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Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Wright’

Robin Cedillo made a sparkling catch while patrolling the outfield Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Robin Cedillo made a sparkling catch while patrolling the outfield Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

There are peaks and valleys in almost every season.

For the Coupeville High School softball squad, they are most definitely wandering in the latter right now.

Which means it’s very likely there’s another peak right ahead. You just have to stay positive.

After absorbing a 9-1 loss at Klahowya Wednesday, the Wolves, who started the season with six wins in seven games, have now suffered the exact reverse.

They sit at 7-7 overall and 2-4 in the 1A Olympic League, which puts them squarely in third-place in the four-team league.

Defending champ Chimacum (5-0, 9-4) is in control, at least for the moment, while Klahowya (3-1, 8-5) is still looking to unseat the Cowboys.

Port Townsend (0-5, 0-10), which has a 32-game losing streak which officially hits two years Thursday, brings up the rear.

The loss to Klahowya eliminates Coupeville from any chance of winning the league title, but it remains in play for second-place, though, admittedly, faces an uphill battle.

First, the Wolves need to regroup and focus on beating Port Townsend at home Friday.

Finish off the season sweep (they captured the first two meetings 19-4 and 24-6), and CHS clinches a playoff berth.

Facing the Eagles Wednesday, Coupeville showed improvement in trying to deal with Klahowya hurler Amber Bumbalough, the reigning league MVP.

“The bats did better today,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan. “We just couldn’t get the big hits to drive in the runs.”

Coupeville notched its lone run in the top of the second, when Jae LeVine rapped a sharp single to right to plate Sarah Wright, who had opened the inning with a walk.

Making her first career start in the pitcher’s circle, Wright, a freshman, went the distance for the Wolves, whiffing two.

“She did a good job and the defense played well behind her,” McGranahan said. “The girls played upbeat today and again never hung their heads and fought to the end.”

Tamika Nastali and Robin Cedillo came up huge in the outfield with “great catches” to spark the defense.

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Sarah Wright (John Fisken photo)

   Sarah Wright has had hair-raising athletic success as just a freshman. (John Fisken photos)

sarah

A vital part of the Wolves on and off the court.

The birthday girl and the prairie.

The birthday girl and her prairie.

Sarah Wright has been a star since day one.

No, not day one of her freshman year at Coupeville High School.

Day one, as in Apr. 5, 2001, the day Miss Wright popped into the world.

I wasn’t there, but I’m pretty sure she came out already talking, clapping and bellowing “Let’s get this goin’, ladies!!”

Sarah is a natural leader, not just because she can kick your butt at most of her sports, but because she has an air about her.

A mix of confidence, steel-jawed courage and love and respect for her teammates, I have yet to see her take the field (or the court) with anything less than a look that says “We are gonna kick some fanny today!!”

As personable, friendly and entertaining as anyone currently repping the red and black in Cow Town, Sarah is a three-sport standout.

Volleyball, basketball (where she made her varsity debut in a state playoff game and promptly ripped down a rebound 1.3 seconds into her floor time) and, now, her calling card to glory — softball.

The Wolf diamond women are off to a 6-1 start, the best the program has achieved in a decade, and much of the credit goes to Wright.

Her ferocious hitting, where she has laid claim to the cleanup spot once owned by highly-decorated slugger Hailey Hammer, is a key.

So is her base-running, where she shows off her smarts, and her work behind the plate.

As the new Wolf catcher, everything flows through her, and a river of confidence flows out from her to all her teammates.

Down by five runs on the road at Concrete with six outs standing between the Wolves and defeat?

Wright would not let her team fall, storming up and down the dugout, telling her fellow players this, right now, was when they would rally.

And, of course, they did, roaring back to not only tie, but win by five, leaving a giddy Wright reason to grab any teammate she could get her hands on and deliver a huge hug.

It’s that mix of natural athletic ability — she is one more link in a large, extended family of highly-accomplished athletes — leadership and ability to inspire those around her that mark Sarah as one of the most promising young Wolves.

By the time graduation rolls around in 2019, she will likely have a pile of awards and letters at her feet, and I fully expect by the time she is done at CHS her face will grace the gym hallway as an Athlete of the Year.

Of course, whichever way her sports career goes, one thing will always be true — Sarah is a truly wonderful person first and foremost.

To know her is to think the world of her, cause frankly, if you don’t like her, there’s probably something deeply wrong with you.

As she celebrates her cake day today, the sunny face of a new generation of Wolf student/athletes, all of her fans (and there’s a lot of them) want to wish her a happy birthday.

Keep being you, Sarah! Cause it’s working out pretty dang well.

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Mikayla Elfrank (John Fisken photos)

   Mikayla Elfrank, seen here during practice, scored twice in her first game as a Wolf. (John Fisken photos)

Sarah Wright

   CHS freshman Sarah Wright had an impressive debut Saturday, crunching a triple and a single while hitting into a deadly wind.

One game in and Sarah Wright already has this whole high school softball thing down pat.

Making a smashing debut, the Coupeville High School freshman catcher whacked both of her team’s hits Saturday, sparking the scrappy, small-ball-lovin’ Wolves to a 4-1 Opening Day win over visiting South Whidbey.

Overcoming a steady wind that ripped in from center field, a strikeout-happy opposing hurler and an umpire who made some calls that would indicate he might have hit the beer tent at Mussel Fest before taking the field, CHS gave new coach Kevin McGranahan a victory in his debut.

Fielding a roster without a single senior, Coupeville’s starting lineup featured two freshmen and five sophomores.

Reunited with McGranahan, who many of the current Wolves played for as little league players, they looked loose, happy and confident, a marked change from last year.

Even when they had difficulty early with Falcon pitcher Mackenzee Collins, who whiffed eight in the first three innings en route to 16 K’s on the day, Coupeville’s core never crumbled.

“The girls stayed in the game and didn’t hang their heads, even when we were down,” Kevin McGranahan said. “They’re not a team that is ever going to quit on you, and they never did.”

With Collins virtually untouchable in the early going, giving up just a walk to fellow hurler Katrina McGranahan her first time through the Wolf lineup, South Whidbey didn’t need much to take control.

The Falcons got on the scoreboard first in the top of the third, when they staged an inadvertent rally.

Katrina McGranahan had torched eight of the first nine South Whidbey hitters she faced, but then had a brief bout of wildness and walked the bags full with two outs.

Perhaps rattled just a bit, a pitch got away from her, skipped on the ground and plunked a Falcon hitter who made no effort to get out of the way.

To the disbelieving howls of Coupeville’s large (and very cold) fan base, the ump awarded South Whidbey first base, forcing home a run.

As the specter of an agonizing 1-0 loss on a questionable, at best, call, hung in the air, the Wolves simply shrugged their shoulders and went to work.

From that point on, Coupeville’s defense was superb behind their mound warrior, and Katrina McGranahan responded with precision pitches, eventually ringing up 12 strikeouts of her own.

Playing error-less ball, with middle infielders Jae LeVine and Mikayla Elfrank both pulling off superb plays on tricky balls, the Wolves set themselves up to retake the lead, and immediately responded.

And they did it with panache, using small ball, gutty base-running and a go-go style to rattle the Falcons.

Coupeville broke through in the bottom of the fourth, putting two across (though it should have been three).

Elfrank, a former Falcon playing her first game in the red and black, led off with a walk, then scampered to third, taking advantage of tentative play from South Whidbey’s catcher.

She came around to knot things up a play later, on another botched play by the Falcons, before Wright finally recorded Coupeville’s first hit of the season.

It was a ferociously-hit single which took off like a rocket, hit an air pocket, spun in place in mid-air, then plopped at the edge of the infield as three infielders went in different directions.

On the edge of falling apart, the Falcons lost the lead on a successful steal of home by Katrina McGranahan, but were saved (for a moment) when Wright was called out on a bang-bang play at home.

This despite clearly sliding under the catcher’s glove, beating the throw by what felt like a good five or six seconds.

Clinging to a 2-1 lead, instead of continuing to rack up runs, the Wolves just kept at it, seemingly oblivious to any wailing from their fan section.

Thoroughly in command when in the field, Coupeville tacked on two more runs in the sixth.

Elfrank reached base when the Falcon catcher dropped a third strike, then whipped the ball off the runner’s back while scrambling to recover.

Though sporting a potential new bruise, the Wolf sophomore boldly took second and third on consecutive pitches before charging home on yet another passed ball.

Wright capped things with the one truly magnificent hit of the afternoon.

With Katrina McGranahan perched on base, the frosh phenom mashed a ball that shot down the first base line, low enough to evade the slicing wind.

Curving viciously, Wright’s shot ripped a chunk out of the outfield grass in fair territory, then shot to the right and headed for the shrubbery as a Falcon vainly tried to snag it.

By the time the ball came back in, Wright had hauled tail into third with the first, but undoubtedly far from the last, triple of her prep career.

The three-bagger earned plenty of hooting and hollering from the bleachers, where the player Wright most resembles in terms of game-changing power, former CHS slugger Hailey Hammer, was camped out.

It was the perfect cap to an auspicious start for a young, talented squad whose future is as bright as the sun that finally broke out, in typical Whidbey fashion, just when it was time for fans to go home.

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Brisa Herrera fought like a wild woman for every loose ball Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

   Brisa Herrera fought like a wild woman for every loose ball Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t perfect, maybe, but it was full of positives.

A year after a very polished squad rolled through much of its competition, this year’s version of the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was much more of a work-in-progress.

With a roster that included six freshmen, several of whom hadn’t played before, the young guns showed improvement every week, and that’s all that coach Amy King asks.

While Coupeville fell 47-31 to visiting Klahowya Saturday, the Wolves finished 7-11, including a strong 5-4 in league play.

They never had anything longer than a two-game losing streak, and featured several players who should be making the jump up to help the varsity in the coming years.

One of the first who could get the call up to the big leagues is freshman Sarah Wright, who capped her season by pounding away in the paint for a game-high 10 points Saturday.

A ferocious rebounder and enforcer, she’s joined in the let’s-pound-folks department by Brittany Powers.

Listed at a mere five-foot-two in the program — she ties Lauren “Mouse” Rose as the smallest Wolf — Powers spends her time on the floor thrashing people up one side of the court and down the other.

Saturday night was a prime example, as she twice exited, applied ice to another place she had been whacked by rogue Eagles, then charged right back on the court to repay the experience, earning a smile and nod from her coach.

The two mighty mites both tallied seven points apiece, with Powers twice taking the ball coast-to-coast for buckets, while Rose pulled off the game’s best move, slicing the defense for a runner, then tacking on the ensuing free throw.

Allison Wenzel added three, while Skyler Lawrence and Nicole Lester rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

Ashlie Shank and Maddy Hilkey pushed the ball all night, running the Wolf offense, while Lindsey Laxton and Brisa Herrera both shone on defense.

Herrera, in particular, spent most of her time on the floor ripping the ball loose from Eagles hands, making sure every called jump ball she was involved in actually ended with her hands alone on the ball.

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Sarah Wright had team-highs in points (8) and rebounds (11) Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Sarah Wright had team-highs in points (8) and rebounds (11) Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Some nights, you can’t win no matter what.

Ravaged by illness (Lindsey Laxton, Brisa Herrera and spark-plug Lauren Rose were absent), the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad still scored more from the field than host Chimacum did Tuesday night.

Unfortunately, the Cowboys were dead-eyes at the free throw line, and that was just enough to spark a fourth quarter rally to carry them to a 29-23 win.

The loss dropped the Wolf young guns to 4-7 overall, 2-1 in conference play.

It was the first time the Coupeville JV lost a game to a 1A Olympic League rival.

After going 9-0 in the league’s debut season in 2014-2015, the Wolves had stretched their win streak to 11 going into Tuesday.

They didn’t go down easy, though.

Led by strong inside play from Sarah Wright (eight points and 11 rebounds) and Skyler Lawrence (six points, six rebounds), Coupeville led by a point coming out of the third quarter.

Up 18-17 with eight minutes to play, the Wolves were stung by foul trouble.

With several key players locked to the bench, Coupeville finally faltered, allowing Chimacum to close on a 12-5 run.

“In the fourth quarter we put up a lot of shots that just didn’t fall,” said Wolf coach Amy King. “We fought till the end though.”

Brittany Powers nailed a “gorgeous three” in the final moments to keep Coupeville close and “did a nice job stealing or getting a hand on the ball” all night.

Chimacum went with a press most of the game, but King was happy with how her team broke it.

Once they got their plays set up, the Wolves let the power twins hold the spotlight.

Skyler and Sarah really impressed from the start with their shots, intense rebounds and just their sheer strength,” King said.

Kyla Briscoe, Allison Wenzel and Nicole Lester each dropped in a bucket to back Wright (8), Lawrence (6) and Powers (3) in the scoring column, while Ema Smith ripped down seven rebounds.

Briscoe pilfered four steals, Maddy Hilkey snagged two boards and Ashlie Shank collected a rebound and a block to round out the team-wide effort.

Coupeville faces Chimacum twice more this season, and King is ready to attack with a full squad at her disposal.

“We meet them again next week and the girls are already looking forward to that,” she said. “We have some practice to do though, and if we play like I know we can, the outcome will be different.”

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