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Posts Tagged ‘Kailey Kellner’

Tiffany Briscoe whacked a triple Monday, one of five extra-base hits in a 19-14 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Tiffany Briscoe whacked a triple Monday, one of five extra-base hits in a 19-14 win. (John Fisken photo)

Have bat. Will bash.

If the Coupeville High School softball players carried business cards, that’s likely what they would say.

All season long, a very young Wolf squad has shown no shyness when it comes to runnin’ ‘n gunnin’ and piling up tons o’ runs.

Monday’s regular season finale was no different.

Blowing the game open with a decisive eight-run burst in the top of the fifth, the Wolves escaped La Conner with a huge 19-14 victory, setting the stage for postseason play.

Now 9-10 on the season, Coupeville, the #3 team from the 1A Olympic League, heads to Sprinker Fields in Spanaway Friday for the West Central District 3 tourney.

The Wolves face Nisqually league #2 Bellevue Christian (10-6) at 6 PM in a loser-out game.

Knock off the Vikings and they stay to battle Olympic League champ Chimacum at 8 PM in the start of the double-elimination portion of the postseason.

Win the opener, which will be the third time Coupeville and BC have played this season (the Wolves won 17-16 in Coupeville and lost 8-1 on the road), and they are guaranteed to return to Spanaway Saturday, regardless of the outcome of game #2.

To take a look at the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1923&sport=15

Looking for a boost headed into the playoffs, the Wolves lit their bats on fire Monday, smacking away for 22 hits.

Kailey Kellner launched a three-run home run, Lauren Rose walloped a solo shot and Katrina McGranahan (triple), Tiffany Briscoe (triple) and Sarah Wright (double) all joined in on the extra-base hit parade.

“Pretty much the whole lineup was hitting today,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan.

For a game that saw 33 runs be plated, it started off deceptively slow, with both teams failing to score a run in the first inning.

Then, the floodgates opened.

The Wolves put together six hits and took advantage of a key La Conner error to open the scoring with five in the top of the second, but then gave the lead right back.

Four in the second and another four in the third staked the Braves to an 8-5 lead and they were still clinging to a 10-7 advantage entering the fifth.

That was when Coupeville decided to get serious, with eight of its nine hitters scoring in the inning.

The Wolves eventually stretched the lead out to 19-12, then coasted home for the non-conference win.

“We made it tougher than it should have been with some errors, but the girls just wouldn’t go away and eventually put the game away with some big bats,” Kevin McGranahan said.

By the time the game was done, all nine CHS starters had scored, with Mikayla Elfrank and Wright stamping on home three times apiece to pace the team.

Rose, Kellner, Jae LeVine, Briscoe, Veronica Crownover and Hope Lodell each scored twice, with Katrina McGranahan the lone Wolf to only score a single time.

The sophomore sensation still saw plenty of action, however, teaming with Wright for a tag-team approach in the pitcher’s circle.

The duo teamed for eight strikeouts on the afternoon.

Back in stride, and with the most wins a Wolf softball squad has had in one season in a very long time, a team with no seniors and just a handful of juniors, will head into the playoffs loose and confident.

“This was a good game to end the season on,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Hopefully we can ride it into districts.”

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Mikayla Elfrank (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf sophomore Mikayla Elfrank had two hits and four stolen bases Friday in a 16-3 win. (John Fisken photos)

Hannah Benway

Hannah Benway comes out firing.

It was made to order.

The Coupeville High School softball squad has been going through a rough patch of late, so the arrival of Port Townsend in town Friday was the perfect cure for all that ails the Wolves.

Facing a team which hasn’t won since April 28, 2014, Coupeville did its best to win decisively while not making things worse than they had to be, strolling to a 16-3 victory.

The victory lifts CHS to 3-4 in the 1A Olympic League, 8-7 overall.

It also pulls the Wolves back within a game of Klahowya (3-2, 8-6) in the battle for second-place, while clinching a playoff berth.

Defending league champ Chimacum (6-0, 10-4), which nipped Klahowya 6-4 Friday, is sitting pretty right now, needing just one more win, or an Eagles loss, to clinch another title.

While Coupeville can’t win the title this year, a very young squad that is comprised almost entirely of freshmen and sophomores, with just a sprinkling of juniors and not a single senior, has the program’s best record in years.

Facing a RedHawks team that entered play Friday with a 32-game losing streak, the Wolves put the gas pedal down early, then tried to hit the brakes as much as possible and coast home.

While the Wolves stole 14 bases, they piled those up early while building their lead, then switched over to a far more conservative style of play.

Their bats were smoking all game long, though, as they pounded out 10 hits to go with the 12 walks they earned.

Sarah Wright led the way with a three-hit day, while Mikayla Elfrank notched a pair of base knocks.

Lauren Rose, Tamika Nastali, Hope Lodell, Jae LeVine and Kailey Kellner each collected a hit, while Katrina McGranahan turned all three of her walks into runs.

The knockout punches came courtesy of Wright and Kellner, who both thumped triples.

When she wasn’t going ballistic at the plate, Wright, normally Coupeville’s catcher, stepped into the pitcher’s circle and gave McGranahan a day off.

Going the distance, the freshman whiffed 11 RedHawks and scattered the three runs evenly, only surrendering one per inning, with a scoreless second and fifth.

After dropping a quick five-spot in the first inning, Coupeville broke things open for good with seven in the second before tacking on a final four in the fourth.

While he’s always happy to get a win, especially one which moves his squad back over .500, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan primarily looked at Friday’s game as a teaching tool and confidence builder.

“As usual, it was a fight to keep the game reasonable, but we somehow managed to get some new players some valuable experience and also rest Katrina for the stretch run,” he said. “Nicole (Lester) and Hannah (Benway) both started and played valuable live game innings and at-bats.

“The experience will pay off in the future as they are both very excited about their future as Lady Wolves.”

Coupeville closes the regular season with two more league games (May 2 at Chimacum and May 4 at home against Klahowya), then non-conference tilts at Bellevue Christian May 10 and La Conner May 16.

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Kailey Kellner

   Kailey Kellner: Killer … with a heart of gold. (John Fisken, Sylvia Hurlburt, Amy King photos)

The first day she stepped into the Coupeville High School gym, she looked hesitant, shy, a little lost.

Having just jumped from England to a cow town in the middle of a prairie on a rock in the Pacific Northwest, Kailey Kellner had her whole world shook up midway through her freshman year.

Now, a little more than two years later, it is hard to think of a Wolf sports world that does not include her.

Kellner, who celebrates her 17th birthday today, has blossomed into a stone-cold killer on the basketball court, a three-ball droppin’ assassin who will fly into the paint in pursuit of rebounds and drop a girl on her butt when needed.

Running along side Makana Stone and Mia Littlejohn, she was a captain, a leader, a role model for a very young Wolf hoops team, which just happened to take the program back to state for the first time in a decade this season.

But it’s not just basketball for Kailey.

She’s become a strong softball player, who can pull off a slick unassisted double play, whack a key hit in crunch time and pick up her teammates with her bench chatter.

As the volleyball manager, she kept things humming smoothly, a word for one player, a hug for another, a playful slap on the back of the head for yet another.

Kellner was welcomed with open arms by her new coaches and teammates (playing for Amy King, who creates a true family atmosphere, was the perfect introduction to her new town and school) and the transformation has been phenomenal.

Her smile lighting up the entire gym, Kailey has become part of the very fabric of Wolf Nation. A very important, very treasured part.

Goofing off for the cameras with her friends or droppin’ daggers on the athletic stage, she has proven to be a truly amazing young woman, and watching her grow, not only in athletic skill, but as a person, has been fun.

She’s far from done, and I’m pretty certain the best is yet to come.

Families come and families go, and every once in awhile, we luck out and win the lottery.

Kailey walked into that gym a complete unknown.

The day she walks out, she will do so as one of the best we have been blessed to witness.

Her skills are becoming legendary.

Kailey’s soaring spirit, the loveliness of her soul, though? That tops whatever she might do with a basketball or a softball bat in her hands.

Happy birthday, Miss Kellner. Thank you for giving us the chance to come along for part of your journey.

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Kailey Kellner (John Fisken photo)

   The Wolf defense was strong all day Monday, with Kailey Kellner pulling off a slick unassisted double play at first. (John Fisken photo)

Shelby Jeffries is a bad, bad woman.

The Sultan High School senior, who signed a college softball scholarship after her sophomore season, cranked two over-the-fence home runs Monday, giving her 22 dingers for her stellar prep career and lifting the Turks to a come-from-behind 6-1 win over host Coupeville.

The non-conference loss evened the Wolves early season record at 1-1.

Jeffries, who has destroyed Coupeville each time she has faced them, was her usual overpowering self, striking out 12 Wolves from the pitcher’s circle.

She then tacked on two moon shots, starting off with a towering solo round-tripper that soared well over the left field fence and landed somewhere down the street around the produce department at Prairie Center.

Even with that epic tater, though, Coupeville’s defense, and strong pitching from sophomore Katrina McGranahan, kept the game knotted at 1-1 until the top of the seventh.

The Wolves had broken through early, eking out a run in the bottom of the first by being aggressive and always looking to take an extra base.

Mikayla Elfrank beat out a one-out infield single to kick things off, then took second and third on consecutive pitches that the Sultan catcher bobbled.

With her teammate perched on third, McGranahan drew a walk and promptly stole second.

With Jeffries possibly on the ropes, the Wolves went for blood, but Sultan forced Elfrank at the plate on a chopper back to the mound.

Shrugging that off, McGranahan zipped home a pitch later, taking advantage of a passed ball.

The slim lead held up until the top of the fourth, when the Turks finally got their first hit off McGranahan, who had whiffed six through the first three innings.

Leading off, Jeffries caught a pitch that got up a little, launching it like a rocket on its way to the moon.

Consensus among Wolf fans was it was the longest home run anyone had seen in the history of Coupeville’s softball diamond.

It would have been easy for the Wolves to break at that moment, but they didn’t, instead pulling off sweet double plays in consecutive innings.

Elfrank turned the first one, snatching a grounder at short, stepping on the bag and firing across the field to first baseman Kailey Kellner to beat the runner by a step.

An inning later, it was Kellner putting on a one-woman show, snaring a liner and hopping to her left to double off a straying Turk, who slid into second only to discover she never should have left first.

Coupeville had runners on in the fourth, fifth and sixth, but couldn’t bring them home to break the tie.

Their best chance came in the fifth, when Veronica Crownover drew a pinch-hit walk, took second on a wild pitch, then went to third and partway around when Elfrank’s hard chopper was booted.

The ball didn’t get quite far enough away to make it worth the risk, though, and Crownover was forced to retreat to the bag, where she was left hanging when a strikeout ended the inning.

Sultan finally struck in the seventh, putting runners at the corners with one out.

After trying and failing to get a bunt down twice, a Turk hitter yanked the bat back and delivered what would turn out to be the game-winning run with a well-placed RBI single.

A juggled grounder let another run come in, and then it was time for Jeffries to cap things.

Taking her final swing at Coupeville, she tied a ribbon on four years of beatings by crushing a three-run long ball that Wolf center fielder Hope Lodell could do nothing with as it dropped over her head and the fence in the deepest part of the park.

After that, Sultan exited stage right to go mash on Cascade Conference foes, while the Wolves pivoted and immediately started getting ready for Concrete’s visit on Wednesday.

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After getting a taste of varsity as a sophomore, Kailey Kellner was coupeville's second-leading scorer as a junior. (John Fisken photo)

   After getting a taste of varsity as a sophomore, Kailey Kellner was Coupeville’s second-leading scorer as a junior. (John Fisken photo)

Coming off its second straight 1A Olympic League title, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad will only lose one player to graduation.

But, that lone senior, Makana Stone, will leave a huge hole on the offensive side of the floor.

She accounted for 46% of the 928 points thrown down by the Wolves in a 16-6 campaign.

The other nine CHS players combined to outscore her, but just barely, working together to chip in with 501 points as Coupeville averaged 42.2 a night in 2015-2016.

The final (unofficial) scoring stats for the best Wolf girls team in a decade:

Makana Stone — 427
Kailey Kellner — 147
Mia Littlejohn — 146
Tiffany Briscoe — 58
Lauren Grove — 57
Lindsey Roberts — 54
Kyla Briscoe — 19
Allison Wenzel — 12
Skyler Lawrence — 6
Lauren Rose — 2

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