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Posts Tagged ‘Softball’

Taylor Brotemarkle is in a good mood. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Many games, many photos.

The Coupeville High School softball program was busy last week, with three varsity games and a JV clash.

The Wolves won three of four, and ever-wandering photo clicker John Fisken was on hand to snap pics at multiple games.

The photos above and below are courtesy him, but you can see tons more if you pop over to:

 

Oak Harbor varsity game:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-/SB-2022-04-22-Coupeville-at-OH/

 

Lakewood varsity and JV games:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-/SB-2022-04-23-vs-Lakewood/

 

Allie Lucero flicks fire.

Katrina McGranahan shows the youngsters how it’s done.

Edie Bittner tracks a fly ball.

Madison McMillan gets plunked.

Izzy Wells (left) and Mckenna Somes plot the destruction of their foes.

Gordon McMillan, man of 1,001 tasks.

Sofia Peters marinates in the moment after smashing a double. “I hit, son, it’s what I do!”

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Coupeville tennis ace Mary Milnes can see May on the horizon. But first, there’s some more April action to play out. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cody Roberts dares you to swing.

Justin Timberlake is warming up his vocal cords.

“It’s gonna be May” in just a few days, but first Coupeville High School sports teams have a couple more April games to play.

Wolf baseball and softball each have three games on the schedule this coming week, with a slightly different setup.

The hardball squad hosts Friday Harbor Tuesday, Apr. 26, travels to South Whidbey Apr. 28, then hosts Orcas Island for Senior Night Apr. 29.

Meanwhile, the CHS softball sluggers remain at home, with Friday Harbor visiting Apr. 26.

Orcas arrives Apr. 29, and while it’s also Senior Night, softball plans to play a doubleheader.

The schedule is lighter for Coupeville girls tennis and track, which both have one competition on the schedule.

The Wolf netters kick off the week, hosting Friday Harbor Apr. 25, while the runners, jumpers, and throwers cap things with a trip to Lakewood Apr. 30.

That Saturday event is a shindig known as the Sunny & 70’s Invite.

As we mentally prep for the final week of April, and the onslaught of May, a look at standings through games of Apr. 23:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 8-0 11-1
Coupeville 8-1 10-5
Orcas Island 4-3 5-6
MV Christian 5-4 8-4
Darrington 1-6 1-7
La Conner 1-7 1-8
Concrete 0-6 0-6

 

Northwest League girls tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 3-0
Friday Harbor 0-1 0-2

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 5-0 12-2
Friday Harbor 5-1 6-5
Orcas Island 2-3 2-4
Darrington 2-4 4-5
La Conner 0-6 0-8

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Melanie Navarro’s bat was so hot Saturday, it may still be on fire. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Lakewood slapped. Coupeville punched.

The visiting Cougars struck first in Saturday’s JV softball game, but the host Wolves had all the answers.

Trailing 6-0 an inning-and-a-half into play, Coupeville responded with an explosion of runs, sprinting away with an 18-7 win in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

Katrina McGranahan’s squad improves to a spiffy 5-1 on the season, with a home game against Burlington-Edison coming up Monday, Apr. 25.

Coming on the heels of a varsity clash in which 36 runs were scored, the JV teams did their best to match the total.

Lakewood scratched out a run in the first, then banked in five more in the top of the second — with all of those runs coming after the Cougars had two outs with nobody on base.

If they were worried, the Wolves never showed it, however.

Instead, Coupeville first baseman Melanie Navarro picked up a bat, bent it nearly in half, then crushed — with a capital C — the ball to the deepest, darkest part of left field.

By the time the ball was done skipping around way out there, Navarro was perched on third with the first of four extra-base hits she would throw down in the game.

That lit a fire under the Wolves, with Katie Marti zipping an RBI single to center and Allie Lucero lofting a sac fly to start the tsunami of runs.

Coupeville sent five runners zipping across home plate in the third, again with Navarro making sweet music with her bat.

She crunched a two-run double to center, before beating a throw home, knocking the ball loose in the melee, two batters later.

Teagan Calkins, destroyer of pitchers.

Up 7-6, the Wolves gave Lakewood one final chance to be competitive, before busting the game wide open with six runs in the fourth and a final five in the fifth.

In between Navarro and Lucero ringing up substantial RBI totals — both sluggers finished with five apiece — 10 of 12 Wolves reached base, with Chloe Marzocca topping the list by getting aboard three times.

Plus, there was plenty of intrigue and cheer-worthy plays to go around.

Camryn Clark made a fairly sensational snag on a towering fly ball to right, earning huge applause from her teammates, while Lucero proved her middle name is danger.

Making sure to keep the Lakewood hitters sufficiently jittery, the lefty slinger twice wound up and accidentally plunked Cougar hitters in the batting helmet with wayward pitches.

After that, the visitors embraced leaning away from the plate, allowing Allie, with a slight smile on her face, to whiff eight Cougars as twin sister Maya nodded in approval from her perch in the stands.

Mess with the Lucero sisters at your own peril, world.

 

Saturday stats:

Teagan Calkins — 1 double, 2 walks
Camryn Clark — 1 single, 1 walk
Alondra Cruz — 1 walk
Jada Heaton — 1 double, 2 walks
Violette Huegerich – 1 walk
Allie Lucero — 2 doubles, 1 walk
Katie Marti — 2 singles, 1 double
Chloe Marzocca — 2 singles, 1 walk
Melanie Navarro — 2 doubles, 2 triples
Maya Nottingham — 1 single, 1 walk

Allie Lucero whiffed eight hitters and drove in five runs in Saturday’s JV win.

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Fab frosh Mia Farris was superb at the plate and in the field Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“A tough game, but a good game. I don’t call it an L (for a loss), I call it (an L for) learning.”

While Saturday’s royal rumble on the diamond didn’t end in favor of the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad, Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan was philosophical afterwards.

His 2B Wolves, playing their third game in four days — all against schools from bigger classifications — hung tough for five innings with 2A Lakewood, before falling 23-13.

The non-conference home loss snaps an 11-game win streak for Coupeville, but the many positives from Saturday’s game are what matter most for a Wolf squad sitting at 12-2 on the season.

With McGranahan’s crew looking to return to the state tourney, they have looked to “play up,” and are 6-0 against 2B rivals and a very strong 6-2 against schools from bigger classifications.

This week was a whirlwind, with victories over 1A Meridian and 3A Oak Harbor, and there were huge chunks of the game Saturday when it seemed the Wolves would complete the trifecta.

Rallying from five runs down, Coupeville went ahead by as much as 10-6 in the middle stages of the game, and only trailed 13-12 heading to the sixth inning.

Ultimately, though, the visiting Cougars proved to be too tough, spraying the ball to all fields in the late going, while clamping down on defense.

Lakewood threw out two Coupeville runners at home plate — both on wham-bam plays which were a whisker away from going the other way — and closed the game with a sensational double play.

The Wolves, who started four freshmen, threw down and left everything on the field.

But some days it’s just not quite enough.

Saturday’s brawl on the prairie came on a beautiful, sunny, largely wind-free day — or basically the exact opposite of their last home game, when ice-cold rain slashed and wind howled for two hours straight.

Lakewood came off the bus hot, its bats popping during a five-run top of the first, before Wolf shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle made a superb running snag on a fly ball into left to start the turnaround.

Coupeville pitcher Izzy Wells promptly whiffed the next two batters, and the Wolves were ready to go on the offensive.

“We got sticks, too!” McGranahan told his players, and they responded.

While CHS only pushed across a single run in the first, on a double steal with Audrianna Shaw streaking for home, it got busy in the following frames.

Base-knocks from Gwen Gustafson and Maya Lucero set the stage in the second, with Shaw and Mia Farris rapping back-to-back two-run singles to cut the margin to 6-5.

That set up the third inning, which was the highlight of Coupeville’s day.

On defense, the Wolves set Lakewood down 1-2-3 with Madison McMillan, Brotemarkle, and Allie Lucero all making sterling plays to rob the Cougars on line drives.

McMillan went to her knees at second for her snag, while Lucero stretched to twice her height at first to bring down a ball which had extra-base hit written all over it.

Madison McMillan dares you to run. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spurred on by the defensive stand, Coupeville poured five runs on the board in its half of the third, romping to a 10-6 lead.

Brotemarkle spanked an RBI single which left a fiery trail as it exited the infield, Farris and Gustafson rapped equally torrid run-scoring base-knocks of their own, but it was Shaw who brought the house down.

Smashing the crud out of the ball, the Wolf senior sparkplug laced a two-run triple to straightaway center, sending a ripple of cheers through her substantial cheering section.

Lakewood wouldn’t go away, however.

A three-run double in the fourth pulled the Cougars within 10-9, before a rally in the top of the fifth sent the visitors ahead 13-11.

Coupeville pulled back within one run after an RBI single from Izzy Wells, but then Lakewood snuffed out the hopes and dreams of the home fans.

Five-run rallies in both the sixth and seventh stretched the lead out, while the Cougar gloves were at their best in the waning moments.

The Wolves loaded the bags in their half of their sixth, sparked by a gorgeous pinch-hit double from Sofia Peters, but Lakewood escaped when it tracked down a long two-out fly ball to right.

In the bottom of the seventh, Coupeville picked up an RBI single from McMillan, only to have the game end with an emphatic exclamation point half a second later.

Gustafson smoked a shot between second and third, but Lakewood shortstop Natalie Krueger speared the ball at her ankles while on the move, before doubling McMillan off of first.

It was a remarkable double play, and one which received an appropriate amount of applause from even the Coupeville side of the field.

In a game in which 36 runs scored, there were more than a handful of defensive gems from both teams — Mia Farris also had a great jumping catch in right field for the Wolves — and the mood of the game was often electric.

In the break before the two JV teams played, a Lakewood player distributed cupcakes to the Coupeville players.

Also, as seen in the photo below, Taylor Brotemarkle and her rival #9 also made an unexpected connection.

Taylor Brotemarkle has a new friend. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

All in all, it was a good day for the Wolves — a rugged test against a strong team, which will help prep Coupeville for the postseason.

A win would have been the cherry on top, but sometimes you take your cupcake and your lessons learned and you move on.

Right back to aiming for personal and team growth, every step of the way.

Cause that’s the real win.

 

Saturday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 1 single
Mia Farris — 3 singles
Gwen Gustafson — 1 single, 1 double
Allie Lucero — 2 singles, 1 walk
Maya Lucero — 1 single, 1 walk
Madison McMillan — 2 singles, 1 walk
Sofia Peters — 1 double
Audrianna Shaw — 3 singles, 1 triple
Izzy Wells — 3 singles, 2 doubles
Savina Wells – 1 walk

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Sarah Wright

Season three is in the books.

Coupeville grad Sarah Wright played the final softball game of her junior campaign Saturday, as Sewanee: The University of the South was eliminated from postseason play.

The former Wolf smacked one of her team’s two hits, but the Tigers fell 4-0 to Centre College.

That, combined with a 3-2 defeat to Millsaps College Friday sends Sewanee home from the double-elimination Southern Athletic Association tournament.

Wright and Co. finished 7-26 on the season, but the 33 games were more than the Tigers played the last two seasons combined.

The pandemic restricted Sewanee to just 16 and 10 games during Wright’s freshman and sophomore seasons, respectively.

This time around, the former Wolf was one of three Tigers to start all 33 games on the diamond.

Wright finished the season leading the team in at-bats (102), runs (15), and home runs (2).

She was #2 in RBI (17), and #3 in hits (25), total bases (35), and doubles (4) while seeing time at both catcher and third base.

The former Coupeville Valedictorian is majoring in politics at Sewanee and has made both the SAA Academic Honor Roll and All-Sportsmanship team during her time in Tennessee.

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