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Nicole Laxton, owner of the most positive attitude in all the land, no matter how many times rival pitchers plunk her. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As you climb the mountain to success, there will be obstacles along the way.

It’s a lesson every team has to learn, and one the Coupeville High School softball squad had reinforced Saturday afternoon in Port Angeles.

Facing their toughest test of the season, the Wolves traveled to “Billy Whiteshoes Memorial Park,” a small gem of an artificial turf-covered diamond nestled in the middle of nowhere, and fought hard through a doubleheader against big-time competition.

Falling to Fife, a 2A school with 600 more students than Coupeville, and Forks, a 1A juggernaut with a roster full of travel ball vets, the Wolves slipped to 4-5 on the season.

But while the non-conference losses sting, the first maybe more than the second, the experience helps set CHS up for the stretch run.

After a week-plus gap in the schedule thanks to spring break, the Wolves begin their pursuit of a second-straight league title in earnest.

Coupeville, which played seven of its last eight games on the road, closes with seven of 10 on Whidbey, with six on its own diamond.

Nine of those games come against North Sound Conference foes, and the Wolves currently sit in a first-place tie with Granite Falls at 2-1 in league play.

 

Game 1 vs. Fife:

The Trojans, who camp out in the tough 2A South Puget Sound League, are in first-place for a reason, and they showed why Saturday, sweeping to a pair of lopsided wins.

After drilling Seattle Prep 17-4, they turned around and bopped Coupeville 17-1, running their season mark to 6-1, with their only loss to big-timer Lynden.

Wolf freshman hurler Izzy Wells went down fighting, flinging heat and mixing things up, even after being drilled in the leg with a laser shot back up the middle, but a very-experienced foe had few weaknesses.

“Fife hit the ball all over the field,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan. “We played pretty good defense … they just hit all the gaps.”

The game was close for an inning, with a home-run to center staking Fife to an early 2-0 lead.

But the second inning, when the Trojans sent 14 hitters to the plate, and brought eight of them around, was a killer.

Tack on a 13-batter, seven-run fourth inning, and the fact Coupeville stifled Fife in the third and fifth innings, holding them scoreless, was nice, but not a game-saver.

The Wolves struggled to get their own offense going against a Trojan pitcher who had one speed – fast – and one way of throwing – scary hard.

The first CHS player to get on board was Mackenzie Davis, who led off the bottom of the third by reaching on an error, but she was quickly erased thanks to a wham-bam double play.

Emma Mathusek finally broke up the no-hitter with a one-out single to center in the fourth, only to have Fife immediately pull off another double play when its first-baseman robbed Chelsea Prescott, spearing a wicked liner headed for her chin.

Coupeville’s other two hits came in the fifth, thanks to Veronica Crownover rocketing a single off of the bag at second and one mighty swing from Sarah Wright.

The senior catcher led off the inning by taking Fife’s hurler deep, depositing her second home run of the year over the right field fence, out where a friendly pack of dogs spent a chunk of the day romping in the sunshine.

The rest of the day, the dogs camped out in the Coupeville dugout, looking for tasty treats, head rubs, and an invitation to get on the bus and go to Subway.

 

Game 2 vs. Forks:

No one really wants a moral victory, but this certainly falls into that category.

The Spartans come from the Evergreen League, the toughest 1A softball league in the state, and last year they savaged Coupeville, sweeping a doubleheader to the tune of 12-0 and 12-0.

This time around, after drilling Seattle Prep 11-1, Forks had a lot more trouble with the Wolves, escaping with an 8-4 win which was even closer than the score might sound.

Watching his team go toe-to-toe with their vaunted foes put a small smile, but still a smile, on McGranahan’s face.

“This year we played them tough and showed that we can play with big, bad District 4,” he said. “We had a lot of good takeaways today and are now shifting focus to the rest of our league schedule.”

After falling behind 3-0 early, the Wolves got their bats going much quicker in the nightcap, coming back to knot the game up with a run in the first, and two more in the second.

Coupeville’s first run came courtesy a walk to Mathusek, a single by Prescott, and a long double thumped to center by the still-sizzlin’ Wright.

The Wolves got even more creative in their half of the second, using a little bit of razzle-dazzle to plate two runs.

Walks to Audrianna Shaw and Nicole Laxton set the scene, an infield single by a hard-charging Scout Smith loaded the bags, before a Mathusek sac fly and an airmailed throw into center by the Forks catcher brought the runners around.

Laxton, the undisputed master at wearing the ball, sacrificed her body for her free pass, getting plunked, or “Nicoled,” as it’s known in the biz, for the 389,512th time this season.

The Forks pitcher, who may not have had the power of Fife’s hurler, was still hyper-efficient most of the day, and she shut down the Wolves after that, retiring seven straight while her hitters slowly chipped away.

By the time Coupeville got its next runner on, thanks to a fifth-inning lead-off Mathusek single, it trailed 7-3.

While Mathusek scampered around the bags, eventually tapping home after an RBI single by Wright, it would prove to be the final rally for the Wolves.

Shaw, a freshman who made several strong catches in the outfield, hammered a sixth-inning single, but that was it, with Forks ending the game by flinging back-to-back strikeouts in the seventh.

After compiling just three hits and no walks in the opener, Coupeville had six hits and four walks in the second game.

Smith, taking the place of Wells in the pitcher’s circle, kept Forks guessing as she mixed and matched speeds, while Prescott had a superb dig on a hard smash to short to end a rally.

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Senior softball slugger Veronica Crownover smashed a three-run home run, a two-run double, and the world’s longest RBI single Saturday, as 1A Coupeville shocked 3A Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Something special happened Saturday in Oak Harbor.

Many will immediately think I’m talking about the Coupeville High School softball squad, repping one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, stunning their 3A hosts 8-3 in the first varsity match-up between these programs in maybe forever.

And it was sweet, watching Wolf senior Veronica Crownover smash a three-run home run over the towering left field fence, while missing a second round-tripper by about an inch.

Cranking six extra-base hits, Coupeville’s sluggers proved the size of your hearts can trump the size of the school you’re facing.

The win gave the Wolves a doubleheader split on the day (both Whidbey schools fell to 2A powerhouse Lakewood), and evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into its first league games.

If you know me, my first reaction is to say something snarky along the lines of “they might live here, but we own the Island.”

But…

Let’s take a moment to give big props to new Oak Harbor softball coach Alicia Ashburn and her assistants, for doing what previous Wildcat coaches did not, and would not, do.

They stepped up and agreed to play Coupeville, even while knowing if a large 3A school fell to a tiny 1A institution, they would have to deal with Wolf fans dancing in their parking lots.

But they did the right thing, bringing together girls who, while they are at different high schools now, grew up often playing on the same little league or travel ball squads.

CHS coach Kevin McGranahan has been asking for this game since stepping into the job, and Saturday was the culmination of everything he wanted.

A win, yes, but also a chance to test himself and his players against our Island’s biggest high school.

Coupeville and South Whidbey occupy the same 1A North Sound Conference, and will face off three times this season. That was assured.

Saturday’s game, which was added to the schedule late, was a rare gift, one McGranahan greatly appreciates.

“This win was four years in the making and it feels good,” he said. “Both teams played their hearts out, and this is what the game is about.

“Friends that grew up and played little league together, now playing for their respective schools and having a blast doing it. It is the smiles and friendly banter that is what makes it so nice to see.”

As an (admittedly biased) writer, please have no doubt I wanted Coupeville to win. Badly.

I long ago gave up the impartiality of my old school newspaper days.

But I can also appreciate, as McGranahan does, what Ashburn accomplished with a simple “yes.”

Saturday’s game was a thriller, a one-run affair until almost the end.

It offered a special spotlight for Coupeville’s seniors — Crownover, Sarah Wright, and Nicole Laxton — and also for fab frosh Izzy Wells, who chucked a complete-game win from the pitcher’s circle while dealing with a ripped-up finger on her throwin’ hand.

And, hopefully, it is the start of a new rivalry.

The Wolves obviously can’t go toe-to-toe with the Wildcats in sports like football, where the disparity in roster size makes the issue a non-starter.

But softball is, without a doubt, a sport in which the two schools can face off, with both teams taking the field knowing it can, and will be, a true battle.

So, my plea to both sides, but especially to Oak Harbor, which largely controls the decision – let’s make this a yearly event.

The quality of play Saturday, from both teams, and the heart and hustle, the excitement, and the fight shown, makes it a necessity.

And it was a rumble, with Oak Harbor poking across the game’s first run in the bottom of the opening inning.

But, after going down one-two-three in the top of the first, Coupeville brought its bats alive, lighting up the scoreboard for a pair of runs in both the second and third innings.

The Wolves opened the second with three straight base-knocks, with Wright and Mollie Bailey punching singles to set Crownover up for the first, but far from last, hero moment of the game.

Turning on a pitch with a stunning ferocity, the Wolf first-baseman walloped the ball to deep center field, sending both of her teammates streaking for home as she pulled into second base with a stand-up double.

While Oak Harbor escaped the inning with little damage after that, just plunking Laxton for the first of two times she would be drilled in the game, the tide had turned.

Wells was bobbing and weaving, chucking strikeouts and inducing ground-outs, and she stranded a Wildcat at third after a gem of a triple from Sam Scott.

Providing immediate support to their freshman ace, the Wolves picked up two runs in the third off of an RBI double from Wright and the world’s longest RBI single by Crownover.

The hottest hitter in the Northern hemisphere launched a moon shot to dead center, and everyone froze for a moment, watching as the ball hit the very top of the fence, thought about crawling over for a home run, then plopped back onto the field.

Veronica’s dad, Darren, wailed like he had been whacked in the groin with a two-by-four when the ball refused to go out of the yard, but, spoiler alert, a little later in this story he’ll be really, really happy.

Oak Harbor didn’t crack down three runs, though, getting one back in the third on a majestic home run from Kayla Crocker, then another in the fifth on an RBI single by Tamara Bennett.

The damage could have been worse, much worse, in the fifth, but Wolf shortstop Chelsea Prescott pulled off a dazzling double play to stem the tide.

Scooping up a hot grounder, the CHS sophomore alertly spun, tagged a runner going by her, then delivered a wicked throw into Crownover’s glove, beating the incoming Wildcat by a millimeter.

Maybe a millimeter and a half.

Oak Harbor’s defense also came up big-time during the middle part of the game, stiffing Coupeville in two consecutive innings.

The ‘Cats escaped a base-loaded jam in the fourth, started by an epic triple off the bat of Scout Smith, then nailed a runner coming home in the fifth thanks to a powerful, precise throw from left field.

With the game sitting at 4-3 headed into the top of the sixth, the overflow crowd, a mix of partisan fans from both towns, was agitated, full of angst and popping M & M’s like they were going out of style.

Wait, that was just me…

But it was OK, cause M & M’s are delicious, and because the Wolves reached a special level with the game hanging by a thread.

Emma Mathusek got things rolling with a single, slapping the ball into the gap like she was playing pool and taking people’s money while doing it.

A one-out double from Wright put runners on second and third, but an alert Oak Harbor fielder kept anyone from scoring, setting up the magic moment.

Or two moments.

The first was a miracle, because it makes no sense how it happened.

Bailey looped a ball towards second base, and the ball, operating with a mind of its own, somehow evaded every Wildcat in the area, dropping suddenly and burrowing into the ground for an improbable, but much-appreciated, RBI single.

And then a shadow covered the field.

Striding to the plate like she was preparing to sack a rival’s castle in olden times, twisting her bat until it screamed for mercy, Veronica Crownover was on a mission.

After whacking her double and top-of-the-wall single, Oak Harbor had intentionally walked her the next time up.

This time, with two runners on base, and after some serious eyeballing of her dugout, the Wildcat hurler came after Crownover, two young women fixing for a back-alley brawl.

Don’t get in a back-alley brawl with Veronica Crownover.

Almost breaking her bat in half, and almost (almost…) making her hitting coach smile in approval, the two-time All-League player hit the ball halfway to Deception Pass Bridge.

By the time the bright yellow orb descended, it was on the other side of the towering left-field fence, some 219-plus feet away, her father had screamed loud enough the relatives back in Pennsylvania had heard him, and the game was a done deal.

Oak Harbor still had two innings to hit, but Wells closed the game with her best pitches.

Ignoring the pain of a shredded finger, she gave up just a pair of walks once she had an 8-3 lead, ending the game by getting a final ‘Cat to loft a soft fly which landed with a sweet lil’ plop as Mathusek pulled the ball in and squeezed it tightly to her chest in center.

Coupeville’s most complete game of the still-young season, it featured 12 hits, with Crownover (HR, 2B, epic 1B), Wright (2B, two 1B’s), and Bailey (two 1B’s) leading the way.

Smith had her triple, Mackenzie Davis smoked a double, while Wells and Mathusek added singles.

Wells, who has both of Coupeville’s wins from the pitcher’s circle, finished with a high school career-high six strikeouts.

 

Game One:

Lakewood hit with power, fielded with grace, pitched with precision, and put on a show, rolling to 4-1 with an 18-5 win over Coupeville, followed by a 14-1 dismantling of Oak Harbor.

The Wolves had their moments, racking up seven hits, including doubles from four different players, and had a nice four-run rally in the third inning.

Laxton led off the frame with a single, followed by Smith, Mathusek, and Prescott crunching back-to-back-to-back doubles.

Mathusek’s shot brought two runners around, Prescott’s plated a third, and the Wolves garnered a final run on a rare Lakewood error.

With four runs in, the bases juiced, and just one out, there were a few fans (OK, maybe just me) who entertained thoughts of Coupeville coming all the way back from the 15-1 deficit it faced at the start of the inning.

It wasn’t to be, however, as Lakewood used a strikeout and a slightly dubious interference call on a Wolf runner to bring things to an end.

Smith (1B, 2B) paced the Coupeville attack, while Mathusek (2B), Crownover (2B), Prescott (2B), Laxton (1B), and Wright (1B) also collected a base-knock.

Freshman third-baseman Audrianna Shaw walked twice.

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Thanks to a schedule shuffle, Izzy Wells and her Coupeville High School softball teammates will travel Mar. 16 to Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is not a drill. This is really happening.

Thanks to a last-second schedule shuffle, true Whidbey Island high school softball supremacy will up for grabs for the first time in more than a decade.

That’s because Oak Harbor, Coupeville, and South Whidbey will play each other, a rarity when it concerns the first two teams.

Coupeville and South Whidbey are reunited in the 1A North Sound Conference this year, and are scheduled to clash three times, twice in April and once in May.

The Wolves have dominated the series in recent years, winning four non-conference games over the past three years, including 12-0 and 10-0 routs last season.

But the biggest school on the Island, 3A Oak Harbor, hasn’t accepted a challenge from Coupeville in a very long time.

You can go all the way back to 2009 using the North Sound Conference web site, and there is not a single meeting between North and Central Whidbey on a high school field.

That changes Saturday, Mar. 16.

Coupeville was originally set to host 2A Lakewood that day, but now will travel to Oak Harbor and play a road triple-header.

The Wolf varsity opens at 11 AM against Lakewood on the OHHS softball field.

Coupeville’s JV squad also plays Lakewood, but at 1 PM at Hillcrest Elementary just down the street, while Oak Harbor and Lakewood’s varsity play on the high school field.

Then, at 3 PM, on the high school field, Coupeville gets what it’s been dreaming about for some time, a chance to square off with the Wildcats.

South Whidbey and Oak Harbor were already scheduled to meet in the season opener Mar. 12, meaning all three Whidbey teams will get a chance to recreate the magic from back when their players were in little league.

Last season, Coupeville went 12-9, South Whidbey 12-13, and Oak Harbor 2-18, but all enter a new year with a fresh slate and new challenges.

One Island, three teams, one “champion” to rule them all.

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Alita Blouin knocked down 14 points Saturday as Coupeville’s SWISH basketball team split a doubleheader. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to the postseason, and don’t spare the gas.

The Coupeville 8th grade SWISH girls basketball squad closed the regular season Saturday, splitting a pair of games to run its record to a crisp 6-2.

The Wolves, playing without back-court ace Savina Wells, who was on a family trip, hung tough with high-powered Victorious Hoops, before falling 33-18 in their opener.

Then, they rebounded and drilled Arlington 28-9 in the nightcap.

Now it’s on to the league tournament, which goes down in Mount Vernon Dec. 15.

Saturday, the twin terrors that are Alita Blouin and Maddie Georges paced the Wolf scoring attack, rattling home 15 and 10 points, respectively, across the two games.

Lauren Marrs and Nezi Keiper each added six, Carolyn Lhamon slapped home five and Gwen Gustafson banked in four.

Keiper led Coupeville on the glass, ripping down 16 rebounds, while Lhamon snagged 11 and Gustafson corralled five.

Ryanne Knoblich, Brionna Blouin and Hayley Fieldler rounded out the active roster for the doubleheader.

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Avalon Renninger scored four points, grabbed two boards and was her usual scrappy, ball-hawking self Saturday as Coupeville squared off with The Bush School. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Abby Parrish could not, and would not, miss.

The private school sharpshooter blitzed Coupeville Saturday, tossing in five three-balls en route to an 18-point performance, as The Bush School derailed the young Wolf girls basketball squad 51-27.

The home non-conference loss, which came in a game where CHS played without its leader, senior Lindsey Roberts, drops the Wolves to 0-2.

Without its fleet-footed, long-limbed defensive dynamo, who was earning scholarship money with a visit to Washington State University, Coupeville had trouble slowing down the bigger Bush bangers.

“Their two post players, they hurt us all game,” said CHS coach David King. “Inside on the low block and then beyond the three-point line.”

Toss in an apathetic start, perhaps due to the early weekend start, and a Wolf team which played three freshmen and two sophomores had trouble matching up with a veteran-led rival.

The two teams went three-and-a-half minutes before scoring the game’s first point, but then Parrish drilled back-to-back treys.

Coupeville’s only points in the first seven-minutes-plus came courtesy two free throws from Chelsea Prescott, as shot after shot slid off.

“We had some open looks throughout and many fell short of their mark,” King said. “Just not getting our legs under us.”

The seal on the rim finally broke for the Wolves when Avalon Renninger, hanging in air, got a jumper to pop straight upwards off the back of the rim, then sweetly plop through the waiting net.

While that pulled the Wolves back to within 11-4, they were immediately stung, however, as a Bush player slipped through the crowd to yank down a rebound and put it back up and in right at the first quarter buzzer.

The second quarter was where Bush stuck the dagger in, using a 9-0 run to stretch its lead out to 20.

The biggest bright spot in the frame was freshmen Anya Leavell swishing a long jumper from the right side, netting her first varsity points.

With Roberts gone, and no JV game since Bush only had one team, Leavell and fellow frosh Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Izzy Wells swung up and saw considerable floor time.

Two of the three scored, with Wells banking home a fourth-quarter shot, while Hoskins led Coupeville with seven rebounds.

Things turned for the better after a timeout right before halftime, as the Wolves closed the quarter on a surge of energy, then carried it over to a much-more competitive second half.

“That’s when we started to see a spark,” King said. “Coming out of halftime, we wanted to continue with the energy, and it was there.”

Sophomore sensation Prescott knocked down seven of her team-high nine after the break, netting a three-ball and another shot which missed being a three-ball by a fraction of an inch.

She was also wheeling and dealing with the ball, dishing to Renninger, who dropped a pull-up jumper in the paint during Coupeville’s best run.

That mini-surge included a rebound on which Scout Smith knocked the careening ball right onto the fingertips of teammate Nicole Laxton.

Maybe it was an accident, maybe it was on purpose (it looked on purpose, and fits Smith’s cerebral playing style), but the tip was perfectly-placed.

Wheeling on one foot, while sporting socks decorated with rubber duckies, Laxton drained the put-back, flicking the ball off the glass.

Toss out the first half, and the game was a six-point affair with enough positives to inspire King.

“All three freshmen showed some promise,” he said. “(Senior) Ema (Smith) had some precision passes and held her own at the defensive end in her season debut and Hannah (Davidson) played energized basketball in the second half.

“This is a game that we need to learn from and move forward and work on correcting some things,” King added. “One positive we talked about was ball movement. When we move the ball offensively we are getting open looks. We did a much better job of that in the second half.”

Prescott’s nine-point, five-rebound, one-steal, one-block, one-assist night paced the Wolves, while Scout Smith and Renninger added four points apiece.

Davidson, Laxton, Tia Wurzrainer, Wells and Leavell each tallied two, with the last three from that group all scoring for the first time at the varsity level.

After getting (unnecessary) grief from the refs pre-game about her head band, sophomore point guard Mollie Bailey let the looooong hair braids fly free and brought considerable scrappiness to the floor, rounding out the Wolf roster.

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