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CHS softball sluggers (l to r) Haylee Armstrong, Sydney Van Dyke, and Cami Van Dyke played for others Saturday. (Photos courtesy Grant Van Dyke and WhidbeyHealth Foundation)

It was a solid day’s work.

Both the Coupeville High School softball and baseball teams won their home games Saturday, but there was more to the afternoon than just on-field action.

The Wolf sluggers spearheaded a Coupeville vs. Cancer event which raised $2,390.20 for WhidbeyHealth’s MAC Clinic through the sale of t-shirts and food.

Both teams dressed up for the occasion, with softball players sporting different colored socks to reflect different forms of cancer, while the diamond men wore special shirts.

Several players offered impassioned speeches about family members who have been impacted by cancer, and, for the first time this spring, home games were played on the prairie under clear blue skies.

The event required the coordinated efforts of many, led by Wolf Moms Michele Thule and Michelle Armstrong.

Also playing a large role was Rainy Simpson from the WhidbeyHealth Foundation and MAC nurses Sherry Phay, Lisa Toomey-Stout, and Courtney Gray.

The WhidbeyHealth Foundation sponsored the baseball team t-shirts, while the Coupeville Booster Club provided softball’s socks.

Ashley’s Design printed the shirts, and CHS coaches covered the cost of 100 hamburgers and 100 hotdogs.

 

Playing key roles:

Shaloma Allen
Joe and Michelle Armstrong
“Granny” Chris Baker
Mandi Black
Shawn Calkins
Mindy Grove
Lark Gustafson
Steve Hilborn
Rachel King
Leann and Nate Leavitt
Aaron and Jess Lucero
Dane Lucero
Tony Martin
Scott and Lara Maynes
Tamra Patterson
Morgan Payne
Mike Pearson
Jennifer Rains
Jon Roberts
Alix Roos
Dina Shaw
“Auntie” Bettie Sifuentes
Kristi and Brent Stevens
Mariah Stoker
Michele and Doug Thule
Colleen and Grant Van Dyke
Emily Zenz

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Mikayla Wagner runs towards Spring Break. (Marquette Cunningham photo)

Everyone is taking a break.

Well, maybe not everyone, but a whole lot of people will be out of office next week as Spring Break fever ripples across the land.

There are only three baseball games and two softball rumbles featuring Northwest 2B/1B League teams on the schedule for the week of Apr. 6-11, and none of those feature a Coupeville squad.

The Wolf track stars and tennis players are also sidelined, though everyone will be back in action the following week.

Which likely means it’ll be sunny skies from now through next Sunday, and then Mother Nature will launch a comeback in time to bedevil the schedule makers.

While we wait to see what the weather forecasters have in store for us, here’s where things sit through Apr. 5:

Olivia Martin flies for home. (Julie Wheat photo)

 

Northwest League baseball:

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

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Teagan Calkins (left) and Haylee Armstrong combined for seven hits in a 21-3 win. (Jackie Saia photo)

It was beautifully brutal.

For an inning-and-a-half Saturday, it seemed like visiting East Jefferson might be able to hang with the undefeated Coupeville High School softball squad.

Then reality hit. Like a hammer.

As in the Wolves delivered a 20-batter, 15-run bottom of the second inning — highlighted by a majestic out-of-the-park grand slam from Teagan Calkins — and the Smash Sisters were on their way to a resounding 21-3 victory.

By the time the frame came to a close, thanks to CHS having a runner leave base early, East Jefferson’s players looked shell-shocked.

It’s been a familiar look for Wolf foes this season, as Aaron Lucero’s squad has launched to an 8-0 start in which it has outscored foes 128-15.

With the loss to graduation of heavy hitters like Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, and Taylor Brotemarkle, there was some concern about Coupeville’s hitting after a 20-3 season which included two wins at state.

The answer so far?

Don’t worry about it, these Wolves are crushing the ball, with some new names tossed into the mix, and danger for rival pitchers to be found in slots one through nine.

Or, in this case, Rival pitchers, as that is what East Jefferson named its teams after folding Chimacum and Port Townsend into a 2-for-1 program.

No one on either current roster was around when Coupeville and Chimacum waged a fierce softball war across several seasons in the Olympic League.

But still, Saturday’s win could be considered payback for that time when a blind Chimacum umpire stole a league title from the Wolves, then shared cupcakes with the “winning” team while still in uniform.

Is my middle name Allen or “Mr. Petty?” You decide.

Even if you didn’t see every Wolf hit Saturday as being delivered with a fist raised to the sky, saluting the memory of Katrina McGranahan and her teammates, the base knock bash was still impressive.

It started where all things start, with “The Red Dragon” carving up pitching.

Calkins, the lone senior on this year’s team, is making the turn for the finish line after crafting a truly impressive run as a prairie powerhouse in three sports, but she’s still got magic to make.

Saturday, she pounded out four extra-base hits and walked, only missing hitting for the cycle for one reason — she can’t stop at first to get a measly single.

Always on the move, always looking for that extra base, Calkins smacked a two-out laser to left in the bottom of the first, slicing around the bag at first and sprawling into second with a double to fire the first shot.

The second shot came mere moments later, as Chelsi Stevens, who has moved from a part-time player as a freshman to the team’s ball-crunching cleanup hitter as a sophomore, whacked an RBI single to left.

When East Jefferson escaped the frame trailing just 1-0, there was a hint of hope emitting from the visitor’s dugout.

But just a hint, as Wolf sophomore hurler Adeline Maynes was unrelenting, whiffing seven in three innings of work, including one especially nasty pitch to punch out a Rivals hitter who had fouled off the previous two balls.

One of the few times East Jefferson made contact against Coupeville’s ace, a batter popped up a bunt, only to see CHS third baseman Sydney Van Dyke come crashing in hard to snatch the ball out of the air.

And then nirvana arrived.

Or the bottom of the second inning, so to speak.

Emma Leavitt led off the frame by getting plunked by a wayward pitch and little did she know she would come to the plate three(!) times in the inning as Coupeville unleashed a fireworks display of hits off of its multi-colored bats.

The longest hit?

The grand salami served up by Calkins, which disappeared over the left field fence, the ball seemingly intent on catching a ride to the ferry with a passing car.

The hardest hit?

A Capri Anter-fired rocket which went straight back up the middle, slamming off the pitcher’s glove and nearly taking her arm along with the mitt.

The most colorful?

A two-run single to left from Haylee Armstrong, who was rockin’ an ice cream-colored hitting stick.

Coupeville didn’t get its first out in the inning until batter #10, and the only reason they’re not still playing the frame is the Wolves gave away outs to ease the bloodletting.

When you go from trailing 1-0 to trailing 16-0, followed by Maynes flinging high, hard cheese that you can’t hit, game over, man, game over.

Though not technically, as the 10-run mercy rule only kicks in after five innings, so back to work the Wolves went.

Stevens and Anter delivered back-to-back RBI hits in the bottom of the third, Allie Powers eked out a bases-loaded walk, then Cami Van Dyke pasted a two-run single to make it 21-0 and bring Coupeville’s scoring to an end.

Armstrong moved into the pitcher’s circle for the final two innings, combining with Maynes to toss a no-hitter.

Zipping fastballs that rattled the windows on the homes in the nearby trailer park, she set down three batters on strikes, while the Wolf defense closed things with a pair of stellar plays.

On the first, Calkins tracked down a towering foul pop-up behind the plate, while on the second Coupeville nabbed a Rival during a run-down where the ball got whipped from Calkins to Stevens to Cami Van Dyke and back.

 

Saturday stats:

Zariyah Allen — One walk
Capri Anter — Two singles, one double, one walk
Haylee Armstrong — Two singles, one double
Teagan Calkins — Two doubles, one triple, one home run, one walk
Emma Leavitt — Two walks
Ava Lucero — One single, one walk
Olivia Martin — One walk
Adeline Maynes — Two walks
Allie Powers — One walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single, three doubles
Cami Van Dyke — One double, three walks
Sydney Van Dyke — Two walks

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Capri Anter has a big bat and she’s not afraid to use it. (Jackie Saia photo)

They’re always hunting for runs.

The Coupeville High School softball squad is jam-packed with fleet-footed, quick-thinking athletes, always looking to disrupt their foes on the basepaths.

That was showcased again Thursday, as the Wolves hammered the ball, then ran visiting Darrington ragged during a 15-0 win on the chilly prairie.

With the victory, Aaron Lucero’s sluggers get to a pristine 4-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-0 overall, with a non-conference home game against East Jefferson (1-5) set for Saturday.

That tilt, slated to tip off at 2:30 PM, is also the annual Coupeville vs. Cancer fundraiser, with proceeds going to WhidbeyHealth.

Thursday’s matchup was a well-rounded beatdown, with the Wolves controlling every facet of the game.

Lucero went three deep with his pitching staff, as Adeline Maynes whiffed five across three innings of work before cousins Haylee Armstrong and Capri Anter each chucked a frame.

Armstrong picked up two K’s, before making a nice snag in center field in support of Anter, who also struck out a batter and got a defensive gem from backup third-baseman Emily Rains, as she snapped up a hot grounder and slapped on the game-ending tag on an incoming runner.

Coupeville pushed four runners across in the bottom of the first to get all the runs it would need but didn’t stop there.

The first rally was kicked off by back-to-back hits from Sydney Van Dyke and Teagan Calkins.

But it was Anter who made the heavens roar, delivering a thunderous RBI triple that bounced off the wall in left field, just a hair shy of earning her sweet, sweet cash from her dad for an out-of-the-park home run.

CHS did get a tater, but of the inside-the-park variety, when Maynes walloped a grand slam to highlight a nine-run second inning.

The sophomore sensation belted the ball deep to left, then trucked around the basepaths, almost running over her teammates in front of her as the Wolf bench urged the stragglers to get movin’.

Two batters after Maynes flexed her biceps, Emma Cushman laid down a beauty of a bunt.

With Olivia Martin motoring in front of her, the Wolf duo freaked out the Logger defense, which airmailed several throws on the play, allowing The Cushinator to turn an artful single into a round trip around the bags.

Up 13-0 at that point, Coupeville managed to get most of its bench into the game, with Zariyah Allen, Emma Leavitt, Rains, Zayne Roos, and Allie Powers all seeing field time.

The Wolves closed their scoring with hot-hitting 8th grader Cami Van Dyke lacing a two-run single to straightaway center in the third, before coasting in for the win, with their eyes already set on delivering their postgame sing-along.

While there’s been barely a hint of sun this spring, at least during home games, Coupeville remains red-hot, having outscored its foes 107-12, with five of the seven wins ending early thanks to the mercy rule.

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — One triple, one walk
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double, one walk
Emma Cushman — One single
Olivia Martin — One walk
Adeline Maynes — One single, one home run, one walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single
Cami Van Dyke — Two singles
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, one walk

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Coupeville sophomore first-baseman Ava Lucero was flawless in the field Tuesday and deadly at the plate. (Jackie Saia photo)

Aim for the mountains.

Look out to center field at Darrington, and that’s what you’ll see peeking down on the Loggers softball field — a range of craggy targets.

So, the smash sisters took advantage Tuesday, as the Coupeville High School sluggers lashed liners to all fields, including a Chelsi Stevens moonshot which cleared the fences, en route to demolishing their hosts 21-2.

The lopsided win, in which CHS coach Aaron Lucero was able to get action for all 17 girls on his active roster, lifts the Wolves to 3-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-0 overall.

Combined with an Orcas Island loss to Friday Harbor, it also moves Coupeville back into sole possession of first place in the conference, with a rematch against Darrington set for Thursday on Whidbey Island.

By that time, they may have found the ball Stevens launched into the stratosphere. Maybe.

It came just four batters into the game yet was already the fourth booming shot unleashed by a CHS squad which has outscored its foes 92-12 this season.

Lethal leadoff hitter Haylee Armstrong jumped on the first pitch of the afternoon, cracking a ball a Darrington outfielder couldn’t handle, while Teagan Calkins mashed a triple to left-center two batters later.

Up to the plate came Stevens, flexing her bat and eyeballing the Logger pitcher.

Boom! The sophomore cleanup hitter delivered with a clang, the ball arcing up, up, and still further up into the blue sky, while the Darrington outfielders watched helplessly as the two-run tater screamed its way halfway back to Whidbey before landing.

It was wash, rinse, and repeat from there for the Wolves, who tacked on another run in the first, thanks to an Ava Lucero RBI double, before pushing six across in the second frame.

Stevens again came up big her second time around, with a long RBI double, while Capri Anter, Lucero, and Emma Leavitt also connected on run-scoring hits.

Wolf hurler Adeline Maynes was unhittable in the early innings, throwing high, hard cheese and collecting strikeouts, with the game put on ice thanks to a 15-batter, nine-run third inning which lasted approximately 45 minutes and change.

Sydney Van Dyke, Calkins, and Stevens walloped back-to-back-to-back extra-base blows to start the frame, with Cami Van Dyke, Leavitt, and Allie Powers chipping in with key base knocks to keep the never-ending rally chugging along.

From midway through the third to the end of the fourth, Aaron Lucero kept his scorebook keeper hoppin’, mixing and matching players in the lineup to give his reserves crucial game action to build for the future while keeping the score from getting to 50-0.

Zariyah Allen, Olivia Martin, Allie Powers, Marina Jadwin, Arianna Vinson, Zayne Roos, and Emily Rains all earned plate appearances, while Emma Cushman (defense) and Emma Leavitt (offense) combined to form a dynamic duo in right field.

Darrington, a plucky team, did scrape out two runs in the fourth, but Calkins and Anter got them back with RBI singles in the fifth.

Flame-throwing Wolf hurlers Maynes and Armstrong combined to net eight strikeouts, while Ava Lucero, playing a spotless first base, pulled off three unassisted put-outs on grounders to highlight a top-flight defense.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — Three singles
Haylee Armstrong — One triple
Teagan Calkins — One single, one triple, one walk
Emma Leavitt — One single, one double
Ava Lucero — One single, one double, one walk
Adeline Maynes — Two walks
Allie Powers — One single
Emily Rains — One walk
Chelsi Stevens — Two doubles, one home run
Cami Van Dyke — One single
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, one double, one triple

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