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Coupeville diamond guru Kevin McGranahan knows sometimes you get the win, and sometimes the rain gets you. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’ll have to wait at least one more game for a milestone.

The softball sluggers, who would have been playing for coach Kevin McGranahan’s 100th win Saturday, instead were the first Coupeville High School sports team to be rained out this spring.

The Wolves, who sit at a pristine 2-0, were slated to travel to Blaine for a battle of undefeated teams.

Mother Nature permitting, Coupeville will get back at it next week, with trips to Orcas Island Tuesday, Mar. 26 and to Concrete Friday, Mar. 29.

The Wolve then host Onalaska for a doubleheader Saturday, Mar. 30.

McGranahan, who is 99-44 in his time coaching at CHS, could see the rainout coming.

“We would have needed snorkels to play today,” he said with a laugh.

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Maya Nottingham picks up some hitting tips. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The bats were so hot they almost melted down.

Getting contributions from everyone in the lineup Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV softball team closed its season in style.

Playing at a tournament in Blaine, Katrina McGranahan’s squad tore the cover off the ball, smashing 23 hits en route to sending 28 batters home to score in a cut-down doubleheader.

With a win over Ferndale and a tie against the tourney hosts, Coupeville’s JV finishes 6-2-1.

The only thing slowing the Wolves down was having to play “JV rules,” with a five-run limit per inning, and a 90-minute cap on games, regardless of what the score might be.

“Today was a beautiful day for a game or two and the girls did a great job with coming ready to play,” McGranahan said. “Never know what you’re going to get with a long bus ride.

“Everyone hit the ball at some point and when I say hit I mean crushed the ball.”

The Wolf coach, who ripped many an extra-base hit in her own playing days, watched in satisfaction as her sluggers launched three home runs, smacked five triples, and bopped three doubles.

Melanie Navarro delivered four of those big base-knocks, including sending two of her team’s three home runs flying far, far away.

Mel had a heck of a day,” McGranahan said. “We couldn’t slow her down!”

Melanie Navarro gets savage.

Allie Lucero joined Navarro in mashing a longball, while Mia Farris led the Wolves with seven hits across the two games.

While the extra-base hits grab the spotlight, Coupeville also proved to be masters of small ball.

“We discovered a new bunting machine,” McGranahan said. “Maya Nottingham did an amazing job, and once I saw she can bunt, let me tell you, I bunted her a lot.”

Farris prowled the pitcher’s circle in the opener against Ferndale, while siblings Allie and Maya Lucero were a nimble tag-team chucking the ball against Blaine.

Mia did a great job in the circle today,” McGranahan said. “She really held her own and I enjoyed watching her work through the game and powering through.”

Mia Farris, a terror in the field and at the plate.

The doubleheader also saw Katie Marti slide behind the plate to catch for the first time this season.

While she doesn’t normally wear the mask and gear, the talented freshman had an immediate impact.

“All season I’ve had Katie play third base and hardly practiced her at catcher, but she did alright!” McGranahan said.

“Even got a girl out on a throw down to second!”

Also proving superb on defense was fellow fab frosh Jada Heaton, who was patrolling center field for the Wolves.

Jada got an amazing catch!” McGranahan said. “We all thought she wasn’t going to get it, but she happened to lay her glove down on the ground at the last minute to scoop up a dying line drive!

“It was a great play and her facial expressions were awesome!”

While the JV has no more games, the players will stay in action to scrimmage with the varsity as it waits out an 18-day gap between the end of the regular season and the start of the playoffs.

 

Saturday stats:

Edie Bittner — 1 double, 2 walks
Teagan Calkins — 1 single, 3 walks
Mia Farris — 5 singles, 2 triples, 1 walk
Jada Heaton — 1 walk
Violette Huegerich — 3 walks
Allie Lucero — 1 home run, 1 walk
Maya Lucero — 1 single, 1 double, 1 triple
Katie Marti — 2 singles, 2 walks
Candace Meek — 1 single
Melanie Navarro — 1 double, 1 triple, 2 home runs
Maya Nottingham — 3 singles, 2 walks

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   Scout Smith sizzled at the plate, on defense and in the pitcher’s circle Monday as CHS softball swept a doubleheader from Blaine. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This wasn’t one player having a good day. Or two, or even three.

This was a team, from top to bottom, firing on all cylinders and beating the living snot out of their foes in one fiery, day-long assault on the scoreboard.

By the time the red-hot Coupeville High School softball sluggers were done Monday, they had rocked Blaine pitching for 29 hits, including four doubles, two triples and a home run to straight-away center field.

So it should come as little surprise that the Wolves returned from the Canadian border bearing not one, but two wins, having swept the Borderites 12-1 and 20-6.

The non-conference victories, coming against a large 2A school, stretches Coupeville’s win streak to three games and lifts its record to 5-1.

After a couple of days to enjoy spring break, the Wolves play three home games in two days, hosting Meridian Friday and Forks Saturday. The second of those match-ups will be another doubleheader.

If CHS comes out swinging like it did against Blaine, the games will be over quickly, though it may not be painless for their opponents.

Coupeville scored in 12 of 13 innings at Blaine, failing to notch at least one run in just the top of the third in game #2.

Even then, they came within an inch of doing so, their run-scoring dream only denied when Blaine’s pitcher made a fairly spectacular snag on a scorching liner off the bat of Sarah Wright.

Mostly a wild defensive move, a bid to save her rib cage from being tattooed by the incoming laser, it earned well-deserved cheers from both teams.

Pretty much every other applause-worthy moment on the afternoon came courtesy of a Coupeville player, as the Wolves mashed from the top of the lineup to the bottom.

Toss in a nearly error-free defense, including a couple of great throws on the move from freshman third-baseman Chelsea Prescott and a “I said, sit down!” throw from Wright to nail a would-be base stealer, and CHS hurlers Katrina McGranahan and Scout Smith just had to be consistent, not inspired.

Not that the duo listened, as they took turns keeping the Blaine hitters off balance and both had stretches where they retired Borderites at a steady clip.

So, a very satisfying, if long, day for CHS coach Kevin McGranahan.

“We came off the bus ready to go; the whole offense just chipped away and kept fighting,” he said. “Everybody got a lot of solid playing time and we gained a lot of experience for our younger players against a big 2A school.

“This is how we build our program and these girls are all buying into the program and giving everything they have every game,” McGranahan added. “Game to game there are stars of the game, but really, this is a TEAM, and they all play for each other. Outstanding day for the Wolves!!”

Game #1:

Using speed and base-running guile to their advantage, the Wolves steadily built a lead, scoring in every inning and pushing the game into 10-run rule territory after the sixth inning.

Early RBI’s from Katrina McGranahan and Nicole Laxton staked CHS to a 2-0 lead, then Wright and Veronica Crownover bashed back-to-back run-producing base-knocks in the third to help their team begin to pull away.

Coupeville really surged in the fourth, when Laxton and Mackenzie Davis came around to score on a two-run single by Lauren Rose.

Davis beat the throw to home by a millisecond, dipping to get below the tag at just the right moment.

Hope Lodell cranked a wicked liner to center field to spur a rally in the fifth, and the Wolves came within an out of pulling off the shutout before Blaine scored its solitary run.

The bottom of the sixth also included some major Katrina McGranahan mojo, as she recorded her seventh and eighth strikeouts, then accidentally exploded an inside pitch off a Borderite batter’s hip.

Ball hit bone with the kind of sound normally reserved for runaway semi trucks hitting grocery carts full of glass bottles, causing even the toughest softball lifers to flinch and mutter under their breath, “Dang! She’s probably dead!!”

She wasn’t, thankfully, and even stayed in the game, after much hobbling around while wailing “Take me now, sweet Jesus!”

Katrina McGranahan, among the classiest of all classy athletes, profusely apologized to her inadvertent bulls-eye, even while knowing, deep in the back of her brain, that not a single Blaine hitter would even remotely crowd the plate the rest of the season.

Game #2:

Showing some chippiness, the Borderites returned from the between-games snack break ready to do some damage, and actually carried a 5-3 lead into the fifth inning.

Coupeville mixed up its lineup a bit, with freshmen Coral Caveness and Mollie Bailey getting major playing time and Smith coming on to replace McGranahan in the pitcher’s circle in the third.

After scraping out a run in both the first and second, thanks largely to hits from Smith and Prescott, CHS briefly stalled out.

Falling behind 5-2, the Wolves chipped back with a run in the fourth, courtesy an RBI single into the gap from Smith, then turned the volume to 11 in the fifth.

Seven of the first eight CHS hitters reached base in the inning, with Prescott lashing a two-run triple to tie the game, before Crownover poked an RBI single over the bag at first to put the Wolves back ahead for good.

RBI’s from Laxton and Smith, packaged around Emma Mathusek being drilled (in the toe, not the hip, and she appreciates it) stretched the lead to 9-5, and then it was time to get medieval.

With two on and two away, Wright hefted her bat like Thor wielding his hammer and sauntered to the plate.

At that exact moment, a particularly cold gust of wind surprise-attacked from behind the bleachers, ripping through the souls (and across the exposed legs) of any fans dumb enough to be wearing shorts.

The goosebumps hadn’t even settled, though, when Coupeville’s catcher turned on a pitch and tore the stitching off the ball.

By the time the hapless orb dropped out of sight, landing on the other side of the center field fence, Wright was halfway to second, and she only slowed down when her teammates charged out of the dugout, ready to gang-tackle her as the ump twirled his hand to signal a three-run dagger of a long-ball.

Her home run marked the end of Wright’s day, as Bailey, who had already taken over her catching duties several innings earlier, also took her spot in the hitting order after that.

Bailey walked during a seven-run seventh, a final Wolf explosion which included RBI singles from Mathusek and Crownover and a gut-check slide into home from Laxton.

Arriving at the same moment as an incoming ball, the Wolf junior collided with the Blaine catcher and took the brunt of the blow.

While it obviously hurt, she was safe, however, and limped back to the bench to be healed by her teammate’s extended cheers.

By the time the stats were totaled up, Crownover came out as the Hit Queen, rattling off five base-knocks on the day, including a double.

Smith and Prescott had four hits apiece, with Lodell, Wright and Caveness each collecting three.

Mathusek (2), Laxton (2), Rose (1), Davis (1) and Katrina McGranahan (1) rounded out the attack.

Seven of those 29 hits were of the extra-base variety, with Wright (2B, HR), Lodell (2B, 3B), Prescott (3B), Crownover (2B) and Katrina McGranahan (2B) all making the big turn at first and heading off to extended glory.

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Mollie Bailey, breakin’ ankles and takin’ names. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mollie Bailey is deceptive.

While older sisters McKayla and McKenzie were more openly vocal during their playing days at Coupeville High School, the youngest member of the family is more of a laid-back cool cat.

The Wolf freshman bops along, often looking like she’s in her own little world, a place where whatever song is playing in her head is something she, and she alone, can hear and appreciate.

And then, just when you think she’s drifting, BAM, Bailey slices you off at the kneecaps and leaves you to bleed out on the field or court.

Cause deep down, under the placid exterior, frequent one-liners and love of being an accomplished photo bomber, is a stone-cold killer who is already carving out a name for herself as a prairie legend.

The latest chapter in the best seller that is Mollie played out Wednesday night, as she outscored the visiting Blaine JV girls basketball squad by herself.

Pouring in 14 points, with eight coming in a game-busting run, she sparked the Wolves to a 25-11 win, evening Coupeville’s record at 1-1 on the season.

Playing against a 2A school with a much-deeper bench, CHS made do with just 6.5 players.

Missing four girls, and with swing player Avalon Renninger limited to just two quarters, Coupeville relied heavily on its starters, and they responded.

Bailey was in a groove from the word go, threading a beautiful pass to a sprinting Tia Wurzrainer for the game’s first bucket.

That was actually the only basket the Wolves scored in a defensive-minded first quarter, yet they still led 5-4 at the break.

With Nicole Lester, Kylie Chernikoff and Chelsea Prescott dominating on defense — Lester rejected one Borderite shot, then snatched the ball away and led the break herself — Blaine struggled mightily to get the ball in the hoop.

The visitors did briefly find a rhythm, scoring the final two buckets of the second quarter and the first one of the third to pull within 11-10, the closest they had been all game.

At which point Bailey sighed, thunked the ball a little harder on the floor as she dribbled up-court, then promptly went and ripped out her defender’s still-beating heart and showed it to her.

Metaphorically…

A free throw, a three-point play the hard way (bucket and free throw), then back-to-back dead-eye jumpers staggered Blaine and the rout was on.

And Bailey had plenty of help as she KO’d the Borderites.

The ever-friendly Lester transformed superbly into an on-court wild woman, swinging sharp elbows as she hauled in rebound after rebound.

Meanwhile, Chernikoff turned a broken play into a buzzer-beating bank shot after snaring a loose ball, Prescott cleaned the glass and turned it into a second-chance bucket and Renninger drilled a jumper from the top of the key.

Toss in a nice little bit of floor time for foreign exchange student Julia Garcia Onoro, and Coupeville JV coach Amy King walked off with yet another win.

It took Bailey a few extra minutes to join her coach in the locker room, though. She had to remove all the bodies she carved up first.

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   Hunter Smith kicked off his senior season Wednesday by scorching Blaine’s defense for 24 points. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Mason Grove also had 24 in the JV game, but all of his points came off of three-point bombs.

It was a long trip, but they scorched some nets while they were there.

Opening a new season Wednesday, with new coaches at the helm, the Coupeville High School boys basketball teams traveled way up to the border to face perennial 2A powerhouse Blaine.

And while both Wolf squads fell, they also both had the hottest shooter on the court, as senior Hunter Smith and sophomore Mason Grove dropped 24 points apiece.

Smith’s came in a variety of ways, as the CHS varsity staged a solid fourth-quarter rally before falling 50-41.

For Grove, it was three-balls all day long, as he rained down eight treys to provide most of the Wolf offense as the JV lost 71-34.

Varsity:

Former Wolf star Brad Sherman made his debut as the new head coach, and his team’s current star was in mid-season form.

Smith tallied five points in the first quarter, then tacked on four, six and nine across the next three periods, as he bedeviled the Borderite defense.

The 24 points raises Smith’s career total to 489.

With that, he passes Sean Dillon and Pat O’Grady on the career scoring list, moving closer to becoming only the 42nd male player in the program’s 101-year history to top 500 points.

One of those guys he’s chasing is Sherman, who graduated in 2003 with 874 points to his credit.

While he didn’t get a win in his first game, Coupeville’s new coach came away pleased with much of what he saw as the Wolves used a 16-7 fourth-quarter run to cut an 18-point deficit in half.

“Boys fought hard. Blaine had a big height advantage, which hurt us a little, but we adjusted well,” Sherman said. “Few guys in foul trouble early on our end, which always presents some challenges.

“With that said – I thought our kids played a heck of a defensive game as a unit,” he added. “Really aggressive and able to get our hands in a lot of passing lanes.”

Smith paced the Wolves with 10 rebounds, while Ethan Spark added five.

Sherman also praised Cameron Toomey-Stout, who “was a beast on defense,” and Joey Lippo, who “had a heck of a defensive game.”

Coupeville had its shot, or shots, at taking down the Borderites, but the rim was unforgiving at times.

“On offense, I thought we moved the ball well and did a pretty good job waiting for good shots,” Sherman said. “Really, what it came down to tonight was a ton of open looks that we didn’t connect on.

“On a lot of nights, a few more of those fall and we are right there at the end.”

Spark tossed in eight points to back Smith, while Lippo (6), Hunter Downes (2) and Toomey-Stout (1) rounded out the offensive attack.

“Obviously you always want that W, but I’m proud of how the boys played and fought tonight against a good basketball team, on the road,” Sherman said. “Now, we learn a few things from it, and get back to our goal of just improving every day.”

JV:

The game was close for a quarter, as Koa Davison swished a three-ball at the buzzer to knot things at 16-16 at the end of the first quarter.

Grove netted three of his long shots in the first, then tacked on two more in the second and three in the third, but Blaine proved to be too much in the end.

“We battled hard but could not keep up with Blaine’s numbers,” said CHS coach Chris Smith. “Ultimately foul trouble and running out of steam as Blaine ran line changes at us allowed them to slowly but consistently creep away.”

Davison and Ulrik Wells both dropped in four points apiece to back Grove, while Jake Pease added a bucket and was “a monster on the boards!”

“I love that we never quit battling and we walked off the floor with our heads held high,” Smith said.

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