Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Hailey Hammer’

McKayla

McKayla Bailey pitched well despite taking a shot off the leg that caused her knee to swell as the game went on. (John Fisken photos)

Emily Coulter, seen here in an earlier game, had the most entertaining moment of the afternoon, doing an interpretive dance after being beaned. (John Fisken photo)

Emily Coulter had the most entertaining moment of the afternoon, doing an interpretive dance after being beaned.

They didn’t go down easy. That’s for sure.

Things were stacked against the Coupeville High School softballers Thursday from the start.

A lack of playing time, with the schedule shredded by frequent rain-outs. Three freshmen in the starting lineup. A key star (Madeline Strasburg) out with illness while another one (Breeanna Messner) was playing, but got sicker as the game went on.

Tack on a hard shot off the leg of hurler McKayla Bailey, which caused the junior’s knee to balloon up and make it harder for her to plant her weight when she threw.

Plus, we can always fall back on the fact CHS is the smallest 1A school in the state, while visiting Cedarcrest is the largest 2A school in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

And yet, with all that going on, the Wolves scrapped and scraped and rode the booming bat of Hailey Hammer and took a 3-1 lead into the top of the seventh.

Unfortunately, that’s when the clock struck midnight for Cinderella, as Cedarcrest rallied to score three runs and claim a 4-3 victory.

At that point, any talk of moral victories goes out the window, and the cold hard fact is Coupeville drops to 1-1 on the season.

A game that started with just one umpire (the second guy showed up in the bottom of the second) and a dazzling burst of sunshine-tinted blue sky — a welcome change for a Wolf squad that has had three road games rained out — ended like a punch to the stomach. That’s the truth.

But, if you go back and look at what came before, the positives far outweigh the negatives.

Coupeville got big time hits from Hammer, who knocked in all three of her team’s runs.

With best friend (and former teammate) Bessie Walstad home from college to root her on, the junior twice drove home runners with hard knocks.

In the bottom of the third, she laced a shot under the third baseman’s glove to score Madeline Roberts, who had beaten out a bunt single, stole second and frazzled the Cedarcrest pitcher by dancing back and forth on every play.

Hammer struck again in the bottom of the fifth, launching a moon shot that came inches from clearing the left field fence for a three-run home run.

Roberts, on via the bunt again, and Messner, who beat out an infield single, both scored on the play.

Defensively, the Wolves were crisp for six innings.

Freshman Tiffany Briscoe, making her debut as a starter in place of Strasburg, twice hauled in long bombs to right.

Emily Coulter (who entertained the crowd with her exuberant dance o’ pain after being hit in the flank by a pitch) made a strong dive to backhand and corral a hard-hit ball up the middle.

Messner gunned down a runner trying to steal second and Roberts was on everything, including hauling in a liner that was several feet above her head.

The wheels only came off in the seventh, with several balls getting past Wolf defenders.

Bailey struck out one and twice got outs on come-backers to the mound, but Cedarcrest used three hits and a fielder’s choice to put together its one-out rally to take the lead and the game.

Coupeville returns to action with three games next week, all on Whidbey Island. The Wolves host Lakewood (Monday, Mar. 31) and Granite Falls (Wednesday, April 2), before traveling to South Whidbey Friday, April 4.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville's senior leaders, (l to r) Madeline Roberts, Breeanna Messner and Haley Sherman. (John Fisken photos)

Coupeville’s senior leaders: (l to r) Madeline Roberts, Breeanna Messner and Haley Sherman. (John Fisken photos)

Emily Licence patrols third base.

Emily Licence patrols third base.

Hailey Hammer told her coach she was only at 45%, but she used that 45% well.

Still recovering from an ankle injury suffered during basketball season, the Coupeville High School junior moved a little tentatively at times during the softball season opener Thursday. Except when she was at bat.

Than the power-hitting first baseman blasted away, knocking home a pair of runs and teaming with sweet-swinging senior Breeanna Messner to spark the Wolves to a huge 6-3 home victory over arch-rival South Whidbey.

Erupting for a three-spot in both the first and fourth innings, Coupeville collected some well-placed hits, then mixed them in nicely with 10 walks and a couple of wildly thrown balls by the Falcons.

South Whidbey’s starting pitcher struggled, perhaps bothered by the cold, crisp air and slight breeze that trickled across the prairie, and the Wolves jumped on her quickly.

Three of the first five batters in the bottom of the first scored, and Coupeville was on the cusp of really breaking out a big inning.

Madeline Roberts led off with a walk, scampered to second on a passed ball, took third on a wild pitch and eventually strolled home when Messner crunched a laser shot over second for the season’s first RBI.

After a walk to McKayla Bailey, two runs came in on a ground-out by Hammer. The second run scored when a Falcon airmailed the ball over the third baseman’s head for an error.

The fourth was almost a repeat, with a mixture of walks and a couple crucial hits staking the Wolves to another three-spot.

Emily Licence and Roberts eked out back-to-back walks to lead things off, then Bailey and Hammer packaged RBI singles around a free run when a South Whidbey throw to first landed somewhere down around Oak Harbor.

With runs to play with, Bailey, Coupeville’s starting hurler, came right at the Falcons. The junior flamethrower struck out eight and only had a brief bit of trouble when she tired a bit in the seventh, giving up a pair of late runs on wild pitches.

Even then, she bore down and found one last burst of adrenaline, ending the game on a nasty strike out, stranding two runners as her last pitch popped with conviction into Messner’s glove behind the plate.

Bailey was backed by a strong defense, with Madeline Strasburg coming up with a big-time catch in center, Roberts pulling off a smart tag play on a runner headed to third and Emily Coulter gobbling up everything that came her way at second.

Coulter was one of three first-time starters for Coupeville. The sophomore was joined by junior right fielder Monica Vidoni and freshman third baseman Licence.

Freshmen Tiffany Briscoe (pinch runner) and Jae LeVine (pinch hitter) also debuted for the Wolves.

Read Full Post »

Hailey Hammer

Hailey Hammer was First Team All-Conference last year as a sophomore. (Linda Hammer photo)

Breeanna Messner (John Fisken photo)

Breeanna Messner will cap her run as a four-sport athlete (volleyball, cheer, basketball, softball) this spring. (John Fisken photo)

The talent is there. Depth may be a question.

As they head into their third season of coaching fast-pitch softball at Coupeville High School, David and Amy King welcome back a strong core group of six players. It’s a group that boasts talent, experience and dedication.

Seniors Breeanna Messner (C/IF), Madeline Roberts (SS/OF) and Haley Sherman (LF) are joined by juniors McKayla Bailey (P, CF), Hailey Hammer (1B) and Madeline Strasburg (CF, C) to form the Super Six.

Hammer was a First Team All-Cascade Conference pick a year ago, while Strasburg was a Second-Teamer and Roberts and Bailey notched Honorable Mention selections.

“The returning six bring experience, speed and smart base running,” David King said. “They are very good defensively and offensively can put pressure on the other teams.

“There is a unity with this team that has already formed and will only get stronger.”

The key will be filling in the other starting spots and getting help from a bench that will be thin, both in bodies and experience.

Starters Maria Rockwell (the team’s winningest pitcher) and Bessie Walstad graduated and Chevy Reyes and Sydney Aparicio opted not to play.

With out those four, sophomore Emily Coulter (IF), junior Monica Vidoni (OF) and freshman Emily Licence (P, IF, C) are among the early leaders for playing time.

Other than Licence, who is expected to team with the fireball-chuckin’ Bailey on the mound, few of the freshmen who turned out have much playing experience.

But then again, everyone starts somewhere, and you never know where you’ll find a diamond in the rough.

“We need to get the younger players up to speed and comfortable on the field,” King said. “We have some work to do in a short amount of time.

“However, the players are eager to learn and want to get better,” he added. “They are putting in the work needed and everyone is focused on what is being taught. This attitude and commitment is something each of the players have demonstrated.”

While Coupeville will be facing fierce foes in its final season in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference (“this league from top to bottom is tough”), King sees no reason his squad can’t fight every single day.

“We are going to aim high. We want to finish in the top half of the league, get to districts and see how far we can go,” he said. “Some lofty goals, but the returners have the drive to improve their game and have already shown that they are more than willing to get the younger players up to speed.

“The day to day goals are to strengthen and improve the things we do well and to work on the areas that need to improve,” King added. “We want to be competitive every game and win or lose, know each and every one of us gave 100%.”

Read Full Post »

Makana Stone (left) and Hailey Hammer (right), the early days. (Photo courtesy Hailey Hammer)

   Makana Stone (left) and Hailey Hammer (right), the early days. (Photo courtesy Hailey Hammer)

Hammer (center) during this year's basketball season, with teammates Amanda Fabrizi (left) and Breeanna Messner. (John Fisken photos)

   Hammer (center) during this year’s basketball season, with teammates Amanda Fabrizi (left) and Breeanna Messner. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone: track supernova.

Makana Stone: track supernova.

They’ve been skilled all their lives.

It used to be arts and crafts, and now Coupeville High School three-sport stars Hailey Hammer and Makana Stone excel on the playing fields and hardcourts.

Basketball, softball, track, volleyball, soccer — it doesn’t matter the sport, pick one and they’ll dominate.

The hand-eye coordination and attention to detail? It came at an early age.

Read Full Post »

Hailey Hammer (right) blocks out as she waits to snag a rebound. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Hailey Hammer (right) blocks out as she waits to snag a rebound. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It could have been worse. Far worse.

After visiting Swedish Orthopedic Institute Tuesday, Coupeville High School junior post Hailey Hammer was sporting the latest in rehabilitation fashion while sitting on the bench during her team’s game at South Whidbey.

Her ankle, which she hurt Jan. 11 in a game against Mount Vernon Christian, has a tear which will require her to wear a “boot” for a month and do physical therapy.

The good news, however, is no surgery seem to be required and she was able to smile widely while hobbling around on crutches after cheering on her Wolf teammates to a come-from-behind 48-38 win.

That means, that while she’s done for the remainder of the basketball season, it’s likely she could be back on two feet in time for the start of softball.

The first day of practice for spring sports is March 3, and the Wolves would like to see Hammer and her big bat back in the cleanup slot then.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »