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Posts Tagged ‘grand slam’

   With a win Wednesday, Central Whidbey advances to the championship round of the District 11 tourney. (John Fisken photo)

Pressure? What pressure?

With it season on the line, the Central Whidbey Little League All-Star Minors softball squad fired up the offense Wednesday and thumped North Whidbey 23-7 in a loser-out playoff game.

CWLL advances to the championship of the District 11 tourney, where it will seek revenge against Sedro-Woolley, a team it lost to Tuesday night.

Win twice — Thursday and Friday, with both games played in Anacortes —  and Central is bound for the state championships.

Sedro, 2-0 at districts, needs just one win to claim the crown.

If Central Whidbey takes advantage of its offensive opportunities like it did against North Whidbey, anything is possible.

Pouring in runs in every inning, the Coupeville sluggers (and their trio of South Whidbey mercenaries) built a 14-1 lead after the first inning and a half and never looked back.

After opening with five in the first and nine in the second, CW settled for two in the third, then closed with fury, plating seven in the fourth and final inning.

Central benefited from a keen eye at the plate, picking up a staggering amount of walks.

The few times the Whidbey hitters did get a pitch somewhere in the vicinity of the plate, they seized the moment, drilling hits left and right.

Mia Farris, Allison Nastali, Chloe Marzocca, Taylor Auld, Mimi Forde and Brionna Blouin all collected base-knocks.

With runs flying across the plate, Auld, Farris, Nastali and Marzocca stepped on home three times apiece, with Blouin, Mayleen Weatherford and Madison McMillan scoring twice.

Coupeville hurlers Blouin and Nastali were a deadly duo in the pitcher’s circle, with Nastali shutting North Whidbey down completely over the final 2 and 2/3 innings.

Behind them their teammates stepped up in the spotlight.

“The girls played stellar defense throughout,” said CW coach Fred Farris. “Teagan (Calkins) was a vacuum behind the plate.”

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   Mikayla Elfrank whacked a grand slam Thursday, crushing the ball over the fence in straight-away center field. (Jordan Ford photo)

   The afternoon started in blazing sun, as CHS honored seniors Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine and Tiffany Briscoe. (Kelly Crownover photo)

The heavens get angry. (Rebecca Lodell photo)

Mikayla Elfrank made the heavens jealous.

First the Coupeville High School junior showed off the guns Thursday, modeling bare arms for a softball game that started with uncharacteristic bright sun and blazing warmth.

Then Elfrank showed what those guns can do, bringing the thunder and lightning with a grand slam to straight-away center field, helping stake the Wolf softball sluggers to a 4-0 lead on visiting 2A Sequim.

At which point, the heavens retaliated.

Sent into a never-ending series of delays by a sudden change in weather, as the sun gave way to booms of thunder and (far-off) lightning streaks, the game came to an unexpected end in the top of the third.

But there is hope for CHS softball, unlike Wolf baseball, which was washed away in the third inning of a scoreless game at Langley, or girls tennis, which never had a chance to play at Chimacum.

With the postseason rapidly approaching, neither baseball or tennis will reschedule Thursday’s action, which would have been the final regular season tilt for both programs.

Softball, though, is scheduled to travel to Sequim next Wednesday, May 10 for its regular season finale.

While it’s not official yet, both coaches agreed they want to pick up Thursday’s game at the moment it went into delay and finish before playing game #2.

And at the moment the first (far, far, far away) lightning strike caught the home plate umpire’s eye, Coupeville was kicking the tar out of Sequim.

The hometown Wolves, who carried a 15-2 record onto the prairie, came out gunning for their big school rivals.

In the top of the first, CHS pulled off a wham-bam-get-back-to-the-dugout play to snuff an early Sequim rally.

With two runners aboard and one out, the cleanup hitter punched a single into center, and then Coupeville pulled off a splendid chain reaction.

Hope Lodell speared the ball on the hop in center, whipped it on a line to Elfrank at short, then stepped back to marvel as her teammate spun and gunned down the runner headed home.

The ball landed perfectly in Wolf catcher Sarah Wright’s glove, and she smacked the tag with emphasis, earning a roar from her fan section.

One fly-out to Robin Cedillo later and Coupeville was off the field with no damage done.

Sequim wasn’t so lucky.

Lead-off hitter Lauren Rose ripped the first pitch she saw up the middle for a laser of a single, then Jae LeVine reached on an error and Katrina McGranahan was plunked by a wayward pitch.

With the bags juiced and no one out, Coupeville fans were on the edge of their seats, hankering for a first-inning explosion under (still) very sunny skies.

It came two batters later.

Rose was nailed at home on a grounder off the bat of Wright, but Elfrank gave the defense no chance whatsoever to come away with her ball.

Her blast was still climbing as it soared over the fence in the absolute deepest part of the outfield, a grand slam that scored three runs for Coupeville.

What? Three runs and not four?

Surprising, but true, as caught up in the excitement of the monster mash, Wright went a step too slow and Elfrank a step too fast.

That allowed a lurking ump to nail the tater producer for inadvertently passing her teammate on the base path, if only for the briefest of moments.

While they had been expecting to be sitting at 4-0, the Wolves made up for the lost run in the bottom of the second.

Hope Lodell lashed a resounding single off the tip of the shortstop’s glove, pilfered second while getting some (still) dry dirt on her uniform, then scampered home on an RBI single from Cedillo.

One of three 12th graders honored on Senior Night, along with LeVine and Tiffany Briscoe, Cedillo drilled a frozen rope, then stayed alert, picking up a second base when Sequim tried to make a late play on Lodell at the plate.

The visitors escaped the inning thanks to a remarkable snag by their pitcher, who, against all odds, speared a cannon shot off of the bat of Rose.

It erupted off of Mouse’s bat with so much force, zinging right back through the pitcher’s circle, that an inch to either side, and the local hospital might have had a visitor.

With Wolf hurler McGranahan firing BB’s — she was one strike away from whiffing the lead-off hitter in the top of the third, which would have been K #4 — the game was extremely one-sided.

Coming against a 2A school which beat Chimacum, Coupeville’s only Achilles heel, earlier this season, there was a genuine buzz in the air.

And then the buzzkill of weather hit.

WIAA rules stipulate a 30-minute break at the first visible lightning, and the clock restarts at each thunderclap or lightning after that.

Cue the clock restarting again and again and again…

The reality is, the game could have been played with no issues, as rain didn’t show up for another hour, and lightning was not even remotely close to Coupeville.

But rules are rules.

So, after much delay, with Senior Night festivities bumped up to fill some of the dead air, Sequim catching the ferry became an issue.

We’ll get back to it in six days.

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   Freshman Mackenzie Davis had a pair of RBI singles Saturday and was a defensive spark-plug in her debut as a high school catcher. (John Fisken photo)

Let the hits rain down.

With eight different players getting at least one base-knock Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV softball squad had plenty of offense to keep their faithful fans warm on a cold, chilly afternoon on the prairie.

By the time they were done knocking Vashon Island around, the Wolves had rung up 14 hits, one for every run they scored in a 14-7 win.

The offensive explosion, which included a pair of doubles from Scout Smith and a resounding inside-the-park grand slam off the bat of Veronica Crownover, lifts the young CHS players to 1-0 on the season.

Coupeville actually spotted the visiting Pirates a three-run lead after the first half inning, and still trailed 4-2 headed into the bottom of the third.

Then the fireworks went off.

A nine-run, seven-hit, 15-batter affair, the bottom of the third went on longer than some entire games do. And the Wolf fans wouldn’t have had it any other way.

An infield single from Tamika Nastali and a walk to Kyla Briscoe set the stage, then Wolf catcher Mackenzie Davis started the barrage.

Rifling an RBI single down the first-base line, she dropped the ball flawlessly in front of an oncoming outfielder, kick-starting a run of five straight Coupeville hits.

Melia Welling dumped a ball between the catcher and pitcher and zoomed into first, Nicole Lester whacked a shot to center, Jae LeVine crushed the ball to the same spot (but even deeper) and Emma Mathusek whipped a frozen rope into right-center.

All that was mere prelude, however.

After Smith walked to juice the bags, still with just one out, Crownover turned on a pitch and drove it to the base of the wall in center.

A couple of inches higher and her home run trot would have been conducted at half-speed as someone hopped the fence to retrieve the ball.

Instead, with the ball still in play and her teammates running wild in front of her, Crownover hit the jets and came crashing around third.

As she stamped on home, beating the throw, dad Darren pretended he wasn’t a cop who had just witnessed someone break the speed limit right in front of him.

Up 10-4 at that point, with all the air having been punched out of the Vashon players, Coupeville cruised home, adding a few more runs along the way.

Crownover and Davis both delivered late-game RBI singles, while the Wolves also scored twice off of double steals.

Smith led the hit parade, collecting two doubles and a single. She also collected a pair of walks, successfully reaching base all five times she came to the plate.

Backing her up, LeVine, Crownover, Davis and Nastali had two hits apiece.

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  Dads dig the long ball, which is why Hailey Hammer loves to mash home runs.

Get out the rye bread and mustard, Grandma, it’s grand salami time!

The words of longtime Mariners announcer Dave Niehaus echoed across the Northwest once again Thursday, as former Wolf Hailey Hammer pounded a grand slam in her college softball game.

Hammer, a sophomore at Everett Community College, connected in game two of a doubleheader sweep of Skagit Valley, as the Trojans opened Northwest Athletic Conference play.

Everett shredded the Cardinals 7-3 and 10-0.

Hammer’s homer was a game-winner, though no one knew it at the moment.

The game was knotted in a scoreless tie and the bags were juiced when she locked on to a pitch and smashed all the hopes and dreams of the SVC pitcher.

With the sweep, Everett improved to 4-7 overall, 2-0 in league play.

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Daniel Olson (John Fisken photos)

Daniel Olson drops some heat on a hapless batter. (John Fisken photos)

Chelsea

Chelsea Prescott puts her whole arm into it.

Time ran out.

Despite mounting an impressive late-game rally Monday, the Central Whidbey Little League 11/12 All-Star Majors baseball squad couldn’t quite get all the way back, falling 9-7 to host South Whidbey.

The loss was the second in three games for Central Whidbey and knocked them out of the District 11 playoffs.

South Whidbey will live on to play North Whidbey in a loser-out game Tuesday in Langley.

The winner of that one advances to play Sedro-Woolley in the championship series.

A run of errors doomed Central Whidbey, which got solid pitching from Daniel Olson and Chelsea Prescott.

Down 9-3 entering the fifth, the squad rallied for four runs, all coming on a grand slam off the bat of Noah Meffert.

Central looked like it might pull off a come-back win, sending the winning run to the plate in the sixth.

But, it wasn’t to be, as Ashton Leland cranked a shot to the deepest, darkest region of the outfield, only to have the ball fall just a hair shy of sailing over the fence for a walk-off home run.

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