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Posts Tagged ‘Madison McMillan’

Coupeville sluggers (l to r) Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, Madison McMillan, and Taylor Brotemarkle are the leaders on a team which sits at 7-2. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started with a bang but couldn’t keep the explosions coming.

The Coupeville High School varsity softball squad jumped on host Forks early Saturday, but then got picked apart by last year’s state runner-up.

In the end, the Wolves, who start three 8th graders and two freshmen, fell 11-2 to the Spartans.

The rare loss drops Coupeville to a still superb 7-2 on the season heading into a busy week.

CHS travels to Friday Harbor Tuesday for a key Northwest 2B/1B League tilt, then gets back on the bus Friday and Saturday for non-conference treks to Blaine and Granite Falls.

This is a stretch of the schedule which will test the Wolves, something Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan embraces.

“Young team against a state tourney #2 veteran team (today),” he said. “We learned a lot about ourselves and will make the adjustments.”

Coupeville came out swinging aggressively Saturday, in the 150th game McGranahan has coached at the school.

Taylor Brotemarkle reached base with two outs in the top of the first, followed by Madison McMillan belting a two-run home run to get her squad on the board.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, that was the end of their scoring.

With 8th grade whiz kid Adeline Maynes pitching well in the circle, CHS held on to its lead until the bottom of the third, when Forks pushed three runs across.

A six-run explosion in the fourth by the Spartans was the difference, but Coupeville hung tough and forced their hosts to play the full seven innings to get the win.

McMillan led the way at the plate, adding a double to her dinger, while Jada Heaton collected Coupeville’s other hit on the afternoon.

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Her fastball-flinging arm? Her hit-happy bat? Her fleet feet? All deadly weapons for fab frosh Haylee Armstrong. (Kim Brotemarkle photo)

They drove to Concrete, then walked to a win.

Collecting 20 free bases and 10 hits Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad crushed host Concrete 21-1 in a game mercy-ruled after four innings.

Now 3-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 4-0 overall, the Wolves head home for a test Saturday, when they host a doubleheader against Onalaska.

First pitch is 1:00 PM, and CHS is holding its annual “Strike Out Cancer” gift basket fundraiser in conjunction with the twin-bill.

Friday’s fracas in Concrete was a classic example of a very good team trying its best not to embarrass a rebuilding program.

The Wolves could have won 100-1 if they had wanted but were efficient yet merciful.

Seven of Coupeville’s 12 outs came by having runners intentionally leave the base early, including all of their outs in the third and fourth inning.

Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan also got playing time for 15 different girls, with every one of them reaching base.

That included sophomore Danica Strong, heir to the throne, who crushed her first hit in a Wolf uniform in front of mom (and Cow Town sports legend) Danette Beckley.

Danica Strong and the woman who gave her all those good athletic genes. (Photo courtesy Danette Beckley)

Enjoying the sunshine and dazzling mountain views in Concrete, the Wolves got right to work Friday, putting 12 of their first 14 hitters aboard.

Starting pitcher Haylee Armstrong kick-started things by cracking a single down the left field line, then, after walks from Mia Farris and Taylor Brotemarkle, it was time for the Mad Masher to make her presence felt.

Twisting her bat like she was going to break it in half, Madison McMillan pointed to those far-off mountains and whispered, “Time to go home, lil’ softball.”

At which point she unloaded a mammoth shot to right, sending all her teammates scampering for home.

Mainly so they wouldn’t get run over by McMillan, who careened around the basepaths like a runaway freight train, tapping home as the ball finally came sailing in behind her.

Grandpa Gordon, doing his usual ace job on the books, credited her with a triple, saying she scored on the throw, instead of a grand slam homerun.

There may be a conversation in the McMillan house tonight…

Whether it was a tater or a really long triple, Madison’s moonball put the lead at 4-0 and that was just the beginning.

A whole lot of walks and a dropped third strike kept the basepaths busy, while Farris and Teagan Calkins rocketed RBI base hits to keep the Lion defenders jumpy and nervous.

The only thing which ended the top of the first was a Coupeville runner giving themselves up, a grace note of mercy in an 11-0 opening salvo.

If Concrete was hoping to respond in kind, that wasn’t happening.

Armstrong, stalking the pitcher’s circle and flinging liquid heat, ripped off a pair of strikeouts, while Taylor Brotemarkle made a sweet play on a chopper to second, snatching the ball up and alertly tagging a runner trying to sneak past her.

Taylor Brotemakle is her name, defense is her game. (Ryan Blouin photo)

If the Wolves have one weird little weakness, it seems to be the second inning.

They’ve done it before, and may do it again, and certainly did it Friday, going down in order in a scoreless frame after their first inning explosion.

Before promptly raining down more runs in every other inning.

CHS pushed across four runs in the top of the third, with Armstrong, Farris, and Jada Heaton smokin’ base knocks.

But McMillan, while getting on base, had a bit of a disappointment.

Hitting with the bags once again juiced, she pulled up one of her uniform sleeves, cause “suns out, guns out” and prepared to take another titanic swing.

But instead, as she stepped backwards to avoid a wayward pitch, the ball spun into her, softly hitting her leg and sending her down to first with a free pass.

The look on her face told the true story.

“Do I have to go? Mama wants to mash!!”

But McMillan honored the rules of the game, and McGranahan did some nimble coaching to keep his team from getting too far ahead and ending the game after the minimum three innings.

All three outs in the third were due to runners “leaving early” and at 15-0 that gave the teams another inning before the next mercy rule would go into effect.

Which was perfect, as it gave Coupeville a chance to run everyone through the lineup, rewarding the Wolves for their work in practice.

Strong led off the fourth with a walk, then came back around about 10 minutes later to punch an RBI single to straightaway centerfield, putting her in the hit club sisterhood.

Meanwhile, Capri Anter, Chelsi Stevens, Adeline Maynes, and Melanie Wolfe all eked out walks, and 8th grader Sydney Van Dyke rapped the latest of her RBI hits.

Flexin’ on fools. The Wolves have outscored opponents 75-10 through the first four games of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Concrete managed to avoid being held scoreless by scraping out a lone run in the bottom of the fourth, but Anter closed the game with solid work from the circle.

She finished with five strikeouts across two innings, while her cousin, Armstrong, had four K’s when she handed the ball over.

Calkins (1B, 2B), Farris (1B, 1B), and Armstrong (1B, 1B) paced the hit parade, with McMillan (3B), Heaton (1B), Van Dyke (1B), and Strong (1B) rounding out the attack.

Ava Lucero and Brotemarkle both walked three times, while McMillan and Calkins accepted two free passes.

Also getting good calls from the ump were (big breath) Wolfe, Maynes, Stevens, Anter, Strong, Bailey Thule, Mary Western, Heaton, Armstrong, and Farris.

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Lyla Stuurmans continues to move up the CHS girls’ basketball career scoring chart. (Jackie Saia photo)

Throw out the first seven minutes, it’s a different ballgame.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team played host Chief Leschi dead even for the final 25 minutes Saturday in Puyallup.

Unfortunately, the Wolves trailed 15-0 after that opening chunk, so a tie the rest of the way still resulted in a 38-23 loss.

The non-conference defeat, coming in the team’s second game without injured star Mia Farris, drops Coupeville to 6-11.

CHS has almost a week off now, returning home for back-to-back games in Cow Town Friday and Saturday, Feb. 2-3.

The first of those contests is Senior Night against Friday Harbor and will largely decide which team advances to the playoffs, while the latter is a non-conference rumble recently added to the schedule.

Saturday’s clash with Chief Leschi started poorly for the Wolves, who surrendered a pair of early three-balls and couldn’t get any of their own shots to stay in the bucket.

Down 15-0 and looking for a spark, the Wolves got it from Katie Marti, who finally cracked the seal on the basket in the final seconds of the first quarter.

Things got much better from there, with CHS holding its own in second and third frames which both ended in 8-8 ties.

Madison McMillan gets out of town fast in an earlier game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Four different Wolves scored in the second quarter, with sophomore Brynn Parker notching her first varsity bucket.

She’s the 247th Wolf girl to score in the 50-year history of the program, and the second in her family, joining big sis Skylar.

The third quarter featured Coupeville’s best work on the boards, with Marti, Madison McMillan, and Jada Heaton all scoring off of putbacks.

While Chief Leschi slipped away with a 7-5 advantage in the fourth frame, the Wolves hit some free throws down the stretch to keep things interesting.

Marti finished with a team-best nine points, while McMillan (6), Stuurmans (2), Brynn Parker (2), Heaton (2), Kayla Arnold (1), and Teagan Calkins (1) also scored.

Skylar Parker, Reese Wilkinson, and fab frosh Haylee Armstrong got floor time, while Farris avidly rooted for her teammates while in street clothes.

Along with Brynn Parker joining the sisterhood of scorers, Marti and Stuurmans both passed CHS assistant coach Kassie (Lawson) O’Neil on the all-time scoring chart.

Marti now sits in 63rd place with 191 points and Stuurmans perches in 66th with 185 points, which puts her a slot ahead of O’Neil, who rattled the rims for 184 during her stellar prep hoops career.

 

No JV action:

Two days before tipoff, Chief Leschi cancelled the second game after deciding it didn’t have enough players to field a full team.

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Katie Marti is coming for all your records before the next family barbecue. (Coupeville High School Yearbook Staff photo)

Katie Marti is halfway home to having all the family bragging rights, female division.

Banking in a trio of three-balls Friday night against Mount Vernon Christian, the Wolf junior moved into a tie with Aunt Aimee (Messner) Bishop on the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball career scoring chart.

Katie, now sitting with 168 points, already passed Aunt Rose Marti (57) and mom Christi Messner (125), with Cousin Breeanna Messner (235) and Aunt Judy Marti (545) still ahead.

And, since I said “female division,” that means we’re not worrying about dad Frank Marti or any of Katie’s many uncles and male cousins.

At least at the moment.

While Katie’s offensive explosion, all of which came in the first quarter, wasn’t enough to totally derail a very-good MVC squad, it does provide a positive from a 68-24 loss.

The defeat, coming against the #3 team in 1B, drops Coupeville to 1-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-9 overall.

Up next is a Saturday rumble at home with the #1 team in 1B, Neah Bay.

Will the Red Devils leave their starters in and continue to shoot three-balls two minutes deep into the fourth quarter, like the Hurricanes did?

Only time will tell.

Perhaps MVC, flustered a bit by Marti’s assault from behind the arc, felt the need to pour it on late to appease a chattering fan base which loudly protested a ref’s call while ahead by 40.

In a game in which those same officials in black and white gave Coupeville exactly zero free throw attempts, I’m sure that one pro-Wolf call must have chilled Hurricane fans to the bone.

Marti, with no help from the refs, even when she was being tweaked, twisted, and tossed about while standing two inches in front of them, kept things close early with her treys.

The first one cut the margin to 4-3, the second one sliced the lead to 10-6, and the third one, an improbable bank shot from an odd angle, snipped the deficit to 12-9.

After that, Mount Vernon used its superior speed and height, plus a little friendly help from the rules crew, to pull away.

Up 18-9 at the first break, the ‘Canes stretched the margin out to 39-18 at the half.

It could have been worse, but Wolf gunner Mia Farris went off for nine points in the second quarter, including the best shot of the night.

With the clock racing to 0:00 as the locker room beckoned, the Wolf junior threw her hands up in frustration, with the ball going along for the ride.

It hung in the air for a very long second, stuck its tongue out at the visiting fans, then splashed home for three points as the Wolves went bonkers.

Things took a downturn after that, with MVC ripping off 23 straight points to open the third quarter, setting off a running clock.

Making things (slightly) better was the sight of one ref being hit twice, once by each team.

Coupeville scrapper Teagan Calkins knocked the ball off the official’s face at close range, before a Hurricane ballhandler drilled a pass off the dude’s knee.

At least we hope it was his knee…

Teagan Calkins, dreaming about throwing the ball off someone’s face. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

CHS coach Megan Richter gave floor time to 11 players, with Farris (13), Marti (9), and Calkins (2) combining to handle all the scoring.

Madison McMillan, Haylee Armstrong, Brynn Parker, Jada Heaton, Kayla Arnold, Reese Wilkinson, Skylar Parker, and Lyla Stuurmans also went into the trenches, fighting for rebounds and eyeballing the refs.

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Coupeville High School sophomore Teagan Calkins delivered a breakout performance Monday, fueling a big varsity win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some people eat chicken soup when they’re sick.

For Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball coach Megan Richter, the best (temporary) cure for her illness is seeing her sophomore sensation play like a wild woman.

Sparked by a breakout performance by Teagan Calkins, the Wolves rallied twice Monday, before burying visiting Auburn Adventist Academy 38-24.

The non-conference victory lifts CHS to 5-6 on the season, with a road trip to Orcas Island Friday up next on the schedule.

Coupeville has already beaten the Vikings once this year, but that game didn’t count in the league standings. Second time around, it most certainly does.

The Wolves will roll into that conference showdown carrying a two-game winning streak and with Calkins and Madison McMillan, who had 12 points Monday, coming off of season-best scoring performances.

Richter only went six players deep against Auburn and got strong work from everyone on the floor.

The Eagles were combative, however, jumping out to a 7-1 lead, before holding on to carry a 10-7 lead into the first break.

The wham-bam duo of Mia Farris and Jada Heaton hit the boards hard for Coupeville in the opening frame, helping keep the hometown squad in the game.

Farris put one of her boards right back up for a bucket, while yanking down another, spinning, and feeding Heaton for a quick two points off of another carom.

Auburn nailed a jumper to open the second quarter, then Coupeville claimed its first lead of the night thanks to an 11-0 tear.

McMillan drilled the bottom out of the net on a three-ball, while also making off with a steal she turned into a breakaway bucket, while Calkins shot up the gut, splitting defenders for another key score during the run.

Madison McMillan eyeballs the net before sending it a gift.

A late three-ball, coming on a pullup jumper from an Eagle gunner, cut Coupeville’s lead back to 18-15 at the half, but the Wolves never flinched.

They did give up seven straight points to open the third, falling behind 22-18, but then promptly went into lock-down mode on defense.

Coupeville closed the third on a 9-0 surge, and the game itself on a 20-2 explosion.

Key to the game-clinching rally was a play on which Farris ripped a ball free from a rival, then flicked a pass to McMillan, who rose to the skies and drained her second three-ball of the game.

CHS converted several offensive rebounds into buckets in the game’s waning minutes, with Calkins hitting a jaw-dropping turnaround jumper off of one.

Not content to stop there, the rising star smashed her way through the lane on back-to-back scoring runs, with McMillan setting up both on superb passes.

It was a night to remember for Calkins, who entered play having scored 16 career varsity points, then almost doubled that in one game.

With her and McMillan combining for 25 points, they outscored Auburn by themselves.

But just to make things safe, Marti banked in five, while Farris and Heaton slapped home four points each.

While Lyla Stuurmans didn’t score on this night, “The Franchise” was her usual nimble self on defense, springing around and putting the fear of God into any Eagle even slightly thinking about firing off a shot.

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