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Ethan Spark rolled to a win in the 6th annual Coupeville Sports Athlete Supreme poll. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The early days of a future champ.

Early in his high school basketball career, Ethan Spark blew up an entire bench.

Chasing a loose ball, he exploded through a wall of chairs, knocking other players left and right, before ultimately spinning and completely destroying a large water jug that was minding its own business.

In the aftermath, with bodies, chairs and water everywhere, Spark surveyed the scene and a small smile graced his face.

I’d like to think he was wearing the same face over the past 100 hours as his fan club carved a bloody path through the voting for the 6th annual Coupeville Sports Athlete Supreme.

Team Spark hit hard and fast, built a pretty-insurmountable 8,000 vote lead for its Wolf senior, went quiet for a bit, then dropped the hammer in the final stages.

The supporters of sophomore Scout Smith, trying to carry her to a win like older brothers CJ and Hunter, made a sustained 24-hour run to carve the lead in half.

But, once the lead dipped below 4,000 votes, Spark’s support crew went ballistic.

Throwing down 100 votes in 10 seconds at one point (seriously) they made sure their guy would come out on top.

And, of course he did, joining Nick Streubel, Amanda Fabrizi, CJ Smith, Hunter Smith and Joey Lippo (who still holds the record for most votes tallied in a single year) as “winners” of a totally fake award.

After 100 hours of voting, the top five from a field of 25 were:

Spark (18,374 votes)

Scout Smith (8,787)

Danny Conlisk (1,300)

Kyle Rockwell (782)

Matt Hilborn (746)

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Scout Smith had a double and three RBI Friday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

In the moment, this one stings.

When you’re repping an itty-bitty 1A school, playing on the road against a large 2A school, and hold the lead for much of the afternoon, losing a game in the final moment is not what you planned for, hoped for, or fought to accomplish.

So, in the moment, falling 7-6 to Port Angeles Friday, with the tying and winning runs coming in on a wild play in the bottom of the seventh, is a killer for the Coupeville High School softball squad.

But as bad as it stings, and it surely does, you don’t want to forget what the Wolves have accomplished, and what heights they can still achieve.

CHS finished the regular season 11-7 despite a patched-together schedule which had them playing 10 of 18 on the road and a third of their games against 2A schools.

They also swept Klahowya to claim the Olympic League title, their first conference crown since 2002.

That sends them to the West Central District 3 playoffs May 18-19 as a #1 seed, two wins from a trip to state.

The key for the Wolves will be to spend the next week focusing on everything that has gone right, not allowing a few down moments to consume their thoughts.

While tweaks are always necessary — Coupeville has uncharacteristically struggled on defense in recent games, while its big bats are in a bit of a slump — the team is in prime position to make a playoff run if the players embrace their destiny.

Districts are played on turf fields, while the Wolves have spent the regular season on grass, so the squad will head to NAS Whidbey this coming week to get in practice time on the different surface.

When they look for positives from Friday’s game, they can point to a sweet catch in left by Nicole Laxton, who elevated to snare a long drive right before it cleared her head.

The way Mackenzie Davis came charging out of the far dugout on foul balls over the backstop, then floored it, cleats clattering on asphalt to beat Roughrider rivals time and again who had a shorter distance to run, but a lot less heart.

Mollie Bailey’s funky drumming, as the fab frosh kept up a lively beat with her drum sticks when not in the game.

Or they can study Scout Smith’s at-bats, as she was the lone truly consistent Wolf at the plate against PA.

First time up, a note-perfect bunt which set up the game’s opening run.

Second time, a thunderous two-run double which shot down the line in left field and curled inwards at the last possible moment to tear a chunk out of fair territory.

Third time, an RBI ground-out to stretch Coupeville’s lead out to its largest margin.

Where the Wolves did have issues Friday was in keeping a consistent offensive attack going, and then preventing the Roughriders from scraping their way back into the game.

CHS got on the board in the first thanks to a little luck and some nice hustle from Lauren Rose.

The senior shortstop led off the game by slapping a liner that banged off a glove for an error, took second when the throw skipped past the first-baseman, then scooted to third on Smith’s bunt.

Perched on third, Rose bounced up and down, then shot home on a passed ball, making the local scoreboard operator get to work early.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s offense stalled out for a bit after that, and the Wolves fell behind 2-1 after two innings.

A triple to right from Kiana Watson-Charles, the first of two epic blasts from the PA sophomore, was big.

But a successful double steal by the Roughriders and a ball airmailed into right by Coupeville on another play were the real killers.

The Wolves fought back in the third, putting together their one sustained offensive attack of the game.

It started when freshman Coral Caveness out-hustled a throw to first after PA dropped a third strike.

After Emma Mathusek reached on a fielder’s choice in which PA’s only choice was to look one way, then the other, then hold the ball, CHS got back-to-back two-baggers from Rose and Smith.

Smith’s blast gave Coupeville the lead, before an RBI ground-out from Sarah Wright staked the Wolves to a 5-2 lead.

With Katrina McGranahan humming in the pitcher’s circle — she finished with 10 strike-outs — CHS held the Roughriders scoreless in the third and fourth.

Mathusek singled and came around on Smith’s run-scoring ground-out to push the lead to 6-2 heading into the bottom of the fifth.

That, though, was when Watson-Charles took over the game.

She mashed the stuffing out of the ball, driving a two-run home-run over the left-field fence to cut the margin to 6-4, then came on to pitch.

Retiring all six Wolves she faced across the sixth and seventh innings, Watson-Charles gave PA a fighting chance, and the Roughriders jumped on the opportunity.

They plated a run in the sixth to cut the lead to 6-5, but CHS escaped further damage when first-baseman Veronica Crownover made a nimble, unassisted put-out on a hot grounder for the third out.

There was no escape in the seventh, however.

PA used a single, a Coupeville error (on a hard-hit ball by Watson-Charles) and a walk to load the bags with one out, then won the game on the kind of shot you usually see on a pool table.

The ball came off a Roughrider bat and skittered wildly past the pitcher’s circle as the tying run charged home.

In the rush to make the play, Coupeville’s throw home skipped wild, as well, allowing the winning run to also tap the plate.

In the immediate aftermath, it was a rough way to lose the regular-season finale.

But, this is a talented Wolf team, full of players capable of great things. Their moment is still there, waiting to be seized.

“This was a tough game for us,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “We have a lot of things to work on this week and we will definitely give districts our best.”

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   “Dang, scored too many runs and broke the counter again…” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The tune-up went off flawlessly.

Playing on the road a day before its biggest game in 16 years, the Coupeville High School softball squad was humming Thursday afternoon.

Crushing 20 hits in just five innings of play, the Wolves obliterated La Conner 18-3 in a game which could have been far, far more one-sided.

CHS coach Kevin McGranahan gave quality time to bench players, never used his pitching ace in the circle and had the big boppers in his lineup practice their in-game bunting skills late in the game.

And still the Wolves romped, running their record to 8-3 headed into Friday’s home rumble with Klahowya.

Win that game (and CHS shellacked the Eagles 15-1 the first time around) and Coupeville clinches its first league title since 2002.

Thanks to rain and a patch-work schedule, Klahowya hasn’t played a single game since being bashed by the Wolves.

Meanwhile, Coupeville has gotten in another seven non-conference contests, going 5-2 with just losses to powerhouse Forks, during that time.

“We are as ready as we can be for Klahowya tomorrow and can now squarely set our sights on them,” Kevin McGranahan said.

His squad, even missing star shortstop Lauren Rose, who was off looking at colleges, played just about to perfection against La Conner.

Coupeville’s pitching ace, Katrina McGranahan, rested her arm, pulling time at short and third while the young guns, sophomore Scout Smith and freshman Chelsea Prescott, shared time in the circle.

Smith whiffed a pair of Braves sluggers while tossing the first two innings, made a sensational running catch over her shoulder at short in the fourth, then returned to close the game in the fifth.

Prescott, who has been a fixture at third base from day one of the season, made her varsity pitching debut and fired BB’s past La Conner in the third and fourth.

With the young duo humming, Coupeville wouldn’t have needed many runs to win. But good luck trying to stop the express train when it’s rolling.

The Wolves unloaded for five runs in both the first and second innings and put the game out of sight early.

While CHS got RBI singles from Katrina McGranahan, Sarah Wright and Mackenzie Davis in the top of the first (two other runs came around thanks to smart base-running), there was one early at-bat which wowed the gathered masses.

That came courtesy Wolf first-baseman Veronica Crownover, who worked the La Conner hurler through approximately 237 pitches.

The Coupeville junior crushed the snot out of a pair of foul balls which curved to the left and ended up down around Fidalgo Island to start things off.

Both were wicked liners which banged off of nearby buildings and would have been home runs if Crownover had gotten either ball to straighten out slightly.

La Conner’s pitcher had the look of a deer gazing softly into a semi truck’s oncoming headlights, and seemed genuinely relieved when the next foul ball went straight back and buried itself into a patch of trees.

Fouls #4 and #5 shot down the third-base line, with the second one causing Kevin McGranahan to jump a good two feet into the air to keep from earning a tattoo on his ankle.

“Ha! Didn’t think I could do that, did you??” the CHS coach chuckled, then took a quick step or two back as Crownover hefted her bat once more.

She finally reached base, coasting into second base after blasting a shot to left-center which skidded off the center-fielder’s glove and bounced madly away.

The whole let’s-smash-the-heck-outta-the-ball plan was just getting started, however.

Cue the second inning and Prescott, who strode to the plate with the bases juiced and no outs.

A single by Coral Caveness, a walk to Katrina McGranahan and Wright beating out a chopper set the table, and then the full meal was served.

Prescott, going full Mike Trout on the ball, crushed it, sending a cannon shot which punched a hole in the heavens, curled hard and plunged, biting a chunk of turf out of the deepest part of right field.

With first-base coach Ron Wright having a stroke yelling at his runners to get their feet moving before Prescott passed them, the fab frosh never broke stride, sliding under the tag for an inside-the-park grand salami.

And yet, there’s more! Much more!

Coupeville still had nine more runs to plate on this day, with Emma Mathusek, Nicole Laxton (twice) and Smith (twice) collecting RBI base-knocks in the later going.

Add a run-scoring ground-out off the bat of freshman Mollie Bailey, and the only thing preventing the Wolves from short-circuiting the scoreboard was their own sense of humility and fair play.

When Wright, your clean-up hitter, a basher and a bruiser who entered the game hitting .500 on the season, is dropping a bunt in the fifth (and safely making it to first), the brakes are as fully-applied as possible.

“They (La Conner) were a young team and learning as they go,” Kevin McGranahan said.

Coupeville spread the love, with nine of 11 active players getting a hit.

Prescott, Katrina McGranahan and Mathusek led the way with three base-knocks apiece, while Smith, Caveness, Wright, Crownover and Laxton collected two apiece.

Davis added a hit on a pool table shot that drifted past the pitcher, then spun madly, while Bailey had an RBI and Hope Lodell walked and played stellar defense in center.

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   Katrina McGranahan lays out to snag a fly ball that was caught in a gust of wind and suddenly changed directions. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Halfway in and the stat sheet is on fire.

The Coupeville High School softball squad, which jumps into the second half of the regular season this week with games against La Conner and Klahowya, is humming along at 7-3.

Coming off of an offensive fireworks show at Friday Harbor, the Wolves have some impressive numbers, and I’m here to share them with you.

The latest sweet statsy stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

 

Hitting:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
Caveness 18 7 5 3 2 5 .278 .350
Lodell 30 7 6 1 1 2 3 .200 .273
Mathusek 16 5 3 2 3 3 .188 .350
Smith 37 15 15 3 1 3 .405 .436
Rose 29 11 7 2 1 4 4 4 .241 .333
Prescott 29 12 7 1 4 3 4 .241 .312
Davis 7 2 1 2 3 .143 .455
McGranahan 31 17 11 1 1 9 6 10 .355 .512
Bailey 8 2 2 4 3 .250 .500
Crownover 34 8 16 4 3 1 13 .471 .486
Wright 36 12 18 4 1 2 1 20 .500 .500
Laxton 12 2 2 1 3 .167 .286

 

Pitching:

Player W/L ERA Gms CG SO Hits Runs BB K IP BF
McGranahan 6-1 2.28 9 6 2 32 25 19 43 46 211
Smith 1-2 7.47 4 1 19 23 5 4 15 76

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   Scout Smith had a pair of singles Saturday as Coupeville clashed with high-flying Forks in a doubleheader. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is not going to go the way you think.

Luke Skywalker’s words of wisdom in “The Last Jedi” were likely echoing around Coupeville Saturday, though, with all the wind, everyone could be forgiven for not hearing them.

On a day when the prairie was lashed by rolling, dirt-flinging, sustained winds that sliced through the souls of even the most die-hard of fans, the Wolf softball squad came back to Earth.

The CHS sluggers, coming off of a romp against Meridian, entered Saturday with a superb 6-1 record.

That record has now taken a ding or two, courtesy a very-impressive Forks team.

A Spartans unit that plays together as both a high school team and a travel ball squad showed what year-round commitment can inspire, as they drilled the Wolves 12-0 and 10-0 to sweep a doubleheader no one was sure would be played in the first place.

The non-conference losses drop Coupeville to 6-3, and its players, who managed just five hits on the day while battling flame-throwing Spartans and Mother Nature, will have some time to reflect on what went wrong.

CHS is off until next Saturday, Apr. 14, when it travels to Friday Harbor.

As he surveyed the damage, Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan was clear-eyed and committed to making sure his players bounce back quickly and efficiently.

“Long story short, Forks hit the ball and we didn’t,” he said. “We ran into a very good team today and we have some things to work on.”

The Spartans (7-2), who compete in the brutal Evergreen League, where they clash with fellow 1A powerhouses like Montesano, Elma and Hoquiam, are GOOD.

And yes, that word was meant to be all caps.

Forks, one through nine, hits with precision and power, it rarely make mistakes in the field and it boasts five pitchers with top-level stuff.

So, even though Wolf hurlers Katrina McGranahan and Scout Smith weren’t off by much Saturday, to beat the Spartans you would have to be close to flawless.

And Coupeville, whether bothered by the wind, the precision of their visitors, or a little jet lag from playing five games in six days, was not flawless on this day.

Game 1:

Katrina McGranahan came out all guns blazing, whiffing the side in the first, en route to nine K’s in the game.

But then things fell apart for a bit in the second, as Forks used four hits, including one greatly helped by the wind, which caused a routine fly ball to madly curve away from a CHS fielder at the last second, to bust things open.

Down 4-0 and unable to muster much offense, the Wolves went 11 batters into the game before they got their first runner aboard.

That was Smith, who ripped a one-out single to straight-away center in the fourth.

When the wind died (for at least six seconds) and McGranahan immediately followed with her own base-knock to right, the hints of a rally begin to emerge.

Only to be promptly smashed, as Forks cut down the lead runner on a grounder off the bat of Sarah Wright, then escaped the inning with a strikeout.

The game got away from CHS after that, with the Spartans plating three in the fifth (including a long two-run home-run) and five more in the sixth to enact the mercy rule.

Smith added a second single, while freshman Mollie Bailey toasted a single to center to cap Coupeville’s limited four-hit attack.

Game 2:

If the offense was blunted in the opener, it was DOA the second time around, with a Lauren Rose single and a Bailey walk accounting for the only Wolf base-runners.

Forks methodically picked away, scoring runs in small clumps, with the only bright spot for Coupeville coming from its defense.

Emma Mathusek nailed a runner coming in to third with a throw from left, Rose devoured everything which came her way in the middle of the infield and CHS turned a tricky double-play to stuff a rally.

The play of the game came from McGranahan, who was manning shortstop with Smith in the pitcher’s circle.

While Forks kept 99% of their hits on the ground Saturday, one Spartan lofted a ball high into the swirling madness in the first inning.

Breaking from short, McGranahan had to fight the wind, which caused the ball to suddenly reverse course, and an ump who couldn’t seem to get out of her way as she charged in, veered, then dove face-first.

Spearing the ball in the very tip of her glove, she snagged the orb as it dropped like an anvil, then held on through the collision with the ground, earning easily the biggest cheer of the afternoon.

Heck, even the ump who made her job harder was smiling about the play afterwards – a small victory on a rough and tumble day.

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