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Madeline Roberts begins her school journey.

Madeline Roberts begins her school journey.

Senior Night for softball, with Roberts joined by mom Lisa Edlin (left) and lil' sis Ally. (John Fisken photo)

  Senior Night for softball, with Roberts joined by mom Lisa Edlin (left) and lil’ sis Ally Roberts. (John Fisken photo)

One day away from graduation.

As the Coupeville High School Class of 2014 prepares for their Friday night walk, take a quick look back at the first day of kindergarten, courtesy of future Wolf softball star Madeline Roberts.

Is she pointing to her name on the wall, or already showing how she’ll one day play defense, spearing liners over her head at shortstop?

I’m going with choice #2.

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Breeanna Messner (left) and McKayla Bailey pose with the sportsmanship awards they won at the state tourney. (Amy King photo)

   Breeanna Messner (left) and McKayla Bailey pose with the sportsmanship awards they won at the state tourney. (Amy King photo)

The magical mystery tour ended with a mix of smiles and tears.

Back-to-back losses at the 1A state tourney in Richland Saturday brought a close to one of the wildest Coupeville High School softball seasons in school history, but the memories put together by this squad will linger for a long time.

And I’m not just talking about the billion and a half cookies they made and/or bought for me this season. Though that was … sweet.

The splendid trio of CHS seniors — Breeanna Messner, Haley Sherman and Madeline Roberts — who played all four years with passion and hustle that were remarkable, went out on the short end of an 8-1 loss to Warden and a 5-2 thriller to Okanogan.

But they also went out having gotten to play nine playoff games this season, stretching through districts, tri-districts and state.

No Wolf softball team had put together that long of a postseason run since the immortal 2002 squad, which finished 3rd at state — the best finish by any team in any sport in school history.

Coupeville opened its first trip to the state tourney in 12 seasons by facing one of most imposing pitchers in the field.

“Warden had a dominating pitcher, 6-foot-2 or close to that,” said CHS coach David King. “She was long, threw hard and with her length it helped her fastball get on our hitters quicker than they were used to.

“She had a good rise ball and we were swinging under early on and just missing,” he added. “Later in the game, she seemed to slow down, lost some of her accuracy and we started to get the bat on the ball.”

The Wolves didn’t get a runner on until Hailey Hammer eked out a two-out walk in the fourth, and 15 of their 21 outs came via strikeouts.

McKayla Bailey, who was firing her own missiles from the mound, got a single off her rival hurler, while Sherman, back after recovering from injuring her ankle during tri-districts, thumped an RBI double to right center.

Warden, which cranked back-to-back home runs in the third, broke the game open with a five-run fourth, combining four hits, a walk and an error for the runs.

Bailey got back in a groove, however, keeping Warden on their heels after that.

The sixth was her best inning, as she shut her opponents down one-two-three with a strikeout, a pop up and a grounder that she snagged and flipped to Hammer to end the inning.

The second game of the afternoon was closer, but, once again, errors, which had bothered Coupeville during the regular season, reemerged as a villain.

“The errors hurt us this weekend,” King said. “When we only have one legitimate pitcher it’s not just tough on our team having to get extra outs, but it’s taxing on our pitcher.”

Coupeville did come up with a couple of web gems, however.

Freshman Tiffany Briscoe made “a very good running catch” in right, while Messner exploded from her position behind the plate to snuff out a bunt attempt, spearing it in mid-air and making “probably the defensive catch of the year.”

At the plate, the Wolves hit better in game two, getting doubles from Messner and Madeline Strasburg, but couldn’t find the big break-out inning they needed to upend Okanogan.

Bailey led the Wolves with three hits at state, while Messner and Hammer had two apiece. Strasburg, Sherman and Roberts each had one.

As they return home to The Rock, one thing remains ever true — this team, these 14 girls, endured, they improved, they went out with class and style.

Long after their season was supposed to be over, the surprise of the spring kept playing, and their giddy grins are the story of the season.

Wolf baseball, which went to state, was expected to be good (the core of that team won a state title as little leaguers).

Makana Stone is electric on the track oval, and Sylvia Hurlburt, Lathom Kelley and Co. are a worthy support crew.

Christine Fields has gone to state three times in three seasons, just like older brother Austin before her. Golf excellence flows through their veins.

Boys’ soccer, with the wham-bam scoring punch of sophomores Abraham Leyva and Zane Bundy, took huge strides, while Allie Hanigan and her tennis compatriots held their own all season with the best of the Cascade Conference.

But softball? Softball almost didn’t happen this season.

There were serious questions as to whether the Wolves would have enough bodies to field a team, and, when they did (barely), half the roster was unproven freshmen who would have played JV at any of the 2A schools from the Cascade Conference who beat up on CHS during the regular season.

But they never quit. They never gave in. They came back, game after game, through epic wins and demoralizing losses. They stayed upbeat. They remained a team to the end.

And they got the postseason run they so richly deserved, but couldn’t have expected. Small miracles do happen to good people.

Messner, Roberts, Sherman, Hammer, Strasburg, Bailey, Briscoe, Monica Vidoni, Emily Licence, Robin Cedillo, Erin Josue, Emily Coulter, Jae LeVine and manager Kailey Kellner — well done, ladies.

You made your town very, very proud.

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Madeline Roberts (left) and McKayla Bailey both took home multiple awards Wednesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Madeline Roberts (left) and McKayla Bailey both took home multiple awards Wednesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Haley Sherman

Haley Sherman, team captain and master of the stare down. (Amy King photo)

One last shindig before they hit the road.

With just hours to go before they depart for Eastern Washington and the state tournament, the Coupeville High School softball squad held a team awards banquet Wednesday night.

The headliner was senior shortstop Madeline Roberts, who was named as a First-Team All-Conference pick when Cascade Conference coaches voted.

Joining her in nabbing league honors were senior catcher Breeanna Messner and junior first baseman Hailey Hammer, who were named to the Second Team, and junior pitcher McKayla Bailey, who received Honorable Mention.

Messner, Roberts and Haley Sherman went out as four-year letter winners and were honored as team captains.

Other awards:

MVP — Messner

Best Offense — Roberts

Best Defense — Bailey

Spirit of the Wolf — Bailey

Most Inspirational — Madeline Strasburg

Most Improved — Emily Coulter

Most Improved Newcomer — Tiffany Briscoe

Letter winners:

McKayla Bailey
Tiffany Briscoe
Emily Coulter
Hailey Hammer
Jae LeVine
Emily Licence
Breeanna Messner
Madeline Roberts
Haley Sherman
Madeline Strasburg
Monica Vidoni

Participation award:

Robin Cedillo
Erin Josue

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Madeline Roberts (John Fisken photo)

Madeline Roberts is not to be trifled with. (John Fisken photo)

Well, it’s a race. Sort of…

Despite doing everything possible to give it away, the Coupeville High School softball squad is still clinging to the 1A/2A Cascade Conference’s #1 playoff seed for 1A schools.

Even after committing eight errors en route to getting bounced 10-0 at Lakewood Monday in the next-to-last regular season game.

The Wolves, now 4-14 overall, 3-14 in league play, are tied with South Whidbey, which lost its last game by forfeit after its only pitcher was injured in a play at the plate.

Coupeville, which owns the tiebreaker, having taken two of three from South Whidbey, closes the season in Granite Falls Tuesday, playing a 16-2 squad.

The Falcons face Archbishop Thomas Murphy … if they found a pitcher.

If the Wolves want to play much beyond Tuesday — they’re guaranteed at least two playoff games — they’ll need to dig down and come up with a better effort than what they displayed against Lakewood.

With rare exception, Coupeville was flat, and flat-out bad.

Eight errors in the field, a pair of Lakewood home runs, with the final one a shot to center that invoked the 10-run mercy rule in the sixth, and an anemic offense all conspired to deflate any Wolf hopes.

CHS never got a runner past second, accumulating just singles from Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg and Breeanna Messner. All three base knocks came in different innings.

The host Cougars answered with eleven hits, including four of the extra-base variety. Terah Barrio and Jennaka Larson both launched balls over the outfield fence for Lakewood.

Even in the midst of what was likely its worst game of the season, Coupeville did find one bright spot.

With two runners on and one out, senior shortstop Madeline Roberts speared a liner and tagged the runner, who had broken from the bag, for a wham-bam double play to end an inning.

She actually went for the triple play, trying to nab the runner coming off of first as well, before realizing she already had three outs in the inning.

While that was the rare ray of sun on a gloomy day, tomorrow is always another day. At least that’s CHS coach David King’s mindset.

“The great thing is, we get to board the bus tomorrow and see if we can take out our aggression at Granite Falls.”

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Madelien Strasburg gets jumped by her teammates after belting a home run to straight-away center field Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg gets jumped by her teammates after belting a home run to straight-away center field Monday. (John Fisken photos)

CHS coach David King high-fives Strasburg as she rounds third.

CHS coach David King high-fives Strasburg as she rounds third.

The dog pile at home.

The dog pile at home.

Goodbye, softball.

With one explosive swing of the bat Monday, Wolf junior Madeline Strasburg joined an exclusive club of long-ball lovers who have cleared the center field fence at Coupeville High School’s softball field.

Then the screamin’ and the dancin’ started.

For more photos from the game, head over to the link below:

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=6264&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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