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Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

Coupeville’s Audrianna Shaw, a three-sport star who played her heart out. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“She never misses a layup. Ever.”

And then Audrianna Shaw promptly bounced the basketball off the back of the rim, the orb skipping free and bringing my career as a hoops scout into serious question.

Except…

As a rival rebounder hauled in the wayward shot and turned to head back up the floor, Audri immediately spun into battle mode, a fierce look crossing her face.

Catching the unsuspecting dribbler from behind, she snaked her hand into a tiny gap, poking the ball free and snatching it up before heading in the opposite direction.

Step-step-slap-the-ball-through-the-hoop and Audri’s layup rate was back at a crisp 99.3%.

That was the one, and only time, I ever saw her miss a layup during her middle school hardwood career.

And her fast recovery to turn the moment into a win speaks to exactly the kind of athlete she has been for the past six-plus years.

Audri, who played three sports and was a key figure in all of them, never hung her head, and certainly never accepted defeat.

Instead, she attacked, attacked, and attacked some more, relentlessly giving her teams the spark they needed.

Whether she was on the soccer pitch, the basketball court, or the softball field, Audri was always one thing – a winner.

Now sure, sometimes her team came out on the short end of the final score, but you never knew it from her effort or body language.

Audri has a bright burning fire in her soul, and I never witnessed her give up on a play or surrender without first throwing haymakers every which way.

In short, she has moxie, something which should serve her well as she heads to college in Alabama, and then off to rule the world.

Giving her all. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On the soccer pitch Audri anchored the Wolves from her midfielder position, capable of both banging home goals and playing rough-and-tumble with any rivals foolhardy enough to challenge her in the open field.

She tied for the team lead in scoring as a senior, spinning the ball past flailing goaltenders with laser-like shots, capping a stellar run which covered her entire high school career.

Once let loose on the basketball court, Audri lived to make wild dashes from end-to-end.

Weaving through traffic, before throwing up runners while on the move, she absorbed more than her share of punishment from flying elbows and grasping defenders trying in vain to slow her down.

“Get outta my way! I got buckets to score!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Even when she was smacked around, Audri almost always wore a huge smile as she ambled to the free throw line, where she tossed in daggers while dropping side eye at the girl(s) who fouled her.

She could be explosive on offense — leading the Wolves in scoring during her junior season — and finished her varsity time with 212 points, which lands her at #56 all-time on the scoring chart for a CHS girls program fast approaching its 50th anniversary.

But while Audri could drop buckets, she was also a scrapper on defense, a two-way weapon able to help her team at any moment of the game.

A layup? Odds are she’ll make it. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

That carried over to her spring sport of choice, where she was an integral part of the softball program.

As a freshman, Audri was one of two 9th graders on a varsity squad which went all the way to the state tourney, where the Wolves played three games in a day, including toppling powerhouse Deer Park.

Covid erased her sophomore campaign, but she and the Wolves responded by mashing the crud out of the ball once they got to return to the diamond.

Audri and Co. went 12-0 during a cut-down junior season, then finished with a 16-3 tear this spring, missing out on a return trip to state by just a game.

Patrolling center field, Miss Shaw was dynamic on defense, capable of running down balls from the left field line to the right field line.

She made life considerably easier for the girls patrolling the outfield corners, as they often got to sit back and watch Audri spear runaway balls while sprinting out of her shoes.

At the plate, she was a weapon unleashed, capable of launching rockets to the deepest, darkest parts of the outfield, followed by her legs churning as she alertly picked up extra bases by capitalizing on the slightest hesitation from fielders.

Power, unleashed. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

How dangerous could she be with a bat in her hands?

At several times during her senior season Audri changed things up during big blowout wins and came to the plate batting left-handed, instead of her normal righty stance.

It’s not easy to suddenly hit from a completely different look, and yet Audri surprised, not just making contact, but whacking the ball for line-drive hits.

Followed by her bouncing at first (or second) base, big grin washing across her face as her teammates went bonkers and Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan shook his head in silent tribute.

From middle school through high school, Audri was a fun-lovin’ ball of fire, one of the more entertaining athletes to ever wear the red and black, and one whose hustle, skill, and love of competing made for a potent combination.

I might have been wrong with my assessment she would never, ever miss a layup, but I was right that she would have a major positive impact during her prep sports days.

So today we induct Audri into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, welcoming her to our hallowed digital shrine.

After this you’ll find her at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

I have no doubt this is but the first of many honors Audri will capture in her life, however.

Her future is as bright as her personality.

Celebrating Senior Night with mom Bonnie. (Jackie Saia photo)

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Izzy Wells? A lovely human being, and a pretty darn good athlete, too. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

She was the serene superstar.

Now, I don’t live inside the brain of Izzy Wells, so it’s possible there were fireworks going off in there every single game.

Her stomach might have been dive-bombed by butterflies, and non-stop cold sweats may have been the rule.

If so, she hides it really, really well.

Throughout her athletic career in Coupeville — from little league exploits to middle school success on to high school excellence, Izzy projected such utter calmness in everything she did.

When she was in the pitcher’s circle on the softball diamond, she could be up by 10 runs or down by five, and she had an uncanny knack to look peaceful, yet determined every time.

It’s a rare trait, one which Wells displayed both as a newbie and as a grizzled vet, and it makes for a highly successful pitcher.

“I’m gonna throw it … but you’re not gonna hit it.”

Now, the Izzinator could break off a nasty fastball which drilled a hole through a rival’s bat as it finished its journey into a waiting catcher’s mitt.

She could chuck BBs with the best of them.

But it was that calmness which flowed out of her, and around her, which centered her team and was — in my opinion at least — her greatest weapon.

Izzy never seemed to get too high or too low, with just a small smile peeking out in rare moments when her sheer awesomeness overwhelmed even her.

Even with a pandemic making the middle part of her high school days a royal pain, she had a run of success which matches up with any Wolf hurler who ever stepped into the circle.

As a freshman, she was the staff ace for a team which got stronger as the season went on, roaring from behind to smack big, bad Granite Falls en route to earning a ticket to the state tourney.

Izzy, chucking liquid heat on her home field, stared down the most-feared hitter in the league, senior slugger Samantha Vanderwel, with a crucial game on the line late in the regular season.

The first time Coupeville faced the homer-happy Tigers, it lost badly. The second time, the Wolves were nipped.

Meeting #3 ended with Izzy firing a laser, Vanderwel swinging with every ounce of her strength and hitting nothing but air, and Wolf catcher Sarah Wright screaming like a banshee in celebration.

In the circle, a slight dip of her head, a half-smile, and then Wells vanished under a dogpile of her teammates.

It was the turning point, as Coupeville roared from behind to tie for a league title, earn a #1 seed to districts — where it beat Granite again — then go on to state for a three-game run which included eliminating highly ranked Deer Park.

The pandemic robbed Izzy of her sophomore season, but she endured, leading CHS to a 12-0 mark in a cut-down junior campaign and a 16-3 record as a senior — when her catcher was often lil’ sis Savina.

Savina (left) and Izzy — how it started…

How it’s going.

Coupeville went a truly impressive 43-13 during Izzy’s time in uniform, with her morphing from a young gunslinger to an all-around weapon as her batting skills boomed in her final two seasons.

She could crank the ball deep into the prairie clouds or slap hits past diving infielders and was always one of the smarter base runners to play for the Wolves.

And yet, as talented on the softball field as she was — and that’s my enduring image of her, Izzy standing motionless in the circle, eyes narrowing ever so slightly behind her face mask as she mentally mapped out her next strikeout — she was successful in everything she did.

A volleyball spiker, a soccer ace, and Miss Dependable on the basketball court, dropping in buckets with her patented super-soft layup.

“Scuse me, pardon me, coming through to score another basket.”

Izzy rang up 204 points across four seasons of varsity ball, finishing as the #3 scorer during both her junior and senior campaigns.

She could give you some of everything on the hardwood, bringing defense, teamwork, and a strong hoops IQ to everything she did.

When I call Izzy a “glue” player, it’s a high compliment.

She helped hold things together, and, again, was always the face of calm in the heat of athletic battle, whether her team was romping to a win or fighting tooth and nail to stay alive.

Hanging out with fellow seniors (l to r) Violette Huegerich, Mckenna Somes, and Audrianna Shaw.

Through it all, the happiest I saw her was when someone close to her, from sister Savina to friends like Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Mckenna Somes, were successful in their endeavors.

Izzy rightfully earned honors of her own — up to and including being named league MVP in softball — but seeing her pride and joy in other’s accomplishments truly highlights her quiet leadership.

In the classroom she was a talented scholar, finishing in the top 10 of all graduates from the CHS Class of 2022, and, in her spare time, she is helping raise what is arguably the town’s most-popular dog.

The Wells clan, featuring a scene-stealing pup.

Looking ahead, I can’t envision any world in which Miss Wells doesn’t go on to accomplish truly amazing things in her future.

Over the course of the 10-year run of this blog, Izzy has been one of my personal favorites, and I am very happy to induct her today into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

After this you’ll find her hanging out up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab, a designation she more than earned.

It’s for Izzy’s play on the diamond and the hardwood, the pitch and the court, for her work in the classroom or with a musical instrument in hand, and for the way she remains one of the highest-quality people to ever rep the red and black.

She was ever-more successful as she got older, but the middle of Lyle and Katy Wells three children has been a truly lovely human being every step of the way.

It was always easy to root for you, Izzy, and that will never change.

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It takes a village to raise ball players.

With a lot of help from the community, Central Whidbey Little League roared back to life this spring, jumping from 81 participants back up to 118.

That reflects baseball and softball players ranging in age from 4-12 and shows a marked improvement as the world continues to come out of a pandemic.

CWLL President Gordon McMillan offered big thanks to the Island County Parks and Rec Department, which handles maintenance and grooming of Coupeville’s Rhododendron Park.

“We call Rhododendron our ‘field of dreams’,” he said.

McMillan also thanked the league’s many volunteers and paid tribute to local businesses which “so generously contributed to our just concluded and very successful 2022 season.”

 

CWLL sponsors:

Front Street Realty
Heritage Bank
Home Depot
Island Title and Escrow
Iverson Insurance Company
Kapaw’s Iskreme
OLF Storage
Penn Cove Vet
Prairie Center Market
Red’s Roofing and Construction
Salon Blue
Snakelum Point Investments
Sunshine Drip
Terra Firma Wealth Management
Whidbey Natural Pet
Wood Bee Construction

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Capri Anter, ready to destroy the hopes and dreams of rival pitchers. (Allison Scarpo photos)

The final game doesn’t tell the entire story.

The Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad is a high-flying group of talented young women, with bright diamond futures ahead of them.

So, while Thursday’s season-ending 28-9 loss to a red-hot Sedro-Woolley squad hurts, it’s a bump in the road, and not the end of the journey.

The Wolves, who finish 13-6 this season after being knocked out of the District 11 tourney, will be back.

Central Whidbey won’t be going to the state championships this time — Sedro claims that ticket thanks to Thursday’s win at Rhododendron Park — but the prairie powerhouses have much to look forward to in years to come.

“The girls came a long way this year and will continue to develop,” said Wolf coach Aaron Lucero. “Excited to see them grow in the future.

“Always tough when a season ends – that part never changes, but we’ll get there.”

“And just where do you think you’re going?!?!”

Central Whidbey beat Sedro during the regular season, but the visitors were locked-in during what turned into an elimination game.

“Sedro has a good core, including solid pitching, fielding, and hitting,” Lucero said. “Hats off to them.”

Lucero and fellow Wolf coach Lark Gustafson also work with the Coupeville High School softball program, and the hope is for the CWLL players to keep moving upwards together, rung by rung.

The diamond guru praised his players, and their families, for their work and commitment.

“Families (were) all supportive,” Lucero said. “Really one of the best groups of parents I’ve ever had, and I think this is my 15th year coaching.”

One team, one dream.

Thursday’s game wasn’t a blowout until the end, as Central Whidbey hung tough through the first two innings.

The Wolves pushed across a pair of runs in the first, then plated seven runners in the second, trailing just 12-9 at that point.

The killer was the third frame, however, as Sedro erupted for 16 runs, eventually forcing the mercy rule to be enacted.

Haylee Armstrong and Capri Anter paced Central Whidbey, both scoring twice, while Sydney Van Dyke, Adeline Maynes, Alison Powers, Cameron Van Dyke, and Emma Cushman also tapped home plate.

Michelle Michaud, Chelsi Stevens, Rhylin Price, Ava Lucero, and Amelia Crowder complete the Wolf roster.

“On to next season!”

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“We’re coming for all the wins! All of them, I said!!” (Allison Scarpo photos)

Adeline Maynes fires a laser.

They’re still very much in it to win it.

The Central Whidbey Little League Majors softball squad rallied Wednesday on its home field, crushing South Skagit 20-10 in a loser-out game at the District 11 all-star tournament.

The victory eliminates Skagit and sends the Wolves into the championship round for a rematch with Sedro-Woolley, which it lost to Tuesday.

Central Whidbey needs to win back-to-back games Thursday and Friday to earn a trip to the state tourney, while Sedro can get to the big dance with one more victory.

All games are set for Rhododendron Park, with 6 PM starts.

The Wolves attacked early and often against Skagit, raining down 10 hits while also eking out a steady series of walks.

Sydney Van Dyke slammed a double for the game’s big blow, with Capri Anter and Adeline Maynes both picking up a pair of singles.

Also collecting base-knocks were Ava Lucero, Rhylin Price, Emma Cushman, Cameron Van Dyke, and Amelia Crowder.

Chelsi Stevens dares the pitcher to try and get one past her.

Nine different Wolves scored, with Anter (4), Mayne (3), and the Van Dyke sisters (3 each) leading the way.

Haylee Armstrong and Lucero both tapped the plate twice apiece, with Chelsi Stevens, Price, and Cushman also coming around to score.

Alison Powers and Michelle Michaud round out the 12-player Wolf roster.

Stars of today, stars of tomorrow.

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