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Posts Tagged ‘Senior Night’

   CHS softball seniors Hope Lodell (2), Lauren Rose (8) and Katrina McGranahan (11) gaze out across the prairie one final time. (Cheri McGranahan photos)

The trio link up with manager Kayla Rose.

“They are all my daughters.”

As the afternoon faded into early evening Wednesday, Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan took the mic and spoke from the heart.

A tall, burly dude, a career military man, he can look like a tough guy from a distance, but up close there is another side to the diamond guru, one which clearly shone through as he tried to tamp down the emotion in his voice.

His Wolf squad had lost a ball game, falling 13-5 to a strong-hitting 2A Sequim team which has taken large strides from the unit which Coupeville swept two games from last year.

But one loss does not a season make, and facing tough foes will hopefully strengthen the Wolves, who sit at 11-6 with one regular season game remaining Friday at Port Angeles.

CHS is the 1A Olympic League champs and begins the double-elimination district tourney May 18.

A year ago, the Wolves came within one strike of making it to state, and McGranahan is firmly focused on what it will take to get the two wins necessary to punch Coupeville’s ticket to the big dance.

Except, as the sun crept away Wednesday, the clouds slid over the prairie and the cupcakes were handed out, he had a lot more on his mind.

Looking at his four seniors — Lauren Rose, Hope Lodell, manager Kayla Rose, and then, finally, daughter Katrina McGranahan — the Wolf coach saw the past, the present and the future, all captured in one moment.

He’s in his third season at the helm of the CHS program, but has coached these young women, and many of their teammates, since they were in their early days on the diamond.

They went to the state tournament in little league, back when they called themselves the Venom, and then they reunited to carry the high school program to heights rarely seen on the prairie.

Lauren Rose, Lodell and Katrina McGranahan have been starters for CHS since the first moment they stepped on the field as freshmen, playing for Deanna Rafferty, who stayed around for only one season as a coach.

Kevin McGranahan returned from a deployment after that, stepped into the coaching gig, Kayla Rose became team manager, and the Wolves have gone 39-22 since that moment.

Last year’s 19-5 squad, which saw the trio make the All-League team (Katrina McGranahan was MVP), was the best since the immortal 2002 Wolf softball sluggers.

Wednesday they couldn’t overcome Sequim’s power, but it didn’t diminish the moment.

“These seniors have and always will have a special place in my softball coaching memories,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Yes, my daughter Katrina is ending her high school softball career, but she is not my only daughter moving on this year.

“The coaches and I spend so much time with these players they all become like daughters to us.”

Playing at home for the final time, the trio, who are vastly different in personality yet united in their integrity, work ethic and genuine love for their teammates, all had a major impact.

Lodell lashed an RBI triple to center, the ball coming off her bat like a cannon, then dipping and biting pay-dirt as it skipped merrily past a charging fielder.

Rose cracked a single to center, one of two times she reached base, while Katrina McGranahan peppered a pair of singles, including one in her final at-bat on the field she has claimed as her own.

Coupeville rallied from an early two-run deficit to build a 4-2 lead after two innings, plating three in the first and a single run in the second.

The big base-knocks came from Katrina McGranahan and Scout Smith, who both collected RBI singles, but Sequim’s extra-base power soon chipped away at the lead.

Four runs in the top of the third gave the visitors the lead, and after Chelsea Prescott and Lodell got one back with a pair of triples, Coupeville’s offense sputtered out for a bit.

Sequim took advantage, pushing the lead from 6-5 out to 13-5 while the Wolves went down in order in the fourth and fifth innings.

CHS got metal on ball, with Emma Mathusek being flat-out robbed when a Sequim infielder made a sensational stabbing catch on a liner back up the middle that had extra bases written all over it.

Coupeville shut down the visitors over the final two innings, with Lodell making a superb catch in deep center on the run, but was never able to get its offense back to its early-game fireworks.

The Wolves finished with seven hits, with Katrina McGranahan leading the way with a pair of singles.

Prescott and Lodell had their triples, while Rose, Smith and Veronica Crownover all added a base-hit.

While the loss chips away slightly at Coupeville’s record, that was largely overlooked in the post-game Senior Night festivities.

Catcher Sarah Wright, reading the words written by Katrina McGranahan, choked up and had to fan herself for a moment when she neared the end, where the Wolf hurler talked about her partner.

“We started the sport together and I’m happy to be ending the sport with you. I loved watching you grow not only as an athlete but a person as well. I love y’all, thanks for being a part of me.”

It was a sentiment spread to all her teammates by Lauren Rose, known as “Mouse,” “Munchkin,” “Lo” and “Keebler Elf” at various points over the years.

“I am beyond blessed to have so many memories with this group of girls from little league with the juniors and seniors to these past couple years with the underclassmen,” Rose wrote.

“Without you guys this team would not be nearly as exciting as it is. It may be Senior Night but our season is far from over!”

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   Wolf seniors Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio have been doubles partners since day one. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Claire Mietus and her biggest supporter, mom Willow.

   Kameryn St Onge played four years for tennis guru Ken Stange. In her Senior Night farewell she said “I will always have my memories and cherish them forever.”

   Heather Nastali, who said “some of the best moments were just going to practice, learning the game with close friends around,” delivers a winner.

Maggie Crimmins and mom Jodi, flooding the world with sunshine.

Mietus and doubles partner Jillian Mayne share a laugh during their match.

The Splendid Six, and the ol’ ball coach.

They went out with a bang.

Sparked by their six seniors, the Coupeville High School girls tennis squad rolled Thursday to its fourth-straight Olympic League title.

To read about the victory, arrow back up a story or two on your computer or phone.

But, before you go, take a moment to marinate in Senior Night pics, courtesy John Fisken.

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Tennis/2018-05-03-vs-Chimacum/

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   Nick Etzell is one of eight seniors on the Coupeville High School baseball squad. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jake Hoagland

Joey Lippo

Kyle Rockwell

Hunter Smith

James Vidoni

Julian Welling

Jacob Zettle

Eight seniors, eight wins.

The red-hot Coupeville High School baseball squad has rolled to a 14-4 mark this season, going a flawless 8-0 at home.

A big part of that success has been the team’s seniors, who were honored after Wednesday’s game.

While their run isn’t done, with the double-elimination district playoffs kicking off Tuesday in Tacoma, the veteran Wolves bid adieu to their home field with an 11-0 romp over visiting Port Townsend.

Before they departed, local paparazzi John Fisken swung by the clubhouse to snap the pics seen above.

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   Matt Hilborn and Coupeville baseball stomped Port Townsend Wednesday, and have won 11 of their last 12 games. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Coupeville’s seniors went 8-0 at home this year. L to r, Hunter Smith, Jake Hoagland, Jacob Zettle, Kyle Rockwell, coach Chris Smith, Julian Welling, Joey Lippo, Nick Etzell, James Vidoni.

They love it when a plan comes together.

Other than a couple of bobbled balls in the field, the Coupeville High School baseball squad was on point Wednesday, closing the regular season with an emphatic win.

Coasting to a five-inning 11-0 thumping of visiting Port Townsend, the Wolves finished 8-1 in Olympic League play en route to their second conference title in three seasons.

Sitting at 14-4 overall, the Wolves have won seven straight and 11 of their last 12 games.

In the past decade, only one CHS hardball squad, the 2014 team which went to state, has won as many games in a single season.

That ’14 unit finished 14-11 and was eliminated by Rochester in the round of 16.

This year’s Wolves, who open the playoffs May 8 in Tacoma against Charles Wright Academy, came dangerously close to going 17-1, with three of their four losses by a single run.

Two of those defeats came to 2A schools.

Coupeville also finished a flawless 8-0 on its home diamond, with Wednesday’s win coming on a Senior Night in which eight Wolves were honored.

One of those 12th graders, Olympic League MVP-in-waiting Hunter Smith, closed out his home career in style.

Captain Cool tossed a six-strikeout no-hitter from the mound, then knocked in four runs while reaching base in all four of his plate appearances.

And, just to make sure local fans would really remember how amazingly consistent and explosive he has been over the past four years, Smith pulled off maybe the most stunning play of his career.

It came in the bottom of the first, after he had been plunked with a pitch.

A quick steal got Smith to second, a passed ball nudged him to third, and walks to Julian Welling and Dane Lucero juiced the bags and set the stage.

With Jake Hoagland at the plate, Smith, not betraying a single emotion on his carefully-crafted game face, edged down the base-path, teasing and tormenting the flustered RedHawk hurler.

He stepped backwards, for just a second, perhaps arched an eyebrow ever so slightly at coach/dad Chris Smith, who was bobbing in the third-base coaching box, and then … HOLY CRUD ON A FREAKIN’ STICK!!

Hunter Smith bolted down the line, a burst of fiery speed shining brighter than the blazing sun that was scorching the prairie.

Port Townsend’s bench screamed, Coupeville’s bench screamed twice as loud, and at least one Wolf parent fell out of their seat. Maybe more.

As Hoagland did a nimble backwards jump away from the plate at the last second, Captain Cool slid under the late tag, pulling off the most difficult play in baseball.

It was just one run, maybe, but, in that instant, he went from mere legend to mythic figure.

The kind of dude who can toss a no-hitter AND steal home on the same day, and make you imagine Matthew McConaughey leaning against a tree down the right field line, chewing on a wheat stalk, murmuring “alright, alright, alright, my man.”

If the game had been a movie script, that would have been the finale.

Instead, back in reality, the Wolves still had four innings to play and 10 more runs to score, so they got at it quickly.

The only base-runners Port Townsend could get aboard came thanks to a handful of errors by the normally sure-handed Wolf infielders.

They made up for the occasional bobble, however, such as in the top of the second, when Matt Hilborn triggered a bang-bang double play to erase a rare RedHawk base-runner.

Scooping up a bouncer at short, he didn’t have time to transfer the ball from glove to hand, so merely flipped it from his glove while on the run.

The ball plopped into Joey Lippo’s hand, the Wolf second-baseman spun and fired a dart to Welling at first, and presto, a “rally” spiked before it could begin.

With Smith humming on the mound, Coupeville tacked on five runs in the second, added two in the third and put a stamp on things with three more in the fourth.

The Wolves, being extremely patient at the plate, eked out a string of walks to set the table in the second, with a bases-loaded free pass to Smith making it 2-0.

After that, it was time for the big boppers to eat.

Welling smoked a two-run single to left, Lucero bopped an RBI single that dropped in front of a charging outfielder and Hoagland arced a long sac fly to cap things.

In the third, Coupeville got creative, with Nick Etzell pulling off an inspired bit of base-running.

Standing in for Wolf catcher Gavin Knoblich, who rapped a one-out single, Etzell, who hasn’t been able to play in the field in recent games as he rehabs a PE-related arm injury, made sure to get his bit of the spotlight.

After stealing second, minus his wrist guard after an over-zealous ump made him remove it, Etzell took third on a passed ball, then shot for home when another ball got away from the Port Townsend catcher.

Well, he shot for two steps, at least.

Unfortunately, the RedHawk backstop recovered the ball quicker than expected and seemed to have Etzell dead to rights.

Au contraire, mon frère.

Etzell faked back towards third, drew the throw, then narrowly missed snapping his own ankles as he spun on a dime, streaking home to beat the return throw.

From there the Wolves coasted home with Smith swatting an RBI single, before a bases-loaded walk to Lippo and a two-run single from Smith in the fourth wrapped the onslaught.

Knoblich and Smith paced the offense, each delivering a pair of base-knocks.

The win marked the final home game for Wolf seniors Kyle Rockwell, Jacob Zettle, James Vidoni, Lippo, Smith, Etzell, Hoagland and Welling.

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   Coupeville captain William Nelson blasts a deep ball Monday against Klahowya. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hunter Downes (center) was one of four Wolf seniors honored Monday night.

Senior defender Axel Partida gets a final photo op with CHS coach Kyle Nelson.

The fans get chatty.

Dawson Houston does his best Spielberg imitation.

An injury has sidelined Ethan Spark, but he was hailed for his stellar career.

The Nelsons have family time on the pitch.

Aram Leyva, who scored his 11th goal Monday, comes sliding in to save the day.

Let’s agree to ignore much of what happened Monday night.

Coming off a playoff-clinching win in its previous bout, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad fell flat against four-time Olympic League champ Klahowya on Senior Night.

But while the Wolves fell 6-1 Monday, the loss can’t dim what they’ve accomplished.

After three straight third-place finishes, CHS closed its final run through the conference by finishing second with a 5-4 mark.

Now, the Wolves take their 6-7-2 record into the postseason, kicking things off with a “home” playoff game against Bellevue Christian Saturday 1 PM at Oak Harbor High School’s stadium.

It’s a loser-out contest, with the victor advancing to the double-elimination portion of districts May 8-12.

While Coupeville took a step back against Klahowya, which had its midfielders firing on all cylinders, the Wolves did pull off one fairly spectacular play.

Derek Leyva fired a cross that freshman Sam Wynn collected and nudged to Aram Leyva, who buried the ball into the back of the net for his 11th goal of the season.

The Wolves have scored 59 goals in their 15 games, the best single-season scoring performance in program history.

While it still has at least one playoff game to go, Coupeville took time to honor its graduating players — William Nelson, Axel Partida, Ethan Spark and Hunter Downes — prior to their final true home game.

 

To see other pics John Fisken shot Monday, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Soccer/2018-04-30-vs-Klahowya/

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