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Posts Tagged ‘Hope Lodell’

   Coupeville freshman Coral Caveness has provided strong defensive play at second base this weekend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If Lynden Christian was expecting an easy Saturday, that’s not what it got.

Facing a Coupeville High School softball team playing its third game in as many days, with all three games in different towns, the undefeated Lyncs barely escaped with their perfect record intact.

Storming back from six runs down, powered by the last three hitters in their lineup, the Wolves came as close as any team to toppling LC this season before falling 7-5.

The non-conference road loss drops Coupeville to 9-4, while Lynden Christian rises to 13-0.

While it wasn’t a win, the day was full of positives for CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, an old pro who knows a narrow loss to a top-notch team often means far more than just mashing another also-ran.

“Nothing to be ashamed of, ladies. That’s the fight I want to see!,” he told his players afterwards.

Lynden Christian is undefeated because they are highly-proficient and fundamentally sound.

Taking advantage of a few “early errors and ticky-tack mistakes,” the Lyncs built a 7-1 lead before the very-determined Wolves mounted a sustained comeback which forced LC to bring back its top pitcher and bear down big time at the end to escape.

Coupeville’s bats took a few innings to warm up, with the first six Wolves going down in order.

Hope Lodell finally broke though, leading off the third with a beautiful bunt that she dropped to the left of the plate with a precise flick of the wrist.

She had barely scampered across the bag at first when freshman Mollie Bailey followed with a sharply-slapped single past the pitcher’s backside, putting CHS into business for the first time.

And while Lynden escaped the inning fairly unscathed, with the Lync catcher gunning down Lodell by half a step at third on a steal attempt to blunt the rally, the Wolves were finally clicking.

Down 5-0 headed to the top of the fourth (LC got three in the first and two in the third, with both mini-runs aided by Wolf errors), Coupeville finally got on the board.

Katrina McGranahan grooved a pitch, lashing a lead-off triple off the wall in right, then Chelsea Prescott brought her home with a long sac fly.

While Lynden scraped out two more runs in the fourth, when an epic fly ball snuck barely under the glove of a sprawling Lodell in center, the Wolves were on the prowl.

Back-to-back-to-back singles from Lodell, Bailey and Emma Mathusek, Coupeville’s 7-8-9 hitters, kicked off the fifth, before Smith brought home a second run with a grounder to second.

With the lead cut to 7-3, Coupeville launched an unexpected rally in the sixth, getting things started with two outs and no one on board.

Veronica Crownover spanked a single over the shortstop’s head to spark another run of Wolf hits.

Lodell followed with her third base-knock of the day, a booming double to left-center, then Mackenzie Davis rifled an RBI single to right on the very next pitch.

Back-to-back walks to Mathusek and Smith loaded the bags, then forced home yet another run and Lyncs fans were openly sweating on a reasonably cool day.

But Lynden is undefeated for a reason, and it stared down into the abyss without blinking.

A big strikeout brought the sixth to an end, and, with their closer firing cannon balls from short range in the seventh, the Wolves went down 1-2-3, though the final two outs were both on hard-hit balls.

Lynden Christian’s defense was impeccable, however, with not a single bobbled ball, and that made life extra-tough for a Coupeville squad looking for a final miracle.

The Wolves finished with eight hits, and seven of those came from their 7-8-9 hitters.

Lodell (1B, 1B, 2B) led the way, while Crownover, Bailey, Davis and Mathusek added singles.

Katrina McGranahan tripled, Smith led the squad with two RBI and fab frosh Coral Caveness had a couple of big defensive plays at second.

While he was pleased with the comeback, Kevin McGranahan was also all smiles over the fact the bottom third of his hitting order proved so potent.

He knows Coupeville’s big mashers will be on fire virtually every game, but getting contributions top to bottom is key to the Wolves being explosive come playoff time.

“The bottom of our lineup is clicking well and did the most damage today,” he said. “Emma is really doing well in the nine-hole and learning that role is very important.”

JV falls:

Facing a Lynden squad heavy in seniors and varsity players pulling double duty, the Wolf young guns jumped out to an early lead, but couldn’t hold on.

The 14-3 loss was Coupeville’s first JV defeat, leaving them at 3-1.

Davis provided half the Wolf offense, smacking a pair of singles, while Caveness and Bailey also collected base-knocks.

Caveness put CHS on the board in the first, beating out an infield chopper, stealing second, zooming to third on a ground-out, then coming around to score on a passed ball.

Coupeville’s other two runs came home in the fourth, with Thora Iverson scoring on a Chelsea Prescott ground-out and Bailey unleashing an ultra-rare slide to get under a tag after streaking for home on a wild pitch.

Iverson also had a sensational running catch on a wildly-drifting pop-up, pulling the ball into the tip of her glove at the last second, and fans were treated to a dance-off between Bailey and Wright.

Lynden Christian plays music between innings and Coupeville’s catchers, who share an irrepressible nature that would have made Footloose-era Kevin Bacon proud, have never turned down a chance to bop to the beat … ever.

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   Hope Lodell, frozen in place like a human Popsicle on a chilly first day of “spring” sports practice. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Dawson Houston works on his ball control skills.

Sage Renninger (front) and Genna Wright get limbered up for tennis.

Diamond men Jake Hoagland (front) and Dane Lucero go for the (cold) burn.

Mckenzie Meyer stretches out the ol’ hamstrings.

Ron Wright stays warm by peppering balls all across the frozen tundra.

Jean Lund-Olsen cruises into a new track season.

   Payton Aparicio shows Renninger, her doubles partner, the best way to chop ice off your car in the morning.

“Thank you and good night!!”

Spring sports are back. Spring weather is not.

Braving a chilly, possibly still ice-encrusted prairie, five Coupeville High School teams kicked off a new season Monday, and chattering photo bug John Fisken was on hand to document the doings.

Me?

I was under my blankets on the recliner, watching old videos of Bill Laimbeer and the Detroit Pistons “Bad Boys” beatin’ the crud out of Michael Jordan.

Much warmer.

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Hope Lodell will be in center field when a new softball season begins. Her aunt, Teresa Terry, was a starter in 1978. (Mike Lodell photo)

One family, 40 years, a ton of history.

When Coupeville High School senior Hope Lodell charges out to center field this spring, she’ll be following in the footsteps of her aunt.

Lodell, a four-year starter who has multiple All-Conference honors to her name, is keeping alive a family tradition.

Her aunt, Teresa (Lodell) Terry, was a freshman who started in the very first softball game in CHS history.

That came back on Mar. 16, 1978, when the Wolves battled through extra innings before falling 20-17 against Island rival Langley.

Coupeville and South Whidbey actually open the 2018 season against each other, with the Wolves traveling down Whidbey Saturday, Mar. 17 for a non-conference game.

If school officials were as obsessed with anniversaries as I am, they’d bump the game up a day to fall on the 40-year anniversary.

Hint, hint.

Anyways, that first game for CHS softball was a doozy, at least from the (very) limited recap in the newspaper of the time.

Slow-pitch was the game back then, with the Wolves not becoming a fast-pitch team until 2002.

At which point Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Sarah Mouw, Lindsey Tucker and crew promptly won four of five games at the state tourney, claiming a third-place finish in their first try at the quicker version of the sport.

In 1978, Kris Severns was the coach, and players in the first lineup included Teresa Lodell, Laurie Estes, Cheri Cass, Micki BoettgerYvonne Jameson and slugging freshman Pam Jampsa.

Jampsa bashed a home run and a pair of doubles in the first game, as Coupeville turned an early 3-0 deficit into a 16-8 lead after five innings.

Then, the offense which had racked up five runs in the second inning, and another eight in the third, cooled off, letting the dastardly South Enders rally.

Langley plated seven runs in the sixth, then scraped out one more in the seventh to forge a 16-16 tie and force extra innings.

Both teams came up empty in the eighth, before Langley put four across in the top of the ninth to make things dicey.

Coupeville got one run back in the bottom half of the inning, but fell short of an Opening Day miracle.

But, while a win wasn’t in the cards, that game set the table for what has turned into a successful four-decade run for the Wolves on the diamond.

Last year’s squad went 19-5, the best record since the immortal 2002 team, and came within a single strike of earning Coupeville softball’s third trip to state.

With virtually their entire lineup back, the 2018 Wolves are intent on joining the 2002 and 2014 teams in punching a ticket to the big dance.

Whether it happens or not, the past and present of CHS softball will come together frequently during this 40th season, whenever Teresa Terry pops by to cheer for her niece.

One family creating a ton of diamond memories.

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   Wolf seniors Lauren Rose (left) and Hope Lodell were named Friday to the 1A All-State volleyball team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville High School had two of the best spikers in the state this fall.

It’s official, as seniors Lauren Rose and Hope Lodell were named to the All-State team Friday by the Washington State Volleyball Coaches Association.

The duo received Honorable Mention nods, along with Klahowya libero Maile Lueck.

King’s, which won the state title, had the 1A Player of the Year (outside hitter Alli Hansen) and Coach of the Year (Jeff Fransen).

Rose was honored for her work as a setter, while Lodell, who exits holding CHS single season and career records for service aces, was named to the team as a libero.

As part of a stellar group of seniors — The Magnificent Seven — they led the Wolves to a second-straight Olympic League championship.

Coupeville won every set it played against conference foes this season, to the tune of 27-0, tied a program single-season record with 13 victories and advanced to the state tourney for the first time since 2004.

To see the complete All-State volleyball teams, pop over to:

http://www.theolympian.com/sports/high-school/article190099744.html

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   Payton Aparicio, here delivering a blistering kill, won team MVP and “Spirit of a Wolf” awards Tuesday at the volleyball banquet. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Maddie Vondrak (top) made sister Peytin proud, winning the JV team’s Most Improved.

It was a season-long celebration for the Wolves.

Payton Aparicio was a busy bee Tuesday night.

The Coupeville High School senior capped a stellar volleyball career by copping two awards, team MVP and “Spirit of a Wolf,” at her team’s awards banquet.

The shindig brought a close to the most successful season in program history since 2004.

Guided by second-year coach Cory Whitmore, CHS won a record-tying 13 matches.

It also captured a second-straight Olympic League crown (while winning all 27 sets it played in conference), advancing to state for the first time in 13 seasons.

Sophomore swing player Maya Toomey-Stout joined Aparicio as a double winner, bringing home Most Improved (varsity) and Most Inspirational (JV).

Senior Lauren Rose picked up Most Inspirational for the varsity.

In awards previously announced, Hope Lodell was the Olympic League MVP, with Mikayla Elfrank, Katrina McGranahan and Rose tabbed as First-Team All-Conference picks.

Coupeville’s JV team, which went 12-1 under first-year head coach Chris Smith (falling only to 2A Port Angeles), honored Emma Mathusek as MVP.

Lucy Sandahl shared Most Inspirational with Toomey-Stout, while Maddie Vondrak earned Most Improved.

Letter winners:

Payton Aparicio
Kyle Briscoe
Mikayla Elfrank
Hope Lodell
Ashley Menges
Katrina McGranahan
Lauren Rose
Emma Smith
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Allison Wenzel

Participation certificates:

Megan Behan
Kylie Chernikoff
Catherine Lhamon
Jaimee Masters
Emma Mathusek
Heidi Meyers
Charlotte Nolle
Chelsea Prescott
Lucy Sandahl
Savannah Smith
Zoe Trujillo
Raven Vick
Willow Vick
Maddie Vondrak

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