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Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

Emma Leavitt (far left) and fellow 8th graders already have a season of high school softball under their belts. (Photos courtesy Leann Leavitt)

Emma Leavitt is ahead of the curve.

As she prepares to transition from middle school to high school this fall, the Coupeville freshman-to-be has already experienced the thrill of advancing to the state tourney as a varsity athlete.

That’s because Leavitt suited up for CHS softball as an 8th grader, part of a group of precocious young athletes who will get a chance to play five seasons of high school ball.

And that first go-round?

Only the second most-successful campaign in program history, as the Wolves went 20-3, won league and district titles, and split four games at state.

With that experience fresh on their minds, Leavitt and Company will hit high school ready to rock.

A big fan of bands such as Creed, Alice in Chains, and Limp Bizkit, she intends to stay with softball and volleyball during her high school days.

Leavitt “tried basketball for the first and only time” in 7th grade, but found it was “not my thing.”

Lil’ Emma (far right) learned the sport from Wolf volleyball legends like (l to r) Hope Lodell, Valen Trujillo, and Payton Aparicio.

First up in the fall will be volleyball, a sport she has played at both the school and club level.

Older sister Jaimee was a skilled sniper as a serving ace back in her own CHS spiker days, and lil’ sis wants to keep the family tradition alive.

Emma took to the sport at a young age and continues to love life on the floor.

“Volleyball is my favorite sport because it has taught me so much,” Leavitt said.

“Starting with the kid clinics in kindergarten all the way to my freshman year, not just learning the sport itself but also teaching me to be supportive of others and to be kind to even those who don’t have any experience.

“Really what it means to be a TEAMMATE.”

Add in softball, where she would like “to make starting varsity outfield and to see state again as a Wolf,” and she’ll be busy.

But that’s part of the plan.

“Not only do sports keep me healthy and active, but it helps me keep my grades up and learning to better my skill at the sports I am playing,” Leavitt said.

“Someone might play a sport for a long time like me, but there will always be some things that you won’t know how to do or just never knew was a thing, like how in 2025 I am just now learning to perfect my jump serve in volleyball.”

Whether paddle boarding around a lake, camping with “my best buds and family,” or “sitting around and being lazy and watching Sweet Magnolias, Gilmore Girls, or 10 Things I Hate About You,” she enjoys her down time, but knows when to turn it on.

“One strength I am told I have in sports is that I am very coachable,” Leavitt said.

“And while you might always see me make a weird face while being coached, which may seem disrespectful, I can assure you it is not.

“It’s simply me being me and my mom will be yelling from the stands “FIX YOUR FACE,” she said with a laugh.

Opening up and becoming more vocal is a goal going forward, Leavitt said.

“I would love to work on that, as well as getting out of my comfort zone of being quiet,” she said. “Even though I have a great attitude and spirit, I’m not loud about it and wish I was.”

Henry Bailey has played a big role on Leavitt’s support crew.

While her parents Nate and Leann have been influential in her life — “I love my parents; they know that and they support me in everything I do, always showing up and cheering me on” — Emma draws her biggest inspiration from someone her own age.

Henry Bailey, my best friend, has always been there for me as a friend,” she said. “We grew up together and he is my comfort place.

“He has taught me to be a kind person and to not to worry about anything ahead of me that might make me uncomfortable, from a simple “Don’t feel weird, it will be OK Emma.

“While those words might seem simple, deep down they mean a lot more.”

Bailey’s friendship has been huge in Leavitt’s growth, and she pledges to return the favor.

“He has supported me through my decisions hard and easy and has made me feel like I could say anything I’m struggling with to him, and he won’t judge me whatsoever,” she said.

“I will also continue to be here for him and support him in track and what every other interest he has come across.”

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Haylee Armstrong (left) and Capri Anter played key roles for a high-flying CHS softball squad. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

They dominated on the field and off.

Putting together a 20-3 season, the Coupeville High School softball squad went four games deep at the 2B state tourney — the second-best performance in program history.

Thursday, Aaron Lucero and his coaching staff hailed their players for all their hard work throughout the spring, handing out letters and awards at a team banquet.

Topping things was the announcement that seven players received All-League honors when Northwest 2B/1B League coaches voted.

Seniors Mia Farris and Madison McMillan, junior Teagan Calkins, and freshman hurler Adeline Maynes were First-Team picks, with seniors Taylor Brotemarkle and Jada Heaton and sophomore Haylee Armstrong tabbed as Second-Team selections.

In team awards, Calkins, Coupeville’s ace catcher, was selected as the Most Outstanding Player.

McMillan was the Offensive MVP, Maynes the Defensive MVP, while Armstrong won the Dirt Bag Award and Farris earned the Heart Award.

Calkins, Farris, and McMillan were honored for their work as team captains, while Heaton, Brotemarkle, Chloe Marzocca, McMillan, and Farris received Four-Year Awards.

Taylor Brotemarkle gets mobbed by Mia Farris (left) and Jada Heaton after making a spectacular catch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Varsity letter winners:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Ava Lucero
Chloe Marzocca
Adeline Maynes
Madison McMillan
Chelsi Stevens
Danica Strong
Sydney Van Dyke

 

Participation certificates:

Emma Cushman
Emma Leavitt
Olivia Martin
Allison Powers
Mary Western

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Wolf netters Delanie Lewis (left) and Ember Light celebrate Senior Night. (Julie Wheat photos)

The prairie is alive with the sound of a legend clicking away.

Julie Wheat was quite the volleyball and softball star back in the day for the Wolves, and she was an early inductee into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

You can find her in our lil’ digital shrine under her maiden name of Swankie, but these days she’s a wife, mom, and talented photographer.

To see the full breadth of her work, check out her web site at https://www.julienatalieimagery.com/.

During recent Senior Night festivities, Wheat went to work documenting softball, baseball, and tennis, as you can see in the pics above and below.

To see much more from those games and celebrations, and possibly purchase some snaps for Grandma Betty Sue out in Grand Rapids, pop over to:

 

Baseball:

https://julienatalieimagery.pixieset.com/coupevillebaseballseniornight20242025/

 

Girls Tennis:

https://julienatalieimagery.pixieset.com/coupevilletennisseniornight20242025/

 

Softball:

https://julienatalieimagery.pixieset.com/coupevillesoftballseniornight/

 

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A new backstop for CHS softball should cut down on foul balls flying free but also is a point of contention for those who want the prairie’s vistas preserved. (Photo property Coupeville School District)

Liability concerns carried the day.

While acknowledging the concerns of Ebey’s Reserve supporters, the Coupeville School Board voted 5-0 Thursday to approve work on the high school softball field.

The $150,000 contract with Oak Harbor’s Valdez Construction, paid for by a voter-approved levy, will center around the installation of a new 28-foot-tall backstop.

The scoreboard will also be moved.

The addition will bring CHS into better compliance with Washington Interscholastic Activities Association and Title IX guidelines, said Coupeville Schools Superintendent Shannon Leatherwood.

The current low-slung backstop was built when Washington state softball teams played slow-pitch.

Once CHS moved into playing fastpitch in 2002, the number of foul balls screaming over the barrier greatly increased, with the mobile home park across from the field on Terry Road, as well as cars in the road, under constant assault.

School Board Director Bryan Sherman acknowledged that at Thursday’s meeting, saying he has frequently had softballs fly his way while traveling by tractor from his family’s farmland through town.

There is also a danger presented by Wolf softball players running into the street to retrieve those balls, he said.

The new backstop, while being much taller, will also be curved at the top, preventing the majority of foul balls from escaping and landing on spectators in the stands.

“Spectator injury is a major concern for the district from a liability standpoint,” Leatherwood said.

Concerns were raised this week by the daughters of the late Pastor Dave Engle, whose family worked extensively on the preservation of the reserve.

Specifically, they are disappointed that the Historical Preservation Committe voted to approve the installation of the backstop, despite the desire of Ebey’s Reserve supporters to “keep this specific land free of permanent structures that detract from the historic view — to keep it as it was.”

The Engles, seventh generation prairie pioneers, previously owned the land on which both the school’s softball and baseball fields sit.

When the original land exchange was made in 2000, there was much talk about building a sports complex which would have both fields on the same side of the road, with bathrooms and concession stands.

There are memories of a fundraiser being planned which would have allowed people to buy tiles with people’s names on them, which would have been used in those bathrooms.

That’s where things get hazy in the passage of time.

The superintendent at the time, Suzanne Bond, has passed away, and Leatherwood told board directors Thursday she has not been able to find any agreements in writing while going through school records.

In both a letter to the board from the family and in public comments during Thursday’s meeting by former longtime CHS cheer coach Sylvia ArnoldDave Engle’s eldest daughter — the Engles asked for the new backstop to be tabled.

“Reconsider the vision (for the sport complex) to be built across the street and all it could be, please,” Arnold said.

Ultimately board members chose to try and find a middle path.

Several of them spoke of a desire to see if voters would consider supporting the sports complex dangled 25 years ago, while saying they needed to deal with liability and safety issues first.

“This backstop is needed right now,” said Nancy Conard. “It doesn’t have to be a permanent thing, but it gives us time to work on an answer which takes into consideration everyone’s concerns.”

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The proposed new backstop. (Photo property Coupeville School District)

The agenda for Thursday’s Coupeville School Board meeting includes a chance for the directors to approve the district beginning work on a project to build a much-larger backstop on the school’s softball field.

If approved, the $150,000 project on Terry Road would be financed through a previously passed levy which has already paid for new tennis courts to be built next to the CHS gym.

With the board considering the request, a family with longtime roots on the prairie has sent the following letter to directors, which they have agreed to let be shared here in full:

 

We are softball and baseball parents. We love to see the success and support in the community that the softball program has had, and we support the opportunity for them to have improved fields.

Our parents and grandparents were active supporters of Coupeville sports and showed this by attending games, supporting teams and providing the land that the baseball and softball fields are now located on.

They were also supporters of the vision of the Reserve to keep this specific land free of permanent structures that detract from the historic view — to keep it as it was.

This commitment cost them convenience and monetary expense over the years.

The understanding they always had was that the school district shared a commitment to this vision.

The promise from (former Superintendent) Suzanne Bond was that the sports complex would be built across the street from the Reserve.

We understand those promises may not have been binding — that leadership and priorities change.

We understand that putting this 28-foot backstop on the current location is understandably easier and less expensive than the original plan our family understood.

We also understand that this seems to have passed all the formal steps and that the Historical Preservation Committee didn’t see this as a violation of the historic vision.

We disagree and we are disappointed.

Unfortunately, at the time of the meeting last year where this was discussed, our dad was very sick, and we could not attend.

We grew up hearing about the historic preservation of the prairie and our grandparents were so proud that their grandchildren would see the prairie as their great grandparents did. This is not the case now.

The seventh generation of Coupeville residents will see an altered prairie viewshed.

We wish Coupeville schools the best, but we ask that you share this with the board and reconsider this course of action.

Go Wolves!

David Engle’s daughters

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