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Island County Public Health is investigating a number of confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 associated with employees of Walgreens, Walmart, and IDEX, all located in Oak Harbor.

A press release Friday afternoon laid out dates of potential public exposure for the first two businesses.

Walgreens was closed Friday with a note in the drive-thru window indicating a “temporary closure.”

Shoppers are warned potential public exposure there was between March 22-27.

Walmart, which remains open, has potential exposure dates of March 23-30.

IDEX is not open to the public.

There are 122 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Island County as of 3:30 Friday afternoon, with 95 on Whidbey and 27 on Camano.

All four confirmed coronavirus-related deaths in the county have been on Whidbey.

Island County Public Health asks all residents to take urgent action to help minimize the health impacts of COVID-19 and honor Governor Jay Inslee’s Stay Home, Stay Healthy order, which has been extended through May 4.

 

For updates:

https://www.islandcountywa.gov/Health/Pages/COVID-19.aspx

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Senior softball slugger Veronica Crownover smashed a three-run home run, a two-run double, and the world’s longest RBI single Saturday, as 1A Coupeville shocked 3A Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Something special happened Saturday in Oak Harbor.

Many will immediately think I’m talking about the Coupeville High School softball squad, repping one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, stunning their 3A hosts 8-3 in the first varsity match-up between these programs in maybe forever.

And it was sweet, watching Wolf senior Veronica Crownover smash a three-run home run over the towering left field fence, while missing a second round-tripper by about an inch.

Cranking six extra-base hits, Coupeville’s sluggers proved the size of your hearts can trump the size of the school you’re facing.

The win gave the Wolves a doubleheader split on the day (both Whidbey schools fell to 2A powerhouse Lakewood), and evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into its first league games.

If you know me, my first reaction is to say something snarky along the lines of “they might live here, but we own the Island.”

But…

Let’s take a moment to give big props to new Oak Harbor softball coach Alicia Ashburn and her assistants, for doing what previous Wildcat coaches did not, and would not, do.

They stepped up and agreed to play Coupeville, even while knowing if a large 3A school fell to a tiny 1A institution, they would have to deal with Wolf fans dancing in their parking lots.

But they did the right thing, bringing together girls who, while they are at different high schools now, grew up often playing on the same little league or travel ball squads.

CHS coach Kevin McGranahan has been asking for this game since stepping into the job, and Saturday was the culmination of everything he wanted.

A win, yes, but also a chance to test himself and his players against our Island’s biggest high school.

Coupeville and South Whidbey occupy the same 1A North Sound Conference, and will face off three times this season. That was assured.

Saturday’s game, which was added to the schedule late, was a rare gift, one McGranahan greatly appreciates.

“This win was four years in the making and it feels good,” he said. “Both teams played their hearts out, and this is what the game is about.

“Friends that grew up and played little league together, now playing for their respective schools and having a blast doing it. It is the smiles and friendly banter that is what makes it so nice to see.”

As an (admittedly biased) writer, please have no doubt I wanted Coupeville to win. Badly.

I long ago gave up the impartiality of my old school newspaper days.

But I can also appreciate, as McGranahan does, what Ashburn accomplished with a simple “yes.”

Saturday’s game was a thriller, a one-run affair until almost the end.

It offered a special spotlight for Coupeville’s seniors — Crownover, Sarah Wright, and Nicole Laxton — and also for fab frosh Izzy Wells, who chucked a complete-game win from the pitcher’s circle while dealing with a ripped-up finger on her throwin’ hand.

And, hopefully, it is the start of a new rivalry.

The Wolves obviously can’t go toe-to-toe with the Wildcats in sports like football, where the disparity in roster size makes the issue a non-starter.

But softball is, without a doubt, a sport in which the two schools can face off, with both teams taking the field knowing it can, and will be, a true battle.

So, my plea to both sides, but especially to Oak Harbor, which largely controls the decision – let’s make this a yearly event.

The quality of play Saturday, from both teams, and the heart and hustle, the excitement, and the fight shown, makes it a necessity.

And it was a rumble, with Oak Harbor poking across the game’s first run in the bottom of the opening inning.

But, after going down one-two-three in the top of the first, Coupeville brought its bats alive, lighting up the scoreboard for a pair of runs in both the second and third innings.

The Wolves opened the second with three straight base-knocks, with Wright and Mollie Bailey punching singles to set Crownover up for the first, but far from last, hero moment of the game.

Turning on a pitch with a stunning ferocity, the Wolf first-baseman walloped the ball to deep center field, sending both of her teammates streaking for home as she pulled into second base with a stand-up double.

While Oak Harbor escaped the inning with little damage after that, just plunking Laxton for the first of two times she would be drilled in the game, the tide had turned.

Wells was bobbing and weaving, chucking strikeouts and inducing ground-outs, and she stranded a Wildcat at third after a gem of a triple from Sam Scott.

Providing immediate support to their freshman ace, the Wolves picked up two runs in the third off of an RBI double from Wright and the world’s longest RBI single by Crownover.

The hottest hitter in the Northern hemisphere launched a moon shot to dead center, and everyone froze for a moment, watching as the ball hit the very top of the fence, thought about crawling over for a home run, then plopped back onto the field.

Veronica’s dad, Darren, wailed like he had been whacked in the groin with a two-by-four when the ball refused to go out of the yard, but, spoiler alert, a little later in this story he’ll be really, really happy.

Oak Harbor didn’t crack down three runs, though, getting one back in the third on a majestic home run from Kayla Crocker, then another in the fifth on an RBI single by Tamara Bennett.

The damage could have been worse, much worse, in the fifth, but Wolf shortstop Chelsea Prescott pulled off a dazzling double play to stem the tide.

Scooping up a hot grounder, the CHS sophomore alertly spun, tagged a runner going by her, then delivered a wicked throw into Crownover’s glove, beating the incoming Wildcat by a millimeter.

Maybe a millimeter and a half.

Oak Harbor’s defense also came up big-time during the middle part of the game, stiffing Coupeville in two consecutive innings.

The ‘Cats escaped a base-loaded jam in the fourth, started by an epic triple off the bat of Scout Smith, then nailed a runner coming home in the fifth thanks to a powerful, precise throw from left field.

With the game sitting at 4-3 headed into the top of the sixth, the overflow crowd, a mix of partisan fans from both towns, was agitated, full of angst and popping M & M’s like they were going out of style.

Wait, that was just me…

But it was OK, cause M & M’s are delicious, and because the Wolves reached a special level with the game hanging by a thread.

Emma Mathusek got things rolling with a single, slapping the ball into the gap like she was playing pool and taking people’s money while doing it.

A one-out double from Wright put runners on second and third, but an alert Oak Harbor fielder kept anyone from scoring, setting up the magic moment.

Or two moments.

The first was a miracle, because it makes no sense how it happened.

Bailey looped a ball towards second base, and the ball, operating with a mind of its own, somehow evaded every Wildcat in the area, dropping suddenly and burrowing into the ground for an improbable, but much-appreciated, RBI single.

And then a shadow covered the field.

Striding to the plate like she was preparing to sack a rival’s castle in olden times, twisting her bat until it screamed for mercy, Veronica Crownover was on a mission.

After whacking her double and top-of-the-wall single, Oak Harbor had intentionally walked her the next time up.

This time, with two runners on base, and after some serious eyeballing of her dugout, the Wildcat hurler came after Crownover, two young women fixing for a back-alley brawl.

Don’t get in a back-alley brawl with Veronica Crownover.

Almost breaking her bat in half, and almost (almost…) making her hitting coach smile in approval, the two-time All-League player hit the ball halfway to Deception Pass Bridge.

By the time the bright yellow orb descended, it was on the other side of the towering left-field fence, some 219-plus feet away, her father had screamed loud enough the relatives back in Pennsylvania had heard him, and the game was a done deal.

Oak Harbor still had two innings to hit, but Wells closed the game with her best pitches.

Ignoring the pain of a shredded finger, she gave up just a pair of walks once she had an 8-3 lead, ending the game by getting a final ‘Cat to loft a soft fly which landed with a sweet lil’ plop as Mathusek pulled the ball in and squeezed it tightly to her chest in center.

Coupeville’s most complete game of the still-young season, it featured 12 hits, with Crownover (HR, 2B, epic 1B), Wright (2B, two 1B’s), and Bailey (two 1B’s) leading the way.

Smith had her triple, Mackenzie Davis smoked a double, while Wells and Mathusek added singles.

Wells, who has both of Coupeville’s wins from the pitcher’s circle, finished with a high school career-high six strikeouts.

 

Game One:

Lakewood hit with power, fielded with grace, pitched with precision, and put on a show, rolling to 4-1 with an 18-5 win over Coupeville, followed by a 14-1 dismantling of Oak Harbor.

The Wolves had their moments, racking up seven hits, including doubles from four different players, and had a nice four-run rally in the third inning.

Laxton led off the frame with a single, followed by Smith, Mathusek, and Prescott crunching back-to-back-to-back doubles.

Mathusek’s shot brought two runners around, Prescott’s plated a third, and the Wolves garnered a final run on a rare Lakewood error.

With four runs in, the bases juiced, and just one out, there were a few fans (OK, maybe just me) who entertained thoughts of Coupeville coming all the way back from the 15-1 deficit it faced at the start of the inning.

It wasn’t to be, however, as Lakewood used a strikeout and a slightly dubious interference call on a Wolf runner to bring things to an end.

Smith (1B, 2B) paced the Coupeville attack, while Mathusek (2B), Crownover (2B), Prescott (2B), Laxton (1B), and Wright (1B) also collected a base-knock.

Freshman third-baseman Audrianna Shaw walked twice.

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Kalia (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf athletes Taylor Consford and Kalia Littlejohn are runway-ready. (John Fisken photos)

Mckenzie Meyer

   CHS musical ace Mckenzie Meyer makes a guest appearance with the Oak Harbor High School band.

Jaschon

Jaschon Baumann is not amused by your shenanigans.

fans

Coupeville’s finest take over the OHHS bleachers.

Quickest way to get your photo taken if you’re a Coupeville athlete?

Pop up to Oak Harbor and hang out in the stands during a Wildcat game.

The OHHS boys’ basketball squads hosted first-place Stanwood Thursday night, and a fair chunk of the rooting section was made up of Wolf athletes.

With wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken working his home beat, he was nice enough to snag some pics of the Coupeville interlopers and send them our way.

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Matt Hilborn (John Fisken photo)

   Matt Hilborn accounted for all of Coupeville’s points Monday in a loss at Oak Harbor. (John Fisken photo)

For one bright, shining moment, an upset seemed to be brewing.

Then reality reared its head.

In the time it took for one pass to head the wrong way, the chances the Coupeville High School JV football squad would upend host Oak Harbor Monday went from “hey now…” to “no, sir.”

One second, the Wolves were knocking on the door, the next Wildcat defensive back Ashton Prats had firmly slammed that door shut.

And while the Wildcat sophomore was hauled down two yards shy of a 76-yard pick six, the play changed the whole tone of the game, which eventually finished with Oak Harbor rolling to a 52-8 win.

Before Prats grabbed the spotlight, for the first, but not last time, Coupeville was holding its own with its big city neighbors.

The Halloween afternoon game was put together at the last second, after Marysville-Pilchuck bailed on Oak Harbor.

Lil’ 1A Coupeville, which had a gap in its schedule thanks to Chimacum not fielding a JV squad, stepped up to the challenge and headed up Island to play the 3A Wildcats in their 3,000-seat, turf-field-rockin’, covered stadium.

Half the Wolf JV roster is made up of freshmen, while Oak Harbor limited themselves to just 15 or so JV-level sophomores plucked from their 59-player roster.

The Wildcat freshmen didn’t see action, as they have a game scheduled for later in the week.

After a 45-yard punt from Matt Hilborn pinned Oak Harbor deep in its own territory, the Wolf defense played strongly on the ‘Cats opening drive.

Gavin Knoblich hauled one runner down from behind, snagging him by the back of his shoe, and Coupeville forced an incomplete pass on fourth down to get the ball back.

Sitting pretty with first-and-10 from the Wildcat 24, Wolf QB Dawson Houston went to the air and had a man open … until Prats jumped the play, snagged the ball and was off like a rocket down the left sideline.

CHS forced him out at the two-yard line, but Prats made up for it on the next play, slamming in for a touchdown run to open the scoring.

There was plenty more of that to come, as Oak Harbor tacked on four scores in the second half and another three in the third to trigger a running clock.

Prats and ultra-speedy Zion Gomez racked up three TD’s apiece, while Cody Fenton and Juan Luna-Elliot chipped in with a score each.

Two of the touchdowns came on passes from ‘Cat QB Taylor Rummel, while the Oak Harbor running game hummed along behind a stout line led by Joseph Orr.

Coupeville bent, but didn’t break, twice blocking PAT attempts.

On the first one Jake Hoagland came roaring around from the outside and took the ball in the middle of his back, while on the second stuff Andrew Martin came up the middle to get his hands on the ball.

Martin also teamed up with Luke Carlson to blow up a running play in the backfield in the fourth quarter, bringing the Wildcat runner down for a big loss and forcing a turnover on downs.

The Wolves finally cracked the end zone themselves in the final quarter.

Hilborn, giving Houston a breather, ripped off a 15-yard run, then hit Jonathan Thurston on a 27-yard bomb to set things up.

Camped on Oak Harbor’s 10-yard line, Coupeville turned a bad play into a brilliant one.

Snagging a high snap over his head, Hilborn started right, spun back to the left, then ran over three defenders as he scooted in for the touchdown.

He then tacked on a two-point conversion, accounting for all of the Wolf scoring himself.

Houston spent much of the game scrambling for his life, but he still completed seven passes, with Hoagland hauling in five of those.

Matthew Shreffner and Thurston also had snags on balls thrown their way.

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Katrina McGranahan (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan leans into a new season. (John Fisken photos)

team

The CHS varsity has a pre-match get-together.

Hope Lodell

Hope Lodell unleashes.

Maddy Hilkey

   Maddy Hilkey sets up the offense, under the watchful eye of teammate Allison Wenzel.

Maya Toomey-Stout

Wolf frosh Maya Toomey-Stout elevates.

They stared down the big dogs and lived to tell about it.

Coupeville may be one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, but its spikers showed no fear Saturday, facing off with two huge schools at a season-opening jamboree.

Host Oak Harbor is a 3A school, while Mt. Vernon calls 4A home.

Whatever they lacked in numbers, the Wolves made up in grit and hustle.

“We did well – I’m very optimistic about our starting point this early in the season,” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore. “It was great to get playing someone other than each other and come together to showcase what we’ve worked hard on so far.”

As the Wolves sparred with the Wildcats and Bulldogs, they stayed focused on the areas their first-year head coach had outlined for them.

“I was happy that we left each game with something specific we improved upon,” Whitmore said. “Our passing was a big focus and by the end that was a skill I felt like saw the most growth.”

Coupeville got plenty of floor time, with both its varsity and JV getting two matches each.

“We remained competitive with everyone; we even took a game from Oak Harbor,” Whitmore said. “I’m pleased with the two squads’ baseline that we set today.

“Now it’s about taking steps forward in each contest and practice.”

The Wolves open regular season play Tuesday (4:30 JV/6:00 varsity), with the first of five straight home matches.

Their foe on opening night is Mount Vernon Christian, which went 18-5 and finished fourth at state in 1B last season.

To see more photos (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/VB-20160903-Jamboree/

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