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Posts Tagged ‘Kentucky’

Stella Johnson, with mom Mimi Iverson, is enjoying a successful sophomore softball season at Boyle County High School in Kentucky. (Photo courtesy Iverson)

Johnson and a teammate hoist some hardware after winning a district title. (Photo property Boyle County softball)

One of Coupeville’s best continues to kill it, halfway across the country.

Stella Johnson, who was a key player on a Central Whidbey Little League softball team which went to state in 2017, lives and plays in Danville, Kentucky these days.

A sophomore at Boyle County High School, she’s a vital part of a Rebels squad which just won a district championship, and now opens regionals this Saturday.

Johnson and Co. beat Garrard County 2-0 in the championship game of the District 45 tournament.

The Rebels, sitting at 24-6 on the season, open regional play against McCreary Central, needing three wins in as many days to clinch another title.

Johnson is in her second season on the Boyle County roster, having made her debut as an 8th grader.

Her hopes of being a five-year varsity high school player were snatched away, however, when the pandemic erased spring sports last year.

After scoring 16 runs and swiping three bases as an 8th grader for a team which advanced to state, Johnson has racked up 13 runs, six stolen bases, and three RBI in her second go-round for the Rebels.

Stella is the daughter of former Coupeville High School great Mimi Iverson, and is following in the athletic footsteps of older brother Elliott, who found success as a competitive bass fisher after the family’s move to Kentucky.

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Former Coupeville ace Stella Johnson, who’s an 8th grader, scored 16 runs for a high-flying Kentucky high school softball team which went to the state quarterfinals. (Mimi Johnson photo)

Two years ago, Stella Johnson and Jill Prince were Coupeville 6th graders, key members of a Central Whidbey Little League softball team which advanced to the state tourney.

Jump ahead to the spring of 2019, and the now 8th graders found themselves on still-successful, but divergent, paths.

Prince swung a big bat for the current CWLL Juniors squad, which finished 13-1, and was a team manager for the high school diamond team.

But, while the CHS sluggers went to the 1A state tourney, where they toppled highly-ranked Deer Park, Prince stayed home.

She’ll get her chance to pull on a high school uniform next spring as a freshman, but not until then.

Johnson, on the other hand, is already a battle-hardened vet for a Boyle County High School team which just ended its run at the state tourney.

Stella and older bother Elliott moved to Kentucky with parents Scott and Mimi after that 2017 little league state tourney appearance, and her new home state allows for a much-longer high school playing career.

As in Johnson appeared in 23 of her team’s 32 games this spring, while still in middle school.

Kentucky is one of just six states, joining Mississippi, Delaware, Alabama, North Dakota, and Arkansas, to allow 7th and 8th graders to play varsity high school sports without restriction.

It actually used to be even more open in Kentucky, until the state tightened things up a bit.

Whitney Creech of Jenkins, the state’s all-time leading scorer in girls basketball with 5,527 points, played eight seasons on her high school team.

She went from averaging 2.5 points a night as a 5th grader(!) to tossing in 50.3 a game during her senior season in 2015-2016.

Johnson won’t get to have an eight-season varsity career, but she could easily put in five years.

After playing middle school softball as a 7th grader, she tried out for both middle school volleyball and high school softball during the same week this year.

An offer of a spot came back from both teams, and Johnson opted for the chance to pursue her softball dream.

She pulled double duty, starting at second and short for the school’s JV team, while operating as a courtesy runner for the varsity team’s pitcher and catcher.

Johnson took full advantage of her time on the varsity diamond, stealing three bases and coming around to score 16 times.

That included a game against East Robertson where she tapped home three times in one afternoon.

Her 16 runs was sixth-best on the team, with the top five scorers all being full-time starters.

Boyle County finished the season 26-6, falling 4-0 to the state’s #1 team, undefeated Male High School out of Louisville, in the state quarterfinals Friday night.

For Johnson, getting the chance to kick off her high school softball career before she’s even in high school was huge.

“It was such a great experience for her – her coaches are amazing and her teammates embraced her,” said mom Mimi. “It’s a pretty awesome group of girls. We have been blessed this season.”

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Coupeville grad Joey Lippo is off to play college tennis in Kentucky. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tennis it is.

Joey Lippo was a three-sport star during his days at Coupeville High School, anchoring Wolf teams in tennis, basketball and baseball.

He was also the rare male athlete who could do a mean dance as well, often joining twin sister Skyy in her world of ballet, when he performed in productions of The Nutcracker.

But now Lippo, a 2018 CHS grad, will devote himself solely to the racket arts, after agreeing to play tennis for Midway University in Kentucky.

The liberal arts school competes athletically in the River States Conference, and is part of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.

Most NAIA schools offer athletic scholarships, and Midway has pledged to pick up a substantial portion of Lippo’s college costs, making his parents hearts sing with great joy.

In addition to playing tennis, Lippo will study environmental science. School begins Jan. 7, with tennis starting in Feb.

He’s joining an Eagles program which is still in its infancy, as Midway was an all-girls school until just recently.

Founded in 1847, the school was originally known as the Kentucky Female Orphan School and admitted its first male undergraduates in time for the fall 2017 semester.

Midway University sits smack-dab on a 200-acre working farm in the Bluegrass region of Kentucky, and the oldest building on campus, Pinkerton Hall, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

While the school has been around for a long time, Lippo is one of the pioneers for male sports at the institution.

The men’s tennis program is in just its second season, with coach Joe Reyes, a highly-accomplished former college player, quickly building a strong roster.

The Eagles currently lay claim to players from Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Texas, plus four foreign netters, one from Spain and three from Columbia.

And now you can add Washington state to the list.

“The tennis coach found me somehow and told me to come visit the school,” Lippo said. “I got to play with the team and I loved that environment and everyone was so welcoming.

“It’s a small school and reminds me a lot of Coupeville.”

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