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Seniors (l to r) Violette Huegerich, Mckenna Somes, Izzy Wells, and Audrianna Shaw. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They went out with a bang.

Coupeville High School’s senior softball players led the way Friday as the Wolves drilled Orcas Island, capturing a pair of wins in their final games on their home field.

Izzy Wells, Mckenna Somes, Violette Huegerich, and Audrianna Shaw are part of a CHS diamond squad currently flying high at 15-2, so there’s still more games to play.

But barring a sudden quirk in the schedule, the rest of the way will play out on the road for the Wolves.

So that meant Friday’s games included a Senior Night celebration, with chunks of it captured in the pics seen above and below.

Izzy arrives in style. (Jackie Saia photo)

Mckenna Somes and part of her rooting section. (Jackie Saia photo)

Violette Huegerich and her proud mom. (Jackie Saia photo)

Audrianna Shaw enjoys a laugh with her #1 fan. (Jackie Saia photo)

They’re eating well today. (Jackie Saia photo)

Izzy Wells and associates — including everyone’s favorite pup. (Jackie Saia photo)

Senior Night deep thoughts, forever immortalized. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Ja’Kenya Hoskins (left) pops over from track practice to get a photo with Wolf softball sensation Izzy Wells. (Katy Wells photo)

The breeze was cold, and the bats were hot.

Fueled up on hot dogs and cupcakes, the Coupeville High School varsity softball team ignored relentless prairie wind Friday, bashing 34 hits on Senior Night during a doubleheader sweep of visiting Orcas Island.

In control from first pitch to last, the Wolves strolled to 17-1 and 19-2 wins in games mercy-ruled after the top of the fourth inning.

With the twin thumpings, Coupeville gets to 7-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 15-2 overall.

The Wolves close the regular season with a trip to Darrington next Tuesday, May 3, then turn their gaze to the playoffs.

But first they honored seniors Mckenna Somes, Violette Huegerich, Audrianna Shaw, and Izzy Wells with a pair of romps.

How the day played out:

 

Game 1:

Playing a 12:30 matinee on a weekday to kick things off meant an early exit from school, and limited fans for the first pitch.

It also meant a bit of a slow start for the Wolves, who scraped out two runs in the first, tacked on six more in the second, then hit their stride with a nine-run burst in the third.

The ball jumped off Coupeville bats, with five different hitters collecting an extra-base hit during an all-out assault on Orcas pitching.

Izzy Wells pounded three doubles, and Shaw smacked a pair of two-baggers, but it was freshman Savina Wells who rifled an inside-the-park home run to drive a huge stake through the visiting Vikings.

The fab frosh zipped a frozen rope to deep center, then churned her way around the basepaths without breaking stride, her long legs crossing home way before the ball arrived back in the infield.

Orcas couldn’t get much going against Wolf hurler Allie Lucero, who whiffed four and kept her foes on their heels with well-placed pitches.

One of the few times the Vikings looked like they might be up to something, Coupeville ended the mini rally by picking a runner off third base, Lucero winging the ball to Madison McMillan for the wham-bam tag.

Mckenna Somes reached base four times Friday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Game 2:

With Orcas in town for most of the day, having taken a 6:45 AM ferry as it Island-hopped, Coupeville hosted a between-games barbeque for softball and baseball players, as well as assorted freeloader writer types.

Then, after a tribute to the 12th graders, the Wolf sluggers went right back to work.

This time, Coupeville dumped eight runs on the board in the first, settled for four more in the second, then capped the day with a seven-spot in the third.

Walks were the currency of choice in the nightcap, with the Wolves drawing 15 free passes, led by McMillan and Huegerich netting three apiece.

The latter was twice bonked by wayward pitches, with the second one nailing her in the batting helmet.

“Not again!” said her mom, as the tough-as-nails Huegerich ambled down to first, shaking her head back and forth as she did.

The Wolves still had their bats going when the ball was near the strike zone, rapping out 12 more base knocks, with Somes, Shaw, and Mia Farris collecting doubles.

Shaw, enjoying herself immensely in the final home game of her stellar prep career, alternated between hitting righty and lefty.

Despite not normally being a switch hitter, the senior centerfielder held up rather well, slapping a pair of hits while trying out the less-comfortable left side of the plate.

McMillan also stole home twice in the game, the second time bouncing off both the catcher and umpire as she successfully bowled over anyone and everyone in her pursuit of tapping home plate.

“Next time … next time I want you to slide,” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan, with a small smile.

The Orcas catcher, freshman Molina Stone, recovered to make the defensive play of the game, crashing into the fence behind home as she snagged a fast-falling foul ball over her head.

And then, at 5:21 PST an era ended on the windswept prairie, as McGranahan went out to lift Izzy Wells after she recorded the first out in the final half-inning.

The calm leader of the Wolves, the Izzinator is a rare young woman.

She pitched CHS to state as a freshman, saw a pandemic erase her sophomore season and slash her junior campaign in half, and now is writing a mega-successful final chapter in her high school career.

Coupeville is 42-12 since Izzy stepped onto the diamond, and she’s not done yet.

But, for a moment, as her teammates hugged her, as a now-overflowing fan section hollered for her, and as her faithful pooch gazed at her adoringly from the sideline, the elder Miss Wells got a moment well-deserved, and very much earned.

 

Friday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 singles, 2 walks
Teagan Calkins — 1 double
Mia Farris — 2 singles, 1 double
Gwen Gustafson — 1 walk
Violette Huegerich — 4 walks
Allie Lucero — 1 single, 1 double, 2 walks
Madison McMillan — 3 singles, 1 double, 3 walks
Melanie Navarro — 2 singles, 2 walks
Sofia Peters — 1 single, 1 walk
Audrianna Shaw — 3 singles, 3 doubles
Mckenna Somes — 2 singles, 1 double, 1 walk
Izzy Wells — 2 singles, 3 doubles, 1 walk
Savina Wells — 4 singles, 1 home run, 1 walk

Melanie Navarro sends the softball flying far away. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Katrina McGranahan, legend. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is a shout-out to one of the true giants.

During her time at Coupeville High School, Katrina McGranahan was a stellar athlete — a volleyball, softball, and (for a brief moment at least) basketball supernova.

Blessed with natural talent, and always willing to put in work, Killer Kat was tabbed as the CHS Female Athlete of the Year.

Following in the footsteps of big bro Wade Schaef, while carving out her own brilliant path, Miss McGranahan remains a one-of-a-kind wonder who also happens to be a pretty extraordinary human being.

These days, she’s a mom to a bright-eyed lil’ boy, and has returned to her alma mater to coach the Wolf JV softball program.

Coupeville’s young guns are 5-1 while playing for Katrina, and it’s a kick to see her passing on wisdom to a new generation.

She has also stepped up in her first season and proven to be the true heir to David and Amy King by being the best quote in the biz.

I’ve watched as a first year CHS softball coach once literally sprinted away across a field to keep from answering one question from Whidbey News-Times guru Jim Waller and myself after a game.

Katrina is the exact opposite, kicking me scorebook photos and introspective insight on her team in a super-timely fashion, just like her dad Kevin, the CHS varsity diamond coach, does.

You love to see it.

It’s always great when former Wolf athletes return to coach teams in Cow Town, either at the middle or high school level.

When they prove to be ideally suited for the job, like Miss McGranahan, it’s even better.

So, thank you once again, Katrina, for all the highlights from your playing career, and now for being part of a very-strong coaching crew guiding Wolf Nation forward.

Once a superstar, always a superstar!

“You’re playing in front of the fence. I said this one is going OVER the fence…”

“I have…”

“the…”

“POWER!!!!!”

“Dang straight she does, skippy!”

“They found it down by the Clinton ferry…”

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Freshman Mia Farris smacked four hits Wednesday as Coupeville beat Friday Harbor to clinch a league title. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re still the gold standard.

It was a little closer than expected, but the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad kept its record perfect in Northwest 2B/1B League games, knocking off visiting Friday Harbor 6-3 Wednesday afternoon.

The victory, coming against a foe it socked 30-0 the first time around, lifts the Wolves to 6-0 in conference action, 13-2 overall.

It also clinches back-to-back league titles for Coupeville and moves Kevin McGranahan’s squad one win away from qualifying for the state tournament.

The Wolves wrap up the regular season with a home doubleheader Friday against Orcas Island on Senior Night, then a road trip May 3 to Darrington.

After that, there’s gonna be a wait.

Current plans call for Coupeville to travel to Fort Borst Park in Centralia May 21, where it will play the #5 team from District 4 in a winner-to-state, loser-out game.

The delay is because District 4, which has 20 schools playing 2B softball, will host a complete district tourney.

District 1, which Coupeville rules, will not, as the Wolves are one of just three 2B schools on the diamond.

Having thunked Friday Harbor and La Conner in regular season play, Coupeville is da champs.

The 2B state tourney, set for May 27-28 in Yakima, will be a 12-team rumble.

That’s right, it won’t be a 16-team bout as usual, because 2B softball, with 49 teams, misses the 50-team cutoff for a 16-team bracket by a single school.

That also means District 1 won’t automatically send a team to state — which it would if there were 50 schools — “requiring” the crossover with District 4.

There will be a test on all of this later…

Wolves (l to r) Teagan Calkins, Sofia Peters, Taylor Brotemarkle, and Madison McMillan are one win away from the state tourney.

Coupeville, then a 1A program, went to the big dance in 2019, the last time Washington held any state championships for spring sports.

The pandemic erased softball, baseball, track, soccer, and tennis in spring 2020, then restricted 2021 action to just league contests.

Now, Wolf seniors Izzy Wells and Audrianna Shaw, who are the only remaining active players from the 2019 squad, will try and guide their team back to state.

The duo was front and center Wednesday, as usual, with the Izzinator whipping strikes to her lil’ sis, Savina, who, clad in catcher’s gear, accepted nine strikeouts.

Shaw banged out a pair of hits and patrolled center field, meanwhile, in a game which stayed close a lot longer than McGranahan might have liked.

“We came out flat, but did enough to get the win,” he said.

“Another Coupeville fastpitch league championship. However, the work is not done, only just beginning.”

The Wolves struck first Wednesday, pushing a run across in the bottom of the first to take the early lead.

Shaw led off with a walk, with Mia Farris and Izzy Wells following with base-knocks, and the scoreboard lit up.

But then it dimmed a bit, as Friday Harbor fought back to take the lead with a three-run top of the third.

Trailing a league opponent for the first time this season, Coupeville rebounded with two runs in the bottom half of the third to knot things up, and two more in the fourth to take the lead for good.

Both of those mini surges featured Shaw, Farris, and fellow freshman Taylor Brotemarkle reach base twice apiece, while 9th grader Madison McMillan bopped a double to put the game on ice in the sixth.

 

Wednesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 walks
Mia Farris — 4 singles
Gwen Gustafson— 2 singles
Allie Lucero — 2 singles
Madison McMillan — 1 double
Audrianna Shaw — 2 singles, 1 walk
Izzy Wells — 1 single, 2 walks

Gwen Gustafson slaps another hit.

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Rain today, play tomorrow. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The battle for league supremacy has been bumped by a day.

Tuesday’s scheduled matchups between Coupeville and Friday Harbor on the softball and baseball diamonds have been moved to Wednesday because of forecasted rain.

Both games are scheduled to have 4 PM starts in Coupeville.

The baseball match-up pits Friday Harbor, which is 8-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play against a Wolves squad which sits at 8-1.

The Wolverines, who are the defending league champs, won the first meeting of the season 3-2 on Friday Harbor.

A win is crucial, as only one of three 2B schools from the NWL advances to the postseason, and La Conner is already eliminated.

On the softball side of things, Coupeville (5-0 in league) can clinch back-to-back league titles with a win over Friday Harbor (5-1).

While their league records look fairly similar, it’s deceptive, as the Wolf sluggers won 30-0 (not a misprint) the first time the teams played this season.

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