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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Izzy Wells and Coupeville softball lost a league opponent Thursday, when Concrete cancelled its season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A crisp 15% of the schedule just vanished.

Concrete High School announced Thursday it would not be able to field a softball team this season, due to a lack of players.

That erases three games from Coupeville’s 20-game schedule.

The Lions and Wolves were slated to play a doubleheader in Concrete Mar. 25, before facing off for a single game Apr. 19 in Coupeville.

The loss of Concrete leaves five of seven Northwest 2B/1B League schools active on the softball field, with La Conner, Friday Harbor, Darrington, and Orcas Island joining Coupeville.

Mount Vernon Christian doesn’t play the sport.

 

UPDATE #1:

A non-conference home game against Meridian Apr. 20 has been added, bumping the Wolves back to 18 contests.

 

UPDATE #2:

A non-conference road game at Oak Harbor Apr. 22 has been added, bumping CHS back to 19 tilts.

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Leni Raduenz swats a shot as Coupeville High School spring sports teams get crackin’. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spring sports have sprung.

The weather’s not bad (for Whidbey, at least) and a new season of Coupeville High School sports is underway.

Photo whiz kid John Fisken bounced around town recently and managed to snap pics of three of four Wolf teams as they prepped for games.

Girls tennis, softball, and baseball are featured here, though CHS track and field athletes were nowhere to be found on this day.

Allie Lucero is thrilled to be back on the softball diamond.

Cody Roberts limbers up.

Wolf tennis guru Ken Stange has the beard in mid-season form.

Scott Hilborn launches a throw.

Chloe Marzocca dares you to try and run on her arm.

Lucy Tenore (rockin’ the hat) and Abby Mulholland (sportin’ sunglasses) are back for a new season of aces and volleys.

“This one ain’t ever coming back!”

Mia Farris scoops up a hot shot.

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Makana Stone fine-tunes her game in England. (Photo property Leicester Riders)

They’re #1 for a reason.

The Sevenoaks Suns sit atop the Women’s British Basketball League this season, undefeated and (so far) unmatched.

And they kept that flawless run going Sunday, knocking off the Leicester Riders 74-57 in the semifinals of the WBBL Cup.

Sevenoaks faces off with the London Lions later this month to decide the winner of one of two in-season tournaments.

For Leicester and its American assassin — Coupeville grad Makana Stone — it’s back to regular-season play.

The Riders, who are 9-4 in league play, 13-6 overall, play the Oaklands Wolves (3-11 in league) Mar. 12.

Sunday’s matchup was close through one quarter, with Sevenoaks clinging to an 18-13 lead at the first break.

But the Suns broke things open in the second frame, using a 21-8 surge to build a lead which it never gave back.

Leicester went on a late run, dropping 12 straight fourth-quarter points to narrow the margin down, but couldn’t get all the way back against the league powerhouse.

Stone tossed in six points and snatched five rebounds, while Oceana Hamilton paced the Riders with 15 points.

Sevenoaks got a double-double from Janice Monakana, who went off for 23 points and 11 boards, and a triple-double from Cat Carr, who piled up 11 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists.

Across her first season of professional basketball Stone has racked up 154 points, 109 rebounds, 22 assists, and 18 steals.

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Senior Mckenna Somes is a key returning player for the Coupeville High School softball squad. (Jackie Saia photos)

How do you follow up perfection?

Hopefully with a lot more of the same.

At least that’s the goal for the Coupeville High School softball program, which is coming off a 12-0 run during a pandemic-shortened 2021 season.

“Big expectations for this season!” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan.

“Our goals are to win the league, be the number one seed for districts, and go to state and cause a whole lot of havoc once there.”

The last time any softball teams had a chance to advance to the big dance, way back in 2019, that’s exactly what Coupeville did – cause some havoc.

Playing in the 1A classification at the time, the Wolves, with freshman hurler Izzy Wells firing BB’s from the pitcher’s circle, thrashed highly rated Deer Park and came within a play of upending Cle Elum.

That capped a three-games-in-one-day jaunt which kicked off with a game against eventual state champ Montesano.

Coupeville was primed for more, and then, whammo, pandemic city.

A 2020 season completely erased by Covid, then a 2021 one chopped down to just league contests, with no playoffs.

But as Wells and hard-hitting Audrianna Shaw — the other remaining member of the 2019 state tourney team — take the field for their senior season, things are looking up.

Coupeville has a full 20-game regular-season schedule which includes non-conference matchups with bigger schools such as Lynden Christian and South Whidbey.

Plus, the promise of the postseason is a thing again.

“The girls need this,” McGranahan said. “I hope that we can play a normal season and playoffs and they can finally put this behind them.”

Wells and Shaw are joined by returning players such as senior Mckenna Somes and juniors Allie and Maya Lucero.

“They will anchor our defense and provide the offensive spark we need,” McGranahan said.

Allie Lucero is a weapon on both offense and defense.

Coupeville has a deep roster, with a strong pack of nine freshmen making the jump to high school ball after finishing their little league careers with a fourth-place finish at the state tournament.

Those young Wolves, players like Taylor Brotemarkle, Madison McMillan, and Savina Wells, can contribute today and tomorrow.

“We have 22 girls out this season and every one of them are essential to the program and getting us to our goals,” McGranahan said.

“The freshmen will be key to carry the program into the future seasons and will have big moments this season as well.

While the Wolves crushed their way through the Northwest 2B/1B League last season, outscoring foes 154-41 across those 12 wins, McGranahan takes nothing for granted.

In particular, he has his eye on Friday Harbor, which will be young but also is likely to “be our toughest test in the league.”

Whether the foes hail from the NWL or not, McGranahan and his players will approach each game with an eye on always getting better.

“We need to work on our softball IQ,” he said. “We are a young team and need to get softball smart.

“Great athletes — just need to harness the softball knowledge.”

Coupeville has a power pitcher, strong hitters, steady defenders, and a few secrets, as McGranahan is keeping some things close to the vest.

Asked about his team’s best points, the veteran coach just smiled.

“Everyone will see our strengths soon enough. Not gonna give out that info,” he said with a laugh, before going right back to work.

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Hawthorne Wolfe and fellow seniors are ready to dominate the diamond. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Will Thayer may need to pace himself.

The Coupeville High School baseball guru is entering his third season at the school but will finally be getting his first crack at a full schedule.

Thayer’s first job at CHS — as an assistant coach with Wolf softball — evaporated when all spring sports were erased by the pandemic.

Last year, he stepped into a new role atop the school’s baseball program, but schools only played against league rivals, with no chance of advancing to playoffs.

Toss in some cancellations, and Thayer and Co. had to make do with a 10-game schedule, one in which they went 7-3 to finish second in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

But this spring, hope abounds, with Wolf baseball eyeing a 20-game regular season campaign, and the postseason the prize at the end of the road.

Add in the end of mask mandates and Covid testing for prep athletes, and the mood is joyful.

“I think the biggest thing for these players was no notes and no masks seemed to be what they were the happiest about on the first day of practice,” Thayer said.

“Playing a full 20 games will be awesome and having something to play for like district titles and playoffs,” he added. “Playing a normal schedule will be a blessing to me.”

Only one team beat Coupeville last season, and the Wolves are chomping for some revenge.

“Friday Harbor is going to stand in our way, and, if we come together, we should be able to take the title away from them,” Thayer said.

Coupeville’s coaches and players have a list of items to accomplish, from being league and district champs, to returning to the state tournament, and “continuing to build the program.”

Thayer only lost one player to graduation and returns a roster which offers “lots of senior leadership.”

“I think pitching and defense will be our strength this year,” he said.

Cody Roberts headlines Coupeville’s pitching staff. (Morgan White photo)

Now the Wolves want to add some pop when batting.

“Just becoming more consistent at the plate,” Thayer said. “We have lots of great athletes; if they become consistent hitters, we will be able to do some special things this year.”

Seniors Cody Roberts (P, OF), Hawthorne Wolfe (P, OF), Xavier Murdy (P, C, INF), and Sage Sharp (UTL) lead the returnees, and are joined by juniors Scott Hilborn (P, SS) and Jonathan Valenzuela (P, 3B) and sophomore Peyton Caveness (1B).

Senior Caleb Meyer, a Little League star back in the day, returns to Coupeville for his final season, while junior Alex Murdy joins his brother on the diamond with soccer having moved from spring to fall.

And the cupboard won’t be bare when this year’s deep senior class departs, as the Wolves have a solid group of freshmen and eighth graders joining the program.

“I’m excited about young talent like Chase Anderson, Camden Glover, Landon Roberts, and Jack and Johnny Porter,” Thayer said.

Scott Hilborn is a vacuum at shortstop. (Morgan White photo)

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