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Posts Tagged ‘Madison McMillan’

Taylor Brotemarkle delivered another strong all-around performance Thursday as the Coupeville JV spikers won their third-straight match. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ruthless.

Or, exactly the way you like to see them play.

Taking advantage of every Orcas Island error, while not committing a whole lot of their own Thursday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad strolled to a straight-sets win.

Dominating play from start to finish, the Wolf spikers captured a 25-15, 25-10 home victory to remain perfect on the season.

Now 3-0, Coupeville’s JV has yet to drop a set in Northwest 2B/1B League action.

After polishing off Concrete and Mount Vernon Christian in earlier matches, the Wolves jumped all over the Vikings.

Orcas stayed close for a half-second, remaining within 6-5 in the first set, before Coupeville made its move.

When the Wolves struck, they did so with power and precision.

The first big blow came courtesy freshman Mia Farris, who popped a spike right down the middle of the floor for a winner, grabbing control of service from the visitors.

That sent Gwen Gustafson to the line, and she was electric, running off seven straight points on her serve.

The opening salvo was a crisp ace which dropped from the heavens and skidded away from the Orcas hitters, while three other points during the run came on serves which the Vikings also couldn’t get back into play.

One of the few times the visitors staged a mini-rally off of a Gustafson serve, the back-and-forth finished prematurely.

That’s because Wolf frosh Madison McMillan promptly rose up and unleashed a spike which crashed into the back corner for a decisive rally-ender.

Madison McMillan filled up the stat sheet.

From there, Farris, Taylor Brotemarkle, and Issabel Johnson all had strong runs at the service line, as CHS closed out the opening set with conviction.

The prettiest point came courtesy Brotemarkle, who bounded into the air as she approached the net, deftly dropping a hook shot over the heads of several Vikings who could do little but watch the ball bounce merrily away.

While Coupeville let Orcas hang around for a bit in set one, it did no such thing in round two.

Brotemarkle fired off some nasty serves — she had a team-high six aces on the night — and the Wolves jumped out to a 6-0 lead, effectively ending things right from the get-go.

Jada Heaton sparkled in set #2, twice teaming up with a friend to deny Orcas at the net.

The first block was made by a team-up between Heaton and Katie Marti, while the second featured Aby Wood getting in on the action.

Toss in a spike from Gustafson which sliced off a rival player’s knee-cap, and one from McMillan which blew a large crater in the hardwood floor as it slammed down, and Coupeville coasted in for the win.

A look at the stat sheet backs up what fans saw with their own eyes — it was a remarkably consistent team-wide attack, sure to make coach Ashley Menges dream happy dreams.

McMillan pounded home four kills to pace the Wolves, while she and Johnson each had three digs.

Marti topped the team with two assists, with Farris and McMillan both collecting three aces to go with the six from Brotemarkle.

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Madison McMillan put together a strong performance Tuesday as the Coupeville JV volleyball team swept Mount Vernon Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They dropped the hammer. Again and again.

Pounding out serves with precision, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball spikers scorched visiting Mount Vernon Christian in straight sets Tuesday, sweeping to their second win in as many matches.

Now the Wolves carry that pristine 2-0 record into another home Northwest 2B/1B League match Thursday, when Orcas Island visits Whidbey.

Facing off with MVC, all nine Wolves in uniform filled up the stat sheet, which kept coach Ashley Menges beaming long into the night.

“It went really well!,” she said. “The girls played great throughout all three sets; our serving was very clean and yet really aggressive.

“Everyone played really well in all aspects whether it was clean passing or putting the ball away,” Menges added. “I asked of them to make the third set the best volleyball they could, and they definitely delivered!

While everyone delivered solid performances for the Wolves, fab frosh Madison McMillan was a particular focal point, compiling a team-high five kills, two service aces, and two digs.

Madison had a great night!,” Menges said. “She had some powerful swings tonight, but my favorite was a perfectly placed out of system kill.

“The kid had some great passes and serve receptions; I’m very happy with how she played tonight.”

Fellow freshman Taylor Brotemarkle dazzled with six assists and a staggering 11 aces, while Issabel Johnson (three digs, three aces) and Katie Marti (three kills, two assists, three aces) were also on top of their game.

Mia Farris (two kills, three aces), Gwen Gustafson (three kills, two aces), Aby Wood (one kill), Jada Heaton (one ace), and Grey Peabody (one kill) also chipped in to the splendid team-wide effort.

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Madison McMillan is a three-sport athlete with a very bright future. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Madison McMillan is in a unique position.

As she prepares to enter Coupeville High School as a freshman this fall, the three-sport star already knows what it’s like to be a high school athlete.

McMillan was one of seven 8th grade girls who played above their grade level last year, helping a CHS hoops program which struggled with low numbers.

Given an extra, early season of high school basketball, she tallied 33 points across five JV games in a pandemic-altered season, finishing second on her squad in scoring.

McMillan powers in for a bucket. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not content to stop there, McMillan quickly moved to the softball diamond, capping her final season in little league by being a homerun-bashing supernova — first for Central Whidbey’s juniors squad, then for an All-Star team which finished fourth at the state tourney.

Along the way, she crushed an out-of-the-park dinger which brought back memories of previous Coupeville sluggers like Hailey Hammer and Veronica Crownover, who both went on to have legendary four-year runs on the high school diamond.

Toss in volleyball, and McMillan plans to be a busy bee during her high school days, playing year-round.

“As long as my grades are good!,” she said with a laugh.

McMillan is part of a tight-knit group of talented young Coupeville athletes who have grown up together, uniting as teammates and friends.

“My most favorite thing about being an athlete is playing the sport with friends and winning and losing as a team,” she said.

“I also love the sense of competition between teams, because both teams want to win.”

McMillan, who enjoys history and English classes when in school, tabs sports classics A League of Their Own and Miracle as her favorite films.

Ready to drop the hammer. (Jackie Saia photo)

Her love of sports has led her to embrace the idea of being a three-sport athlete, which is huge at a small school like Coupeville, which needs as many players as possible.

“My favorite sport really depends on the season,” McMillan said. “Like, if it was the fall, my favorite sport would most likely be volleyball.

“Or, if it was spring and summer then it would be softball, when winter would be basketball,” she added. “So I’m pretty fortunate to have a sport for each season.”

As she has grown as an athlete and young woman, McMillan has had many mentors, with her grandparents, Gordon and Nancy, standing out.

“My grandpa definitely had the greatest influence on not only my sports career, but my life as well,” McMillan said. “He coached the tee-ball team I was on, and rookies.

“And along with my grandma, he comes to cheer every single game, no matter what sport it is.

“And jokes if I play college sports he and my grandma will buy a trailer and drive to each game.”

McMillan and Teagan Calkins celebrate as they roll to another win. (Jackie Saia photo)

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Madison McMillan cranked a game-changing three-run home run Sunday, keeping Whidbey’s state title hopes alive. (Jackie Saia photos)

Adyson Morales whiffed seven batters for the Inferno.

I assumed something went wrong with my phone.

Working on my sister’s farm Sunday, I peeked once to see how the Whidbey Island All-Star juniors softball team was doing in its loser-out game at the state tourney in Vancouver.

The answer: the Inferno were scuffling, held to three singles and no runs through five innings, and trailing South Hill of Puyallup 5-0.

Three hours later, I grabbed my phone, saw that the GameChanger app was claiming Whidbey had won 19-10, preserving its hopes of a state title, and thought I had tapped on the wrong game.

But it was true. All true.

Really. Seriously. Really.

Staging one of the great comebacks in Whidbey youth athletic history, the Inferno unleashed a tsunami in the final two innings, raining down 19 runs on 21 hits, including nine of the extra-base variety.

Better still, 13 of those runs, including a game-changing out-of-the-park three-run home run from Coupeville’s Madison McMillan, came with the Inferno just a single out away from being eliminated.

South Hill needed 21 outs to stay alive and move on to face Mukilteo Monday night in another loser-out game, but got to 20 outs and then promptly imploded.

Or, more accurately, Whidbey dropped a nuclear bomb on their foes hopes and dreams, creating a beautiful ballet of death and destruction on the diamond.

“That was nuts,” said mentally-exhausted Inferno coach Fred Farris. “Greatest sports moment I’ve been a part of, or frankly ever watched.

“I’m speechless!”

You can sum the first five innings of the game up by simply saying, “Not much was working for Whidbey.”

Maybe still reeling a bit from a one-run loss to Camas Saturday in their tourney opener, the Inferno couldn’t get anything started.

Savina Wells and Loto Tupu whacked singles in the second inning, only to be stranded, and that was almost the full extent of Whidbey’s offensive output until late.

But big bats can stay quiet only so long, and the Inferno finally broke through.

Trailing 5-0 heading into the top of the sixth inning, Whidbey got a one-out single from Taylor Brotemarkle, then started to find its usual free-flowing groove.

After not getting a single extra-base hit up until then, the Inferno unloaded for five doubles in the inning, with Payton Ludemann, Adyson Morales, Wells, McMillan, and Tupu all bashing the ball.

That allowed Whidbey to scrape together six runs and take their first lead of the game at 6-5, but it was a lead which vanished almost as quickly as it came.

South Hill bounced right back to slap four runs on the scoreboard in the bottom half of the frame, regaining the upper hand at 9-6, and things looked dire.

A strong defensive play, with Brotemarkle rifling a throw off a one-hopper to right, and Mia Farris making “an incredible stretch” to haul in the throw at first, kept the damage from being worse.

But things weren’t looking good in the top of the seventh and final inning, as two of Whidbey’s first three hitters went down.

Haylee Burleigh poked a single to left to put one runner aboard, but the end of the season, and the little league careers of many of the Inferno players, seemed a mere moment away.

Who knew that final moment would stretch out into eternity?

With everything hinging on her, Coupeville catcher Teagan Calkins — an artful photographer, a quick cross country runner, and a high-achieving student — ambled to the plate.

And thus began the Ragnarok which would reduce South Hill to a pile of rubble.

Calkins whacked a single to center to keep the game going, Wells followed with an RBI single to short to cut the lead to 9-7, then McMillan got epic.

Swinging the hammer of the gods, one of Coupeville’s best and brightest mashed the kind of dinger which can define a career, and launch years of future softball excellence in her home town.

Boom, 10-9 Inferno — game over on the spot, essentially, even if the two teams played on for a while longer.

Her coach, who has seen a lot of games in a lot of sports in his time, was suitably impressed.

Madison hit it WAY over the fence,” Fred Farris said. “The girls really fed off that.

“It was probably five foot fair and 20 feet over the foul pole, and still climbing!”

There were still 10 more hits, and another nine runs to score before the inning came to an end, and it was artistry, pure artistry.

One out from elimination, the Inferno responded with 13 consecutive hits, with Calkins, Wells, McMillan, and Layla Suto collecting two base-knocks apiece during the streak.

The run only came to an end when Mia Farris was drilled by a pitch, one of two times Whidbey players were plunked on the afternoon, but by then, South Hill was dead and buried.

The Puyallup nine did scrape out one run in the bottom of the seventh, but couldn’t mount a rally against Wells, who was on in relief of Morales.

Whidbey’s pitchers combined for nine strikeouts on the afternoon, with Morales netting seven of those.

Calkins and Wells finished with four hits apiece to pace the Inferno, with McMillan thumping three and collecting a game-high six RBI.

Burleigh (2), Morales (2), Suto (2), Tupu (2), Brotemarkle (2), Mia Farris (1), Ludemann (1), and Katie Marti (1) also garnered hits, with Jada Heaton and Lilly Norman rounding out Whidbey’s roster.

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Taylor Brotemarkle tied for the team lead in RBI as the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad won the District 11 regular-season title. (Jackie Saia photo)

They were a hit machine.

Getting base-knocks from the top of the order to the bottom of the lineup this season, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad was a group of bash-happy young women.

And it served them well, as the Hammerheads finished 9-3 after sweeping a doubleheader Saturday from South Skagit.

The twin bill at Rhododendron Park was the regular-season finale, as Central Whidbey clinched the District 11 regular-season championship.

For some of the Hammerheads it was the end of the season, while others will join with players from Oak Harbor to form a Whidbey Island All-Stars squad which begins postseason play June 28.

As he basked in the afterglow of a doubleheader sweep and a successful season, CWLL coach Fred Farris reflected on the moment, while also looking ahead.

“Well, that’s a wrap,” he said. “All the girls contributed. So proud of this group and they’ll be fun to watch the next four years in high school!”

How Saturday played out:

 

Game 1:

Central Whidbey busted open a tie game, then went on to mercy-rule South Skagit 20-10.

The Hammerheads went with either feast or famine, scoring nine runs in the first, five in the third, and six to end the game in the bottom of the fifth.

In between, CWLL went scoreless in the second and fourth, yet had the visitors on the edge all game.

Savina Wells drew the start and prowled the pitcher’s circle like she owned the joint, whiffing eight batters en route to the win.

At the plate, the Hammerheads whacked 14 hits, with Jada Heaton bopping a double, Wells smacking a triple, and Mia Farris going big-time with not one, but two, resounding three-baggers.

Both of her triples came off of frozen ropes smoked to the opposite field gaps.

 

Game 2:

More of the same, as Central Whidbey racked up 13 hits and rolled to a 21-9 win which again was halted early thanks to the mercy rule.

This time out, it was all about the two-baggers, with five of those base-knocks being doubles.

Teagan Calkins and Katie Marti, who also “caught a solid two games,” each collected one of the extra-base hits, while Wells was liquid fire, rapping out three doubles as South Skagit had no answer for her electric bat.

Chloe Marzocca and Calkins combined to pitch the game, with Marzocca registering four K’s.

 

Saturday stats:

Teagan Calkins (5 runs, 2 hits, 4 RBI, 5 walks)
Mia Farris
(4 runs, 4 hits, 2 RBI, 1 walk)
Savina Wells
(6 runs, 7 hits, 6 RBI)
Madison McMillan
(5 runs, 2 hits, 1 walk)
Taylor Brotemarkle
(5 runs, 3 hits, 2 RBI, 3 walks)
Jada Heaton
(5 runs, 3 hits, 4 RBI, 3 walks)
Katie Marti
(3 runs, 1 hit, 2 RBI, 3 walks)
Chloe Marzocca
(4 runs, 3 hits, 4 RBI, 1 walk)
Candace Meek
(2 runs, 1 RBI, 2 walks)
Anna Steckman
(1 walk)
Mayleen Weatherford
(2 runs, 2 hits, 1 RBI, 1 walk)

 

Season stat leaders:

Plate appearances — Mia Farris (51)
At-Bats — Savina Wells (44)
Batting average — Savina Wells (.705)
Hits — Savina Wells (31)
Doubles — Madison McMillan (9)
Triples — Savina Wells (6)
Runs — Savina Wells (31)
RBI — Taylor Brotemarkle and Savina Wells (23)
Walks — Teagan Calkins (11)
Hit by pitch — Madison McMillan (5)
On-Base Percentage — Madison McMillan (.760)
Stolen bases — Jada Heaton (32)

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