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Posts Tagged ‘Klahowya’

Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

It’s a learning process.

Fielding a team without a single senior, with almost all of its key players freshmen or sophomores, the Coupeville High School softball squad is still very much a work in progress.

The early days of the season were a heady time, as the rally caps came out often en route to a 6-1 start.

Now, after taking a 7-1 loss at home to Klahowya Tuesday, the team’s third straight defeat, the Wolves are experiencing the bumps in the road.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 6-4 overall, 1-2 in league play and the Wolves slid into third-place in the 1A Olympic League standings.

Defending champ Chimacum (2-0, 6-4) sits on top, with Klahowya (1-0, 6-4) and Port Townsend (0-2, 0-6) sandwiched around Coupeville.

The Wolves, though, will have a strong opportunity to get back to their winnings ways, as they travel to Port Townsend Thursday, where they will try and add to the RedHawks two-year, 29-game losing streak.

If nothing else, the hits should come easier than they did Tuesday.

Klahowya hurler Amber Bumbalough, who was named the league MVP as a freshman, is continuing to roll in her second season of high school ball, and she was scorching as usual.

Coupeville, a fairly strong-hitting team, couldn’t get a base knock off of her until the fifth inning, when Tiffany Briscoe whacked a single to left.

Coming on the heels of a walk to Mikayla Elfrank, that gave the Wolves two on with nobody out, and a familiar pattern seemed to be emerging.

Fall behind early — in this case 4-0, largely on the basis of a three-run triple — then rally right back into the game.

Only, on this day, an alert Klahowya coach sprang from the dugout and got the hit negated on a technicality.

When Briscoe had entered the game, replacing Tamika Nastali in the second inning, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had forgotten to declare the change to the ump.

So, instead of a single, Coupeville was given an out.

“That’s on me, not Tiffany,” McGranahan said. “She did a great job up there, I just made a mistake. My mistake all the way.”

Coupeville finally got an official hit (or two) off Bumbalough in the sixth, when Lauren Rose lashed a lead-off liner to center field, followed by a gorgeous bunt single off of the bat of Hope Lodell.

“The Surgeon” dropped the ball neatly in front of and to the side of the Klahowya third-baseman, then burned down the base path to beat the throw by half a step.

The Wolves netted their lone run in the inning, with Rose scampering home on a fielder’s choice ground-out by Sarah Wright, but the rally died too quickly for the local fan’s liking.

Klahowya put the game away for good in the seventh, with an RBI triple, followed by a two-run dinger that cleared the fence.

With the game slipping away, Elfrank refused to go down easy.

Capping a solid all-around game, the sophomore sensation crushed a lead-off double in the seventh, pounding the ball about a foot short of a home-run.

Her big blow, combined with several nifty web gems at short, caught her coach’s eye.

Mikayla played strongly,” McGranahan said. “She was a rock for us; always nice to see.”

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Sage Renninger teamed with Payton Aparicio for a huge victory at first doubles Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Renninger teamed with Payton Aparicio for a huge victory at first doubles Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

Twice the wins. Twice the statement.

Bringing home two victories Tuesday, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad moved a huge step closer to defending its 1A Olympic League title.

Knocking off host Klahowya twice, the Wolves improved to 3-0 in league play, 5-3 overall.

That puts them a game-and-a-half up on Chimacum (1-1, 3-6) and three up on Klahowya (0-3, 4-8).

Beat the Cowboys Apr. 26 on their home court and Coupeville clinches its second straight league title banner.

The Wolves effectively eliminated Klahowya from title contention Tuesday by finishing off a win from a match that was left unfinished Mar. 24, before rolling to a second win in the day’s regularly scheduled match.

The earlier match had been frozen at 3-3 for close to a month, with Valen Trujillo and Sydney Jackson locked at 5-5 in the third set of their singles bout.

Trujillo came out loaded for bear Tuesday, winning eight of nine points as she polished off a 6-7(0-7), 6-4, 7-5 victory.

After that, she and her teammates rolled to a 4-2 win in the nightcap.

Complete Match #2 results:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Sydney Jackson 6-4, 6-3

“She had to work hard to win today’s match, but she came through, big time!,” said CHS coach Ken Stange.

2nd singlesSydney Autio beat Sophie Kovaleskie 6-1, 6-3

“It was a very businesslike win for Sydney. She was in control the whole way.”

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Ciara Perez 6-2, 6-0

Bree absolutely rolled.”

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Shania Rose/Haley Sargent 6-3, 1-6, 7-6(7-4)

Hailed by Stange as “the match of the day,” the Wolf sophomores battled back from down 5-4 in the final set to knock off a highly-regarded duo.

With two wins in two matches against Klahowya’s top dogs, Aparicio and Renninger have clinched the league’s top seed heading into the postseason.

“The goal: win league, win district … and beyond,” Stange said.

2nd doubles — McKenzie Bailey/Maggie Crimmins lost to Mary Ann Marker/Maddy Reinks 6-1, 6-2

3rd doublesKenzi LaRue/Kameryn St Onge lost to Taylor Bruce/Domnique Sutton 6-3, 6-2

4th doublesJulia Borges/Julianne Sem led Desiree Watts/Emma LaJoie 6-4, 1-4 (match stopped for Coupeville to catch ferry, but doesn’t affect outcome)

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Marc Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

   Marc Aparicio, seen here hanging out during a JV game, has the Wolf varsity sitting atop the 1A Olympic League at 3-0. (John Fisken photo)

You can admit it, you didn’t see this one coming.

I certainly didn’t.

Only the most diehard of diehard fans, the ones who approach every game with an unblinking faith which borders on mania, would have seen the Coupeville High School baseball team toppling Klahowya Tuesday.

And yet that’s exactly what happened.

Riding strong work on the mound from senior CJ Smith, key hits in the late going and an unflappable defense which bounced back from its few small errors to immediately make spectacular plays, the Wolves blanked the visiting Eagles 2-0.

The win, the fourth in the last six games for CHS, lifts it to 6-7 overall, and, more importantly, a flawless 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

That puts the Wolves a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (1-1, 10-3) and two up on Chimacum (1-2, 3-7) with six league games to play.

Port Townsend (0-2, 0-8), which visits Whidbey Thursday, sits in the basement.

So, how did Coupeville topple a Klahowya squad that came in with seven wins against 2A schools, a team that had rung up 99 runs and not come close to being shutout this season?

By believing in themselves.

“We played smart baseball,” said Coupeville coach Marc Aparicio. “We hit the ball hard and even when we weren’t scoring, we held in there.

“What I was most impressed with was our ability to stay focused,” he added. “At this level, you make some errors, but we recovered, didn’t throw it away and came back with big plays to erase those errors.”

The two teams battled through a scoreless game until the bottom of the sixth, when the Wolves used aggressive work at the plate and on the base-paths to crack things open.

Freshman Matt Hilborn beat out an infield single to kick things off, then Hunter Smith reached on a bunt single.

Except … after much complaining from the Klahoywa bench, the umps changed their mind and said Smith was actually out.

The moment seemed to swing momentum back to the Eagles, but the Wolves refused to play along.

CJ Smith ignored the commotion and promptly drove Hilborn home, then came around to score himself when Julian Welling whacked an RBI single two batters later.

Klahowya opened the seventh by getting its first runner on, but Coupeville refused to break, closing out the inning, and the game, with flawless defensive work.

As he basked in the victory, Aparicio praised his defense, one through nine, with a special shout-out to the work outfielders like Clay Reilly and Ethan Marx put in.

“Our outfield was very strong all the way around today,” he said.

First-baseman Kory Score also pulled off an unassisted double play, snaring a liner and catching a straying runner off of first, while Hilborn slapped on a note-perfect tag at third in which “he tagged the guy right in the face.”

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Coupeville is chomping through the 1A Olympic League the same way Luke Merriman eats hot dogs -- in big bites. (John Fisken photo)

   Coupeville is chomping through the 1A Olympic League the same way Luke Merriman eats hot dogs — in big bites. (John Fisken photo)

We are Darth Vader. At least for the moment.

Sparked by a top-drawer basketball season, Coupeville High School has slid past Klahowya to become the true rulers of the 1A Olympic League.

How is this possible? Let me break it down for you.

With the regular season done for basketball, when you look at the six varsity sports in which Coupeville has competed in so far during the 2015-2016 school year (four in the fall, two in the winter), the Wolves have won more games against league opponents than their rivals.

Now, we’re only counting official “league” games, and not the weird “non-league” volleyball and soccer matches played against league foes to fill out schedules in the fall.

Those games didn’t count in the official league standings, so they don’t count here.

So, with spring still ahead of us, and four more team sports to decide (baseball, softball, boys soccer and girls tennis), here’s where the league win tallies stand right now:

Coupeville (25)
Klahowya (23)
Port Townsend (18)
Chimacum (13)

The Wolves are also tied with Klahowya with two league titles, having retained their girls basketball top dog status while stealing boys tennis away from the Eagles.

For the sixth-smallest 1A school to be up on the second-biggest is an accomplishment, and Coupeville has done it so far by being spectacular in one sport, solid in almost every one, and, during their one weak season, not taking a zero.

The Wolves are the only school not to have a win-less league season in at least one sport this year.

Broken down by sports, the wins:

Coupeville — girls basketball (9), boys tennis (4), boys basketball (4), girls soccer (4), volleyball (3), football (1)
Klahowya — VB (6), girls soccer (6), girls BB (4), FB (4), boys tennis (3), boys BB (0)
Port Townsend — boys BB (7), FB (6), girls BB (4), girls soccer (1), VB (0), boys tennis (0)
Chimacum — boys BB (7), VB (3), FB (1), girls soccer (1), girls BB (1), boys tennis (0)

Last year, in the first go-round for the four-team league, Klahowya finished with 52 wins to Coupeville’s 40, while Chimacum (23) and Port Townsend (20) brought up the rear.

The Eagles won five titles in 2014-2015, to two each for Coupeville and Chimacum and one for the RedHawks.

With five of the six league champs having repeated so far, thanks to Chimacum’s miracle finish in boys’ basketball, where they were a basket away from losing their title, only to rally for four straight wins, that would seem to indicate a possible late surge ahead for Klahowya.

The Eagles are the defending champs in baseball and boys soccer.

But I wouldn’t count out Coupeville.

The Wolves are the defending league champs in girls tennis, and should return almost their entire squad.

And, in softball, where Chimacum slid in to snatch a title a year ago, the Wolves will be reuniting the squad which stormed to an undefeated season and a trip to state at the little league level two seasons ago.

With big bopper freshmen Veronica Crownover and Sarah Wright (and new CHS coach Kevin McGranahan) once again teaming with Hope Lodell, Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Co., the Wolf softball squad could be the surprise team of the spring.

As the next three months play out, the mythical league win title is very much up for grabs.

For the moment, though, if you want to know where the power resides, look no further than Cow Town.

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Brisa Herrera fought like a wild woman for every loose ball Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

   Brisa Herrera fought like a wild woman for every loose ball Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t perfect, maybe, but it was full of positives.

A year after a very polished squad rolled through much of its competition, this year’s version of the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was much more of a work-in-progress.

With a roster that included six freshmen, several of whom hadn’t played before, the young guns showed improvement every week, and that’s all that coach Amy King asks.

While Coupeville fell 47-31 to visiting Klahowya Saturday, the Wolves finished 7-11, including a strong 5-4 in league play.

They never had anything longer than a two-game losing streak, and featured several players who should be making the jump up to help the varsity in the coming years.

One of the first who could get the call up to the big leagues is freshman Sarah Wright, who capped her season by pounding away in the paint for a game-high 10 points Saturday.

A ferocious rebounder and enforcer, she’s joined in the let’s-pound-folks department by Brittany Powers.

Listed at a mere five-foot-two in the program — she ties Lauren “Mouse” Rose as the smallest Wolf — Powers spends her time on the floor thrashing people up one side of the court and down the other.

Saturday night was a prime example, as she twice exited, applied ice to another place she had been whacked by rogue Eagles, then charged right back on the court to repay the experience, earning a smile and nod from her coach.

The two mighty mites both tallied seven points apiece, with Powers twice taking the ball coast-to-coast for buckets, while Rose pulled off the game’s best move, slicing the defense for a runner, then tacking on the ensuing free throw.

Allison Wenzel added three, while Skyler Lawrence and Nicole Lester rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

Ashlie Shank and Maddy Hilkey pushed the ball all night, running the Wolf offense, while Lindsey Laxton and Brisa Herrera both shone on defense.

Herrera, in particular, spent most of her time on the floor ripping the ball loose from Eagles hands, making sure every called jump ball she was involved in actually ended with her hands alone on the ball.

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