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Posts Tagged ‘Sean Toomey-Stout’

   Sean Toomey-Stout celebrated his 16th birthday Friday with a 45-yard touchdown catch and run. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Olympic/Nisqually League football conference took a shot to the chin Friday night.

Well, actually it was more like seven shots.

Wrapping up non-league play, seven of the eight teams in the conference absorbed losses, including Cascade Christian, which entered the night ranked #4 in 1A.

The only one to escape the carnage was Bellevue Christian, and that’s only because its game against Chelan is a Saturday affair.

So, when Coupeville fell 55-14 at seventh-ranked Nooksack Valley, victim of future D-1 college quarterback Casey Bauman, the Wolves were in good company.

Port Townsend was blasted by Mount Baker (48-7), Vashon Island was decimated by Concrete (66-0), Chimacum was annihilated by Forks (52-7) and Charles Wright was stuffed by Rochester (21-7).

The only close games came with Cascade Christian being upset by Meridian (34-29) and Klahowya being nipped by Granite Falls (27-22).

The good news for all involved is the seven-game league schedule kicks off next Friday, Sept. 22, which means we’ll see four winners guaranteed.

If Coupeville, now 2-1 on the season, is looking for even better news, it is this — it likely won’t face anyone as dangerous as Bauman the rest of the way.

Any Wolf fans wondering why Montana State has signed the 6-foot-6 gunslinger to a scholarship had that promptly answered on a night when the pungent smell of manure from nearby fields hung heavy over the Pioneers home turf.

Bauman was handed the ball six times in the first half Friday, and he turned that into six Nooksack touchdowns.

After opening with a pair of scoring runs, a one-yard zig and a 14-yard zag, he began using his cannon-like arm, showing off precise targeting, impeccable timing and remarkable Zen-like composure.

His four scoring strikes through the air, three which went to favorite receiver Austin O’Bryan, covered 15, 34, 72 and 27 yards and featured not a single noticeable wobble.

There were moments the Wolf defense, having busted through Nooksack’s beefy line (think multiple versions of Billy Bob from Varsity Blues), made Bauman move a bit.

Heck, they even brought him down once, with Tyler McCalmont and Julian Welling sandwiching him on a sack.

But the rest of the night Bauman glided, side-stepping Wolf rushers, never seeming to break a sweat as he waited for the defense to give him an opening, a brief crack — which he then promptly exploited with laser-like throws.

At one point he casually reached out, put his hand on an approaching Coupeville defender’s helmet and gently stiff-armed the Wolf to the ground with a flick of his wrist, basically looking like a large cat toying with a pesky ball of yarn.

Then promptly ripped off a gorgeous aerial bomb which dropped like a feather at the last second, nestling into his receiver’s hands for another score.

In short, Bauman was as silky as the Raspberry Sweet Cream Cheese Crepes I had at IHop on the way home.

The first, and only time, Coupeville stopped him for good came on the opening drive of the third quarter — Bauman’s final series — when a botched pitch at the Wolf two-yard line resulted in a fumble and Nooksack’s only turnover on the night.

The Wolves had little hope of a comeback at that point, having trailed 20-0 after one quarter and 49-7 at the half, but they did pick up a few highlights of their own before the game was done.

CHS quarterback Hunter Downes tossed a pair of touchdowns, connecting with birthday boy Sean Toomey-Stout on a 45-yard catch-and-run and Hunter Smith on an 85-yard hookup.

It was Smith’s fourth receiving touchdown of the season — he’s caught at least one in each game this season — and the 17th of his career. That ties him with Chad Gale for the school’s career record.

Downes, who spent a fair amount of time scrambling for his life, was resilient, staying on his feet 99.8% of the game and putting up what should be close to 200 yards through the air.

The two TD tosses gives him eight through the first three games.

Toomey-Stout, who leads Coupeville in tackles from his spot in the defensive backfield, made an impression on the sizable Nooksack crowd, repeatedly flying from side to side to bring down Pioneer ball-handlers.

While the Wolves didn’t score until their seventh possession, finally breaking into the end zone with 1:29 left in the first half, they did move the ball on the Nooksack defense and had just one turnover. That came on a bobbled snap on a punt attempt.

Chris Battaglia pounded away for yardage on the ground, picking up 55 yards in the first half (unofficially), with runs of 18 and 12 yards.

Downes also slid a 12-yard pass into Matt Hilborn’s hands and Smith brought back a first-half kickoff 30+ yards, just barely missing a chance to take it to the house.

With the game winding down, the Wolves mixed things up a bit, with Dawson Houston and Shane Losey getting snaps under center and young guns like Gavin Straub and Jean Lund-Olsen earning their most substantial playing time of the season on defense.

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   Hunter Smith broke the CHS career receiving yardage record Friday night, and missed the single-game mark by just two yards. (John Fisken photo)

Hunter Smith is coming for all the records. I said all of them!

The Coupeville High School senior now owns at least a share of five Wolf football records, and came within a measly two yards Friday night of getting a sixth one.

Smith hauled in seven passes for 200 yards and a pair of touchdowns to spark CHS to an 18-0 win over host South Whidbey.

His first catch of the night, a 12-yard reception, gave him the school’s career receiving yards record.

Chad Gale racked up 1,345 yards in the late ’80s, and Smith had 1,335 entering the 2017 season.

The record Smith narrowly missed was the single-game mark for receiving yards.

While his 200 yards topped his own personal best (178, which Smith hit once as a sophomore and once as a junior), Gale’s 202 yards from an ’87 game is still the gold standard … if just barely.

The quarterback flinging passes Smith’s way, senior Hunter Downes, threw for 310 yards, just 13 off his personal best (323 vs. Charles Wright as a junior).

The Hunter to Hunter connection was the big news, but plenty of other Wolves posted sterling stats in the opening night victory.

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

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 13-26 for 310 yards with 3 TDs and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 7 receptions for 200 yards
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-57
Matt Hilborn 2-39
Cameron Toomey-Stout 2-8
Shane Losey 1-6

Rushing:

S. Toomey-Stout 5 carries for 54 yards
Smith 2-5
Chris Battaglia 1-2
Hilborn 6 (-14)
Downes 6 (-27)

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

Smith 205
S. Toomey-Stout 111
C. Toomey-Stout 50
Hilborn 25
Losey 6
Battaglia 2
Downes (-27)

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 283
Smith 205
S. Toomey-Stout 111
Hilborn 25
C. Toomey-Stout 8
Losey 6
Battaglia 2

Touchdowns:

Smith 2
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Points:

Smith 12
S. Toomey-Stout
6

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

S. Toomey-Stout 14
Battaglia 12
Hilborn 8
Dane Lucero 8
Julian Welling 7
Losey 6
Jake Pease
6
C. Toomey-Stout
6
James Vidoni
5
Trevor Bell
3
Jake Hoagland 3
Smith
3
Andrew Martin
1

Interceptions:

C. Toomey-Stout 2

Fumble recoveries:

Hoagland 1
Pease 1
Welling 1

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Kickoffs:

Hilborn 4 for 140 yards

Punts:

Downes 2 for 40 yards

Kickoff/Punt returns:

C. Toomey-Stout 1 for 12 yards

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   Wolf sophomore football player Sean Toomey-Stout prepares to lift all the weight in the room. I said all of it. (Bob Martin photos)

Raven (left) and Willow Vick prep for a new volleyball season.

The early-risers club.

The countdown has begun.

The start of fall high school sports is three weeks away — less if you’re playing football — and Wolf athletes are hard at work.

Coupeville High School’s weight room is open for SST (Sports Specific Training) Monday-Friday in August, with the action kicking off each morning at 8 AM.

Dates to keep in mind going forward:

Thursday, Aug. 10 — High School/Middle School Sports Day in the school gym (12-6 PM). Register for fall sports and get a physical if needed.

Wednesday, Aug. 16 — First day of high school football practice.

Monday, Aug. 21 — First day of practice for high school girls soccer, volleyball and boys tennis.

Friday, Sept. 1 — First game of the 2017-2018 school year, as CHS football heads to Langley to defend ownership of The Bucket. Kickoff is 7 PM.

Wednesday, Sept. 6 — First day of practice for middle school football and volleyball.

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Kyle Rockwell was one of seven Wolves to score in Friday night's JV game. (John Fisken photo)

   Kyle Rockwell was one of seven Wolves to score in Friday night’s JV game. (John Fisken photo)

The score was deceptive.

Walk into the gym in the final seconds Friday and you would have seen the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad lost 52-43 to visiting Port Townsend.

Arrive a bit earlier and you would have been front and center for a back-and-forth affair where the Wolves came within one missed shot of having a chance to tie or win at the very end.

Closing on a 6-2 run, with buckets from Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, Koa Davison and Sean Toomey-Stout, Coupeville was within four with the ball in its hands in the final minute.

Unfortunately, the Wolves then hit their only sustained shooting slump of the night, and the RedHawks took advantage to stretch out the final deficit.

The loss drops the CHS young guns to 7-7 overall, 2-4 in Olympic League play.

Coupeville controlled the game for much of the first half, with Toomey-Stout dropping in 10 of his team-high 14 points along the way.

He scored on a variety of moves, with back-to-back buckets in the second quarter that drew some oohs and ahs from the fans in the stands.

On the first play, Toomey-Stout slashed to the hoop without the ball, hopped into the air, caught a bullet pass, then drilled the soft jumper before heading back down to Earth.

Very next trip down the floor he was back at it.

A pesky RedHawk defender jarred the ball loose as he tried to set up a play, so Toomey-Stout whirled, snatched the loose ball from behind his back, then spun and left the Port Townsend player flatfooted as he flew by him for a layup.

Holding on to a one-point lead, the Wolves put a cap on the half with a team-wide display of defensive aggressiveness.

Port Townsend had the ball with 16 ticks on the clock, but under extreme pressure from all five Wolves, failed to get a shot off before the halftime buzzer sounded.

Mason Grove drilled back-to-back three-balls to kick off the second half, and the two teams traded the lead back and forth through much of the final 16 minutes.

A huge RedHawk trey as the shot clock threatened to run out midway through the fourth was tough to overcome for the Wolves, but they fought back behind Davison.

He dropped a sweet mini-hook that evoked memories of Magic Johnson pulling off a Kareem tribute in the 1987 NBA Finals (look it up on Wikipedia, kids…), then banked home a loose ball that he plucked from a rival.

Seven Wolves scored, with Toomey-Stout’s 14 backed up by nine from Grove and eight from Jered Brown.

Branden Newhard (5), Davison (4), Pacquette-Pilgrim (2) and Kyle Rockwell (1) also tickled the twines, while Gavin Knoblich, Ulrik Wells, Nikolai Lyngra, Elliott Johnson, Tucker Hall, Jean Lund-Olsen and Ariah Bepler all saw floor time.

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Ulrik Wells (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells, here lining up a free throw Tuesday, delivered a blocked shot that sparked a huge fourth-quarter run. (John Fisken photo)

Go back, erase the second quarter and we got ourselves a barn-burner.

Tuesday night’s JV boys basketball clash between Coupeville and Port Townsend was a back-and-forth affair, highlighted by a big-game performance from Wolf frosh Sean Toomey-Stout.

It had strong work early from the Wolves.

Plus a great surge down the stretch from a tired seven-man squad facing a team that was able to sub in five fresh new players every few minutes.

So much good stuff.

And then there was the stinky cheese second quarter, when eternally-upbeat CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh looked like a man who had just been slapped in the face 73 times in a row.

Take away those soul-crushing eight minutes and Coupeville is up 31-29.

Put that 23-6 second quarter back in the books, however, and the Wolves lose 52-37.

Now 6-5 overall, 2-2 in Olympic League play, the CHS young guns held up well despite missing more than half their roster.

Injuries, vacations and academic issues left a whopping eight of 15 Wolves unavailable coming out of winter break, assuring Van Velkinburgh of having little problem finding a seat on his very empty bench.

Shrugging off their lack of numbers, the young guns came out blazing in the first.

Toomey-Stout led the charge at the hoop, swooping and diving and leaving the RedHawks grasping at air as he banked in six of his game-high 19 in the opening quarter.

A running jumper from Mason Grove staked the Wolves to a 10-9 lead heading into the break and things were still looking great when a three-ball from Grove knotted things at 13 early in the second.

Then the wheels fell off in mystifying fashion.

Coupeville’s defense went AWOL (though four Port Townsend treys didn’t help) and the Wolves shooting touch evaporated in horrifying fashion.

For anyone who went out to buy a hotdog at 13-13, coming back to find the RedHawks up 32-16 at the break was the kind of surprise which would make a person wonder if the scoreboard operator was pulling a (very early) April Fools trick on everyone.

Things got moderately better in the third, with Toomey-Stout throwing down all seven of Coupeville’s points, then took a decided turn for the better in the fourth.

The pivotal moment came when Ulrik Wells held his ground in the paint and soundly rejected a RedHawk shot.

That seemed to spark something deep inside his Coupeville teammates, and they promptly went on a 14-2 run to slice a 25-point deficit down to 13.

Four different Wolves (Toomey-Stout, Grove, Wells and Gavin Knoblich) scored during the run, with half the baskets coming off of offensive rebounds.

The late run put the skip back in Van Velkinburgh’s step, the roar back in the throats of Wolf fans, and bodes well for the all-freshman JV squad.

Grove finished with eight points to back Toomey-Stout’s 19, while Jered Brown and Knoblich each dropped in four.

Wells added a bucket on a nice move in the paint, while Nikolai Lyngra and Tucker Hall rounded out the Wolf roster.

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