junior-to-be permanently snuffed out any lingering hopes of a comeback by her rivals.

Overall, the hard-hitting duo accounted for 11 RBIs across Sunday’s two games, with McMillan sending six runners careening for home, while Suto knocked in five of her teammates.

Swenson and Brotemarkle were hot on their heels, each picking up three RBI on the day.

From there, the Thunder defense, anchored by Coupeville catcher Teagan Calkins, went into lock-down mode.

“Just killer defense from the entire team,” Matt Suto said. “This is the momentum we need to roll into Tri-Cities next weekend for the NSA state tournament.”

The champs. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

The Thunder have a 14-woman roster most days, but picked up Oak Harbor’s Addison Morales for the weekend, and she pitched for the team in pool play.

Swenson and Kallio hail from Sedro, while Ramona Ryder, Lilly Norman, McKayla Smith-Day, Layla Suto, and Loto Tupu call Oak Harbor home.

Coupeville players fill out half the roster, with Calkins, McMillan, and Brotemarkle joined by Allie Lucero, Haylee Armstrong, Jada Heaton, and Maya Lucero.

 

Championship bracket stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — Four singles, one double
Teagan Calkins — One single
Jaymie Kallio — Three singles
Allie Lucero — One single
Maya Lucero — Two singles, one double, one walk
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, one home run
Lilly Norman — One single
Ramona Ryder — Two singles
McKayla Smith-Day — One single
Layla Suto — Two singles, two doubles, one triple
Grace Swenson — Three singles, two walks
Loto Tupu — One single, one walk

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