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Posts Tagged ‘Lauren Rose’

Tiffany Briscoe (John Fisken photo)

Tiffany Briscoe, seen here earlier in the season, drilled a hard-hit single to center Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

The final score wasn’t pretty, but some of the plays were.

It’s easy to look at the scoreboard and see that visiting Lynden Christian drilled Coupeville 21-6 Wednesday in a softball game shut down after five innings, and make assumptions.

Many of those assumptions would be wrong.

The Lyncs did smack the ball around at a pretty strong clip, but the Wolves (1-4) didn’t just fold up and meekly go down.

With stellar defensive play from first baseman Kyla Briscoe and third baseman Monica Vidoni, both newcomers to the corner infield positions, CHS did its best to limit the damage in the field.

Briscoe made a beautiful snag on a liner in the fifth, then proved it wasn’t a fluke, making an unassisted putout on a hard grounder on the very next play.

Vidoni, filling in for the injured Hailey Hammer, knocked down several balls hit her way, following the ball and successfully gunning down the runner.

The game’s best web gem might have belonged to Wolf catcher Lauren Rose, however.

With the bags juiced in the first and two runs in, a pitch got away from the freshman.

Never blinking, she whirled, scrambled after the bouncing ball, nabbed it and spun and fired to pitcher Katrina McGranahan, who slapped on the tag for the inning-ending out.

Rose also had the key hit during Coupeville’s best extended offensive surge.

The Wolves used six walks and Rose’s rocket of an RBI single down the right field line to rally for four runs in the second inning.

Lauren is really hitting the ball well right now,” said Wolf coach Deanna Rafferty. “I can’t say enough good things about how she’s playing for us.”

The Wolves had a patient eye, drawing 12 walks in the game, but struggled a bit when it came to making contact, scraping together just three hits.

Vidoni beat out an infield single, Rose thumped her base hit and Tiffany Briscoe crushed a single to center field that a Lynden outfielder got the tip of her glove on, but was unable to haul in.

With Hammer, the team’s primary power source, having missed two games (she’s expected back Friday to face South Whidbey), the Wolves took another body hit late in the game.

Plucky second baseman Jae LeVine took a shot off of her ankle, but, after going down to her knee for a bit, recovered to stand upright, hands above her head in a classic “Rocky” pose her fans know by heart.

She was a bit gimpy after the game as she ran out to rake the infield, but her mile-wide smile was still intact, a good sign for a team with a young, thin roster.

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Lauren Rose swings away. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose swings away. (John Fisken photo)

Munchkin is swinging the bat like a monster.

The Coupeville High School softball squad continues to get lively hitting from freshman catcher Lauren Rose, but even that wasn’t enough to save the Wolves Monday.

Hampered by the loss of hard-hitting slugger Hailey Hammer (out until Friday after being hit in the face by a ball in her team’s previous game), CHS wasn’t able to sustain any offense, falling 6-0 at Bellevue Christian.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 1-3 on the season.

Without Hammer’s formidable pop in the middle of the lineup, a young Coupeville team is working to find a groove at the plate.

“We are still struggling with our batting but are slowly improving,” said Wolf coach Deanna Rafferty.

Rose and fellow frosh Katrina McGranahan both had hard hit singles to lead the limited offensive show.

In the field, the Wolves held up well, with Monica Vidoni standing in for Hammer at third.

Monica held her own,” Rafferty said. “Our defense is improving each game and hopefully our offense can catch up.”

The defensive star for the day was second baseman Jae Levine, who displayed a nimble glove.

She snared a pair of rocket line drives hit right at her, before turning an unassisted double play when she snagged a ball in mid-air and then chased down a runner who had strayed off the bag.

The Wolves return to action Wednesday when they host Lynden Christian. First pitch is 4 PM.

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Lauren Rose was electric Friday, knocking in four runs to spark the Wolves to their first win of the season. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose was electric Friday, knocking in four runs to spark the Wolves to their first win of the season. (John Fisken photo)

The victory was the first as a high school coach for Deanna Rafferty (right), seen here with Robin Cedillo. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   The victory was the first as a high school coach for Deanna Rafferty (right), seen here with Robin Cedillo. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Someone flipped a switch.

A Coupeville High School softball squad that had scored just one run in its first two losses exploded with sustained fury Friday, bashing host Port Townsend to a merry 19-11 tune.

The victory, the first for new coach Deanna Rafferty, puts the Wolves atop the Olympic League standings at a pristine 1-0.

CHS is 1-2 overall and will have five non-conference games before its next league game.

Coupeville came out on fire, took a hit on defense for a bit, then really brought out the big guns against the Redhawks.

The Wolves built a 6-0 lead headed to the bottom of the third, fell behind 9-7 after five, then closed with consecutive six-run innings.

Swinging the bat with conviction, nearly everyone in the lineup was a beast at the plate.

Freshman Lauren Rose led the way, reaching base five times and knocking in four runs, while McKayla Bailey and Hope Lodell chipped in with three RBIs apiece.

Bailey hit a shot to the farthest reaches of the outfield, and might have had an inside the park home run if the ball hadn’t found a hole in the fence. Instead, she accepted a ground rule double.

“We had an overall great offensive game,” Rafferty said.

Katrina McGranahan got the start on the mound and contributed an “award-winning diving catch” before being relieved by the flame-throwing Bailey in the fifth.

The senior hurler promptly struck out a pair of Port Townsend hitters in the inning and got the win when the Wolves rebounded at the plate.

About the only negative for Coupeville was the loss of senior third baseman Hailey Hammer, who took a softball to the head and left the game early.

She’s expected to be back when the Wolves travel to Bellevue Christian Monday.

In her place, freshman Heather Nastali made her varsity debut and “had a couple rough plays but held her own.”

Rafferty came away pleased not only with the result, but the timing of the victory.

“We are incredibly happy with our first win and for it to also be a league game,” she said.

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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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Lauren Rose (Amy King)

Julia Myers (rear) and Lauren Rose get chummy. (Amy King photos)

dinner

Myers, Kacie Kiel (center) and Hailey Hammer dig into a pre-playoff team dinner.

team

The first CHS hoops team to win a league title since 2002.

dinner

Back to the dinner table.

team

Rose gets a lift.

David

CHS head coach David King ponders the future while sweeping the gym.

Tonight’s the night.

Coming off the best regular season performance in a decade, the 15-5 league champion Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad starts its postseason run in less than 12 hours.

The Wolves open against Bellevue Christian (a rematch of an early season game they lost 52-51) in the first game of a district doubleheader at Sumner High School.

Tip-off is 6 PM, with Seattle Christian and Cascade Christian playing afterwards.

Win or lose, Coupeville returns to Sumner Wednesday.

A victory tonight puts them in the championship game. A loss drops them into a loser-out game.

Win two before they lose two and the Wolves will advance to regionals Feb. 27-28 with a chance to punch their ticket to state for the first time since 2005-2006.

To get you ready, a medley of behind the scenes photos courtesy CHS assistant coach Amy King.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1446

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