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Her fastball-flinging arm? Her hit-happy bat? Her fleet feet? All deadly weapons for fab frosh Haylee Armstrong. (Kim Brotemarkle photo)

They drove to Concrete, then walked to a win.

Collecting 20 free bases and 10 hits Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad crushed host Concrete 21-1 in a game mercy-ruled after four innings.

Now 3-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 4-0 overall, the Wolves head home for a test Saturday, when they host a doubleheader against Onalaska.

First pitch is 1:00 PM, and CHS is holding its annual “Strike Out Cancer” gift basket fundraiser in conjunction with the twin-bill.

Friday’s fracas in Concrete was a classic example of a very good team trying its best not to embarrass a rebuilding program.

The Wolves could have won 100-1 if they had wanted but were efficient yet merciful.

Seven of Coupeville’s 12 outs came by having runners intentionally leave the base early, including all of their outs in the third and fourth inning.

Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan also got playing time for 15 different girls, with every one of them reaching base.

That included sophomore Danica Strong, heir to the throne, who crushed her first hit in a Wolf uniform in front of mom (and Cow Town sports legend) Danette Beckley.

Danica Strong and the woman who gave her all those good athletic genes. (Photo courtesy Danette Beckley)

Enjoying the sunshine and dazzling mountain views in Concrete, the Wolves got right to work Friday, putting 12 of their first 14 hitters aboard.

Starting pitcher Haylee Armstrong kick-started things by cracking a single down the left field line, then, after walks from Mia Farris and Taylor Brotemarkle, it was time for the Mad Masher to make her presence felt.

Twisting her bat like she was going to break it in half, Madison McMillan pointed to those far-off mountains and whispered, “Time to go home, lil’ softball.”

At which point she unloaded a mammoth shot to right, sending all her teammates scampering for home.

Mainly so they wouldn’t get run over by McMillan, who careened around the basepaths like a runaway freight train, tapping home as the ball finally came sailing in behind her.

Grandpa Gordon, doing his usual ace job on the books, credited her with a triple, saying she scored on the throw, instead of a grand slam homerun.

There may be a conversation in the McMillan house tonight…

Whether it was a tater or a really long triple, Madison’s moonball put the lead at 4-0 and that was just the beginning.

A whole lot of walks and a dropped third strike kept the basepaths busy, while Farris and Teagan Calkins rocketed RBI base hits to keep the Lion defenders jumpy and nervous.

The only thing which ended the top of the first was a Coupeville runner giving themselves up, a grace note of mercy in an 11-0 opening salvo.

If Concrete was hoping to respond in kind, that wasn’t happening.

Armstrong, stalking the pitcher’s circle and flinging liquid heat, ripped off a pair of strikeouts, while Taylor Brotemarkle made a sweet play on a chopper to second, snatching the ball up and alertly tagging a runner trying to sneak past her.

Taylor Brotemakle is her name, defense is her game. (Ryan Blouin photo)

If the Wolves have one weird little weakness, it seems to be the second inning.

They’ve done it before, and may do it again, and certainly did it Friday, going down in order in a scoreless frame after their first inning explosion.

Before promptly raining down more runs in every other inning.

CHS pushed across four runs in the top of the third, with Armstrong, Farris, and Jada Heaton smokin’ base knocks.

But McMillan, while getting on base, had a bit of a disappointment.

Hitting with the bags once again juiced, she pulled up one of her uniform sleeves, cause “suns out, guns out” and prepared to take another titanic swing.

But instead, as she stepped backwards to avoid a wayward pitch, the ball spun into her, softly hitting her leg and sending her down to first with a free pass.

The look on her face told the true story.

“Do I have to go? Mama wants to mash!!”

But McMillan honored the rules of the game, and McGranahan did some nimble coaching to keep his team from getting too far ahead and ending the game after the minimum three innings.

All three outs in the third were due to runners “leaving early” and at 15-0 that gave the teams another inning before the next mercy rule would go into effect.

Which was perfect, as it gave Coupeville a chance to run everyone through the lineup, rewarding the Wolves for their work in practice.

Strong led off the fourth with a walk, then came back around about 10 minutes later to punch an RBI single to straightaway centerfield, putting her in the hit club sisterhood.

Meanwhile, Capri Anter, Chelsi Stevens, Adeline Maynes, and Melanie Wolfe all eked out walks, and 8th grader Sydney Van Dyke rapped the latest of her RBI hits.

Flexin’ on fools. The Wolves have outscored opponents 75-10 through the first four games of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Concrete managed to avoid being held scoreless by scraping out a lone run in the bottom of the fourth, but Anter closed the game with solid work from the circle.

She finished with five strikeouts across two innings, while her cousin, Armstrong, had four K’s when she handed the ball over.

Calkins (1B, 2B), Farris (1B, 1B), and Armstrong (1B, 1B) paced the hit parade, with McMillan (3B), Heaton (1B), Van Dyke (1B), and Strong (1B) rounding out the attack.

Ava Lucero and Brotemarkle both walked three times, while McMillan and Calkins accepted two free passes.

Also getting good calls from the ump were (big breath) Wolfe, Maynes, Stevens, Anter, Strong, Bailey Thule, Mary Western, Heaton, Armstrong, and Farris.

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Scoring runs is dusty work. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Concrete was the cure.

A Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad which had tallied 20 runs across its first seven games topped that total in just five innings of play Friday afternoon.

Rapping out hit after hit, including three separate three-run triples, the Wolves pasted their hosts, cracking Concrete 25-7 in a game mercy-ruled.

The win lifts CHS to 2-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 3-5 overall heading into a home showdown Saturday with next door neighbor South Whidbey.

Coupeville’s offense was unstoppable Friday, rolling up a season-high 20 hits and 11 walks. Overall, 14 of the 16 Wolves to see the field reached base.

Concrete had one brief glimmer of hope in the top of the first, then things went sideways in a hurry.

Wolf leadoff hitter Peyton Caveness crunched a triple but was nabbed trying to come home on a ball off the bat of Landon Roberts.

After that, it was all Coupeville, all day.

CHS pushed seven runs across in the first, with Yohannon Sandles delivering a two-run single and Aiden O’Neill clearing the bags with a triple to right field.

With Seth Woollet dealing on the mound and punching an RBI single of his own through the Lion defense, the Wolves shoved the lead out to 12-0.

Caveness delivered his team’s second three-run triple to cap the early push.

Peyton Caveness prepares to get dramatic.

While Concrete scraped out a pair of runs in its half of the second, Coupeville scored in every inning, with the advantage eventually ballooning out to 25-2 through the top of the fifth.

In the third, the big blow was an RBI double from Jack Porter, while in the fourth it was an RBI triple from the very same batter.

The fifth was brutal for Concrete, as the hometown nine couldn’t get off the field quickly enough, surrendering eight more runs.

Jack Porter, having himself a day, blasted Coupeville’s third, and final, three-run triple, with Camden Glover, Carson Grove and Jayden Little all plating runners with base-knocks.

Grove, just an 8th grader, was superb in relief, tossing two shutout innings for the Wolves, holding his foes to a single hit across the third and fourth.

Concrete, looking for a little redemption, or at least a positive note to end its tortured day, scored five runs in the waning sunshine in the bottom of the fifth, but it was too little, too late.

Woollet, Grove, Matthew Gilbert, and Glover combined for the win, with the group racking up nine strikeouts.

At the plate, Jack Porter was a man afire, blasting two doubles and two triples while being credited with a team-high five hits and five RBI.

Caveness collected a pair of triples as part of a three-hit day, while White, Grove, and Sandles each added a pair of singles.

Cole White can kill you with his bat or glove.

Rounding out the hit parade were O’Neill (3B), Glover (2B), Johnny Porter (1B), Gilbert (1B), Little (1B), and Coop Cooper (1B).

Glover and O’Neill both walked three times, with Aidyn McDermott, Sandles, Roberts, and Cooper showcasing eagle eyes while collecting a free base.

Easton Green and 8th grader Nick Laska also saw playing time, with the latter making his varsity debut.

Saturday’s rumble with South Whidbey, which is a rematch from earlier in the season, is scheduled to start at 1:00 PM.

It’ll be part of a busy day on the prairie, with the Wolf softball squad slated to host Onalaska in a doubleheader starting at the same time.

In other words, a perfect time to do some spring cleaning in the morning, then bring your no longer needed DVD’s down to be left next to my green ‘n dirty Xterra in the parking lot as I build a secret underground shrine to Videoville’s glory days.

Just sayin’.

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“Hey, no touchy, mister! Stranger danger!! STRANGER DANGER!!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Seven schools, two separate paths.

The 1B schools in the Northwest 2B/1B League have wrapped regular season play, and are currently involved in playoff action, while the 2B institutions are still playing conference rumbles.

Coupeville’s hoops squads close with road games Tuesday at La Conner, before the Braves travel to Friday Harbor Feb. 9.

After that comes the postseason, though only the Wolf boys will advance this season, as the CHS girls fell just short of qualifying for the playoffs.

Seniors (l to r) Skylar Parker, Kayla Arnold, and Reese Wilkinson bow out next week.

 

Where win/loss records sit through Feb. 4:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 6-0 13-5
Coupeville 6-1 14-5
MV Christian 7-2 9-11
Orcas Island 4-5 8-11
Friday Harbor 3-4 8-10
Concrete 2-7 8-14
Darrington 0-9 4-14

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 9-0 18-4
La Conner 5-1 12-6
Friday Harbor 4-3 6-12
Darrington 4-5 10-9
Orcas Island 3-6 5-13
Coupeville 2-5 7-12
Concrete 1-8 9-12

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Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and friends are 12-4 after drilling Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We’d love it if every game was like this.”

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball coaching staff was in a righteous mood Tuesday, basking in the afterglow of a 66-30 win over visiting Concrete.

It wasn’t just the win, which lifts the Wolves to 5-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 12-4 overall, but how the win was accomplished.

CHS put three guys into double digit scoring — including a career-best performance from bearded banger Zane Oldenstadt — got points from nine players and gave floor time to 13.

That should leave the Wolf starters fresh as they kick off a three-games-in-five-days stretch, while giving the role players a chance to earn big cheers from their home fans.

So, exactly the kind of game you want coming off a fairly lackluster performance Saturday against Neah Bay in a rare loss.

This time around, the Wolves hit the floor with purpose and passion, sharing the ball, making the small plays, and never once taking their collective foot off the gas pedal.

Concrete’s one and only lead came at 3-2 extremely early in the first quarter, and then it was fun times under the bright lights for the run-and-gun Wolves.

Chase Anderson drilled a short jumper to put CHS ahead for good, then snatched a rebound and fed Logan Downes for a three-ball and the rout was on.

Another trey, this one flying off the fingertips of Ryan Blouin, staked the Wolves to a 15-8 lead at the first break.

From there, Coupeville steadily stretched the advantage, with first Anderson, then Hunter Bronec, reeling off three straight buckets.

Five different Wolves scored in the second frame, with Oldenstadt converting putbacks and Downes outsprinting the defense on breakaways, as CHS pushed things out to 36-17 at the half.

Bearded banger Zane Oldenstadt arrives to inflict damage and destruction. (CHS Yearbook Staff photo)

Cole White stepped up to showcase the hot hand in the third, with the final one of his three baskets in the frame coming on a wild play.

A ballet of destruction, playing out precisely in favor of the Wolves, it began with Nick Guay bounding airborne to punch the ball half the length of the floor, before Anderson chased down the errant orb a half-inch away from stepping on the end line.

Flicking the ball back to White, he watched in fascination as his older teammate stopped on a dime, throwing the shot down in one smooth motion as Lion defenders skidded past, silent screams etched on their faces.

Things got really brutal for Concrete in the fourth, as they discovered a painful secret.

Once unleashed, you can’t put Oldenstadt back in the bottle.

Like a genie granting all the wishes — even the one for more wishes — the burly Wolf senior ripped off eight straight points to cap the greatest offensive display of his career.

Known for his rebounding, love of planting fools on their butt while patrolling the paint, and willingness to wear a hollowed-out pumpkin on his head at Halloween, Oldenstadt finished with a hyped-up 12 points.

This, after scoring 13 points total across the first 15 games.

It brought a big smile to CHS coach Brad Sherman’s face as he scanned the scorebook, while Oldenstadt’s faithful fans chanted “More playing time! More playing time!!”

Downes led the Wolves with 15, and on the night when he was honored for becoming the #1 scorer in CHS boys’ basketball 107-year history this past weekend, he passed yet another milestone.

With 1,165 points and counting, he slips past Makana Stone (1,158) to become #3 all-time at the school regardless of gender.

Next up? Novi Barron (1,270), then Brianne King (1,549).

Anderson slapped home 14 to slide in between Downes and Oldenstadt, while White (8), Hunter Bronec (7), Blouin (5), Aiden O’Neill (2), Mikey Robinett (2), and Guay (1) also scored.

William Davidson gets frisky. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

William Davidson, Timothy Nitta, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Hurlee Bronec also saw floor time for the Wolves, who host South Whidbey Wednesday before traveling to Puyallup Saturday to play Chief Leschi.

 

No JV action:

Coupeville’s red-hot ‘n rollin’ second unit had the night off Tuesday, as the Lions don’t have a JV boys’ team this season.

The Wolf young guns, sitting at 10-2 on the season, return to action Wednesday with a home game against South Whidbey.

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“Your bench is short tonight, mom? Put me in! I’ll burn those nets down!!” (Photo courtesy Megan Richter)

Teamwork makes the dream work, especially when you’re missing a star.

With two-way warrior Mia Farris riding the bench while recovering from a nasty fall in a game this weekend, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad spread the love Tuesday night.

Six different Wolves scored multiple times, and a second-half surge carried Megan Richter’s squad to a convincing 45-24 win over visiting Concrete.

The victory lifts CHS to 2-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 6-10 overall.

It also propels the Wolves from the cellar up to fourth place in the seven-team NWL, with the final days of the regular season fast approaching.

Tuesday’s win was a team effort from start to finish.

Nine players saw the floor, and the three who didn’t score still had a solid impact, with Kayla Arnold and Reese Wilkinson snaring rebounds and tougher-than-she-looks Brynn Parker holding up well under stress while handling the ball.

Brynn Parker slices ‘n dices the defense. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville came out firing, with Lyla Stuurmans banking home the game’s first shot, before Katie Marti sank a three-ball from the top after being set up by a rebound and kickout pass from Wolf sparkplug Jada Heaton.

The visitors made their one stand of the night in the first, briefly creeping ahead 8-7 on a three-ball at the tail end of the quarter, but then CHS went to work.

The aforementioned Heaton was spectacular in the second frame, getting her hands on seemingly every loose ball and interjecting herself into nearly every play.

While she still showed off her enormous heart by stopping in the middle of a fight for a loose ball to check on a Lion who bounced off the hardwood, she was also a cold-blooded killer when needed.

Peppering Concrete with buckets, Heaton knocked down the shot of the game when she put back a rebound a half tick before the shot clock buzzed, then merrily cartwheeled down the floor, slapping hands left and right as she went.

Junior Jada Heaton (12) is the glue that holds the Wolves together. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Still, Concrete hung tough, trailing just 17-13 at the half, with a little help from the world’s thinnest-skinned ref.

His operating style? Spending almost as much time lecturing Coupeville’s coaches for imaginary conversations as he did calling fouls on the Wolves with no time left on the clock.

Ignoring the zesty zebra, the Wolves seized control of the game in the third quarter, however.

Madison McMillan dominated in the paint, Skylar Parker slashed the Lion defense to ribbons, and Teagan Calkins was everywhere and nowhere at once, an assassin making the kill, then vanishing before the victim knew they were dead.

CHS exited the third quarter up 28-17 and it would have been more, only to have a ref try to interject themselves back in the game by waving off a Calkins shot at the buzzer.

Not that it mattered, because even when the officials fouled out Heaton early in the fourth quarter — to the wails of her robust fan club — there was no slowing down the Wolves.

Whipping the ball around the arc, and up and down the floor, Coupeville triggered multiple buckets on precise passes, as everyone got in on the point explosion.

The Wolves closed the game on a 17-3 surge, with five of the last eight baskets directly set up by an assist.

Calkins popped for a game-high 13 points to pace CHS, with Marti banking in nine, and Stuurmans and McMillan both rippling the nets for seven.

Heaton had five, before the refs knifed her in the back, while Skylar Parker added four, making for very balanced books.

With the win in hand, the Wolf girls are off until Saturday, when they travel to Puyallup to face Chief Leschi in a non-conference tilt.

After that comes home matchups with Friday Harbor and Orting, and a road trip to La Conner to wrap the regular season.

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