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   Katrina McGranahan whacked a double, triple and home run while also tossing 11 strikeouts Monday in a win over Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

“We ended it early so we could go to Taco Time for dinner.”

Raining down pain on host Meridian Monday, the Coupeville High School softball squad made quick work of another opponent, leaving coach Kevin McGranahan smiling.

“The whole team fought from the beginning to the end,” he said. “Another solid win for the Wolves.”

By the time CHS was done pasting the ball — all nine starters had at least one hit, with Katrina McGranahan tallying a double, triple and home run — the Wolves had rolled to a 12-2 win called early thanks to the mercy rule.

The win, the fifth straight for Coupeville, lifts it to 12-1 on the season.

That matches the 2002 Wolf sluggers, who finished 3rd at state, for the best start through 13 games.

Facing their second straight foe from the always-dangerous Northwest Conference, Coupeville showed the same resolve (and big bats) which helped them thump Lynden Christian Saturday.

The Wolves got to Meridian’s starting pitcher in a hurry.

Lead-off hitter Lauren Rose swatted a single, then, two batters later, Katrina McGranahan jacked her fourth home run of the season, parking it deep over the fence in right-center.

A couple of walks, a Meridian error and a single off the bat of Hope Lodell plated two more runs before the inning was done, and the Wolves were off in style.

Coupeville added two in the third, then put together three-run rallies in both the fourth and sixth to ice the game.

Continuing her torrid pitching of late, McGranahan mowed down 10 of the first 11 batters she faced, allowing only one runner until the fourth inning.

Never in danger (Meridian scraped together its two runs in the sixth after trailing 12-0), she whiffed 11 and, when necessary, got a little prime-time help from her defense.

The very first batter singled, only to be gunned down trying to steal second by Wolf catcher Sarah Wright.

CHS had everything going for it — pitching, defense, and, as usual, high-powered offense.

All three of McGranahan’s hits were for extra bases, and she was only denied a chance to hit for the cycle when Meridian walked her the fourth time she strode to the plate.

Wright (a single and double) and Lodell (two singles) backed her up, while Rose, Jae LeVine, Mikayla Elfrank, Veronica Crownover, Tiffany Briscoe and Tamika Nastali all added a base-knock.

Freshman Scout Smith scored twice and had a pair of steals as a pinch-runner.

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Kory Score, seen here making a defensive play

   Kory Score, seen here snagging a low throw at first in an earlier game, knocked in both of Coupeville’s runs Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

One out away.

Stung twice by crucial two-out hits, the Coupeville High School baseball squad fell 4-2 to visiting Meridian Saturday.

The non-conference loss to the #10-ranked team in 1A dropped the Wolves to 7-8 heading into the stretch run of league games.

Sitting atop the Olympic League at 4-0, Coupeville has five games left, with a key stretch of three looming in the week ahead.

First up is Chimacum (1-3) at home Monday, then a trip to Klahowya (2-1) Wednesday, before winding up back on Whidbey Friday to face Port Townsend (0-3).

Saturday’s game was a warm-up for that run at a possible league title, and, while the Wolves came up just a bit short, they held their own against a highly-regarded squad.

CHS hurlers Julian Welling and Matt Hilborn combined to limit the Trojans to just four hits, but Meridian made them count.

Henry Skaggs blasted a three-run, two-out double in the top of the second to stake Meridian to a lead it never relinquished.

Coupeville chipped away, getting back into the game with a single run in both the second and third innings, but left the bags juiced in the third.

Welling led off the second with a walk, and then pinch-runner Joey Lippo sprinted all the way home on an RBI double from Kory Score.

The second Wolf run came via their own backs-to-the-wall magic, as Score capped a run of four-straight two-out hits with an RBI single that plated CJ Smith.

In between Smith and Score, Cole Payne and Welling also dropped in hits.

Both teams swapped zeros on the (non-existent) scoreboard until the sixth, when the two-out bugaboo hit again for the Wolves.

This time it was an RBI double off of the bat of Baker Otter, and it capped the scoring.

While his team came up a hair short, Wolf coach Marc Aparicio liked a lot of what he saw.

“It was a great game. We both played strong, but they just got one hit more than us,” he said. “I’m happy how our team played. Focused on Chimacum now.”

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Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

Like sand between the fingers, this one slipped away.

After bashing the ball with ease most of the afternoon Saturday, the Coupeville High School softball squad suddenly went cold down the stretch, letting visiting Meridian wiggle away with a 10-8 win.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 7-5 heading into the heart of their league schedule.

Coupeville, which is 2-2 and in second place in the 1A Olympic League, plays all three of its conference rivals next week.

The Wolves host Chimacum (3-0) Monday, travel to Klahowya (1-1) Wednesday, then are back on Whidbey to face Port Townsend (0-3) Friday.

Saturday’s tune-up started nicely, with Coupeville scoring in all of the first five innings, but then the bats went cold, as Meridian retired seven of the final eight Wolves.

Tied 8-8 after five, the visiting Trojans picked up a run in the top of the sixth on a hard-hit RBI triple to right, then tacked on an insurance run in the seventh by poking an RBI single over the first-baseman’s head.

After a series of shuffles, Meridian was on its third pitcher at the close of the game, but the strategy worked, as Coupeville’s final two hitters went down on strikes while representing the potential tying run.

Things were much brighter at the start, as the Wolves used timely hits, aggressive base-running and some Trojan miscues to jump out to a 2-0 lead.

Lauren Rose socked a lead-off single to center in the first, stole second and came around to score on a passed ball, then Kailey Kellner brought out the big stick in the second inning.

Crunching a double to left, she alertly picked up another bag when the throw back in sailed over the infielder’s heads. A moment later, she too skipped home on a passed ball as the Meridian catcher struggled in the early going.

From there the game took on a seesaw feel, as the lead shifted back and forth.

Four hits plated three runs for Meridian in the third — and gave it a brief taste of the lead — but Coupeville responded immediately.

A single into the gap between short and third from Katrina McGranahan and a Meridian error on a hard chopper by Sarah Wright set the scene in the bottom of the third, then Veronica Crownover got medieval on the ball.

Unloading a shot to right field that ricocheted off a glove, she ended up at second with a stand-up two-run double that restored Coupeville’s lead to 4-3.

The rally ended too quickly, however, a recurring theme on this day.

While the Wolves scored in each of the first five innings, they also stranded base-runners in all of those innings, and spent much of the day one good swing away from really busting things wide open.

Coupeville stretched the lead to 5-3 in the fourth, with Hope Lodell ripping an RBI single under a mitt.

Lauren Rose, who crossed home with the score, had reached base after an unusual at-bat.

Thinking she had struck out, she grabbed her bat and started back to the bench, only to have coach Kevin McGranahan gently remind her she only had two strikes.

Taking advantage of the new opportunity, “Mouse” unloaded from the very bottom of her toes, smacking a shot to the deepest part of the park with almost enough force to untie her shoelaces.

As the ball hit the ground a millimeter away from the center-field fence with a bang loud enough to wake up any slumbering ducks on the prairie, the mightiest mite of them all tore into third with a stand-up triple.

Waiting for Rose was her coach, who nodded and grinned as his third-baseman looked up at him, blushing a bit, maybe because of the exertion and maybe because of forgetting the pitch count.

The lead wouldn’t hold, though, as a string of Wolf errors swung the pendulum back to Meridian, which used a five-run fifth to surge back in front 8-5.

Unfazed, Coupeville responded with three runs of its own to knot things back up, and there was a genuine sense at that point that you were watching two boxers trade blows, with the KO coming from whomever hit last.

The Wolves rally started with another double from Crownover, followed by four walks and a dropped ball on a play at home.

But Meridian, using three pitchers in the inning, finally found one who worked, escaping from a bases-loaded jam when Wright grounded out on a sharply hit ball.

Little did the Wolves know that, in that moment, the offense was effectively turning off.

Coupeville collected nine hits in the loss, with Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Crownover each notching a pair. Lodell, Kellner and Jae LeVine each had one.

Robin Cedillo had an especially nice catch in right on a long, arcing fly and LeVine was a beast at second, knocking down everything that came her way, to provide stability to a team defense that wildly fluctuated on this afternoon.

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Hunter Smith, seen here last year, went for a team-high 12 Monday at Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith, seen here last year, went for a team-high 12 Monday at Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

For one half they were as good as they’ve ever been.

Putting together an absolutely stellar 16 minutes of ball Monday night at Meridian, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team carried an 11-point lead into the halftime locker room.

Unfortunately, as hot as things were in the first half, they went cold in the second, as a string of missed Wolf shots allowed the much-bigger hosts to scramble back for a 51-41 non-conference victory on opening night.

The Wolves will have a day to rest and sharpen their skill-set before they welcome Island foe South Whidbey to town Wednesday in their home opener.

Tip-off is 5:15 PM, with a Wolf/Falcon girls game to follow at 7.

If Coupeville wants to stun their arch-rivals, they’ll need to channel some of that first-half excitement.

“We played the best half of basketball in the first half that has been played under Coach (Anthony) Smith,” said Wolf assistant coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “We played inspired, hard-nosed, good basketball.”

After going toe-to-toe with the Trojans in the first quarter — Meridian clung to a 14-13 lead at the first break — Coupeville drilled their hosts 16-4 in the second.

The third quarter, which was the Wolves Achilles heel last year, was a different story, however.

“We missed some easy shots and they used their height to their advantage,” Van Velkinburgh said.

The Trojans jumped all over Coupeville to the tune of 22-5 in the third, before salting things away with an 11-7 mini-run in the fourth.

Despite the loss, the Wolves came away with a number of positives, led off by a balanced scoring attack.

Sophomore Hunter Smith, making his first varsity start, went for a team-high 12, hitting a pair of three-point bombs, and made off with two steals.

Seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Risen Johnson each knocked down 11, while DeAndre Mitchell (3), Ryan Griggs (2) and Gabe Wynn (2) rounded out the scorers.

Griggs hauled down five boards and rejected three Meridian shots, Johnson had three rebounds and two steals and Dante Mitchell and Wynn added three rebounds apiece.

Jared Helmstadter and Jordan Ford also saw floor time, with Ford following in the footsteps of dad David by making his first start as a Wolf hoops player.

The JV game was cancelled because Coupeville couldn’t field enough players due to injuries and players who haven’t had enough practices to be eligible. The Wolves expect to play a JV game Wednesday.

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Makana Stone (John Fisken photos)

   Makana Stone paced Coupeville with 17 rebounds in Sunday’s doubleheader. (John Fisken photos)

Kailey Kellner (third

   Kailey Kellner (second from right) provides some vocal support in a game earlier this season.

Fall ball isn’t really about wins and losses.

Well, every basketball team wants to grab as many victories as possible, and a depleted Coupeville High School girls’ squad didn’t get that done Sunday, but putting in work, in all its forms, is what truly matters.

The off-season sport, with CHS coaches David and Amy King merely interested spectators while former Wolf legends Sherry Roberts, Brittany Black and Kacie Kiel call the coaching shots, is a chance for returning players and newcomers to mesh.

Hopefully.

With only five players available to suit up for much of Sunday’s doubleheader — a 31-19 loss to 3A Mount Vernon and a 39-12 loss to perennial postseason rival Meridian — the Wolves hung close, then ran out of gas against teams with deeper benches.

Foul trouble stung, as well.

Coupeville tacked on two late-arriving players midway through the day, but then had two starters foul out almost immediately, negating the surge in roster size.

With no subs early against Mount Vernon, the Wolves spread out on offense and played a patient style, which worked for a time.

But with tired legs (being out of season, several of the players are pulling double time with their fall sports teams) betraying them, Coupeville struggled in the second half.

The game against Meridian was similar, though with seven players available, all of whom snatched at least one rebound, tiredness was less of a factor.

The twin-bill, filled with big highs and big lows, captured the work-in-progress Wolves in all their glory.

While Coupeville is the defending 1A Olympic League champs, they lost six players to graduation.

The returning stars will need to mesh with a talented, but raw, pack of freshmen who have yet to play a second in an actual high school game.

One of those 9th graders, Sarah Wright, showed strong movement with (and without) the ball, drawing praise from hoops gurus in the crowd.

The consensus was she’s a hard-working fireball ready to explode.

Wolf senior Makana Stone, the Olympic League MVP last year, paced Coupeville with 17 rebounds across the two games.

Lauren Grove (8), Kailey Kellner (7), Wright (6), Mia Littlejohn (3), Lindsey Roberts (3) and Kalia Littlejohn (3) all chipped in on the boards, while Grove, Roberts and Stone collected blocks, as well.

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