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Posts Tagged ‘Katrina McGranahan’

Katrina McGranahan, seen here during select softball play, sparkled on Opening Day for CHS.

   Katrina McGranahan, seen here during select softball play, sparkled on Opening Day for CHS. (John Fisken photo)

Katrina McGranahan kicked off her high school softball career with a bang.

The Coupeville High School freshman hurler struck out the first batter she faced Monday, one of 11 K’s she would record on Opening Day, putting together a strong outing.

Even though she was undone by too many fielding errors and a lack of run support, with the Wolves falling 11-0 to former Cascade Conference rival Sultan, the future is bright for a young woman who could grow into being The Terminator in the pitching circle.

Katrina did amazing, especially for a freshman pitcher,” said Coupeville coach Deanna Rafferty. “I’m incredibly happy with how she threw.”

McGranahan got the call because senior McKayla Bailey, who threw nearly every inning for the Wolves last season, is coming off of shoulder surgery.

She started at shortstop and, while Rafferty plans to work Bailey back into the pitching rotation, she doesn’t want to fully do so until the time is right.

Coming off of a stellar run with a Central Whidbey Little League Junior All-Star squad that went 18-2 last summer, McGranahan is familiar with the CHS diamond and seemed at ease from the first pitch.

Picked as a co-captain with Bailey, she tore through the first and pulled her squad out of the fire in the second.

With the bases juiced after a pair of fielding errors, McGranahan shut Sultan down.

First she snagged a come-backer and nailed the lead runner at the plate for the second out, then she sent the next batter down on strikes, with the final one slamming into catcher Lauren Rose’s glove with an audible pop.

Rose and McGranahan, two of four freshmen to start in game one (with center fielder Hope Lodell and first baseman Kyla Briscoe), were in sync and did their best to hold things together all game.

It mostly worked, but the Turks took advantage of some first-game jitters, turning a string of Coupeville errors into three runs in the top of the third.

Even then, McGranahan held tough and the game was close until Sultan put together a four-run rally in the sixth to break things open.

The rally might not have happened if an umpire’s questionable call hadn’t opened the floodgates.

The Turks lead-off hitter in the inning tried to stretch a single into a double, only to be gunned down by a laser throw from Wolf right fielder Monica Vidoni.

Only the ump ruled the runner safe, vaguely calling baseline interference on Coupeville.

Given a second chance, Sultan took advantage and stretched the lead out well beyond what their star hurler, Shelby Jeffries, would need.

An often overpowering veteran pitcher, she whiffed 18 Wolves and was only nicked for base hits by Bailey and Hailey Hammer.

While Coupeville had very little offensive momentum, Rafferty was pleased with the fight she saw in her very young team.

“They made good contact with the ball, all of them,” she said. “They let nerves get the best of them a little, facing a tall, strong player, but I’m proud of what they did.

“We’ll work to get better before the next game.”

After a four-year run as a player at Oak Harbor High School, this was Rafferty’s first game as a softball coach.

“It’s a whole different game. A lot more multitasking; it’ll take some time to get used to,” she said. “But I’m glad there’s room for improvement, for the team and me.”

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Katrina McGranahan brings the thunder. (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan brings the thunder. (John Fisken photos)

Payton Aparicio stretches to the last millimeter as she tracks down an elusive ball.

Payton Aparicio stretches to the last millimeter as she tracks down an elusive ball.

After seeing that, Maggie Crimmins makes sure to get properly stretched.

After seeing that, Maggie Crimmins makes sure to get properly stretched.

Kayla Rose (left) and Jae LeVine enjoy a moment together pre-match.

Kayla Rose (left) and Jae LeVine enjoy a moment together pre-match.

Sofia Hassapis tip-toes through a Dr. Suess-styled volleyball scenaro.

   Sofia Hassapis tip-toes through a volleyball scene straight off the cover of a Dr. Seuss book.

Katie Kiel carries lil' sis Kacie around for a victory lap on Senior Night.

Katie Kiel carries lil’ sis Kacie around for a victory lap on Senior Night.

Kacie

Flawless form for the senior captain.

celebrate

Wolves (left to right) Valen Trujillo, Kiel, Kyla Briscoe (8), Lauren Rose, Madeline Strasburg and Hailey Hammer celebrate.

Photos. Thousands and thousands of photos.

Fall sports may have wrapped, but I still have tons of unused pics I can transmit out to the waiting public.

This time around, the focus is on Wolf volleyball, from high-flying action to pre-game shenanigans.

Let the spikes fly one more time.

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Katrina (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Katrina McGranahan, who has started playing some varsity as well, delivered big numbers in her team’s JV win Tuesday. (John Fisken photos)

Wolves (l to r) Sofia Hassapis, Payton Aparicio

Wolves (l to r) Sofia Hassapis, Payton Aparicio, Lauren Grove, Hope Lodell, Allison Wenzel and McGranahan celebrate another winner.

Rustiness didn’t matter.

Despite being off the court for a bit, thanks to one school not having a team for them to play and another not being able to make it to Whidbey because of a cancelled ferry, the Coupeville High School JV spikers were just fine Tuesday night.

Finally able to play a full match for the first time in a week, the Wolves drilled host Port Townsend 25-13, 25-18, 25-20.

Coupeville’s third win of the season was sparked by superb serving (25 service aces) and strong net work (13 kills).

“Overall, everyone played like we haven’t practiced in a week or played a match in about that same time frame, but we were able to work together and get the job done, which was sweet!,” said CHS coach Amy King.

After dominating the first set behind its starters, Coupeville liberally used its bench the rest of the night to make sure everyone played in the final road game of the year.

“Those girls also stepped up and accepted the challenge,” King said, “Took care of business and helped us win.”

With Brittany Powers and Allison Wenzel getting time as setters and Kameryn St Onge dominating at the net,the second unit brought the heat.

Meanwhile, the vocal team leader brought the emotion, even when she was on the bench.

“I was almost deaf by the end of this game as Lauren Grove sat next to me, yelling and cheering for her teammates on the floor, celebrating everything as loudly as she could,” King said with a laugh.

St Onge led the attack with six kills, while Katrina McGranahan and Hope Lodell paced the Wolves at the stripe, recording five service aces apiece.

Nearly all the Wolves were spot-on with their serves, as Powers (3), Wenzel (3), Payton Aparicio (3), Jae LeVine (2), Mackenzi Valko (2), Kayla Rose (1) and St Onge (1) all recorded aces.

Maggie Crimmins (three serves), Abby Parker (“Just hustled anywhere she was on the court”), Claire Mietus (“Worked hard at the net”) and Sofia Hassapis (two kills) all chipped in as well.

Grove, who has stepped forward to claim the role of team leader, made her impact felt both on and off the court.

“As always, Lauren was a great and vocal leader, had many great passes and helped keep the team up and motivated to win,” King said.

The emotion she and her teammates showed carried over to the varsity match, when they made their coach proud by out-shouting a fired-up home crowd.

“I was SOOO happy with our JV,” King said. “Port Townsend had a strong cheering section, much like what we have when our guys are at the games, yelling and intimidating the other team.

“Our JV out-yelled them almost all night!”

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M Valko (John Fisken photos)

   Mackenzi Valko (right) and Katrina McGranahan celebrate a successful point. (John Fisken photos)

Jae (in red)

  Jae LeVine (in red) gets a hug from Lauren Grove. Looking on are Payton Aparicio (far left), Hope Lodell (8), McGranahan and Valko.

For the first time this season, my schedule at my “real” job prevented me from attending a home Coupeville High School volleyball match.

I will never hear the end of it.

“Well, you chose the wrong night to work because even though we didn’t win the match, there was a lot of exciting volleyball going on,” said Wolf JV coach Amy King.

She then went on to point out I also missed the loud ‘n proud return of the CHS student section in full costumes for the first time since the midpoint of last year.

“The boys were back louder than ever for the varsity games,” King said. “It was great!”

And I had fun washing dishes…

Anyway, facing off with a hard-hitting Darrington squad, the Wolf JV squad pushed the Loggers to the limit before falling 25-20, 19-25, 25-19 in a magnificent rumble.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 2-4 on the season. With Chimacum in town tonight (and me back in the bleachers), the JV will have the night off, as the Cowboys have a thin roster.

Facing off with Darrington, the Wolves got off to a cold start (Perhaps eying the exit hoping the press would still show up? Yes? No … OK), falling behind 20-10.

Then, sparked by the pinpoint serving of Payton Aparicio, Coupeville staged a rally and almost made it all the way back before running out of points to play with.

Aparicio, who tossed in a couple of aces to keep the Loggers jumping, was supported during the rally by stellar play from the quartet of Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell, Kameryn St Onge and Lauren Grove.

All four flew around the court, providing a dazzling blend of tips, hits and kills, with McGranahan and Lodell also being lights-out at the service stripe.

The second set was a “constant battle at the net, just good defense and offense all around.”

Trailing by seven, the Wolves unleashed their version of the Kraken, the laser-blasting McGranahan.

The freshman phenom went wild on her serve, while Sofia Hassapis had a sparkling tip and Mackenzi Valko “placed a kill just on the inside corner of the opposite side of the net.”

Katrina just hit and hit, Kameryn threw in some tips and with every ball over the net the girls just got more intense and refused to let the game slide,” King said. “This one ended with a nice set from Lauren to Hope, who put the ball away from the back-row.

“Yes, the gym erupted.”

So that’s what I heard way down the street at Christopher’s on Whidbey.

With the varsity squads getting restless as the start of their match approached, the two JV teams continued to wage war in an ultra-tight third set, with the Loggers holding on for the narrow victory.

“Everyone played their hearts out but we just couldn’t hold on, despite Katrina’s kills,” King said.

McGranahan (18 successful serves including seven aces, three kills, two tips, six hits and one save) filled up most of the stat sheet by herself, while Aparicio (13 successful serves, three aces) and Lodell (8 serves, one ace, one hit, one kill and one save) provided invaluable backup.

Grove added five kills and two saves, Maggie Crimmins knocked in five successful serves (with one ace) and St Onge had two tips, two kills and a crowd-pleasing block.

Top to bottom the Wolves came out swinging, with everyone chipping in.

Valko had a pair of kills, Kayla Rose hit on four serves at a crucial part of the match, Allison Wenzel “played a very well-rounded game” and Jae LeVine “covered well behind our blockers, getting a lot of great passes to our setters.”

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Hope Lodell, one of many Wolves to play strongly Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Hope Lodell, one of many Wolves to play strongly Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

The Wolves enjoy a break from the muggy gym while a fire alarm is checked out. (Amy King photo)

  The Wolves enjoy a break from the muggy gym while a faulty fire alarm is checked out. (Amy King photo)

They put in a full day’s work.

The Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad spent close to 12 hours together Saturday.

Playing at a tournament in Bellingham hosted by Meridian, the Wolves met up at the CHS gym at 6:30 in the morning and didn’t return until 6 PM.

Along the way they played three matches, survived a muggy gym and were evacuated when faulty fire alarms interrupted them mid-match.

And while it didn’t win any of the three matches (losing to Nooksack Valley, Sehome and Mount Baker), Coupeville did have its fair share of highlights along the way.

“I know it was a long day, but the girls really stepped up and worked hard,” said CHS coach Amy King. “They did things today I haven’t seen them really do before. There were so many great rallies, awesome digs and hits.

“I’m very proud of each of them and how they continued to battle,” she added. “We may not have won but we made the other teams work for every point.

“This group is chalk full of talent and heart. I appreciated their positive attitudes and the way they constantly help each other out.”

The Wolves opened against Nooksack and had a bit of a struggle to blink away the early-morning tiredness. They got stronger as the match progressed, eventually falling 25-10, 25-17, 25-21.

Hope Lodell continued to earn her nickname of “The Surgeon,” slicin’ n’ dicin’ her foes with precision serving.

She nailed 14 serves in (including an ace) while Katrina McGranahan and Payton Aparicio connected successfully on 10 apiece.

McGranahan spent most of the match stalking the net, then exploding upwards to deny Nooksack. She amassed seven hits, two blocks and five tips in the match.

King also gave a nod of approval to the play of Sophia Hassapis and Abby Parker (“she was going for everything and saved a few balls heading out of the court”).

The middle match of the day started strong, then faded a bit, as Coupeville fell 25-20, 25-8, 25-12 to Sehome.

“We couldn’t maintain our scrappiness and let some of our errors get to us,” King said.

Lodell, Maggie Crimmins and Kayla Rose were money at the service stripe, while McGranahan soared for two court-shaking blocks that “got the bench screaming.”

Aparaicio, Rose, McGranahan, Lauren Grove and Kameryn St Onge spread out the kills, taking turns at destroying Sehome’s carefully-planned attacks.

Things got interesting near the end of the day, as the Wolves and their final opponent, Mt. Baker, got run out of the gym midway through the first set when fire alarms went off.

After a reprieve from a stuffy gym and a chance to sit outside in the breeze and take selfies, the two teams got back it, with Baker eventually triumphing 25-17, 25-20.

King came away pleased with the play of all of her players who made the day-long trip.

Hope and Lauren were very consistent in their setting duties. Moving around the court, setting their teammates up and being steady all around on both offense and defense,” she said. “Kayla served for Lauren all day as Lauren’s shoulder has been giving her some problems. Kayla did a great job with serving as well as back row defense.

Payton and Katrina did a great job with serve receive and defense; Abby stepped in and played a very aggressive back row and had several saves,” King added. “Kameryn, Allison (Wenzel), Mackenzi (Valko), Sophia and Claire (Mietus) all had great moments, whether tipping, hitting, serving or defense.

“They all contributed positively through the day.”

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