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Posts Tagged ‘Madison McMillan’

Whidbey sluggers swing big, no matter what country they’re in. (Photo courtesy Gordon McMillan)

Put together a softball tournament with 2,000-plus players, and there’s a great chance some of those sluggers will hail from Cow Town.

The 30th annual Canada Cup runs July 4-13 in Surrey, British Columbia — AKA “Softball City” — and a number of Coupeville athletes are participating this season.

Recent CHS grads Taylor Brotemarkle and Madison McMillan, joined by Oak Harbor compatriots Layla Suto, Mia Regan, and Ramona Ryder, play for the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U team, which went 3-2 in their appearance.

That squad has a couple more tourneys on their schedule as its travel ball season runs through the end of July.

Also playing in Canada was the Island Vipers, which has a sizable chunk of Wolf varsity players on its roster.

Plus, All-World catcher Teagan Calkins is prepping for her senior year at CHS while anchoring Elevate NW Elite.

The Canada Cup draws teams from multiple states, with the USA and Canada being joined by squads from as far away as Israel, New Zealand, The Netherlands, and Taiwan.

Haylee Armstrong is chasing that softball life. (Photos courtesy Michelle Armstrong)

Big tourney, ritzy awards.

The days are packed.

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Haylee Armstrong (left) and Capri Anter played key roles for a high-flying CHS softball squad. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

They dominated on the field and off.

Putting together a 20-3 season, the Coupeville High School softball squad went four games deep at the 2B state tourney — the second-best performance in program history.

Thursday, Aaron Lucero and his coaching staff hailed their players for all their hard work throughout the spring, handing out letters and awards at a team banquet.

Topping things was the announcement that seven players received All-League honors when Northwest 2B/1B League coaches voted.

Seniors Mia Farris and Madison McMillan, junior Teagan Calkins, and freshman hurler Adeline Maynes were First-Team picks, with seniors Taylor Brotemarkle and Jada Heaton and sophomore Haylee Armstrong tabbed as Second-Team selections.

In team awards, Calkins, Coupeville’s ace catcher, was selected as the Most Outstanding Player.

McMillan was the Offensive MVP, Maynes the Defensive MVP, while Armstrong won the Dirt Bag Award and Farris earned the Heart Award.

Calkins, Farris, and McMillan were honored for their work as team captains, while Heaton, Brotemarkle, Chloe Marzocca, McMillan, and Farris received Four-Year Awards.

Taylor Brotemarkle gets mobbed by Mia Farris (left) and Jada Heaton after making a spectacular catch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Varsity letter winners:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Ava Lucero
Chloe Marzocca
Adeline Maynes
Madison McMillan
Chelsi Stevens
Danica Strong
Sydney Van Dyke

 

Participation certificates:

Emma Cushman
Emma Leavitt
Olivia Martin
Allison Powers
Mary Western

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Sun’s out, guns out in Yakima, giving Danica Strong and friends a chance to rep their coach. (Photo courtesy Aaron Lucero)

The Wolves made every moment count.

Playing seemingly from sunup to sundown in Yakima, the Coupeville High School softball team put together a rock-solid run Friday and Saturday at the 2B state tourney.

By the time they were done, the Wolves had split four games, survived two loser-out contests, wrapped one rumble under the lights at nearly midnight, and put a cap on an impressive 20-3 season.

The fourth CHS softball squad to make it to the big dance, the 2025 edition had the second-longest run of any of those teams, right behind the 2002 Wolves, who won four of five at state en route to claiming a 3rd place trophy.

The Yakima experience began with a 13-0 loss to River View, followed by 18-11 and 12-6 wins over Colfax and Raymond-South Bend, respectively, before ending early on day #2 with a 10-0 defeat to Northwest Christian (Colbert).

Chloe Marzocca is ready to rumble on the East side. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

It was the final run for Wolf seniors Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, Taylor Brotemarkle, Chloe Marzocca, and Jada Heaton, who led CHS to 64 diamond wins over the past four seasons.

While the loss of the veterans will sting, Coupeville can return its entire pitching staff, as Adeline Maynes is only a freshman and cousins Haylee Armstrong and Capri Anter are sophomores.

Catcher Teagan Calkins is a junior, while first baseman Ava Lucero and second baseman Sydney Van Dyke are also fab frosh.

Add in a strong bench currently anchored by junior Danica Strong and freshman Chelsi Stevens, and Aaron Lucero will likely have a solid base to build on when he heads into his second spring as CHS head coach.

After making the jaunt from Whidbey to Eastern Washington Thursday, the Wolves were on their way to the Gateway Sports Complex by 8:15 AM Friday morning.

They wouldn’t see their hotel again for quite some time.

Playing three games in a day, with start times eventually falling 2.5 hours behind schedule, Coupeville was the last winner off the diamond Friday, eliminating Raymond-South Bend at 11:53 PM.

How long had their day been?

River View, the team they lost to in the opener, picked up back-to-back losses and was sent packing long BEFORE the Wolves even made it back to the hotel.

Coupeville (barely) beat the sprinklers Friday night. (Brad Sherman photo)

Then, in typical tourney fashion, Coupeville, the last winner off the field on Friday, had to head back to the diamond by a little after 7 AM Saturday to play in the day’s first game at 9:00.

That was where the gas finally ran out for the Wolves, but not before they impressed their coach.

“First game was a “get the jitters out.” Second game was better against a solid, well coached Colfax team. Third game was the jewel,” Aaron Lucero said.

“The final game we just couldn’t put it together. It happens.

“There are so many accolades from the team this weekend.”

Lucero praised his squad top to bottom, while noting McMillan blasting a “couple of bombs” which cleared the fence, Calkins playing “like a beast while catching every inning,” and the duo of Maynes and Armstrong coming up big in the pitcher’s circle.

Adeline kept hitters off balance as she does and Haylee came in every game in relief and threw gas,” he said.

Then there was team sparkplug Jada Heaton, who ripped a nasty foul ball off of her own chin, but stayed in the game, not wanting to abandon her teammates.

She eventually had a trip to the ER and will be dealing with a chipped tooth and badly swollen jaw, cementing her already legendary status among Wolf Nation fans.

“Special year with a special group of incredibly strong young women,” Lucero said.

 

How state played out:

 

Game #1 — River View

Facing off with a rival which likely deserved higher than a #10 seed after outscoring foes 400-84 across its first 25 games, the Wolves struggled to get their own bats going.

Singles from McMillan and Stevens were the only CHS base knocks, while Coupeville only had two runners aboard in the same inning once — in the bottom of the sixth.

River View never put together a huge inning of its own but slapped four runs on the board in the second, third, and sixth to stretch things out.

Chelsi Stevens digs in during the state tourney. (Kristi Stevens photo)

 

Game #2 — Colfax

The bats came alive in Coupeville’s first loser-out game, with eight different Wolves collecting a hit.

The contest actually was close, and CHS was trailing, heading into the bottom of the fourth.

McMillan led off the second with the first of her two out-of-the-park dingers, but Colfax was holding on to a 4-1 lead when things took a huge change of direction.

Erupting for 10 runs in their half of the fourth, the Wolves were sparked by Calkins, Farris, and Van Dyke, who each rapped out a pair of hits in the frame.

Coupeville’s first seven hitters in the inning picked up base knocks, then, after an RBI groundout from Anter, the next five also had a hit.

Colfax, a frequent visitor to the state tourney, wasn’t going down easy, however, cutting the deficit from 11-4 to 11-8.

So, the Wolves promptly went off again, pushing seven more runs across in the bottom of the fifth.

Brotemarkle smashed her second double of the game to fuel the second rally, and the Wolves were still alive.

The Wolves wait for their next victim to arrive. (Christina Baker photo)

 

Game #3 — Raymond-South Bend

This was one of the biggest shockers of the tourney, at least if you listen to podcasters who love to go on and on about how great District #4 is, while never knowing how to pronounce or spell the word Coupeville.

Raymond-South Bend, led by Emma Glazier, who has committed to play D-1 softball for UNLV, won the “District of Death,” knocking off high-powered Pe Ell-Willapa Valley in that tourney finale.

RSB was seeded #4 for state and seemed destined to bring home some hardware.

Until it all fell apart in a Friday night fizzle.

Nipped 8-7 by #12 Toledo in the quarterfinals, RSB crashed into the loser’s bracket, and had about 1.3 seconds to prepare for Coupeville, which had been waiting patiently.

A game planned to start at 8:00 PM went off at more like 10:30, and the Wolves jumped on their vaunted foes.

McMillan struck again in the top of the first, pounding a two-run homer that scored Calkins, and CHS never trailed in the game.

The Wolves almost had a second home run, but Farris was denied when Glazier proved her future D-1 credentials by crashing over the outfield fence to rob “Mia the Magnificent” of a state tourney tater.

Three runs in the third, set up by a series of walks and a big-time hit from fab frosh Van Dyke staked Maynes to a 5-1 lead.

While RSB sliced the lead back to 5-3, Coupeville closed with a cold fury.

The Wolves pushed four runs across in the fifth, mixing hits and walks at a steady clip, then sealed the deal with a three-run sixth capped by a two-run single off the bat of Ava Lucero.

The District 4 champs scraped out three runs of their own in their final at-bats, but Coupeville wasn’t having it, slamming the door shut and sending RSB to the sidelines, the eighth team to be knocked out of a 16-team tourney.

 

Game #4 — Northwest Christian (Colbert)

Armstrong rapped out a pair of hits, but Coupeville couldn’t get a rally going in what would prove to be its finale.

The Wolves had runners aboard in six of seven innings, but each time it was just one batter who reached.

Northwest Christian scored three times in the top of the first, twice more in the second, then coasted along for the win.

Which was not a mercy-rule affair, as NWC didn’t get the lead out to 10 runs until it plated four in the top of the seventh.

Coupeville’s last base runner of the season was Van Dyke, courtesy of one of her five hits, as the Wolves racked up 34 hits and 17 walks in their visit to state.

They’ll be back. (Photo courtesy Aaron Lucero)

 

State stats:

Capri Anter — Two singles, three walks
Haylee Armstrong — Four singles, one walk
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single, two doubles, two walks
Teagan Calkins — Five singles, one double, two walks
Mia Farris — Four singles, three walks
Jada Heaton — One single
Ava Lucero — Three singles, one walk
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, two home runs, four walks
Chelsi Stevens — One single, one walk
Sydney Van Dyke — Five singles

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Teagan Calkins and her weapon of choice. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These Wolves carry big bats, and they know how to use them.

Belting nine extra-base hits Friday, including three out-of-the-park home runs, the Coupeville High School softball squad decimated host South Whidbey 15-3.

The non-conference victory, brought to a close after five torrid innings by the ten-run mercy rule, lifts CHS to 16-1 heading into its regular-season finale.

That game is set for Tuesday, May 6 in Coupeville, with former league rival Granite Falls visiting as the Wolves celebrate Senior Night for Chloe Marzocca, Madison McMillan, Jada Heaton, Mia Farris, and Taylor Brotemarkle.

Coupeville’s seniors are exiting in style. (Ava Lucero photo)

The sage veterans, and their very-ready-for-prime-time younger teammates, are part of one of just two teams in 2B with only a single loss this season.

That lone blemish was a 5-4 defeat to 3A Oak Harbor, way back on March 15, and everything after it has been good times.

Case in point, Friday’s clash with a very-solid Falcon diamond squad, which sits at 8-8 after its loss.

While South Whidbey, a 1A school, may have a bigger student body than CHS, the Wolves run deep in talent.

Freshman hurler Adeline Maynes, already an ace in her second high school diamond campaign, was firing BB’s Friday, whiffing nine while scattering just three hits.

And she got solid defense from her support crew, for the most part, with middle infielders Sydney Van Dyke and Brotemarkle gunning down runners to cap things in the final inning.

Home run hitters (left to right) Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, and Sydney Van Dyke marinate in the moment. (Ava Lucero photo)

But it’s the bats which once again captivated the always-enthusiastic Wolf fan base, as Aaron Lucero’s sluggers made contact, and drove through the ball with a vengeance time and again.

Coupeville scored in every inning, jumping on the Falcons for four runs in the top of the first to set the stage.

Walks to Brotemarkle and McMillan mingled with base knocks for Teagan Calkins, Van Dyke, and Haylee Armstrong, and the Wolves were off to the races.

But the biggest blows were yet to come.

Mia Farris was the first to strike, crushing a two-out solo shot in the second.

It was her second over-the-fence tater in as many days, as she also went yard Thursday while on Orcas Island.

Coupeville pushed two more runs across in the third to get the lead out to 7-0, then had its one brief burp of the afternoon.

South Whidbey took advantage of a brief defensive letdown to net three runs, before Maynes dug in and declared, “No more for you.”

She retired the final seven Falcon hitters, with the last out a decisive strikeout to set off a team-wide celebration.

“This ball ain’t coming back. Ever.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Back at the plate, the Wolves threw down four runs in both the fourth and fifth innings to stretch the margin back out, with Van Dyke and McMillan joining “Mia the Magnificent” in the “I love the longball” club.

Van Dyke sent a two-run missile screaming out to left, clearing the fence for the first time in a varsity game, while McMillan’s mammoth shot — a bases-clearing grand slam — almost made it over to South Whidbey’s football stadium.

Maddie’s was a smash,” Aaron Lucero said. “She got every ounce of that ball.

“I think it was still rising as it left the park.”

During the high school season, they may wear different uniforms, but when summer arrives, they unite and strike as the Island Vipers. (Grant Van Dyke photo)

While Coupeville and South Whidbey are not currently in the same league, or classification, as in many past years, the rivalry always remains important for bragging rights.

“There are certain teams that I get just a bit more excited for, and they’re one of them,” Aaron Lucero said with a smile.

“I know most of their team from summer ball and they have solid players. Excited for our team.”

 

Friday stats:

Capri Anter — One double
Haylee Armstrong — Two singles, one triple
Taylor Brotemarkle — One double, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, two doubles
Mia Farris — One double, one home run, one walk
Jada Heaton — One walk
Adeline Maynes — One walk
Madison McMillan — One home run, one walk
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, one home run

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Softball scorebook keeper extraordinaire Gordon McMillan (right) was one of those honored Saturday during Coupeville’s Strike Out Cancer event. (Photo courtesy Aaron Lucero)

They played for themselves, and they played for their loved ones.

Most of all, they played to make a statement, and they made it a loud one.

This edition of the Coupeville High School softball squad is the real deal.

Sweeping a pair of games from visiting Forks Saturday, the Wolves survived their biggest test of the season yet, while pushing their record to a sizzlin’ 13-1 and counting.

With their only loss a one-run affair against a 3A school, the Wolves can sting you with their bats, their gloves, and their pitching arms.

Plus, their brains and resilience, as they have proven to be a team of players that pulls each other up, makes the smart play time and again, and is clicking on all cylinders.

How Saturday played out, as Aaron Lucero’s squad won 5-2 and 6-2 while raising money and honoring fighters during the Wolves annual Strike Out Cancer Day:

 

Game #1:

Forks has won eight games at the 2B state tourney across the past three seasons, earning a second-place trophy in 2023 and a third-place hunk o’ metal in 2022.

Suffice it to say, the Spartans are a brand name.

Plus, they boast Ron Bagby’s niece, one Chloe Gaydeski, who is a ton of trouble for opposing teams as both a pitcher and hitter.

As a freshman, she pitched Forks to the state title game, where it fell to Adna.

As a junior, she stepped into the circle in Coupeville Saturday and squared off with Coupeville fab frosh Adeline Maynes.

And on this day, Maynes proved to be the main attraction.

Whiffing 12 Spartans while holding the visitors scoreless until the seventh and final inning, Coupeville’s second-year ace was lights out.

Maynes set down eight of the first nine hitters she faced via the punchout, with only Gaydeski walking in the top of the first, and she proved to be as gritty as they come.

Forks loaded the bags in the third, thanks to its first hit of the day and two walks, only to see Coupeville’s ace escape by inducing an infield pop-up, then scoot to her left to snag the ball out of the air.

Maynes got some defensive help as well, with third-baseman Madison McMillan making a sensational throw to gun down a would-be bunter in the fourth.

The biggest defensive gem came in the fifth, however.

With a runner at first, Forks lofted a double to center field, with Wolf outfielders Mia Farris and Jada Heaton crashing into each other as they both made a play on the ball.

Cue the smarts, as Heaton recovered the ball, pegged a flawless strike to Sydney Van Dyke, then hopped in glee as the strong-armed second baseman whipped the ball to catcher Teagan Calkins to nail the runner headed home.

“The Red Dragon” had herself a day behind the plate, not only making that run-saving tag, but also springing up twice to snatch popped-up bunts out of the air.

“I am The Red Dragon, and you will fear my roar!” (Bailey Thule photo)

While Maynes (and her defense) were lighting up the prairie, Gaydeski and crew matched her until the bottom of the fourth.

Coupeville got a Van Dyke double in the second and a Maynes single in the third but couldn’t break the scoreless tie.

Until lightning struck twice.

Calkins laced a laser to right field for a one-out single in the fourth, followed by McMillan bringing the pain to the Spartans by crushing the stuffing out of the ball.

Her majestic, game-changing two run home run soared into the all-blue prairie skies, cleared the fence in right-center, and came back to Earth somewhere down around the ferry dock.

Not content to cling to just a 2-0 lead, the Wolves pushed three more runs across in the sixth to get the lead out to where they could weather Forks two-run rally in the seventh.

Farris laced a standup triple, then skipped home with run #3 when the throw back in sailed wide of the bag, before McMillan cracked another big hit, this one an RBI double.

While Forks did get on the board in the final frame, the Spartans also struck out three more times, with Maynes ending the game by rearing back and firing BB’s that the hitters couldn’t locate.

 

Game #2:

Maynes and Gaydeski handed the ball off to other pitchers to start things off, though both aces ended up returning as relievers.

For Coupeville, sophomore Haylee Armstrong, pitching on mom Michelle’s birthday, was electric, setting down 11 Spartans on strikes across 4.2 innings.

The Wolves supported their hurler by exploding for five tallies in the bottom of the third, scoring all of the runs before they had a single out.

Farris launched a two-run triple to right-center, before later beating a throw home by sliding under the tag on a delayed double steal, while Capri Anter put together an epic at-bat.

The Wolf sophomore fouled off 767 pitches (give or take one or two) during her trip to the plate, before pulling out a crucial walk to kick-start the rally.

The teams swapped runs in the fifth, with Farris singling, stealing second, taking third on a passed ball, then scooting home on a wild pitch, again narrowly beating the tag.

With the game, and the doubleheader sweep, up for grabs, the Wolves clamped down big time in the seventh.

Anter, ambling around in left field, robbed Forks of an extra-base hit, before Maynes closed the day with her fifth strikeout in relief, and 17th of the day.

Adeline Maynes dreams of strikeouts. (Bailey Thule photo)

 

What’s next:

Coupeville wraps up its Northwest 2B/1B League slate with a pair of games next week against Orcas Island.

The Wolves host the Vikings Tuesday, then ride the ferry Thursday.

After that comes a trip to Langley Friday for a non-conference clash with next-door neighbor South Whidbey.

 

Saturday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one double, one walk
Mia Farris — One single, two triples
Ava Lucero — One single
Adeline Maynes — Two singles
Madison McMillan — One double, one home run
Chelsi Stevens — One walk
Sydney Van Dyke — One double

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