Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Cameron Toomey-Stout’

   Dear KFC, this is Andrew Martin. He would happily be your celebrity spokesman, if you paid him in free chicken. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Central Whidbey remembers.

The last time the Coupeville High School varsity football team went to Vashon Island, it made history. And not in a good way.

Two years ago the Wolves surrendered a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns to Bryce Hoisington on a dark day in Wolf football history.

Friday night, the epic, never-ending trip to the hinterlands ended in a much happier fashion for Coupeville’s gridiron squad.

Even if the Wolves did have their bus scraped up by a wayward car on the way in, then had to wait an hour-and-a-half in the parking lot for an exit ferry to arrive.

Opening the game with back-to-back pick-sixes — Coupeville led 12-0 before taking its first snap on offense — they crushed Vashon’s spirit and rolled to a 42-7 win.

The victory, which could have been by twice the margin if CHS coach Jon Atkins hadn’t pulled back the reins, snaps a two-game losing skid for the Wolves.

Now 3-2 overall (they’ve already matched last year’s win total) and 1-1 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, they sit just a game out of first place.

Vashon, which has been outscored 248-21 this season, slid to 0-5, 0-2 and sits far removed from the heady days of Hoisington running amuck.

The game didn’t come without a few sour notes, as both of Coupeville’s top weapons, senior Hunter Smith and sophomore Sean Toomey-Stout, exited with injuries.

Smith, the Wolves top receiver, got twisted in three directions at once by Vashon tacklers while executing a running play and spent the second half on the sideline wearing a knit cap instead of a helmet, resting his back.

Thankfully, the early word is he is not expected to miss any future games.

The situation may be more dire for Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading rusher and tackler.

After scoring a pair of first-half touchdowns on short runs, “The Torpedo” took a bad hit to his ankle early in the third quarter. When the team packed up after the game, he limped out on crutches and headed off to the ER with his family.

It was a rough and tumble game all around, as Vashon also lost its best player, Connor Hoisington, Bryce’s younger brother.

Trying to pick up a first down on a fourth-and-two, he went up the middle and had his world exploded by Wolf senior Julian Welling, who came through the porous Vashon line like a semi truck with no brakes.

It was a clean, but lethal hit (the bang could be heard all the way up at the top of the stands) and Hoisington was down on the ground afterwards for some time.

He eventually was able to walk off the field, but, like Toomey-Stout, spent part of his evening in the suddenly-busy Vashon ER.

Welling’s blow was a prime example of how the Wolves played all night.

Jake Pease spent most of the game in the Vashon backfield, or sitting on the Pirate QB’s head, with one sack literally coming after he went airborne and pounced on his foe like a jungle cat unleashed.

Rattled by the constant pressure, Vashon’s signal caller threw the game away in less than three minutes.

Coupeville ended both of the Pirates first two possessions with interceptions which they brought back for touchdowns, taking all the air out of an already deflated home crowd.

On the game’s second offensive play, Smith jumped a route, snatched a wobbly ball and sprinted 45 yards down the left sideline for his sixth score of the year.

Not to be outdone, Cameron Toomey-Stout matched him on the next possession.

A pass over the middle hit a Vashon receiver in the pads and popped up in the air, where the silky-smooth Wolf defensive back was lurking.

Snagging the deflection in traffic, Camtastic skipped, whirled and twirled like a ballet dancer, avoiding five would-be tacklers on his way to pay-dirt some 40 yards away.

About the only thing going Vashon’s way was Coupeville’s surprising inability to hit on either of its first two PAT attempts, as the first one went low and the second one clanged off the scoreboard.

If the Pirates were holding out any kind of hope based on that quirk, they weren’t thinking straight, however.

When the ball finally went into the hands of Wolf QB Hunter Downes, the first quarter was almost played out, so the senior gunslinger moved quickly.

After softening the Vashon defense with a pair of passes to Smith, he rolled to his right and lofted a buttery 27-yard TD strike which dropped with a pleasing plop into Cameron Toomey-Stout’s hands as he lurked in the right corner of the end zone.

This time, CHS mixed things up, going for and converting the two-point conversion on a Smith run.

Up 20-0, the Wolves almost added more in the first quarter, and it came from a somewhat surprising source.

Senior lineman Kyle Rockwell (remember the name, cause you’ll hear it again in a sec), playing in only his second game, batted a Vashon pass into the air and came 99.4% within capturing his own pick-six.

While the ball was in the air, it pinged off of at least six of Rockwell’s body parts before falling just out of his grasp, causing his teammates on the sideline to lose their collective mind cheering for the hard-working, well-liked role player.

Worry not, Wolf fans, because while he might not have gotten the year’s most surprising interception, he returned to get the season’s first blocked punt.

With Vashon pinned deep in its own territory, the Pirate punter took the snap, swung his foot and then screamed like a little girl as Rockwell roared up the middle, punching the kick out of mid-air.

Emerging from behind his rampaging teammate like a heat-seeking missile, Wolf junior Teo Keilwitz followed the bouncing ball and landed on it in the end zone for yet another CHS touchdown.

Toss in two TD runs for Sean Toomey-Stout (one set up by a sweet 14-yard catch under heavy duress from Jake Hoagland) and Coupeville carried a 42-0 lead into the halftime locker room.

If you’re saying, but wait, I’ve been counting points throughout the story and it appears the Wolves picked up an extra one, good eye, and you’re right.

Matt Hilborn crushed PAT kicks on two of the three second-quarter TD’s, while on the final one, the Vashon line got in too quickly for him to have a chance.

Thinking quickly on his feet, holder Shane Losey pulled the ball up and lobbed a flawless spiral over the defense to Sean Toomey-Stout for a two-point conversion.

With the game thoroughly out of hand, and a running clock used in the second half, Coupeville’s coaching staff had a chance to try out some different wrinkles.

Dawson Houston subbed in for Downes at QB in the fourth and, with Sean Toomey-Stout out, the rushing load was handed to sophomore Andrew Martin.

He slammed through the line for several tough-guy gains, then broke through and went down the left side for the Wolves longest run of the night, a 28-yard bolt to daylight.

It was his “KFC run,” cause Martin, possibly the world’s biggest fan of the fast food establishment, was churning like a man who’s been told a free lifetime supply of chicken tenders has been hidden in the end zone.

Read Full Post »

   CHS sophomore Jean Lund-Olsen got his first varsity rushing attempt Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The charts are starting to expand.

Week two of the high school football season brought a 40-6 romp over La Conner, and, with it, several new names popped up on the Coupeville High School stat sheet.

From Jean Lund-Olsen, who had his first varsity carry (he sprinted around the right side for three yards) to Tyler McCalmont, who recorded his first three tackles of the season, the list grows.

The biggest jumper was Cameron Toomey-Stout, who hauled in 108 yards as a receiver Friday while scoring three touchdowns, two off of passes from Hunter Downes and one on a 70-yard kickoff return.

Where we stand after week two, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps:

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 23-41 for 456 yards (#1 in 1A, #6 in the state) with 6 TDs and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 10 receptions for 230 yards (#2 in 1A, #5 in the state)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 8-116 (#3 in 1A)
Sean Toomey-Stout 2-65 (#10 in 1A)
Matt Hilborn 2-39
Shane Losey 1-6

Rushing:

S. Toomey-Stout 14 carries for 105 yards (#7 in 1A)
Chris Battaglia 12-61
Hilborn 14-10
Smith 2-5
Jean Lund-Olsen 1-3
Downes 9 (-27)

All-Purpose Yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 332
C. Toomey-Stout 228
S. Toomey-Stout 190
Battaglia 61
Hilborn 49
Losey 6
Lund-Olsen 3

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 429 (#2 in 1A)
Smith 235 (#7 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout 170 (#10 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout 116
Battaglia 61
Hilborn 49
Losey 6
Lund-Olsen 3

Touchdowns:

Smith 4 (#2 in 1A, #6 in the state)
C. Toomey-Stout 3 (#4 in 1A)
Hilborn 1
S. Toomey-Stout 1

PATs:

Hilborn 4 (#2 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 24 (#2 in 1A, #6 in the state)
C. Toomey-Stout
18 (#4 in 1A)
Hilborn
10 (#9 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout
6

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

S. Toomey-Stout 26 (#2 in 1A, #4 in the state)
Battaglia 19 (#5 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout 16 (#7 in 1A)
Julian Welling 13
Hilborn 12
Dane Lucero
12
Jake Pease
12
Losey
11
Smith
8
Jake Hoagland 7
James Vidoni
7
Trevor Bell 3
Tyler McCalmont 3
Andrew Martin 2
Teo Keilwitz 1
Gavin Knoblich 1

Tackles for Loss:

Lucero 2
Vidoni 2
Hoagland 1
McCalmont 1
Pease 1

Interceptions:

C. Toomey-Stout 2 (#1 in 1A, #3 in the state)
Smith
1 (tied for #2 in 1A)

Fumble recoveries:

Pease 2
Hoagland 1
Welling 1

Sacks:

Losey 1.5 (#9 in 1A)
Lucero 1.5 (#9 in 1A)
Battaglia 1
Pease 1

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Kickoffs:

Hilborn 11 for 273 yards (#2 in 1A)

Punts:

Downes 3 for 69 yards

Kickoff/Punt returns:

C. Toomey-Stout 2 for 82 yards (#3 in 1A)
S. Toomey-Stout 1-20
Smith 1-5

Read Full Post »

   Jake Pease had a key fumble recovery and knocked down several passes Friday as Coupeville crushed La Conner 40-6. (John Fisken photo)

   After scoring three touchdowns, Cameron Toomey-Stout was carried off the field by fellow senior Jake Hoagland. (Jim Hoagland photo)

What a difference a year makes.

A lot of the faces may have changed on both sides of the ball, but Coupeville remembered.

Striking with a cold fury from the very first play, literally, the Wolves reclaimed gridiron dominance from old-school rival La Conner Friday, thrashing the visiting Braves 40-6 to earn sweet payback for being on the opposite side of a rout last season.

This time around, Coupeville scored four different ways (pass, run, kickoff return and pick-six) and reignited memories of the days when it was known as the Big Red Machine.

With the beat-down of La Conner coming on the heels of an emotional win over South Whidbey, the Wolves are 2-0 for the first time since 2009.

That was the final year of Ron Bagby’s three-decade run at the helm of the CHS program, and current coach Jon Atkins becomes the first of his four successors to match the ol’ ball coach.

“That was fun!,” Atkins said as players and fans celebrated in a teeming mob off to the side.

“The whole team played really well, and our defense was spectacular,” he added. “We challenged them to improve on (giving up) 30 points a game (last year), and they are stepping up.”

Coupeville will get a big test next week, when it travels to Nooksack Valley for its final non-conference game.

The Pioneers are also 2-0 after beating Blaine and Granite Falls, and they feature one of the best QB’s in 1A in Montana State recruit Casey Bauman.

“Nooksack is a really good team, and that will give us a good measuring stick,” Atkins said. “I think we’re a good team, too, so we’re really looking forward to that.”

For the moment, though, the Wolves can bask in the afterglow of one of their most impressive wins in recent memory.

A victory which was all but assured in the first 13 seconds of the game.

That’s all it took for Coupeville to go nuclear on La Conner, as human highlight machine Cameron Toomey-Stout hauled in the opening kickoff, then dodged, darted and danced 70+ yards to the opposite end zone.

The silky senior, who had a game for the ages (you’ll hear his name again in this story, many times) sliced through the Brave defense with ease on the play.

He bounced off one would-be tackler, knocked another on his tush, lost a third with a ballet-style twirl, then gunned it like a madman, leaving everyone, even his own blockers, to watch his #11 vanish into the horizon.

The crowd was barely settled into the (limited) seating, announcer Willie Smith was just clearing his vocal cords and the rout was on.

Not taking the foot off the gas pedal, Coupeville added two more touchdowns in the first quarter to thoroughly deflate La Conner.

After big gains from Chris Battaglia (a 19-yard bull run) and Sean Toomey-Stout (an 11-yard sprint to the outside) softened up the Brave defense on the Wolves next possession, Cameron Toomey-Stout popped back in to blow things up.

Wolf QB Hunter Downes lofted a gorgeous ball into the furthest part of the right corner of the end zone, where CTS laid out, pulled the ball in, and somehow, against all the laws of physics, managed to keep both feet in-bounds while being assaulted by a defender.

That it turned out to be only the second-best catch of the game from Cameron tells you how out of his mind he was on this night.

La Conner’s only saving grace at this point was Coupeville’s early inability to convert after the touchdown (a blocked PAT and a failed conversion run left the score at 12-0).

Putting together their only sustained drive of the night against a hyped-up Wolf defense, the Braves marched down field, and looked, for a moment, like they might have a fighting chance.

Then that chance ended. Violently.

On one play, CHS senior lineman Julian Welling blew up a Brave runner with such stunning ferocity that Wolf fans didn’t know whether to cheer or inquire about his next of kin.

A moment later, Hunter Smith drove the final stake through La Conner’s barely-beating heart.

Facing a second and two from Coupeville’s eight-yard line, the Braves, for reasons known only to themselves, decided it would be an ideal time to have their freshman quarterback try to slip a pass past Smith.

It was a bad decision.

A really, really bad decision, the kind which haunts coaches sweat-encrusted dreams for years.

Smith, who is capping one of the great football careers in Cow Town’s history, picked him clean and was off to the races, taking back a pick-six 90+ yards.

On the La Conner sideline, an offensive coordinator headed off the field, preferring to walk home rather than have to explain his thought process.

On the Coupeville sideline, however, it was bedlam, as players pummeled each other and electricity crackled through everyone sporting red and black.

And it just got better from there.

The Wolves tacked on another touchdown in the second quarter, on a 12-yard pass from Downes to Smith, and should have had another on a pick-six from Sean Toomey-Stout with just 15 seconds to play in the first half.

A questionable holding call erased that score, sort of the ref’s way of whispering to the Wolves, “Please, stop hurting them!!”

It was a first half for Coupeville in which everything seemed to go right.

One moment Cameron Toomey-Stout (remember him?) was hauling in a sensational 26-yard snag on a third-and-23.

“Go, Go, Gadget!!,” screamed Willie Smith as CTS made his arms stretch out to three times their normal length.

The next moment, it was Jake Pease, with a head of steam, shedding blockers, slamming into the Brave QB, forcing the ball to pop loose, then having the presence of mind to do The Worm and launch forward, recovering the fumble.

Frankly, La Conner could have packed up its gear at halftime and gone home early. Nothing was going to change.

But, both teams returned to the field, and after giving up their first, and, so far, only points of the season on the second half’s first possession, Coupeville closed the game out like a boss.

Matt Hilborn plunged in from one-yard out to counter La Conner’s score (the drive was triggered by a 39-yard pass from Downes to Cameron Toomey-Stout), then Coupeville closed the game with a final dagger.

It came on a 10-yard heave into the right corner of the end zone, Downes third TD strike of the night. That gives him six on the season and 24 for his career.

His target? You might have heard of him … guy with the initials CTS.

With the game a romp, Coupeville got a chance to give their young guys work, with Dawson Houston replacing Downes at QB in the latter stages, and Jean Lund-Olsen ripping off a nice run on a carry to the right side.

Defensively, the Wolves never stopped coming, as Dane Lucero shredded the La Conner QB’s last nerve, whipping him to the ground on a fourth-down sack.

James Vidoni also laid some wood on a runner and Shane Losey erupted through the line for another sack.

Read Full Post »

Sophomore lineman Matt Stevens is one of ?? Wolf football players to letter this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Sophomore lineman Matt Stevens is one of 34 Wolf football players to letter this season. (John Fisken photos)

Freshmen Dawson Houston (left) and Andrew Martin are part of a young group on its way up.

   Freshmen Dawson Houston (left) and Andrew Martin are part of a young group on its way up.

Cameron Toomey-Stout

   Cameron Toomey-Stout piled up numbers on both sides of the ball during his junior campaign.

Hunter Smith broke school records left and right this season, and Wednesday night his coaches and teammates hailed him for his work.

Smith, who snapped school single-season records for receiving yards (916) and receiving touchdowns (11), was named Offensive MVP as Coupeville officially closed out its first football season under head coach Jon Atkins.

Uriel Liquidano was tabbed Defensive MVP, Clay Reilly (and his super-powered kicking leg) made off with Special Teams MVP and Julian Welling was named Most Valuable Lineman.

Jacob Martin capped the honors, taking home the Wolf Award.

He, Reilly, Liquidano, Welling and quarterback Hunter Downes were also hailed for their work as captains.

The 1A Olympic League hasn’t announced All-Conference picks yet.

To earn a letter, Wolf players had to be on the field for at least one varsity play during the season and end the year in good standing.

Letter winners:

Chris Battaglia
Trevor Bell
Luke Carlson
Hunter Downes
Tucker Hall
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Dawson Houston
Teo Keilwitz
Gavin Knoblich
Ryan Labrador
Uriel Liquidano
Shane Losey
Dane Lucero
Spencer Machen
Andrew Martin
Jacob Martin
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim
Axel Partida
Jonathan Partida
Jake Pease
Clay Reilly
Josh Robinson
Matthew Shreffner
Hunter Smith
Matt Stevens
Gavin Straub
Jonathan Thurston
Cameron Toomey-Stout
Sean Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni
Julian Welling
Ulrik Wells
Jacob Zettle
BayLee Dunsmore
(manager)

Read Full Post »

Matt Hilborn

   Matt Hilborn has the ball in his sights, but a BC defender arrives at the same time. (John Fisken photos)

The ball is jarred skyward.

The ball is jarred skyward.

Fly...

Fly…

Fly...

Fly…

Fly away.

Fly away.

But wait...

But wait…

The man...

The man…

The myth...

The myth…

The legend...

The legend…

Cameron Toomey-Stout is here to save the day.

Cameron Toomey-Stout is here to save the day.

"And I'm outta here." A broken play, a huge bounce, an alert player and a 67-yard reception.

   “And I’m outta here.” A broken play, a huge bounce, an alert player and a 67-yard reception.

It was the play of the year.

Seen here for the first time in all its flip-book glory, thanks to John Fisken, is a wild series of events that somehow, against all odds, worked 100% in favor of the Coupeville High School football squad.

Playing on the road against Bellevue Christian in an extremely tight game, with a 100-year storm supposedly on its way (spoiler: it wasn’t), the Wolves needed a miracle.

And they got it.

With quarterback Hunter Downes sent to the bench for a play by an over-zealous ref, Hunter Smith took the snap and fired a pass to Matt Hilborn.

The BC defender and the ball arrived at the same time, causing the football to kick upwards, seemingly a lost opportunity for the Wolves.

Except … Cameron Toomey-Stout, tracking the play the whole way, appeared out of nowhere to snatch the ball in mid-air, then turned it into a 67-yard dash to daylight that dropped jaws throughout the stadium.

In a season that saw records broken and The Bucket come back to Cow Town after Coupeville mashed arch-rival South Whidbey, the Smith-to-Hilborn-to-ToomeyStout miracle stands tall.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »