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Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

We stick the landing. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is the last one.

With the postseason fully upon us, today marks the final standings story for the 2023-2024 school athletic year.

Here’s to a year of arguing with the Northwest 2B/1B League’s web site when I disagreed with something it had recorded wrongly.

Games against Granite Falls, Sultan, or Blaine are NOT league games, and jamborees don’t count in the win/loss records, and you can’t count the same game twice and…

Just let it go, David, and move on. You can go back to arguing with an inanimate object in September.

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Orcas Island 10-2 16-5
Coupeville 9-2 11-8
MV Christian 8-3 14-7
Friday Harbor 6-6 7-12
La Conner 5-7 9-8
Concrete 1-10 2-11
Darrington 1-10 1-11

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 3-0 3-1
Coupeville 0-3 0-6

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 9-0 14-4
Darrington 7-3 9-5
Friday Harbor 7-3 7-7
Orcas Island 3-6 4-10
La Conner 2-8 2-13
Concrete 0-8 0-12

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Coupeville mad bomber Mia Farris waits for South Whidbey to figure out a way to stop her. Spoiler: They couldn’t. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville and South Whidbey clashed on the softball diamond Friday, with the Wolves crushing their rivals 15-0 under blue skies.

Working along the edges of the field, wandering paparazzi John Fisken captured the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he shot, and maybe buy some glossies for the grandparentals, pop over to:

 

Coupeville:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2024/SB-2024-05-10-vs-South-Whidbey

 

South Whidbey:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/South-Whidbey-HS/SB-2024-05-10-at-Coupeville

 

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Haylee Armstrong prepares to open a can of whup-ass. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

As rivalries go, this one is incredibly one-sided at the moment.

Fueled by a fantastic pitching job from 8th grade ace Adeline Maynes, strong defense, and even stronger bats, the Coupeville High School softball squad crushed visiting South Whidbey Friday in the regular season finale.

Running the Falcons off the prairie to a 15-0 tune in a game mercy-ruled in the fourth inning, the Wolves get to 14-4 on the season.

Now, they’ve got eight days to get ready for their biggest game of the campaign.

That arrives Saturday, May 18, when CHS travels to Centralia to play a winner-to-state, loser-out game against a yet-to-be-named school from District 4.

While the playoffs are on the horizon, Friday was all about putting a punctuation mark on the regular season.

And how.

The very-young Wolves, who have no seniors and started two 8th graders and two freshmen Friday, were in control from the first pitch to the last swing.

Enjoying the only truly warm game day the prairie has had this spring, Coupeville fans jammed the stands, with a fair number of little league diamond stars in attendance to watch their idols.

The current Wolf stars more than lived up to the hype.

Maynes, playing catch with Teagan Calkins, held the Falcons to one lonely hit on the day, while whiffing five.

That included a wham-bam-bigger bam second inning, when the Wolf hurler struck out all three batters she faced, the ball whistling past bats with a merry lil’ hum before smacking into her catcher’s mitt.

When South Whidbey did get the ball back into play, Coupeville’s defense was lights out.

Shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle speared a pair of liners in the hole, elevating off the dirt to snag one, while fellow infielders Madison McMillan and Sydney Van Dyke vacuumed up everything that came their way.

Not to be outdone, Mia Farris hauled in a long fly ball to deep center, reaching over her shoulder to pluck the ball from the air while on the move.

Teagan Calkins, born to be awesome.

And then there was “The Red Dragon” sacrificing her body and sending a jolt through the throng of fans on the very first play of the game.

Roaring up from behind the plate, Calkins charged forward, went airborne, stretched her arm to its maximum length, and somehow pulled in a botched bunt as it spun towards the CHS dugout.

Ball hit mitt, player hit ground, ball stayed in glove, crowd and teammates went wild, and the sophomore backstop calmly gazed at her fans and whispered, “Oh, there’s more where that came from.”

Calkins proved it, using her bat and feet to help CHS jump out to a 4-0 lead in the bottom of the first.

The frame began with Haylee Armstrong punching a hole in the sky with a towering shot that dropped in between defenders, with Farris and McMillan slapping singles around a sac fly off the lethal bat of Brotemarkle.

Things really got wild however after Calkins crunched a hit over the third baseman’s head.

With the Wolves running aggressively on the basepaths, it spooked South Whidbey’s catcher into skipping a throw into left field, with two runners careening home to score on the botched play.

With Maynes throwing heat, and the Falcons having little chance to do anything with it, Coupeville blew the game open with an eight-run surge in the second inning.

Three consecutive walks to open the frame juiced the bags, before McMillan, Calkins, Danica Strong, Capri Anter, and Farris delivered run-scoring base knocks.

If South Whidbey thought the pain parade was done at that point, it was wrong.

While the Wolves coasted in for the win, they did so by pounding the stuffing out of the ball.

McMillan, flexing in the sunshine, drove a frozen rope to center field, then hit the jets and outran the throw for an inside the park home run to open the third.

Two batters later, Jada Heaton sliced a shot to right field, then showed off her own set of wheels as she rambled in with a triple.

An RBI single from Maynes pushed the lead to 14-0, with the game-ending run pushed across moments into the start of the fourth.

Armstrong walked, skittered down to second on a passed ball, moved to third on a Farris bunt which was so perfect it could get its own SportsCenter highlight, then tapped home when Brotemarkle mashed a hot shot.

Taylor Brotemarkle sends the ball flying far, far away.

The win gives the 2B Wolves a season sweep of their 1A next-door neighbors — they won 20-9 back in the season opener — and sends them to the playoffs on a high note.

And they’re not done yet.

 

Friday stats:

Capri Anter — One single
Haylee Armstrong — One single, two walks
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Two singles
Mia Farris — One double, two singles, one walk
Jada Heaton — One triple
Madison McMillan — One home run, one double, one single
Danica Strong — One single
Sydney Van Dyke — Two walks

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They’ve reached a new level.

The Coupeville High School softball team, rolling towards the postseason with a 13-4 record and one game left to play, was honored Tuesday by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

The Wolves were tabbed as the 2B Team of the Month for April, joining Dayton baseball (1B), Overlake girls’ tennis (1A), Lakewood softball (2A), Cascade boys’ soccer (3A), and Jackson softball (4A).

“This team has earned every bit of it and have bought into the program completely,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan.

“We have had some tough seasons since 2020 and we coaches have stayed the course and the girls have risen to the challenge. A little motivation going into the postseason!!”

Coupeville, which starts three 8th graders, two freshmen, one sophomore, and four juniors (with no seniors on the roster) are 9-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, earning their third conference crown in the last four seasons.

The Wolves wrap the regular season Friday with a non-league tilt at home against South Whidbey, then head to districts May 18, where they’ll play for a ticket to state.

McGranahan’s squad was honored by the WIAA for being strong, both on and off the field.

The sluggers hit .385 as a team, while racking up a team GPA of 3.453.

Along with their play on the diamond, and their work in the classroom, the Wolves were noted for their community involvement.

The team raised $1,300+ for the WhidbeyHealth cancer department with a “Strike Out Cancer” day, while also extensively working as mentors with Central Whidbey Little League players.

 

The coaches:

Michelle Armstrong
Lark Gustafson
Aaron Lucero
Kevin McGranahan

 

The players:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Shania Kenney
Ava Lucero
Adeline Maynes
Madison McMillan
Allie Powers
Chelsi Stevens
Danica Strong
Bailey Thule
Sydney Van Dyke
Mary Western
Melanie Wolfe

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Brooke Crowder leads off a collection of Coupeville coaching pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The spotlight lands on Coupeville coaches this morning.

Or, more specifically, on high school softball and middle school track and field gurus, since that’s the unused photos I have still hanging around.

Call it spring cleaning, with a tip of the hat to John Fisken, who snapped the pics.

Lark Gustafson

Jon Gabelein

Kevin McGranahan

Amber Wyman

McGranahan makes a point to Aaron Lucero (left) and Gustafson.

David Bernardy

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