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Posts Tagged ‘season opener’

“Excuse me ladies, I have to go be awesome now.” (Jackie Saia photos)

Melanie Navarro is just here to mash softballs and chew gum, and apparently, she was all out of gum Wednesday afternoon.

So, the Coupeville High School senior instead kicked off her final season on the prairie by swinging a big bat, whacking two home runs en route to a three-hit, six-RBI performance.

Powered by Navarro, the Wolves dominated visiting South Whidbey in every facet of the game, rolling to a 20-2 win in a game called after five innings due to the mercy rule.

Playing in its season opener, Coupeville was in control from first pitch to last pitch.

And frankly, the 2B Wolves could have waxed the 1A Falcons by a lot more than 18 runs, if CHS coach Kevin McGranahan hadn’t carefully done what he could to keep the game from getting too out of hand.

Coupeville picked up most of its outs by having runners intentionally leave base too early, a quiet, but effective way to show some mercy.

In a game in which the Wolves swung aggressively — Maya Lucero launched a wicked liner off of McGranahan’s jaw as the diamond guru patrolled the third-base box, leaving a visible mark — CHS scored early, and often.

Wolf hurler Allie Lucero zipped through the top of the first inning 1-2-3, collecting a pair of strikeouts and a soft comebacker to the pitcher’s circle, and then the hometown bats started booming.

Coupeville put up nine runs in the bottom of the first, and there was little South Whidbey could do to stop the rampaging Wolves.

Freshman catcher Teagan Calkins was plunked by the first pitch she saw, then came around to score on an RBI double to center from Mia Farris.

Taylor Brotemarkle followed by eking out a walk, Madison McMillan got aboard on an error, and it was time for Navarro to launch her season of longballs.

Home run #1 came on a laser shot to the deepest part of centerfield, the ball splashing down right in front of the fence, then kicking away from the Falcon fielder.

Running full tilt, with no lag in her step, Navarro easily beat the throw home, her three-run tater staking CHS to a 5-0 lead.

Not that the Wolves were done.

Singles from Allie Lucero, Jada Heaton, and Calkins kept the runners bouncing from base to base, with two Falcon errors helping them come around to tap home.

Up 9-0, McGranahan moved things along by having a runner drift off base to prematurely end the first frame, but the Wolves scored in every inning, so there was little slow to their roll.

Navarro came back around in the second to crush a two-run home run over the fence, the ball heading up to high-five the moon, then she departed the game for a bit as the Wolves got field time for most of their roster.

Melanie Navarro (jumping in middle) is mobbed by her teammates after launching a longball.

South Whidbey stayed plucky, pushing across a pair of runs in the top of the third to cut the margin down to 11-2, but Coupeville tacked on three more in its half of the inning, and six more in the fourth to set the final score.

The brief Falcon rally was ended, emphatically, thanks to McMillan pulling off a dandy unassisted double play at third base.

Spearing a liner for out #2, the Wolf super sophomore whirled and tagged a drifting runner for out #3, her grin beaming from behind her face mask.

The third inning featured back-to-back big hits from Farris and Brotemarkle, plus Chloe Marzocca thrashing a shot down the right field line for a base knock of her own.

Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Chloe Marzocca, killers in red and black.

In the fourth, it was a rat-a-tat attack, after foreign exchange student Layla Heo led off with a walk in her American softball debut.

Farris and Brotemarkle both smoked shots down the third-base line, before Navarro, back in the lineup, completed a 3-for-3 afternoon with an RBI single.

The final big blow on opening day jumped off of Heaton’s bat, as the sophomore slugger crunched a two-run single to bring in runs 19 and 20.

It was an equal opportunity kind of day for the Wolves, who delivered hits from the top of the lineup to the bottom.

Farris and Navarro led the way, collecting three hits apiece, while Brotemarkle smacked a pair of base-knocks.

Calkins, McMillan, Allie Lucero, Heaton, and Marzocca each had one base hit, while Coupeville racked up eight walks, with Calkins and McMillan earning two each.

Allie and Maya Lucero split pitching duties, with the latter relieving the former midway through the third, and the duo combined to whiff seven Falcons across five innings.

McGranahan got 12 players on the field, with Sofia Peters starting at second base and providing strong defensive play, and newcomer Bailey Thule garnering her first varsity at-bat.

Thanks to Mother Nature messing with the schedule, the Wolves get right back at it Thursday, traveling to Meridian for another non-conference rumble.

After that, Coupeville plays seven of its next nine games on its home field.

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Coupeville High School baseball coach Steve Hilborn is not traveling to Bellingham Monday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tradition, upheld.

It’s raining all across Washington state, as it’s prone to doing in March, and the liquid sunshine is already forcing schools to juggle planned spring sports games.

Coupeville High School was set to send its baseball and softball squads to Bellingham Monday to open the season with non-conference games against Meridian.

Instead, the splash-splash of raindrops will keep the wheels on the bus from going round and round.

The schools will look to reschedule at a later date, said Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith.

“I’ll think about it,” responded Mother Nature with a slight smirk.

 

UPDATE:

Games rescheduled for Thursday, Mar. 16.

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Sharpshooter Kennedy O’Neill informs big bro Aiden she plans to score more points on the basketball court than he does. (Photo courtesy Ashley Blouin)

First road trip, in the books.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball teams kicked off a new season Thursday, making the trek down-Island to face off with arch-rival South Whidbey.

The Wolves came away with a split, plus their first taste of life in other people’s gyms, while CMS coaches Mia Littlejohn and Bennett Richter debuted as hardwood gurus.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville 8th grader Haylee Armstrong led all scorers, but South Whidbey pulled away in the second half to claim a 31-19 win.

The hosts jumped out to an 8-3 advantage after one quarter, then slightly bumped the lead ahead to 14-8 at the half.

The third quarter was a killer for Coupeville, however, as South Whidbey gunner Greta Jones knocked down all seven of her points, including a three-ball, during a game-busting 11-4 run.

Jada Balora banked in six points in support of Jones, while Armstrong rattled the rims for nine points.

The sweet-shooting guard tallied points in every quarter and proved to be a deadeye at the free-throw line, where she sank three charity shots.

Capri Anter tossed in five points in support of Armstrong, with Tenley Stuurmans (3) and 6th grader Tamsin Ward (2) also scoring for the Wolves.

Adeline Maynes, Lexis Drake, Sydney Van Dyke, Chelsi Stevens, and Rhylin Price all saw floor time for Coupeville’s top squad.

Chelsi Stevens, a powerhouse on the taekwondo mat and the basketball hardwood. (Photo courtesy Kristi Stevens)

 

Level 2:

She who scores last, wins the day.

Coupeville went scoreless in the first quarter, fell behind 6-0 midway through the second frame, then stormed from behind to capture an 18-14 victory.

In a back-and-forth affair, the Wolves led 8-6 at halftime, South Whidbey went back in front 14-10 through three quarters, and then the visitors closed on an 8-0 fourth quarter surge.

Lillian Ketterling had the hot hand down the stretch, knocking down a pair of buckets to fuel the late rally, while Kennedy O’Neill and Ava Lucero also netted baskets in crunch time.

Arianna Cunningham paced the Wolves with six points, while O’Neill (4), Ketterling (4), Taylor Marrs (2), and Lucero (2) also wrote their name in the scorebook on opening day.

While they didn’t score, Isabella Bowder, Amaiya Curry, Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge, and Melanie Wolfe brought hustle and defense to their time on the floor.

 

Up next:

Coupeville has a week off, traveling to Sultan next Thursday, Feb. 16 to play Sultan.

The home opener is Feb. 21 against Northshore Christian Academy, and the Wolves get a rematch with South Whidbey — this time at CMS — in the Mar. 9 season finale.

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CHS players listen to coach Brad Sherman during a timeout. (Michelle Glass photo)

This is its own thing.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team put together a season for the ages last time around.

Winning league and bi-district crowns en route to their first trip to state since 1988, the Wolves were the last unbeaten 2B team in the land, winners of 16 straight to open the 2021-2022 campaign.

That won’t happen this time around.

Instead, a new-look Coupeville squad starts at 0-1, after falling 62-54 Wednesday at South Whidbey.

The non-conference loss, coming against a strong-shooting Falcon squad which features nine seniors on its roster, doesn’t have to be a crippler, however.

The Wolves don’t start league play until January, and the chance to hone their game against schools from larger classifications, such as 1A South Whidbey, could be invaluable.

If nothing else, Coupeville showed nice resilience, overcoming a poor performance at the free-throw line and the occasional growing pains of a roster in flux to rally several times.

Trailing by as many as 18 points in the second half, the Wolves kicked up their defensive effort and cut the deficit down to single digits more than once.

The rise in intensity was highlighted by the work of Cole White and Chase Anderson, who flustered the Falcons by relentlessly fighting for control of every loose ball and challenging South Whidbey’s ability to push the ball up court.

Anderson, a freshman, hit the court late with the knowledge he had five fouls to burn, and burn most of them he did, thoroughly getting under the skin of his rivals.

As the Falcons grew ever more frustrated with his refusal to step back, The Magic Man never flinched, his eyes burning a hole through their fragile psyches, before calmly strolling away, a whisper of a smile at the corner of his mouth.

The late defensive stand made up for some struggles in the beginning.

Coupeville actually outshot South Whidbey from the three-point line, winning the trey battle 7-6 by the end of the night.

But while that’s a cold, hard fact, every single one of the Falcon three-balls seemed to be a gut-punch.

None hurt worse than a miracle shot which splashed home a half of a tick before the halftime buzzer roared, pushing an eight-point South Whidbey lead to 11 as the teams left the court.

Unless it was the very next Falcon three-ball, which dropped through the net mere moments into the third quarter, sparking a 12-5 run which lifted the hosts to a 44-26 advantage.

South Whidbey led from start to finish, pushing out to an 18-11 lead after one quarter of play, and Coupeville failed to score back-to-back buckets until late in the second quarter.

The Wolves had their moments early, whether it was White popping a short jumper off of a William Davidson rebound and dish, or Ryan Blouin nailing a three-ball for his first varsity points.

But CHS couldn’t put together a sustained run for much of the night, and each time it almost did, South Whidbey stuck a quick dagger in to blunt the rally.

Wolf junior gunner Logan Downes came to life in the second half, rampaging through the paint and arcing moon shots, collecting 17 of his team-high 25 points after halftime.

That included a trio of third quarter three-balls, while running mate Alex Murdy flipped the nets on a pair of late treys.

Coupeville got as close as 58-51 late in the fourth, after Jonathan Valenzuela hauled in a pinpoint pass from Downes and slapped home a layup over a forest of Falcon arms.

But it wasn’t to be, as South Whidbey closed out the game at the charity stripe and was ruthlessly efficient.

Downes was the lone Wolf to hit double digits with his 25 points, while White (9), Murdy (8), Nick Guay (5), Valenzuela (4), and Blouin (3) chipped in.

Zane Oldenstadt, Davidson, and Anderson also saw floor time for Coupeville, which hosts 2A Lakewood Saturday.

Tip time for the varsity boys is 7:00 PM.

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Davin Houston (right) and Coupeville Middle School basketball kicked off a new season Thursday at Langley. (Alia Houston photo)

The shoes are squeaking on the hardwood once more.

Basketball is back in action, with the Coupeville Middle School boys’ hoops stars first to take the floor in a competitive game.

Facing off with next-door neighbor South Whidbey down in Langley Thursday, the Wolves held their own, coming within a bucket or two of winning two of three.

While the Cougars ultimately swept all three games, it was a strong start for a CMS program featuring a considerable chunk of players who are fairly new to the sport.

The Wolves put 12 players into the scoring column on opening day.

Coupeville returns home for its next three games, hosting Lakewood (Nov. 22), Sultan (Nov. 29), and King’s (Dec. 1) as the eight-game schedule begins to unfold.

How Thursday went down:

 

Level 1:

The day’s most-competitive rumble, as South Whidbey surged, Coupeville rallied, then the Cougars held off the Wolves at the end for a 35-31 win.

A 12-2 run by the hosts stung CMS, as it fell behind 21-9 at the half.

The second half was a different story, however, with Coupeville going on a 13-4 tear in the third quarter before getting all the way back to knot things up at 27-27 midway through the final frame.

South Whidbey closed the game strongly, getting key buckets down the stretch, but the scrappiness shown by the Wolves bodes well for the future.

Jayden McManus banged home 10 points to lead Coupeville, while Carson Grove sank a pair of three-balls en route to an eight-point performance.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh, the lone 6th grader on the varsity, chipped in with five, while Davin Houston (3), Riley Lawless (3), and Sage Arends (2) also scored.

Coupeville’s first unit also featured appearances by Dylan Robinett, Joshua Stockdale, and Nic Laska.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh fires off a free throw. (Dustin Van Velkinburgh photo)

 

Level 2:

A slow start doomed Coupeville, as an 18-1 deficit after one quarter of play morphed into a 39-5 loss.

CMS clamped down on defense after that, limiting its hosts to just four points in the second quarter.

Liam Lawson and Nathan Niewald paced the Wolves, each dropping in a bucket, while Robinett rippled the nets on a free throw.

Wyatt Fitch-Marron, Charles Hart, Hunter Atteberry, and Brantley Campbell also saw floor time for CMS.

 

Level 3:

Take away the second quarter and Coupeville wins this one.

The Wolves held South Whidbey to just four points in every other quarter, but an 8-0 deficit in frame #2 was the difference in a 20-16 loss.

Down 12-2 at the half, CMS rallied to win the second half to a tune of 14-8, with Cyrus Sparacio going off for all of his team-high eight points in the fourth quarter.

Jacob Barajas and Campbell knocked down four points apiece in support, while Johnathan Jacobsen, Zach Blitch, Jacob Meador, Khanor Jump, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Atteberry rounded out the roster.

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