Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

Marquette Cunningham (left) and Malachi Somes love the smell of track shoes in the morning. (Julie Wheat photos)

Spring is sizzlin’.

Maybe not weather wise, where most events have played out in cold, gusty prairie wind, and the occasional burst of rain, but Coupeville High School sports teams are racking up wins.

Softball is 9-0, baseball sits at 7-2, and girls’ tennis is a solid 2-2, while track and field has battled for titles at every meet this season.

Who knows? At some point the sun may come out and stay out.

Until then, we have the pics seen above and below to warm up the souls of Wolf parents.

Girls’ tennis dominates on every court.

The CHS diamond men are fighting for a league title.

Wolf seniors (l to r) Aleksia Jump, Dahlia Miller, and Miles Gerber are all aces.

The Smash Sisters are queens of the diamond.

Track and field’s numbers are booming.

Read Full Post »

The prairie looked nothing like this Tuesday, but Cami Van Dyke and Co. win in any weather. (Grant Van Dyke photo)

Hits are overrated.

Limited to just three base knocks Tuesday, the Coupeville High School softball team remained undefeated, using 15 walks and a top-tier pitching performance from Adeline Maynes to KO visiting La Conner 10-0.

The win, mercy-ruled after five innings, lifts the Wolves to 5-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 9-0 overall, and keeps them as one of just two squads in 2B who haven’t tasted defeat this spring.

Aaron Lucero’s squad, which came within a two-out error in the fifth of seeing Maynes toss a perfect game, hits the road Thursday for a rematch at La Conner, before playing a non-conference doubleheader in Forks Saturday afternoon.

Back from Spring Break, the Wolves were greeted by a chilly prairie which rudely kicked up the cold wind.

If the weather was less than appealing, the one thing fully warmed up was the pitching arm of Maynes, as the sophomore hurler whiffed 13 Braves, while inducing a pair of groundouts to Cami Van Dyke.

The shortstop, an 8th grader who plays like a grizzled vet, made a very-strong play on the first of those two fielding chances, knocking down a hot grounder, then firing a laser to Ava Lucero for the out.

La Conner only got one runner aboard on this day, and it wasn’t until the 15th Braves batter, who beat a throw to first on a play where the ball got juggled and squirted free.

No biggie, as Maynes promptly chucked three strikes past the next hitter, ending the game the way she started it, throwing heat and essentially playing catch with backstop Teagan Calkins.

The Wolves, a hit-first team, didn’t get their first base knock until Ava Lucero dumped a truly gorgeous bunt single down the third-base line in the third inning.

At that point, CHS was up 2-0, having eked out a run in the first and another in the second using patience at the plate and opportunistic running on the basepaths.

Maynes forced home the only run she would need, drawing a bases-loaded walk to put CHS on the board, before Haylee Armstrong scooted home on a wild pitch an inning later.

Cue the third, which, while not a huge explosion, still put the game on ice.

Ava Lucero’s bunt single followed walks to Capri Anter (who got drilled by a wayward pitch) and Maynes, and once the bags were juiced, the Wolves went to work.

A combination of La Conner wild pitches, passed balls, and mental mistakes allowed CHS to plate three, with Anter and pinch-runner Olivia Martin nimbly avoiding tags at home, before Coupeville used its biggest hit of the day to break things open.

The blow came off the bat of Calkins, with “The Red Dragon” lashing a two-run double to left, one of the few times a hitter was able to out-muscle the wind, which was steadily gusting in across home plate, kicking up infield dirt every two seconds.

Coupeville pushed the lead out to 10-0 in the fourth, with a dirt-covered Anter careening home on a wild pitch, followed by Sydney Van Dyke crushing a two-run single off the fielder’s glove in left.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — Two walks
Haylee Armstrong — Three walks
Teagan Calkins — One double, one walk
Emma Cushman — One walk
Ava Lucero — One single
Adeline Maynes — Two walks
Chelsi Stevens — One walk
Cami Van Dyke — Two walks
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, three walks

Emma Cushman waits for her pitch. (Jackie Saia photo)

Read Full Post »

Teagan Calkins gets strapped in and ready to rock. (Jackie Saia photo)

We’re back in action. Probably.

After a sun-drenched Spring Break which featured no Coupeville High School athletic contests, the Wolves rev back up this coming week, with all four of their teams in action.

Cue the wind and rain, likely. Mother Nature is a fickle mistress…

For now, CHS girls’ tennis is slated to travel to South Whidbey Monday, before hopping over to Friday Harbor four days later for a league clash.

Meanwhile, Wolf track and field hosts a home meet Wednesday before getting up at the crack o’ dawn Saturday to venture off to Forks for an invitational.

On the diamond, Coupeville baseball and softball both have busy weeks.

The diamond men travel to South Whidbey Monday, host La Conner Tuesday, then hit the road Thursday (La Conner) and Saturday (Forks).

Finally, the undefeated softball sluggers have two against La Conner — home on Tuesday, away on Thursday — before pulling doubleheader duty in Forks Saturday afternoon.

As we … spring … back into action, here’s where things stand through Apr. 12:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 6-0 10-1
Coupeville 4-0 6-2
Friday Harbor 2-2 3-5
Orcas Island 2-4 3-7
La Conner 1-2 2-5
Concrete 0-3 0-3
Darrington 0-4 0-8

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 2-2
Friday Harbor 0-1 0-2

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 4-0 8-0
La Conner 2-0 3-1
Orcas Island 3-2 4-4
Friday Harbor 2-2 4-6
Darrington 0-3 1-3
Concrete 0-4 0-4

Read Full Post »

Madison McMillan

When she sees the field, she has a big impact.

Playing for a very-deep Edmonds College softball squad, Coupeville grad Madison McMillan has had to be patient during her freshman campaign, sharing duties at third base.

But when the former Wolf is in the lineup, she rakes.

Wednesday night was another example, as McMillan started in the first game of a doubleheader sweep against host Skagit Valley College, collecting two walks, a hit, a run, and an RBI in a 19-4 win mercy-ruled after five innings.

The nightcap went even faster, with the Tritons bouncing SVC 15-3 in just three innings as Coupeville’s progeny cheered on her teammates from the bench.

The sweep pushes Edmonds winning streak to 20 games, with the squad sitting at 20-1.

On the season, McMillan has played in 15 of 21 games, starting nine.

She’s hitting at a .429 clip — fifth-best on the team — with 11 runs, 12 hits, three doubles, two home runs, 15 RBI, and six walks.

McMillan’s stellar play at Edmonds follows on the heels of a superb four-year run at CHS, where she was a key player for Wolf volleyball, basketball, and softball teams, helping both the spikers and diamond women advance to the state tourney.

 

UPDATE:

McMillan actually smashed her third home run of the season, only to be officially denied by an extra-picky ump.

Flexing her muscles, she sent a shot which one fan noted was “to deep, deep center field … one of the longer home runs I’ve seen her hit.”

But…

After a 10-15 minute discussion between the umps, it was ruled McMillan “touched the orange safety bag, NOT the white first base bag when rounding to second,” which is an automatic out under Northwest Athletic Conference rules.

In the postgame shuffle, the home plate ump remarked it was “the farthest jack he has seen this year,” and Instagram gave her some props, even if the home run will never exist in the “official” stats.

Read Full Post »

Adeline Maynes is the point of the spear for an 8-0 Wolf softball squad. (Jackie Saia photo)

The WIAA has entered the chat.

Wednesday marked the first time the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association has released Rating Percentage Index (RPI) numbers for spring sports.

And as soon as they did, Coupeville High School made a nice splash, with its undefeated softball squad landing #7 in the 2B rankings.

Meanwhile, the Wolf baseball squad shows up at #19 (out of 47 schools), with the WIAA crediting Steve Hilborn’s team with being 5-2, even though they’re really 6-2.

That’s not an error, but a quirk, as Coupeville’s season-opening victory against 3A Oak Harbor technically came against the Wildcats JV and the RPI rankings don’t count varsity teams beating JV teams, regardless of classification.

Aaron Lucero’s softball sluggers have no quirks on their own schedule, as they beat Oak Harbor’s varsity and sit at 8-0 as Spring Break unfolds.

The Smash Sisters have won six of those eight by 10+ runs and are one of just two 2B softball teams to still have a spotless record, joining #3 Liberty (Spangle), which is 11-0.

And actually, now there is a second quirk, as when the RPI rankings were first revealed Wednesday, Colfax was also undefeated and ranked #4 as shown in this photo.

Then the Bulldogs fell 8-4 to 2A Pullman in an early afternoon game, and slid from #4 to #8, while Adna, River View, Toutle Lake, and Coupeville all jumped a spot.

In the end, how important is RPI? Depends on who you ask.

The rankings are “one tool utilized by the seeding committees to determine first round bracket pairings into the state tournaments.”

So, there’s that, though first you have to punch your ticket to the dance for it to really matter.

Until then, it’s all about bragging rights.

So, yeah, it’s kinda a big deal for the easily hyped-up such as myself.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »