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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Wolf pitchers (l to r) Landon Roberts, Camden Glover, Seth Woollet, and Coop Cooper celebrate. (Sherry Bonacci photo)

Never count ’em out.

After twice rallying from three runs down Thursday, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad forced extra innings with visiting La Conner, then KO’d the Braves on a walk-off hit.

When Camden Glover’s RBI single in the bottom of the eighth hit paydirt on the prairie, it capped an improbable, but very rewarding 9-8 victory.

It also keeps the Wolves, now 3-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, just a game out of first place.

Coupeville, which is 4-7 overall heading into a trip to Forks Saturday, is tied with Friday Harbor in the NWL standings.

Those two sit a half-game behind Orcas Island (3-1) and a game back of current frontrunner Mount Vernon Christian (4-1) with half the season left to play.

Thursday’s titanic tilt went in favor of La Conner for much of the afternoon, though Coupeville kept chipping away and hanging around.

After trailing 1-0 early, the Wolves pushed two runners across in the bottom of the second to take their only lead of the game until the day’s final play.

Landon Roberts knotted the game at 1-1 on an RBI groundout, before Peyton Caveness, who leads the Wolves in most offensive categories this season, delivered an RBI single to put his team in front.

Peyton Caveness (8) fires up his team. (Jackie Saia photo)

Coupeville wouldn’t score again until the fifth, however, giving the Braves ample opportunity to surge back in front.

Four runs in the top of the third put La Conner up 5-2, but then Wolf pitchers strung together three scoreless frames to give their offense time to warm back up.

CHS notched a pair of runs in the fifth, with Steven Gonzalez, Carson Grove, and Roberts stepping up with big-time hits, before the Wolves got all the way back with a tally in the sixth.

Cole White lashed a single, stole second, scooted to third on a wild pitch, then screamed home with the tying run when La Conner once again couldn’t maintain control of the madly bouncing baseball.

Back in a 5-5 tie, the Wolves were rocking and rolling and then … gave it all right back.

The Braves smacked a pair of base hits and took advantage of a Coupeville error to plate three runners in the top of the seventh, and things looked bleak.

Until they didn’t, as the yo-yo effect the game had continued to play out in often surprising fashion.

Grove, just an 8th grader, delivered his second hit of the game to lead off Coupeville’s last stand, but was promptly erased thanks to a fielder’s choice.

The Wolves kept coming, however, with a single from Roberts and a walk to Glover keeping things interesting.

Seth Woollet skittered home on a wild pitch to cut it back to 8-6, Caveness launched a sac fly to make it 8-7, and then the game ended.

Or it should have.

White lofted a fly ball that would have been the final out, except La Conner fudged the catch, the ball popping loose from the third baseman’s glove as Glover steamed home with the tying run.

Given new life, and extra baseball, Coupeville took advantage.

Roberts, the fourth Wolf to take the mound on the day, set the Braves down in order in the top of the eighth, as the visitors went down swinging one-two-three.

“Don’t stop believing!” (Ember Light photo)

That sent the hometown heroes back to the plate with the game in their hands, and they played their final song to precision.

Woollet poked a leadoff hit, before Roberts dropped a gorgeous bunt down the third-base line, beating the throw for an infield single.

An error on the La Conner first baseman moved the winning run to third, and Glover rose to the moment, immediately punching a solid line drive to left to plate Woollet and set off a celebration.

That capped a 15-hit performance for the Wolves, with Glover and Roberts leading the way with three base knocks apiece.

Caveness and Grove each added two, with Jack Porter, White, Gonzalez, Coop Cooper, and Woollet rounding out the hit parade.

Coupeville’s pitchers combined to whiff 12 Braves, with Glover picking up six K’s to lead the way. Roberts (3), Woollet (2), and Cooper (1) also chipped in to the effort.

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Logan Martin lets it fly. (Photo courtesy Bob Martin)

He was ready for the spotlight.

Coupeville grad Logan Martin, now a sophomore at Central Washington University, won the hammer throw Thursday at the Whitworth Twilight meet in Spokane, crushing his foes.

The former Wolf chucked the implement 179 feet, which put him way ahead of runner-up Cody Wheeler of Whitworth, who notched a throw of 156-01.

In all, Martin bested a field of 15 athletes.

He also competed in the discus at Thursday’s meet, earning sixth place (out of 20 throwers), chucking it 135-01.

Martin, a four-sport star during his CHS days, will get right back at it Friday, when he travels to Portland to throw the hammer in the Larry Byerly L & C Invite.

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Freshman Capri Anter, seen here in an earlier game, pitched and hit Coupeville to a win Thursday afternoon. (Ryan Blouin photo)

“Love it when a plan comes together.”

Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan exited the field Thursday with a smile on his face, and a skip to his step.

His Wolves, ranked #9 in 2B by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, cruised past visiting La Conner 14-2 in five innings, and they did it exactly the way the diamond guru drew it up.

“The plan was to rest most of the starters and play the bench players a lot and have Capri (Anter) eat up five innings in the circle,” McGranahan said.

“Check, check, and check.”

The win lifts Coupeville to 4-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-1 overall, while allowing key players to stay fresh for Saturday’s major showdown with highly regarded non-conference foe Forks.

The Wolves kept sophomore catcher Teagan Calkins in place to give the team a calm hand at the wheel, while mixing and matching their other players.

Normal starters Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, and Haylee Armstrong sat this one out, while Madison McMillan, Taylor Brotemarkle, and Sydney Van Dyke saw limited action.

Which didn’t slow the Wolves down, as every young woman in pinstripes was on point Thursday, combining to rack up six hits and 19 walks in a game which could have been much, much more lopsided.

Five of Coupeville’s nine outs across the second, third, and fourth inning came from having players intentionally leave base early.

That ensured the game would make it to five innings and the second mercy rule (10+ runs), and not be ended after three innings if CHS was up by 15 at that point.

La Conner actually held the lead for a hot second, scraping out a run in the top of the first thanks to a pair of hits.

After that, Anter, who finished with eight strikeouts, was virtually untouchable in the pitcher’s circle.

Calkins, who was frequently (and loudly) hailed as “The Red Dragon” by her bench, provided a burst of defensive excellence as well.

Spring up from behind the plate, she snared a popped-up bunt for one out, while twice gunning down runners who strayed too far off the bag.

Coupeville got all the offense it would need in the bottom of the first, and it began with Anter.

The fab frosh whacked a one-out triple to left, then scampered home on a passed ball to knot the score at 1-1.

From there, the Wolves used six walks, a couple of La Conner wild pitches, and an error to push the lead out to 5-1 at the end of the frame.

The most painful of those walks provided an RBI, as Mary Western got plunked with a wayward pitch and wore it well, to the delight of her teammates.

Danica Strong (left) took advantage of better weather Thursday, reaching base twice. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

CHS stretched the advantage out to 12-1 through two innings, scoring seven more thanks to six walks and a pair of two-run singles from Danica Strong and Ava Lucero.

Strong’s base knock was especially impressive, as she stood tall to track down a pitch headed for the backstop and instead rammed it back up the middle between two defenders.

The Wolves added two more runs in the third, but no more, and did everything humanly possible not to score in the fourth — despite a double and three walks.

The two-bagger came off the bat of Calkins, with the righty flipping around and hitting from the left side in an effort to showcase her ability to be sublimely awesome in every aspect of the game.

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — One triple, two walks
Taylor Brotemarkle — One walk
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double
Shania Kenney — One walk
Ava Lucero — One single, two walks
Adeline Maynes — Three walks
Madison McMillan — One single
Chelsi Stevens — Three walks
Danica Strong — One single, one walk
Bailey Thule — Three walks
Mary Western — Two walks
Melanie Wolfe — One walk

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From across the waters, foreign exchange students have come to compete for a small town in Washington state. (Emma Garcia photo)

Small slices of life, caught between the competition.

Coupeville High School yearbook staff captured the images seen above and below, which showcase Wolf athletes in behind-the-scenes pics.

My thanks, as always, for their hard work, keen shooting eyes, and willingness to let me use their photos here on the blog.

(Jackie Saia photo)

(Ember Light photo)

(Emma Garcia photo)

(Thomas Studer photo)

(Emma Garcia photo)

(Ember Light photo)

(Emma Garcia photo)

(Thomas Studer photo)

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Haylee Armstrong and Coupeville softball are flexin’. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Movin’ on up.

The Coupeville High School softball team inched up from #10 to #9 in the latest RPI rankings from those scalawags at the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

The Wolves, who sit at 6-1 heading into a Thursday home game with Northwest 2B/1B League rival La Conner, have ten-runned their foes in each of their victories.

Coupeville’s lone loss was a one-run affair in the second game of a doubleheader with Onalaska, and even then, Kevin McGranahan’s thumpers had the tying run at third when the game ended.

Not bad for a team that starts three 8th graders, two freshmen, one sophomore, and four juniors, with no seniors on the roster.

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