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Nicole Lester made her varsity softball debut Thursday as the Wolves rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

   Nicole Lester made her varsity softball debut Thursday as the Wolves rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

“It was good to see the girls back to their old selves.”

After hitting a brief rough spot in the schedule, the Coupeville High School softball squad bounced back with a fury Thursday afternoon, pleasing coach Kevin McGranahan.

Taking full advantage of a young Port Townsend program mired in the midst of a 30-game losing streak, the Wolves, as politely as possible, thrashed the RedHawks 24-6.

The win snaps a three-game skid for Coupeville and lifts them to 7-4 overall, 2-2 in 1A Olympic League play.

With Klahowya (1-1, 6-5) falling to Chimacum (3-0, 7-4) Thursday, the Wolves move back up into second place with more than half the league season left to play.

Facing a school which hasn’t won a softball game since April of 2014, Coupeville rained down runs.

The Wolves plated 10 in the first, then another eight in the second, forcing their coach to curtail his team’s running and find ways to keep the game moving as quickly as possible to its foregone conclusion.

He was able to swap players around and have them work at new positions, give daughter Katrina some time off in the pitcher’s circle and offer Nicole Lester her first start.

The freshman responded just the way her coach was hoping, turning on a pitch and smacking a sharp ground-ball on her first at-bat.

As a team, the Wolves were able to walk a fine line — they needed a win to get their mojo back, but didn’t want to unnecessarily embarrass their hosts.

“Port Townsend is a rebuilding team, but it was good to play them and let the girls just have fun and get back to the basics and play ball,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Everyone on the team contributed today and played well.

“The bats were on fire and we went station to station after the first inning trying to keep the scoring to a minimum.”

Katrina McGranahan carried the biggest bat, whacking two triples and a pair of singles while driving in six runners.

The Wolves collected five doubles on the day, with Mikayla Elfrank leading the way with a pair. Sarah Wright, Kailey Kellner and Jae LeVine also got in on the extra-base parade.

Wright and LeVine had three hits apiece, while Lauren Rose collected a pair of singles and Tamika Nastali beat out “a beautiful bunt.”

Veronica Crownover, Robin Cedillo, Tiffany Briscoe and Hannah Benway all collected base knocks, as well.

Katrina McGranahan (one hit and nine strikeouts in three innings) and Wright (two hits and four K’s) made for a formidable duo in the pitcher’s circle.

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They call Hope Lodell "The Surgeon" because she carves up opposing pitcher's. (John Fisken photo)

   They call Hope Lodell “The Surgeon” because she carves up opposing pitchers. (John Fisken photo)

Domination, mixed with compassion.

That was the tricky balancing act Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan had to navigate Thursday.

With the Wolves runnin’ and gunnin’ to their best start in more than a decade, and visiting Port Townsend coming in carrying a 25-game losing streak, the chances of the game being a rout ran high.

And, to little surprise, Coupeville beat the snot out of the ball en route to a 19-4 win in their 1A Olympic League opener.

But the Wolves improved to 6-1 overall while shaking up their lineup, putting the spotlight on some of their role players and finding creative ways to use their stars.

Coupeville opened the game with a different look in the outfield, going so far as to give freshman Hannah Benway not only her varsity debut but a chance to start in right field.

The most upbeat, happy-to-be-here player on a Wolf roster full of players who fit that description, the whirlwind frosh made solid contact her first time at the plate, earned a walk by getting drilled with a pitch the next time up, and was a constant source of delight to her teammates and coaches.

After starting pitcher Katrina McGranahan whiffed the first three Port Townsend hitters with a mere flick of her wrist, her dad decided to further mix things up by moving freshman catcher Sarah Wright into the pitcher’s circle.

Once there, she ended up working three innings in two stints (McGranahan pitched a one-two-three third inning before Wright returned and finished the game, which was called after five innings).

At the plate, everyone hit for the Wolves, and they carved up RedHawk pitching with ease.

Coupeville plated five in the first, with the big hits coming from Wright (a two-run triple that was cranked) and Jae LeVine (a two-run double that took off like a rocket).

After Port Townsend crawled back into the game for a moment with three runs in the second as Wright adjusted to her new role, the Wolves put the game on cruise control with a 14-batter, 10-run bottom of the third.

Making the inning even more special? All 10 runs came in after CHS had two outs.

Mikayla Elfrank scampered home on a passed ball, Benway came around on a throwing error, and then Kailey Kellner uncorked a liner to deep center field.

By the time it finished bouncing around, two runners had crossed the plate. Kellner trucked all the way around as well, when the throw back in sailed into the deep brush behind the first-base dugout.

Not content with a 10-3 lead, Coupeville pushed five more across before the inning ended, with Elfrank and LeVine smacking back-to-back RBI triples to account for three of the runs.

LeVine made it to third despite being plunked in the head on a throw from a frazzled Port Townsend outfielder.

Bouncing right back up, double-pumping her fists in celebration and flashing a huge grin, “Flash” seemed none the worse for wear.

And yet, after all that, the biggest hit of the game was still on the horizon, and came from a player who spent a chunk of the afternoon chilling on the bench.

Normally her team’s starting center fielder, sophomore Hope Lodell sat to allow Kevin McGranahan to work in players lower on the roster.

Having returned to the lineup in the fourth, she came to the plate for the first time with Coupeville up 17-3 and Wright camped on first with one out.

Normally a superb slap hitter, “The Surgeon” suddenly hefted her expensive bat and crushed a ball down the left field line.

As the ball sliced through the air, caught fair territory and kicked to the side, Lodell, after a momentary pause, took off like a Greyhound coming down the stretch run.

Almost passing Wright on the base-paths once her jets kicked in, she pulled off a stand-up, inside-the-park two-run home run that caused dad Mike — the craftsman groundskeeper who keeps the CHS field looking flawless — to come unglued.

The chances he’s still screaming, and will be for the next two weeks (the Wolf softball sluggers are off until Apr. 12, when they travel to Lynden Christian)?

Pretty close to 100%.

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Maggie Crimmins teamed with Kameryn St Onge to pull out a doubles win Monday. (John Fisken)

Maggie Crimmins teamed with Kameryn St Onge to pull out a doubles win Monday. (John Fisken)

Everything went to plan.

Playing on its home courts Monday, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad enjoyed sunny skies, warm weather, no breeze and a chance to paddle an opponent.

Facing a Friday Harbor team that was very young and very much in the development stage, the Wolves romped to a 6-1 win, their first official victory of the season.

Coupeville now sits at 1-1, with two matches (a 3-1 lead over Granite Falls and a 3-3 tie with Klahowya) still waiting to be finished later in the season.

The Wolves hit the road Wednesday to face Island arch-rival South Whidbey in Langley, then sit until Apr. 12.

Facing off with a green Wolverine squad (more than half its players are newcomers and the coach is in his first season), Coupeville put them down quickly.

Only two varsity matches resembled anything close to a battle.

Playing pro sets instead of the normal best two-of-three sets format to allow Friday Harbor time to ankle to the ferry, Coupeville dropped two or fewer games in five of seven contests.

Best moments:

Valen Trujillo dropping a series of lobs over her opponents head, artfully using her shot-making skills to baffle her foe.

Bree Daigneault rolling her eyes way into the back of her head and moaning “Moooooooooooommmmm, you’re making me nervous,” and then immediately proving she wasn’t really all that nervous by whipping a winner down the line.

The entire CHS squad proving once again it is the kindest, politest, most considerate tennis squad I have ever witnessed, stopping to compliment their opponents on almost every shot, even when the Wolves were rolling.

When I played at Tumwater High School back in the day, we took great delight in hitting our own teammates during practice and once set off a near-riot while in Aberdeen.

Monday, almost to a girl, the Wolves went out of their way to personally thank the Friday Harbor girls for making the trip to Whidbey.

Kids today, so much classier than we ever were…

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Morgan Timmons 8-0

2nd singlesSydney Autio beat Alli Benz 8-1

3rd singlesBree Dagineault beat Madeline King 8-2

1st doublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Jillian Urbach/Lucy Urbach 8-0

2nd doublesJazmine Franklin/McKenzie Bailey beat Midi Thomas/Mariah Dannibar 8-2

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Katy Kalseth/Joely Loucks 8-6

4th doubles Julia Borges/Julianne Sem lost to Morgan Timmons/Isabelle Brown 8-3

JV:

5th doublesKenzi LaRue/Jazmine Franklin lost to Yasmin Sara/Calina DePue 6-4

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Arisbeth Montiel, seen here in an earlier game, scored twice Saturday in an 8-0 win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Arisbeth Montiel, seen here in an earlier game, scored twice Saturday in an 8-0 win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Jovanah Foote

Jovanah Foote has become a crowd favorite in her first year as a booter.

Lauren Grove was the loneliest girl in town.

The Coupeville High School soccer goalie got all dressed up and then spent 80 minutes cooling her heels, as she didn’t face a single shot on goal Saturday.

With the Wolves scoring early and often, they eventually had to spend the final 30 minutes of the game conducting a passing drill to keep from thrashing visiting Forks any harder than they did.

When the ref finally, mercifully signaled the end of play, allowing the visitors to head back to their bus and the pile of pizzas waiting them (Coupeville moms pulled off a surprise Pizza Factory delivery as a thank you for the Spartans making the long trip), the scoreboard read 8-0.

And it could have been much, much worse, if Wolf coach Troy Cowan hadn’t very firmly applied the brakes.

Capturing the first win of the fall season for any CHS squad, varsity or JV, the Wolf booters, now 1-1-1 on the season, controlled every aspect of the game.

Kalia Littlejohn provided her squad with the only goal it would actually need in the game’s 11th minute, cracking in a shot from the right side for her third goal of the season.

It was the third straight game she had scored, keeping her perfect during her young high school career.

Once the bubble was burst, the Wolves poured it on.

Bree Daigneault punched in a goal, taking a booming corner kick off the foot of Jenn Spark, catching it and flipping it past the stricken goalie.

It was a feeling the Spartans net-minder would feel often on the day, with the game’s third goal coming on a ball that landed in the goalie’s hands, then popped free.

Seizing the moment, Ashley Smith tapped in the ball and the rout was on.

After that, the rest of the first half was the Mia Littlejohn show.

Back after missing a game, the super sophomore scored on a bull run, assisted on a score by Arisbeth Montiel, then capped the half with a bomb from almost midfield that splashed into the back of the net.

Coupeville continued to push, for just a bit, in the second half, with Montiel notching her second score and Spark pulling off a nasty pump fake move that left two Spartans on the ground while she slid by for the game’s final goal.

After that, the Wolves noticeably pulled back, passing up numerous breakaway opportunities while working on their passing game, with Sage Renninger, Lindsey Roberts, May Rose and others essentially playing keep-away.

Crowd favorite Jovanah Foote, a Wolf cheerleader moonlighting as a booter for the first time, made several strong runs near the end and came dangerously close to notching a goal, which would have sent her ardent fans into a fit.

I’m just saying. If Foote had hit pay dirt, Dawn Hesselgrave would have come fully unglued.

And Grove?

She finally touched the ball 64 minutes into the match, when Roberts, circling on defense, tapped it back to her, mainly to check and see if her goalie was still awake.

Grove was, and she flashed a huge smile as the pro-Coupeville crowd went bonkers razzing her for her “great save.”

It was a smile worn by all the Wolves on this day, a sunny afternoon when the goals rained down from the heavens.

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A warning has been issued to softballs everywhere. This is Hailey Hammer and she will hurt you. (John Fisken photo)

  A warning has been issued to softballs everywhere. This is Hailey Hammer and she will hurt you. Approach with caution. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose, having recovered from this dusty encounter in an earlier game, knocked in a pair of runs Thursday.

Hailey Hammer’s bat just melted.

Pounded the snot out of the ball all day long, the Coupeville High School senior put together a nine RBI afternoon Thursday, sparking the Wolves to a 20-4 romp over host Klahowya.

Hammer’s offensive explosion, which included a grand slam that cleared the fence and is still bouncing down the interstate, helped Coupeville improve to 6-10.

The Wolves finished their first go-round in the 1A Olympic League at 5-4 and will claim third place and a trip to the playoffs.

Before they get there, however, they have three non-conference games that were rained out to make-up — at South Whidbey (May 15) and Meridian (May 18) and home against La Conner (May 19).

Klahowya (6-2) and Chimacum (6-2), who have split their first two meetings, face-off Tuesday to determine the league champ.

The Eagles, who were without their top pitcher Thursday, will need to regroup after taking a shellacking from the Wolves.

“Everyone hit today and made it on base,” said CHS coach Deanna Rafferty.”It was a great offensive game.”

The few times Hammer didn’t pick up the RBI, everyone else chipped in.

Freshmen Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan had two each, while Tiffany Briscoe, McKayla Bailey, Kailey Kellner and Jae LeVine knocked in a run apiece.

McGranahan whiffed seven batters, and the few times the Eagles made contact against her, the Wolf defense flagged most things down.

Briscoe got web gem honors with a deep catch in left.

“It was a great way to finish league play,” Rafferty said. “I’m proud of my girls, they played with grace and sportsmanship.”

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