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   Veronica Crownover cranked a home run to the deepest, darkest part of center field Saturday in a 9-4 win. (John Fisken photo)

History will not repeat itself.

Coming off its first loss this season, the Coupeville High School softball squad took the field Saturday looking for a bit of redemption.

The Wolves, who returned virtually their entire roster from last year, remember how they started 6-1, then went into a horrible 3-10 free-fall after Spring Break.

This year, having absorbed a tough loss to Chimacum Wednesday that snapped a seven-game win streak, CHS wanted an immediate bounce back.

And they found it.

Erupting for seven runs in the fourth inning, then capping things off an inning later with a home-run to straightaway center off the bat of Veronica Crownover, the Wolves rallied to drill visiting Friday Harbor 9-4.

The non-conference win lifts Coupeville to 8-1, a show of softball dominance not seen since the 2002 squad which finished 3rd at state.

While this year’s team still has a lot of work ahead of them if they want to reach the heights achieved by Sarah Mouw, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby and Co., they possess similar traits.

They hit with power, they play often-inspired defense and they have a steady hurler in the pitcher’s circle who drives the engine.

For the 2017 Wolves, that’s junior hurler Katrina McGranahan, who whiffed nine batters — including the final three in the game.

Friday Harbor didn’t get to her until the third inning, when they used their first two hits of the afternoon to plate a pair, opening a brief 3-1 lead.

The visitors notched their first run in the opening inning, using a walk, two stolen bases and a passed ball to somehow put the game’s first run on the (non-existent) scoreboard.

Coupeville responded right away in the bottom of the first, as Lauren Rose led off with an infield single (she dropped it right between the pitcher and first-baseman), then came around to score two batters later.

Driving her home was McGranahan, who pasted an RBI single back up the middle.

Friday Harbor escaped with no more damage, however, as their slick-fielding shortstop gunned McGranahan down at home two batters later.

With the offense sputtering just a tad in the early going, the Wolves got a huge psychological boost on defense in the top of the fourth, and you could feel the entire flow of the game change in an instant.

Trailing 3-1 with a runner at second and no one out, McGranahan got the batter to shank a foul ball skyward.

The softball was spinning quickly and headed for no-man’s land, but the CHS pitcher shot to her left, and, running full-tilt towards the visitors dugout, speared the ball out of the air even while having her glove twisted awkwardly to the side.

Not only did it count for an out, but it sent an electric shock through the Wolves and their fans, who were out in full force.

McGranahan escaped the inning untouched, whiffing the next hitter before coaxing a ground-out to third-baseman Lauren Rose to end things.

Pumped up, Coupeville’s players pounded enthusiastically on each other as they charged off the field, and the good vibes immediately surged through the Wolf bats.

The fourth inning was a classic example of what this team can do when it gets in a groove at the plate, with a few wrinkles tossed in.

Wolf shortstop Mikayla Elfrank achieved a bit of prairie immortality, hitting a moving car with a foul ball (on the fly, not the bounce, so even more impressive).

Not content to just be a trivia answer, she promptly mashed the next pitch way, way down the left field line for a stand-up triple, plating Scout Smith, who was running for Sarah Wright after she reached on an error to lead off the inning.

Elfrank then pulled off her third consecutive moment of awesomeness, breaking for home on a hard grounder by Crownover and sliding under the tag at the very last millisecond to tie the game.

After that, the dam broke.

OK, deep breath and…

Hope Lodell popped a seeing-eye single into left, Tamika Nastali beat out a bunt, Rose cranked a two-run single to center, Jae LeVine bopped an RBI single, Wright scorched a single, Friday Harbor’s pitcher slumped in the circle, her coach got pissed at the ump and winner, winner, chicken dinner.

Up 8-3 after an 11-batter inning, Coupeville was making the whole prairie rock ‘n roll, and the day’s most impressive feat was still ahead.

Well, maybe second-most impressive, cause Elfrank plunking a ball off a moving pickup truck, causing the passenger to scream, is pretty dang hard to top.

But Crownover made a solid bid to do just that.

Striding to the plate to lead off the bottom of the fifth, the tall, hard-hitting Wolf sophomore betrayed little emotion, which probably scared the crud out of the Friday Harbor pitcher.

If so, she was right to be worried.

Swinging with a vengeance, Crownover left a permanent dent on the face of the softball, sending it on a line over the very deepest part of the center field fence.

Her proud papa, Darren, may never stop hyperventilating.

Luckily, much-calmer mom Kelly was present to grab him and keep him from jumping off the top row of bleachers during his celebration.

The moon shot was one of 11 hits on the day for the Wolves, who were led by LeVine’s three singles.

Rose and Crownover each had a pair of base-knocks, Elfrank added her three-bagger and CHS got singles from McGranahan, Wright and Lodell.

All of Coupeville’s starters reached base, with Tiffany Briscoe eking out a walk and Nastali reaching on an error.

Robin Cedillo came off the bench to get an at-bat and play right field, while both Kyla Briscoe and Smith scored as pinch runners.

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   Robin Cedillo whacked an RBI single down the first-base line Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

   Swinging a big bat, Veronica Crownover collected two of Coupeville’s seven hits, including an RBI double to straight-away center-field.

Round one to the Cowboys.

A day that started in torrential downpour morphed into a wind-fest and then, in the biggest surprise, turned into a sun-splashed, fairly calm afternoon on the prairie.

Unfortunately for the Coupeville High School softball squad, its previously-pristine record absorbed its first ding at the same time, as aggressive, hard-hitting Chimacum showed why it’s the two-time defending champions of the Olympic League.

By the time the Cowboys were done raining down hits, and tearing up the base-paths, they had run off with a resounding 15-4 win in a game called after six innings thanks to the mercy rule.

The loss drops Coupeville to 2-1 in league play, 7-1 overall, and it slides a game-and-a-half behind Chimacum (4-0, 5-1).

The Wolves have six games to play before the first of two rematches with the Cowboys Apr. 28.

The squads also tangle May 8, with both games on Chimacum’s diamond.

Along with four non-conference games, CHS has league tilts with Klahowya (0-2, 2-3) and Port Townsend (0-3, 0-4) before they again face the Cowboys.

When they do, they won’t need big changes, just a general clean-up.

“It was a good loss,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “You never seek it (a loss) out, but it’s not always a bad thing.

“They hit the ball. I expected us to hit with them and we just didn’t today,” he added. “We need to hit and button down on the little knick-knack errors.”

The Wolves put bat on ball, and a glance at the score-book shows they were only out-hit 9-7.

But Chimacum, which was led by Shanya Nisbet (two doubles) and Grace Yaley (three singles), packed their hits together, while Coupeville’s base-knocks were far more strung out.

Add in an uncharacteristic five errors (and numerous bobbled balls) by the Wolves, and CHS was fighting uphill most of the way.

Trailing 3-0 after a half an inning, Coupeville cut the lead to 3-2 in the second, then promptly gave back five runs in the top of the third to seal its fate.

The Wolves scraped together their first runs after Mikayla Elfrank led off the second by lining a long shot to right field that was dropped for an error.

Veronica Crownover followed by crushing a laser shot of an RBI double to straight-away center-field — the hardest-hit ball by a Wolf all game.

Three batters later, Crownover, putting the pedal through the metal, beat a throw home after Robin Cedillo drilled a single off the first baseman’s glove.

Coupeville tacked on two more in the bottom of the third, slicing the lead to 8-4, and did all its damage after starting the inning with two outs and no one on base.

Katrina McGranahan walked, Sarah Wright slapped a single up the middle, then both came flying home on a thunderous double to left-center off of Elfrank’s still-smokin’ bat.

But, while the Wolves had runners on base every inning, they also left a lot of them high and dry, stranding runners in five of six innings.

The only time they didn’t, the inning ended on a runner being snuffed out at second on one of the few plays the field ump was actually on top of…

Chimacum hurler Holly Snider only whiffed two Wolves (while Katrina McGranahan notched seven K’s), but she was quite adept at getting Coupeville hitters to punch fly balls that her steady fielders ran down.

The Cowboys had three errors, but they all came at times where they ultimately mattered little.

Crownover, who also battled the wind to track down and snare a dangerous foul ball wide of first, paced Coupeville with two hits.

Both she and Elfrank had doubles while Cedillo, Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell and Jae LeVine added singles.

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Jae LeVine swung a big bat and played stellar defense for a Wolf squad which won its most games in several seasons. (John Fisken photos)

   Jae LeVine swung a big bat and played stellar defense for a Wolf squad which won nine games, including five straight at one point. (John Fisken photos)

Hannah Benway shared Most Improved honors with fellow frosh Nicole Lester.

Hannah Benway shared Most Improved honors with fellow frosh Nicole Lester.

Sophomore Lauren Rose is now a two-time All-League softball player.

Sophomore Lauren Rose is now a two-time All-League softball player.

Mikayla Elfrank (Justine McGranahan photos)

   Mikayla Elfrank beats the hose wielded by her coach while playing a wet version of kickball during the team’s banquet. (Justine McGranahan photos)

Hope LOdell

Hope Lodell splashes down in the pool.

Consistency.

Coupeville High School upheld tradition, netting four First-Team All-League players for the second consecutive year when 1A Olympic League softball coaches tallied their votes.

Sophomores Katrina McGranahan (P) and Lauren Rose (3B) repeated, while sophomore Hope Lodell (OF) and freshman Veronica Crownover (Designated Player) were first-time honorees.

Coupeville went 9-11, winning five straight early in the year.

The Wolves battled aggressively against Bellevue Christian in a playoff loss, then watched as the Vikings, who they split regular season games with, went on to claim 3rd place at the state playoffs.

The All-League honors were among a mix of awards handed out by coaches Kevin McGranahan and Ron Wright at a season-ending banquet Monday afternoon.

Katrina McGranahan nabbed MVP honors, while Rose (Offensive MVP), Sarah Wright (Defensive MVP), Tiffany Briscoe (Hustle Award) and Kailey Kellner (Coaches Award) were also honored.

Freshmen Nicole Lester and Hannah Benway shared Most Improved.

Varsity letter winners:

Tiffany Briscoe
Robin Cedillo
Veronica Crownover
Mikayla Elfrank
Kailey Kellner
Jae LeVine
Hope Lodell
Katrina McGranahan
Heather Nastali
Tamika Nastali
Lauren Rose
Sarah Wright

Participation certificates:

Hannah Benway
Nicole Lester
Melissa Otto

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Freshman Veronica Crownover had three hits and two RBI against the #1 team in 1A Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Veronica Crownover was 3-for-3 with a double and two singles while facing the pitcher who is the reigning 1A Olympic League MVP. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf fans get comfortable while watching Wednesday's game. (Photo by Anonymous)

   Wolf fans Luke Carlson (left) and Jordan Ford get comfortable while watching Wednesday’s game. (Photo by Anonymous)

Veronica Crownover has no fear.

The Coupeville High School freshman softball slugger stared down the reigning 1A Olympic League MVP, Klahowya hurler Amber Bumbalough, and crushed three hits off of her in three plate appearances.

While Crownover’s sparkling Wednesday afternoon wasn’t enough to topple the Eagles by herself, it was one of several bright spots in the season’s final home game for the young Wolves.

Up 6-3 entering the fifth, Coupeville was stung by one never-ending 11-run inning in which Klahowya bashed the heck out of the ball, and eventually fell 16-6.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 3-6 in league play, 8-9 overall.

CHS has two non-conference games left on the schedule (May 10 at Bellevue Christian and May 16 at La Conner), then opens the district playoffs May 20.

Playing on Fan Appreciation Day, which included cake and a team-wide thank you from the players to their loyal supporters, things got off to an odd start.

Thanks to an ever-shuffling schedule, no umps showed up, delaying the start of the game a half-hour-plus.

Then, once the blue crew was in place, they conspired to make an odd call to stifle an early Wolf rally.

Trailing 2-0 in the bottom of the second, Coupeville had Sarah Wright at first with one out, when Jae LeVine went down on strikes.

The Klahowya catcher missed the ball, however, giving LeVine time to zip to first.

In the ensuing melee, after several throws, Wright came around to score, while LeVine was tagged out inches short of second-base.

Except, after a long discussion by the umps, the run was waved off, as Wright was called out for interference, even though no one, including the umps, seemed to know exactly why.

While the controversy would have cracked some teams, the Wolves seemed to shrug it off, immediately coming up with their best defensive play of the game.

Lauren Rose, making a rare appearance at short with Wright having slid to third when Katrina McGranahan took over on the mound, came flying from the side on a looping liner.

Nimbly sidestepping a collision with LeVine at second, Rose spun, went airborne and snagged the ball over her shoulder all in one balletic move.

Buoyed by Mouse’s miracle, Coupeville cut the lead to 3-2 with two runs in the third, then surged ahead in the fourth.

Kailey Kellner walked and Crownover lashed a single to center to set the table, with the Wolves plating them both on a RBI ground-out from Tiffany Briscoe and an RBI single from Rose.

While Coupeville left a runner at third to end the third, they picked right back up offensively in the fourth.

Klahowya’s third baseman botched a pop-up off the bat of Wright, but Bumbalough immediately came back with two straight strikeouts, seemingly slamming the door shut.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Eagles left fielder bobbled a long fly by Kellner to keep the inning alive.

Given a gift run, a tie ball game and new life, Coupeville took advantage, with Crownover ripping an absolute laser shot of an RBI double, followed by a single from Briscoe.

Rose then parked one right between two outfielders.

While the right-fielder got her glove on it at the last second, all she could do was knock the blast down, while two more Wolves came scampering home.

At that point, up 6-3, with a runner at second and the smirk having vanished from Bumbalough’s face, Coupeville’s crowd was loud and its team was giddy.

And then it all went wrong.

Bumbalough escaped the fourth with an inning-ending strikeout, on a call that took about a month to come out of the ump’s mouth as she seemingly mentally reviewed the entire rule-book before saying “strike three.”

Then the Eagle bats erupted.

To its credit, Klahowya stepped up and claimed the win with one hard-hit ball after another. Coupeville didn’t give it to them with walks and errors.

The big blow was a three-run home run to straight away center, while the most painful was a two-run single back into the box that nailed McGranahan in the ankle and ricocheted into right.

Coupeville finally got out of the inning thanks to two big plays from sophomore catcher Mikayla Elfrank.

On the first, she came up firing, whipped a throw that McGranahan cut off at short, then took the return throw and held on while the Klahowya runner coming from third lowered her shoulder and hit her full-tilt.

A batter later, Elfrank was back at it, throwing off her mask and whirling around to snag a foul pop fly to finally end the bleeding.

Up 14-6, when a half hour before she had trailed 6-3, Bumbalough bore down and retired six of the final seven Wolf hitters to put the game on ice.

The only one to slip through? Crownover, who whacked her third straight base knock, this one a two-out single to right.

Coupeville collected seven hits, its best showing in three games this season against the Klahowya ace, with Rose (2), Wright and Briscoe joining Crownover on the hit parade.

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Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here during practice, absolutely abused a softball Saturday, driving a triple to deepest center field. (John Fisken photo)

Like sand between the fingers, this one slipped away.

After bashing the ball with ease most of the afternoon Saturday, the Coupeville High School softball squad suddenly went cold down the stretch, letting visiting Meridian wiggle away with a 10-8 win.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 7-5 heading into the heart of their league schedule.

Coupeville, which is 2-2 and in second place in the 1A Olympic League, plays all three of its conference rivals next week.

The Wolves host Chimacum (3-0) Monday, travel to Klahowya (1-1) Wednesday, then are back on Whidbey to face Port Townsend (0-3) Friday.

Saturday’s tune-up started nicely, with Coupeville scoring in all of the first five innings, but then the bats went cold, as Meridian retired seven of the final eight Wolves.

Tied 8-8 after five, the visiting Trojans picked up a run in the top of the sixth on a hard-hit RBI triple to right, then tacked on an insurance run in the seventh by poking an RBI single over the first-baseman’s head.

After a series of shuffles, Meridian was on its third pitcher at the close of the game, but the strategy worked, as Coupeville’s final two hitters went down on strikes while representing the potential tying run.

Things were much brighter at the start, as the Wolves used timely hits, aggressive base-running and some Trojan miscues to jump out to a 2-0 lead.

Lauren Rose socked a lead-off single to center in the first, stole second and came around to score on a passed ball, then Kailey Kellner brought out the big stick in the second inning.

Crunching a double to left, she alertly picked up another bag when the throw back in sailed over the infielder’s heads. A moment later, she too skipped home on a passed ball as the Meridian catcher struggled in the early going.

From there the game took on a seesaw feel, as the lead shifted back and forth.

Four hits plated three runs for Meridian in the third — and gave it a brief taste of the lead — but Coupeville responded immediately.

A single into the gap between short and third from Katrina McGranahan and a Meridian error on a hard chopper by Sarah Wright set the scene in the bottom of the third, then Veronica Crownover got medieval on the ball.

Unloading a shot to right field that ricocheted off a glove, she ended up at second with a stand-up two-run double that restored Coupeville’s lead to 4-3.

The rally ended too quickly, however, a recurring theme on this day.

While the Wolves scored in each of the first five innings, they also stranded base-runners in all of those innings, and spent much of the day one good swing away from really busting things wide open.

Coupeville stretched the lead to 5-3 in the fourth, with Hope Lodell ripping an RBI single under a mitt.

Lauren Rose, who crossed home with the score, had reached base after an unusual at-bat.

Thinking she had struck out, she grabbed her bat and started back to the bench, only to have coach Kevin McGranahan gently remind her she only had two strikes.

Taking advantage of the new opportunity, “Mouse” unloaded from the very bottom of her toes, smacking a shot to the deepest part of the park with almost enough force to untie her shoelaces.

As the ball hit the ground a millimeter away from the center-field fence with a bang loud enough to wake up any slumbering ducks on the prairie, the mightiest mite of them all tore into third with a stand-up triple.

Waiting for Rose was her coach, who nodded and grinned as his third-baseman looked up at him, blushing a bit, maybe because of the exertion and maybe because of forgetting the pitch count.

The lead wouldn’t hold, though, as a string of Wolf errors swung the pendulum back to Meridian, which used a five-run fifth to surge back in front 8-5.

Unfazed, Coupeville responded with three runs of its own to knot things back up, and there was a genuine sense at that point that you were watching two boxers trade blows, with the KO coming from whomever hit last.

The Wolves rally started with another double from Crownover, followed by four walks and a dropped ball on a play at home.

But Meridian, using three pitchers in the inning, finally found one who worked, escaping from a bases-loaded jam when Wright grounded out on a sharply hit ball.

Little did the Wolves know that, in that moment, the offense was effectively turning off.

Coupeville collected nine hits in the loss, with Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Crownover each notching a pair. Lodell, Kellner and Jae LeVine each had one.

Robin Cedillo had an especially nice catch in right on a long, arcing fly and LeVine was a beast at second, knocking down everything that came her way, to provide stability to a team defense that wildly fluctuated on this afternoon.

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