Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Haylee Armstrong’

Only a sensational defensive play prevented Mia Farris from being a hero Friday afternoon in Blaine. (Ryan Blouin photo)

Give credit where credit is due — Blaine won; Coupeville didn’t lose.

Friday’s matchup of high-rolling softball squads was a pitcher’s duel decided by a couple of plays, and the host Borderites made a couple of stunners to seal their 4-1 non-conference win.

An inch here, a gust of wind (or lack of a gust of wind) there, and the 2B Wolves, who roll out three 8th graders and two freshmen in the starting lineup, could very well have upended their 1A rivals.

But Blaine’s pitcher pulled off a stunner of a double play to thwart one threat, and then its centerfielder went all Superman on the final play of the game to rob Coupeville of a chance to tie the game.

So, you tip your hat, you get back on the bus and mentally plan for another road trip Saturday — this one to Granite Falls — and you look at what went right.

Which was a lot of things for a Wolf team which sits at 8-3 on the season.

From Sydney Van Dyke and Madison McMillan gobbling up groundballs on defense, to Wolf catcher Teagan Calkins bursting from behind home plate to gun down runners, to leadoff hitter Haylee Armstrong getting aboard three times.

CHS came out strongly, loading the bases in the top of the first thanks to infield hits from Armstrong and Calkins packaged around a walk to McMillan.

Van Dyke then eked out another free pass to force in the game’s first run, before Blaine escaped the half inning with a strikeout.

With starting pitcher Armstrong retiring the first five hitters she faced, Coupeville held on to its razor-thin lead until late in the bottom of the second inning.

Blaine finally broke through thanks to a two-run double from its #8 hitter, inching ahead at 2-1, and the stage was set for a tense tussle.

The Wolves had their chances, getting two aboard in the third, but the Borderite hurler, while not untouchable, was hard to pin down.

And then came the web gems, which drove a stake through the hearts of CHS fans.

With a runner at first and one out in the top of the fifth, Taylor Brotemarkle smashed a red-hot liner back up the middle.

Only to see the Blaine pitcher spear the ball in the tip of her glove at the last second, then whirl to double off the runner for an inning-ending double play.

With Armstrong and Adeline Maynes combining to whiff five batters from the circle, Coupeville hung tough, and made its move in the top of the seventh.

“I get on base, son. It’s kind of my thing.” (Jackie Saia photo)

Both Wolf pitchers walked, bringing Mia Farris to the plate with the Wolves down to their final out.

The junior slugger smoked a shot to centerfield which, on a less windy day, mighty have cleared the fence for a three-run homer.

Instead, the ball got caught in the crossflow just long enough for Blaine’s centerfielder to make a superb diving catch while on a full sprint.

What could of have been…

Instead of cutting the lead to 4-3, with Farris bouncing on second or third with the crush crew of Brotemarkle, McMillan, and Calkins on deck, it was game over.

But while the Wolves lost, coach Kevin McGranahan was thrilled with a lot of what he saw from his very young team after a very long drive to the border.

“4-1 against them is a big win in my book,” he said. “We learned today that we can hang with real good teams and if the ball bounces differently a time or two we could come out on top.

“They kept their ace in for all seven innings even though now she pitched 24 innings since Monday, and they play Lynden Christian tomorrow — a league game for them.

“I told the girls that is a very high show of respect for us and our young squad.

“Great game for us and another that will only make us better and stronger.”

 

Friday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — One single, two walks
Teagan Calkins — One single, one walk
Adeline Maynes — One walk
Madison McMillan — One walk
Sydney Van Dyke — One walk

Read Full Post »

Juniors Jada Heaton (second from left), Mia Farris (second from right), and Madison McMillan (far right) anchor a young but talented CHS softball squad. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

They may be young, but they’re not going to wait around to win.

Starting two 8th graders and two freshmen Friday, the Coupeville High School softball squad opened the season with a bang, mashing host South Whidbey 20-9.

The Wolves led from start to finish, cranked out 13 hits and drew 10 walks, and got big contributions from all nine starters.

Top things off with a pinpoint pitching performance from fab frosh Haylee Armstrong — already a grizzled vet in her second season of high school ball — and it made for a fun trip down Island.

“We had our chances to panic but the team rallied and would not let that happen,” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan. “Great first game win!”

It was the 98th victory at CHS for the diamond guru, keeping him ahead of volleyball sage Cory Whitmore (88) and boys’ basketball head man Brad Sherman (70) as the winningest active coach at the school.

Meanwhile it was win #1 for middle school aces Sydney Van Dyke and Ava Lucero, as the former whacked two hits and picked up four RBI, and the latter walked three times.

Sydney had two clutch singles driving in runs, and that’s huge for an 8th grader,” McGranahan said.

Armstrong, who played in the outfield for the Wolves during her own 8th grade season, moved to the pitcher’s circle Friday, where she was lights out for a good deal of the game.

Racking up 12 strikeouts, she kept the Falcon hitters on their heels, and already looks like an ace.

Haylee pitched seven great innings,” McGranahan said. “It was her varsity debut as a freshman pitcher and she more than rose to the occasion.”

Armstrong helped herself, lacing a leadoff single in the top of the first to kick-start a three-run rally.

The “old folks” helped out, as well, with juniors Taylor Brotemarkle and Madison McMillan ripping singles and sophomore Teagan Calkins crunching an RBI groundout.

The Wolves continued to chip away, pushing runs across in each of the first five innings as they built a 13-3 lead.

Van Dyke delivered a key two-run single, Armstrong blasted a triple, and Coupeville mixed and matched hits with walks, while alertly running the bases.

South Whidbey proved to be chippy, however, getting back in the game with four runs of its own in the bottom of the fifth, and another two in the sixth.

The top of the sixth was the only frame in which Coupeville went down 1-2-3, briefly allowing the hosts to cut the deficit back to 13-9.

But never fear, as the Wolves bounced right back with seven runs in the seventh, before blanking South Whidbey in its final at-bats.

Van Dyke, making one of the great debuts in CHS softball history, laced a second two-run single, while Armstrong and Mia Farris smacked back-to-back run-scoring base-knocks to blow things wide open.

Coupeville, which has no seniors on its roster, spread the offensive love from the top of the order to the bottom.

Armstrong led the way with three hits, including her three-bagger, while McMillan, Van Dyke, and Calkins each collected a pair.

Farris, Brotemarkle, Jada Heaton, and Capri Anter also stroked singles, with Lucero and Heaton walking three times apiece.

Ever the busy bee, McMillan eked out a pair of free passes to go with her hits, while Farris and Calkins picked up the other walks.

Coupeville’s young sluggers come home next Tuesday, Mar. 19 for a showdown with Northwest 2B/1B League archrival Friday Harbor, then hit the road again for three straight rumbles.

The Wolves travel to Blaine, Orcas Island, and Concrete, before welcoming Onalaska to Cow Town Mar. 30 for a doubleheader.

Read Full Post »

With the high school season done, Taylor Marrs is off to play middle school hoops. (Jackie Saia photos)

They took advantage of every moment they had.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was limited to 13 games this season, while their varsity counterparts got 20, thanks to rival schools maybe not being as committed as the Wolves are to playing God’s Chosen Sport.

But when the CHS young guns hit the hardwood, they were a scrappy bunch who showed continued improvement every time out.

In her second year at the helm of the JV program, former Wolf ace Kassie O’Neil guided her squad through a campaign which wrapped Tuesday with a rumble at La Conner.

Coupeville fell 64-36 to a strong Braves squad, finishing 2-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-8 overall.

But while the high school season is done, six Wolf 8th graders who played above their grade level will keep on keepin’ on, moving on to play another eight games for the middle school program.

Ari Cunningham, Taylor Marrs, Ava Lucero, Tenley Stuurmans, Adie Maynes, and Chelsi Stevens start that season Thursday at home against South Whidbey.

The Wolf JV came out on fire Tuesday, battling La Conner almost even for eight minutes.

Ready to attack.

Bryley Gilbert dumped in six points and Haylee Armstrong rattled the rim for the first of her two three-balls as Coupeville headed to the break down just 15-14.

The second quarter was a killer, however, as the Braves used a 21-3 surge to stretch the halftime lead out to 36-17.

The Wolves fought back in the second half, once again playing their hosts almost straight up, as Stuurmans knocked down nine of her team-high 11 points after the break.

Gilbert finished with seven in support of her young teammate, while Armstrong (6), Maynes (5), Capri Anter (3), Lucero (2), and Brynn Parker (2) also scored.

Stevens, Cunningham, Marrs, and Lexis Drake rounded out the Wolf roster, with all seeing floor time.

 

Final scoring stats:

Haylee Armstrong – 134
Tenley Stuurmans – 90
Bryley Gilbert – 59
Adie Maynes – 36
Capri Anter – 33
Brynn Parker – 29
Lexis Drake – 16
Teagan Calkins – 9
Ari Cunningham – 9
Taylor Marrs – 6
Chelsi Stevens – 5
Ava Lucero – 4

**Missing 26 points​​**

Read Full Post »

Haylee Armstrong sees your defense, and she is not impressed. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mama said knock you out, so Haylee Armstrong went and threw some haymakers.

Raining down 20 of her career-high 30 points in the second half Tuesday, the Coupeville High School freshman turned a JV game against visiting Concrete from a nailbiter to a blowout.

The Wolves went into the locker room up by just a single point, only to come away with a 47-26 victory thanks to their hot-shooting guard.

The win lifts Kassie O’Neil’s squad to 1-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 4-6 overall, with a road trip to Chief Leschi Saturday next up on the schedule.

Tuesday’s rumble with Concrete was a sticky one for the first 16 minutes, as the two teams exchanged body blows, warily circling one another.

Armstrong popped for 10 in the first half, propelling the Wolves to an 8-4 lead after one and a narrow 16-15 advantage as everyone heading in for pep talks and (maybe) orange slices.

Whether she got to nibble on citrus or not, the fab frosh came out flexin’ in the second half.

Raining down 11 points in the third quarter alone, Armstrong spurred an 18-8 run to bust the game wide open.

She had some help, with Tenley Stuurmans and Capri Anter combining for seven points in the frame, and the Wolves kept the heat cranked up in the fourth quarter.

Closing on a 13-3 tear, CHS slammed the door shut, locked it, and threw the key away.

While Armstrong’s 30 was the best performance by any Wolf girl this season, varsity or JV, she wasn’t the only young gun to score.

Anter backed up her cousin with a solid seven-point effort, while Stuurmans (6), Brynn Parker (2), and Ari Cunningham (2) also kept the scorekeeper busy.

Ava Lucero, Lexis Drake, Bryley Gilbert, Adie Maynes, Taylor Marrs, and Chelsi Stevens rounded out the rotation for the Wolves, who have four games left in their season.

Ava Lucero dares a foe to try and get past her.

Read Full Post »

Tenley Stuurmans flies into action. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The young guns are ahead of the curve.

Six of the 11 players on the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team are just 8th graders, pulling double duty.

Starting Monday those scrappers will join their fellow middle schoolers for the CMS season, while still playing out the rest of this campaign with the high school squad.

It’s a baptism of fire, and Kassie O’Neil’s youngest players are holding up well.

“They’re playing really good right now,” said the CHS hardwood guru. “Love to see it.”

Those 8th graders accounted for half the points Friday during a 56-29 loss to a much-more experienced Mount Vernon Christian squad.

While the home defeat drops the Wolves to 0-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-6 overall, learning under fire is invaluable for the growth of Coupeville’s future stars.

One of the precocious group, Tenley Stuurmans, paced Coupeville Friday, popping for a team-high nine points.

The latest in a string of strong hoops players to emerge from her clan, Lyla’s lil’ sis banked in four of those points in the opening quarter as CHS hung tough, trailing 19-10 at the first break.

MVC steadily pushed the lead out from there, to 29-17 at the half and 47-21 after three quarters of play, but the Wolves stayed scrappy to the end.

Adie Maynes, doing double duty as she hones her hardwood skills. (Coupeville High School Yearbook Staff photo)

With 8th grader Adie Maynes going off for all five of her points in the final frame, while Stuurmans added another three, Coupeville fought until the final buzzer sounded.

Five Wolves recorded points in the clash, with Stuurmans (9), Brynn Parker (7), Maynes (5), Bryley Gilbert (4), and Haylee Armstrong (4) all putting their name into the scoring column.

Taylor Marrs, Chelsi Stevens, Ari Cunningham, Lexis Drake, Ava Lucero, and Capri Anter also saw floor time for the Wolves, who return to action with a home game Jan. 23 against league rival Concrete.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »