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Posts Tagged ‘Maya Toomey-Stout’

Lindsey Roberts (right), seen here during basketball season, won her first three track races Wednesday. (John Fisken)

   Lindsey Roberts (right), seen here with mom Sherry during basketball season, won her first three track races Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

Lindsey Roberts is the new Makana Stone.

Setting her track season off with a bang, the Coupeville Middle School eighth grader won all three of her solo events Wednesday at a season-opening four-team meet in Shoreline.

Shredding her opponents just like Stone, who has set school records left and right for the Wolves in three seasons of high school track, Roberts won the 200, 1600 and 100 hurdles.

She accounted for three of Coupeville’s seven wins on the day, with fellow eighth graders Danny Conlisk (1600) and Gabe Eck (long jump) joining her at the top of the charts.

The CMS seventh graders were led by Maya Toomey-Stout (100 hurdles) and the 4 x 200 relay squad (Jillian Mayne, Anna Dion, Oliana Stange, Megan Thorn), who also recorded wins.

Host King’s won the eighth grade boys’ team battle, while Lakewood captured the seventh grade boys title and swept both girls competitions.

Complete Coupeville results:

 

GIRLS (8th grade):

100 — Jasmine Nastali (5th) 14.97

200 — Lindsey Roberts (1st) 29.02; Ashlie Shank (3rd) 32.19

1600 — Roberts (1st) 6:26.86

100 Hurdles — Roberts (1st) 19.03

Shot Put — Emma Smith (3rd) 21-00; Nicole Laxton (8th) 18-11

Discus — Smith (8th) 49-10; Laxton (14th) 38-11

Long Jump — Nastali (3rd) 11-04; Laxton (16th) 8-10.25

 

GIRLS (7th grade):

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (3rd) 14.58; Ja’Tarya Hoskins (5th) 14.75; Mallory Korteum (6th) 15.07; Cassidy Moody (8th) 15.16; Avalon Renninger (12th) 15.88; Tia Wurzrainer (17th) 16.43; Ashleigh Battaglia (20th) 17.20

200 — Korteum (3rd) 31.64; Moody (4th) 31.84; Renninger (6th) 32.87; Wurzrainer (9th) 34.69; Jillian Mayne (11th) 37.46

400 — Oliana Stange (3rd) 1:18.63

800 — Anna Dion (6th) 3:24.71

100 Hurdles — Toomey-Stout (1st) 20.89; Megan Thorn (14th) 22.77

4 x 100 Relay — Kortuem, Renninger, Wurzrainer, Toomey-Stout (3rd) 1:00.33

4 x 200 Relay — Mayne, Dion, Stange, Thorn (1st) 2:40.67

Shot Put — Stange (3rd) 21-02; Battaglia (7th) 18-02.50

High Jump — Hoskins (2nd) 3-10; Thorn (6th) 3-08

Long Jump — Dion (17th) 8-08.75

 

BOYS (8th grade):

100 — Gabe Eck (3rd) 12.88;  Danny Conlisk (5th) 13.34; Teo Keilwitz (8th) 13.75; Kyle Burnett (16th) 14.31; Seth David (18th) 15.96; Dawson Sorrows (19th) 16.10

200 — Eck (2nd) 26.47; Conlisk (3rd) 26.76; Keilwitz (7th) 29.22

400 — Jakobi Baumann (3rd) 1:16.54

1600 — Conlisk (1st) 5:26.98

110 Hurdles — Burnett (3rd) 20.68

4 x 100 Relay — Burnett, Uriah Kastner, David, Keilwitz (4th) 57.84

Shot Put — Chris Battaglia (2nd) 33-08; Sorrows (13th) 26-07, Baumann (17th) 21-08

Discus — Battaglia (2nd) 108-00; Sorrows (14th) 66-09; Baumann (18th) 57-09

High Jump — Kastner (7th) 4-02

Long Jump — Eck (1st) 16-05; Burnett (6th) 13-03; David (11th) 11-11

 

BOYS (7th grade):

100 — Sean Toomey-Stout (6th) 14.78; Jaylen Nitta (8th) 15.18; Gabe Carlson (14th) 15.65; Dawson Houston (18th) 17.53

200 — Nitta (7th) 33.54; Tucker Hall (9th) 34.90

400 — Thane Peterson (4th) 1:14.68; Nitta (6th) 1:15.93

800 — Robert Roper (9th) 3:57.09

1600 — Hall (2nd) 6:11.78

110 Hurdles — Houston (15th) 28.41

4 x 100 relay — No names listed (4th) 59.17

Discus — Peterson (3rd) 65-11; Mason Testroet (4th) 65-00

High Jump — Testroet (8th) 4-00

Long Jump — Toomey-Stout (3rd) 14-06.25; Testroet (6th) 12-06.00

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"Are you ready to stop my shake 'n bake move? No, no I don't think you are!!" (John Fisken photos)

   “Are you ready to stop my shake ‘n bake move? No … no, I don’t think you are!!” (John Fisken photos)

Maya Toomey-Stout (3) pushes the fast break, with Scout Smith coming up on the outside.

 Maya Toomey-Stout (3) pushes the fast break, with Scout Smith coming up on the outside.

Oliana Stange channels Larry Bird.

Oliana Stange, born to make it rain (buckets).

Ema Smith

Ema Smith only needs one healthy hand to beat you.

Lindsey

Lindsey Roberts, laying claim to the gym mom Sherry once ruled in olden days.

The Turks got tamed.

Sultan invaded Whidbey Island Wednesday and ended up suffering a pair of losses at the hands of Coupeville before their middle school girls’ basketball teams could get back to the safety of the bus.

“Girls played great! 8th grade varsity won, 7th grade varsity won and JV lost by a few,” said CMS coach Brett Smedley.

The most dominant performance of the afternoon came from the Wolf 8th grade varsity, which held Sultan scoreless for the first 11 minutes of the game, rolling out to a 13-0 lead.

Hanging around the gym, camera in hand, to document the goings on was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who provides the pics above.

To see more of his work, pop over to:

8th grade varsity — http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf35d4177aa8

7th grade varsity — http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf35d416efdf

JV — http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf35d4157aaa

And remember, a percentage of all purchases goes to help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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zoe

   If this picture is any indication, Zoe Trujillo will be just as feisty on the court as older sister Valen. Which was very, very feisty. (John Fisken photos)

Oliana

Oliana Stange dreams of breakin’ ankles and takin’ names.

Tia

Tia Wurzrainer (left) and Maya Toomey-Stout work on their ball-handling skills.

Ema

   “Me! I want the ball, coach!! Give me the rock!!” Ema Smith, stone-cold hoops assassin.

girls

“Dribbling drills all day long? I want to start bustin’ some heads, coach!!”

Kalia

   Try and touch her basketball and Kalia Littlejohn pledges to let you taste the fury of her elbow.

Maya

Heart of a champion.

The future is fine-tuning its skills set.

With the start of a new Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball season less than two weeks away, the Wolves are hard at work.

Dribbling drills, rebound work, learning to pose for the camera man — all in a day’s work.

Wandering through the gym before heading across the hallway to snap high school action, John Fisken caught the next generation of hoops stars hard at work.

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