Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘JV’

Lily Leedy smacked a pair of hits Wednesday afternoon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

More runs than there are stars in heaven.

Or close, at least.

Despite playing just five innings Wednesday, the JV softball teams from Coupeville and Lynden Christian combined to rack up an impressive 35 combined runs.

And, if we believe the scoreboard, the host Lyncs escaped with an 18-17 win.

But if we go with the scorebook, we actually come away with a 36th run, and an 18-18 tie.

Intrigue!

Mystery!!

A possible miscarriage of justice and…

OK, I’m being told Coupeville coach Katrina McGranahan isn’t all that worried about the final score and is much more focused on the improvement and hustle she saw from her young players.

Which is why the former CHS Female Athlete of the Year is well on her way to being a softball coaching guru, and I’m over here using a magnifying glass to decipher conspiracies behind squiggles of ink on a scorebook page.

For McGranahan, the on-field results are what matters most.

“Lynden Christian is a great and solid team; hats off to them,” she said. “I do not think they expected us to come out and give them a run for their money.

“All in all it was a great game.

“I told the girls that I wanted them to figure out a team goal for the game and they came up with effort. If you ask me, they definitely made that goal. I’m so very proud of them.”

Freshman Mia Farris had a busy day, bouncing from varsity to JV, and she stalked the pitcher’s circle for the young Wolves.

Mia did a great job,” McGranahan said. “It’s definitely hard to go from one game to another with little warm up pitching-wise, but she handled it well.”

Coupeville swung big bats, with 8th grader Teagan Calkins bopping a double and Melanie Navarro walloping a dinger.

Melanie definitely got ahold of one and it left the park, no questions asked,” McGranahan said. “She has put in so much work and effort, and it’s great to finally see it paying off for her.

“She was also a key player on defense — stopping balls at first, not allowing them to get extra bases.”

Lily Leedy added a pair of singles, while Chloe Marzocca smashed a base-knock as well.

Violette Huegerich and Jada Heaton topped the Wolves with three walks apiece, Katie Marti walked and scored, and two brand-new players brought a smile to their coach’s face.

Camryn (Clark) and Edie (Bittner) both had great games,” McGranahan said.

“This is a hard sport to walk into and learn, but they are taking it on with a smile.

Edie even surprised me by sliding into second base! WOW, that’s awesome just thinking about it.”

Teagan Calkins cracked a double and scored twice.

Read Full Post »

Zane Oldenstadt reached base twice Wednesday as Coupeville’s JV drilled Lynden Christian. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Once they started bashing, they didn’t stop.

Jumping on host Lynden Christian for six runs in the top of the first inning Wednesday, the Coupeville High School JV baseball team romped to a 13-5 win in a five-inning game.

The non-conference victory lifts the Wolf young guns to a pristine 2-0 on the season.

Coming on the heels of a pitcher’s duel in the day’s varsity game, the JV hardball sluggers decided to go in the opposite direction.

Cue the runs raining down on the scoreboard, with Coupeville building a 13-0 lead, then holding on for the win.

Aiden O’Neill kicked things off in the top of the first, drawing a walk from the Lynden hurler, and that set things in motion.

Camden Glover and Yohannon Sanders smacked base hits in the first inning explosion, with Landon Roberts and Johnny Porter eking out free passes.

From there, the Wolves cruised, tacking on a run in the third, before dropping three-run rallies in both the fourth and fifth.

Lynden Christian spent much of the afternoon swinging and missing, with Wolf hurlers O’Neill, Roberts, and Cole White combining to whiff 12 Lyncs.

While the win makes the bus ride home a happier one, getting the chance to put 14 players on the field against a quality opponent is maybe even bigger when it comes to building for the future.

In addition to the guys already mentioned, CHS sent Gabe Reed, Alex Smith, Seth Woollet, Cole Hutchinson, Zane Oldenstadt, Coop Cooper, Marcelo Gebhard, and Kai Wong into action.

Cole Hutchinson takes a rip.

Read Full Post »

Freshman Mia Farris whacked a triple Monday, sparking a 15-5 win for Coupeville JV softball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not even Mother Nature could slow them down.

Jumping on host Burlington-Edison from the first pitch Monday, the Coupeville High School JV softball team rolled to a 15-5 win in a game shortened to three innings by bad weather.

It was an almost-perfect start to the new season for the Wolf young guns.

“It was a great way for players to see and experience a softball game,” said CHS coach Katrina McGranahan.

“The weather was not great, but they held out and played with their hearts.

“There are definitely some areas that need improvement,” she added. “But I think that’s something all coaches say, and I can’t wait to see where this season goes.”

Freshmen Mia Farris and Chloe Marzocca combined to hold Burlington largely at bay while flinging BB’s from the pitcher’s circle, while 8th grader Teagan Calkins shone brightly with her play at catcher.

Teagan was awesome behind the plate despite how wet and cold it was,” McGranahan said. “After every inning she was covered in mud.

“She had very little passed balls and was dropping like crazy to stop them.”

Wet, cold, but triumphant. (Photo courtesy Christi Messner)

Coupeville took advantage of a ton of walks to get the scoreboard jumping, but also got several key hits.

Melanie Navarro and Farris both crushed triples, with Katie Marti bopping a double.

“We had some good hits, which was great to see,” McGranahan said. “Especially because it helps show the other girls that it can be done, and it gives them that much more energy and drive to play.”

The Coupeville coach, herself a former softball star for the Wolves, was also very pleased with the hustle and chatter she heard.

And not just the chatter of teeth on a cold, wet day.

Jada (Heaton) was constantly moving and talking to the girls, keeping everyone in the game despite how cold we all were,” McGranahan said. “Never have to question her heart.”

Maya Nottingham, Lily Leedy, Camryn Clark, and Violette Huegerich rounded out the active roster for Coupeville on this day, with all of them reaching base.

Wolf coach Katrina McGranahan leads workouts with her squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Read Full Post »

Coupeville 8th grader Camden Glover made an impressive high school baseball debut. (Photo courtesy Stevie Glover)

Welcome to the Camden Glover Experience.

Making his high school baseball debut while still attending middle school, the burly right-hander had an immediate impact Saturday as a pitcher, hitter, and fielder.

Five strikeouts in four innings of work on the mound. Two hits and four RBI at the plate. A perfect read on a bunt back to him.

Toss it all together, liberally season with strong work from his teammates, and it’s not a surprise Glover paced the Coupeville High School JV baseball team to an 8-5 win over visiting Mount Baker on opening day.

The victory, coming as a few fat rain drops mixed with gusts of prairie wind, gave the Wolves hardball program a split on the afternoon and offers the promise of good days ahead for Central Whidbey baseball.

Glover — giving mom Stevie, aunt Alexa, Grandma Tammy, and all of his lil’ family fan club members plenty of opportunities to cheer — didn’t pitch like an 8th grader.

Or at least he didn’t show off any of the butterflies one might expect, as he picked up exactly where he left off after dominating little league play.

Camden busted through the first two innings, notching three strikeouts while getting an assist from Cole Hutchinson, who made a pretty snag on a fly to right.

With their ace throwing liquid heat, the Wolves jumped on Mount Baker, rolling up three runs in the bottom of the first, then sending another three runners across in the third inning.

Cole White stroked a leadoff single to center to get the opening rally going, followed by another base-knock off the bat of Seth Woollet.

That set up Glover, who promptly mashed a two-run double to straight-away center in his first high school at-bat, providing the answer for a trivia question which will likely be asked one day.

A balk by the Baker pitcher sent a third run home for the Wolves, who came back around to match the run total two innings later.

Cole White? He can beat you with his bat, and his arm. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The third inning started off with back-to-back walks for White and Woollet — though the latter had to wear a ball as he was plunked.

Glover punched an RBI single to keep the good times rolling, while Coop Cooper and Marcelo Gebhard brought runs home with a fielder’s choice and an infield single, respectively.

Coupeville’s only stumble on defense came in the top of the fourth in a five-inning game.

Putting together a string of singles, while also taking advantage of a couple of Wolf miscues, Mount Baker shaved the lead all the way down to 6-5.

That was when Glover seized the moment, punching out the final batter he would face on this day, stranding the tying run on base.

Coupeville made up for its defensive letdown by tacking on a pair of insurance runs in its half of the fourth, with Woollet and Glover picking up RBIs.

Up 8-5, three outs away from the win, the Wolves needed their version of Mariano Rivera, and they found him in the lanky (and lethal) Cole White.

He may not have entered the game to the strains of Enter Sandman, like the greatest relief pitcher in Major League Baseball history always did, but Riley White’s big bro proved to be just as devastating with the ball in his mitt.

Making his first-ever pitching appearance, Cole walked his first opponent — on a questionable call — then dropped the hammer.

A strikeout, with the batter catching nothing but the last gusts of prairie wind as he swung, then a force-out at second, and a soft fly ball to center.

Save #1 for White, win #1 for the Wolf JV.

The legend begins.

Glover (2), Woollet (2), White (2), and Gebhard (1) rapped hits for CHS, with Zane Oldenstadt, Hutchinson, Johnny Porter, Woollet, and White eking out walks.

Kai Wong and Cooper rounded out the opening day lineup for the JV, which returns to action Mar. 16 with a game at Lynden Christian.

Wolf football star Kai Wong, making his baseball debut, helped spark his team to a season-opening victory. (Photo courtesy Becky Terry)

Read Full Post »

Hunter Bronec tossed in six points Thursday in the JV season finale. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

For eight minutes they were unstoppable.

Unfortunately, high school basketball games are 32 minutes long, and the Coupeville JV boys cooled off a bit after a torrid start Thursday and got caught from behind.

Up 13-2 at the first break, the Wolves eventually fell 44-38 in a hard-fought clash at La Conner.

The loss, coming in the JV season finale, drops Coupeville’s young guns to 1-6 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-8 overall.

In the opening moments it looked like the Wolves couldn’t be stopped.

CHS gunner Ryan Blouin knocked down back-to-back three-balls to open the game, while La Conner didn’t even get a shot up until the 5:42 mark of the first quarter.

Add Hunter Bronec driving and dishing to Zane Oldenstadt for a layup, another Blouin trey, and two free throws from Hurlee Bronec and the Wolves were sizzlin’.

And then it all went away for a bit.

La Conner finally found its rhythm, opening the second quarter with a 9-0 run that set the Wolves back on their heels.

Coupeville stopped the bleeding for a bit thanks to a putback from William Davidson and Blouin’s fourth three-ball of the half, but the Braves kept chipping away.

A turnaround jumper from La Conner gave the host team its first lead of the game, at 19-18 heading into the halftime break, though CHS answered on the first play of the second half.

Nick Guay slashed to the hoop for a bucket and free throw after getting hacked in the head on the play, and the Wolves had a short-lived 21-19 advantage.

Short-lived because La Conner rained down the next 11 points, effectively taking control of the game.

The Wolves continued to scrap, however, carving the deficit back to 33-31 midway through the fourth quarter.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim drained a short jumper, on a play set up by Davidson yanking a rebound free, and that capped a 6-0 Wolf surge.

La Conner had an answer, however, driving a stake through Coupeville’s heart with a long three-ball, before closing out the win at the free-throw line.

Afterwards, Wolf coach Hunter Smith was philosophical about the defeat.

“Would’ve liked to come away with the win, but definitely some good learning moments for our boys today,” he said.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and Bronec give a rival player few options.

Blouin paced Coupeville with 13 points, while Davidson banked in a season-high eight and Hunter Bronec popped for six.

Guay (5), Simpson-Pilgrim (2), Oldenstadt (2), and Hurlee Bronec (2) also scored, with Mikey Robinett, Jack Porter, Landon Roberts, and Johnny Porter seeing floor time.

Robinett was a force on the defensive end for the Wolves, sweeping down rebounds and forcing turnovers.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Nick Guay – 79
Ryan Blouin – 74
Hunter Bronec – 74
Zane Oldenstadt – 38
Mikey Robinett – 30
Hurlee Bronec – 27
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 24
William Davidson – 18
Jack Porter – 15
Johnny Porter – 8
Landon Roberts – 8
Carson Field – 2

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »