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Venom sluggers (l to r) Emma Mathusek, Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout combined for six hits in a 17-7 win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Venom sluggers (l to r) Emma Mathusek, Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout combined for six hits in a 17-7 win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

The weather was cold, but the bats were hot.

A day after Whidbey Island was scorched by the sun, we were back to chilly, swirling breeze on the prairie Tuesday, but that wasn’t enough to slow down the Venom.

Central Whidbey Little League’s Juniors softball squad whacked 12 hits and scored in every inning en route to thrashing visiting North Whidbey 17-7 in a game called after four innings.

The win, the team’s third straight, lifted them to 4-2 on the season.

The Venom came out aggressively, with starting pitcher Scout Smith firing BB’s, whiffing two and holding North Whidbey hit-less over the first two innings.

Her teammates quickly gave her a sizable lead, plating four in the first and another in the second.

The gazelle-like Maya Toomey-Stout, making her season debut at catcher, drew a lead-off walk, stole second on a play where she was two inches from the bag before the ball even arrived at the plate, then scampered home on an RBI single from Emma Mathusek.

Central Whidbey tacked on runs off of a passed ball and an error before Willow Vick capped the first-inning rally.

She golfed an RBI single that went two miles high over short, then plummeted downward, finding a tiny crack between two defenders as it arrived back on Earth.

A bases-loaded walk to Hannah Davidson forced in another run in the second to make it 5-0, before North Whidbey found its one rally.

Taking advantage of a switch in pitchers, the Oak Harbor squad used five walks (including a batter plunked on the posterior) and a couple of passed balls to tie things up at 5-5.

The Venom flipped to their third pitcher of the game, moving Chelsea Prescott in from shortstop with two outs, and the heat-chuckin’ 7th grader immediately shut things back down.

She ended the inning with a strikeout on a nasty fastball, then held North Whidbey in check the rest of the way.

As quickly as the game got close, it went right back to being a blow-out, as Central Whidbey couldn’t stop hitting.

Sending 12 hitters to the plate in the bottom of the third, the Venom rained down a game-busting seven runs off of five hits.

Melia Welling lofted a gorgeous shot to right field that sliced just over the first baseman’s head to kick things off, then returned later in the inning with a two-run single to cap the scoring.

In between, Toomey-Stout, Smith and Mollie Bailey all collected base knocks, with Smith’s exploding off of the bag at third and Bailey’s being a laser shot to left center.

North Whidbey’s pitching came a bit unglued in the fourth, with five walks and five wild pitches allowing the Venom to scratch out enough runs to invoke the ten-run rule.

Fittingly, though, on a day when Central Whidbey was generating hits from the top of the order to the bottom, the final run came home off of a single up the middle from Toomey-Stout.

Proving her blazing speed is not a fluke, she was already at first before the ball left the bat.

Or at least it seemed that way.

Toomey-Stout, AKA “Gazelle,” led the way with three hits, while Smith, Prescott and Welling had two apiece.

Mathusek, Vick and Bailey each chipped in with a hit, while Davidson, Cynthia Rachal and Marenna Rebischke-Smith combined to draw six walks.

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Scout Smith

   Scout Smith (black hoodie) headed outdoors Thursday and whiffed 12 hitters in a 10-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

Scout Smith might not be the biggest player on the field, but she’s a beast nonetheless.

Gunning down hitters left and right Thursday, the Coupeville Middle School 8th grader whiffed 12 North Whidbey batters as she sparked the Central Whidbey Little League juniors softball squad to a resounding 10-1 home win in its season opener.

The game revived the Venom brand and its day-glo uniforms.

Two years ago, the CWLL juniors went undefeated through the regular season and advanced to state.

After a year with no team, a new batch of Wolves have reclaimed the mantle and got off to a highly-successful start.

With Smith, or Scoutosaurus Rex as her fan club started describing her, on fire in the pitcher’s circle, the Venom were in command all game.

Not that they were ahead all game, though, as their offense took a bit to get fully going.

Trailing 1-0 heading into the bottom of the fourth — the run came in on a throwing error — Central Whidbey had put runners on in every inning, only to strand them.

Smith singled in the first, Maya Toomey-Stout walked in the second and Chelsea Prescott singled in the third, but each time the Venom couldn’t follow up.

And then things changed in a snap.

Emma Mathusek reached on an error to lead off the fourth, took second on a passed ball and scooted home when Smith smashed a hot shot off the second baseman’s glove.

Marenna Rebischke-Smith then won the game (though no one knew it at the time) by crushing an RBI single to straightaway center to give Central Whidbey its first lead.

Not content to stop there, the Venom plated four in the fifth and four more in the sixth, effectively turning a pitcher’s duel into a rout.

Cynthia Rachal kicked things off in the fifth when she out-ran the catcher’s throw to first after a third strike skittered away, while Prescott eventually brought her home with a bullet of an RBI single up the gut.

With North Whidbey frazzled, the Venom took advantage, running on almost every pitch and tacking on runs on a heady mix of passed balls and errors.

Hannah Davidson, Smith and Toomey-Stout all added RBI singles in the late going, as the singing and chanting, once started in the Central Whidbey dugout, never stopped.

All ten Venom players in attendance had an impact.

Melia Welling drew two walks and scored a run, Willow Vick patrolled right field with panache and Mollie Bailey anchored the squad with her work behind home plate, non-stop chatter and her impeccable fashion style in post-game footwear.

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Scout Smith (John Fisken photos)

   Scout Smith dropped the hammer in the fourth quarter Monday, lifting the CMS 8th grade varsity to a victory. (John Fisken photos)

Megan Thorn

  Megan Thorn tied for team-high honors with four points in the 8th grade JV’s win.

Scout Smith is an assassin.

Saving her best for crunch time, the Coupeville Middle School hoops star poured in seven of her nine points down the stretch Monday to lift the Wolf 8th grade varsity to a wild 33-24 win at Chimacum.

The victory lifted Smith’s squad to 4-2 on the season and gave CMS two wins in three games on their road trip.

Coupeville’s 7th grade varsity was nipped 30-28 in a thriller, while the 8th grade JV got buckets from everyone on their roster en route to a 20-15 win.

8th grade varsityHannah Davidson was a force in the middle, dropping in 12, while Smith, Maya Toomey-Stout (5), Avalon Renninger (5) and Tia Wurzrainer (2) helped the cause.

Coupeville pulled off the win despite a thin roster and sometimes playing what seemed like 5-on-7.

“The refs were not on our side tonight,” said CMS coach Bob Martin. “But they (the girls) all played their hearts out.”

Things got dicey after Emma Mathusek went to the bench with a wrenched ankle, followed by Davidson fouling out.

That forced the Wolves to play a man down for a bit, before Mathusek returned, one painful step at a time, to give CMS five players on the floor.

Emma returned in the fourth with tears and a limp, but didn’t hold anything back, diving, jumping, and leaving it all on the court,” Martin said. “Very proud of their efforts tonight!”

7th grade varsity — The Cowboys got a bit of revenge for an earlier-season loss, holding off the Wolves at the very end.

The loss dropped the young guns to 2-4, but their coach came away pleased with the effort his players gave him.

“It was a great game,” Ryan King said. “Win or lose, I’m proud of these girls.”

Chelsea Prescott paced CMS with 10 points, while Mollie Bailey and Genna Wright each banged away for seven.

Morgan Pease banked home four to round out the offensive attack, while Luci Coleburn and Catherine Lhamon both chipped in with hustle and hard work.

8th grade JV — Seven different Wolves scored, but it was their work on the defensive end that sealed the deal.

Wurzrainer, Megan Thorn and Seraina Weatherford each knocked down four, while Cassidy Moody, Marenna Rebischke-Smith, Cynthia Rachal and Melia Welling all chipped in with a basket.

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Morgan Pease (John Fisken photo)

   Morgan Pease, seen here corralling a loose ball in an earlier game, scored eight points for the CMS 7th grade squad Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

Five girls, no subs, one win. (Charlotte Young photo)

   They will break you. CMS 8th graders (l to r) Maya Toomey-Stout, Avalon Renninger, Emma Mathusek, Hannah Davidson and Scout Smith. (Charlotte Young photo)

Pop-pop-pop.

Or, maybe, swish-swish-swish.

Once the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade girls’ basketball squad locked on Thursday, they were dead-eye shooters, riding a wave of shots that tickled the twine to a 29-24 win over visiting Sequim.

The victory, which lifted the Wolves to 3-2 on the season, put a most pleasant cap on a day in which CMS had dropped the first two games to their much-larger rivals.

Coupeville fell 43-32 in the 7th grade varsity game and 32-20 in the 8th grade JV contest.

The nightcap was worth the price of admission, though (if they charged for middle school sports, which they don’t).

A tightly-fought affair with nine lead changes and six ties, the game was a war of attrition until Coupeville made its move late in the third quarter.

Trailing 20-19, the Wolves closed the quarter with back-to-back buckets that would have made Steph Curry nod and smile in appreciation.

First Avalon Renninger lofted a one-hander while on the move that hit nothing but net on its way down, then Maya Toomey-Stout banked home a miracle shot from the right corner as time ran down.

Not content to stop there, Coupeville opened the fourth with lil’ Emma Mathusek abusing two Sequim players, ripping down a rebound and exploding back up through them for the game-clinching bucket.

Sequim twice got the lead back down to three points, but each time the Wolves answered.

Hannah Davidson knocked down a shot in the paint, then Mathusek put a bow on things, dropping a ball off the glass for the game’s final bucket.

The frantic finale brought an end to a game that started with a monster blocked shot by Davidson and featured some especially sweet shot-making by the Wolves.

Renninger, in particular, was in a special zone, with nearly all of her made shots barely making the net move.

Not to be outdone, Wolf point guard Scout Smith, who actually led CMS in scoring with nine points, nailed a three-ball from the top that brought a roar from her fan section.

A relentless ball-hawk much of the evening, Renninger finished with eight to back Smith, while Toomey-Stout (5), Mathusek (4) and Davidson (3) all chipped in, as the starting five, who played the entire 32 minutes, all scored.

7th grade rallies:

Coupeville, which had only six girls, got stronger as the game wore on, actually winning the second-half battle to a 20-15 tune.

While it wasn’t quite enough to pull out the win, the scrappiness displayed by the Wolves (2-3) left coach Ryan King with a smile on his face.

Chelsea Prescott torched the nets for a game-high 14 to pace Coupeville, while Morgan Pease banged away inside for eight, Genna Wright knocked down six and Mollie Bailey popped for four.

Luci Coleburn and Catherine Lhamon didn’t score, but both stepped up with hustle plays, chasing loose balls down and pestering Sequim shooters until the final whistle.

JV hurt by rough first quarter:

Take away the first eight minutes, when the Wolves were drilled 14-4, and it was a close game.

Coupeville saved its best for last, rallying to take the fourth quarter 11-4 behind six points from Cassidy Moody.

Moody led the Wolves with 10, while Megan Thorn (5), Tia Wurzrainer (3) and Seraina Weatherford (2) also scored.

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Chelsea

   Chelsea Prescott, who played baseball last year, will get to play on a softball squad in her own town this year. (John Fisken photos)

Mollie Bailey

Mollie Bailey, flingin’ heat.

The last minute recruiting surge worked.

Central Whidbey Little League officials have confirmed parents were able to get enough girls registered and Cow Town will have its own juniors softball squad this season.

That means the players, who are 7th and 8th graders at Coupeville Middle School, will not have to travel to Oak Harbor or the South end to compete, as originally thought.

With only five girls signed up at the original deadline, and other leagues closing registration early, league officials were scrambling to make everyone happy.

Parents of the girls already signed up asked for a few more hours Tuesday to try and fill out a Coupeville roster, and were granted a second chance by CWLL president Scott Johnson.

They then put on a substantial push Tuesday night, using Facebook, Coupeville Sports and texts flying everywhere.

And it worked.

CWLL currently has 10 players signed up for junior softball, with the hope two more will join shortly.

The current roster:

Mollie Bailey
Hannah Davidson
Emma Mathusek
Chelsea Prescott
Cynthia Rachal
Marenna Rebischke-Smith
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Willow Vick
Melia Welling

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