Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘state tourney’

Loto Tupu is a key part of a hot-hitting Whidbey Island All-Stars juniors softball team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A car wash this Saturday, July 3, will help fund big softball dreams.

The Whidbey Island All-Stars juniors diamond squad, which features a mix of Coupeville and Oak Harbor players, are the District 11 champs and state-bound.

But the big dance is way down at the bottom of the state in Vancouver, so the Inferno are scrambling to raise money for the trip.

The car wash will be at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #7392 in Oak Harbor (3037 Goldie Road) and runs from 10-2.

Or, if you can’t make it there in person, you can help the Inferno players online by popping over to:

Fundraiser by Christi Messner : Whidbey Island LL Juniors go to State (gofundme.com)

Read Full Post »

The bright future of Coupeville softball. (Photos courtesy Jess Lucero)

Celebrating a season of success. And it’s not done yet.

Coupeville is coming for all your softball trophies.

Two squads will compete for state titles in the coming weeks, with the Central Whidbey Little League minors team joining the Whidbey Island All-Stars juniors in advancing to the big dance.

The minors squad, which features 10 Coupeville girls on a 14-woman roster, features players who range in age from 8-12.

The core of the team is from the original CWLL team, which boasted 16 active players, and two who attended practices. Of those, only four girls had played before this season.

With the postseason upon them, 10 Coupeville players are in playoff mode, having been joined by three others from Oak Harbor, and one from Anacortes.

Both the original team — which was coached by Aaron Lucero and Lark Gustafson, with assistance from Scott Maynes, Ana Valencia, and Sofia Peters — and the playoff squad have made huge strides.

“The girls really worked hard, were committed and had a winning season, and showed amazing growth,” Aaron Lucero said. “I couldn’t be more proud of how far they came in such a short time.”

The minors team had a chance during the season to work with older players such as CHS stars Allie and Maya Lucero, and juniors supernova Teagan Calkins, while high school coaches Kevin McGranahan and Ron Wright attended games.

“We love that community is supporting our young ones and they’re already getting to know the high school coaching staff,” said team mom Jess Lucero.

The minors squad opens the state tourney in Auburn with a tough draw, facing a District 1 team which is pulled from 13 leagues including Everett and Marysville, but Central Whidbey doesn’t back down.

“I’m confident with our ability to compete,” Aaron Lucero said. “I’m happy for the girls to have this opportunity.”

 

The team:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Ava Arnold
Ava Carpenter
Emma Cushman
Ava Lucero
Adeline Maynes
Ali Powers
Bella Salter
Chelsi Stevens
Cammi Van Dyke
Sydney Van Dyke
Gracie Wallin

Sutton Zimmerman

Read Full Post »

Jada Heaton (front), Mia Farris (getting a ride), and ever-enthusiastic fan/unofficial assistant coach Bella Whalen celebrate a district title. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

Savina Wells rearranges the atoms of a softball (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to state!

Help ’em get to Vancouver.

The Whidbey Island All-Stars juniors softball squad — a mix of Coupeville and Oak Harbor players — is off to the state tourney in early July, carrying the banner of District 11 champs.

The Inferno need your help, however.

It’s 210 miles from Whidbey to Vancouver, which sits at the bottom of Washington state, meaning players and parents will need to stay on-site for up to a week, instead of making trips back-and-forth.

But you (yes, you!) can help the Inferno with gas, food, and lodging.

If you do, than in the coming years when the players go on to be high school softball stars, before possibly playing in college and beyond, you can sit back and say, “I helped make that possible.”

So, you’d have that going for you, which is nice.

 

To see more, and possibly donate to the future (and present) of Whidbey softball, pop over to:

Fundraiser by Christi Messner : Whidbey Island LL Juniors go to State (gofundme.com)

Read Full Post »

Dorothy Keefe keeps an eye on those rascals, Randy Keefe (middle) and Bill Jarrell. (Renae Mulholland photo)

We’re off to Spokane.

Renae (Keefe) Mulholland has been digitizing cassettes from her father’s collection of radio broadcasts, and this time out we’re at the big dance.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball team clashes with Lind in the first of two games it played at the 1975 state tourney, and we have the radio call to prove it.

The game you can listen to below was part of Coupeville’s second of five trips (so far) to the state tourney.

The first came during the go-go 1969-1970 campaign, and the first Wolf win on the sport’s biggest stage would come almost exactly a year after this Lind game.

On March 4, 1976, CHS, featuring some of the same players who made the trip to state in 1975, such as Bill Jarrell, Foster Faris, and Marc Bissett, bounced Columbia (Burbank) 80-63.

That, along with a 62-51 win over Montesano March 1, 1979, remain the only tourney wins for a Coupeville boys basketball program which sits at 2-10 all-time at state.

But, the future is an unknown. Who knows how many state wins may be lurking right around the corner?

As you wait for that, and as the current players work for that, take a moment to bask in past glory.

 

Read Full Post »

Chloe Wheeler let her bat do her talking. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The quietest Wolf was loudest when it mattered most.

During the spring of 2019, I did something I haven’t done in the eight-year history of Coupeville Sports — attend every single game, home or away, for one team.

Writing this blog is a delicate, often tricky, balancing act, trying to be “fair” to all teams, and all sports.

You’ll always have some people who are grateful for whatever coverage their preferred rooting cause gets, and some who claim bias or neglect. It is what it is.

But in spring 2019, while still writing about every CHS track and field, baseball, tennis, and soccer contest — and attending a lot of those games and meets in person — I absolutely played favorites.

I hit the road with Darren and Kelly Crownover, parents of homer-thumping first-baseman Veronica, making it to every road game — even the ones rained out moments after we got there.

And, even when presented with multiple events on the same day here in Cow Town, I opted for the softball sluggers.

Turned out to be a smart choice, as that was the Wolf squad which went the furthest as a united team, returning to the state tourney for the first time in five seasons, and winning a game there for the first time since 2002.

As the guy forever hanging around the edge as CHS softball made its run, filled with a few heartrending losses, and a lot of epic wins, I had a chance to see the Wolf players in all their many moods.

Whether dancing on a rain-soaked field after a long, fruitless trip to Sultan, going bonkers after freshman Izzy Wells struck out the league’s most-dangerous slugger to cap the win which sent them to a league title, or just killing time on countless ferries, it was a team made up of wildly-diverse personalities.

One of my favorites quickly became Chloe Wheeler, a junior who bopped along like a feminine version of Matthew McConaughey, her grin often her only statement to the outside world.

As the season played out, I found out more about her — Darren Crownover can make anyone talk — and her plans for the future.

Chloe is highly-intelligent, a kind, caring young woman who proved on the diamond, and off, to be exceptionally-strong.

On a 2019 Wolf team which boasted the big bats of Sarah Wright and Veronica Crownover, and the explosive talents of young stars such as Chelsea Prescott and Scout Smith, she didn’t play every day.

But Chloe was ready every day.

Plug her in to the lineup, and she responded, giving you every ounce of hustle she had in the field and at the plate.

And, time and again, she proved to be an absolute killer in the spotlight.

A quiet assassin at the plate.

Her first high school hit was a thing of beauty, coming deep in the wilds at Granite Falls against the team which gave Coupeville its biggest struggle.

The Wolves and Tigers split four games in 2019, with CHS winning the last two, including a key playoff game which sent Granite home.

But, earlier in the season, as Coupeville tried to rally in the twilight, Chloe strode to the plate and launched a missile, rifling a two-run double to the deepest, darkest part of left field.

After watching her teammates struggle with the bat all afternoon, the quiet one mashed the crud out of the whirling orb, and it lit a fire under her fellow Wolves.

Hanging on the dugout fence, screaming Chloe’s name, they were reinvigorated, recharged, and rowdy as all get-out.

Granite Falls didn’t know it then, but what seemed like a surefire path to a league title and a trip to state for the Tigers vanished in that exact moment.

For the first time, you could see the Wolves really, truly no longer feared their hit-happy foes.

And, while that rally fell just short, they haven’t lost to Granite since.

As she quietly bounced on the bag at second, slight smile on her face, Chloe was already locked-in on CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, working over in the third-base coaching box.

Always ready, always watchful.

The moment was big, it was impactful, and it could have been the highlight of Chloe’s season.

But then she went to the biggest dance, and went bonkers.

Chloe started the state tourney on the bench, part of the support crew as Coupeville was drilled by eventual state champ Montesano.

Given a pinch-hit at-bat late in the game, however, she proved to be the one Wolf who was absolutely perfect against the reincarnation of the 1927 Yankees.

Breaking up Montesano’s bid for a shutout, and pissing off its thoroughly irritating coach, Chloe crunched an RBI single to right-center.

Her refusal to back down against a dominant team, and a loudly-braying coach, earned her the start in games #2 and #3 on a long day for Coupeville.

Chloe’s bat stayed scorchin’ down the stretch, as she racked up three more hits across a 14-2 demolishing of highly-ranked Deer Park and a gut-wrenching 8-6 loss to Cle Elum.

With four base-knocks in Richland, she had made a name for herself while the biggies in the sport watched.

After one of her hot smashes back up the middle, the coach from perennial power Castle Rock, camped in the bleachers during his team’s break, pointed at Chloe, and softly said something to his assistant.

The words were unclear, but the approval was obvious.

Coming within a play (or two, at most) of advancing to day two of state and likely earning some hardware, the Wolves capped the second-best performance in program history.

While there was sadness in the aftermath, there was hard-earned pride, and the unmistakable feeling this was the start of a run of success for the Wolf diamond queens.

Chloe likely would have been a full-time starter her senior year, and I firmly believe she was on her way to a true breakout season.

The pandemic denied her that opportunity, but her rep as a big-game killer was already set in stone.

When we talk about the highlights of CHS softball during its four-decade-plus run, Chloe Wheeler, the quiet assassin with the wicked bat, will forever hold a place in that conversation.

So today, we take a moment to pay tribute to her, inducting her into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame for being an inspiration to local athletes at every level.

She worked and she fought, and when Chloe got her chance, she made the absolute most of it. The way you hope every Wolf does.

After this, when you stroll past the top of the blog, you’ll find her hanging out under the Legends tab.

And why not? She earned it.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »