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Posts Tagged ‘Sean Toomey-Stout’

Matt Stevens and the Coupeville defense stood tall Friday, as the Wolves came dangerously close to toppling King’s in a gridiron thriller. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Do not go gentle into that good night … especially if a deer is leading the way.

Throwing the fear of God into the Christian school boys, the Coupeville High School football squad came within a play or two of pulling off one of the great comeback wins of all time Friday, before running out of time in a 20-14 loss to visiting King’s.

The Wolves almost made it all the way back from a 20-0 fourth-quarter deficit, scoring two late touchdowns, one with a major assist from a hoofed mammal who wandered onto the gridiron in search of an apple, then ended up possibly dropping road apples as the lead blocker on a 95-yard TD run.

The narrow loss, coming in the North Sound Conference opener for both teams, drops the Wolves to 0-1 in league play, 3-2 coverall.

King’s (1-0, 1-4), Cedar Park Christian (1-0, 3-1) and South Whidbey (1-0, 4-1) are tied for the early conference lead, while CHS, Sultan (0-1, 1-4) and Granite Falls (0-1, 0-5) sit a game back.

South Whidbey nipped Sultan 21-20 on a Kody Newman Hail Mary pass in overtime Friday, while CPC held off Granite 20-8.

The battle in Cow Town belonged to the visiting Knights for three quarters, as senior running back Josiah Seirs slammed across the line for a TD run in each quarter.

Other than a clanked PAT after the second score, King’s was in control, giving up a fair amount of yards to the Wolves, but bending and not breaking.

And then the deer appeared and everything went all to holy heck.

It came on the very first play of the fourth quarter, as Sean Toomey-Stout waited to receive a kickoff from the Knights, who had scored with a second on the clock in the third frame.

As “The Torpedo” bounced in place, the ball went airborne, then it plunged from the sky, right as our deer hero, who’ll we call Jebediah, came bounding from behind the soccer goal in the far end zone.

The football hit Toomey-Stout in the fingers, skipping away. The crowd wailed.

And Jebediah the deer, doing his best Arnie, screamed “Come with me if you want to live!!” and headed up the right side of the field on a dead run.

Circling back to snatch the ball off the turf at about the four-and-a-half yard line, Toomey-Stout sprinted from left to right, as Jebediah almost creamed the King’s kicker at mid-field.

Shedding one would-be tackler, and then another, and then two more, “The Torpedo,” under a full head of steam now, whipped down the same path carved out by the deer, almost catching his unexpected lead blocker.

As Toomey-Stout roared into the end zone, the crammed CHS stands rocked so enthusiastically the sound system in the press box bounced two inches off the counter it sits on.

Meanwhile, PA announcer Willie Smith, stopping in mid-chomp on a mini candy bar, dropped a perfectly-timed (and probably not fully-appreciated) “Oh, deer!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

And Jebediah?

He stopped for a moment right outside the end zone in which the Wolves were now pummeling Toomey-Stout, then leaned in and whispered to a CHS coach, “I’ll see you guys next week. Just leave the apples in the usual place.”

With Wolf soccer star turned football kicker Derek Leyva hammering the PAT kick high into the night sky to cap the play, a potential blowout was suddenly transformed.

And Coupeville responded.

Leyva pinned King’s deep on its side of the field with his kickoff, before the Wolf defense forced a three-and-out to get the ball back.

With the ball in his hands, Coupeville QB Dawson Houston led his team downfield, mixing a couple of quick swing passes with a couple of power runs from Toomey-Stout.

Facing third-and-goal from the 10, Houston dodged the incoming pressure, stood tall and pegged a pass through the heart of the defense to Gavin Knoblich, who made a sensational jumping catch to bring his squad back within a single score.

After Levya tacked on another extra point, he mashed a long, slicing kick-off, giving Matt Hilborn time to haul butt down-field and level the returner as he made his first tentative step.

Pinned deep in their own territory once again, King’s went to a pass play on third-and-six, but Wolf senior Alex Turner snapped off the receiver’s head, hauling him down well short of the marker and forcing a punt.

Five minutes on the clock, the ball in their hands, and their still-new stadium shaking like Candlestick Park during the earthquake that rocked the ’89 World Series, the impossible seemed possible.

A comeback for the ages, against one of the private school boogeymen that made life miserable for Coupeville back in the day.

It was there, and then it wasn’t, as not every prayer gets answered.

Houston hit Knoblich on another pass play, but a pair of sacks pushed the Wolves back and CHS couldn’t pull off a big play on fourth down, despite a little razzle dazzle with Houston lobbing the ball to Dane Lucero, who then fired an incomplete pass downfield.

King’s needed two first downs to run out the final three-minutes plus, and they got them, barely, with Seirs plunging through the line to convert on a fourth-and-five to cap things.

Through the first three quarters, Coupeville moved the ball well, with Toomey-Stout and Hilborn making for a very-effective one-two rushing attack.

But an interception, a missed field goal and a reffing brain fart, on which the guys in stripes ignored blatant interference by King’s on a punt, kept the Wolves from getting the ball into the end zone through the first 36 minutes of action.

While Seirs rambled in for his scores, the Wolf defense was electric most of the night, with Turner, Lucero, Matt Stevens, Andrew Martin, Gavin St Onge, Ryan Labrador, Chris Battaglia and Co. keeping the Knights largely bottled up.

Hilborn stuffed a King’s drive at the very last moment, stripping the ball and recovering the fumble inside Coupeville’s 10-yard line, while Shane Losey and Knoblich teamed up on the most thrilling play not involving a deer.

That came mid-way through the third period, when Losey, defending a pass, clipped the ball with one hand, popped it skyward, then juggled it from hand to hand (all while still in motion) before bumping it in the direction of Knoblich.

Spearing the gift out of the air, the Wolf junior pulled in the interception as he, Losey and the King’s receiver all went to the turf in a pile.

While he wanted a true win, and not just a moral victory, Coupeville coach Marcus Carr was still pleased with the never-say-die attitude shown by his team.

“It was an outstanding effort by our guys,” he said. “It’s a process and we want to keep improving, which is what we’re doing.

“The fight is there, we just need to tighten things up a bit on some of our drives; our running backs played hard and other than a play or two, our defense played outstanding – I’m amped at that,” Carr added. “I’m as happy as I could possibly be after losing a game.”

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Coupeville freshman Brian Casey has recorded four tackles for a high-flying 3-1 team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Senior Shane Losey leads the Wolves in receiving yards, and is fourth in rushing.

Stats are a tricky business.

Every team keeps them a different way, and every coach monitors them differently.

That being said, the current Coupeville High School football staff is way, way ahead of the curve compared to past regimes in many sports at the school.

After tracking down a missing clipboard or two, we have a pretty concise look at Wolf gridiron stats through the first four weeks of the season.

Now, there’s no special teams stats, and the receiving numbers don’t totally match up to the passing yardage, as five receptions worth nine yards went missing from week #3 against Friday Harbor.

But, as I’ve waded through the maze that is CHS sports history, a few missing receptions is nothing. Nothing, I say!

Other football teams, and other sports, are missing entire seasons of stats.

Other than the ’70s, when boys basketball score-book operators were on top of their game, if you played in a Wolf uniform in any sport pre-2000’s, good luck on figuring out ANY of your numbers.

So, with that, up-to-the-moment season stats for the current gridiron squad.

We’ll call them 94.7% complete, which, for this school, is pretty dang complete.

 

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Dawson Houston 23-37 for 253 yards with 2 TDs
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-1 for 20 yards

Receiving:

Shane Losey 4 receptions for 78 yards
Dane Lucero 3-56
Gavin Knoblich 4-50
Toomey-Stout 3-39
Jake Pease 3-33
Matt Hilborn 2-8

Rushing:

Toomey-Stout 72 carries for 742 yards
Hilborn 12-123
Chris Battaglia 13-63
Losey 15-55
Xavier Murdy 6-28
Gavin Straub 4-21
Andrew Martin 3-14
Alex Turner 1-(-5)
Houston 14-(-27)

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Toomey-Stout 801
Houston 226
Losey 133
Hilborn 131
Battaglia 63
Lucero 56
Knoblich 50
Pease 33
Murdy 28
Straub 21
Martin 14

Touchdowns:

Toomey-Stout 6
Battaglia 1
Hilborn 1
Houston 1
Losey 1
Pease 1

PATs:

Murdy 4

Conversions:

Knoblich 1
Pease 1

Points:

Toomey-Stout 36
Pease 8
Battaglia 6
Hilborn 6
Houston 6
Losey 6
Murdy 4
Knoblich 2

 

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

Turner 41
Toomey-Stout 32
Lucero 28
Battaglia 23
Knoblich 22
Martin 21
Ryan Labrador 
19
Losey
16
Pease 
12
Hilborn
10
Matt Stevens
9
Murdy
5
Gavin St Onge
5
Isaiah Bittner
4
Brian Casey 
4
Miles Davidson 
4
Ben Smith 
2
Houston
 1
Straub 
1

Interceptions:

Toomey-Stout 2
Hilborn 1
Martin 1

Fumble recoveries:

Knoblich 1
Labrador 1
Pease 1
Turner 1

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Freshman Xavier Murdy had three carries for 16 yards Friday as Coupeville whacked La Conner on the road. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Stats are back.

Flush from Friday night’s 33-12 romp over La Conner, Coupeville High School football coaches kicked out a spiffy stat sheet for week #4.

While I can’t deliver a concise season-to-date stat breakdown at the moment, this should tide you over for a bit.

 

Friday’s totals:

 

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Dawson Houston 8-12 for 96 yards

Receiving:

Dane Lucero 3 receptions for 56 yards
Gavin Knoblich 1-25
Matt Hilborn 2-8
Sean Toomey-Stout 2-7

Rushing:

Toomey-Stout 19 carries for 144 yards
Hilborn 9-109
Xavier Murdy 3-16
Gavin Straub 2-16
Andrew Martin 1-3
Houston 5-(-2)

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Toomey-Stout 151
Hilborn 117
Houston 94
Lucero 56
Knoblich 25
Murdy 16
Straub 16
Martin 3

Touchdowns:

Toomey-Stout 3
Hilborn 1
Houston 1

PATs:

Murdy 3

Points:

Toomey-Stout 18
Hilborn 6
Houston 6
Murdy 3

 

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

Alex Turner 16
Toomey-Stout 12
Shane Losey 7
Lucero 5
Knoblich 4
Ryan Labrador 3
Martin 3

Interceptions:

Hilborn 1

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Playing tight end for the first time this season Friday night, Dane Lucero had huge catches in a 33-12 Coupeville win at La Conner. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Freshman Xavier Murdy nailed three PATs and came within inches of scoring his first touchdown as a runner.

Matt Hilborn was a force to reckon with on both sides of the ball.

It begins with a rumble, rapidly spreading from the bottom of his shoes to the top of his electric-shocked hair.

The rumble becomes a guttural howl, and then his body begins to shimmy and shake, his head flies backwards, his arms pumping, his fists shaking as they slam into his chest.

Emerging from the haze of a rain storm, Alex Turner is dancing and behind him, sprawled on the sodden turf, another vanquished foe lies in a heap.

Often the Coupeville High School senior is celebrating one of his own back-breaking tackles, but Friday night in La Conner, he also did the full-on freak-out when teammates like Andrew Martin and Matt Hilborn were dropping hay-makers.

Every time Turner’s hips went in over-drive, the mass of Wolf fans who traveled down the highway to watch Coupeville administer a 33-12 whuppin’ on their old-school rivals, went bonkers.

Ignoring the frequent bursts of rain, the gusts of wind, and the fragrant aroma of manure wafting in off of nearby fields, Turner’s classmates, his fellow Wolf athletes, parents, alumni and random passerby grooved along with him.

“Dude’s crazy … craaaaaaaazzzzzyyyy … and I like it man,” said one former CHS coach.

And then he softly laughed and shook his head, smile spreading from cheek to cheek.

With Turner bellowing at the heavens, with QB Dawson Houston flinging the ball like a true gunslinger, dropping darts into the waiting hands of Dane Lucero and Gavin Knoblich, and with the CHS running game tearing up yardage, especially in crunch time, Coupeville headed back to the bus bearing a 3-1 record.

For a program which has won just three games in each of the last two seasons, which hasn’t posted a winning record since 2005, this is huge.

Only three Coupeville gridiron squads have started 3-1 in the last two decades.

The most recent was 2014, when the Wolves finished 5-5 behind record-busters Josh Bayne and Joel Walstad, the only non-losing record since before this year’s seniors were in kindergarten.

Now, a win next Friday at home against King’s in the North Sound Conference opener would stake the 2018 Wolves to arguably the program’s best start since the 1990 team rolled to 9-0 before losing in the state playoffs.

And while the Knights might have a gaudy history, they will come into that game a bit battered at 0-4, having been outscored 164-30 in their non-conference schedule.

But that match-up is still six days away, and as they exited La Conner Friday, the gathered forces of Wolf Nation were content to marinate in the moment.

Coupeville’s rumble in the rain, kicked off by a tremulous, ultimately soaring live vocal rendition of the national anthem, marked about the 2,000th time the former (and possibly future) league mates have clashed under Friday Night Lights.

And, to be honest, other than a win here, a win there, it’s a series the Braves have mostly dominated over the decades.

But you know what? The 2018 Wolves don’t know, and probably don’t care, what went down in say, 1977 or 1942.

In the moment, the new generation was in town merely to inflict damage.

Which was very doable, as, other than a random play here or there, like when two defenders ran into each other while trying to tackle the same La Conner receiver, letting him run wild, Coupeville was clearly the dominate team.

Even if the scoreboard took a moment or two to show it.

Despite putting together a 70-yard drive in the first quarter, with Hilborn busting off a 16-yard reception and 10-yard run wrapped around Sean Toomey-Stout zigging and zagging for his own 30-yard run to daylight, the Wolves couldn’t get the ball in the end zone.

CHS had first and goal from the eight-yard line, only to run four plays and come up virtually empty, leaving the game scoreless at the first break, while offering a stark reminder the Wolves hadn’t led at halftime in any of their previous games.

Coupeville shrugged off its scattershot opening, however, slamming home a pair of touchdown runs in the second quarter to take control of the game.

The first came on a short dash around the right side by Toomey-Stout, the second on a bolt up the middle by Hilborn.

The Wolves set up the run game by giving Houston a chance to air his arm out, and the eternally-positive signal caller sliced ‘n diced the La Conner defense.

One pass zipped over the middle, then dropped neatly onto Lucero’s fingertips, while another was a lob into the left corner which Toomey-Stout out-jumped the Braves to snag.

Mix things up with Martin dropping his shoulder and slamming into the heart of the defense for a short, but tooth-rattling and psyche-destroying run, and then Houston was back at it.

Leading Lucero down the left side, the Wolf QB spun a pretty, pretty ball through the rain drops, letting it tail off and drop like manna from heaven at the last moment.

The game was turning into a rout, until, for a time, it wasn’t.

La Conner got seriously lucky, when a short pass play blew up into a 64-yard TD, thanks to the aforementioned Wolf defenders colliding at high speed, leaving the Brave receiver to romp free.

And, while the Braves missed the PAT, they benefited from a weird call on a punt (not the first odd ref moment, and not the last) and tacked on another score late in the third quarter.

Back to within 14-12, La Conner went for the two-point conversion, and, essentially, the game ended on that very play.

The Brave ball-carrier was met head-on by almost all 11 Wolves on the field, who drove him halfway back to Whidbey, denying the tie.

Then they got really nasty.

The fourth quarter was not just a case of putting the hammer down, but instead of emptying an entire case of hammers, and then beatin’ the snot out of La Conner with a trillion blows.

Bing, bam, boom, the Wolves pounded home back-to-back-to-back TD runs, with some razzle-dazzle to open things, and some smash-mouth to close them.

The game-busting TD was a thing of precise beauty, with Houston zipping a short pass to Lucero, who spun, took a step or two, then lobbed the ball on a dime to Toomey-Stout, who was coming from behind under a full head of steam.

With “The Torpedo” lit and fired, the chase was on — though there was no chance La Conner would catch him — and Toomey-Stout (or just Stout, if you listened to the clueless PA announcer muddle through the evening) covered 60+ yards in .02 of a second.

Give or take a tenth of a second.

Big runs from Hilborn and freshman Xavier Murdy, a little more defense-softening from Martin to get a crucial first down, and strong work by unsung warriors Ben Smith and Gavin Straub, put the Braves on their heels.

“That was G-3! THAT … WAS … G-3!!!,” screamed injured Wolf Jake Pease with a huge grin as he hopped up on a bench and hollered at former teammates Hunter Downes and Kyle Rockwell in the aftermath of Straub making a kamikaze run.

Those heroics set up short scoring jaunts for Toomey-Stout and Houston, while a Hilborn pick thwarted La Conner’s last hopes.

The Wolf senior, who carries himself in a very business-like manner when on the field (even when a rival player tries, and fails, to start a fight), emerged from a pack of players and headed to the sideline, ball wedged firmly against his chest.

But if Hilborn wasn’t wailing, Turner was happy to oblige, doing the full-body shimmy and bellowing at the skies above.

Behind him, the CHS cheerleaders, soaked by the rain, but still as full of fire and joy at the end as they were at the start of a two-and-a-half hour game, danced on behind captains Melia Welling, Ashleigh Battaglia, Mica Shipley and Moira Reed.

Down the track, softball star Sarah Wright, part of a loyal, and vocal, group of Wolf athletes who followed their team to the mainland, was doing her own get-down-with-your-bad-self boogie.

And when you’re dancing like the Wolves and their fans are, every falling rain drop starts to taste like champagne.

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Coupeville lineman Ryan Labrador recovered a fumble Friday as he and his defensive mates put up a strong fight in a loss to Friday Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

For one play Friday night, everything was perfect.

Freshman kicker Xavier Murdy lofted a beautiful ball, dropping an onside kick exactly where he wanted it to be.

And that landing spot was right on the fingertips of teammate Gavin Straub, who bounded off the ground as he hurtled down the right sideline, neatly plucking the ball from the skies.

It was a single football play run to perfection.

One which sent the student section into an explosion of cheers, as chants of “G-3! G-3! G-3!” rained down on Straub as he clutched the ball to his chest with an iron grip.

If the rest of Friday night had gone in the same direction, we’d be talking about the first Coupeville High School football team to go 3-0 in a very, very long time.

But, unfortunately, we are not.

Unable to get their offense into gear, and beset by rain, (distant) lightning and a very strong Friday Harbor defense, the Wolves fell 17-0 on their home turf.

The non-league loss drops Coupeville to 2-1, with a road game at La Conner next week the final warm-up before North Sound Conference play begins Sept. 28.

Friday’s rumble pitted two running backs — Wolf junior Sean Toomey-Stout and Friday Harbor senior Emeron Geiser — who had each racked up 500+ rushing yards across their first two games.

But this game was a tale of two defenses, as neither runner was able to really break free.

While Geiser scored a pair of late touchdowns, he only ripped off a 20+ yard run once Friday night.

Toomey-Stout was bottled up even more, attacked from all sides by an aggressive Wolverine D which kept him from getting to the corners.

His biggest play came not on a run, but a pass play, as he hooked up with Dawson Houston on a 32-yard catch-and-run, in which the run part covered most of the yardage.

The two squads spent the first half exchanging body blows, playing smash-mouth football, moving the chains a bit, but suffering from slippery fingers.

A torrential downpour which hit for the first 5-10 minutes of the game, before greatly abating, helped to put a sheen on the ball, even when it was toweled down. Cue players jumping on loose balls every third play or so.

Coupeville came up with two big turnovers in the early going, with Jake Pease and Ryan Labrador recovering fumbles, but the Wolves also gave the ball back twice.

A fumble at the 17-yard line brought an abrupt end to the one and only time Coupeville got inside Friday Harbor’s 20-yard line, while a picked off pass set up the only score of the first half.

Handed the ball at Coupeville’s 16-yard line with under a minute to play in the half, the Wolverines tried to ram the ball into the end zone, only to be thwarted by a fired-up CHS defense.

Still, Friday Harbor walked away with something, netting a 25-yard field goal off the toe of sophomore Milo Geiser to carry a 3-0 lead into the half.

Coupeville, which was tied 6-6 and 0-0 headed into the third quarter of its first two games, respectively, has been a second-half team in 2018.

The magic never showed up this time, however, as the Wolves gave Murdy plenty of chances to work on his punting after the break.

While the freshman booter took advantage, nailing one for a solid 50 yards with no return, it’s hard to win a game when your punter is operating as your biggest weapon.

Coupeville’s defense kept its offense in the game for a long time, holding the score at 3-0 until Emeron Gleiser slipped away on his only semi-long run of the night, a 27-yard TD bolt up the middle.

The PAT kick sailed wide, and hope hung in the air for at least a few more ticks … then things got weird.

The game came to a screeching halt at the 3:57 mark of the third quarter when a lightning strike somewhere up around Albuquerque (or Everett, I’m bad at geography…) sent the game into a half-hour delay.

Wolf fans filled the time with a dance-off, with the song selections cued up by Ema Smith delivering one sweet bonus.

That was the reappearance of 2008 rap hit turned dance sensation “The Wobble” by V.I.C., which used to play after every Wolf football game until it was unfairly banned by an uptight former administration.

For one night, as rain drops splattered down on Mickey Clark Field and lightning sparked somewhere up around San Jose (still bad at geography…), the forbidden dance was back.

Somewhere, in a different part of the world, former Head of Mischief Brian Norris snapped to attention, pulled his vuvuzela horn from its hiding place and screamed, “I’m on my way!!!”

If only, if only…

Anyway, back in the slightly misty reality of Coupeville, circa 2018, the players were finally let back on the field, as the lightning had seemingly moved on to Caracas.

What do you mean I’m in the wrong country, now? Geography, kicking my butt since 1971…

Anyway, the Wolf defense filled the remainder of the game with inspired plays, even as the offense continued to spin its wheels.

Chris Battaglia blew up a dude five steps behind the line, Isaiah Bittner knocked the very soul out of a rival, and Alex Turner, after shedding multiple blockers, administered one tackle known simply as “The Back Breaker.”

Meanwhile, Shane Losey, while stretched out and airborne, snagged a runner by his shoelaces and promptly untied the laces before both he and the runner met the Earth together.

But Emeron Geiser added a six-yard bolt to the end zone to stretch the lead to 15-0, and a late safety on a muffed Wolf kickoff return set the final margin in amber.

While the end result wasn’t what he wanted, Coupeville coach Marcus Carr handled his first loss in red and black with a calmness which filtered out to his players.

Already looking ahead at La Conner, the Wolf boss realizes a little rain must fall into everyone’s lives.

“They kept fighting, and I’m happy with that,” Carr said. “The guys never gave up.

“We’ll get back to basics, work on a few things and get back at it. When we execute well, good things happen. We just need to execute.”

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