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Posts Tagged ‘web gems’

Mikayla Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank was one of three Wolves, along with Tiffany Briscoe and Robin Cedillo, to pull off web gems Monday in a rough loss. (John Fisken photo)

Some days you need to embrace the small moments.

In terms of the large picture, Monday was the roughest afternoon the Coupeville High School softball squad has had this season.

Absorbing a 19-4 beating at the hands of visiting Chimacum, the Wolves slid to their fifth loss in their last six games and dropped into third place in the 1A Olympic League.

Now 2-3 in league play, 7-6 overall, Coupeville trails Chimacum (4-0, 8-4) and Klahowya (2-1, 7-5).

The Wolves remain in prime position to earn the league’s third and final playoff berth, however, with Port Townsend (0-4, 0-9) firmly mired in the cellar.

Win on Wednesday, when CHS travels to Klahowya, and they’re right back in a tie for second-place.

Chimacum, the defending league champs, teed off on the Wolves, launching laser shots in all directions, using a nine-run explosion in the top of the third to firmly put the game away.

Up until then, it was a nail-biter, thanks to some of those small moments.

In the first inning, both of Coupeville’s corner outfielders came up huge with web gems, helping Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan toss a flawless inning.

On the first batter of the game, left fielder Tiffany Briscoe made a snag over her head while backpedaling, robbing a Cowboy slugger of a blast which seemed to have extra-base hit written all over it.

Not to be outdone, right fielder Robin Cedillo then went her one better, ending the inning by sprinting to her left and snaring a long smash down the line.

Coupeville made it three dynamite plays in four hitters when shortstop Mikayla Elfrank flat-out robbed Chimacum to start the second inning.

The Cowboys cleanup hitter smashed a sharply-hit shot into the gap between short and third, but Elfrank’s glove was too quick, as the slick-fielding sophomore speared the ball an inch above the ground, smothering it for an out.

While Chimacum then started putting the ball where the Wolves weren’t, McGranahan limited the assault to a mere two runs.

Kailey Kellner led off the bottom of the second with a high, arcing double to center and eventually came around to score on a sac fly by Briscoe, setting up what seemed like it would be a back-and-forth affair.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Cowboys rattled off seven hits in the third, all hit with force and flair.

If nothing else, Coupeville can hang its hat on the fact it didn’t lose the game, Chimacum very clearly stepped up and won it.

An RBI ground-out by Wolf catcher Sarah Wright got one run back, and then the freshman moved out from behind the plate to pitch the game’s final two innings.

Coupeville loaded the bags in the fourth, but stranded all three runners, before netting two final runs in the fifth on a sweet two-run single by freshman Veronica Crownover.

Kellner paced the Wolves with two hits, while Crownover and Lauren Rose each delivered one.

While the loss stings, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan was pleased to see his players hold their heads high and keep fighting until the final out.

“They didn’t fall apart out there, which is nice to see,” he said. “That’s what we ask of them, to play 110% in every game, regardless of the score, and they did today.”

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Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Wolf first baseman Aaron Trumbull is in lock-down mode. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

CHS coaches Willie Smith and Chris Chan

   CHS coaches Willie Smith (goatee) and Chris Chan (sunglasses) celebrate with their squad.

A little post-game campaigning.

A little post-game campaigning.

“Coach, we flipped the switch!”

Coupeville High School senior catcher Carson Risner was overjoyed in the post-game huddle and it was a feeling that ran through every Wolf player and coach on the field.

A game after having their worst meltdown of the season, CHS rose up and played what assistant coach Chris Chan termed “the most complete game they’ve had in the last two to three years,” Thursday, rapping out 14 hits en route to shredding host Cedarcrest 10-2.

The victory, coming against a large 2A school, and former league rival, who entered the game with a 5-1 record, lifted the Wolves to 3-4 on the still young season.

Quickly shaking off the hangover from their collapse against Lynden Christian Tuesday, the Wolves jumped on Cedarcrest from the first pitch.

Crunching three doubles (Cole Payne, Aaron Curtin, Risner) in the first inning, Coupeville shot out to a quick 3-0 lead before its hosts even came up to bat.

Payne and Curtin went back-to-back, before a Kyle Bodamer single set up Risner, who delivered his second two-run hit in as many games.

Quick to prove it wasn’t a fluke, the Wolves threw down three more runs in the second.

Clay Reilly led off with a single and eventually came around to score on an RBI single off the bat of Payne.

After Curtin smashed a single, Bodamer played long ball, walloping a two-run single deep down the left field line to stake the Wolves to a 6-0 lead.

A jubilant CHS coach Willie Smith thoroughly enjoyed the power show from his headquarters in the third base box.

“It put them in a bit of shock as to what was happening,” he said with a chortle.

Coupeville tacked on four more runs in the fourth, kicking things off with back-to-back singles from Hunter Smith and Josh Bayne.

After Payne loaded the bags when Cedarcrest couldn’t handle his intended sacrifice bunt, the Wolves started bringing their runners around in style.

Curtin lashed a run-scoring double, Bodamer notched another RBI with a single, then Risner and Aaron Trumbull capped the afternoon with RBIs of their own.

With the offense booming, the pitching and defense didn’t need to be first-rate, but it was.

CJ Smith went the distance, scattering four hits and striking out four (“He was in total command, working the corners and keeping them in check”), while the guys behind him came through with a variety of inspired plays.

“Our defense was perfect and we received some amazing web gems from a variety of players,” Willie Smith said.

Coupeville had a snappy 1-4-3 double play that started with CJ Smith knocking down a line shot up the middle. Payne snatched it, stepped on second and fired to first to complete the twin-killing.

When the ball cleared the infield, Reilly and Bayne ran everything down, with the duo each making a pair of highlight-reel catches.

Bayne, playing center field on a very roomy field that runs 370 feet in left center, went deep into the alley to make an over-the-shoulder snag to rob a possible triple.

He then followed that up with an even more impressive catch, going to the wall to snare a ball headed for pay dirt.

“Completely took the wind out of them,” Willie Smith said. “That was the defensive play of the year so far and pretty much sealed the deal for us.”

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