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Posts Tagged ‘Veronica Crownover’

Sophomore second-baseman Scout Smith is in the top four in eight of 11 offensive categories. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Turn the page, it’s time to start a new season.

As the Coupeville High School softball team prepares for the district tourney, which goes down May 18-19, one thing hangs around, though.

That’s the stats piled up by the Wolves through the first 18 games of the season.

With the postseason coming up fast, a look at the latest sweet statsy stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

 

Hitting:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
C. Caveness 37 10 9 4 3 7 .243 .300
H. Lodell 54 11 15 3 1 2 4 4 .278 .339
E. Mathusek 36 7 10 3 5 8 .278 .381
S. Smith 64 23 22 3 3 4 15 .344 .391
L. Rose 42 18 12 2 1 5 10 5 .286 .423
C. Prescott 54 20 14 1 2 4 5 11 .259 .322
M. Davis 23 4 4 2 3 3 .174 .296
K. McGranahan 60 29 27 1 3 1 14 9 16 .450 .548
M. Bailey 20 8 6 1 1 4 5 .300 .417
V. Crownover 61 15 28 7 3 4 19 .459 .482
S. Wright 67 22 25 5 3 2 1 1 26 .373 .382
N. Laxton 19 2 4 1 5 .211 .286

 

Pitching:

Player W/L ERA Gms CG SO Hits Runs BB K IP BF
K. McGranahan 9-4 3.07 16 10 3 84 68 33 81 89 421
S. Smith 2-3 9.00 6 1 31 40 9 6 21 120
C. Prescott 0-0 3.50 1 3 1 2 2 12

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   Veronica Crownover tops Coupeville softball in batting average and is tied for the lead in hits and doubles. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The bats are hummin’.

As it preps for Friday’s rivalry game with South Whidbey (4 PM in Cow Town), the Coupeville High School softball squad continues to pile up the offensive numbers.

The Wolves, who sit at 9-4 and shellacked the Falcons 12-0 the first time they played this season, are a well-oiled machine.

The big boppers — Katrina McGranahan, Sarah Wright and Veronica Crownover — are delivering in style, but CHS is also getting major contributions from young guns like Scout Smith, Chelsea Prescott and Emma Mathusek.

The latter, who hits out of the #9 hole, has torn the cover off the ball in the last week-and-a-half, running her batting average up to a sizzlin’ .360.

As Mathusek and Co. prep for the Falcons, a look at the latest sweet statsy stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

 

Hitting:

Player AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. OBP
C. Caveness 30 9 7 3 3 5 .233 .303
H. Lodell 38 11 11 2 1 3 3 .289 .357
E. Mathusek 25 5 9 2 5 8 .360 .484
S. Smith 48 17 19 1 3 3 9 .396 .442
L. Rose 29 11 7 2 1 4 4 4 .241 .333
C. Prescott 42 16 10 1 1 4 3 10 .238 .289
M. Davis 12 3 3 2 3 2 .250 .438
K. McGranahan 43 22 18 1 3 14 7 12 .419 .537
M. Bailey 14 4 3 1 4 3 .214 .389
V. Crownover 44 14 21 4 3 3 14 .477 .511
S. Wright 49 18 21 4 2 2 1 22 .429 .429
N. Laxton 15 2 4 1 5 .267 .353

 

Pitching:

Player W/L ERA Gms CG SO Hits Runs BB K IP BF
K. McGranahan 7-2 2.73 11 8 2 46 36 20 56 59 271
S. Smith 2-2 7.00 5 1 22 25 8 6 18 91
C. Prescott 0-0 3.50 1 3 1 2 2 12

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   Nicole Laxton, here making a play in a home game, had a spectacular diving catch Saturday as Coupeville whacked Friday Harbor 13-4. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves had six days to think, to plan, to prep, to refine their swings.

Pity Friday Harbor.

Aggressively bouncing back from their weakest offensive afternoon of the season, the Coupeville High School softball squad smashed 17 hits Saturday, decimating their hosts to a happy tune of 13-4.

The resounding non-conference victory, which came a week after a doubleheader sweep at the hands of Forks, lifts the Wolves to 7-3.

CHS has one more tune-up, a road trip to La Conner, next Thursday, Apr. 19, before playing its biggest game in 16 years.

The Wolves host Klahowya Apr. 20, and a win would clinch Coupeville softball’s first league crown since 2002.

Accomplish that and CHS will carry the #1 seed out of the Olympic League to districts in May.

As league champs, they would open the playoffs in the double-elimination round, needing two wins in three games to punch a ticket to the state tourney.

All of that is still fairly far down the road, however, and, on this day, all the Wolves were concentrating on was whacking the snot out of the ball.

Mission, accomplished.

“So, the weather let us play today and we came out swinging,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “All in all, it was a good solid game and both teams played good defense, but we played error-free and they didn’t, and we hit better than them all day.

“Good day trip to the islands and a great lunch after the game, followed by ice cream of course. On to La Conner!”

Coupeville had at least one base-knock in six of seven innings, with seven doubles and a triple along the way.

And yet the game was semi-close for two innings.

The Wolves scratched out a run in the first, with Scout Smith reaching base, swiping second, taking third on a passed ball, then flashing home on a sac fly from Katrina McGranahan.

But the rally stopped there, as they stranded Sarah Wright after she doubled, and CHS couldn’t get Veronica Crownover off of first after she led off the second with a single.

Things took a dramatic turn in the third, however, as Coupeville started to mash the ball big-time, with the first seven hitters reaching base.

11 batters, four hits and six runs later, Friday Harbor escaped with their lives intact (barely), but the Wolves were up 7-0 and everyone’s fates were sealed.

The Wolves juiced the bags with Rose reaching on an error, Smith singling and McGranahan wearing a pitch.

From there it was a revolving door of RBI’s.

Wright lashed a single, Chelsea Prescott walked to force in a run, Crownover launched a two-run double, then Hope Lodell got artistic and dropped the ultra-rare RBI bunt.

Rose came back around to close the scoring with an RBI on a ground-out, and, by that time, Friday Harbor’s collective hopes and dreams were fully shattered.

The host Wolverines managed to finally get on the board in the bottom of the third, scratching out two runs, but Coupeville had an immediate response.

RBI doubles by the scorching-hot Wright and Crownover in the top of the fourth stretched the lead back out to 9-2, then CHS turned on the web gem show.

Nicole Laxton, who came on to give Mackenzie Davis some rest, immediately made an impact.

The junior whacked a shot to right in her first at-bat, then she turned the volume to 12 on a spectacular running, diving snare on a well-hit ball while playing left field.

Snagging the rapidly-descending orb, Laxton speared it with her glove, then held on through the crash back to Mother Earth, earning rapturous applause from her teammates, coaches and hardy road fans.

On another play, fab frosh Mollie Bailey, also a mid-game replacement, made a superb throw from right to Smith, who gunned it on to Wright.

The Wolf catcher caught the ball, dropped and defended the plate like a lioness guarding her cubs.

That prevented Friday Harbor from plating any runners, and gave Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan the chance to escape one of her few jams.

The Bailey-to-Smith-to-Wright connection paid off again later in the game, this time with the throw nailing an incoming runner at the plate.

After shocking the world by not scoring in the fifth or sixth, despite several more hits, Coupeville found its run-scoring mojo again in the top of the seventh.

Rose and Smith kick-started things again, with the former poking a ball off a glove, while the latter froze all nine defenders with a note-perfect bunt that dropped and promptly dug a hole to China.

That set up the big boppers, and they were swinging for the fences.

McGranahan lashed a two-run triple before Wright and Crownover (who else?) mashed RBI doubles, with all three Wolf sluggers narrowly missing home runs on their epic blows.

Coupeville got hits from seven of the 11 girls who played, led by Wright, who was a perfect 5-5 with three doubles and two singles.

Crownover had four hits (including three doubles), while Smith (1B, 1B), Lodell (1B, 1B), McGranahan (1B, 3B), Prescott (2B) and Rose (1B) rounded out the extraordinarily-deep hitting attack.

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   Veronica Crownover had two hits and three RBI Wednesday as Coupeville mashed Klahowya 15-1, taking the upper hand in the race for a league crown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The mission is simple.

Beat Klahowya twice this season and the Coupeville High School softball squad wins its first league title since 2002.

And now it’s halfway there.

Led Wednesday by the booming bats of junior sluggers Veronica Crownover and Sarah Wright, the Wolves shellacked KSS 15-1 in Silverdale, capturing the first round in a three-game season series.

With the victory, Coupeville improves to 3-1 overall, 1-0 in Olympic League play, while Klahowya falls to 5-2, 0-1.

Conference mates Chimacum and Port Townsend suspended their softball programs during the first week of practice, citing a lack of players, which left only two teams standing in what had been a four-team league.

So now, beat the Eagles Apr. 20 on Whidbey, and the Wolves will exit the Olympic League — CHS joins the new North Sound Conference in the fall — as champs.

The third, and final, regular season meeting between the two schools is Apr. 30 back in Silverdale.

Wednesday Coupeville struck early and late, both times inflicting serious damage.

While Wright “had a monster game,” lashing three hits including a triple while driving in six, and Crownover was hot on her heels with two hits and three RBI, every Wolf contributed.

And I do mean EVERY Wolf, as all nine starters recorded at least one hit and one run as CHS showed remarkable balance.

Coupeville came off the bus swinging from the heels, dropping a three-spot on Klahowya pitcher Amber Bumbalough before she even got properly warmed-up.

Lauren Rose led off with a single, promptly stole second and third, and scored the game’s opening tally when she and Katrina McGranahan, aboard on a walk, scampered home on a two-run single from Wright.

Crownover capped the opening surge with an RBI single of her own, and a rout looked like a distinct possibility.

Bumbalough is a two-time Olympic League MVP and D-1 recruit, though, and she settled down, matching goose eggs with McGranahan from that point on until the top of the fifth.

CHS got back-to-back hits from Scout Smith and McGranahan to lead off the third, but was ultimately stiffed. In the fifth, the Wolves went in a different direction, and it paid off.

This time they had two outs and no one on base, then fired the ignition.

Sophomore sensation Smith, who played superbly against Klahowya as a mere freshman, was just as sharp Wednesday, and ripped one of her three hits on the day to trigger things.

McGranahan followed with a base-knock of her own, before Wright went medieval on the ball, dropping a two-run triple into the farthest reaches of the ballpark.

While a 5-0 lead was nice, the Wolves decided to triple their fun in the top of the sixth, knocking Bumbalough out of the pitcher’s circle en route to a 13-batter, 10-run inning.

Crownover started things, reaching on an error, then came back around to drive home the final nail with a booming double that caused dad Darren to nearly lose his voice with all of his good-natured screaming and caring on.

It’s rare to look at a score-book and see an inning where every player on a team scores, but it was nothing but a gorgeous string of filled-in diamonds in the sixth for CHS assistant coach Justine McGranahan.

Everyone chipped in, with Chelsea Prescott, Emma Mathusek, Hope Lodell and Coral Caveness all collecting their first hits of the game in the inning.

With the game in hand, Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan made sure all 12 girls in uniform saw playing time, with Nicole Laxton, Mollie Bailey and Mackenzie Davis hitting the field in the bottom half of the inning.

Klahowya scraped out a single, solitary run in its half of the sixth to stave off the shutout, but the blowout remained intact.

CHS spread out 15 hits among its nine starters, with Wright and Smith each having a three base-knock afternoon.

Crownover and Katrina McGranahan chipped in with two hits apiece, while Rose, Prescott, Lodell, Caveness and Mathusek each added one of their own.

“Huge win for us and now we are in the drivers seat for the league title,” said Kevin McGranahan. “Now they have to come to us.

Sarah was clutch all day (at bat) and picking a girl off at third. Coral also had a great game, with a big hit off Amber,” he added. “Hang on tight; it is gonna be a wild ride this year.”

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   Tamika Nastali reached base twice Friday, including dropping a bunt for a single. (John Fisken photo)

They are getting close.

A still-young Coupeville High School softball squad has taken enormous strides this season while piling up wins at a rate not seen since the legendary 2002 Wolf sluggers, who finished 3rd at state.

They’ve taken down traditional powers like Lynden Christian, won twice against Klahowya and its two-time MVP pitcher and bashed home runs like never before.

Now, the next step is to get over the hump and dethrone two-time defending Olympic League champ Chimacum.

And they are getting close. So close.

The Cowboys, to their credit, played virtually error-free ball on their home diamond Friday, holding on to nip the Wolves 7-4 in a battle for sole possession of first place.

The loss snaps a six-game winning streak for Coupeville and drops it to 4-2 in league play, 13-2 overall.

Chimacum (5-1, 7-3) sits a game up with three league games left, and owns the tiebreaker, having taken the first two meetings this season.

But the Wolves, who started seven underclassmen Friday, including freshman third-baseman Scout Smith, who filled in for an ill Mikayla Elfrank, still have a shot at a league title.

They’ll need to complete a season sweep of Klahowya with a win at home Monday, then hope the Eagles can help them out by stunning Chimacum a second time.

Both front runners also have a game remaining against Port Townsend, which has lost 48 straight games.

If Coupeville tacks on two wins, and the Cowboys split, the two schools would be sitting at 6-2 and play for the title when they close league play May 8 back at Chimacum.

Friday afternoon the Wolves were one hit away from taking control of the game, more than once.

But, despite rapping out nine hits, led by three base-knocks from sluggin’ sophomore first-baseman Veronica Crownover, Coupeville died a slow, agonizing death on the base-paths.

The Wolves stranded nine base runners, with five of them sitting at third when the final out came.

Meanwhile, Chimacum used well-placed hits (and six Wolf errors) to slowly build up a lead it never relinquished.

One run in the first, two in the third and another in the fourth staked the Cowboys to a 4-0 lead entering the fifth inning.

During that time Coupeville failed to capitalize on two prime opportunities, leaving runners sitting at second and third in the second, then stranding a runner at third the next inning.

That one hurt maybe a little more, as the stranded runner, Tamika Nastali, had landed on the bag with just one out.

Beating out a bunt, she went to second on a passed ball, took third on a fielder’s choice, then had nowhere left to go as a strikeout and a pop-up ended things too soon.

Coupeville finally broke through in the top of the fifth, and it was a bit unexpected.

With two outs and no one on base, Nastali struck again, eking out a walk to light the fuse.

Lauren Rose followed with a single to center, Jae LeVine walked, then Katrina McGranahan smashed a long blast to right field.

Having their one spotty moment on defense, the Cowboys saw two of their outfielders nearly collide, with one letting the hard-hit ball glance off her glove as three Wolves churned for home.

But, with a chance to tie or take the lead, Coupeville couldn’t keep the rally going, as Sarah Wright’s shot to deep center was snagged.

Chimacum, a veteran squad led by twin senior sisters Shanya and Mechelle Nisbet, didn’t flinch, tacking on two runs in the bottom of the fifth to stretch the lead to 6-3.

Then, senior Cowboy hurler Holly Snider escaped her biggest moment of danger, even while taking a piece of dirt in the eye.

Singles from Crownover and Hope Lodell and a walk to Tiffany Briscoe juiced the bags with one out in the sixth, but again … that one big hit was not to be found.

Coupeville’s final shot in the seventh had its moments, including singles from McGranahan, Smith and Crownover to plate a run.

But with runners at first and third and the tying run at the plate, Snider escaped one final time, inducing a game-ending ground-out.

While the loss stung, the Wolves, even without Elfrank, played much better than in the team’s first meeting, when they fell 15-4.

Smith made a superb snag and throw at third, while Wright, working behind the plate, gunned down a runner trying to take an extra bag.

“We played them better than the score dictates,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan. “Gonna be a battle to the end this year, I hope.

“The girls are in good spirits and ready to go for Monday.”

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