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   In it to win it. Robin Cedillo (back) and Jae LeVine, who went to state as freshmen, are trying to get back as seniors. (John Fisken photos)

17-3 and ready to keep on singing through the postseason.

Six teams enter, two teams keep their dream alive.

The West Central District 3 softball tournament is May 19-20 in Tacoma, and the headline story (at least for readers of this blog) is Coupeville’s run at the state tourney.

As the #2 seed from the Olympic League, the Wolves, who sit at 17-3, have two goals.

First, they have to beat the Nisqually League’s #3 team, Vashon Island, in their opener Friday to keep playing.

Since CHS already thumped the Pirates 13-5 early in the season, that’s likely.

Get past that first hurdle and Coupeville advances to the double-elimination portion of the tourney, with a second game Friday night (against NL #1 Bellevue Christian) and one or two games Saturday.

Collect three wins total at districts and Coupeville returns to state for the first time since 2014.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2271&sport=15

And for some info on the teams:

 

Coupeville:

Overall record: 17-3

League record: 6-3 (#2 in Olympic League)

W/L vs. district foes: 4-3 (3-0 vs. Klahowya, 1-0 vs. Vashon, 0-3 vs. Chimacum)

Run differential: 193-90

Coach: Kevin McGranahan

Seniors: Three – Tiffany Briscoe, Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine

Mascot: Wolves

State tourney history: Two trips. Best finish: 3rd in 2002. All-time record is 4-3.

 

Bellevue Christian:

Overall record: 14-1 (one game left)

League record: 5-1 (#1 in Nisqually League)

W/L vs. district foes: 5-1 (3-0 vs. Vashon, 2-1 vs. Seattle Christian)

Run differential: 168-54

Coach: Ryan Kelly

Seniors: Three

Mascot: Vikings

State tourney history: Five trips. Best finish: 3rd in 2016. All-time record is 7-9.

 

Chimacum:

Overall record: 10-4

League record: 8-1 (#1 in Olympic League)

W/L vs. district foes: 5-1 (3-0 vs. Coupeville, 2-1 vs. Klahowya)

Run differential: 148-67

Coach: Jim Eldridge

Seniors: Six

Mascot: Cowboys

State tourney history: 14 trips. Best finish: 3rd in 2010. All-time record is 19-27.

 

Klahowya:

Overall record: 9-7

League record: 4-5 (#3 in Olympic League)

W/L vs. district foes: 2-5 (1-0 vs. Vashon, 1-2 vs. Chimacum, 0-3 vs. Coupeville)

Run differential: 125-102

Coach: Jodie Gagnon

Seniors: Three

Mascot: Eagles

State tourney history: Three trips. Never placed. All-time record is 1-6.

 

Seattle Christian:

Overall record: 8-5 (one game left)

League record: 3-3 (#2 in Nisqually League)

W/L vs. district foes: 3-3 (2-1 vs. Vashon, 1-2 vs. BC)

Run differential: 127-125

Coach: Rick Ronish

Seniors: Six

Mascot: Warriors

State tourney history: 12 trips. Best finish: 4th in 2005. All-time record is 12-22.

 

Vashon Island:

Overall record: 7-9

League record: 1-5 (#3 in Nisqually League)

W/L vs. district foes: 1-7 (1-2 vs. SC, 0-1 vs. Klahowya, 0-1 vs. Coupeville, 0-3 vs. BC)

Run differential: 114-111

Coach: Heather Jurs

Seniors: Five

Mascot: Pirates

State tourney history: One trip in 1991 as a slow-pitch team. All-time record is 0-2.

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   Katrina McGranahan whacked a single and a triple Wednesday at Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

They were right there on the edge of the dream.

Six outs away from beating Chimacum for the first time in three tries this season and clinching a share of the Olympic League crown, the Coupeville High School softball team had success slip through its fingers.

The Cowboys, a disciplined, veteran team which thrives on capitalizing on the smallest mistakes, rallied for six runs in the bottom of the sixth inning Monday, upending the visiting Wolves 7-2.

The loss drops Coupeville to 6-3 in league play, 15-3 overall.

The Wolves, who are undefeated against teams which don’t have the word Cowboys on the front of their jerseys, close the regular season with a non-conference doubleheader Wednesday at Sequim.

CHS, which finished second in the Olympic League — its best showing in the three-year history of the conference — opens the district playoffs May 19.

Chimacum (7-1, 9-3) clinches its third straight league title, a testament to the six seniors it honored in post-game festivities.

While Shanya and Mechelle Nisbet are the undisputed leaders of the Cowboys, it was one of the other seniors, Kelle Settje, who delivered the coup de grâce.

The Cowboy outfielder looped a two-run single into right, dropping the ball into a narrow patch of open grass, to turn a 2-1 Wolf lead into a 3-2 Chimacum advantage.

Settje’s blow came after a throwing error and a walk put the first two Cowboy hitters in the sixth on base.

Up until then, the home town hitters had experienced little luck against Coupeville hurler Katrina McGranahan, who gave up a run in the first, then started throwing up zeroes on the scoreboard.

Whiffing six and helping herself with her glove — she pulled off a nifty double play to close the second, snagging a popup and doubling a straying runner off of first — McGranahan was in fine form all day.

She had a two-hitter headed into the sixth, even while dealing with a home plate ump with a shall we say, “creative” strike zone.

That was when things fell apart a bit, and the well-seasoned Cowboys took advantage, mixing well-placed base-knocks, a Wolf miscue or two, and at least one blatant howler of a call by the man in blue to plate six in the inning.

It was an emotional killer, as the Wolves had held on to their lead since the top of the second, and were playing stellar ball.

If there was any downside to the first five-and-a-half innings, it was Coupeville once again had Chimacum on the ropes, but couldn’t deliver the knockout punch.

Much as in their last clash with the Cowboys, the Wolves had runners on base all day long, but found a game-busting hit — which has come so frequently against other teams — elusive.

The first inning is a perfect example.

After opening the game with consecutive singles from Lauren Rose, Jae LeVine and McGranahan (Rose nimbly side-stepped Mechelle Nisbet at the plate to score the opening run), CHS was on fire.

Add a walk to cleanup slugger Sarah Wright and the Wolves had the bases juiced with no outs, a hit away from really punching Chimacum in the gut right out of the gate.

Except it didn’t happen.

A popup, a strikeout and a hard ground-out which Shanya Nisbet gobbled up stranded all three runners, setting a tone for the rest of the game.

Coupeville did score one more, plating Tiffany Briscoe in the second.

The senior left-fielder walked, went to second on a passed ball, took third on a fielder’s choice and scampered home when Rose chopped a ball off the first-baseman’s glove.

But Rose, sitting at first with just one out, was left on base, and the Wolves stranded eight base runners on the day.

Coupeville put people on base in six of seven innings, but three times saw runners at third unable to come around.

The final one was McGranahan, who lashed a two-out triple to right in the top of the seventh in a bid to prolong the game.

The Wolves finished with seven base-knocks, as LeVine (two singles), McGranahan (single, triple) and Hope Lodell (two singles) had two hits apiece.

Rose rounded out the hit parade with a single.

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   Tamika Nastali reached base twice Friday, including dropping a bunt for a single. (John Fisken photo)

They are getting close.

A still-young Coupeville High School softball squad has taken enormous strides this season while piling up wins at a rate not seen since the legendary 2002 Wolf sluggers, who finished 3rd at state.

They’ve taken down traditional powers like Lynden Christian, won twice against Klahowya and its two-time MVP pitcher and bashed home runs like never before.

Now, the next step is to get over the hump and dethrone two-time defending Olympic League champ Chimacum.

And they are getting close. So close.

The Cowboys, to their credit, played virtually error-free ball on their home diamond Friday, holding on to nip the Wolves 7-4 in a battle for sole possession of first place.

The loss snaps a six-game winning streak for Coupeville and drops it to 4-2 in league play, 13-2 overall.

Chimacum (5-1, 7-3) sits a game up with three league games left, and owns the tiebreaker, having taken the first two meetings this season.

But the Wolves, who started seven underclassmen Friday, including freshman third-baseman Scout Smith, who filled in for an ill Mikayla Elfrank, still have a shot at a league title.

They’ll need to complete a season sweep of Klahowya with a win at home Monday, then hope the Eagles can help them out by stunning Chimacum a second time.

Both front runners also have a game remaining against Port Townsend, which has lost 48 straight games.

If Coupeville tacks on two wins, and the Cowboys split, the two schools would be sitting at 6-2 and play for the title when they close league play May 8 back at Chimacum.

Friday afternoon the Wolves were one hit away from taking control of the game, more than once.

But, despite rapping out nine hits, led by three base-knocks from sluggin’ sophomore first-baseman Veronica Crownover, Coupeville died a slow, agonizing death on the base-paths.

The Wolves stranded nine base runners, with five of them sitting at third when the final out came.

Meanwhile, Chimacum used well-placed hits (and six Wolf errors) to slowly build up a lead it never relinquished.

One run in the first, two in the third and another in the fourth staked the Cowboys to a 4-0 lead entering the fifth inning.

During that time Coupeville failed to capitalize on two prime opportunities, leaving runners sitting at second and third in the second, then stranding a runner at third the next inning.

That one hurt maybe a little more, as the stranded runner, Tamika Nastali, had landed on the bag with just one out.

Beating out a bunt, she went to second on a passed ball, took third on a fielder’s choice, then had nowhere left to go as a strikeout and a pop-up ended things too soon.

Coupeville finally broke through in the top of the fifth, and it was a bit unexpected.

With two outs and no one on base, Nastali struck again, eking out a walk to light the fuse.

Lauren Rose followed with a single to center, Jae LeVine walked, then Katrina McGranahan smashed a long blast to right field.

Having their one spotty moment on defense, the Cowboys saw two of their outfielders nearly collide, with one letting the hard-hit ball glance off her glove as three Wolves churned for home.

But, with a chance to tie or take the lead, Coupeville couldn’t keep the rally going, as Sarah Wright’s shot to deep center was snagged.

Chimacum, a veteran squad led by twin senior sisters Shanya and Mechelle Nisbet, didn’t flinch, tacking on two runs in the bottom of the fifth to stretch the lead to 6-3.

Then, senior Cowboy hurler Holly Snider escaped her biggest moment of danger, even while taking a piece of dirt in the eye.

Singles from Crownover and Hope Lodell and a walk to Tiffany Briscoe juiced the bags with one out in the sixth, but again … that one big hit was not to be found.

Coupeville’s final shot in the seventh had its moments, including singles from McGranahan, Smith and Crownover to plate a run.

But with runners at first and third and the tying run at the plate, Snider escaped one final time, inducing a game-ending ground-out.

While the loss stung, the Wolves, even without Elfrank, played much better than in the team’s first meeting, when they fell 15-4.

Smith made a superb snag and throw at third, while Wright, working behind the plate, gunned down a runner trying to take an extra bag.

“We played them better than the score dictates,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan. “Gonna be a battle to the end this year, I hope.

“The girls are in good spirits and ready to go for Monday.”

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   Clay Reilly whacked two hits and knocked in two runs in a 6-1 win Friday, then made sure to beat his teammates to Subway. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith was back on center stage, and Chimacum never had a chance.

Bouncing back from struggles with an injured back, the Coupeville High School hurler made his first start in some time Friday and was lights out.

Retiring 15 straight Cowboys at one point, the Wolf junior tossed a three-hitter as the Wolves rolled to a 6-1 road win.

The third straight victory for CHS, it lifts them to 5-2 in Olympic League play, 10-7 overall.

With the win, the Wolves clinch second place in their four-team league and earn a home playoff game.

Klahowya beat Port Townsend 10-0 Friday to reclaim the league title they won in 2015.

The Eagles are 7-0 and sit two games up on Coupeville with two to play.

Even if the teams finish with identical records, KSS holds the tiebreaker, having beaten the Wolves twice this season.

CHS closes the regular season with three games next week (Klahowya, Port Townsend and non-conference foe South Whidbey), then opens the playoffs May 9.

Coupeville will host the Nisqually League’s #3 seed in a loser-out game.

Win and the Wolves advance to the double elimination portion of districts May 11-13, where three of four teams advance to state.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2268&sport=6

Needing a win Friday, CHS came out aggressively, scoring in each of the first four innings.

Getting a single run in the first, second and third, the Wolves tacked on two in the fourth, then capped things with another run in the sixth, running their lead to 6-0.

After giving up back-to-back one-out singles in the first, Smith mowed down the Cowboys in order from that point until there was one out in the sixth.

A single and two errors allowed Chimacum to plate their only run, but then the Wolves re-locked back down, with Smith retiring the final four batters in order.

Coupeville spread out its offensive attack, getting 10 hits, with seven different hitters recording at least one base-knock.

Julian Welling, swinging a mighty bat from the cleanup spot, blasted a pair of RBI doubles, while Clay Reilly (a single and double) and Dane Lucero (two singles) were a steady back-up combo.

Taylor Consford, Joey Lippo, Jake Hoagland and Matt Hilborn added singles.

Reilly joined Welling in driving home a pair of runs, while also proving to be the swiftest Wolf, at least in terms of sprinting from the team’s bus at the ferry to a nearby Subway.

As the two workers on Friday night sandwich duty silently cried as they watched the combined forces of Coupeville’s baseball and softball teams surge their way, Reilly nipped Jonathan Thurston through the front door, having dodged traffic like a (hungry) ballet dancer.

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   Hitting a variety of sweet winners Tuesday, Kameryn St Onge teamed with Maggie Crimmins to sweep to a 6-0, 6-0 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf seniors (l to r) Rubi Melendrez, Fanny Deprelle, Bree Daigneault and Valen Trujillo celebrated their last home match. (Craig Trujillo photo)

Daigneault goes out swinging. (Ken Stange photo)

The sun departed, but the winning remained.

After playing under blue skies Monday, the Coupeville High School netters bundled up again Tuesday, as a more typical cold, overcast “spring sports” kind of weather descended on Cow Town.

But, not a single rain drop was anywhere to be seen, giving the Wolves a chance to pull off that rarest of rarities this season — complete matches on consecutive days.

And, just like Monday, Coupeville rolled, this time bouncing visiting Chimacum 6-1 on Senior Night.

The win lifts CHS to 2-0 in Olympic League play, 4-3 overall.

Winners of four straight matches, the Wolves hit the road (weather permitting) the next two days, heading to South Whidbey and Klahowya.

Facing Chimacum for the first time this season — an earlier match was postponed by rain — Coupeville moved with precision and put the Cowboys away quickly.

Sage Renninger and Payton Aparicio remained perfect at first doubles, winning so fast at least one Wolf grandmother had barely settled into her court-side seat when the final winner was hit.

Several Wolves had especially strong days, but maybe none more so than Avalon Renninger.

The fab frosh used her wicked left-hand shot to drop winner after winner over her befuddled foes head’s, then bounced enthusiastically over to high-five doubles partner Zoe Trujillo each time.

The day’s most back-and-forth match came at second singles, where Port Townsend gunslinger Amelia Breithaupt pulled out a three-set stunner over Fanny Deprelle.

PTHS doesn’t have a tennis program, so a few Redhawks latch on with Chimacum each season, and the ever-affable Breithaupt has been a regular presence on the court.

On this day, she pulled out a tough tiebreaker in the opening set, got rocked hard by Deprelle (to the tune of 6-0) in set two, then rallied for the victory in a match where the two combatants played the day’s longest match.

Chimacum gives the Coupeville girls a run for its money in being the most polite tennis team in all the land, and that was evident all afternoon.

At first singles, Cowboy Renee Woods and Wolf Valen Trujillo had a love-fest, repeatedly praising each other’s shots.

That tone carried from court to court, with the topper, of course, being CHS singles player Bree Daigneault, who was born to gush sunshine.

After dismantling her rival, she spent the walk back to their respective coaches praising the Chimacum player’s service game and left her with a smile on her face, even in defeat.

With the match being Senior Night for Coupeville — the Wolves have a string of road matches still left on the schedule — it was the final chance for Daigneault, Trujillo, Deprelle and Rubi Melendrez to rep their school on their home court.

How appropriate that, in the final moments of her final home match, Daigneault was doing what she does best — showing a genuine love and respect for the game, and people who play it with her, regardless of what uniform they wear.

Complete Tuesday results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Renee Woods 6-2, 6-1

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Amelia Breithaupt 7-6(7-4), 0-6, 10-6

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Gladys Hitt 7-6(7-2), 6-3

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Amy Plastow/Christina Bell 6-0, 6-0

2nd doubles Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo beat Jordyn Johnson/Marley Music 6-1, 6-1

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Marianne Eastwood/Claire Jorgensen 6-0, 6-0

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus won by forfeit

JV:

5th doublesJillian Mayne/Zara Bradley lost to Christina Bell/Amelia Breithaupt 6-0

5th doublesHeather Nastali/Sophie Furtjes trailed Marley Music/Jordyn Johnson 4-2 (match called for ferry)

7th doublesRubi Melendrez/Nanci Melendrez lost to Marianne Eastwood/Claire Jorgensen 6-0

8th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus lost to Renee Woods/Amy Plastow 6-1

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