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Fab frosh Mia Farris was superb at the plate and in the field Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“A tough game, but a good game. I don’t call it an L (for a loss), I call it (an L for) learning.”

While Saturday’s royal rumble on the diamond didn’t end in favor of the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad, Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan was philosophical afterwards.

His 2B Wolves, playing their third game in four days — all against schools from bigger classifications — hung tough for five innings with 2A Lakewood, before falling 23-13.

The non-conference home loss snaps an 11-game win streak for Coupeville, but the many positives from Saturday’s game are what matter most for a Wolf squad sitting at 12-2 on the season.

With McGranahan’s crew looking to return to the state tourney, they have looked to “play up,” and are 6-0 against 2B rivals and a very strong 6-2 against schools from bigger classifications.

This week was a whirlwind, with victories over 1A Meridian and 3A Oak Harbor, and there were huge chunks of the game Saturday when it seemed the Wolves would complete the trifecta.

Rallying from five runs down, Coupeville went ahead by as much as 10-6 in the middle stages of the game, and only trailed 13-12 heading to the sixth inning.

Ultimately, though, the visiting Cougars proved to be too tough, spraying the ball to all fields in the late going, while clamping down on defense.

Lakewood threw out two Coupeville runners at home plate — both on wham-bam plays which were a whisker away from going the other way — and closed the game with a sensational double play.

The Wolves, who started four freshmen, threw down and left everything on the field.

But some days it’s just not quite enough.

Saturday’s brawl on the prairie came on a beautiful, sunny, largely wind-free day — or basically the exact opposite of their last home game, when ice-cold rain slashed and wind howled for two hours straight.

Lakewood came off the bus hot, its bats popping during a five-run top of the first, before Wolf shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle made a superb running snag on a fly ball into left to start the turnaround.

Coupeville pitcher Izzy Wells promptly whiffed the next two batters, and the Wolves were ready to go on the offensive.

“We got sticks, too!” McGranahan told his players, and they responded.

While CHS only pushed across a single run in the first, on a double steal with Audrianna Shaw streaking for home, it got busy in the following frames.

Base-knocks from Gwen Gustafson and Maya Lucero set the stage in the second, with Shaw and Mia Farris rapping back-to-back two-run singles to cut the margin to 6-5.

That set up the third inning, which was the highlight of Coupeville’s day.

On defense, the Wolves set Lakewood down 1-2-3 with Madison McMillan, Brotemarkle, and Allie Lucero all making sterling plays to rob the Cougars on line drives.

McMillan went to her knees at second for her snag, while Lucero stretched to twice her height at first to bring down a ball which had extra-base hit written all over it.

Madison McMillan dares you to run. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spurred on by the defensive stand, Coupeville poured five runs on the board in its half of the third, romping to a 10-6 lead.

Brotemarkle spanked an RBI single which left a fiery trail as it exited the infield, Farris and Gustafson rapped equally torrid run-scoring base-knocks of their own, but it was Shaw who brought the house down.

Smashing the crud out of the ball, the Wolf senior sparkplug laced a two-run triple to straightaway center, sending a ripple of cheers through her substantial cheering section.

Lakewood wouldn’t go away, however.

A three-run double in the fourth pulled the Cougars within 10-9, before a rally in the top of the fifth sent the visitors ahead 13-11.

Coupeville pulled back within one run after an RBI single from Izzy Wells, but then Lakewood snuffed out the hopes and dreams of the home fans.

Five-run rallies in both the sixth and seventh stretched the lead out, while the Cougar gloves were at their best in the waning moments.

The Wolves loaded the bags in their half of their sixth, sparked by a gorgeous pinch-hit double from Sofia Peters, but Lakewood escaped when it tracked down a long two-out fly ball to right.

In the bottom of the seventh, Coupeville picked up an RBI single from McMillan, only to have the game end with an emphatic exclamation point half a second later.

Gustafson smoked a shot between second and third, but Lakewood shortstop Natalie Krueger speared the ball at her ankles while on the move, before doubling McMillan off of first.

It was a remarkable double play, and one which received an appropriate amount of applause from even the Coupeville side of the field.

In a game in which 36 runs scored, there were more than a handful of defensive gems from both teams — Mia Farris also had a great jumping catch in right field for the Wolves — and the mood of the game was often electric.

In the break before the two JV teams played, a Lakewood player distributed cupcakes to the Coupeville players.

Also, as seen in the photo below, Taylor Brotemarkle and her rival #9 also made an unexpected connection.

Taylor Brotemarkle has a new friend. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

All in all, it was a good day for the Wolves — a rugged test against a strong team, which will help prep Coupeville for the postseason.

A win would have been the cherry on top, but sometimes you take your cupcake and your lessons learned and you move on.

Right back to aiming for personal and team growth, every step of the way.

Cause that’s the real win.

 

Saturday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 1 single
Mia Farris — 3 singles
Gwen Gustafson — 1 single, 1 double
Allie Lucero — 2 singles, 1 walk
Maya Lucero — 1 single, 1 walk
Madison McMillan — 2 singles, 1 walk
Sofia Peters — 1 double
Audrianna Shaw — 3 singles, 1 triple
Izzy Wells — 3 singles, 2 doubles
Savina Wells – 1 walk

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Izzy Wells? She’s pretty good at this softball thing. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was a big one.

The Coupeville High School varsity softball team is chasing a return to the state tournament this spring, and games against quality foes will prep the Wolves for high-pressure contests to come.

Which is why CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had a huge smile on his face Wednesday after watching his team dismantle visiting Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

Powered by sisterly sluggers Izzy and Savina Wells — who combined for five RBI — Coupeville KO’d the Eagles 7-4 in a game in which the home team never trailed.

The non-conference victory, coming against a quality 1A foe, lifts the 2B Wolves to 7-1 on the season.

Next up is a road trip Thursday to Sultan for another non-league tilt, before a Northwest 2B/1B League doubleheader Friday at La Conner.

While CPC resides in a different classification now, the Eagles are former league rivals of the Wolves, from back when both schools lived in the 1A North Sound Conference.

The last time any Washington state high school softball teams vied in a state tourney, Izzy Wells was a freshman phenom, and getting past the Eagles was a major step to the Wolves advancing to the big dance.

Jump forward three years, with the last two postseason-free thanks to Covid, and the Izzinator is now a battle-hardened senior flinging fastballs caught by Savina, her freshman catcher.

Wednesday the duo clicked as usual, with Izzy Wells whiffing 12 Eagles, with the final punchout coming on the game’s last out.

The sisters also led the way at the plate, but they weren’t the only ones, as Coupeville rained down 10 hits on the Eagles.

The first big base-knocks came early, with the Wolves erupting for three runs in the bottom of the first inning.

Audrianna Shaw opened things with an emphatic leadoff single to right field, before CPC recorded back-to-back outs to (almost) escape untouched.

I say almost, because Izzy Wells, Madison McMillan, and Mia Farris erupted for consecutive RBI singles, plating their teammates with well-smacked hits.

The elder Wells went to left field with a shot, McMillan tore the top of the shortstop’s glove off with a laser, then Farris capped things by spanking a ball between two CPC fielders.

Coupeville added another two-out run in the second, with Savina Wells lashing a liner to straightaway center to send Gwen Gustafson motoring for home.

Cedar Park fouled off a ton of pitches, sending Wolf bench players running in every direction to retrieve runaway balls, but couldn’t break through against Izzy Wells.

One of the few times the Eagles made solid contact, a batter lofted a long fly only to see Shaw, gliding across the top of the grass in centerfield, smoothly snag the ball out of the air while in mid-stride.

Coupeville’s defense was first-rate most of the game, as evidenced by a one-two-three inning in the fourth.

McMillan snagged a pop-up between short and third and Savina Wells scraped the heavens to pull down a foul ball which hit the clouds behind home.

But it was the third out which was the most eye-popping, as Allie Lucero scrambled to pull in a foul ball over first, then went airborne like she had time travelled back to The Karate Kid and run afoul of “Sweep the leg, Johnny!”

The ball hit Lucero’s mitt, both of her legs violently shot out from beneath her, and the slick-fielding lefty went face-first into the sweet, sweet grass.

While never dropping the ball, it should be noted, which caused her teammates, coaches, and fans to go bonkers.

Allie Lucero is a defensive dynamo.

CPC got one run across on a Wolf error to cut the deficit to 4-1, but that was where it remained until a wild fifth inning.

The frame started with a sickening injury, as two Eagles players thunked into each other while chasing after a Shaw foul ball.

Neither the CPC catcher or third baseman called each other off on the play, and the duo met while traveling at full steam, sending both players crashing.

With no protective gear or face mask, the infielder took the worst of the collision, and remained face down for some time, eventually leaving a spattering of blood in the dirt.

Her face wrapped in gauze, one eye covered, the battered Eagle was able to eventually walk off the field largely under her own power, but it rattled her teammates.

Given a second chance, Shaw eked out a walk, then stole second to launch a game-busting three-run rally.

Once again, the rampaging Wells sisters brought the heat, with Savina punching an RBI single — but only after she bounced a foul ball off the windshield of a moving car.

Putting the final punctuation point on an unusual half-inning, Izzy launched a moon shot, almost clearing the fence, before outrunning the relay to claim a two-run homerun.

While CPC got the three runs back in the top of the sixth, that was as much of a comeback as it could mount on this day.

Izzy Wells ended the sixth by corralling a high pop-up, before coming back around to garner strikeouts #11 and #12 as she closed out the game in the seventh.

With Coupeville’s league games having been blowouts, getting the chance to play quality bigger-school foes like CPC or Lynden Christian — the only squad to upend the Wolves this season — is huge.

“We finally played a competitive game and we played mostly clean,” Kevin McGranahan said.

“Bats looked good against real pitching and we never wavered, even when they were trying to come back.

“It was a good test to see where we are now, compared to where we were when we played Lynden Christian.”

 

Wednesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 1 single
Mia Farris — 1 single
Gwen Gustafson — 1 walk
Maya Lucero — 1 single
Madison McMillan — 2 singles, 1 walk
Audrianna Shaw — 1 single, 1 walk
Izzy Wells — 1 single, 1 homerun
Savina Wells – 2 singles

Savina Wells rips the hide off the softball.

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Maddie Georges denies a pass. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a bit lopsided.

League champ La Conner and state champ Mount Vernon Christian accounted for 11 of 16 All-League picks when Northwest 2B/1B League coaches honored their top female basketball players.

The 2B Braves, who went undefeated in league, then finished fourth at state, have seven selections, including MVP Sarah Cook.

MVC, which only lost to La Conner and 1A power King’s before going on to claim the 1B hoops crown, have four players and their coach on the list of honorees.

Coupeville, which finished third in the seven-team league, was the only other school to land recognition for more than one player.

Junior point guard Maddie Georges was a Second-Team All-League pick, while senior gunner Audrianna Shaw earned Honorable Mention status.

 

Complete All-League awards:

 

MVP:

Sarah Cook — Senior — La Conner

 

Coach of the Year:

Jeff Droog — Mount Vernon Christian

 

Sportsmanship:

Friday Harbor

 

First-Team All-League:

Rachel Cram — Senior — La Conner
Josie Harper — Junior — La Conner
Ellie Marble — Junior — La Conner
Juna Swanson — Senior — La Conner
Hannah Van Hofwegen — Junior — Mount Vernon Christian

 

Second-Team All-League:

Bethany Carter — Sophomore — Orcas Island
Maddie Georges — Junior — Coupeville
Allie Heino — Sophomore — Mount Vernon Christian
Kylee Russell — Senior — Mount Vernon Christian
Caitlin Vander Kooy — Junior — Mount Vernon Christian
Ellalee Wortham — 8th grade — La Conner

 

Honorable Mention:

Ava Ashcroft — Freshman — La Conner
Mia Blackmon — Junior — Friday Harbor
Audrianna Shaw — Senior — Coupeville
Alyvia Wright — Senior — Darrington

Audrianna Shaw slaps home a runner.

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Senior Mckenna Somes is a key returning player for the Coupeville High School softball squad. (Jackie Saia photos)

How do you follow up perfection?

Hopefully with a lot more of the same.

At least that’s the goal for the Coupeville High School softball program, which is coming off a 12-0 run during a pandemic-shortened 2021 season.

“Big expectations for this season!” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan.

“Our goals are to win the league, be the number one seed for districts, and go to state and cause a whole lot of havoc once there.”

The last time any softball teams had a chance to advance to the big dance, way back in 2019, that’s exactly what Coupeville did – cause some havoc.

Playing in the 1A classification at the time, the Wolves, with freshman hurler Izzy Wells firing BB’s from the pitcher’s circle, thrashed highly rated Deer Park and came within a play of upending Cle Elum.

That capped a three-games-in-one-day jaunt which kicked off with a game against eventual state champ Montesano.

Coupeville was primed for more, and then, whammo, pandemic city.

A 2020 season completely erased by Covid, then a 2021 one chopped down to just league contests, with no playoffs.

But as Wells and hard-hitting Audrianna Shaw — the other remaining member of the 2019 state tourney team — take the field for their senior season, things are looking up.

Coupeville has a full 20-game regular-season schedule which includes non-conference matchups with bigger schools such as Lynden Christian and South Whidbey.

Plus, the promise of the postseason is a thing again.

“The girls need this,” McGranahan said. “I hope that we can play a normal season and playoffs and they can finally put this behind them.”

Wells and Shaw are joined by returning players such as senior Mckenna Somes and juniors Allie and Maya Lucero.

“They will anchor our defense and provide the offensive spark we need,” McGranahan said.

Allie Lucero is a weapon on both offense and defense.

Coupeville has a deep roster, with a strong pack of nine freshmen making the jump to high school ball after finishing their little league careers with a fourth-place finish at the state tournament.

Those young Wolves, players like Taylor Brotemarkle, Madison McMillan, and Savina Wells, can contribute today and tomorrow.

“We have 22 girls out this season and every one of them are essential to the program and getting us to our goals,” McGranahan said.

“The freshmen will be key to carry the program into the future seasons and will have big moments this season as well.

While the Wolves crushed their way through the Northwest 2B/1B League last season, outscoring foes 154-41 across those 12 wins, McGranahan takes nothing for granted.

In particular, he has his eye on Friday Harbor, which will be young but also is likely to “be our toughest test in the league.”

Whether the foes hail from the NWL or not, McGranahan and his players will approach each game with an eye on always getting better.

“We need to work on our softball IQ,” he said. “We are a young team and need to get softball smart.

“Great athletes — just need to harness the softball knowledge.”

Coupeville has a power pitcher, strong hitters, steady defenders, and a few secrets, as McGranahan is keeping some things close to the vest.

Asked about his team’s best points, the veteran coach just smiled.

“Everyone will see our strengths soon enough. Not gonna give out that info,” he said with a laugh, before going right back to work.

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Audrianna Shaw and Co. lost Thursday to La Conner but get another playoff game Saturday on the road. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The wheels on the bus go round and round, all the way to Tonasket.

After absorbing a 70-19 loss to La Conner Thursday in the title game of the District 1/2 tourney, the Coupeville High School girls basketball team gets a second chance at punching its ticket to state.

That game goes down Saturday at 1 PM and will pit the Wolves, now 9-8 on the season, against the Tonasket Tigers (15-7).

But first Coupeville has to travel 241 miles to Okanogan County, where it’s a crisp 29 degrees as I write this.

Saturday’s game is a loser-out, winner-to-state affair.

With Friday set as a travel day, Coupeville won’t have to pop off a bus and immediately open fire, instead getting a chance to camp out in the finest hotel the school system is willing to fund.

When the Wolves do hit the floor Saturday, goal #1 will be to get off to a quicker start than they did against La Conner.

The Braves, with eyes firmly set on competing for a 2B state title, got to 20-1 on the season by throwing down an avalanche of points.

The first 31 of the game to be exact, as La Conner busted out to a 28-0 advantage after one quarter, then nailed a three-ball to open the second frame.

That was the fifth of 10 treys the Braves hit on the evening, as they stung Coupeville inside, outside, and every which way.

The Wolves finally got on the board thirty seconds into the second quarter, thanks to a runner off the fingertips of Maddie Georges.

That sparked Coupeville’s one sustained run, as Ja’Kenya Hoskins banked in a shot from the paint, followed by freshman Savina Wells drilling the bottom out of the net on a long jumper from the side.

But a 6-0 mini-run, while nice, wasn’t going to be enough to catch La Conner, which stretched its lead to 42-8 at the half and 64-14 heading into the final frame.

Coupeville’s best play probably came on a defensive stand, with Georges scrambling back to continue her streak of drawing offensive charges from out-of-control rival ballhandlers.

Sliding into a narrow gap, the Wolf point guard planted herself and accepted the collision without budging a muscle, earning a hearty round of congratulations from her teammates as they hauled her back up off the floor.

Audrianna Shaw, who paced Coupeville with five points, made off with a couple of steals late in the game which she turned into breakaway buckets, while Georges chipped in with four points.

Savina Wells, Hoskins, Abby Mulholland, Lyla Stuurmans, and Izzy Wells added a basket apiece, with Carolyn Lhamon, Nezi Keiper, and Gwen Gustafson also seeing floor time for the Wolves.

“It’s how many miles to Tonasket???”

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