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Posts Tagged ‘Mitchell Carroll’

   Katrina McGranahan (top) is joined by (l to r) Maya Toomey-Stout, Mitchell Carroll and Lindsey Roberts. (Maria Reyes and John Fisken photos)

Life is made up of moments.

Today, as we open the doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re going to immortalize four such pieces of time, and the athletes who crafted them.

So, let’s pay tribute to Lindsey Roberts, Mitchell Carroll, Maya Toomey-Stout and Katrina McGranahan for crafting events which, after this, will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Pop up there, scroll down past Athletes, Coaches and Contributors, stop on Moments, and viola, there they’ll be, forever alive on the internet.

And in the memories of those who created them.

Our first two moments came at this year’s West Central District 3 track and field championships, though one of the two has a footnote (which we’ll get to in a second.)

But we start at districts, where Roberts, a CHS sophomore, and Carroll, a senior, chose the same meet to smash school records which were set before either of them were born.

Roberts sailed through the 100 hurdles in 15.97 seconds, knocking Jess Roundy (16.06) off the track big board, where her name had resided since 1999.

When Lindsey’s name goes up to replace Jess, it will give the speedy supernova her third appearance on the board, as she’s already a member of 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relay units which own school records.

With half her career ahead of her, Roberts is tied with Chad Gale (long jump, 110 and 300 hurdles) for most school records, two shy of Makana Stone (200, 400, 4 x 1, 4 x 2, 4 x 4) for total track board dominance.

Carroll exits having won a 5th place medal in the triple jump Friday at the 1A state track and field championships, while also ensuring his name will live on (at least for a bit) at the entrance to Coupeville’s gym.

In our second Hall o’ Fame-worthy moment, he sailed 43 feet, three inches at districts, knocking Virgil Roehl (42-11.50 in 1994) off the record board.

The change erases the last touch of the ’90s from the male side of the Wolf record book, as all the records now are either holdovers from the ’80s or were set between 2000-2017.

Not content to stop, though (this is that footnote), Carroll erupted for a jump of 43-11.75 at state, adding eight-plus inches to his record and ensuring it has just that much more chance to live as long as Roehl’s mark did.

Our third magic moment isn’t really one moment, but we can fudge things a bit since it’s very much a milestone.

Toomey-Stout, AKA “The Gazelle,” is on her way to putting her name up on the record board, having come dangerously close to busting school records in the 100 and 4 x 2 in her first go-round.

What she did accomplish though is nothing short of amazing, as she became the first Wolf girl in the 117-year history of the high school to qualify for and compete in four separate events at one state meet.

Bouncing from event to event in the blazing Cheney sun, Toomey-Stout ran in the 100, 200, 4 x 1 and 4 x 2, and was still bouncing sky-high at the end of her first (but I doubt last) trip to state.

For our final Hall-worthy moment, we step away from track and head to the softball diamond.

McGranahan has been pouring in strikes for the Wolf sluggers since she first stepped inside the CHS pitcher’s circle three seasons ago.

Her junior campaign was her finest though, as she used her arm and booming bat to lead Coupeville to a 19-5 record, the second-best mark in program history.

Along the way, she faced six teams which made it to state — South Whidbey, Lynden Christian, Sequim, Friday Harbor, Chimacum and Bellevue Christian — blitzing four and battling to the final out with the final pair.

We could talk about the frequent out-of-the-park home runs, the electrifying strikeouts, the steals (she has wheels to go with her strength, leading the team in pilfered bags) and her quiet leadership skills.

But today we honor McGranahan for a moment which stands as a testament to her inner strength.

Having made a 90+ mile trip with her teammates to Tacoma for the district playoffs, she threw every pitch for the Wolves across four games in little more than a day.

Coupeville split those four contests, two of which went to extra innings, falling a single out short of state in a 10-inning battle royal with BC in the tourney finale.

The Vikings went on to win twice at state, the best showing of any Wolf foe to make the big dance.

By the time she was done, her throbbing arm encased in a cool-down mechanism, McGranahan had hurled pitch after pitch, racking up 33 innings in just under 26 hours.

None of the other five teams at districts played more than three games, and Killer Kat’s pitching duties included a tourney-opening nine-inning win over Vashon, followed by a second game against a fresh BC squad literally five minutes later.

The Wolves had time only to walk from one field to the other, with no food or water break, as the start time for the second game had already passed thanks to game one going to extra innings.

Every one of Coupeville’s players put in supreme effort during districts, overcoming illness, injury, fatigue and heat in their quest to get to Richland.

But McGranahan deserves a special tip of the cap, since, as pitcher, she was literally the focal point of every single moment on defense.

While still finding time to clear the fences yet again with a home run in a win over Seattle Christian.

Time and again, Katrina reached down and found something maybe even she didn’t know was there, and her performance stands with the best the softball program, and her school, has seen.

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   Lindsey Roberts (left), seen with teammate Ashlie Shank, shattered a Coupeville High School record in the 100 hurdles which had stood since 1999. (Roberts photo)

   Wolves (l to r) Danny Conlisk, Lauren Bayne and Mitchell Carroll (he busted a school record from 1994) are all state-bound. (Deb Smith photo)

The Wolves got historic.

Capping an impressive first day at the West Central District III track and field meet in Renton, Coupeville’s Lindsey Roberts and Mitchell Carroll shattered school records which had stood since the ’90s.

Roberts, a sophomore, claimed her third school record, and first as an individual, when she broke Jess Roundy’s mark in the 100 hurdles.

Hitting the tape in 15.97 seconds, she toppled Roundy, who ran a 16.06 in 1999, before Roberts was born.

Carroll went five years better, bringing an end to Virgil Roehl’s 23-year residence on the CHS record board in the triple jump.

The Wolf senior, also not born when the record he busted was set, cleared 43 feet, three inches, beating the long-held standard by three-and-a-half inches.

Needless to say, both Roberts and Carroll punched their tickets to the state meet as well, two of eight Wolves to do so on the first day of the two-day district rumble.

Junior Jacob Smith and sophomore Danny Conlisk, who won the 100 and 400 respectively, are state-bound, as is high jumper Lauren Bayne and the girls 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 squads.

Those relay units, which feature Roberts running with freshmen Maya Toomey-Stout and Mallory Kortuem and senior Lauren Grove, rolled to big wins in both events.

Coupeville returns to Renton Saturday for day two of districts, when it will try to add to the list of those going to Cheney May 26-27 for state.

A top three finish punches an athlete (or relay team’s) ticket to the big dance.

At the mid-point of districts, which brings the five Nisqually League and four Olympic League schools together, the Wolf girls are in second place in the team standings.

They trail Charles Wright Academy 67-55.

The CHS boys sit in sixth place, while Bellevue Christian is halfway to a team title.

Complete district meet (Day 1) results: 

Girls:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (4th) 12.96 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (2nd) 15.97 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*

4 x 100 Relay — Lauren Grove, Mallory Kortuem, M. Toomey-Stout, Roberts (1st) 51.05

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Kortuem, M. Toomey-Stout, Roberts (1st) 1:47.67

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (4th) 30-06.25; Alexxis Otto (5th) 28-00.25 *PR*

High Jump — Lauren Bayne (2nd) 4-08

Long Jump — Roberts (4th) 15-00.50

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 11.29 *PR*

400 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 51.42 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Smith, Mitchell Carroll, Cameron Toomey-Stout, Conlisk (4th) 45.28

Discus — Chris Battaglia (7th) 103-11

Triple Jump — Carroll (3rd) 43-03 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*

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Mitchell Carroll (left) and Nick Dion celebrate a state title in Science Olympiad.

Best in the biz.

Coupeville High School seniors Nick Dion and Mitchell Carroll beat competitors from 21 other schools Saturday to claim a title in Robot Arm at the Science Olympiad state championships.

The duo also finished fourth in Electric Vehicle, while teammates Josh Robinson and Luke Carlson claimed third place in Write It, Do It.

Sparked by their three top-five finishes, the Wolves finished 18th as a team, one spot better than they did in 2015, their last trip to state.

Camas won the team title.

Nationals are in Dayton, Ohio in May, but the season is done for Coupeville, as only the top teams, and not individual winners, advance to the big dance.

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   Lindsey Roberts, seen here at state last spring, has the third-fastest time among all 1A hurdlers this year. (Sherry Roberts photo)

It’s early. Like, really, really early.

But with one official meet under their belt in 2017, four Coupeville High School track stars have already staked their place among the best in the state.

Seniors Jacob Martin and Mitchell Carroll, junior Jacob Smith and sophomore Lindsey Roberts are all currently sitting in the top 10 among all 1A athletes in at least one event.

As the Wolves prepare to head to Port Angeles Thursday for a six-team meet, a quick look at the CHS front-runners:

Girls:

100 hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (3rd) 16.55

Boys:

200 — Jacob Smith (3rd) 23.70

Long Jump — Jacob Martin (2nd) 20-07; Mitchell Carroll (8th) 19-04

Triple Jump — Carroll (4th) 39-11

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(Mckenzie Meyer photo)

   Let the medals rain down, as Coupeville High School’s Science Olympiad team ran wild through regionals. (Mckenzie Meyer photo)

(Josh Robinson photo)

   Seconds later, Coupeville’s robot arm went wild and took out half the UW campus, but we’re not here to talk about that. (Josh Robinson photo)

The Wolves stormed the U-Dub Saturday and returned with much honor.

The Coupeville High School Science Olympiad team claimed three first-place finishes and three runner-ups at regionals, which were held on the campus at the University of Washington.

The Wolves finished 5th overall in the team standings.

Next up for CHS is a trip to state April 15.

Events the Wolves competed in Saturday:

Wind Power: Luke Carlson and Josh Robinson – 1st place

Disease Detectives: Mckenzie Meyer and Nick Dion – 4th place

Towers: Mitchell Carroll and Josh Robinson – 2nd place

Electric Vehicle: Mitchell Carroll and Nick Dion – 2nd place

Hovercraft: Nick Dion and Josh Robinson – 1st place

Game On: Harris Sinclair and Jaschon Baumann – 1st place

Helicopters: Madison Rixe and Mckenzie Meyer – 3rd place

Robot Arm: Mitchell Carroll and Nick Dion – 2nd place

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