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Posts Tagged ‘Maya Toomey-Stout’

Maya Toomey-Stout finds a creative use for her complimentary pom-pom. (John Fisken photos)

   Maya Toomey-Stout finds a creative use for her complimentary pom-pom. (John Fisken photos)

Payton Aparicio

   Payton Aparicio had a huge night, helping lead the Wolves to a straight-sets victory over their big school rivals.

Julian Welling

Gridiron god Julian Welling is pleased.

bench

   Ally Roberts (4) and Sarah Wright (16) yuk it up on the bench with coaches Kristin Bridges and Cory Whitmore.

Ashley Menges

Ashley Menges fires off another ace.

student section

   The student section gets rowdy (within strict guidelines, so as not to upset the Fun Police too much).

Cory Whitmore

   Whitmore either passes on sage wisdom to Peytin Vondrak, or is about to send her to the snack bar with his order.

Lucy and Maddy

   Lucy Sandahl (left) and Maddy Hilkey enjoy watching their fellow spikers deliver a butt-whuppin’.

The stands were crammed and the action was hopping.

With the Coupeville High School Booster Club passing out all sorts of free doodads, the fans at Thursday night’s volleyball match had plenty of things to shake.

And with the Wolves utterly destroying 2A Port Angeles on the court, they had plenty to scream about.

Capturing both worlds was your friendly neighborhood paparazzi, John Fisken, who delivers unto us the photos seen above.

To view all of his shots (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/VB-20161006-Coupeville-vs-Pt-A/

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Birthday duo Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout. (John Fisken photos)

Birthday duo Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout. (John Fisken photos)

They are the titanic twosome, the dazzling duo, the Wonder Twins, The Gazelle and The Torpedo.

When Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout popped into the world 15 years ago today, they heralded a new age in Wolf sports, even if no one realized it at the time.

It’s all paying off now, here in the present, as the Coupeville High School freshmen continue to impact virtually every sports team in town, something they first started doing back in their middle school days.

Where to begin with this duo, who are following in the electric, well-dressed footsteps of older brother Cameron?

Whatever we say, we need to do it quickly, as Maya and Sean are all about the speed.

Hence the nicknames (whether they want them or not).

Maya (aka The Gazelle) stealing second base on a softball diamond is a no-brainer, as she accelerates so quickly she’s generally wiping infield dirt off her pants before the rival catcher even comes up out of her crouch.

Sean (aka The Torpedo) flies down the football field like a mad man unleashed when playing on special teams, exploding into the returner’s chest a nanosecond after they’ve hauled in the kick.

Where some runners always look they’re straining, the Toomey-Stout twins generally look like they’re gliding, slicing by Flash-style while everyone else is caught in a vat of molasses.

And it’s not just speed for them.

Pick a sport and they are naturals, whether it be volleyball, basketball, softball, football, track or anything else you might be interested in having your rear tattooed in today.

Of course, sports are but a small (but important) part of their family’s lives.

Moms Lisa Toomey and Beth Stout have raised three hyper-intelligent, extremely friendly children who bring hard work, dedication and humility to everything they do.

They are the poster children for a family doing things the right way, and it’s a treat to have the Toomey-Stout clan reside in our town.

So happy birthday, twins, and get ready, because I’m going to spend the next four years gushing about you to the world.

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JV players listen intently to Wolf coach David King during a timeout. (Amy King photos)

  JV players listen intently to Wolf coach David King during a timeout. (Amy King photos)

Shark Bait

Each group of players have marked their room this week.

team

Still standing (even if some of them are sitting).

crossword

   Senior Kailey Kellner (left) leads her group as they work on a basketball crossword during a team competition.

Big, Bad Wolves

The Big, Bad Wolves get extra credit for their animal-drawing skills.

outside

King takes his pep talk outside, proving the sun still shines outside the gym.

t-shirt

The team’s extremely snazzy camp t-shirt.

Pray for David King.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach is down in Ocean Shores for four days, one lone man adrift in a sea of 20 women.

Wife/assistant coach/team photographer Amy King and 19 Wolf hoops stars are his companions, as Coupeville takes part in their annual summer hoops camp.

Long hours are the norm, with Coupeville playing between 16-18 games this year.

Having an unusually large number of players making the commitment this time, the surging Wolves, two-time defending 1A Olympic League champs, are fielding both a varsity and JV squad.

Each team opened with two games Monday, another three Tuesday, play twice Wednesday (with some time set aside to hit the beach) and then close Thursday with at least one and possibly two more games.

With tons of teams in play, the earliest start time has been 7 AM, and the latest midnight, though (so far) the Wolves have not gone earlier than 8 AM or later than 10 PM.

Toss in injuries — two CHS players have gone down, one after having her head landed on, another with a tweaked finger, though both were able to return later — and the coaches are busy bees.

“It’s long days,” said David King,who plans to sleep for a month upon returning home. “Other than that, we are all surviving.”

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Maya Toomey-Stout (John Fisken photos)

   Maya Toomey-Stout helps direct the attack during her middle school volleyball days. (John Fisken photos)

Toomey-Stout waits for her pitch, mere seconds away from unleashing her gazelle-like speed.

   Toomey-Stout waits for her pitch, mere seconds away from unleashing her gazelle-like speed.

It’s an honor.

That’s how Maya Toomey-Stout feels about being an athlete.

A quicksilver speed demon, she excels at numerous sports, be it volleyball, basketball, softball or track, using her gazelle-like speed and smarts to blend her skills with her teammates.

Toomey-Stout, who will join twin brother Sean as CHS freshmen in the fall, plays with a smile and it’s genuine.

“I don’t really have a favorite sport because all are different and very fun each in their own way,” she said. “I enjoy a lot of things about being an athlete.

“Even the title is an honor,” Toomey-Stout added. “Being an athlete means that you push yourself, create challenges, and are also able to keep your grades up.

“I honestly don’t know what I would do without sports.”

This spring, she was one of the leaders on a Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad which rolled to a 13-3 record.

Setting the table for the Venom, she was an aggressive lead-off hitter, spraying the ball, then using her speed to create havoc.

On a team which ran their foes into the ground, she was the premier base thief, often zipping into second before the opposing catcher could even get out of her crouch, much less make a throw.

“I love to run,” Toomey-Stout said. “And I think that running will help you in almost every sport.”

Not content to rely merely on her speed, she’s intent on fine-tuning all the aspects of her skill set.

In fact, as this article appears, Toomey-Stout is down in Ocean Shores with other Wolf girls hoops players at a summer camp, putting in work as a team.

“Areas that I would like to work on more aren’t really things I have been working on,” she said. “In volleyball, I want to improve in hitting/spiking the ball and in basketball I want to improve on shooting.”

A strong student who enjoys math (“it’s my strongest core subject”) and gym, Toomey-Stout wants to be a true student/athlete, and not just a jock.

“With all the sports I’m doing, I have a goal to keep concentrated in my studies and to keep my grades up,” she said.

Whether in school, competing in the arena or just hanging out with family and friends, Toomey-Stout has a large circle of supporters she can turn to for advice, help or just a reliably boisterous cheering section.

“There are so many people that I look up to,” she said. “My moms (Lisa Toomey and Beth Stout) have always told me to keep working hard and to never give up.

“My brothers (Sean and Cameron) don’t really tell me anything, but I push myself to be a great athlete like they are.”

Regardless of the sport, Toomey-Stout is part of an especially strong wave of younger female athletes in Coupeville right now, and the band of sisters looks out for one another.

“With my friends, not all of them are in my grade, but they always support me,” she said. “They always give the best pep talks, and they make me laugh even if I am crazy nervous before games.”

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Emma Mathusek (John Fisken photos)

Emma Mathusek contemplates the state of the universe. (John Fisken photos)

Willow Vick

Bat at the ready, Willow Vick gets ready to launch the ball across the prairie.

Melia Welling

Melia Welling pities the fool who has to get a strike past her explosive bat.

Emma

Mathusek comes in hot.

shirt

Assistant coach Ema Smith sports a t-shirt signed by all the Venom players.

Charlotte

Venom softball guru Charlotte Young imparts sage wisdom to Vick.

Marenna

Marenna Rebischke-Smith hangs out in the high dandelions.

Maya Toomey-Stout

   Maya Toomey-Stout, AKA “The Gazelle,” prepares to unleash her blazing speed on an unsuspecting world.

For a team which was only pulled together at the very last moment, the Venom did pretty dang good.

By the time the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad was done thumping people, it finished 13-3 and won a league title.

Along for the ride Thursday night during the season finale was wanderin’ photo man John Fisken, who clicked the pics above.

While not showing all 10 Venom players, they do give you a great sneak peak at some of the sluggers who should go on to star for CHS in the coming years.

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