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Here comes the heat! Izzy Wells struck out 18 batters across two games Saturday, leading Coupeville to a doubleheader sweep. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

First test? Passed.

Taking the field for the first time since the 2019 state tournament, the new-look Coupeville High School softball squad made a bold statement Saturday afternoon.

Sweeping a doubleheader from visiting Friday Harbor, the Wolves fired the first shots across the bow of their new home in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

When last we saw CHS softballers, they had just played three games in one day at the 1A state tourney, demolishing highly-ranked Dear Park and coming within a play of eliminating Cle Elum.

Since then, COVID-19 wiped out a season and brought a premature end to the careers of stars such as Scout Smith and Emma Mathusek.

Jump forward to Saturday, and the Wolves, now a 2B school, finally got to return to play, with a chance to face the defending champs from their new league.

While Coupeville claimed first-place in the 1A North Sound Conference in 2019, Friday Harbor went a flawless 12-0 in the NWL that season.

That won’t be happening this time around, thanks.

Winning 7-3 and 6-3 in games which weren’t as close as they might sound — Friday Harbor scored only one run outside of the 7th inning all day — the Wolves made an emphatic statement.

Their handful of returning state tourney vets — fireball-tossing pitcher Izzy Wells, slammin’ slugger Chelsea Prescott, easy-going catcher Mollie Bailey, fleet-footed Coral Caveness, and fast-rising two-way star Audrianna Shaw — all looked sharp.

Even better, the next gen stars, many of whom were making their debut on a high school field, were sensational.

From Gwen Gustafson, who made one eye-popping catch after another in centerfield, to Jill Prince and Maya Lucero, who launched lasers off their bats, the young guns already have some serious pop.

“I was very happy with my “red-shirt sophomores” and how they played,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “They showed right away the game was not too big for them.”

Mixing and matching his lineup a bit between games, the Wolf diamond guru got incredible balance across the board.

Coupeville finished the twin-bill with 17 walks and 16 base-knocks, with 12 different players reaching base, 10 with hits.

How the day played out:

 

Game 1:

Friday Harbor was late after its bus broke down, requiring CHS to retrieve their opponents at the ferry dock.

Whether that affected the visiting team’s pitchers, or whether Coupeville’s hitters all just have eagle eyes, it worked out to the advantage of the team in red and black.

The Wolves piled up 11 walks in the opener, tossed in a few hits at important moments, and scored in every inning except the bottom of the sixth.

Meanwhile, on the other side, Wells limbered up her arm by playing a hardy game of catch with Bailey, as the duo combined to ring up an impressive 12 strikeouts.

Coupeville’s first two runs came courtesy of well-timed double steals, with the runner heading to second drawing the throw, before a runner at third scooted home.

The first time around it was Caveness tip-toeing down the line, the second time Shaw juking the Friday Harbor catcher out of her shoes.

The Wolves broke the game open with three runs in the third inning, all scored with two outs.

Shaw whacked an RBI single to centerfield, with the ball diving under the glove of the oncoming defender, before Prince smoked a two-run single to right-center, which drew a roar of approval from mom Jennie (Cross) Prince.

“I saw that!,” said the woman who still holds the CHS shot put and discus records three decades down the road, while her daughter ducked her head and beamed brighter than the sun.

Prince and Shaw also made nice snags on defense, supporting Wells, who was slingin’ heat while new CHS assistant coach, and former Wolf star, Katrina McGranahan hollered support from the bleachers.

When she wasn’t gently bouncing her adorable young son, the one-time diamond phenom was dropping pop quizzes on the greenest of Coupeville’s new players, giving them a gentle, but very-effective entrance into game strategy.

Meanwhile, out on the field, her father’s squad built its lead all the way up to 7-0, thanks to opportunistic base-running.

While Friday Harbor did claw back a bit in the seventh, scraping together a three-run rally, it was too little, too late.

Looking like the calmest pitcher to ever toe the rubber, Wells reared back one final time, sent the ball skidding into Bailey’s glove as a Friday Harbor bat went by too slowly, then skipped off the field in search of a quick between-game snack.

 

Game 2:

If the opener was about walks, the nightcap — played with just a hint of sprinkles replacing the here-sometimes, gone-sometimes sun which graced the prairie earlier — was all about hits.

Eleven of them, to be exact, with eight of nine starters notching at least one.

On the day she celebrated her birthday, second-baseman Heidi Meyers led the way, clubbing a single and double out of the leadoff slot, while Wells and Bailey also had a pair of hits each.

Heidi Meyers celebrated her birthday with a pair of base-knocks.

The game was actually scoreless until the bottom of the second, thanks to Friday Harbor gunning down a runner at the plate, and the Wolves pulling off an unusual double play.

Wells recorded yet another strikeout, with Bailey popping out of her crouch to nail a runner trying to steal second on the same pitch.

As the ball nestled perfectly into Prescott’s glove, the irrepressible Bailey nodded ever so slightly at her rabid fan base, while undoubtedly firing off finger pistols in her head.

That seemed to trigger the offense, as it came out firing on all cylinders in the bottom of the second.

Bella Whalen, making her Wolf debut, kicked things off by tearing the ball in half, her screamer down the third-base line reminiscent of former power hitters such as Veronica Crownover and Sarah Wright.

While this hit was a long single, she also thumped one deep foul ball off of a power line Saturday, and kept her teammates bouncing on the edge of their seats each time she strolled to the plate.

With Whalen aboard, Wells dumped a single into left, and Coupeville was off to a three-run inning.

One run came in on a passed ball, a second on an RBI grounder off of Shaw’s bat, and the final one on a long liner to center by Maya Lucero.

While Meyers didn’t get a hit in the inning, she did get a roar from her teammates after she almost killed first base coach Ron Wright with a rocket hit right at his chest.

The birthday girl came back around later in the game to mash an RBI double, while Lacy McCraw-Shirron added an RBI single as Coupeville cruised out to a 6-1 lead.

Down the stretch, the Wolves sparkled on defense as well, with Gustafson patrolling center like a legend, including making one truly sensational snag while running full-tilt towards right.

CHS also saved a run after a botched play, as Whalen alertly grabbed a wildly-skittering ball, spun, and delivered a pin-point strike to Bailey, who rode the incoming runner down to the dirt for the inning-ending out.

On the day, Shaw and Bailey led the way at the plate, with three hits apiece, while Meyers and Wells each had two.

Caveness, Prescott, and Whalen all walked three times, with Kylie Van Velkinburgh, Gustafson, and Wells eking out two base-on-balls each.

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Sarah Wright leads the dugout chatter back in her high school days. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Winner, winner, (Southern fried) chicken dinner.

Powered by Coupeville grad Sarah Wright, the Sewanee: University of the South softball squad rolled to a doubleheader sweep of Johnson University Saturday in Tennessee.

Winning 10-0 and 10-4, the Tigers notched their first victories of the new campaign, and sit at 2-4 on the season.

Sewanee returns to action next weekend, when it travels to Georgia for back-to-back twinbills.

Wright and Co. play a doubleheader at Agnes Scott College Saturday, Feb. 22, then bounce over to Wesleyan College for two more games the next day.

The Tigers play the first 15 games of their 40-game schedule on the road, not making their home debut until March 7.

Facing off with Johnson University Saturday, Sewanee controlled the action from start to finish.

Wright caught both games of the doubleheader, collecting three hits and two RBI while holding down the #5 slot in the lineup.

On the season, the former Coupeville star is hitting .313 with five hits, three RBI, two walks, and an on-base percentage of .389.

That puts her in the top three on the team in all five offensive categories.

A freshman at Sewanee, Wright is studying politics in between softball games and practices.

During her time at CHS, she was class Valedictorian, while playing volleyball, soccer, basketball, and softball.

Wright capped her prep softball career by being tabbed as the 2019 North Sound Conference Defensive Player of the Year, while helping the Wolves advance to the state tourney for the third time in program history.

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“Scoring runs? It’s kind of my thing!” (Jackie Saia photos)

Brionna Blouin gets some planking in during a pause in the action.

Teagan Calkins stands tall behind the plate.

“You thought you might beat us? You thought wrong!”

Find a way to win.

The Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad kept its season-long hot streak alive Saturday, sweeping a road double header against South Skagit with two very different victories.

The Hammerheads opened the twin-bill at Mt. Baker Middle School by pulling out an 11-8 win in extra innings, then dominated in the nightcap, pounding their foes 16-2 in a game shortened by the mercy rule.

With the sweep, the Majors mashers return home sporting a 10-1 record on the season.

How it played out Saturday:

 

Game 1:

Chloe Marzocca ripped off 16 strikeouts from the pitcher’s circle for the Hammerheads, but Central Whidbey had to overcome being caught in a triple play and losing the lead late.

After building an 8-2 margin, thanks to a four-run first inning and then a steady drip of one-run frames, CWLL stumbled, briefly, giving up six runs in the bottom of the sixth.

Never blinking, the Hammerheads calmly regrouped, moved into the unexpected seventh and dropped three runs on the board to seal the deal.

Central Whidbey finished the game with 11 hits, as Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, Brionna Blouin, and Allison Nastali led the way with two base-knocks apiece.

McMillan blasted a triple, while Teagan Calkins, Jada Heaton, and Mayleen Weatherford chipped in with singles.

The Hammerheads also showed patience at the plate, picking up seven walks, with Taylor Brotemarkle earning two free passes.

Calkins, Heaton, McMillan, Aleksia Jump, and Katie Marti also won duels with the South Skagit hurler, then bolted to first to claim their base.

 

Game 2:

Nastali replaced Marzocca in the pitcher’s circle, whiffing three across four innings, while her catcher, Blouin, was on fire.

The Hammerheads backstop picked off a runner on the base-paths and twice tracked down foul balls behind the plate, pulling in the rapidly-dropping balls for crucial outs.

At the plate, Central Whidbey jumped on everything, taking advantage of five dropped third strikes, while also pounding out seven hits, many of the extra-bases variety.

Nastali and McMillan had two hits apiece, with McMillan garnering another triple.

Marti matched her with a three-bagger of her own, Calkins swatted a double, and Brotemarkle singed the grass for a single.

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   Freshman Scout Smith made several superb defensive plays Wednesday during a doubleheader sweep of 2A Sequim. (John Fisken photos)

   Mikayla Elfrank can beat you with her bat, glove or arm, something Sequim will never forget.

It started with thunder and lightning and ended with Dairy Queen.

Powered by a phenomenal performance from slugging shortstop Mikayla Elfrank, the Coupeville High School softball squad completed a doubleheader sweep of 2A Sequim which took a week, and two towns, to play.

Six days after game one was suspended by a sudden storm on Whidbey, the Wolves hit the road Wednesday and arrived on the mainland just in time to catch the arrival of the carnival to town.

Oh yeah, and they also pulled off 5-3 and 4-3 wins, while Elfrank cranked two home-runs to straight-away center (on separate days in different towns), collected seven RBIs, and got a gift certificate for creamy ice cream goodness from the rival coach.

The wins lift Coupeville to 17-3, the second-best record in program history, heading into postseason play.

The Wolves open the district playoffs May 19 against Vashon Island, a team they roughed up 13-5 earlier this season.

As they chase the 2002 CHS sluggers, who went 24-3 and finished 3rd at state, this year’s squad, which had eight underclassmen in the starting lineup Wednesday, has beaten every team except one.

They are 0-3 against Olympic League champ Chimacum and 17-0 against the world.

That includes going 5-0 against two teams, Klahowya and Sequim, which gave those Cowboys (9-4) two of their four losses.

Facing off with Sequim, a strong squad which claimed second in the 2A division of the Olympic League, Coupeville used a similar strategy in both games — big hits to jump on top early, then stellar defense and lights-out pitching from Katrina McGranahan to slam the door shut.

Game One (4-3 win):

This started in Coupeville May 4, then stopped after two innings, with the Wolves pounding the snot out of the ball on their way to a 4-0 lead.

Distant thunder and lightning caused a never-ending series of delays on Senior Night, and the game never re-started.

While it could have been called off, both coaches agreed they wanted to finish and made a gentleman’s agreement to do just that.

Before the delay, Elfrank crushed a grand-slam to straight-away center (that became a really long three-run single after she inadvertently passed teammate Sarah Wright at second) and Robin Cedillo spanked an RBI single.

Jump ahead six days, and the game, which was actually played second Wednesday, morphed from a hit-fest into a pitcher’s duel.

Sequim scraped out two runs in the fourth and another in the sixth to make things tense, but the Wolf defense withstood the challenge.

Freshman Scout Smith, in the lineup for Cedillo, who didn’t make the trip Wednesday, threw out not one, but two runners in the sixth from her position in right field.

Both were smart plays that serve as a testament to lessons learned growing up as a coach’s daughter.

On the first one, she snagged an errant throw over first and fired a laser to Elfrank covering the bag at second, cutting down the runner.

Smith then closed the inning with a nifty double play, pulling in a long fly, before nabbing a Sequim player who neglected to go back and tag up before trying to advance from second to third.

Clinging to a one-run lead in the seventh inning, Coupeville closed with a bang, as McGranahan collected her eighth strikeout, before Hope Lodell and Kyla Briscoe pulled in long fly balls.

The final blow was a high winder to deep left and had danger written all over it, but Briscoe, subbing for big sis Tiffany, who was back home taking AP English Lit tests, played the drifting ball to perfection, then got rushed by her jubilant teammates.

Game Two (5-3 win):

Wednesday’s regularly-scheduled game started off awfully similar to the one interrupted by lightning.

Jae LeVine ripped a single to right, Wright got plunked with a pitch and then Elfrank strode to the plate, twisting the bat in her hands like a woman about to rip it in half.

Before the game the Sequim coach had joked with the Coupeville players, telling them he’d buy a Blizzard for any Wolf who successfully crushed a ball off of the carnival rides being set up behind the outfield fence.

Elfrank was a woman on a mission.

Jumping on the very first pitch she saw from the same hurler she had homered off of six days earlier, she whacked the ball a country mile and the resulting clang when the ball hit pay-dirt left little doubt — ball had met carnival ride.

I’m calling it. Two consecutive pitches from the same rival pitcher — six days and two towns apart — and two consecutive bombs to straight-away center cement Elfrank as one of the most electrifying players to ever wear the red and black.

But she wasn’t done.

Next trip to the plate, in the top of the third, Elfrank dropped an RBI single to right, using her bat like a pool cue to place the ball into a small patch of open grass.

So, to recap — over the course of three consecutive at-bats against the same pitcher, but in two towns with a six-day delay between plate appearance #1 and #2, she went 3-3 with a home run that wasn’t because of a quirk, a home run that dented a carnival ride and seven RBI.

But she wasn’t done.

With the bat yes, as Elfrank didn’t reach base again Wednesday, but she also has a superb glove and a cannon for an arm.

Case in point, the bottom of the sixth.

Sequim had chipped away at the lead, cutting it from 4-0 to 4-3 and had the tying run at third with two outs.

The batter cranked a hard-hit shot deep into the hole, and was flying down the line as her teammate headed home, ready to celebrate.

Elfrank, though, was in super-human mode, snagging the ball on the move, then spinning and firing while falling backwards into short left-field.

The ball zipped on a line, the runner leaned, all of Sequim held its collective breath, Wolf first-baseman Veronica Crownover reached as far as her 5-foot-11-and-three-quarters-inch frame would allow and time stopped for a moment.

To my right, Rod Serling, host of The Twilight Zone, appeared, calmly saying “You are traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination…”

And my dream came true.

Ball met mitt a split-second before spikes hit bag and the field ump punched the air, signalling the out with so much energy the entire diamond rocked like the epicenter of an earthquake.

Coming on the heels of two earlier gems — a catch at her shoestrings by center fielder Lodell and Wright ignoring hurt fingers to throw out a runner at third — Elfrank to Crownover to save the game was the perfect cap.

Sequim’s hitters seemed to know it too, as they meekly hit three pop-ups in the seventh, one each to Lauren Rose, Elfrank and LeVine.

Over the course of the two games, Coupeville racked up 14 hits, with 10 different hitters getting at least one.

Elfrank led the way with her three big blows, while Rose and LeVine had two singles apiece.

Tamika Nastali might have had the most satisfying base-knock.

After missing on two bunt tries, she pulled the bat back on the very next pitch and crushed a hard-hit liner down the right-field line that landed with a smack and brought her bench to its feet.

As his players celebrated around him, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had the look of a man who would enjoy his bus ride back to Whidbey.

“This is the kind of test we wanted before the playoffs, and we passed,” he said with a satisfied smile. “Their confidence is soaring, and that is great to see.”

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