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Freshman Savina Wells had three hits, including a home run, in her second high school softball game. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not all losses are the same.

Yes, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad fell 8-5 at Lynden Christian Wednesday, but there’s more at stake here than just the final score.

While the non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 1-1 on the still-young season, getting to play a bigger school — and one that is a sports powerhouse — is the kind of challenge CHS coach Kevin McGranahan craves.

Unlike last season — when there were no playoffs and no non-conference games — and unlike the season before — which was simply erased by the pandemic — the 2022 Wolves get a chance to flex their muscles against big-time foes.

That should help tremendously when Coupeville chases a return to the state tourney.

Wednesday the Wolves squared off with a school coming off of a girls basketball state title, in a game played in a town where wins are highly valued.

And take one inning out, and Coupeville likely heads home with a victory.

“We played seven innings of up and down softball tonight,” McGranahan said. “(The score) is deceiving.

“We started out strong and fell apart in one inning, giving up runs on a bunch of errors,” he added. “We take out those errors and we win, but unfortunately the errors still count.”

Coupeville drew first blood, pushing across a run in the top of the first thanks to some prime-time two-out hitting from Savina and Izzy Wells.

The freshman catcher punched a single, then came around to score when her big sis whacked an RBI double.

Izzy Wells played strongly on both sides of the ball against a tough foe.

A day after obliterating South Whidbey, Izzy Wells was strong in the pitcher’s circle again, and the game was knotted at 1-1 heading into the bottom of the fourth inning.

That was where Coupeville’s gloves went on strike, with a series of bobbled balls allowing Lynden to blitz the scoreboard for six runs.

The Lyncs added another run in the fifth to stretch their lead out to 8-1, but the Wolves dug in and gave their hosts some heart palpitations before things were done.

CHS sprang back to life with a three-run rally in the sixth, getting base-hits from Audrianna Shaw, Savina Wells, Madison McMillan, and Taylor Brotemarkle.

Not done just yet, Savina Wells came back around in the seventh to launch her first high school home run, a two-out solo shot which capped a three-hit day for the fab frosh.

Sparked by the round-tripper, the Wolves brought the tying run to the plate, thanks to back-to-back walks to Izzy Wells and McMillan, before Lynden escaped with the win.

The Wolves, who started four freshmen in the game, with Mia Farris joining McMillan, Brotemarkle, and Savina Wells, return to action Mar. 22, when they host La Conner in their league opener.

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Freshman Taylor Brotemarkle had four RBI Tuesday, sparking Coupeville to a 10-1 win over South Whidbey. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This could be the start of something big.

Taking the field with three freshmen starters Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad didn’t skip a beat.

Instead, fueled by the hot bats of their fab frosh, and a 14-strikeout performance from senior hurler Izzy Wells, the Wolves thoroughly dominated visiting South Whidbey during a season-opening 10-1 win.

The game was the 100th at CHS for head coach Kevin McGranahan (he’s 61-39 if you’re wondering) and marked the program’s 13th consecutive victory.

After going 12-0 last season in a pandemic-altered campaign — and sitting out 2020 during the early throes of Covid-19 — Coupeville softball hasn’t lost a game since May 24, 2019.

That loss was to Cle Elum in the third and final game the Wolves played during a busy day at the state tourney.

Now, three years later, Izzy Wells and Audrianna Shaw, who were freshmen on that squad, are the team’s senior leaders, and there’s a new pack of 9th graders ready to contribute from day one.

Taylor Brotemarkle, Savina Wells, and Madison McMillan were in the starting lineup on opening day, combining for three hits, five walks, and four RBI.

Add in fellow frosh Mia Farris, who came off the bench to garner a walk and make a nice catch in center, and the youngsters were more than OK.

As were the (relatively) grizzled vets, who joined the hit parade, while also coming up huge on defense.

Izzy Wells, flinging BB’s to her younger sister — who presents a tall target behind the plate — shut South Whidbey down on about 99.2% of her pitches.

Striking out the side three times, and getting a K in every inning, she had only one pitch she might have wanted back.

That one was whacked over the fence in center field in the top of the first inning, courtesy Falcon slugger Chanel Sterba.

After that brief miscue, Izzy Wells was lights-out, giving up just a single, solitary infield single the rest of the way.

South Whidbey did eke out a walk in the fourth inning, but Shaw drove a stake through the hearts of Falcon Nation with a gasp-inducing double play.

Running full tilt, the Wolf centerfielder threw her glove down and speared a rapidly falling ball, catching the potential extra-base hit right at her shoe tops.

She wasn’t done however, as Shaw immediately pulled the ball free from the webbing and zipped a throw to a teammate to nab the Falcon runner, who had drifted off base while watching the play unfold.

Wham, bam, thank you ma’am, as the Coupeville dugout went bonkers and the ever-unflappable Izzy Wells (slightly) nodded in approval.

While Coupeville briefly trailed 1-0 in the game, it quickly snatched the lead back, peppering the Falcons for runs in each of the first four innings.

Fab frosh Savina Wells is already swinging a wicked bat.

The opening big blow came from Savina Wells, who turned her first regular season high school at-bat into a highlight reel.

Cranking a two-out laser to center in the bottom of the first, she hit the gas and never broke stride, flying around second and sliding into third with a resounding triple.

South Whidbey’s defense didn’t handle the moment as well, however.

A rushed throw from an outfielder who thought the younger Wells sister was stopping at second hit the dirt at third and skidded away, allowing Savina to pop up and amble home with the tying run.

Jump to the second inning, and the fab frosh were back at it again.

This time McMillan walloped a triple to left, then scooted home on a grounder off of Brotemarkle’s bat — the first of Taylor’s four RBI in her high school debut.

The Wolves broke the game open, and shattered South Whidbey’s will, with a five-run third inning which featured Coupeville sending nine hitters to the plate.

Shaw bopped a double, Gwen Gustafson slapped an RBI single back up the middle, then Brotemarkle struck again with a gorgeous two-run single to straight-away center field.

The final two runs in the frame showcased Coupeville’s aggressive baserunning, as two Wolves crashed across home plate on the same wild pitch.

McMillan, coming in from third, was an expected arrival as the wayward ball bounced towards freedom.

Brotemarkle, roaring in on a jet plane, then nimbly side-stepping the catcher’s tag, was much more of a surprise, earning a double fist-pump from McGranahan.

The Wolves pushed the game towards mercy rule status by tacking on three runs in the fourth inning — all without getting the ball out of the infield — but came up a run short of ending the game in less than seven innings.

That frenzy in the fourth was fueled by five walks, with four of those coming thanks to Wolves being drilled by pitches.

Sofia Peters, Shaw, Savina Wells, and McMillan were all plunked, while Brotemarkle’s RBI walk with the bases loaded came thanks to an eagle eye and no ducking and praying.

Coupeville almost ended the game early, putting the first two runners on base in the fifth thanks to walks to Mckenna Somes and Farris, but South Whidbey escaped.

Which just gave Izzy Wells more time to fine-tune her low-key punch-out celebration — she slightly cocks an eyebrow in appreciation of each third strike if you look closely enough.

McGranahan’s 100th game in charge of the CHS softball program allowed him a chance to play all 14 girls on his varsity roster, with 10 of them reaching base.

McMillan (3B), Savina Wells (3B), Shaw (2B), Brotemarkle (1B), Gustafson (1B), and Izzy Wells (1B) collected hits, with Brotemarkle and McMillan each walking twice.

Farris, Somes, Peters, Maya Lucero, Shaw, and both Wells sisters walked once, while Allie Lucero, Melanie Navarro, Lily Leedy, and Violette Huegerich also saw action.

Kevin McGranahan — 100 games in and he’s still smiling.

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Senior Mckenna Somes is a key returning player for the Coupeville High School softball squad. (Jackie Saia photos)

How do you follow up perfection?

Hopefully with a lot more of the same.

At least that’s the goal for the Coupeville High School softball program, which is coming off a 12-0 run during a pandemic-shortened 2021 season.

“Big expectations for this season!” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan.

“Our goals are to win the league, be the number one seed for districts, and go to state and cause a whole lot of havoc once there.”

The last time any softball teams had a chance to advance to the big dance, way back in 2019, that’s exactly what Coupeville did – cause some havoc.

Playing in the 1A classification at the time, the Wolves, with freshman hurler Izzy Wells firing BB’s from the pitcher’s circle, thrashed highly rated Deer Park and came within a play of upending Cle Elum.

That capped a three-games-in-one-day jaunt which kicked off with a game against eventual state champ Montesano.

Coupeville was primed for more, and then, whammo, pandemic city.

A 2020 season completely erased by Covid, then a 2021 one chopped down to just league contests, with no playoffs.

But as Wells and hard-hitting Audrianna Shaw — the other remaining member of the 2019 state tourney team — take the field for their senior season, things are looking up.

Coupeville has a full 20-game regular-season schedule which includes non-conference matchups with bigger schools such as Lynden Christian and South Whidbey.

Plus, the promise of the postseason is a thing again.

“The girls need this,” McGranahan said. “I hope that we can play a normal season and playoffs and they can finally put this behind them.”

Wells and Shaw are joined by returning players such as senior Mckenna Somes and juniors Allie and Maya Lucero.

“They will anchor our defense and provide the offensive spark we need,” McGranahan said.

Allie Lucero is a weapon on both offense and defense.

Coupeville has a deep roster, with a strong pack of nine freshmen making the jump to high school ball after finishing their little league careers with a fourth-place finish at the state tournament.

Those young Wolves, players like Taylor Brotemarkle, Madison McMillan, and Savina Wells, can contribute today and tomorrow.

“We have 22 girls out this season and every one of them are essential to the program and getting us to our goals,” McGranahan said.

“The freshmen will be key to carry the program into the future seasons and will have big moments this season as well.

While the Wolves crushed their way through the Northwest 2B/1B League last season, outscoring foes 154-41 across those 12 wins, McGranahan takes nothing for granted.

In particular, he has his eye on Friday Harbor, which will be young but also is likely to “be our toughest test in the league.”

Whether the foes hail from the NWL or not, McGranahan and his players will approach each game with an eye on always getting better.

“We need to work on our softball IQ,” he said. “We are a young team and need to get softball smart.

“Great athletes — just need to harness the softball knowledge.”

Coupeville has a power pitcher, strong hitters, steady defenders, and a few secrets, as McGranahan is keeping some things close to the vest.

Asked about his team’s best points, the veteran coach just smiled.

“Everyone will see our strengths soon enough. Not gonna give out that info,” he said with a laugh, before going right back to work.

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Carolyn Lhamon was a powerhouse on both ends of the floor this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Tigers were too tough.

Having traveled 241 miles down the highway, the Coupeville High School girls basketball team put up a strong fight Saturday but fell a game short of qualifying for the state tournament.

Ultimately, the Wolves couldn’t stop host Tonasket on its home court, falling 58-24 in what turned out to be the season finale.

Coupeville finishes 9-9 in Megan Smith’s first year as head coach and can return nine of 13 girls who scored in a varsity game this season.

With the win Tonasket gets to 16-7 and advances to the 16-team 2B state championships.

The Tigers, who emerged from a tough district, are a talented, battle-hardened team, and they came out strongly in front of their largely-maskless home fans.

Coupeville trailed 11-0 before it finally got the ball to stop popping out of the basket, and the Wolves had trouble breaking through Tonasket’s stingy defense in the first half.

Wolf senior Izzy Wells finally got her team on the board at the 4:15 mark of the first quarter, snatching a rebound and slapping the ball back home.

But down 20-2 at the first break, Coupeville needed an offensive surge and couldn’t find one, failing to put together back-to-back buckets at any point in the first 16 minutes of play.

Not that the Wolves weren’t in there, scrapping away for every opportunity – because they certainly were.

Lyla Stuurmans, playing on dad Scott’s birthday, banked home a jumper from the top of the key for Coupeville’s best-looking bucket, while Nezi Keiper used and abused the defense down low for a score in the paint.

Lyla Stuurmans is one of four Wolf freshmen to see varsity action this year.

The problem was Tonasket responded almost immediately to each Wolf score, and often with a three-ball.

The Tigers rained down eight treys on the afternoon, with five different players netting at least one shot from distance.

Down 41-10 entering the second half, Coupeville dug deep, playing its hosts virtually even across the game’s final 16 minutes.

The Wolves finally got back-to-back buckets in the third quarter — with Carolyn Lhamon and Izzy Wells teaming up to make the net jump — then closed the game on an 8-3 mini-tear.

That run, which had four different CHS players knock down shots, also featured a tooth-rattling block on defense from a rampaging Ja’Kenya Hoskins.

It was the final high school hoops contest for Hoskins, Abby Mulholland, Izzy Wells, and Audrianna Shaw, plus manager Mckenna Somes, as the five-pack all graduate with the Class of ’22.

Audrianna Shaw clamps down on defense.

While her team won’t get a chance to head to state like the Coupeville boys, Megan Smith came away from her first campaign as Wolf head coach pleased with a lot of what she saw.

“It was a heck of a season and I’m super proud of how far these girls came this year,” she said. “Lots of ups and downs and all around. They battled through it all.

“It was a great group of kids to have for my first season of many as a head coach,” Smith added. “I couldn’t be more thankful to be a part of this program.

“We have a bright future ahead of us!”

Izzy Wells made her swan song a memorable one, pacing the Wolves with eight points, which allows her to crack the 200-point club for her career.

Lhamon dropped in four in support, with Stuurmans, Maddie Georges, Savina Wells, Shaw, Mulholland, and Keiper each adding a bucket to the cause.

Hoskins and Gwen Gustafson also saw floor time, with youngsters Katie Marti and Mia Farris and injured junior gunner Alita Blouin rounding out the 2021-2022 squad.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Maddie Georges – 129
Audrianna Shaw – 119
Izzy Wells – 91
Savina Wells – 74
Carolyn Lhamon – 65
Gwen Gustafson – 38
Lyla Stuurmans – 36
Abby Mulholland – 32
Ja’Kenya Hoskins – 27
Nezi Keiper – 27
Alita Blouin – 11
Katie Marti – 9
Mia Farris – 4

Izzy Wells finishes her CHS varsity hoops career with 204 points.

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Maddie Georges was a beast on offense and defense Tuesday, sparking Coupeville to a home playoff win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Youth will have its day. Just not today.

Facing off with an Auburn Adventist Academy squad with eight freshmen on its roster, the Coupeville High School girls basketball team bounced the visitors Tuesday, winning 56-37 in its district playoff opener.

The win lifts the Wolves to 9-7 and guarantees they will have two shots to punch their first ticket to state since 2016.

First up is a rumble with La Conner (19-1) Thursday in the CHS gym, with the winner claiming the District 1/2 title.

Tipoff is 5:15 PM.

The loser of that clash travels East, way East, to play Tonasket (15-7) Saturday in a loser-out, winner-to-state game.

Tuesday’s game, the first playoff clash for Megan Smith as a head coach, got off to a great start, hit a momentary pothole, then returned to being covered in awesome sauce.

Harassing their visitors non-stop, the Wolves forced a series of quick turnovers, bolting to a 10-0 lead before the refs could even get their whistles properly wetted.

Maddie Georges buried a three-ball from the left side to kick things off, before Audrianna Shaw and Savina Wells started throwing down points of their own.

Big sis Izzy Wells rejected an Auburn shot, with the ball bouncing right to her sibling, who covered the remainder of the court in several long strides before slapping home a layup.

Coupeville kept the ball moving on offense, with multiple passes on most plays, and finished strongly at the hoop, pushing the lead out to 20-6 by the first break.

Breaking the huddle to start the second quarter, Georges took control, burying a pair of three-balls while also pulling off her copyrighted move of drawing at least one offensive charge per game.

The fiery junior guard once again scrambled to get between the bucket and an incoming player, planted herself, then absorbed a full-body blow without the slightest hint of a flinch.

That sent her big bro (and CHS assistant coach) Alex Evans skyward, pumping both fists as he elevated off his chair, while Maddie offered a small smile of acknowledgement.

The third trey from Georges shoved the lead all the way out to 28-8 and dreams of a rout were in the air.

But then Auburn’s young guns proved to be a resilient bunch.

The Falcons, who had looked flustered all game, finally found a groove and closed the half on a 14-4 run, sparked by two three-balls of their own, plus a three-point play the hard way.

Gwen Gustafson and Shaw hit buckets down the stretch, with Shaw’s jumper moving her past 200 career varsity points, but the feel of the game had changed a bit.

Add in a quick Auburn bank shot to open the third quarter, slicing the lead back down to single digits at 32-24, and there was a slight hint of danger in the air.

Or maybe someone in the stands was eating Flaming Hot Cheetos, because those also smell like danger…

But you know who has no fear? Audrianna Shaw, that’s who.

When she wasn’t smack-talking the refs (with a smile on her face), the senior sparkplug was busy taking Auburn into the back alley and making sure the Falcons never returned.

A Shaw three-ball ripped through the net like a knife, while her razor-sharp dish inside set Nezi Keiper up for a huge bucket in the paint.

Audrianna Shaw, on the rampage.

Coupeville stretched the lead back out to 42-28 by the end of the third frame, before savagely killing all of Auburn’s remaining dreams with 10-0 tear to open the fourth quarter.

The Wolf defense was especially ferocious, with Lyla Stuurmans and Abby Mulholland blocking shots to rile up the CHS student section, while Savina Wells dropped the most-electrifying play of the game late.

Plucking the ball free, the fab frosh roared down court.

Without breaking stride, Wells weaved back and forth between three retreating defenders, spinning them in circles, before sliding through a paper-thin crack at the end, flicking the ball off the glass for a pretty, pretty bucket.

Putting together the kind of balanced attack every coach dreams of, the Wolves had three players in double figures, with eight of 11 scoring.

Shaw knocked down a game-high 13, with Georges (11) and Savina Wells (10) also hitting big.

Gustafson (6), Izzy Wells (6), Carolyn Lhamon (4), Stuurmans (4), and Keiper (2) also scored, with Mulholland, Ja’Kenya Hoskins, and Katie Marti also seeing floor time.

One win from punching a ticket to state.

 

All the tension, half the jersey:

La Conner’s boys survived a wild one on Coupeville’s court, upending Auburn Adventist 48-45 in the nightcap to a playoff doubleheader.

The Braves scored the game’s final four points on free throws, before the Falcons missed badly on a half-court three-ball at the buzzer.

La Conner (7-12) advances to face Coupeville (15-0) Thursday in the district title game, in what will be the third meeting this season between the teams.

The Wolves won the first two clashes 54-26 and 79-45.

Facing off with a quick Auburn squad Tuesday, the Braves led most of the game, only to fall behind by a point with less than 90 seconds to play.

But La Conner responded, with Isaiah Price netting a pair of charity shots to push his team ahead at the 1:15 mark, before Ivory Damien punched home two final daggers with just 2.3 ticks left on the clock.

The Braves defense came up big at the end, with six-foot-nine post player Josh Denton — the man, the mountain, the myth — rejecting Auburn shots on back-to-back plays.

The full-tilt bout also featured a frustrated La Conner player ripping his own jersey into two pieces — while it was still on his body — as he stormed off the court.

Good times for all.

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