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Posts Tagged ‘Melia Welling’

The impeccably-dressed Melia Welling. (John Fisken photos)

The impeccably-dressed Melia Welling. (John Fisken photos)

"Is mom working at PC right now, cause I'm parking this ball somewhere around the produce section."

   “Is mom working at PC right now, cause I’m parking this ball somewhere around the produce section.”

I like Melia Welling.

Regardless of whether or not she continues to become a big athletic star and ends up giving me plenty to write about over the next four years (and I think she will), she’s just a great young woman.

Like older brother Julian, she projects a friendliness that is infectious, and you can’t help but root for her.

Melia is on her way to becoming a freshman at Coupeville High School, with a pit stop in Birthday Land today, and she’s already made an impression as an athlete.

Volleyball, basketball, and, most recently, as a softball slugger for Central Whidbey Little League’s high-flying Juniors squad, the Venom, Welling has jumped in feet first.

She hails from an athletic family, which includes big bro and her cousins, Mitchell and Shane Losey, and she’s upholding tradition well.

Her biggest moment so far probably came when she thumped a two-run double in a Venom game.

The blow made Julian come dangerously close to flipping off the top row of the bleachers at the CHS softball diamond, as he screamed like a banshee while Melia beamed from ear to ear at second base.

Whether crunching big hits or giggling away with Cassidy Moody as the duo kept score at middle school boys’ basketball games, Welling is a talented, hard-working young woman who has made a very good impression on those of us in the cheap seats.

From all of us, happy birthday Melia. May the best be yet to come.

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Melia Welling (John Fisken photo)

   Melia Welling put a huge smile on big bro Julian’s face Thursday when she belted a two-run double during her little league softball game. (John Fisken photo)

Thursday night was all about making big brothers proud.

Mixing an opportunistic offense with lights-out pitching from star hurler Chelsea Prescott, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad pounded visiting South Whidbey 12-4.

The win lifted the Venom to 3-2 on the season.

And while there were plenty of highlights, it was two plays in particular, pulled off by young women whose older, high school baseball-playing brothers were in the stands, that carried the evening.

The first came when Central Whidbey’s #9 hitter, first-year player Melia Welling, socked a two-run double to left field to break the game open in the sixth inning.

Kicking off a four-run rally that doubled the Venom’s lead, Welling’s base knock plated Mollie Bailey and Marenna RebischkeSmith, while causing big bro Julian Welling to come unglued.

Bouncing up from his seat at the top of the bleachers, the sophomore sensation, who will be playing for a league title Friday with his CHS teammates, pumped his fist in the air while his sister’s smile carried all the way across the diamond.

“That just made my day, Melia!!,” Julian said as he sat back down while wearing a huge grin of his own.

The moment was almost matched an inning later, when Coupeville closed out the win with a sensational snag from second baseman Maya Toomey-Stout.

Slicing backwards, the fastest softball player in all the land reached backwards over her shoulder and snagged the ball out of the air as her feet carried her into the outfield grass, pulling down the ball in one elegant motion.

That set off older brother Cameron, who, along with fellow Wolf diamond men Joey Lippo and Hunter Smith, had been watching the action from the first row.

While Prescott didn’t have an older sibling in the crowd, she more than made her parents proud, giving up just a pair of infield singles while whiffing 11 batters.

Stalking around the pitcher’s circle like a caged lioness, slapping the ball into her glove in between pitches, the 7th grade phenom retired the side in order in four of seven innings.

When she did get base runners, her defense stepped up to help.

Hannah Davidson pulled off the best defensive play — at least until Toomey-Stout made her bid for Sports Center glory — turning a double play in which she snared a grounder, stamped on first for the force and fired to second to gun down a runner.

With the game tied 1-1 heading into the bottom of the third (Central Whidbey’s run came around on an RBI double from Prescott), the Venom exploded for five runs and never looked back.

Scout Smith started things off by cracking a single under the shortstop’s glove, then Central used five walks, three steals, two South Whidbey errors and a pair of passed balls to keep their runners zipping around the bases.

After tacking on a run apiece in the fourth and fifth, the Venom closed strongly in the sixth.

Welling’s blow was a big one, but she also showed some skills on the base paths as well.

When South Whidbey’s catcher dropped a third strike, Davidson beat out the ensuing throw to first.

With the ball headed the other way, Welling, bouncing around at third, took off for home, beating the throw back from first base and sending her relatives into a brief moment of delirium.

Her big brother? He’ll probably still be smiling the rest of the night.

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A Wolf works on her dribbling skills in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photos)

   A Wolf works on her dribbling skills in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photos)

Genna Wright

Genna Wright (with ball), breakin’ ankles and takin’ names all day long.

It’s their time to own the court.

With the start of the season less than a week away (Thursday, Feb. 18 at home against Chimacum, 3:15 tip), the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads are hard at work.

8th grade hoops guru Bob Martin has 15 girls, while guru-in-training Ryan King will have to make do with just seven 7th graders, it appears.

Since they can swap players around a bit (middle school rules are flexible like that), it shouldn’t be too much of a problem.

The rosters as they stand today:

8th grade:

Ashleigh Battaglia
Luci Coleburn
Hannah Davidson
Jaden Marrs
Emma Mathusek
Cassidy Moody
Cynthia Rachal
Marenna Rebischke-Smith
Avalon Renninger
Scout Smith
Megan Thorn
Maya Toomey-Stout
Seriana Weatherford
Melia Welling
Tia Wurzrainer

7th grade:

Brooke Ausman
Mollie Bailey
Thora Iverson
Catherine Lhamon
Morgan Pease
Chelsea Prescott
Genna Wright

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Chelsea Prescott (John Fisken photos)

   Chelsea Prescott brings the thunder and the lightning. She’s a 2-in-1 threat. (John Fisken photos)

7th

   Lacy McCraw-Shirron (12) and Emily Fielder (16) send positive energy to their teammates.

Emma Mathusek

   Under the eye of Wolf coach Randy King, 8th grader Emma Mathusek glides in to keep the rally going.

8th

Hannah Davidson (center) keeps the mood light in the huddle.

Welling

   Melia Welling (39) is all smiles as Maya Toomey-Stout (9) comes flying in to congratulate her.

Wick

Willow Vick will let no volleyball touch the floor. It is her sworn duty.

Casie

New CMS 7th grade coach Casie Dunleavy finally gets her close-up.

7th

Her players show her how it’s supposed to be done.

Spikes were flying, reputations were being forged and cameras were clicking.

All in all, Thursday was a busy day, as the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads invaded the high school gym to face off with Stevens.

Along for the ride was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who provides us with the pics above.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping to fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

7th grade — https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf363cc65f50

8th grade — https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf363cc5ca25

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(Alysabeth Bonifas photo)

   Wolf 7th graders (l to r) Ivy Leedy, Lacy McCraw-Shirron, Jaimee Masters and Alexis Czarnik bask in the glow of their first win. (Alysabeth Bonifas photo)

We're coming for all your wins! (Konni Smith photo)

We’re coming for all your wins! (Konni Smith photo)

No answers.

That’s what Chimacum had Thursday, as the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads thrashed their visitors in straight sets to kick off a new season.

Both Wolf squads were made up of players who were too tall, too quick, too efficient, too confident, too composed and too talented for the overwhelmed Eagles to have much of a fighting chance.

Whether it was the tall, graceful “Terminator Twins” — big-hitting CMS 7th graders Morgan Pease and Chelsea Prescott — or the unstoppable force of nature known as Melia Welling, who served 18 straight winners during one stretch in the 8th grade match, Coupeville was on point all afternoon.

The 7th graders presented new head coach Casie Dunleavy with a 25-12, 25-15, 25-23 win that was much more of a rout than the score might indicate, before the Wolf 8th graders cruised 25-6, 25-15, 25-8.

Wolf prodigy Savannah Smith kick-started the rampage, reeling off five straight points at the service stripe, to open the 7th grade match.

The younger sister of high school VB star Emma Smith, Savannah might have run the entire first set, but 7th grade matches require a change of servers after five points, giving Chimacum a brief moment to catch its breath.

At which point Prescott, a lean, mean, fastball-firing machine on the baseball diamond, slid behind the service stripe and unleashed a shot that burned the top of the net on its way across and scattered the Eagle returners like so many falling pins on a bowling alley.

With Jaimee Masters, Emily Fiedler, Megan Behan and Genna Wright all taking turns dominating on serve (Wright was unleashing cannon shots), CMS cruised.

Then Prescott and Pease took control and Chimacum’s players all started edging closer and closer to the protection of the bench.

At 23-15 in the second set, Prescott skied high and delivered the afternoon’s one truly scary spike, shredding her foes kneecaps with a laser.

When she added an especially hard-hit ace in the third set, it looked like it would be the most fearsome serve of the day, until Pease went her one better, unleashing a bomb that exploded off the back-line and drilled itself into the gym wall.

Coupeville High School players in the stands exchanged side glances and began to mentally compute if they’ll still be in school when the Terminator Twins arrive on the scene.

More than one sigh of relief was heard from current juniors and seniors.

The 8th graders are just a year away from the big time, but Welling is already ready in many ways.

Coming up third as a server, after Hannah Davidson and Ashleigh Battaglia combined to stake Coupeville to a narrow 7-6 lead in the first set, Welling went off.

It wasn’t just that she ripped off 18 straight winners, but that she did it with every serve echoing through the gym, every serve kicking around, aces slamming off of the shoes of Chimacum players while Welling’s smile got larger and larger.

The few times the Eagles managed to return the ball, Coupeville promptly ended the rally, with Emma Mathusek and Welling sliding into position for picture-perfect tips.

The Wolves actually won 23 straight points, with Scout Smith dropping the hammer for five straight points to open the second set.

Only a serve that narrowly went wide stopped the rampage, but, even then, it was but a small bump in the road.

No matter who CMS 8th grade coach Sadi Foltz sent to the line, the Wolves responded in style.

Willow Vick reeled off six straight, with Jillian Mayne putting away one winner on a tip that froze three Eagles.

Later it was Zoe Trujillo and Maya Toomey-Stout coming up with winners, while Lucy Sandahl and Cassidy Moody combined on back-to-back big hustle plays.

In the end, it may have been only one match. But it felt like a coronation for both Wolf teams.

The future is here, and it is an exciting one for Coupeville volleyball.

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