Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Taylor Brotemarkle’

Wolf pitcher Capri Anter teamed up with cousin Haylee Armstrong to shut down Orcas Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These Wolves carry big bats, and they’re not afraid to use them.

Thumping 14 hits Tuesday, spraying base knocks to every part of the field, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad rallied to crunch visiting Orcas Island 16-5.

Playing for the fourth time in five days, CHS fell prey to a bit of fatigue early, then demonstrated why it’s the class of the Northwest 2B/1B League.

With the win, which was mercy-ruled after five innings, the Wolves get to 7-0 in league play, 10-4 overall.

Next up are home games Thursday against Concrete and Saturday against Darrington as Kevin McGranahan’s squad chases another conference crown.

In the moment, however, Coupeville can bask in the afterglow of reaching double-digit wins for the seventh consecutive season.

That continued run of excellence was built on the kind of grit the current Wolves showcased Tuesday.

A very-young team with no seniors but a lot of 8th graders and freshmen never flinched after falling behind 3-0 in the top of the first.

Wolf hurler Haylee Armstrong re-found her groove, ending things emphatically by tossing her third strikeout of the opening frame, and then the bats went to work.

Mia Farris stroked a one-out single to kick things off, followed by Taylor Brotemarkle massacring the ball, launching an RBI triple over the centerfielder’s head, and the prairie was hoppin’.

Coupeville pushed two more runs across in the first, with Madison McMillan spanking an RBI single, before scampering home to score when her steal of third base spooked the Orcas catcher into airmailing the ball into left field.

The Wolves might have gotten more, but the Viking shortstop flat-out robbed Ava Lucero, going airborne to spear her liner a foot off the ground.

That got a nice round of applause but would be one of the few times Orcas would have a positive moment the rest of the day.

While the bats were hot, so were the defensive plays.

Wolf catcher Teagan Calkins nailed a would-be base thief to end the top of the second, Farris made a superb diving catch in center to deny a hitter, and CHS pulled off a wham-bam double play to end the game.

Chelsi Stevens socked a pair of hits, while playing strong defense at first. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On the final play, first-baseman Chelsi Stevens threw out a runner coming home, immediately followed by Calkins spinning away and laying a laser into McMillan’s glove at third.

Do you remember the first time you saw John Travolta, rockin’ the pink socks, dance the hand jive in Grease, forever changing the laws of physics?

Sometimes watching Calkins, AKA “The Red Dragon,” play catcher, you get a similar feeling.

It’s like freakin’ poetry in motion, only with a lot more in-game hollering and occasional side eye thrown at dad Shawn if he’s a step slow in delivering her beverage.

If her defense was the star of the show, Calkin’s bat was a close second, and she joined Brotemarkle and Sydney Van Dyke in lashing run-scoring hits as CHS turned a 3-3 game into a 7-3 lead.

From there, the Wolves iced the game with a vintage 13-batter, nine-run fourth inning.

A string of walks to the big boppers loaded the bases, with Bailey Thule, Stevens, and Shania Kenney coming off the bench to score their teammates.

Stevens obliterated the ball on a booming double to left — her second hit of the game — while Kenney, a first-year player making huge strides, lashed a single back up the middle to the great joy of her teammates.

Shania Kenney, stone-cold diamond assassin. (Jackie Saia photo)

Farris got nailed on the ankle by a wayward pitch, after earlier taking a throw off the top of her helmet.

As she rambled down to first base, someone from the bench hollered “Stop hitting her! She’s delicate!!”

There was nothing delicate after that, as Brotemarkle, her bat smoking from the torrid hitting show she was putting on, thumped another RBI single, before McMillan and Calkins pasted back-to-back two-baggers to complete the rout.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Taylor Brotemarkle — Two singles, one triple, one walk
Teagan Calkins — One single, two doubles, one walk
Mia Farris — One single, two walks
Shania Kenney — One single
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, one walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single, one double
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, one walk

Read Full Post »

Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Mia Farris dig the longball. (Kim Brotemarkle photo)

Three digits for the ol’ ball coach.

A pandemic slowed his roll just a bit, but Coupeville High School varsity softball coach Kevin McGranahan hung around long enough to collect win #100 while reppin’ the red and black.

The milestone victory came Tuesday on Orcas Island, as the hit-happy Wolves mashed an overwhelmed Vikings squad 21-0 in a game called after three innings due to the mercy rule.

Along with bumping McGranahan to 100-44 at the helm of the CHS diamond program, the win lifts Coupeville to 2-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play this season, 3-0 overall.

Up next is a road trip to Concrete Friday, then a home doubleheader against Onalaska Saturday, when the Wolves will hold their annual “Strike Out Cancer” gift basket fundraiser.

Tuesday’s titanic rout featured back-to-back fence-clearing home runs from Wolf mad mashers Mia Farris and Taylor Brotemarkle and could have been much more lopsided if McGranahan hadn’t taken the pedal off the medal at times.

“More runs! More wins!! It pleases me!!!” (Ryan Blouin photo)

Coupeville’s diamond queens came off the bus swinging hot, dropping 11 runs on the scoreboard in the top of the first inning.

Well, OK, it wasn’t right off the bus, as the Wolves left Cow Town at a hair past 9 AM and arrived on Orcas a solid four hours before the first pitch.

Ferry life, bouncing island to island…

But anyways, once the Orcas players finished with their own classroom work and ambled out to the diamond, Coupeville was lying in wait, bats at the ready.

The first seven Wolves to step to the plate reached base successfully, then after Chelsi Stevens knocked in a run with a well-placed groundout, the next four also got on board.

Madison McMillan, who paced CHS with four hits, all of the extra-base variety, cracked the first of her team’s three home runs, and the rout was on.

Now, the Wolves actually didn’t score in the second inning, getting just a walk from Mary Western, before going off on another tear in the top of the third to effectively end things.

McMillan, bringing both the thunder and the lightning on a balmy day made for “suns out, guns out,” crunched a two-run triple, while recent birthday girl Jada Heaton stroked a two-run single.

But the big blows came from Farris and Brotemarkle, who launched lasers which ended up somewhere offshore by the time they came back down to Earth.

Mia the Magnificent” let loose with a mammoth grand slam, then, before the Orcas pitcher could catch her breath, “Taylor the Terrific” smoked a shot which flew into the heavens, high-fived the sun, then kept on going.

The back-to-back moonballs kept the Wolves busy, as they stormed off the bench to congratulate their bicep-flexin’ bomber girls.

Junior sluggers (l to r) Madison McMillan, Farris, Jada Heaton, Brotemarkle, and Bailey Thule rule the prairie. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

From there, Coupeville did its best not to embarrass Orcas, ending things by taking an out by having a runner leave the bag early.

The Wolves made such quick work of the Vikings, they hung around and played two more practice innings while waiting for the CHS baseball team to finish up its own game.

That allowed all 14 eligible players to get at least two at-bats on the day, crucial field time for a young squad which has several 8th graders and absolutely no seniors on the roster.

McMillan led the hit parade, peppering the Orcas pitchers for a double, a pair of triples, and a homer.

Hot on her heels were Brotemarkle (1B, 1B, HR), Farris (1B, HR), Haylee Armstrong (1B, 2B), Teagan Calkins (1B), and Heaton (1B).

Armstrong and Western each walked twice, while Capri Anter, Ava Lucero, Bailey Thule, Calkins, and Farris also got aboard by keeping a hawk-like eye on balls and strikes.

Orcas, by contrast, scratched out just three hits and no walks while striking out six times while trying to catch up to fast balls flung their way by Wolf hurlers Adeline Maynes and Anter.

Read Full Post »

International superstars Taylor Brotemarkle (top) and Katie Marti bask in a rare sunny day on the prairie. (Ember Light photo)

Plenty of things rained down Tuesday afternoon on the prairie. Just no actual rain.

There were tons o’ runs, a big softball win, enough sunshine for everyone, and glossy pics by the dozens.

Some of those photos, which come to us courtesy Ember Light, Ryan Blouin, and Jackie Saia, can be seen above and below.

“I am the style queen of this here Cow Town, son!” (Ryan Blouin photo)

“Bump me, baby, before I go blow up some more fools!” (Jackie Saia photo)

In their offseason, Logan Downes (left) and Mikey Robinett are available for fashion model work. (Ember Light photo)

“Sorry, slick, you’re too slow to catch me.” (Ryan Blouin photo)

Having earned the Hat o’ Power, Mia Farris makes her own bid for Prairie Style Queen. (Jackie Saia photo)

“You want to take my photo? Well … OK.” (Ember Light photo)

“Yeah, you better run away!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

Read Full Post »

Teagan Calkins? Born to be a star, baby! (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“This group will not just phone it in, EVER!”

Softball season is back, complete with the usual rain, wind, and Kevin McGranahan’s belief in his rock-em, sock-em diamond warriors.

With 97 career wins in the bank, and seeking a second trip to state, the Coupeville High School coach is ready to come out all guns blazin’.

And he’s got the lineup to do just that, with a collection of battle-tested veterans who can kill you on offense or defense.

Juniors Madison McMillan (3B), Taylor Brotemarkle (SS), Mia Farris (OF), and Jada Heaton (OF) are back, as is super sophomore Teagan Calkins, who anchors the team while sportin’ catcher’s gear.

All can hit for power and average, and all bring plenty of experience to the diamond.

“We will use them as our leaders throughout the season and help the younger players develop into our program,” McGranahan said.

Wolf sluggers Jada Heaton (purple sweatshirt), Mia Farris (dark grey), and Taylor Brotemarkle (light grey) are ready to make a run at advancing to state.

Danica Strong, a sophomore transfer (and daughter of former CHS Athlete of the Year Danette Beckley), is a key newcomer, while a strong group of 8th graders are expected to make immediate contributions.

They would follow in the big footsteps of current freshman Haylee Armstrong, whose lethal bat and fleet feet in the outfield helped her dazzle while playing high school ball as a middle school student.

As he builds the program to compete for titles today and tomorrow, McGranahan is pleased to see a new pack of youngsters ready to rock.

“It is good to have all of them because we have no seniors this year and will be a young team,” he said. “And we will need to develop those players for next year when we have six seniors.”

As he and his assistant coaches prep for the season, McGranahan embraces the chance to combine younger players with veterans.

“The strength of our team will be its mix between youth — they don’t know what they don’t know and will go headfirst at everything — and our junior leaders that have weathered a few seasons and have seen both the league championship and also missing it by one run.

“Those experiences will help them mold this team into a contender.”

With basketball season complete, Madison McMillan returns to wrecking folks on the softball diamond.

Putting in consistent work, which McGranahan’s teams always do, will be huge.

“We will have to work at everything all season long, you can never be too ready in this game,” he said.

“We have a talented group. We are just going to be young in some positions.”

After dominating the Northwest 2B/1B League and winning titles in their first two seasons in the conference, the Wolves fell just short last season, losing the crown to Friday Harbor.

Still, CHS finished 14-6 and is 42-9 since coming back to 2B after advancing to the 1A state tourney in their final year in the classification.

“Friday Harbor will once again be our main focus as far as league play goes,” McGranahan said. “However, we can’t look past anyone, as Darrington is ready to make a move on the title if we sleep on them.

“Our team goals for this season are the same as every other sport — to win the league title and compete for a state berth.

“With that said, in order to achieve those goals, we need to improve each day and have as much fun as we can while maintaining our focus on the end goal.”

Coupeville is scheduled to play five of eight non-conference games against larger schools, while the 2B matchups are against fierce foes in Forks and Onalaska.

There’s a method to that set-up.

“This is going to be an interesting season as we have a tough non-conference schedule and should be battle tested by the end of the season,” McGranahan said.

“I can promise one thing and that is that these young ladies will be working their tails off to be ready, and if the bigger schools take us lightly, they will be in a dogfight.”

Read Full Post »

Softball sensation Taylor Brotemarkle works the mic at Friday’s pep rally for Wolf boys’ basketball. (Bailey Thule photos)

On to topple Tonasket!

Coupeville High School held a pep assembly Friday, before sending its boys’ basketball team off to the state tournament.

The Wolves tangle with the Tigers Saturday in Arlington, seeking their first win at the big dance since 1979.

But before Brad Sherman’s pack of ballhawks got on the bus, they (and their support crew) got to entertain their fellow students, as captured in the Bailey Thule-shot pics seen above and below.


Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »