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Capri Anter and crew are state-bound. (Jackie Saia photo)

It’s the Wolves vs. the Coyotes.

The Coupeville High School softball squad has been seeded #8 in the 16-team double-elimination 2B state tourney and will open against #9 Kittitas.

The Wolves, who sit at 18-2, are making their fifth appearance at the big dance and are going in back-to-back seasons for the first time in program history.

Kittitas, which carries a 15-10 record to the Gateway Sports Complex in Yakima, has qualified in four straight campaigns and 17 overall.

CHS and KHS are slated to face off at 11:00 AM Friday, May 22.

Win or lose the Wolves return to action later in the day against either #1 Freeman or #16 Friday Harbor, with the latter being the team they just beat to capture the District 1 title.

You can see the bracket here:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=5214&school_year=2025-26&district=0&sport=15&class=2B

From last year’s field of 16, there were 13 teams which made it back to state this season, with Coupeville and Kittitas both splitting the four games each played a year ago.

Raymond-South Bend, Northwest Christian, and Tonasket fell by the wayside this season, with Brewster, Rainier, and Friday Harbor taking slots in the 2026 tourney.

Kittitas plays in the highly competitive Eastern Washington Athletic Conference, which divides its 10 softball-playing schools into two five-team divisions.

The Coyotes finished 8-0 in league play to sweep to the title in the West division, while River View (7-1) and Warden (7-1) shared top honors in the East.

Those three, plus West runner-up Cle Elum-Roslyn (6-2) made the cut for state.

Numbers-wise Coupeville’s Smash Sisters have outscored their foes 298-49 this season, which breaks down to a 14.9-2.5 average, while Kittitas is at 282-182 or 11.3-7.3.

With their schools sitting 166 miles apart, the Wolves and Coyotes haven’t played a ton of games against each other over the years.

But CHS did travel East in 2019, where it rode a wham-bam rushing attack led by Andrew Martin to garner a 28-0 win.

The schools have also played several times in recent seasons in holiday basketball tourneys.

Coupeville and Kittitas have clashed twice in state events, but both were way back in the 1970’s.

Wolf baseball won 14-0 in 1977, while Kittitas boys’ basketball came out on top 63-54 in 1970.

 

PS — For social media snoops, here’s the Kittitas softball Instagram page:

https://www.instagram.com/kittitas_coyote_softball/

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Playing on a stacked team, she still got noticed.

Coupeville grad Madison McMillan is part of an Edmonds College softball squad which sits at 39-2 heading into this weekend’s season-ending Northwest Athletic Conference Championship tourney.

Prior to the final batch of games kicking off, the NWAC released its list of award winners for the spring, with Tritons sophomore Scarlette Chapman being named the Most Valuable Player for the North Region.

Edmonds also received top honors for its coaching staff, while eight other players were named to the All-Conference teams.

That includes McMillan, tabbed as Second-Team pick at designated hitter/designated player.

During her freshman season the former Wolf ace has hit at a .457 clip — third-best on the team — while piling up 21 hits, 20 runs, four doubles, three home runs, 10 walks, 21 RBI, and a .739 slugging percentage.

Truth be told, McMillan actually has hammered five taters, only to have picky umps deny her twice because of minor technicalities.

Edmonds opens the championship tourney Thursday against Walla Walla, with play running through Sunday in Portland, Oregon.

During her CHS days, McMillan was a cornerstone player for the Wolf volleyball, basketball, and softball programs, helping lead the spikers and sluggers to state.

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Teagan Calkins heads off to destroy the hopes and dreams of rival softball pitchers. (Jackie Saia photo)

Check off another box on the to-do list.

Having cruised to a league title by going undefeated in conference action, the Coupeville High School softball squad added a district title trophy Thursday afternoon.

Holding off pesky Friday Harbor 7-4 under cloudy skies on a neutral field in Mount Vernon, the Wolves get to 18-2 on the season, with one trip left to make.

That journey will be to the Gateway Sports Complex in Yakima May 22-23 for the 2B state tourney.

It’s the fifth time CHS softball had made it to the big dance, and the first time they’ve gone in back-to-back seasons, having split four games at last year’s season-ending royal rumble.

The Smash Sisters, who have outscored their foes 298-49 this season, find out their state path Sunday when the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association releases the bracket for the 16-team tourney.

With District 1 getting two tickets this year, Coupeville knew it was going back to state regardless of whether it won or lost Thursday.

Not that the Wolves intended to lose.

Friday Harbor, the #2 seed in the district tourney, polished off #3 Orcas Island 15-5 in a lunchtime loser-out game, then jumped on CHS for a run in the top of the first in the mid-afternoon title game.

Two of the first three Wolverine hitters smacked an extra-base hit, but that was as far as Wolf pitcher Adeline Maynes was willing to let things go.

The sophomore hurler stranded the second Friday Harbor runner at third, nimbly throwing out a hitter on a bunt attempt before powering up for the first of her eight strikeouts.

After the second hit, Maynes retired 14 of the next 15 batters, mixing K’s with solid work by her defense.

Haylee Armstrong and Emma Leavitt tracked down fly balls to the outfield, while the Van Dyke sisters formed an impenetrable wall on the left side of the infield.

With Sydney, a sophomore, locking down third base, and Cami, an 8th grader, patrolling a wide swath of field at shortstop, little got through.

Ball in glove, the siblings took turns gunning down would-be base runners, their throws dropping smartly into Ava Lucero’s glove at first base time and again.

Cami Van Dyke gets low to snag a ground ball. (Jackie Saia photo)

With Maynes powering up and the defense on point, that gave Coupeville time to change the tune from an early 1-0 deficit to a 7-1 lead through five innings.

The Wolves pushed three runs across in the bottom of the first, with Chelsi Stevens lashing an RBI single back up the middle to knot things up at 1-1.

After that, pain became pleasure, with Sydney Van Dyke, Ava Lucero, and Maynes all getting plunked by wayward pitches.

Lucero’s free pass forced a run home, with Capri Anter picking up the third RBI thanks to a well-placed groundout to the left side of the infield.

Coupeville had the bases juiced and was looking for more, but Friday Harbor escaped the jam before muffling the Wolf offense a bit over the next several frames.

Armstrong reached on an infield single to open the second but was thrown out on a steal attempt, and the game stayed stuck at 3-1 deep into the bottom of the fourth.

A collection of walks, with Maynes, Leavitt, and Armstrong showing eagle eyes, loaded the bases, but Friday Harbor forced a runner at home after a pitcher change and looked like it might escape one more time.

To which Teagan Calkins, Coupeville’s lone senior, said, “Not on my watch, sister!”

The “Red Dragon,” mashin’ and takin’ names to the end, launched a screamer down the left field line, then hit the gas, freaking out the frazzled fielder, who mishandled the ball.

What would have likely been a three-run double turned into a three-run double plus Calkins streaking home with a fourth run as CHS coach Aaron Lucero screamed, “Go! Go! Go!!” every step of the way.

The big bash shoved Coupeville’s lead out to 7-1 and proved to be invaluable, as Friday Harbor, which will be 13-8 when it joins the Wolves at state, continued to chip away at its rivals.

After both teams stranded runners in the fifth, the Wolverines scraped out two runs in the sixth, and a final tally in the top of the seventh.

Both times Maynes and her defense stood tall, getting key outs to prevent Friday Harbor from being able to get all the way back.

Cousins Haylee Armstrong (left) and Capri Anter both came up big in the spotlight. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Sydney Van Dyke corralled a twisty pop-up while charging across the infield, while Armstrong had her bazooka locked ‘n loaded.

Living up to the gold standard set by her predecessors in center field — strong-armed assassins like Hope Lodell and Mia Farris — the junior made several eye-popping throws Thursday, including nailing a runner headed to third by a good four or five steps in the final inning.

Consider her coach impressed.

Haylee really showed off the arm today,” Aaron Lucero said. “I think I told her three times after the game how solid those throws were!”

After Armstrong’s epic chuck to nail the incoming runner, Friday Harbor had a girl at first with two outs, the tying run in the on-deck circle, but Maynes slammed the door shut, inducing a final grounder to Sydney Van Dyke.

That set off an on-field celebration, the first of several for the still-hungry Wolves.

The champs and their new t-shirts. (Christina Baker photo)

“Hats off to Friday Harbor for playing tough,” Aaron Lucero said. “Need to clean up a couple things, which we will work on.

“Overall, really proud of this team for winning district for the second year in a row and back-to-back trips to state!

“This is a special team and very tightknit.

“They also have a tremendous appetite for success and continued improvement and push each other to get better. Bottom line, we are moving on and have another trophy to add to the case!”

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Haylee Armstrong — One single, two walks
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double
Emma Leavitt — One walk
Ava Lucero — One walk
Adeline Maynes — Two walks
Chelsi Stevens — One single
Sydney Van Dyke — Two walks

Coupeville’s sophomores are headed back to state. (Kristi Stevens photo)

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Wolf diamond man Avery Eelkema strolls over to look at the final standings for spring sports teams. (Jackie Saia photo)

The turn is made.

Regular season play has wrapped, with three of four Coupeville High School spring sports teams making the transition to the postseason.

Wolf girls’ tennis heads to Seattle Wednesday for the District 1/2 tourney, where the top two finishers in singles and doubles punch their tickets to state.

A day later CHS softball plays in the district tourney in Mount Vernon.

As the top seed in the three-team tourney, the Smash Sisters face the survivor of a loser-out game between Friday Harbor and Orcas Island, taking the field in the championship game.

Win or lose in that bout, Aaron Lucero’s squad has already clinched its second-straight trip to the big dance.

Then Saturday CHS track and field hosts the District 1/2 meet at Mickey Clark Field, with the top two finishers in each event advancing to the 2B state meet.

The only Wolf team already sidelined is baseball, which came up just a game short of advancing to the playoffs.

And with the regular season done, this is the final standings story for the 2025-2026 school year.

If we’re still around in the fall, we’ll rev it back up.

But for now, I can stop venting to my computer about the Northwest 2B/1B League website and its inability to stay on top of things.

So, there’s that…

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 12-0 18-2
Friday Harbor 8-4 10-8
Orcas Island 8-4 10-8
Coupeville 7-5 9-9
La Conner 3-8 4-12
Darrington 3-9 4-15
Concrete 0-11 0-11

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 3-1 5-3
Coupeville 1-3 4-5

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 10-0 17-2
Friday Harbor 8-2 12-7
Orcas Island 6-4 7-8
La Conner 3-7 6-9
Darrington 2-8 4-12
Concrete 1-9 1-10

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Haylee Armstrong arrives, and the scoreboard numbers start to jump. (Jackie Saia photos)

The Smash Sisters are back in business.

Rebounding nicely from a rare loss, the Coupeville High School softball squad thrashed host East Jefferson 19-0 in a mercy-ruled game Friday afternoon.

Thumping 17 hits, including a bonanza of extra-base blows, the Wolves wrap the regular season with a 17-2 record and now turn their attention to the playoffs.

As the Northwest 2B/1B League champs, CHS is the #1 seed to the three-team district tourney and will play the survivor of a loser-out game between Friday Harbor and Orcas Island in the championship game.

Win or lose, Aaron Lucero’s squad has already punched its ticket to state as well, the fifth time in program history and the first time the diamond queens have qualified for the big dance in back-to-back seasons.

The district tourney goes down May 14 in Mount Vernon, and you can see the bracket and order advance tickets here:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=5105

Friday’s regular season finale, a non-conference clash with East Jefferson, which is a mash-up of former Coupeville league rivals Chimacum and Port Townsend, was a perfect tune-up for the postseason.

In control from start to finish, the Wolves were able to get playing time for 13 girls, while letting their three flamethrowers share pitching duties.

Staff ace Adeline Maynes started and cruised through three innings of work, whiffing seven and allowing just a single base runner.

After that, cousins Capri Anter and Haylee Armstrong each threw a scoreless frame, with Armstrong picking up a K, while Anter celebrated as laser-armed catcher Teagan Calkins threw out a would-be base stealer by a solid three steps.

“All (the pitchers) did a great job with location and changing speeds,” Aaron Lucero said.

At the plate, the Wolves steadily pushed runs across the plate, dropping four on the scoreboard in the first, adding a solo tally in the second, then getting two in the third and another three in the fourth.

Cue the fifth inning and Coupeville exploded for nine runs in its final at-bats, turning a romp into a blowout which gives CHS a 291-45 scoring advantage heading into the postseason.

All nine starters reached base, with Calkins thumping an inside-the-park home run, narrowly missing on another one (she settled for a ground rule double), and smoking a foul ball 300+ feet as fans jaws dropped.

Anter, back in the groove after missing several games due to an injury, also hit a line shot which smacked off the base of the fence for a double, coming within an inch or two of earning cash from her family for nailing an out of the park tater.

 

Friday stats:

Capri Anter — Two doubles, one walk
Haylee Armstrong — One single, one triple
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double, one home run, one walk
Marina Jadwin — One walk
Emma Leavitt — One walk
Ava Lucero — One single
Adeline Maynes — Two singles, one double, one walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single
Cami Van Dyke — Three singles, one walk
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles

 

Also played:

Emma Cushman
Emily Rains
Zayne Roos

“On to the playoffs!!”

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