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Emma Mathusek had four RBI and a sensational catch in center field Thursday as Coupeville softball romped to a win at Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Boom, baby.

A wild Thursday is in the books, and, just like that, the Coupeville High School softball squad is back in first place.

The Wolves, missing two starters, swung by Sultan and still thumped the Turks 12-0 in a game called after six innings.

Meanwhile, off in Bothell, with both teams having apparently taken a detour into the Twilight Zone, Cedar Park Christian pulled off the upset of the season, shocking Granite Falls 14-10.

With those twin verdicts both falling in favor of Coupeville, the Wolves, now 2-1 in North Sound Conference play, 4-3 overall, move back to the penthouse.

They’re sharing it with Granite (2-1, 5-4), while Cedar Park (1-1, 3-1) and South Whidbey (1-1, 3-3) sit a game back, and Sultan (0-2, 0-4) brings up the rear.

How CPC, a team Coupeville crushed 13-2 the first time around, beat the bashers from Granite, is a question for another day.

For now, we’ll focus on the Wolves, and how they polished off the Turks.

A band trip erased pitcher Izzy Wells and third-baseman Mollie Bailey from the starting lineup, while a foot injury kept go-go reserve Chloe Wheeler sitting on the bench, operating as an enthusiastic cheerleader for her teammates.

In their place, freshman Kylie Van Velkinburgh got a promotion, at least for one day, and made her varsity debut in right field in the game’s final inning.

For one brief second, the game looked like it might be close, as Coupeville came away with nothing in the top of the first.

Wolf lead-off hitter Scout Smith opened the game with a single, but a botched bunt turned into a rally-killing double play, giving Sultan a flicker of hope.

A very, very brief flicker.

Smith, stepping into the circle, was dealin’ from her first pitch to her last, whiffing five Turks while letting only a handful reach base.

Any potential trouble was promptly squashed by stellar defensive play from her support crew.

Coupeville’s outfielders, who struggled while staring into a fiery, hellish sun two days before at Granite Falls, were flawless on this day.

The trio of Nicole Laxton, Emma Mathusek, and Mackenzie Davis tracked down anything and everything which went airborne, with Mathusek making a sensational catch on a blast to center.

She and Laxton almost collided, but the silky-smooth center-fielder hurdled her partner at the last second, while refusing to let the rapidly-falling ball get away from her.

CHS catcher Sarah Wright also gunned down a rare would-be base thief, delivering a frozen rope which landed with a happy little plop into shortstop Chelsea Prescott’s glove.

The one, and only time Sultan had a chance to score a run came in the fifth, when it put a runner at third with just one out.

Cue a flawlessly-executed double play, as Smith speared a bouncer back up the middle, froze the runner at third, then whipped the ball to first-baseman Veronica Crownover.

Tapping her toe on the bag for one out, Crownover promptly launched a missile to Wright, who spun and slapped the very soul out of the incoming Turk for the inning-ending third out.

After their brief brush with offensive unhappiness in the first, the Wolves tore the hide off the ball the rest of the way, cracking 12 hits, with four going for extra bases.

Crownover had the bashingest bat in the lineup, going a sweet four-for-four at the plate, with a mammoth double followed by three long singles.

The Wolves got their first three runs of the game in the second inning, scoring them all after starting with Crownover camped at third base with two outs.

Walks to Mackenzie Davis and Nicole Laxton (who was plunked for the 27,651st time in her career) juiced the bags, then Coral Caveness and Emma Mathusek earned RBI walks, packaged around a run-scoring single off of Smith’s electric bat.

Not content to stop there, Coupeville lit up the joint in the third inning, rolling up six runs off of five hits, including doubles from Wright and Mathusek and a triple by Chelsea Prescott.

Each extra-base hit went further than the one before it, with Mathusek’s bomb to deep left only topped by Prescott lashing a ball that dove under an outfielder’s mitt before skipping merrily away to go kiss the right field fence.

Up 9-0, the Coupeville bus was revving its engine in the parking lot, which seemed to light a brief (very brief) spark under the Turks.

Backed by a girl on the bench whose scream was reminiscent of a Navy jet taking off right next to your ear canals, Sultan made a couple sweet defensive plays of their own to stifle the Wolves through the fourth and fifth.

The best was a tumbling snag by the Turk shortstop on a hot liner.

Her own double play partner came crashing through the scene, undercutting the shortstop, who went airborne, pulling off a hap-hazarded cartwheel while robbing Laxton.

And let’s take a moment to give it up for Nicole.

She remains the most pleasantly positive athlete in Wolf Nation, even after being plunked, robbed of a hit by a miracle play, then forced to ride home on the ferry with her thumb stuck in a cup of ice after taking a later pitch off of the digit in question.

Laxton deserves all the cheers. All of them, I said.

Coupeville finally got up and over the 10-run mercy rule margin by tossing in three final runs in the top of the sixth.

Mathusek capped a four RBI game with a bases-loaded walk, while Prescott shouldered her bat like a missile launcher and let loose with another epic blast to plate the final two runs.

The sophomore slugger was denied a hit, because a Turk outfielder got some glove on the ball, but the orb was covered in fire as it hit mitt, and there was no way it was going to stay in the webbing.

As he left the field, content with his own victory while not yet knowing about Granite’s debacle, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan praised his players.

“We came out a little flat in the first, but quickly hit our stride,” he said. “Our offense came alive and defensively we played much better; we were error-free and the outfield bounced back nicely, as I knew they would.

“All in all, it was a good game to focus on the basics.”

Crownover paced the hit machine with her four base-knocks, while Smith whittled away at the defense, poking holes to every field with her three singles.

Wright (1B, 2B), Prescott (3B), Mathusek (2B), and Caveness (1B) also had hits, and Laxton, Davis, and Audrianna Shaw combined for four of Coupeville’s nine walks.

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A strong defense, led by senior captain Teo Keilwitz, carried Coupeville High School soccer to a 2-0 win Friday night under the lights. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You want pretty? Probably should have gone to a different game.

Want a victory, garnered by any means necessary? Then you were at the right stadium.

Playing under the lights Friday night, and missing three starters, including their leading scorer, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad gutted out a 2-0 win over visiting Sultan.

And, in the end, the W, especially with it coming in a league game, is what mattered most.

“We got a win in a game that was a hard fight, and we were able to take advantage of Mother Nature a bit, so that was good,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson.

“The guys worked hard and deserved the result.”

The win lifts Coupeville to 1-1 in North Sound Conference play, 3-3 overall.

The Wolves sit in third-place in the five-team league, a game off of King’s (2-0, 3-1-1) and a half-game back of South Whidbey (1-0, 4-0).

Sultan (0-1, 0-5) and Cedar Park Christian (0-2, 0-3) round out the standings.

Friday’s clash, played in a persistent, though not overpowering wind, fell on the chippy side.

Sultan has always been a soccer program which seems to pride itself on being physical, and the Wolves got into mini-scraps with the Turks more than once.

A few yellow cards were waved in the air before the clock ran out Friday, but Coupeville dodged any red cards, while controlling play on both sides of the field.

Starting goaltender Dewitt Cole carried a shutout into the second half, while facing only one truly legitimate shot on goal.

The Wolf defense, anchored by scrappers like James Wood, Teo Keilwitz, and Owen Barenburg, kept the Turks bottled up all night, refusing to give their goalie much to worry about.

Until he came down wrong on his leg after a brief bit of action in front of the net and had to exit the game about 10 minutes into the second half.

With his senior goalie stuck on the bench the rest of the way, Nelson turned to freshman Miles Davidson, who entered the game with PA announcer Eryn Wood giving him a rousing intro.

Once on the field, the man known simply as “Turducken” played lights out, making several scrambling saves and putting in a solid half-hour of scoreless ball.

Coupeville had collected both of its goals in the first half, thanks to Sage Downes and Aram Leyva.

Downes slashed in from the left side five minutes into the game, slapping a ball past Sultan’s flailing goalie for his fourth score of the season.

While that would be the only goal the Wolves would really need, Leyva tacked on a bit of insurance right before the half.

The junior captain was awarded a penalty kick in stoppage time and promptly blew the ball past the over-matched Sultan net-minder, who waved at the orb weakly as it shot past his head doing 75 MPH in a 50 zone.

It was Leyva’s sixth goal of the season, and 25th of his career.

The Turks one really good shot (in an 80-minute game) came 15 minutes in, when a sudden, unexpected hole opened in the Wolf defense.

With the ball on his foot, a Sultan player ripped a liner at Cole, only to see the ball clang off the bar and skitter away.

That was the first, last, and only time the Turks would get a clear look at the net, thanks to a Wolf defense which imposed its will.

With starters Derek Leyva, Xavier Murdy, and Chris Cernick unavailable for duty, Nelson gave quality field time to young guns like Aiden Burdge, Dakota Eck, and Andrew Aparicio, and they all responded strongly.

Friday’s win was the last time Wolf fans will see their team play on its home turf for almost a month.

Coupeville’s next five games, which include four league contests, are on the road, and the Wolves don’t return to Mickey Clark Field until Apr. 19.

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Claire Mayne and her fellow CMS track and field stars are set to kick off a new season next month. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to the next sport!

Middle school girls basketball ended less than 24 hours ago, and already we’re looking ahead to the next season, as Coupeville’s 7th and 8th graders head outside in a few weeks.

CMS track and field kicks off practice Apr. 9, with the first meet set for five weeks from today.

The schedule, as it sits today:

 

Wed-Apr. 24 — @King’s (3:15)
Wed-May 1 — HOME vs. S. Whidbey, King’s (3:15)
Wed-May 8 — HOME vs. Sultan/Lakewood (3:15)
Thur-May 16 — @Sultan (3:30)
Wed-May 22 — @South Whidbey (3:15)
Tue-May 28 — @Lakewood (League Prelims) (3:15)
Thur-May 30 — @Lakewood (League Finals) (3:15)

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Carolyn Lhamon (11), seen here in an earlier game, was a one-woman wrecking crew Thursday as Coupeville’s 8th graders improved to 8-0. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some good, some bad, all covered in a solid slathering of germs.

Thursday night offered up the home finales for the Coupeville Middle School girls basketball teams, and the Wolves emerged with a split against pesky Sultan.

Or, at least the girls semi-healthy enough to play did.

There was no JV game, as the visiting Turks, also dealing with flu and cold season, couldn’t field enough bodies for a contest.

How the varsity games played out:

 

8th grade:

Alex Evans played with fire, and didn’t get burned.

Trying to achieve two missions – to give a chunk of JV players valuable floor time since their game was cancelled, while still getting a win to keep his team undefeated – the Wolf hoops guru succeeded admirably in a 33-20 victory.

Coupeville, which is 8-0 with one road game left on the schedule, blew Sultan off the floor the first time around.

This time, the Wolves showed the same dominance, but just in spurts, and when it mattered most.

The prime example came in the fourth quarter, as Evans‘ two missions collided.

With all of his starters on the bench, the coach watched a 12-point lead shrink to four, but showed only calmness to the folks in the stands, and, most importantly, his own players.

Evans allowed his more inexperienced players a chance to discover what it’s like to play under pressure, holding a lead against a rival which was greatly-improved from the two teams first meeting.

Then, when the Turks had a brief moment of hope, Coupeville’s coach slid his starting five – Maddie Georges, Nezi Keiper, Gwen Gustafson, Alita Blouin, and Carolyn Lhamon – back into the game, and let them put the hammer down.

And they did, closing the game on a 9-0 run, started by Keiper pounding down low and utterly annihilating her defender in the paint.

After that, her buddy in the post, Lhamon, snatched the spotlight, throwing down five of the game’s final seven points.

One bucket came on a nice roll to the hoop, set up by a pinpoint pass off the fingers of Georges, while another showcased Lhamon’s skills in the open court.

Leading a one-woman charge down the floor, Lhamon broke every bone in her defender’s body, faking left, then slashing hard to the right, all while on the move.

As the backpedaling Turk went down in a crumpled pile of misery and regret, the Wolf ace pulled the ball back into her body to keep it away from a different defender, then banged home the layup.

The run, one unbroken charge from coast to coast, was a thing of beauty, even more so coming from a player who gets the majority of her points working with her back to the basket.

Coupeville used sustained runs like that 9-0 swan song to set the pace all afternoon.

The Wolves closed the first quarter on an 8-2 surge, punctuated by Hayley Fiedler drilling the bottom of the bucket out with a long-range bomb.

In the second quarter, it was a 6-0 run to close the half, then, in the third, CMS capped the quarter with an 8-0 tear.

The one constant through it all was “The Assassin,” zippy guard Alita Blouin, who blew by the Turks for buckets, then jumped outside to nail a three-ball from the top of the arc.

Coupeville spread its offensive attack out nicely, with Blouin topping the scoring chart with nine points, while Lhamon banked home seven, and Keiper popped for five.

Georges (4), Gustafson (4), Fiedler (2), and Ryanne Knoblich (2), who looked deathly ill, yet hit the boards with her usual ferocity, rounded out the scoring.

Mixing and matching his lineups, Evans was able to get a whopping 16 players floor time.

Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson, Melanie Navarro, Jill Prince, Jordyn Rogers, Claire Mayne, Jessenia Camarena, Cristine McGrath, Abigail Ramirez, and Adrian Burrows all saw action.

Camarena was a particular standout on this day, ripping down rebounds and playing an enforcer role.

In the midst of another Wolf win, this one coming in the final home game, the game’s enduring moment was crafted by a ref, however.

Coming out of halftime, one of the two officials was late to return to the floor. When he did, he turned and blindly lobbed the ball cross-court to his partner, only to drill a hapless Sultan player in the back of the head.

 

7th grade:

The Wolves were missing four players, including leading scorer Brionna Blouin, and fell 21-9.

The loss drops the young guns to 2-7 on the season.

Take away the first quarter, when Sultan romped to a 12-0 lead as the basket displayed a harsh, unforgiving nature whenever a Coupeville shot came its way, and the game was a tie.

Sparked by Lauren Marrs, who pumped in seven of her team’s points, the Wolves put up a strong fight over the game’s final 21 minutes.

Desi Ramirez finally got CMS on the board when she plucked a rebound free, then swished a fall-away shot over a sea of Turk arms with 2:30 left to play in the opening half.

Marrs immediately followed by gunning it up-court on Coupeville’s next possession, weaving through a pack of defenders jammed together in the paint, and slapping home a running layup.

But, just as quickly as the Wolves hit those back-to-back buckets, the basket went back to being a jerk, spitting out any and all offerings from CMS.

Other than a Marrs free throw right before halftime, Coupeville couldn’t get anything to drop until midway through the fourth quarter.

By that time the Wolves trailed 20-5, thanks to a couple of offensive rebound put-backs by the Turks, and a glaring lack of traveling calls being whistled on a Sultan team which seemed to have studied with James “I’ll take five steps, thanks” Harden.

Marrs finally broke the drought, with a pair of sweetly-crafted buckets.

On the first, she curled around the defense, then slashed through a tiny gap for a layup. The second, a breakaway bucket, was set up by a strong outlet pass from Mayne.

Each Wolf to see action chipped in with something, from Reese Wilkinson playing strongly on the boards, to Kaitlyn Leavell streaking down floor, ahead of the play, almost every single time.

Allison Nastali, Skylar Parker, Karyme Castro, and Erica McGrath rounded out the active roster, with all four fighting until the final buzzer for coach Megan Smith.

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Nezi Keiper tossed in seven points Wednesday as the CMS 8th graders pounded host Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a good day to be in Sultan, unless you played for the home team.

Rampaging through town like a horde of Vikings, the Coupeville Middle School girls basketball teams left destruction in their path, winning two of three games played on the hardwood.

How the merry mayhem played out:

 

8th grade varsity:

Coupeville hammered the Turks through three quarters, before coasting home with a 35-12 win to stay undefeated.

The Wolves got started on getting to a crisp 2-0 start on the season with a 10-4 first quarter run, then steadily pulled away.

Four different CMS players scored in the opening frame, led by Nezi Keiper, who pounded home a pair of buckets.

The attitude of sharing spread from there, as five Wolves combined to shape a 9-2 second quarter surge.

Coupeville’s most dominant seven-minute stretch was in the third, as Maddie Georges and Carolyn Lhamon tossed in four points apiece to fuel a 10-2 run, before CMS closed the fourth with a mild 6-4 advantage.

Georges paced the Wolves with eight points, while Keiper popped for seven, and Lhamon netted six.

Ryanne Knoblich and Alita Blouin both added four points to the scoring explosion, Hayley Fiedler, Gwen Gustafson, and Jordyn Rogers chipped in with a bucket apiece, and Jill Prince was a terror on defense.

 

8th grade JV:

A defensive gem, as the Wolves limited the Turks to just a single bucket in both quarters played, claiming an 8-4 win.

The game was knotted up at 2-2 after the first seven minutes, with Coupeville’s lone bucket coming off the fingertips of Jessenia Camarena, but things changed after the break.

While a 6-2 run in the second quarter might not bring back memories of the Showtime-era Lakers, it was enough to lift the JV to its first win of the season.

Now 1-2 on the still-young season, the Wolves picked up a second-quarter basket from Cristina McGrath and two buckets by Trinity McGee to seal the deal.

Claire Mayne, Abigail Ramirez, Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson, Adrian Burrows, Karyme Castro, Jessica Ross-McMahon, and Melanie Navarro rounded out the CMS roster.

 

7th grade varsity:

The lone loss of the day came down to the final moments, but a late Sultan surge carried it to a razor-thin 27-25 win.

With the defeat, Coupeville drops to 1-2 on the season.

The Wolves get an immediate chance to bounce back, however, as the 7th graders (and only the 7th graders) travel to Everett Thursday to play Northshore Christian Academy.

Facing off with Sultan, CMS put up a strong fight.

Trailing just 6-4 at the first break, and 14-9 at the half, the Wolves put together a sizzling 12-6 run across the third quarter with three players dropping in points.

Brionna Blouin worked the glass for six of her game-high 14 during the surge, while Lauren Marrs tossed in four and Desi Ramirez knocked down a bucket.

Back up by a single point heading into the fourth, Coupeville couldn’t quite hold on down the stretch, with a late Sultan three-ball being an especially sharp dagger.

With her 14 points, Blouin increased her lead in the season scoring race.

Sitting with 47 points after three games, she’s averaging 15.7 a night, while Georges, who has 22 in two 8th grade contests, is throwing down 11 a game.

Marrs, who was making her season debut, chipped in with seven points, including a three-ball of her own, while Ramirez rounded out things with four points.

Reese Wilkinson, Ava Mitten, Kaitlyn Leavell, Skylar Parker, Erica McGrath, Allison Nastali, Jackie Contreras, and Kayla Arnold gave coach Megan Smith multiple options to work with.

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