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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Landon Roberts is back in black.

Give them their moment, and they’ll deliver.

Coupeville grads Landon Roberts and Madison McMillan are part of deep diamond rosters at Walla Walla College and Edmonds College, respectively, so neither former Wolf is playing full-time as a freshman.

But they’re drawing notice when they get the call.

Roberts is part of a pitching staff which has used 14 hurlers this season, but he’s appeared in four games, which puts him in the thick of things for a squad where no mound man has more than nine games to their credit.

His best performance came recently against Wenatchee Valley, where he came on in relief and picked up his first collegiate strikeouts, whiffing two of the four hitters he faced.

Madison McMillan (left) is pounding the softball.

McMillan, meanwhile, is part of an Edmonds squad which is streaking at 27-2 after sweeping a doubleheader against Shoreline Sunday.

The power-hitting third baseman picked up four hits, three runs, and a walk as the Tritons came out on top 26-2 and 20-0 in games mercy-ruled after five innings.

On the season McMillan has racked up a .394 batting average across 19 games, with 12 runs, 13 hits, three doubles, three home runs, 18 RBI, and seven walks.

Unofficially, she should be sitting with five taters but has twice had umps wave off moonballs due to team base-running technicalities.

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Lillian Ketterling gets airborne. (CHS Yearbook photo)

Every jump, every race changes something.

Or so it seems as the top performances statewide among 2B track and field athletes continue to ebb and flow as the spring plays out.

In the past week members of the Coupeville High School squad competed at two different meets in two different towns, and as we take a pause to scan the leader board, four Wolves are among the best of the best currently.

They aren’t the same four as a week ago, however, with sophomore Lillian Ketterling having moved back into the top 10 in the pole vault while freshman Cyrus Sparacio has, for the moment, been bumped out in the 1600.

Where things sit through April 20:

 

GIRLS:

Shot Put — Tamsin Ward (9th) 30-10

Pole Vault — Lillian Ketterling (7th-tie) 8-00

 

BOYS:

High Jump — Wyatt Fitch-Marron (5th-tie) 5-10; Davin Houston (5th-tie) 5-10

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Dahlia Miller (left) and Aleksia Jump form a dynamic duo. (Jackie Saia photo)

The hardcourt battle rages on.

Friday Harbor bounced back from an early-season defeat to beat visiting Coupeville 3-2 Friday afternoon, putting the two girls’ tennis squads in a tie in the chase for a conference crown.

With the loss, the Wolves fall to 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 2-3 overall, while the Wolverines sit at 1-1, 2-2 after finishing their week Saturday by beating the Anacortes JV.

Coupeville and Friday Harbor, the only two of the seven NWL teams to play the net game, have two more matches on the schedule this season.

The first rumble, April 29, is set for Cow Town, while the final meeting goes down on Friday Harbor May 6, weather willing.

For Coupeville, it has two non-conference tussles to play before renewing its league rivalry.

The Wolves are slated to travel to Granite Falls this Monday, before trekking to Seattle Saturday to square off with University Prep.

 

Friday’s results:

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Tenley Stuurmans beat Stella R. 6-0, 6-0

2nd Singles — Milana Light beat Chelsi P. 6-0, 6-0

1st Doubles — Dahlia Miller/Aleksia Jump lost to Hazel L./Frankie P. 3-6, 7-5, 10-4

2nd Doubles — Hailey Goldman/Hazel Goldman lost to Daisy B./Kate C. 6-4, 6-4

3rd Doubles — Kauri Hamilton/Jovanah Villagomez lost to Bella A./Olive F. 6-4, 6-2

 

JV:

4th Doubles — Savannah Coxsey/Miles Gerber lost to Dalila C./Marg P. 6-5

5th Doubles — Rowan Stoner/Annabelle Cundiff tied Kaylee B./Azalea R. 5-5

6th Doubles — Lakshmi Erickson/Natalie Driscoll lost to Flora G./Ami P. 6-2

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Wolf netters (left to right) Kauri Hamilton, Aleksia Jump, and Dahlia Miller are super-thrilled to play in the swirling winds of a prairie “spring.” (Melanie Wolfe photo)

The season rolls on.

The weather hasn’t been stunning, but most Coupeville High School athletic events on the schedule have been played this spring, as the Wolves survive and thrive.

Looking at the week ahead, it’s heavy on home affairs, with five of nine contests set to go down on the prairie.

Chief among those is the Cow Town Classic Invite, hosted by the CHS track and field team Saturday morning.

While the Wolf girls’ tennis team travels to Granite Falls Monday and University Prep Saturday, both of Coupeville’s diamond squads get to play two of three on their own fields.

The Smash Sisters and diamond men travel to Concrete Tuesday, before hosting back-to-back games Thursday and Friday.

The first of those are against the same Lions squads they play earlier in the week, with Friday’s twin-bill a non-conference rumble with Island rival South Whidbey.

As we head into the next-to-last week of April, a look at where things currently sit:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 6-0 10-2
Coupeville 5-1 7-4
Friday Harbor 4-2 5-5
La Conner 2-3 3-7
Orcas Island 2-4 3-7
Concrete 0-3 0-3
Darrington 0-6 0-11

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-1 2-3
Friday Harbor 1-1 2-2

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 6-0 11-1
Friday Harbor 4-2 7-6
Orcas Island 3-2 4-5
La Conner 2-2 4-3
Concrete 0-4 0-4
Darrington 0-5 1-6

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Sydney Van Dyke is a key part of a high-flying Wolf softball team. (Julie Wheat photo)

And then there were none.

The final two undefeated softball teams in 2B both clashed with rock-solid foes in doubleheader action Saturday, and both absorbed their first losses of the season in tense tussles.

Liberty (Spangle), previously 12-0, split a twin-bill with Freeman, while many miles away Coupeville knocked off host Forks 8-5 in extra innings in its opener, before falling 10-6 in the nightcap.

The split with an always-dangerous non-conference rival leaves the Wolves at 11-1 heading into a week when they return to Northwest 2B/1B League action.

As he looked back on a long day, CHS coach Aaron Lucero was philosophical about the results.

“Glad we played a team to push us,” he said. “It can be hard to adjust when we just roll over teams all the time. I had Forks on there for a double to do exactly that.

“I never get too interested in undefeated. I’m more obsessed with how we play day in, day out.”

That mentality paid off handsomely last year, when CHS went 18-1 in the regular season, followed by splitting four games at the state tourney.

While Saturday’s loss stings a bit, it gave a still very-young Wolf roster a chance to deal with hardship, starting with power-hitting second-baseman Capri Anter being sidelined after hurting her knee earlier in the week.

Allie Powers stepped in to play defense, and “made some very solid plays,” while fellow young guns Emma Leavitt and Emma Cushman handled the offensive duty.

Coupeville also shuffled its lineup in game two, with sophomore Ava Lucero, the future full-time catcher, sliding over from first to work behind the plate while senior backstop Teagan Calkins was sent out to ramble in center field.

And “The Red Dragon” went for quite a run once let free, sprinting from the left field line to the right field line at times to snag descending softballs.

Tack on shortstop Cami Van Dyke hurtling backward and extending to rob a Forks player of a potential hit, and Adeline Maynes pulling off web gems at both pitcher and second base, and the defense was often inspired.

How things played out:

 

Game 1:

Calkins lit the fuse in the top of the first, mashing a two-run home run over the left field fence, before Coupeville tacked on two more runs in the frame thanks to alert base-running.

With runners at the corner, Ava Lucero poked a single over the second-baseman’s head to send two runners careening for home, the second scoring when a Forks defender drilled a runner with a wayward throw.

Up 4-0, the Wolves looked like they might go off on another mercy-rule beat-down, but then the game took a turn into a pitcher’s duel between Coupeville hurler Adeline Maynes and her Forks counterpart, Chloe Gaydeski.

The Spartans got one run back in the second, but little else, while CHS stranded runners in scoring position in the second and fourth.

The fifth was slightly better, with Ava Lucero slapping an RBI single to right to make it 5-1, but Forks escaped a bases-loaded situation by nailing a runner at the plate to end the inning.

Taking advantage of the slight swing in momentum, the Spartans scored two runs in the fifth — after having two outs — before tying the game at 5-5 in the bottom of the seventh on a one-out two-run home run from Bailey Johnson.

As the ball disappeared over the fence to the screams of the local fans, the Wolves faced their first true gut-check since their season-opening one-run win over 3A Oak Harbor. To their credit, they responded in style.

Maynes bore down, forced a popup to Cami Van Dyke, then whiffed a batter to send the game to extra innings, and the Wolf offense came alive in response.

Cami Van Dyke prepares to paint her masterpiece. (Jackie Saia photo)

Leading off the eighth, Leavitt and Cushman earned back-to-back walks, before the 8th grader who plays like a 15-year vet dropped an ice-cold sacrifice bunt to drive a stake through the heart of Forks Nation.

Cami Van Dyke, operating the bat like a surgeon, laid the ball down with precision, then ruffled the defense with her fleet feet, allowing Leavitt to come hurtling home with what would be the game-busting run.

But, since it was the top of the inning, and not the bottom, the play wasn’t a walk-off winner.

So, to give Maynes some extra help, the Wolves tacked on a pair of RBI base knocks from Sydney Van Dyke and Calkins just to make sure.

Back in front 8-5, Maynes closed the game by inducing a popup to Powers, before ripping off strikeouts #12 and #13.

 

Game 2:

Almost a complete reversal, as Forks, this time playing as the road team, tallied four runs in the top of the first.

That put Coupeville in a hole, and while the Wolves fought back time and again in the second game, they never were able to recover the lead.

Stevens smacked an RBI single to center in the second to cut the deficit to 4-1, while CHS hurler Haylee Armstrong was lights out in the second and third inning (with some defensive help from Maynes at second and Calkins running wild in the outfield).

Chelsi Stevens has been a hit machine. (Jackie Saia photo)

That set up several moments where Coupeville launched mini comebacks, almost got all the way there, but was blunted by Bailey Johnson, handling the pitching duties for Forks in game two.

The Wolves trimmed the lead to 4-3 in the third, Forks pushed it back to 5-3, then CHS pulled within 5-4 only to leave the bases loaded in the fourth.

When pinch-runner Olivia Martin beat the tag at home on a wild pitch in the bottom of the fifth, tying things up at 5-5, things were looking up.

But then they went South, with Forks mashing a two-run tater to reclaim the lead. And while a Calkins RBI single got Coupeville within 7-6, it once again left runners in scoring position.

That proved to be fatal, as the Spartans erupted for three runs in the top of the seventh, turning a one-run game into a four-run deficit for a Wolf team which finally ran out of steam.

While he would have preferred two wins, Aaron Lucero came away focusing on the positives.

Maynes, who came on in relief in game two, picked up another six strikeouts to give her 19 for the day, while Armstrong recorded three punch-outs.

All nine starters reached base, as well, with seven recording hits.

“We hit the ball well, even when we hit it right at their players,” Aaron Lucero said. “We did have some good moments, but what hurt us was not having the timely hits when we had runners.

“Overall, I like to say I never lost a game, I win or learn, and the players learned some lessons today. On to the next!”

 

Saturday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — Two singles, four walks
Teagan Calkins — Three singles, two doubles, one home run, one walk
Emma Cushman — One single, one walk
Emma Leavitt — Two walks
Ava Lucero — Three singles, one walk
Adeline Maynes — One walk
Chelsi Stevens — Five singles
Cami Van Dyke — One single, one walk
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, one double, one walk

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