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Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

CHS baseball coach Steve Hilborn soaks up a rare ray of sunshine at a recent game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now we have no excuse not to go to the school board meeting.

Crummy weather has washed out Thursday’s scheduled Coupeville High School softball and baseball games, leaving a gap on the schedule.

The rumbles, which were Northwest 2B/1B League contests against Concrete, will likely be made up.

If Mother Nature cooperates as the remaining days in the regular season schedule rapidly run out.

For now, Wolf fans can look ahead to Saturday and the hope Darrington will be able to come to Whidbey for afternoon games and Senior Night festivities.

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Softball celebration, or start of a vampire movie? (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The prairie was alive with the sound of diamond action once more.

Baseball and softball games returned to Coupeville Tuesday, after a week or so of the Wolves playing almost exclusively on the road.

Both CHS squads drilled visiting Orcas Island for key league wins, while wandering photographer John Fisken stayed busy hanging out in the high brush, clicking away.

To see everything he shot, and possibly purchase some glossies for early Christmas presents, pop over to:

 

Softball:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2024/SB-2024-04-23-vs-Orcas

 

Baseball:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Baseball-2024/BB-2024-04-23-vs-Orcas

Jack Porter waits for his pitch.

Mia Farris gets plunked.

Seth Woollet gives the radar gun a workout.

Michelle Armstrong keeps an eye out for any shenanigans.

Chase Anderson plunks a hit.

Haylee Armstrong abuses the softball.

Peyton Caveness goes for a stroll.

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Wolf pitcher Capri Anter teamed up with cousin Haylee Armstrong to shut down Orcas Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These Wolves carry big bats, and they’re not afraid to use them.

Thumping 14 hits Tuesday, spraying base knocks to every part of the field, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad rallied to crunch visiting Orcas Island 16-5.

Playing for the fourth time in five days, CHS fell prey to a bit of fatigue early, then demonstrated why it’s the class of the Northwest 2B/1B League.

With the win, which was mercy-ruled after five innings, the Wolves get to 7-0 in league play, 10-4 overall.

Next up are home games Thursday against Concrete and Saturday against Darrington as Kevin McGranahan’s squad chases another conference crown.

In the moment, however, Coupeville can bask in the afterglow of reaching double-digit wins for the seventh consecutive season.

That continued run of excellence was built on the kind of grit the current Wolves showcased Tuesday.

A very-young team with no seniors but a lot of 8th graders and freshmen never flinched after falling behind 3-0 in the top of the first.

Wolf hurler Haylee Armstrong re-found her groove, ending things emphatically by tossing her third strikeout of the opening frame, and then the bats went to work.

Mia Farris stroked a one-out single to kick things off, followed by Taylor Brotemarkle massacring the ball, launching an RBI triple over the centerfielder’s head, and the prairie was hoppin’.

Coupeville pushed two more runs across in the first, with Madison McMillan spanking an RBI single, before scampering home to score when her steal of third base spooked the Orcas catcher into airmailing the ball into left field.

The Wolves might have gotten more, but the Viking shortstop flat-out robbed Ava Lucero, going airborne to spear her liner a foot off the ground.

That got a nice round of applause but would be one of the few times Orcas would have a positive moment the rest of the day.

While the bats were hot, so were the defensive plays.

Wolf catcher Teagan Calkins nailed a would-be base thief to end the top of the second, Farris made a superb diving catch in center to deny a hitter, and CHS pulled off a wham-bam double play to end the game.

Chelsi Stevens socked a pair of hits, while playing strong defense at first. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On the final play, first-baseman Chelsi Stevens threw out a runner coming home, immediately followed by Calkins spinning away and laying a laser into McMillan’s glove at third.

Do you remember the first time you saw John Travolta, rockin’ the pink socks, dance the hand jive in Grease, forever changing the laws of physics?

Sometimes watching Calkins, AKA “The Red Dragon,” play catcher, you get a similar feeling.

It’s like freakin’ poetry in motion, only with a lot more in-game hollering and occasional side eye thrown at dad Shawn if he’s a step slow in delivering her beverage.

If her defense was the star of the show, Calkin’s bat was a close second, and she joined Brotemarkle and Sydney Van Dyke in lashing run-scoring hits as CHS turned a 3-3 game into a 7-3 lead.

From there, the Wolves iced the game with a vintage 13-batter, nine-run fourth inning.

A string of walks to the big boppers loaded the bases, with Bailey Thule, Stevens, and Shania Kenney coming off the bench to score their teammates.

Stevens obliterated the ball on a booming double to left — her second hit of the game — while Kenney, a first-year player making huge strides, lashed a single back up the middle to the great joy of her teammates.

Shania Kenney, stone-cold diamond assassin. (Jackie Saia photo)

Farris got nailed on the ankle by a wayward pitch, after earlier taking a throw off the top of her helmet.

As she rambled down to first base, someone from the bench hollered “Stop hitting her! She’s delicate!!”

There was nothing delicate after that, as Brotemarkle, her bat smoking from the torrid hitting show she was putting on, thumped another RBI single, before McMillan and Calkins pasted back-to-back two-baggers to complete the rout.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Taylor Brotemarkle — Two singles, one triple, one walk
Teagan Calkins — One single, two doubles, one walk
Mia Farris — One single, two walks
Shania Kenney — One single
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, one walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single, one double
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, one walk

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Bailey Thule was one of 11 Wolves to reach base Monday in a 21-1 win at Darrington. (Jackie Saia photo)

When the dam broke … damn.

The Coupeville High School varsity softball squad went down 1-2-3 in the top of the first inning Monday in Darrington, continuing a cold trend at the plate from its last game.

Then, boom, back to reality.

The Wolves unloaded on the Loggers during a 17-batter, 14-run top of the second — only ending things by intentionally having a runner leave early for the third out — and were well on their way to a 21-1 win mercy-ruled after four frames.

The victory, coming against the team closest to it in the standings, lifts CHS to 6-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 9-4 overall.

The Wolves haven’t technically clinched the league title, with a game-and-a-half lead on Darrington and Friday Harbor, which both sit at 5-2, with four conference tilts to play.

But they’ve also outscored the Loggers and Wolverines 47-2 across three wins, so Vegas ain’t exactly taking too many bets on CHS falling apart down the stretch run.

Kevin McGranahan’s squad, which starts three 8th graders and two freshmen, can put things to rest this week, with home games against Orcas Island Tuesday, Concrete Thursday, and Darrington Saturday.

Haylee Armstrong (left) and Shania Kenney celebrate another victory. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

For a brief moment in the Darrington sunshine, the Loggers entertained hopes of an upset. Then reality came crashing down.

Up 1-0 after an inning of play, the home team stumbled to start the second frame, then a tsunami of base knocks washed all of its hopes and dreams away.

Madison McMillan, Teagan Calkins, and Sydney Van Dyke walked to juice the bases, before Joltin’ Jada Heaton got spectacular.

Belting a two-run single to center — the first of two multi-RBI hits she would have in the inning — Jennifer’s favorite daughter put her team ahead for good.

From there, the runs came fast and furious.

Ava Lucero plated one on an RBI groundout, before Mia Farris crunched a two-run double to center and McMillan sliced a two-run single to right.

Van Dyke sent a teammate scampering home on an infield single to make it 8-1, then Heaton arrived back at the plate, intent on terrorizing the Loggers again.

This time the junior outfielder pasted a two-run triple to straightaway center, the ball merrily skipping away into the deepest, darkest regions of the field.

To which Farris told her best bud, if you can do it, so can I, welcoming a new pitcher to the circle by unleashing her own two-run triple.

After scratching out its one run early, Darrington could do little against Wolf hurlers Adeline Maynes and Haylee Armstrong, who combined to whiff four.

Content to coast in with the win, the Wolves plated three more in the third, and another four in the fourth to enforce the mercy rule.

Softballs incoming! (Kevin McGranahan photo)

The final rally featured Mia the Magnificent tagging a ball off the top of the wall, missing a home run by inches, before McMillan cleared the fences with a towering tater.

The deadly duo was likely aiming at the snowy peaks which can be seen from Darrington’s diamond.

Mia wanted me to tell you that her double was crushed to Mt. Whitehorse, but at the last minute Elsa from Frozen grabbed it and threw it back in so it only counted as a double,” McGranahan said with a laugh.

 

Monday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Haylee Armstrong — One single, one walk
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one walk
Mia Farris — Two doubles, one triple
Jada Heaton — One single, one triple
Ava Lucero — One single
Adeline Maynes — One walk
Madison McMillan — One home run, two singles, one walk
Bailey Thule — One walk
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, one walk

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Adeline Maynes, softball sensation and award-winning essayist. (Jackie Saia photo)

On the softball diamond or in the classroom, Adeline Maynes is killin’ it.

The Coupeville Middle School 8th grader, coming off a 12-strikeout pitching performance against Granite Falls, will be honored at Thursday’s school board meeting for being a local and regional Fleet Reserve essay contest winner.

Now, thanks to mom Lara, Coupeville Sports is exclusively presenting that award-winning essay, “What Memorial Day Means to Me.”

 

Memorial Day means a great deal to me.

It means honoring the sacrifice and courage of those who have lost their lives in military service to our country.

When I think of Memorial Day, the image of my father comes to mind. What if he was the one who we were honoring?

What if one day, the United States Navy informed my family that he had been killed? How would this make me feel?

Memorial Day brings a lot of important questions to mind.

I feel I can understand the meaning of Memorial Day better than most.

Just thinking about how sad I am when my dad deploys for six months at a time, and then magnifying that feeling if he were never to come home. For military kids, this is a realistic worry.

We never know when something unexpected might happen.

For example, my dad was on an aircraft carrier when the previous Commanding Officer was removed. As the Executive Officer, he had to take charge and do both jobs.

It is incredibly daunting to think that Memorial Day could come around and my family would be the ones honoring a family member lost in service.

These experiences as a military kid make me feel that I can understand what Memorial Day means in a significant way.

All of these reasons make me think about how incredibly grateful I feel to have a dad who serves in the United States Navy and is still with us, when some families do not have that privilege.

All of my experiences have led me to believe that what Memorial Day means to me is honoring the sacrifice and courage of those who have fallen in military service to our country.

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