Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Alex Murdy is one of 26 seniors on the CHS track team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Coupeville High School track and field team is doing things a little differently this year.

With 26 seniors on the roster and a hole in the schedule, Wolf coaches have scrambled to add a home meet Wednesday, April 19.

The Coupeville Classic Invitational, set to kickoff at 3:00 PM, allows CHS to have a real Senior Night ceremony, which often doesn’t happen in the world of track.

It also keeps the Wolves active, as they were looking at a two-week gap between off-Island meets.

 

Coupeville coaches will honor:

Anna Annunziato
Reiley Araceley
Katie Buskala
Dominic Coffman
Jermiah Copeland
Gwen Crowder
Cameron Epp
Josh Guay
Mitchell Hall
Taygin Jump
Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson
Ryanne Knoblich
Carolyn Lhamon
Claire Mayne
Cristina McGrath
Alex Murdy
Anna Myles
Valentina Nadela
Sara Omega
Anthony Smolen
Lavinia Tomba
Josh Upchurch
Tim Ursu
Aidan Wilson
Kai Wong
Tate Wyman

Hawthorne Wolfe, old-school style. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf alumni still have that lovin’ feeling for baseball.

Coupeville High School grads Hawthorne Wolfe and Joey Lippo are deep into collegiate hardball seasons in different parts of the country.

Wolfe is a freshman at Western Washington University, where he’s part of a Viking squad sitting at a sweet 10-6 on the season.

With the former Coupeville ace striking out a season-high six batters in a game this past weekend, WWU claimed two of three from the University of Washington to cement its status as the second-best team in their five-team conference.

The Vikings, who are 4-2 in league play, have 12 games left on the schedule.

Western hosts Gonzaga this coming Saturday and Sunday for three games, then gets a first-place showdown with the University of Oregon (12-4, 5-1) the following weekend.

On the season, Wolfe has pitched in a team-high six games, starting three, and is 1-0 with a save. His 16 strikeouts across 15+ innings of work ranks second among WWU hurlers.

Lippo, a junior outfielder at the University of Maine at Presque Isle, is having a solid season for a team struggling to improve its win/loss record.

The Owls are 1-18 heading into a pair of weekend doubleheaders with Thomas College in Waterville.

Coupeville’s alumni is hitting .258 — second-best on his squad — with 16 hits, eight runs, two triples, a home run, seven RBI, seven walks, and four steals.

Lippo also displays a nimble glove and a strong arm while patrolling the field for UMPI.

Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Chloe Marzocca both scored as Coupeville thumped previously undefeated Darrington. (Jackie Saia photo)

“We started pretty fast and kept our foot on the gas.”

Kevin McGranahan had his Coupeville High School varsity softball team primed for Tuesday’s showdown with undefeated Darrington, and it showed.

Pounding out 13 hits, with nine of those base knocks being for extra bases, the Wolves made quick work of the visiting Loggers, rolling to a 15-3 victory.

The win lifts CHS to 4-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-4 overall, while Darrington falls to 3-1 in conference action.

The home game, played on a day when the sun peeked out over the prairie, the rain stayed away, and the wind made but the smallest of rustles, kicks off a busy week for Coupeville.

The Wolves travel to La Conner Thursday to face a winless Braves squad, then head off to Onalaska Saturday for a doubleheader against a tough non-league foe.

Based on win/loss records, Tuesday’s tilt with Darrington might have been expected to be a tightly-contested affair.

It was not.

Wolf hurler Allie Lucero struck out the side in the top of the first, kicking off a day in which the senior would record nine K’s, and then the offense went to work.

Coupeville crunched four doubles in the bottom of the first en route to grabbing a 3-0 lead, with Mia Farris, Taylor Brotemarkle, Allie Lucero, and Maya Lucero all finding their groove.

The hits kept coming in the second frame, as 8th grader Haylee Armstrong led off with a triple, launching a gorgeous line drive to deep centerfield that brought to mind memories of former Wolf hitting star Chelsea Prescott.

The middle school masher, who worked her way into the starting lineup with her defense, is proving her bat is ready for prime time as well, something her coach noted.

“We had big hits all over today, but none bigger than the one from the smallest girl out there today,” McGranahan said with a big smile.

Two batters later Armstrong tapped home after freshman catcher Teagan Calkins bopped a double down the third-base line, and the rout was on.

Darrington briefly cut its deficit to 4-1 in the third, scoring on a botched play in which a Logger got caught in a two-out rundown, only to escape when the Wolves threw the ball away not once, but twice.

While that play might have given McGranahan and his assistant coaches a touch of angina, it was soon washed away by the glory of the Wolf bats.

Coupeville plated eight runners in its half of the third inning, before tacking on three more in the fourth to firmly put the game into mercy rule land.

Jada Heaton and Farris walloped doubles in the third, while Darrington fell apart in a wild mix of errors, walks, wild pitches, and mental meltdowns.

The defining play might have been Calkins, alertly scampering to first on a dropped third strike.

A smart move from a young gun who already plays like a grizzled veteran, it kept the Wolf rally at full tilt and never gave the Loggers a chance to recover from their mistakes.

 

Tuesday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — One single, one triple
Taylor Brotemarkle — One double, two walks
Teagan Calkins — Two doubles
Mia Farris — Two singles, one double
Gwen Gustafson — One single
Jada Heaton — One double
Allie Lucero — One double, one walk
Maya Lucero — One double, one walk
Madison McMillan — Two walks
Sofia Peters — One double

Wolf freshman Camden Glover dominated on the mound Tuesday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Stevie Glover)

Two innings of destruction was all it required.

Using a mix of big hits, precise base-running, and botched plays by their foes, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball team broke open a scoreless tie in the third inning Tuesday, then romped to a 10-0 win over visiting Darrington.

The conference victory lifts the Wolves to 4-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-3 overall, with a road trip to La Conner looming Thursday afternoon.

CHS controlled every aspect of the game against Darrington, outhitting the Loggers 9-1, stealing nine bases, and forcing the visitors to commit six errors.

Freshman hurlers Camden Glover and Coop Cooper prowled the mound for the Wolves, giving their senior counterparts a rest day while piling up nine strikeouts in five innings of work.

Both pitchers allowed just two Darrington hitters to reach base, with Glover recording six K’s to three from Cooper.

Even with the young duo poppin’, the game was scoreless heading into the bottom of the third.

Coupeville only had two baserunners of its own through its first two series of at-bats, and those came courtesy a Darrington error and a dropped third strike.

That changed in the third, however, with Scott Hilborn and Chase Anderson whacking back-to-back one-out singles to get things going.

Anderson came flying home on an error to make it 2-0, before a sac fly from Glover and yet another Logger miscue helped the Wolves stretch the advantage to 4-0.

The CHS bats really came alive during a six-run rally in the fourth, with Jonathan Valenzuela clobbering a two-run triple and Hilborn mashing a two-bagger.

Anderson and Glover also picked up singles, while a wild pitch and two more Darrington errors allowed Coupeville to make it a 10-run game.

The visitors had one chance to keep the mercy rule from being used, but meekly went down 1-2-3 in the fifth, as Cooper closed things with an exclamation point.

 

Tuesday stats:

Chase Anderson — Two singles
Peyton Caveness — One single
Camden Glover — One single
Scott HilbornOne single, one double
Jack Porter — Two singles
Jonathan ValenzuelaOne triple, one walk
Cole White — One walk

Coupeville sophomore hurler Landon Roberts, seen with dad/coach Jon and big sis Lindsey, piled up six strikeouts on the mound Tuesday. (Photo courtesy Jon Roberts)

Darkness makes soccer players of us all.

The Coupeville High School JV baseball team rallied late to force a tie with visiting Darrington Tuesday, but then the light fled from the prairie.

Deciding not to play by candlelight, the Wolves and Loggers made peace with a 7-7 stalemate and went their separate ways, knowing they’re scheduled to meet again later this season.

After a pair of rough losses to 3A Oak Harbor, getting the chance to go toe-to-toe, and pitch for pitch, with a school whose student body is much closer to its own, was a bonus for Coupeville.

“A good outing, even if it was a tie!” said Wolf JV coach Jon Roberts. “I was impressed by the young Wolves to play through the adversity of facing five pitchers by Darrington.

“We are learning the game play by play in preparation of fielding new players at the varsity level next year.”

Coupeville countered Darrington’s parade of pitchers with a four-pack of their own hurlers.

Landon Roberts whiffed six of the eight hitters he faced, while Aiden O’Neill, Myca Clarkson (first appearance on the bump), and Johnny Porter combined to pile up another eight strikeouts.

The Wolves built a 2-0 lead, pushed it out to 4-1 through three innings of work, then faced a bit of a Logger comeback.

Darrington pushed three runs across in both the fourth and fifth innings to snatch the advantage at 7-5, before the CHS young guns countered.

Coupeville plated a runner in the bottom of the fifth to slice the deficit back to one, then (barely) beat the darkness to push across the tying run in the sixth.

Slamming the door on the Loggers, Porter retired the final five Darrington hitters in the game, four on strikeouts.

Coupeville’s offense was a mix of patience — 13 walks — and big hits, with Porter, Roberts, Marcelo Gebhard, Aidyn McDermott, and 8th grader Jack Farrell delivering base knocks for the Wolves.