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Wolf 8th grader Capri Anter has a bright softball future. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was informal, but hugely helpful.

Coupeville High School’s JV softball team got one more go-around on the diamond Friday, playing a four-inning game with host South Whidbey in which no score or stats were kept.

While they might not have gotten an official win, the Wolves did score the maximum number of runs allowed, with JV rules limiting teams to five tallies per inning.

What mattered most, however, was getting more field time for young players before bats and balls are officially put away for the season.

“It was a beautiful day to play some softball, and that’s just what we did,” said Coupeville JV coach Katrina McGranahan.

“We were able to show them just how powerful our future is.”

While all of her players had their star moments, the softball guru gave praise to three Wolves, two of whom have the potential for long diamond careers.

Capri Anter and Melanie Wolfe are just 8th graders, and the extra season of softball has been invaluable.

Melanie crushed a line drive to left field, earning her a double,” McGranahan said. “Man, what a confidence booster.

“I’m proud of her and how she was able to stick with the sport.”

With Coupeville’s three varsity pitchers graduating, Anter and fellow 8th grader Haylee Armstrong are the early frontrunners to inherit the job as freshmen.

As a former Wolf ace who prowled the pitcher’s circle from day #1 of her own 9th grade season, McGranahan knows the benefits of getting in as much work as possible.

Capri pitched well today!” the CHS coach said.

“Yeah, she may have hit a few girls, but hey, she stayed with it and fought through her frustrations to end the game with a solid comeback.”

While Wolfe and Anter can return next season, foreign exchange student Layla Heo returns to South Korea soon and McGranahan wanted to make sure the hard-working softball newbie would get one more time in the spotlight.

Layla got to play in her last game for the Wolves before she heads home after the school year! Bittersweet,” McGranahan said.

“She has improved so much as a player and as a person; I know she will be missed by her whole team.”

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Coupeville seniors (l to r) Sofia Peters, Maya Lucero, Allie Lucero, and Melanie Navarro exit as winners. (Photo courtesy Paula Peters)

The season ended as it began, with the Wolves thumping their next-door neighbors.

Returning to the diamond after an eight-day break, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad swamped host South Whidbey 23-0 Friday in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

The victory, fueled by a ferocious tsunami of hits, gives the 2B Wolves a sweep of their two-game season series with the 1A Falcons and leaves Coupeville’s final record at a sweet 14-6.

While there won’t be any playoffs for CHS softball this season, its five-pack of splendid seniors — Allie Lucero, Melanie Navarro, Sofia Peters, Maya Lucero, and Gwen Gustafson — finish their prep careers with a 42-9 record.

Not bad for a group which lost a season-and-a-half to pandemic restrictions but stayed together and finished strongly.

Gwen Gustafson tossed five scoreless innings and smacked three hits during her final high school softball game. (Photo courtesy Irene Gustafson)

Coupeville’s seniors, and their younger teammates, overwhelmed South Whidbey in the finale, crunching extra-base hits at the plate and playing precision defense in the field.

Wolf catcher Teagan Calkins, much spryer after a week-plus to rest an injured ankle, popped out of her crouch and gunned down a runner straying off the bag at first base.

The ball smacked into Allie Lucero’s glove before the wanderin’ Falcon knew what was what, and happened so quickly it almost seemed to catch the ump off guard as well.

He recovered, however, punching out the runner with an emphatic yell, which was quickly overwhelmed by the roar from the Coupeville bench.

Equally applause-worthy was a double play which could have been a triple play pulled off by sophomore shortstop Madison McMillan.

Spearing a liner out of midair for out #1, she whirled, slapped the tag on a runner going by for out #2, then whipped a laser to first in a bid to also catch that Falcon straying.

And she would have, except South Whidbey already had an out before the play happened, and you can’t get four outs in the same inning most days.

“We only need two, Maddie,” Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan said with a chuckle as he headed for the dugout. “But I like your thinking.”

Coupeville actually only scraped out a single run in the top of the first, as South Whidbey clamped down, for a moment, on defense.

Taylor Brotemarkle smoked an RBI single back up the middle to make it 1-0, and while CHS failed to get more at the moment, it soon made up for it.

The Wolves, swinging from their heels and spraying the ball all over the field, tacked on five more runs in both the second and third innings, then closed with six more tallies in both the fourth and fifth.

Everyone in the lineup was hitting, from top to bottom, as all 11 Wolves who picked up a bat Friday collected at least one base knock.

Mia Farris mashed a three-run triple to straight away centerfield to bust the game open, while Calkins, Allie Lucero, and Brotemarkle all zinged RBI doubles to deep and dark parts of the park.

Not to be outdone, Farris came back around, and flexing her biceps in true “sun’s out, guns out” fashion, thumped a pair of doubles to go with her three-bagger, having herself a day.

And then, with the end of the season just a whisper away, Maya Lucero erupted, launching a cannon shot which cleared the fence in left field for a titanic tater that’s never, ever coming back.

Her final high school at-bat and her first out-of-the-park dinger, in one compact swing. Kismet.

Maya “The Mad Masher” Lucero. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Coupeville loses its five seniors, and foreign exchange student Layla Heo, 10 of the 16 players on the roster can return next season.

And they’ll be around for a while, as Chloe Marzocca, Jada Heaton, Bailey Thule, McMillan, Farris, and Brotemarkle are currently sophomores, while Calkins is a freshman.

Haylee Armstrong, who started most of the season, Capri Anter, and Melanie Wolfe are just 8th graders.

 

Friday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — One single
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single, one double
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one double, two walks
Mia Farris — Two doubles, one triple, one walk
Gwen Gustafson — Two singles, one double, one walk
Jada Heaton — One single
Allie Lucero — Two singles, one double
Maya Lucero — One single, one home run
Madison McMillan — One single, one double, one triple, one walk
Melanie Navarro — One single, two doubles
Sofia Peters — One single, one walk

Coupeville’s young sluggers carry big bats and know what to do with them. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Fab frosh Teagan Calkins gets a helping hand from coach Kevin McGranahan after an injury. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The finale approaches.

Coupeville High School softball takes the field for the final time this season Friday, traveling to South Whidbey to clash with the Falcons.

Win and the Wolves earn a season sweep of their next-door neighbors — CHS won 20-2 first time around — while finishing with a spiffy 14-6 record.

As we count down towards the end, a photographic look at the best softball squad on Whidbey Island, courtesy Diet Coke-fueled photo clicker John Fisken.

Aaron Lucero imparts diamond wisdom to Chloe Marzocca. “Hit the balll … HARD!!”

Haylee Armstrong, already crunching homers and triples as just an 8th grader, stares intently at her bright future. She might want to wear sunglasses.

Melanie Navarro awaits an incoming strike.

Calkins, ankle secured, delivers a heartfelt Senior Night tribute to some of her older teammates.

“When I flex that muscle right there while hitting? The ball goes over the wall and it doesn’t come back.”

“Was it a hit or an error?”

“We’ll be the judge of that!”

Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose.

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Layla Heo and CHS softball end their season this coming week. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Djina Radenovic and Wolf tennis play twice as the regular season wraps.

A little something for everyone.

The week ahead is a hodgepodge of regular season and playoff action, with all four Coupeville High School spring sports teams involved.

Wolf softball and girls’ tennis wrap regular season action, while track and field and baseball begin what they hope will be long postseason runs.

The netters travel to Mount Vernon Tuesday, May 9 in a match just added to the schedule, then host Friday Harbor May 12.

That second bout, where the Wolves will celebrate Senior Night, offers CHS a chance to claim sole possession of the Northwest 2B/1B League title.

After that, Ken Stange’s squad sends its top players on to the district tourney, which is set to go down in Seattle May 19.

The CHS softball squad, meanwhile, travels to South Whidbey May 12 for a final non-league game, then packs up the equipment.

The Wolf sluggers were nipped by Friday Harbor in the league finale and lost a chance to advance to the playoffs.

Baseball and track get their postseason closeup Saturday, May 13, with the hardball squad on the road at Lakewood High School, where they will face either Northwest Christian (Lacey) or Friday Harbor.

The Wolf runners, throwers, and jumpers defend their home turf, with CHS hosting the district meet.

Do well, and the state championships are next on the schedule for both teams.

As we head into a week of intrigue, a look at where things sit in terms of wins and losses:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 13-1 15-5
MV Christian 13-1 14-3
Friday Harbor 8-6 8-8
Orcas Island 7-8 11-8
Darrington 6-9 8-10
La Conner 3-11 5-14
Concrete 0-14 0-15

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 2-1 2-5
Friday Harbor 1-2 1-3

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 11-1 14-4
Coupeville 10-2 13-6
Darrington 8-4 9-5
Orcas Island 5-7 5-11
La Conner 2-10 3-16
Concrete 0-12 0-14

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CHS seniors (l to r) Maya Lucero, Gwen Gustafson, Melanie Navarro, Sofia Peters, and Allie Lucero join coach Kevin McGranahan on their prairie field of dreams. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sports are weird sometimes.

Take this spring, where a winless Concrete baseball team is playoff eligible, while the Coupeville High School softball squad is not.

The Wolf sluggers can finish 14-6 with a win in their season finale against South Whidbey — a team they beat 20-2 the first time around.

But they won’t go to the postseason, because only one 2B softball program advances from District 1, and, this year, that’s Friday Harbor, thanks to a pair of one-run victories over CHS.

Meanwhile, all four 1B schools in the Northwest 2B/1B League make the baseball playoffs, regardless of record.

That’s because a much-larger pool of 1B schools in our district and District 2 makes it possible for a full-scale, 12-team bi-district tourney to be played.

A Wolf softball team which was truly dominant at times, a squad which held its own with big-timers like Forks, Onalaska, and Meridian, stays home.

While Concrete baseball, which is 0-14 and forfeited three games this season, may take the field this Saturday to face Pope John Paul II in a playoff rumble.

Emphasis on may, as two of those forfeits came in Concrete’s final two games.

Sports are weird sometimes.

But we’re not here to disparage the Lions. They are building for the future, and anything can happen in the playoffs.

Case in point, the 2011 edition of the Coupeville Wolves, who had six freshmen in the lineup while going 0-17 as the only 1A school playing softball in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

That team shocked the world in the playoffs, however, eliminating Meridian 5-1 behind Alexis Trumbull, Bessie Walstad, and Breeanna Messner.

Coached by Jackie (Calkins) Saia, mom of current Wolf freshman phenom Teagan Calkins, that squad launched the rebirth of Wolf softball, and now the program is a consistent winner, year in, year out.

So good luck, Concrete baseball — if you take the field Saturday — and go open a can of whup ass on the private school dandies.

But this blog isn’t called the Concrete Clarion, so let’s swing the focus back to Cow Town.

Coming off of an emotional 3-2 loss in extra innings Thursday at Friday Harbor, the Wolves mood probably resembles the weather outside – gray and gloomy.

But it shouldn’t. At least not completely.

As one fan said, “There’s always next year!” and it’s true, the Wolf roster is chock full of star players with multiple years left to play.

Madison McMillan, Mia Farris, Taylor Brotemarkle, Jada Heaton, and Chloe Marzocca? All sophomores.

Calkins, the team’s starting catcher and leadoff hitter, has three years left, while Haylee Armstrong, who lashed a laser of a triple against the Wolverines?

She just an 8th grader, which means she’s been launching moon shots and chasing down balls in the outfield while still attending middle school classes.

Those core players, and others, should have many more chances to conduct group sing-a-longs on the prairie after wins in the future.

But, for Coupeville’s five seniors — Melanie Navarro, Allie Lucero, Sofia Peters, Maya Lucero, and Gwen Gustafson — next week’s clash with South Whidbey marks their final moments in a Wolf jersey.

They are an amazingly resilient bunch of young women, bright, outgoing, dedicated — and we can’t put enough emphasis on that last word.

These five are the last group which took a hit when the world shut down over the pandemic.

Just as they were about to make the jump from little league to high school games, Covid-19 restrictions erased all spring sports in 2020.

When they returned as sophomores, games were played again, but only against league rivals, which limited Coupeville to 12 games, instead of the normal 20, with no playoffs.

It wasn’t until their junior campaign that the Wolves played a full schedule, and, through no fault of their own, the seniors exit having played just 2.5 of the four, or five, seasons many others are given.

Through it all, they remained dedicated.

They found ways to work on their skills when government officials shoved them apart, and they proudly returned to the prairie diamond the first chance they got.

With one game left to play, this five-pack has led Wolf softball to a 41-9 record in their time on the field, a superior winning percentage in any world.

They are a group, and yet each one brings a unique skill set to the game.

Navarro, beloved by CHS football coaches for her stellar four-year run as that team’s manager, brings power to each swing, sending tremors down the spine of rival pitchers as she blasts home runs over far-flung fences.

Seeing her team pour out of the dugout to swarm Melanie after each tater, while her parents proudly beam from behind the fence, has been one of the true feel-good stories of this school year.

Gustafson, the third Wolf from her family I have written about, after older siblings Amanda Fabrizi and Clay Reilly, remains as happy an athlete as any I have witnessed.

Her smile carrying from one end of the prairie to the other, Gwen truly seems to enjoy every moment she is given on a court or diamond, an admirable trait.

Peters, the daughter of a coach, like Gustafson and the Lucero twins, is a two-way winner.

She can lash hits and knock down grounders and has shown an ability to pass on her knowledge to the next generation, joining dad Mike in guiding little league girls who will one day inherit her place on the CHS diamond.

A few years down the road, there will be a young woman who delivers a tear-stained Senior Night farewell in which she thanks Sofia for being her inspiration, and the circle will be complete.

And then there are the Lucero twins, who, at times seem interchangeable (thank heavens for uniform numbers…), and yet emerge as very distinct the longer I watch them play.

I mean, Allie throws and hits left-handed while Maya operates from the right side, so there’s that.

But they also have their own styles, in how they approach their time in the pitcher’s circle and at the plate, while sharing a quiet passion installed in them by being part of a diamond-mad family.

With no disrespect to the first three, it is the Lucero twins who I see as the heart and soul of this squad.

These five young women have dealt with world-shaking events and emerged stronger for it.

I have no doubt they wanted to end their runs in the playoffs — you could see that on their faces, and in the effort given.

But when they exit after next week’s finale in Langley, they should do so with heads held high.

Melanie, Maya, Gwen, Sofia, and Allie will always be remembered as one thing — winners, pure and simple.

Down the road, as they pursue excellence in other parts of their lives, they may return to the prairie diamond they once ruled.

When they do so, let them walk with pride. They earned it.

Once more, with feeling.

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