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Posts Tagged ‘letter of intent’

CHS senior Mitchell Hall checks out his college letter of intent. (Willie Smith photos)

Hall signs autographs for his teammates.

Wolf coaches and athletes came out in support of their college-bound teammate.

Mitchell Hall will be a Fightin’ Engineer.

The Coupeville High School senior signed a letter of intent Thursday to run cross country next fall for the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

The NCAA D-III school, located in Terra Haute, Indiana, is a member of the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference.

Rose-Hulman kicks off a new cross country season with a home meet Sept. 1 on the LaVern Gibson Championship Course.

Hall signed his letter of intent a day after he and his CHS track and field teammates celebrated Senior Night.

He entered the week ranked in the Top 10 in two events among all 2B athletes.

Hall is currently the 5th fastest male runner in the 1600 and is part of a 4 x 400 Wolf relay squad ranked #9 in its classification.

A four-year cross country runner for CHS, he advanced to the state championships as both a junior and senior.

In addition, Hall won the boys individual title at the Northwest 2B/1B League meet in his final go-round.

At Rose-Hulman, the speedy Wolf will join a program which claimed the league title in 2022 and boasted 32 runners on its roster last fall.

The Fightin’ Engineers rep rose and white colors, with Rosie the Elephant holding the spotlight as school mascot.

RHIT was started in 1874 and boasts a curriculum focusing “on both career preparation and undergraduate-driven research in STEM-fields.”

Founder Chauncey Rose launched the school “to provide technical training after encountering difficulties in local engineer availability during construction of his railroads.”

Noted alumni include Barzilla W. Clark, the former Governor of Idaho, Art Nehf, who pitched 15 seasons in Major League Baseball, and Abe Silverstein, who was “responsible for the conception, design, and construction of America’s first supersonic propulsion wind tunnels.”

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Coupeville softball star Sarah Wright has signed to play college ball for Sewanee: The University of the South in Tennessee. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Softball is carrying Sarah Wright across the country.

The Coupeville High School senior signed a letter of intent Wednesday to play for Sewanee: The University of the South, an NCAA D-III school in Tennessee.

While attending the liberal arts college, Wright plans to study politics, but will also spend a fair amount of time hanging around the diamond.

“I can’t imagine my life without softball,” she said in her Senior Night farewell. “And I am blessed enough to continue to play the sport I love.

“Go Tigers!”

The school, which is commonly referred to as simply Sewanee, offers 24 varsity sports.

The softball squad, coached by Merrit Yackey, went 3-27 this spring and graduates five of 11 players, leaving plenty of opportunity for Wright to make an immediate impact.

During her time at CHS, she’s been a four-year starter at catcher, while also pulling some side duty at third base and in the pitcher’s circle.

One of the most-ferocious sluggers ever to pull on a Wolf uniform, she brings smarts, grit, a surprising amount of speed, and eye-popping power to the diamond.

Wright is hitting .621 this season, with 41 hits, including 12 doubles, two triples, and four home-runs, while scoring 32 times and picking up 30 RBI.

During a four-year run she’s shared with fellow seniors Veronica Crownover and Nicole Laxton, the trio has won back-to-back league titles as juniors and seniors, while never losing a game to arch-rival South Whidbey.

Wright also played basketball for three seasons, volleyball for two, and soccer for two, and was named Homecoming Queen her senior season.

Sewanee softball, which plays in the Southern Athletic Association, currently has players from Florida, Tennessee, Alabama, Texas, and Pennsylvania on its roster.

A deep dive into Wikipedia reveals the campus (referred to as “The Domain” or “The Mountain”), sits on 13,000 acres atop the Cumberland Plateau, overlooking the Tennessee Valley.

The school was established in 1857, is affiliated with the Episcopal Church and has a long history of athletic and academic achievement.

The Sewanee Review, founded in 1892, is the oldest continuously-published literary magazine in the country, while 26 Rhodes Scholars have been launched from the campus.

Playwright and Pulitzer Prize winner Tennessee Williams, author of landmark plays such as The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, left his literary rights to the school.

There’s now a performance venue and teaching facility on campus named in his honor, and the school offers Tennessee Williams teaching fellowships.

The school can also lay claim to one of the great early-day athletic success stories.

The 1899 Sewanee Tigers football team went 12-0, with 11 shutouts, outscoring their foes 322-10.

Five of those wins came during a six-day, 2,500-mile road trip by train.

In a 2012 vote held by the College Football Hall of Fame, the 1899 Sewanee team nipped the 1961 Alabama squad and was named “the greatest collegiate football team of all time.”

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   CHS senior Katrina McGranahan signed a letter of intent Tuesday to play softball for Everett Community College. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

McGranahan was already a slugger back in her Little League days.

   Catching some Z’s with fellow Wolf softball star Lauren Rose on another long road trip. (Justine McGranahan photos)

   McGranahan puts pen to paper Tuesday during a signing ceremony which attracted a strong turnout of friends, family and fellow Wolf athletes. 

   McGranahan is joined by CHS softball teammates (l to r) Sarah Wright, Melia Welling, Scout Smith, Kyla Briscoe and Hope Lodell.

Killer Kat is taking her talents to Everett.

Coupeville High School senior softball standout Katrina McGranahan signed a letter of intent Tuesday and will join the Everett Community College sluggers next spring.

“This was the school she wanted and liked the best,” said CHS softball coach/dad Kevin McGranahan.

His daughter agreed, pointing to Everett’s proximity with Whidbey and the chance to be part of a tight-knit group as big factors in her choice.

“Everett has a great family atmosphere,” Katrina McGranahan said. “Every softball team I’ve been on has felt like a family, and I can’t wait to join the EvCC softball family.

“Everett is also really close to home; I am able to come back when I want,” she added. “Which is a plus! Because I would love to come back and support not only the (CHS) softball team but the volleyball team as well.

“Everett gives me the opportunity to continue my softball career and I couldn’t be more thankful.”

Before she pulls on a college uniform, the reigning Olympic League MVP has one more crack at leading her high school squad to the state tourney.

Coupeville, which fell just a single strike short of punching its ticket to the big dance in 2017, returns virtually every starter this spring.

Leading the way is McGranahan, who is a double threat, whipping strikes from the pitcher’s circle and thumping the heck out of the ball at the plate.

As a junior she went 18-5 as a pitcher, earning a save in the only game where she didn’t notch the decision.

McGranahan tossed 140 strikeouts in 144 innings of work, with 19 complete games, a no-hitter and a sparkling 1.56 ERA.

At the plate, she hit .524, piling up 33 hits, 34 runs and 37 RBI. That included five home runs, five triples and three doubles.

A two-sport star, McGranahan was also a league MVP during her junior volleyball season and was a major part of the Wolves winning back-to-back conference titles her final two seasons.

As a senior, she helped the CHS spikers return to the state tourney for the first time since 2004.

A serene superstar, a quiet leader who lets her skills do the talking, McGranahan shared Coupeville High School Female Athlete of the Year honors in 2016-2017 with Valen Trujillo.

McGranahan will be the second Wolf to make the jump to EvCC in recent years, as former Coupeville slugger Hailey Hammer just wrapped up a two-year run at first base for the Trojans.

Seeing his daughter prepare to strike out on her own, while pursuing her life-long love of softball, is big for Kevin McGranahan.

“From her father’s perspective –  I am extremely proud of her and excited for her opportunity to play at the collegiate level,” he said. “She has put in a lot of her own time during the off-season to make herself and her teams better and achieve her dream to play at the next level.

“I feel like it was only yesterday she picked up a softball for the first time and I saw her fall in love with the game,” Kevin McGranahan added. “No matter what happens from here I couldn’t be more proud of her.”

Having coached his daughter from little league through high school, Kevin McGranahan is justifiably proud of how she has grown during her time on the diamond.

Katrina has always been there for her team and has done everything she can to help the team succeed,” he said. “She has a natural athletic ability that has been a pleasure to coach and mold her into the athlete and person she is today.

“Softball has always been her passion. To see her achieve her goal is awesome,” Kevin McGranahan added. “Incoming freshmen and future Coupeville softball players should understand the commitment and off-season work that goes into making yourself the best you can be.

“Softball doesn’t end, the season comes and goes, but it is a year-long sport just like any other, and if you put in the work you will see the results.”

When Katrina transitions to the college game, her dad will change roles.

“I am excited to just be dad next year and get to watch from the sideline,” Kevin McGranahan said.

“Of course, once a coach always a coach, and it will be hard to not try to coach her after the games,” he added with a laugh.

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Kailey Kellner, on her way to scoring another basket. (John Fisken photo)

   Joined by high school hoops teammates Sarah Wright (left) and Lindsey Roberts (right) at her signing day. (Jennifer Kellner photo)

England to Cow Town to Buffalo.

The basketball journey of Kailey Kellner continues, as the Coupeville High School senior has signed a letter of intent to take the court for D’Youville College.

An NCAA D-III school, the New York-based institution found her through her recruiting website, and it was kismet.

“I visited there during the summer and it hit home with me,” Kellner said. “I’m so excited to continue my journey as a basketball player.”

After arriving in Coupeville midway through her freshman season, after a family move back to the USA, Kailey became an integral part of Wolf Nation.

A three-point gunner with a sweet shooting touch who was never afraid to get down and dirty in the paint — most memorably in a playoff win over Seattle Christian her junior season — she never lost a varsity game in Olympic League play.

Kellner also played softball and was a manager for the volleyball squad.

D’Youville College is a private co-ed college with a Roman Catholic tradition. It celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2008.

The school’s teams, the Bisons, play in the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference, a 10-team league.

The women’s hoops squad Kellner is joining finished 7-17 this winter.

While most of her future teammates hail from New York (seven of the nine possible returnees), she likely won’t be the only player from Washington state.

CeDrice Howard, who would be a sophomore next year, played her prep ball for Curtis High School.

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