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Posts Tagged ‘Central Whidbey Little League’

Chelsea Prescott

Chelsea Prescott has arrived to terminate you. (John Fisken photo)

The Venom celebrate Cinco de Mayo, and another win. (Charlotte Young photo)

The Venom celebrate Cinco de Mayo, and another win. (Charlotte Young photo)

There’s a new Team of Destiny on the rise.

Continuing to crush the ball at an uncanny rate, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball sluggers bashed South Whidbey 12-1 Thursday, capturing their fourth straight win.

The road victory improved the Venom to 5-2 heading into a rematch with the only team to solve them this season.

That’s Anacortes, which nipped Central Whidbey in two tightly-played games in mid-April.

The two teams will meet in Anacortes next Tuesday, May 10, then tangle in Coupeville Thursday, May 12.

The Venom, who combine big bats and an aggressive running style, have had little problem scoring this season.

They’ve cracked double digits in every game but one (an 11-9 loss to Anacortes) and have outscored their foes 106-45.

Against South Whidbey, lead-off hitter/speed demon Maya Toomey-Stout ran wild on the base-paths, while Mollie Bailey and Emma Mathusek swung hot sticks.

With the offense flowing so well, Central Whidbey didn’t need top-notch pitching and defense, but it got it anyway.

Venom hurler Scout Smith surrendered just a single hit, while twice robbing South Whidbey, snuffing balls hits back up the middle.

Bailey ran down two airborne foul balls behind the plate while playing catcher, and Chelsea Prescott snagged a pair of line drives at short.

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Proud papa Jim Wheat (left) and son Joel reunite on the diamond.(Connie Lippo photo)

   Proud papa Jim Wheat (left) and son Joel reunite on the diamond. (Connie Lippo photo)

The boys in blue were on the same wavelength last night.

The two-man crew working the little league softball game between Central and North Whidbey Tuesday in Coupeville worked as smoothly as any umpire tandem we’ve seen this year.

And why not?

The game offered Jim Wheat, the head of umpires for Central Whidbey Little League, a chance to work alongside his son Joel.

So, basically it was take your kid to work day, but with an adult twist.

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Maya

   Her secret identity hidden by her hair mask, superhero Maya Toomey-Stout arrives to save the day once again. (John Fisken photos)

Mollie

Mollie Bailey strikes a pose, then unleashes Hell on hapless batters.

Emma

  Emma Mathusek plans to park this one down around the Prairie Center parking lot.

Willow

Run on Willow Vick, and she will terminate you.

Scout

   “Curses! Foiled again!!” A North Whidbey runner arrives at home, only to find Scout Smith already waiting for her, ball in glove.

Hannah

   Hannah Davidson multitasks, manning first while trying to remember if she finished her homework.

Scout

Smith is a master of many positions. Here she flings the high, hard cheese.

Home

Davidson successfully evades the tag as Bailey monitors the situation.

The future is easy to see.

Clad in day-glo green uniforms, Central Whidbey Little League’s Juniors softball sluggers (AKA The Venom) stand out while playing on the prairie.

That makes the job for travelin’ photo man John Fisken just a wee bit easier.

The snappy pics above are courtesy him.

To see more (and possibly purchase some), thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf367a22cae1

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Venom sluggers (l to r) Emma Mathusek, Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout combined for six hits in a 17-7 win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Venom sluggers (l to r) Emma Mathusek, Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout combined for six hits in a 17-7 win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

The weather was cold, but the bats were hot.

A day after Whidbey Island was scorched by the sun, we were back to chilly, swirling breeze on the prairie Tuesday, but that wasn’t enough to slow down the Venom.

Central Whidbey Little League’s Juniors softball squad whacked 12 hits and scored in every inning en route to thrashing visiting North Whidbey 17-7 in a game called after four innings.

The win, the team’s third straight, lifted them to 4-2 on the season.

The Venom came out aggressively, with starting pitcher Scout Smith firing BB’s, whiffing two and holding North Whidbey hit-less over the first two innings.

Her teammates quickly gave her a sizable lead, plating four in the first and another in the second.

The gazelle-like Maya Toomey-Stout, making her season debut at catcher, drew a lead-off walk, stole second on a play where she was two inches from the bag before the ball even arrived at the plate, then scampered home on an RBI single from Emma Mathusek.

Central Whidbey tacked on runs off of a passed ball and an error before Willow Vick capped the first-inning rally.

She golfed an RBI single that went two miles high over short, then plummeted downward, finding a tiny crack between two defenders as it arrived back on Earth.

A bases-loaded walk to Hannah Davidson forced in another run in the second to make it 5-0, before North Whidbey found its one rally.

Taking advantage of a switch in pitchers, the Oak Harbor squad used five walks (including a batter plunked on the posterior) and a couple of passed balls to tie things up at 5-5.

The Venom flipped to their third pitcher of the game, moving Chelsea Prescott in from shortstop with two outs, and the heat-chuckin’ 7th grader immediately shut things back down.

She ended the inning with a strikeout on a nasty fastball, then held North Whidbey in check the rest of the way.

As quickly as the game got close, it went right back to being a blow-out, as Central Whidbey couldn’t stop hitting.

Sending 12 hitters to the plate in the bottom of the third, the Venom rained down a game-busting seven runs off of five hits.

Melia Welling lofted a gorgeous shot to right field that sliced just over the first baseman’s head to kick things off, then returned later in the inning with a two-run single to cap the scoring.

In between, Toomey-Stout, Smith and Mollie Bailey all collected base knocks, with Smith’s exploding off of the bag at third and Bailey’s being a laser shot to left center.

North Whidbey’s pitching came a bit unglued in the fourth, with five walks and five wild pitches allowing the Venom to scratch out enough runs to invoke the ten-run rule.

Fittingly, though, on a day when Central Whidbey was generating hits from the top of the order to the bottom, the final run came home off of a single up the middle from Toomey-Stout.

Proving her blazing speed is not a fluke, she was already at first before the ball left the bat.

Or at least it seemed that way.

Toomey-Stout, AKA “Gazelle,” led the way with three hits, while Smith, Prescott and Welling had two apiece.

Mathusek, Vick and Bailey each chipped in with a hit, while Davidson, Cynthia Rachal and Marenna Rebischke-Smith combined to draw six walks.

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Stella Johnson (Mimi Johnson photos)

   Stella Johnson fires the ball back to Coupeville Crush hurler Izzy Wells. (Mimi Johnson photos)

Abby

   7-0 and it’s all smiles in the Central Whidbey dugout for Kaela Meffert (left) and Abby Mulholland.

Can’t touch ’em.

Central Whidbey Little League’s Majors softball squad continues to rampage across the land, thrashing foes left and right.

Thursday night the opponent was South Whidbey, and once again the Coupeville Crush dropped the boom.

This time out, the score was a more-modest 18-10 in a game called after five innings because of the onset of dusk.

The victory lifts the Crush to a flawless 7-0 on the season.

Sofie Martin, Izzy Wells and Kaela Meffert delivered big hits for CWLL, while Wells was her usual imposing self while stalking the pitcher’s circle.

While the game dragged on a bit, thanks to bad calls inflicted on both teams and some discussion about rules, nothing seems to be able to derail the Crush.

Central Whidbey returns to action with a pair of home games next week against the best teams Oak Harbor can muster.

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