Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

Gwen Gustafson, seen last year, scored three times Thursday as Central Whidbey Little League’s Juniors softball team won 18-0. (Irene Gustafson photo)

They didn’t play an entire game, because two innings was enough to show the world what’s what.

Taking advantage of a ton of walks Thursday, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball team bushwhacked arch-rival South Whidbey 18-0, rolling to an eye-popping opening day win.

The Wolves scored nine runs in the first without getting a single hit, then tacked on another nine scores in the bottom of the second inning.

When South Whidbey conceded the game, there was only one out in the second inning.

Coupeville 6th grader Savina Wells, playing alongside middle school girls, punched a hit, as did Maddie Georges and Sofia Peters, while everyone in the starting lineup came around to score.

Gwen Gustafson, who held South Whidbey’s offense in check while flinging heat from the pitcher’s circle, tapped home three times, while Melanie Navarro matched her run total.

Allie Lucero (2), Peters (2), Vivian Farris (2), Georges (2), Maya Lucero (2), Wells (1) and Jill Prince (1) also scored for Central Whidbey.

Providing support off the bench were Adrian Burrows, Karyme Castro, Hayley Fiedler, and Cypress Socha.

Central Whidbey returns to action Saturday with a home game against Anacortes at Rhododendron Park. First pitch is at noon.

After that, the Wolves are off until Apr. 11.

Read Full Post »

Central Whidbey Little League’s softball opener was played in memory of umpire Joel Wheat (right), seen here with proud papa, Jim. (Connie Lippo photo)

Heartbreak intertwined with triumph.

After opening a new season Tuesday with an emotional tribute to beloved coach and umpire Joel Wheat, the Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball team toasted visiting South Whidbey 22-1.

CWLL officials released a statement acknowledging the league’s unexpected loss.

“It is with great sadness that I have to tell you that our Joel Wheat passed away from cardiac arrest this morning.

Joel was an integral part of CWLL and we will miss him.

Joel was an active T-Ball coach last season and umpire for many years.

Please keep Dee and Jim, his young daughter and the entire family in your thoughts and prayers.”

When the teams took the field Tuesday, players, fans, umpires and coaches held a moment of silence, and CWLL dedicated the game to Wheat and his family.

Central Whidbey put together a 13-run first inning to take complete control of the game, with Jada Heaton lashing a game-busting double.

CWLL coach Fred Farris did his best to keep the game from becoming a rout of epic proportions, eventually sending his runners early to give away some outs.

That was about the only thing going right for South Whidbey, as their batters couldn’t touch Central hurler Chloe Marzocca, who whiffed eight across four innings of work.

“She pitched awesome!,” Farris said.

Everyone chipped in for Central Whidbey, with Mia Farris, Heaton, and Madison McMillan rapping out two hits apiece.

Teagan Calkins, Taylor Brotemarkle, Brianna Blouin, and Katie Marti each added a base-knock, while Mayleen Weatherford, Marzocca, and Allison Nastali scampered to first on walks.

Every girl on the CWLL roster scored, and “the girls played almost flawless defense, including a hard liner snared by Mia to end the game.”

Read Full Post »

On a day when the Coupeville softball defense struggled at Granite Falls, freshman Audrianna Shaw had one of her team’s two web gems. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One game does not a knockout make.

The Coupeville High School softball squad absorbed a rough loss Tuesday, falling 23-11 in an error-riddled game at Granite Falls, and, for the moment, fall out of first place in the North Sound Conference.

But, before anyone panics, it’s good to remember we’re less than a third of the way through the regular season schedule, and there are still 10 league games left to play.

As of Tuesday night the Wolf sluggers sit at 1-1 in conference action, 3-3 overall, a game back of Granite (2-0, 5-3), while Sultan (0-0, 0-2), Cedar Park Christian (0-1, 2-1), and South Whidbey (0-1, 2-3) round out the standings.

But, it’s also Mar. 26, and the regular season doesn’t end until May 7, so nothing is decided.

Coupeville and Granite will face twice more, with the Wolves hitting the road Apr. 17 and then welcoming the Tigers to Cow Town May 1.

Round one went to the wrong team – if you’re a CHS fan – but that’s all it was, round one.

“So, they hit as advertised,” said a philosophical Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan.

“They aren’t unbeatable, but we have to play error-free ball,” he added. “We had a lot of errors, mainly in the outfield, and they took full advantage of them.”

While miscues — dropped balls, bad throws, and base-running mistakes — seriously hurt the Wolves, they did some damage at the plate, and with the exception of one awful inning, played the Tigers even.

Literally.

Toss out the third inning, and the game was 11-11, something which greatly encourages McGranahan.

“I am happy with how we hit against them and competed to the last out,” he said. “They are a good hitting team; we just need to clean up the errors.”

Facing a Granite team which had scored a ton of runs (126 in their first seven games), but also given up way too many (97), Coupeville started strongly.

Drawing a wide-ranging assortment of walks, then peppering the Tiger defense with well-placed hits, the Wolves tossed three runs on the board in the first inning, then duplicated the feat in the second.

The opening frame began with consecutive walks to Scout Smith, Emma Mathusek, and Chelsea Prescott, with Smith being plunked.

Coupeville’s cerebral lead-off hitter charged home with the game’s first run after a wayward pitch skipped wide of the Granite catcher’s glove, before Sarah Wright plated Mathusek off of a ground-out.

Sophomore second-baseman Mollie Bailey capped the first inning fireworks by smashing an RBI single to left, the first of two such hits she would have on the day.

Granite wasn’t going anywhere, scoring three of its own in the bottom of the first, thanks to the first of many Wolf errors and a nimbly-executed double steal.

But freshman hurler Izzy Wells ended the inning with a strikeout, the second of seven she would chuck across four innings of work, and Coupeville’s bats immediately responded.

Walks to Smith and Mathusek set the stage, before the Wolves hammered three-straight two-out RBI base-knocks.

The big blows came off the bats of Wright, Bailey, and Veronica Crownover, the first two being singles and the third being a mammoth double to deep center.

Coupeville fell a footstep short of a fourth run, however, as Bailey, following Wright home, was gunned down at the plate by a dead-eye throw.

The bottom of the second gave a taste of the trouble which was coming, as Coupeville had a chance to get away free, yet stumbled into letting Granite put up five runs.

Fighting a harsh sun which was right in their eyes for most of the game, the Wolf outfielders struggled to track fly balls, and precious outs transformed into game-changing hits as the ball evaded gloves at a terrifying rate.

Still, Wells closed the inning by whiffing back-to-back Tigers, her pitches zinging a sweet song as they nestled into Wright’s glove behind the plate.

Down just 8-6, Coupeville seemed primed to make the game a brawl from start to finish.

And then the third inning broke their hearts.

There is little positive to say about the frame, top or bottom, so we’ll make this quick.

The Wolves went down 1-2-3, then the Tigers most assuredly did not.

Instead, Granite, given life by CHS errors, beat the stuffing out of the ball during a 16-batter, 12-run inning which local fans enjoyed immensely.

It was an inning which went on seemingly for a week, and contained one single play which McGranahan and Co. will remember fondly.

It came on the seventh batter of the inning, when a Granite hitter tried to drop a bunt in for a hit.

Charging from third base, booster rockets firing in her shoes, Wolf third-baseman Chelsea Prescott went airborne and, body stretched as far as she could go, pulled in the rapidly-falling orb.

The sophomore sensation also, against all odds, held on to the ball, even after pancaking into the infield dirt, sending a jolt through her rib cage and causing her legs to whip in directions they weren’t originally intended to go.

It was a flat-out brilliant play, one of the best I’ve witnessed on a softball diamond, a testament to Prescott’s athleticism and competitive fire.

And it was also the only thing to go right in the inning.

The Wolves didn’t back down, though, putting up two runs in the fourth and three more in the fifth, but a 20-6 deficit was daunting and the Tigers kept the hammer down.

CHS freshman Audrianna Shaw, inserted into right field, provided her team’s second-best defensive play, running down and snagging a long blast to rob Granite of at least one extra-base hit.

In the end, the Wolves racked up 11 hits and collected nine walks, with Wright (three singles), Crownover (1B, 2B), Mathusek (two singles), and Bailey (two singles) leading the way at the plate.

Prescott and Wells both collected singles, while Smith walked three times.

Read Full Post »

CHS freshman Kylie Van Velkinburgh made her high school pitching debut Monday afternoon in Oak Harbor. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mckenna Somes had Coupeville’s lone hit in a 15-3 loss.

Stretch yourself now, try new things, and it may pay off down the road.

JV sports are about mixing and matching, seeing who can excel while playing multiple positions.

And, while the Coupeville High School JV softball squad fell 15-3 at Oak Harbor Monday, the Wolves got a chance to build for the future.

The Wolves, now 2-1 on the season, put freshman Kylie Van Velkinburgh in the pitcher’s circle for the first time, and she went the distance, facing 27 hitters.

That’s huge, as Coupeville tries to build a solid pitching staff at the JV level.

Van Velkinburgh’s best inning was the bottom of the second, when she erased three Wildcat hitters in order, ending things by taking down the top two hitters in the lineup.

While Coupeville’s JV was hoping to follow in the footsteps of the school’s varsity softball players and upend a 3A school, Wolf bats had a rare cold day.

McKenna Somes smashed a single in the first inning, but that was it for CHS, which did manage to eke out seven walks.

They came from seven different Wolf hitters as well, with Lily Leedy, Heidi Meyers, Van Velkinburgh, Abby Meyers, Chloe Wheeler, Morgan Stevens, and Amanda Thomas all reaching base thanks to possessing eagle eyes.

Marenna Rebischke-Smith and Ivy Leedy rounded out the lineup for the Wolves, who now head into a long break.

The JV isn’t scheduled to play again until Apr. 10, while the Wolf varsity takes the field five times during that stretch.

When they do get back into action, Coupeville’s young guns have eight games left on their schedule, including a rematch Apr. 18 with Oak Harbor.

That game is set to go down on Coupeville’s diamond.

Read Full Post »

Like this picture, some spring sports standings are in focus, while others are still fuzzy. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let the battles begin.

Three of the four spring sports which keep win/loss records have started league play, though girls tennis continues to lag behind everyone else.

In fact, the Coupeville High School netters have yet to play a match of any kind, much less a league one, even while baseball, softball and soccer all have played at least five games.

Barring weather shenanigans, Wolf tennis finally gets on the court this coming Wednesday, with a home match against King’s.

While we’ve barely begun to figure out which schools will be crowned league champs, Coupeville is off to a strong start in softball, a decent one in soccer, and will have to make up some ground in baseball.

And if you’re wondering why we haven’t mentioned track and field, where the Wolves are off to a brilliant start, it’s only because they don’t keep track of team win/loss records over at the oval.

Otherwise, rest assured that’s the hottest sport in Cow Town at the moment, especially on the girls side of things, where the Wolves have dominated at their first two meets.

But, back in the world of wins and losses, here’s where things sit through Mar. 24:

 

North Sound Conference softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 3-2
Granite Falls 1-0 4-3
Sultan 0-0 0-2
CPC-Bothell 0-1 1-1
South Whidbey 0-1 2-2

 

North Sound Conference baseball:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell 3-0 4-1
South Whidbey 3-0 6-0
King’s 0-0 1-4
Sultan 0-0 0-5
Coupeville 0-3 0-5
Granite Falls 0-3 1-5

 

North Sound Conference girls tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-0
Granite Falls 0-0 1-3
King’s 0-0 1-0
South Whidbey 0-0 0-2

 

North Sound Conference boys soccer:

School League Overall
King’s 2-0 3-1-1
South Whidbey 1-0 4-0-0
Coupeville 1-1 3-3-0
Sultan 0-1 0-5-0
CPC-Bothell 0-2 0-3-0

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »