Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Haylee Armstrong and crew will play two games Thursday at home. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mother Nature is on Coupeville’s side, it appears.

Both Wolf softball and baseball were set to return to action Tuesday with a road trip to the wilds of Darrington, but rain washed that away.

Now, the games have been bumped to Thursday and will go down in Cow Town instead of Logger territory.

It’ll be doubleheader action on both sides of the road for the Wolves, with the start time of both game #1’s set for 3:00 PM.

Game #2 for each is tentatively planned for 5:00 PM.

CHS softball is sitting on top of the Northwest 2B/1B League coming out of spring break, boasting a 2-0 conference record and a 5-1 overall mark.

Meanwhile, a rebuilding Wolf hardball squad is still looking for its first win of the campaign, carrying 0-2 and 0-6 records into Thursday’s twin bill.

Oak Harbor twins Averie (left) and Kailee Welden are blazing their own trails on the diamond while honoring those who came before. (Photos courtesy Amie Welden)

“The girls always want to play baseball or softball, 24/7!”

Amie Welden grew up in Massuchusetts playing both sports, a born-and-bred passionate Boston Red Sox fan, and it’s carried down to her daughters.

Averie and Kailee, 11-year-old twins who attend Oak Harbor Intermediate School, would happily live on the diamond.

The fifth-grade duo, who have been playing with North Whidbey Little League since 2021, began as baseball players before morphing into softball stars, but still have a date with hardball destiny.

Selected to participate in this summer’s Maria Pepe Little League Baseball Legacy series, the Welden twins and their family will head off to Williamsport, Pennsylvania for the June 6-8 event.

The weekend-long celebration will see 96 players divided into eight teams, with each squad guaranteed a minimum three games played at Howard J. Lamade and Volunteer Stadiums.

The twins are joined by their younger sister, president of their fan club.

Maria Pepe was a trailblazer for girls playing little league baseball.

The national association banned females from participating in hardball games in 1951, and when Pepe, a pitcher, played alongside boys from her New Jersey neighborhood in 1972, Little League threatened to revoke Hoboken’s charter.

The National Organization for Women rallied to Pepe’s cause, with an ensuing lawsuit finally winning the right in 1974 for girls to play little league baseball.

The series named in her honor debuted in 2024 and truly celebrates the place of women in the sport, with all coaches and umpires involved also being females.

Kailee Welden is primarily a pitcher who also bounces around the field as a utility player, while Averie is often on the receiving end of her sister’s throws while operating as a catcher and third baseman.

After starting as baseball players — “I’m an avid Red Sox fan, so they may have been unintentionally brainwashed into thinking baseball is the greatest sport around” said mom — they now play softball for the North Whidbey Tidal Wave in the Majors division.

“They love baseball, but socially it was tough being with a bunch of boys,” Amie Welden said.

“They have embraced softball as an alternative and are having much more fun being surrounded by girls their age.”

Kailee and Averie, who also participate in FLL Robotics, German Club, and Track Club at Oak Harbor Intermediate, greatly enjoyed watching the Junior League Softball World Series in Kirkland last summer.

That experience inspired them, and the Williamsport trip, and temporary return to baseball, has them fired up.

“They jump at any opportunity to play,” Amie Welden said.

“They both said their favorite part about the sport is meeting new friends.

“All-Star season is their favorite because they get to meet kids from all over the state and play at a more competitive level.”

Diamond dreams live large.

With the 96 young women playing in the Maria Pepe series coming from around the USA, the twins get a chance to be trailblazers of their own.

“I am so excited for them to have this opportunity,” Amie Welden said. “What a great experience for not only them, but our small hometown Little League and all of Whidbey Island.

“I wanted to share our story to inform and encourage any other girls to take advantage of this opportunity, that it really can happen to anyone,” she added.

“They too can be selected to play on Little League’s biggest stage! We hope it encourages more girls to get out and play!”

 

To help Averie and Kailee (and mom and lil’ sis) make it to Williamsport, the twins are selling handmade items at farmer’s markets, and there is also a GoFundMe at:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-averie-and-kailee-reach-williamsport

Katie Marti is currently ranked #7 among all 2B shot put flingers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Their time on the sidelines is done.

With spring break having played out last week, Coupeville High School track and field athletes could do little more than bide their time with no new meets.

That allowed for other prep stars from across the state to slip past the Wolves in some places on the top 10 charts for 2B schools.

But now, class is back in session and Coupeville returns to competition at the Birger Solberg Invitational in Bellingham this coming Saturday.

For Wolves like Carson Field, who slipped from #1 to #4 in the 800 over the course of the past week, the chance to control their own fates is once more open.

Let the number-crunching begin anew!

For now, through April 7, here’s where CHS oval queens and kings sit among all 2B competitors:

 

GIRLS:

800 — Lyla Stuurmans (8th) 2:33.53

Shot Put — Katie Marti (7th) 32-08

Pole Vault — Aleksia Jump (7th-tie) 7-00

 

BOYS:

800 — Carson Field (4th) 2:05.85

4 x 100 Relay — Marquette Cunningham, Matthew Ward, Preston Epp, Chase Anderson (9th) 46.20

High Jump — Cael Wilson (4th) 6-00; Davin Houston (6th) 5-08

Pole Vault — Wilson (6th) 11-06; Axel Marshall (8th) 10-06

Wolf softball coach Aaron Lucero keeps his team jumpin’. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Back to action.

After sitting out spring break, Coupeville High School sports teams are hankerin’ to return to play and will do so in the week ahead.

Wolf baseball and softball square off with Darrington in two-game series, traveling off-island Tuesday, before welcoming the Loggers to Cow Town two days later.

Meanwhile, CHS girls’ tennis host Granite Falls Wednesday, then makes the short jaunt to South Whidbey for a Friday fracas.

And last, but not least, track and field travels to Bellingham Saturday for the Birger Solberg Invitational.

Break’s over, and the next eight weeks will be filled to the brim with action, Mother Nature willing.

Where things sit as of April 6:

 

Northwest League baseball:

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

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 1-0 1-0
Coupeville 0-1 0-3

 

Northwest League softball:

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

Tate Wyman

He’s still got that zing.

Coupeville grad Tate Wyman, now a sophomore at Oregon Tech, zipped around the track oval Saturday in McMinnville, Oregon.

Competing for the Hustlin’ Owls at the Jenn Boyman Invitational, the former Wolf set a PR in the 110 hurdles while also running legs on Oregon Tech’s 4 x 100 and 4 x 400 relay squads.

The 4 x 1 unit earned 5th place (out of nine teams) with a time of 43.47 seconds, while the 4 x 4 finished 5th in a field of 11 squads in 3:28.28.

Wyman also placed 10th, out of a field of 24 competitors, in the hurdles, hitting the tape in 15.99.

His previous collegiate PR was 16.07.

During his days at CHS, Wyman was a standout track and cross country runner, earning a 2nd place medal in the 4 x 100 at the state meet his senior season.

Oregon Tech returns to action April 11-12, when the track team travels to Monmouth, Oregon for the John Knight Twilight meet.