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   Bundled up against the weather, Hope Lodell was warmed by a huge win Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

Mikayla Elfrank comes up gunning at short.

   Jae LeVine (right), who had three hits, including a game-winning RBI double, celebrates with teammates Veronica Crownover (left) and Melia Welling.

There are victories which define a team, define a season, define a program.

If everything goes according to plan, at some point in the future, the Coupeville High School softball squad will look back at the windy, rainy afternoon of Mar. 29, 2017 and say, “That there, that was the turning point.”

The Wolves won, and a win is always nice.

But it was how they won, and who they beat, that matters most.

For on this wild ‘n wet Wednesday, Coupeville stared down Klahowya, and its leader, two-time Olympic League MVP Amber Bumbalough, and seized its moment, toppling the Eagles 7-6.

The win lifts CHS to 1-0 in Olympic League play, 3-0 overall, pulling them a half game behind two-time defending league champ Chimacum (2-0, 3-1).

Klahowya, to the shock of all, tumbles into the cellar (for the moment) at 0-2, 1-3, a half game behind Port Townsend (0-1, 0-2), a team which is on a 39-game losing streak.

Coupeville won Wednesday by swinging hot bats from the top of the order to the bottom, as eight different players had at least one base-knock.

Included in the 12 hit attack were two doubles (including a game-winning one off the bat of Jae LeVine), two triples and an out-of-the-park home run from senior Tiffany Briscoe that seemed to surprise Briscoe more than anyone else.

Last year, in Kevin McGranahan’s first year as CHS coach, the Wolves were swept by Klahowya, outscored 32-8 across three games.

Wednesday, his team swung hot, played stellar defense, didn’t blink when a five-run lead was erased, rallied late, then closed like stone-cold killers, stranding the tying run at second in the seventh.

The grin on McGranahan’s face may fade sometime before Coupeville’s next game — a road trip to Port Townsend Friday — but it’s doubtful.

“Huge. Huge!! Such a great team win for all of these girls,” he said, and then he smiled, and smiled some more.

The Wolves have fared better against flame throwers than soft tossers, and Bumbalough (“the best we’ll face this year”) can toss wicked heat.

But the cold, wet, windy conditions seemed to bother her at times, and the CHS hitters took advantage.

With their own hurler, Katrina McGranahan, slicing through the Eagle hitters in the early going, the Wolves built a 5-0 lead by putting up runs in each of the first three innings.

In the first, LeVine kick-started things with the first of her three hits, a solidly-whacked single to center.

Wolf catcher Sarah Wright plated her with a two-out RBI single (also to center), then came around to score after a single from Mikayla Elfrank and a hard-hit chopper by Veronica Crownover where the throw to first was dropped.

Coupeville’s defense looked like it would be the biggest story in the second inning, as McGranahan and Elfrank teamed up to pull off an unexpected web gem.

An Eagle slugger ripped a shot back through the pitcher’s circle, but it deflected perfectly off of McGranahan’s glove and right onto the fingertips of the hard-charging Elfrank.

Snagged the madly-bouncing ball, she spun and dropped a rocket of a throw into Crownover’s glove at first for the out.

But, remember, I said “it looked like,” because, with one vicious swing to open the bottom of the second, Briscoe put the spotlight firmly back on the offense.

The senior left fielder, who has been known of late for being an expert in getting hit by the ball (she has a huge welt on her left thigh after being plunked twice Saturday), is primarily a contact hitter.

For one glorious swing, though, it was as if former Wolf slugger Hailey Hammer had been reborn in Briscoe’s body.

Turning on Bumbalough’s heave with unexpected vengeance, Tiffany sent the ball screaming over the fence in left center on a line, almost causing her mom, Amy, to fall off the bleachers.

One of two CHS Class of 2017 athletes to have played a sport all 12 seasons of their high school days (along with Lauren Grove), Briscoe has been a hard-working class act since day one.

Seeing her get mobbed by her teammates at home, with joy and yes, a little shock on her face, was a special moment for all.

But the Wolves weren’t going to stop there, as LeVine cracked a triple in the third, followed by RBIs from Wright and Crownover to run the lead to 5-0.

Klahowya doesn’t fold easily, however.

A veteran team with a star who will be playing college ball one day, the Eagles scraped together three runs in the fourth and another three in the fifth to reclaim the lead.

Coupeville had a marvelous chance in its half of the fourth, getting a lead-off double from speedster Hope Lodell.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Bumbalough bore down and retired the next three hitters herself, making two nimble plays in the field wrapped around a strikeout.

There was no break in Coupeville’s stride, however, as the Wolves scraped out a run in the bottom of the fifth — McGranahan singled and came around to score on a passed ball two batters later — and knotted things back up at 6-6.

In a bid to keep the fans from realizing how chilly it was, the two teams played a high-wire act in the late going.

Elfrank tripled after McGranahan scored, but was thrown out at home trying to score after the initial throw overshot third base.

While the Wolves would have loved the go-ahead run, they endured, as McGranahan gunned down three straight hitters in the sixth to keep everyone on edge.

Facing a two-out, no-one-on-base dilemma in the bottom of the sixth, Coupeville could have been content to move into the seventh in a tied game.

Instead, Lauren Rose popped a seeing-eye single down the right field line, getting the ball to drop in right between two fielders.

Then, as Mouse danced back and forth on the first-base bag, the mightiest mite, the woman so awesome she needs four nicknames, Jae “Flash” LeVine, strode to the plate, twirling her bat over her head.

Hey, that’s how I remember it…

The prairie hushed. Not a cow could be heard mooing.

Only the wailing of former Wolf softball legend Breeanna Messner, home from sunny Cali and forced to remember how cold her home town can be.

And then Joltin’ Jae went and became (even more of) a legend, ripping the hide off the ball, as she sent Bumbalough’s pitch crashing into right-center, plating Rose with the go-ahead (and winning) run.

Peeking out from between her frost-bitten fingers, Messner beamed as LeVine, her prodigy, stood astride second, queen of all she surveyed.

Of course, nothing comes easy, and Klahowya had one last chance to crush a town’s hopes.

Bumbalough (who else?) beat out a one-out infield single in the top of the seventh and moved to second on a steal where she had already popped up before the throw arrived.

Danger loomed, and not just in the really dark clouds out in right field, but Katrina McGranahan was having none of this tomfoolery.

Twice she stared down Eagle hitters, and twice she whiffed them with breaking balls so nasty they might as well have been poison-covered.

At which point the Wolves let loose with a well-deserved celebration, capping it with a full team sing-along.

This day, this moment, they were on top of the world. And justifiably so.

 

To see more photos from this game, pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Softball/20170329-vs-Klahowya/

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   Axel Partida and teammates are in a second-place tie with Port Townsend, who they host Friday. (John Fisken photo)

The gap is real.

The Klahowya boys soccer squad has yet to lose a game in 1A Olympic League play, and none of the other three conference teams are getting any closer to making that a reality.

Thrashing visiting Coupeville 7-0 Tuesday, the Eagles ran their season league mark to 3-0 and their all-time win-streak in conference play to 15-0.

That’s the third-longest active league winning streak, behind Coupeville girls basketball (27-0) and Klahowya girls soccer (20-0).

With six more league games ahead of them, the Eagle booters have a chance to slide past their female counterparts this season, if they stay perfect.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-1 in league play, 2-3-1 overall.

The Wolves are in a second-place tie with Port Townsend (1-1, 3-2), who they host Friday (3:30 JV/5:30 varsity), while Chimacum (0-3, 0-5) is mired in the cellar.

Facing off with Klahowya, Coupeville battled fairly evenly for the opening 35 minutes, then was stung by two goals right before the half.

The Eagles used their familiarity with turf to speed the game up in the second half, stretching the final score out.

“Klahowya is a very good team, especially on their turf field,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “It was a good game to work on our defense and will give us some things to look at to improve.”

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Emma Smith

   Emma Smith and CHS volleyball won a league title in the fall, picking up eight conference wins along the way. (John Fisken photos)

Jakobi Baumann

   Jakobi Baumann was part of a Wolf tennis team which successfully defended its league title.

The champ is staggered, down, but not necessarily out.

Winter was rough for Klahowya, which got just two league wins combined from its varsity boys and girls basketball squads, thanks in large part to a combination of injuries and bad luck.

That’s allowed Coupeville to surge ahead in the standings at the two-thirds point of the 2016-2017 school year, boasting the most combined varsity team wins of any 1A Olympic League school.

If the Wolves can hold fast through the spring — where they are the defending league champs in baseball and girls tennis — they would unseat the Eagles, who have ruled the roost in the league’s first two years.

To get these totals, I look at 10 of the 11 sports in which Coupeville vies with its conference rivals.

That means skipping track, which is the only one of the 11 not to be a true head-to-head team sport.

Track is an individual sport conducted in the guise of a team sport, with meets typically involving a jumble of schools from different classifications. Any attempt at keeping track of a team win-loss record is a waste of time.

And this is Coupeville Sports, so if the Wolves don’t field a team (wrestling, swim, gymnastics), it would be equally pointless for me to consider that sport.

So, what I do look at is regular season league varsity wins in football, volleyball, girls and boys soccer, girls and boys tennis, girls and boys basketball, baseball and softball.

A season-by season comparison:

2014-2015:

Klahowya 52 wins/5 league titles
Coupeville 40/2
Chimacum 23/2
Port Townsend 20/1

2015-2016:

Klahowya 45/3
Coupeville 42/4
Chimacum 26/2
Port Townsend 22/1

2016-2017 (fall and winter):

Coupeville 32/3
Klahowya 24/1
Port Townsend 22/1
Chimacum 13/-

All-time:

Klahowya 121/9
Coupeville 114/9
Port Townsend 64/3
Chimacum 62/4

Now first, if you’re counting football, volleyball, girls soccer, boys tennis and girls and boys basketball, you might think I missed a title this year.

I didn’t, though, as the Olympic League united with the Nisqually League for football, and when the 8-team gridiron conglomerate anointed its champ, the crown went to outsider Cascade Christian.

Looking at the numbers, here’s what I see happening over the first two-and-two-thirds years of our conference.

In the early going Klahowya, which is the second-largest 1A school in the state with 445 students in the last WIAA classification count, got off to a strong start.

To the surprise of probably many, Coupeville, which is the smallest school in the league (227 students to PT’s 278 and Chimacum’s 250) hung tough, then quickly realized it could do more than just that.

While KSS has nearly double the student body of CHS, after years of facing down large 2A schools and private school powerhouses in the Cascade Conference, any fear factor evaporated quickly.

In year two, every other school’s win numbers went up, at Klahowya’s expense.

Plus, in a huge psychological boost, Coupeville doubled its league titles in year two, repeating in girls basketball and tennis, while taking baseball and boys tennis away from the Eagles.

That trend is continuing in year three, as boys tennis and girls basketball repeated (the hoops squad is 27-0 all-time in league play), while volleyball snatched another title away from Klahowya.

As we head into the spring, Coupeville’s greatest strength is girls tennis, which has swept titles in both years, going 11-0 in league play.

Klahowya can counter with boys soccer, also a two-time champ, and 12-0 all-time.

The two sports which could decide things are the ones played on the diamond.

Chimacum is a two-time defending softball champ, but the Eagles have the league’s best player in standout junior hurler Amber Bumbalough.

The Wolves, who got off to a great start last year, then spiraled a bit at the end, boast a lineup stacked with young talent like Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell, Sarah Wright and Lauren Rose.

Baseball went to Klahowya in year one, then Coupeville surprised in year two.

The Wolves lost key players to graduation in CJ Smith and Cole Payne, while Port Townsend, which went win-less in 2016, is seeing a noticeable uptick in all boys sports across the board this year.

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Nicole Lester (John Fisken photo)

   Nicole Lester had five rebounds and a blocked shot Saturday, as the Wolf JV rolled to its third straight win. (John Fisken photo)

Not so fast, Eagles.

Klahowya might have been feeling pretty good, having pushed the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad to the final seconds in a two-point loss Tuesday, but Saturday was a far different story.

Riding a 13-point, seven-rebound performance from Sarah Wright, the Wolf young guns were in destroy mode this time around, pasting their visitors 42-24.

The win, Coupeville’s third straight and sixth in their last seven, lifts CHS to 5-0 in Olympic League play, 9-3 overall.

Of course, give the young Wolves forfeits for the three times Chimacum and Port Townsend have failed to provide a JV team this season and it’s more like 8-0, 12-3.

After struggling at times earlier in the week, the Wolves played to their full potential this time around.

“Well, we didn’t make any friends from Klahowya today,” said an amused coach Amy King. “I asked the JV to not make it a close two-point game and they aim to please.”

The Wolves mixed things up on defense, starting in a man-to-man look, then snapping into a 1-2-2 press.

“We decided to go a little different to start,” King said. “The lesson early on is that Maya (Toomey-Stout) is the quickest player on the court.

“When she plays you on defense, you don’t get to shoot.”

When they had the ball on offense, the Wolves mixed things up, with Toomey-Stout, Ashlie Shank and Avalon Renninger all chipping in with points in the early going.

As soon as Klahowya went to focus on one CHS player, another rose up and stung them.

Brittany Powers exploded off of the bench, banging home a long bucket, then topping that the next time down the floor with an even-longer three-ball.

Not to be outdone, Toomey-Stout promptly drilled her own trey and the rout was on.

King kept things interesting, shifting her defense into a 2-3 zone, then a 3-2, confounding the Eagles.

When Klahowya tried to counter with its own zone look, the Wolves promptly broke it, with Ema Smith spearheading things and triggering Coupeville’s offense.

“I was proud of the way the girls fought,” King said. “They found a way to get shots up. When one or two of us struggled, someone else was there to pick them up.”

Wright paced the Wolves, pounding away down low for her 13, while Toomey-Stout tickled the twines for eight and Powers was money with seven.

Renninger (6), Shank (5) and Scout Smith (3) rounded out the attack, with Ema Smith and Shank both hauling down six rebounds apiece.

Nicole Lester collected five caroms and emphatically rejected an Eagle shot.

Emma Mathusek (three steals, two rebounds), Maddy Hilkey (two steals) and Tia Wurzrainer (two rebounds) all chipped in, as well.

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(John Fisken photo)

   David King has the Coupeville girls flying high at 13-3, winners of nine straight. (John Fisken photo)

No quit in these Wolves.

Overcoming fatigue, a short-turnaround and the danger of overlooking a cellar-dwelling team they had just drilled four days prior, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad took care of business Saturday afternoon.

Playing methodically, and turning up their vaunted defense to a higher level in the second half, the Wolves romped past visiting Klahowya 37-19 to pull within a win of completing their third straight undefeated league season.

Now sitting at 8-0 in Olympic League play, 13-3 overall, Coupeville has won nine straight.

The Wolves have a unique home-and-away non-conference series with Sequim Monday and Thursday, then close the regular season at home Feb. 4 against Port Townsend, where they will make a bid to improve to 27-0 all-time in Olympic League play.

After that comes the playoffs, which don’t start until Feb. 14.

Coupeville, as a #1 seed, will begin in the double-elimination portion of districts, needing two wins to return to the state tourney.

Saturday, the Wolves were playing their second game in less than 24 hours, having knocked off Chimacum Friday night.

Many of the Wolves were back in the gym at 8:15 Saturday to coach and ref youth basketball, before taking the floor for an early 12:30 tip-off.

Fatigue seemed to catch up to CHS in the early going, as it weathered crisp shooting from Klahowya’s Amber Bumbalough and held just a 9-7 lead after the first quarter.

“The first quarter was a struggle,” said Wolf coach David King. “Many of our jump shots were short (tired legs); we just didn’t have the lift needed in the legs, even though the mind told us differently.

“What kept us in the quarter was our offensive rebounds and put backs.”

Things began to take a turn for the better in the second, as Coupeville shied away from long jumpers and attacked the basket en route to a 12-6 advantage.

Despite being up 21-13 at the break, the Wolves rallied together as a team in the locker room, pledging to put the game away.

“The great thing at halftime was the whole team wasn’t satisfied with our halftime lead or our effort,” King said. “They knew we could play better in the second half.”

And they did, using a 14-2 surge in the third to take the last bit of fight out of Klahowya.

Key was going to a press on defense, which triggered a number of easy buckets off of turnovers.

The Wolves were quick to back each other up on defense, something which brought a smile to their coach’s face.

Whether it was Lindsey Roberts alertly moving to pick up a player after a teammate slipped, or Tiffany Briscoe sliding over to shut-down Roberts original rival, the Wolves were firing as a group, five players working as one.

That carried over to the offensive end, where several players stepped up to have one of their better shooting performances of the season.

Junior Mikayla Elfrank pumped in a game-high 11, while speedy Kalia Littlejohn knocked down eight and Roberts banked in seven.

Briscoe (3), Mia Littlejohn (3), Kailey Kellner (3) and Sarah Wright (2) rounded out the offensive attack.

“Every game we have players stepping in and up to help with the scoring,” King said.

Roberts also hauled down 10 boards, while Lauren Grove added four rebounds and three steals. Both Littlejohn sisters doled out three assists apiece.

While he would like to work on cleaning up some areas (free throws and minimizing turnovers), King likes the grit he sees from his players.

“This team never quits,” he said. “Never thinks they are out of a game if down or if our lead starts to shrink.

“They are unflappable! They refuse to lose.”

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