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Posts Tagged ‘Tiffany Briscoe’

A shiner? Tiffany Briscoe, still smiling after catching a ball with her face during a recent practice. (Photo courtesy Amy Briscoe)

   Tiffany Briscoe, still smiling after catching a ball with her face during a recent practice. (Photo courtesy Amy Briscoe)

Softball is just getting started.

While the other spring sports are either completely done (baseball, soccer) or deep into postseason play (golf, track, tennis), the diamond women returned from an eight-day absence Friday to play the first of three final non-conference regular season games.

The gap between games may have hurt the Wolves, who struggled in an 11-3 loss at South Whidbey.

“We had a rough game riddled with errors and a couple sloppy plays,” said CHS coach Deanna Rafferty. “Although we hit really well, our defense was where we let South Whidbey beat us.”

The loss dropped Coupeville to 6-11, with games at Meridian Monday and home against La Conner Tuesday still ahead.

The Wolves, the #3 seed out of the Olympic League, head to the district playoffs May 22.

Facing off with its Island rivals, Coupeville got doubles from McKayla Bailey and Katrina McGranahan and a single from Hailey Hammer.

Rafferty also liked the team’s bunting ability, with Tiffany Briscoe and Hope Lodell laying down successful sacrifices.

While the Wolves as a whole struggled with their gloves, second baseman Jae LeVine pulled off a nifty double play, snagging a pop fly and alertly catching a runner straying off of first.

As her squad moves forward, Rafferty will look to continue building around an offense that, even with a week-plus off, still had some pop.

“I am incredibly proud of our hitting and hope we can carry it through to our game Monday against Meridian.”

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Jae LeVine, seen here making a play Monday, (John Fisken photo)

   Jae LeVine, seen here making a play Monday, has been scrambling to come up with big plays at second base. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf seniors McKayla Bailey (13), Monica Vidoni (14) and Hailey Hammer (15) were honored before the game. (Mike Lodell photo)

   Wolf seniors McKayla Bailey (13), Monica Vidoni (14) and Hailey Hammer (15) were honored before the game. (Mike Lodell photo)

Sometimes the little things mean the most.

Case in point: the fourth inning Tuesday in an otherwise less-than-memorable Coupeville High School softball game.

Trailing 7-0 to visiting Chimacum in a game they would lose 8-0, the Wolves were challenged by coach Deanna Rafferty to get the game back on track with a 1-2-3 inning.

In fact, she went one better, pledging to buy candy for every one of her players if they did just that.

Boom.

Hope Lodell hauled in a shot to center, then Tiffany Briscoe pulled off back-to-back pretty snags on well-hit balls to left and led the excited charge back to the dugout.

Awaiting them, their coach, huge grin on her face, shook her head and let loose.

“I literally hate all of you right now!!”

Then she laughed and so did her team, and, for a moment, the promise of candy made things that much sweeter.

Ultimately, though, defense would spell doom for the Wolves — in two ways — as they dropped to 5-10 overall, 4-4 in Olympic League play.

The loss guarantees Coupeville will carry the league’s #3 seed into the playoffs.

A hot and cold defense — when they were on, they made several standout plays, but then turned around and booted some routine plays — killed the Wolves.

Not helping matters was Chimacum’s defense, which was on point all game.

Coupeville made good contact with the ball most of the game, but garnered only two late-game hits — a single from Katrina McGranahan and a smash-it-and-hustle double from Hailey Hammer — as the Cowboys swallowed up nearly everything hit their way.

“We hit it well, we just hit it right at them all game,” Rafferty said.

Chimacum, which is still battling Klahowya for the league title, scraped together four runs in the first without really doing much more than talk.

A lot.

The chippy, vocal Cowboys only had one hard-hit ball in the inning — a two-run single into center — but capitalized on Coupeville’s inability to hang on to the ball.

After tacking on another run in the second and two more in the third, Chimacum had little more to do than cruise in with the win.

McGranahan finally broke up the no-hitter with two outs in the sixth, but was left stranded.

Hammer then led off the bottom of the seventh with a shot to right center, legging out the double and beating the throw by a step.

But she too never came around, eventually being picked off of third by the Chimacum catcher to end the game.

In between a stream of bobbled balls, the Wolves did have several nice defensive plays.

Jae LeVine upheld the honor of second basemen everywhere, sprinting around to flag down several balls, including a pop-up near the first base line.

Right fielder Monica Vidoni charged a single and threw out a runner trying to go to second, Lauren Rose dropped a lightning bolt on a Cowboy trying to steal a bag and Hammer alertly gunned down another runner at home after fielding a chopper at third.

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Freshman catcher Lauren Rose had a stellar defensive game Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

Freshman catcher Lauren Rose had a stellar defensive game Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

The bats never woke up.

Still slumbering after a long road trip, the aluminum didn’t have much pop Tuesday for the Coupeville High School softball squad as it suffered a 9-1 conference loss at Klahowya.

The defeat dropped the Wolves to 3-6 overall, 2-1 in Olympic League play.

“We had a slow offensive game and struggled to get our bats around,” said CHS coach Deanna Rafferty.

Klahowya went the opposite way, crushing the second pitch in the bottom of the first for an out-of-the-park home run.

That blow seemed to derail the Wolves a bit.

“That would rattle any pitcher,” Rafferty said. “I know the girls are a little down on themselves over their batting and it is understandable.

“With a couple missed plays and overthrows defensively, we needed to make up for it offensively and that’s where we’re lacking.”

Coupeville’s best mini-bursts of offense came via singles off of the bats of Tiffany Briscoe, Robin Cedillo and Mckayla Bailey, while Bailey brought in her team’s only run with a sac fly that plated Cedillo.

Hailey Hammer twice whacked shots to the furthest reaches of the outfield, only to have both blows chased down by Eagle outfielders.

Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan whiffed four, while the Wolves pulled off a couple of web gems behind her.

Catcher Lauren Rose terminated three runners with strong throws, with the best play coming when she fired to Bailey at short, then Bailey immediately came back home with the ball, allowing the plucky freshman backstop to slap on the tag.

Coupeville returns to action Thursday, when it hosts league rival Port Townsend (4 PM), a squad it beat earlier this season.

“We’re looking forward to our home game and we’re ready for a win,” Rafferty said.

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Katrina McGranahan has never stopped smiling, from little league to highs chool. (John Fisken photo)

   A big play whiz kid, Katrina McGranahan has never stopped smiling, from little league to high school. (John Fisken photo)

Katrina McGranahan has four years to be a great athlete at Coupeville High School.

Thursday afternoon it only took one swing of her bat to become a legend.

Years from now, half the town will claim they were there, at the end of a sun-drenched, three-hour war of attrition for first place in the Olympic League softball standings.

They will claim they made it through the big hits, the terrible mistakes, the wild mood swings.

That they saw the Wolves come within one swing of 10-running visiting Chimacum, only to come one swing away from losing it all, only to recapture victory in the most goosebump-raising fashion of all.

Most of all, they will remember a stone-cold freshman ripping a two-out, bottom-of-the-seventh shot to left field that cleared the Chimacum outfielder’s head and dropped in, letting three Wolves come crashing home for a what-the-heck-did-we-just-see 22-21 win.

As McGranahan bounced up and down on second base, her coach, Deanna Rafferty, fist-pumped to the sky and an overflowing fan base went nuts.

The win lifted Coupeville to 3-4 overall, a flawless 2-0 in league play (giving them sole possession of first place), but it was far more than just another W in the book.

The Wolves will tell you otherwise, but if they had lost, squandering a 19-10 lead after surrendering eight runs in the sixth and three more in the seventh, it would have been devastating.

But as tired as CHS hurler McKayla Bailey looked at the end — going the distance in her first start of the season, with her hand cramping — Chimacum’s pitcher could barely lift her own arm at the end.

Coupeville took advantage, eking out a pair of one-out walks to get runners aboard in the seventh, but Chimacum pushed the game to the edge by forcing a runner at third.

Down to their final out, the Wolves stayed alive by the edge of Tiffany Briscoe’s batting helmet, which got grazed by a pitch that got away.

With the bags juiced and all of Cow Town on the edge of its seats, McGranahan, who already had three hits and three RBI on the afternoon, looked like a grizzled vet at the plate.

No matter how big the butterflies might have been inside her stomach, she locked in on her pitch and cracked a shot that was never in doubt.

The only question was how many Wolves would beat the throw back in, and Tiffany Briscoe, hauling rear around third as fast as anyone has ever seen her move, followed Lauren Rose and Kyla Briscoe across the plate.

There was a momentary pause — the scoreboard, which hadn’t worked all game, still sat at 0-0 — and then the place went bonkers.

“So, so proud of them,” Rafferty said. “At bat, when we have two outs, I always want them to think there’s one out and play that way. I am so impressed with how they played under pressure.”

The victory celebration, with McGranahan, shy smile still intact after being jumped by her entire team, capped a game of unbelievable highs and dizzying lows.

Coupeville scored 14 runs in the first two innings, with two-run singles from Hailey Hammer and Lauren Rose setting things off.

At one point, the Wolves drew three straight bases loaded walks, with Kyla Briscoe, Rose and Tiffany Briscoe forcing in runs.

Then McGranahan lofted a three-run double — the first, but not last time, she would do that on this day — and Bailey crushed an RBI single to stake Coupeville to a 14-5 lead.

After giving a few runs back, the Wolves almost closed the game out in the fifth, scoring five runs to push the lead to 19-10.

Tiffany Briscoe thumped her own three-run double, coming on the heels of a gorgeous RBI single from Monica Vidoni, but Briscoe was left stranded, two bags away from ending the game by virtue of the ten-run rule.

Given just a sliver of life, Chimacum jumped on the opportunity.

The Cowboys pounded out seven hits in the sixth, scoring eight, then retook the lead with a three-spot in the seventh.

The damage could have been worse, but Rose popped up from her catcher position and smartly threw out a runner at third.

Rose’s dagger, hauled in by Hammer, who hip-checked the runner into the dugout, was one of several standout defensive gems from Coupeville.

McGranahan pulled off a nifty inning-ending double play, spearing a liner and doubling a straying runner off base, while Hope Lodell went zipping from short center to the wall, reaching up and snagging a long fly over her shoulder at the very last second.

At the plate eight different Wolves collected an RBI, with McGranahan (6), Tiffany Briscoe (4), Rose (3) and Hammer (3) leading the way.

Vidoni (2), Kyla Briscoe (2), Bailey (1) and Kailey Kellner (1) all chipped in, while the ever-plucky Jae LeVine drew several crucial walks and Jasmine Melena, Robin Cedillo and Heather Nastali provided vocal support from the bench.

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The sound you hear is the pitcher's knees knocking together as Hailey Hammer stares into her very soul.

   The sound you hear is the pitcher’s knees knocking together as Hailey Hammer stares into her very soul. (John Fisken photos)

Tiffany Briscoe rips a solid base hit.

Tiffany Briscoe rips a solid base hit.

McKayla "Twinkle Toes" Bailey flies across home plate with a run. (John Fisken photos)

McKayla “Twinkle Toes” Bailey flies across home plate with a run.

Katrina

  Katrina McGranahan (11), backed up by Kyla Briscoe and the gently blowing trees, snags a pop-up.

The unflappable Lauren Rose, as cool as the other side of the pillow.

The unflappable Lauren Rose, as cool as the other side of the pillow.

The lil' hitting machine, Jae LeVine, gets medieval on a ball.

   The lil’ hitting machine, Jae LeVine, gets medieval on a ball, while mom Joline prepares to give her the slow clap of approval.

A sunny day in the spring?

Hard to believe, but it was true Tuesday, as a rain-soaked season gave way to balmy skies and a big Coupeville High School softball win.

As the Wolves smacked Concrete’s pitching around in a 9-7 win, travelin’ photo man John Fisken worked the perimeter, clicking away.

The photos above are courtesy him, and, if you want to see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8451&league=5&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=43&sport=0

P.S. — Use coupon code EB84514962 before April 22 and you’ll get 15% off any purchases.

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