Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Sean Toomey-Stout’

Coupeville senior Jered Brown has been a four-year varsity player. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Fellow senior Sean Toomey-Stout was in the top two in nearly every stat category a season ago.

They have the numbers. They have the experience. They have the talent.

As Brad Sherman enters his third season at the helm of the Coupeville High School boys basketball program, the Wolves are primed to make a big surge.

CHS, which kicks off a new season with back-to-back road trips to Darrington and Oak Harbor Dec. 3-4, boasts 33 players divided equally between three squads.

Sherman will be joined by returning JV coach Chris Smith, while the C-Team needs to replace Scott Fox, who has taken over the Wolf girls varsity program.

Coupeville’s first-string boys squad is virtually the same one which took the court a year ago, as the Wolves lost just sixth man Dane Lucero to graduation.

Hawthorne Wolfe tossed in a team-high 158 points last season, the most scored by a Wolf freshman boy across 102 seasons, but he’s not the only guy capable of filling up the hoop.

The next eight players on the scoring list, led off by Sean Toomey-Stout (122) and Mason Grove (109), were juniors last season, giving CHS a senior-heavy roster this time around.

Ulrik Wells (74), Jered Brown (71), Gavin Knoblich (65), Jacobi Pilgrim (43), Koa Davison (11), and Jean Lund-Olsen (7) are also back, while sophomore Xavier Murdy (4) is a full-time varsity player in his second season.

Rounding out the roster is one newcomer, with senior Tucker Hall making the jump from JV to varsity.

“Depth and experience are going to be big for us,” Sherman said. “This group has shown they are willing to work hard.

“With so many returners, they are getting more comfortable playing together and that’s huge,” he added. “I think we have the opportunity to be strong on both sides of the ball.”

While the Wolves kick off the second week of practice Monday, many of their players have been working on their games year-round. A strong showing at team camp is also cause for happiness.

“Our guys showed a lot of growth over the summer, especially in our transition game and showing a lot more poise on offense,” Sherman said.

“Between our summer practice schedule, the tournament win on the coast, and battling with some big schools in Cheney at camp, we were really proud of the body of work our guys put together in June to carry us toward the season.”

As he mixes and matches players, looking for the best combinations, Sherman wants to see those groups gel.

“We are seeing a lot of good things from a lot of guys right now, and really just stressing the importance of each and every role working together,” he said. “Several of our guys have quite a bit of versatility to play in different spots, which gives us a lot of flexibility with our lineups and sets.

“Trust, on and off the court (is big),” Sherman added. “We have to have five guys on the floor working together, thinking together, trusting one another to do their jobs in every aspect of the game.

“That is a big point of emphasis for us.”

As they work towards the start of the season, the Wolves are hard at work fine-tuning their games on both sides of the ball. Keeping the pressure ramped up on opposing teams is big.

“We know we need to take care of the ball better and finish at the rim,” Sherman said. “Unforced turnovers hurt us last year – and while we aren’t spending any time looking in the rear-view mirror, we do need to learn and improve on some of those key things.

“Defensively we need to just make sure we are playing four quarters of all-in defense with five guys moving hard to position on every single pass,” he added.

“We are really emphasizing closeouts, on-ball pressure, and improved communication on the defensive end.”

Coupeville has a 19-game regular-season schedule, with the final nine tilts all against fellow North Sound Conference teams.

King’s, which finished 3rd at state last year, offered league rivals a chance to play just once, and not twice, and the Wolves, along with Granite Falls and Sultan accepted.

South Whidbey and Cedar Park Christian did not, making for a lopsided league schedule.

For his part, Sherman is not super-concerned with any one team on the schedule, viewing each game as an important building block for his program.

“Really not focused on one particular team,” he said. “Our preparation as coaches and athletes has to be the same for every team we face.

“This is a tough league, and we just need to take it one game at a time.

“As a coaching staff we have full confidence in our guys ability to compete night in and night out,” Sherman added. “We certainly scout and game plan for each team we face, but ultimately it’s our ability to go out and play good team basketball and execute our own stuff that really matters.”

This will also be the Wolves final rumble against this set of conference foes, as Coupeville drops from 1A to 2B with the 2020-2021 school year.

“We part ways with this league next season, so one of our goals is to go out strong and make a statement at every level of our program,” Sherman said.

“Our ultimate hope would obviously be to earn a postseason opportunity in February, but for now, it’s just one game at a time.”

Read Full Post »

Coupeville senior Andrew Martin was named to the All-Conference team, despite not playing any league games. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hard-hitting, fumble-causing Sean Toomey-Stout, a contender to play in the All-State game, was also honored by North Sound Conference coaches.

Well, this is a nice bonus.

Despite not playing a single league game this season, the Coupeville High School football squad still landed two players on the All-Conference team.

The Wolves chose to step away from the North Sound Conference for a year, to give a young, inexperienced team time to build and mature.

It worked out nicely, as CHS went 5-4, claiming the program’s first winning record since 2005, but the decision seemed to deny any of the Wolves a chance to be honored by league coaches.

But not so fast.

Hoping to get his seniors consideration for the All-State game, Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith approached his league counterparts and hit pay-dirt.

Not only were the AD’s in support of making sure the Wolves remained viable in the All-State process, but they turned around and voted two of them onto the All-Conference team.

Sean Toomey-Stout was named to the First Team as a Specialist, while also being honored as a Second Team pick for his play in the secondary.

Fellow senior Andrew Martin was tabbed as a Second Team player as both a running back and linebacker.

Selections to the 2A/1A/B All-State game, known as the Earl Barden Classic, will be announced later.

The All-Conference honors topped Coupeville’s season-ending football banquet Wednesday night, as Wolf coach Marcus Carr and staff honored their team.

Dawson Houston, Martin, Gavin Straub, Toomey-Stout, and Gavin Knoblich received four-year awards for playing every season of their high school career, while 25 players and two managers lettered.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Nick Armstrong
Isaiah Bittner
Brian Casey
Dominic Coffman
Sage Downes
Dakota Eck
Scott Hilborn
Dawson Houston
Daylon Houston
Cole Hutchinson
Alex Jimenez
Gavin Knoblich
Joven Light
Andrew Martin
Melanie Navarro
(Manager)
Jonathan Partida
Kevin Partida
Gabe Shaw
Breanna Silveira
(Manager)
Ben Smith
DJ Stadler
Gavin St Onge
Gavin Straub
Sean Toomey-Stout
Josh Upchurch
Tim Ursu
Kai Wong

 

Participation certificates (8th grade practice squad):

Cameron Breaux
JP Edoukou

Read Full Post »

Ben Smith was one of five Coupeville High School football players to both score a touchdown and pick off a pass this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sean Toomey-Stout led CHS with seven touchdowns.

So, this isn’t 100% complete.

Let’s just get that out of the way from the start.

But, that being said, it’s better than nothing.

The Coupeville High School football team rolled to a very-respectable 5-4 record this season — posting the first winning mark by a Wolf gridiron squad since 2005, if you didn’t hear that fact the first 100,000 times I mentioned it.

Here’s where I’d like to present a flawless accounting of stats for the whole year, but, for a lot of different reasons, I don’t have those numbers.

What I do have are the stats I was able to keep track of personally – some of the big ones like who scored, how they scored, and how often they scored.

Like I said, it’s better than nothing.

So here you go:

 

Passing TD’s:

Dawson Houston – 9

 

Receiving TD’s:

Sean Toomey-Stout – 5
Gavin Knoblich – 4

 

Rushing TD’s:

Andrew Martin – 5
Dawson Houston – 3
Sage Downes – 1
Dakota Eck – 1
Scott Hilborn – 1
Ben Smith – 1

 

Defensive TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 1

 

Return TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 1

 

Total TD’s:

Toomey-Stout – 7
Martin – 5
Knoblich – 4
Dawson Houston – 3
Downes – 1
Eck – 1
Hilborn – 1
Smith – 1

 

PAT’s:

Daylon Houston – 9

 

Conversions:

Dawson Houston – 2
Martin – 2

 

Points:

Toomey-Stout – 42
Martin – 34
Knoblich – 24
Dawson Houston – 22
Daylon Houston – 9
Downes – 6
Eck – 6
Hilborn – 6
Smith – 6

 

Interceptions:

Toomey-Stout – 4
Eck – 3
Hilborn – 2
Sage Downes – 1
Joven Light – 1
Smith – 1

Read Full Post »

Gavin Knoblich and his fellow CHS seniors closed their prep careers Friday with a hard-fought loss to 3A Interlake. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf senior captain Sean Toomey-Stout (right) hugs junior Ben Smith after the game. (Deb Smith photo)

There’s the finale you deserve, and the finale you get, and the two are often not the same.

This year’s Coupeville High School football team accomplished something the Wolves haven’t done since 2005, finishing with a winning record at 5-4.

For a program which has been mired in the mud for so long — 12 losing seasons and one .500 record in 2014 — it’s a giant step forward.

It’s a testament to the seniors on the squad, who led by voice and by example.

It’s also a promise of what could be to come, as numerous young stars rose under the tutelage of CHS head coach Marcus Carr and his staff.

And it all culminated perfectly a week ago, when Coupeville, a 2B-sized school forced by the state to pretend to be 1A for years, smacked 2A Anacortes.

Winning on their home field, on Senior Night, the Wolves brought all the emotion, all the accomplishment, together, and topped it with a giant bow.

It was a fitting finale.

Except, there was still a game left on the schedule.

In a year in which Coupeville football abandoned the North Sound Conference and went independent, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith did his best to pull together a schedule from scratch.

He wanted teams in a similar place as Coupeville, a mix of young teams, rebuilding teams, programs also mired in the mud, and he pretty much pulled it off.

But week #9 was always going to be a bit problematic.

Going on the road to Bellevue to face Interlake, a 3A school with 900+ more students than Coupeville, was a tall order.

While the Saints have been getting reamed for the past three seasons, they play in KingCo, a powerhouse league headed up by 11-time state champ Bellevue.

Coming in to play Friday night, Interlake was 1-7, but it was a battle-hardened 1-7, and the Saints, at least according to their roster, had a 20-man advantage on the Wolves.

They also had a group of seniors who have been roughed up, rolled over, and crunched week after week.

A group of veterans who, on their own Senior Night, were looking for some redemption in front of their fairly-sparse crowd.

Now, this blog isn’t called “Interlake Sports,” so the finale we were looking for would have been more of a “small town team shocks the big city boys.”

But, sometimes reality intrudes, and that was the case Friday night, as the Saint seniors pulled off enough big plays to deny the Wolves, rolling to a 36-7 win.

The game wasn’t as lopsided as the score might suggest, as Coupeville stayed within two scores until midway through the third quarter.

Only at the end, when the Wolves, already missing starters Gavin St Onge and Ben Smith, watched big-timers Andrew Martin, Sean Toomey-Stout, and Gabe Shaw sent to the sidelines with injuries, did the margin get out of reach.

Martin, the team’s leading rusher, suffered a second-half concussion when “their big, fat kid sat on my head,” though he regained his sense of humor after a visit to Mod Pizza on the way home.

Shaw, a standout sophomore likely playing in his final game as a Wolf due to an impending family move, ripped his way through the Interlake line all night, pulling down runners and flinging bodies left and right before his own momentarily gave out with a foot injury.

And then there is Toomey-Stout, one of the most dynamic players to ever wear a Wolf uniform, but, more than that, the owner of one of the largest hearts we have ever witnessed in a Coupeville athlete.

For four years “The Torpedo” has endured, triumphed, led, and inspired.

First while playing alongside big brother Cameron, the two of them pointing at each other, then pointing downfield at the poor sap about to field a kickoff or punt, igniting a brother vs. brother race to annihilate the ball carrier.

After “Camtastic” left for college, Sean moved into a solo spotlight (unless he’s standing near twin sister Maya, his match in every way as an electrifying, passionate star), and word of his exploits has spread near and far.

Friday night, on a hunk of artificial turf far from Whidbey Island, on the final play of his prep football career, “The Torpedo” made the biggest statement of his time as a Wolf.

He had been on the sideline with a badly pinched nerve in his arm, but then, very late in the game, as Coupeville’s defense took the field to play out the final moments of a lost cause, the Wolf coaches suddenly called timeout.

It wasn’t to set up a play, or change a defense, or swap players out, but to retrieve Toomey-Stout, who, unable to feel much of his arm, had still charged back onto the field with his team trailing by four touchdowns.

Why? Because it’s his defense, he’s the leader, and as long as his team was on the field, that’s where he wanted to be as well.

Regardless of the score. Regardless of his own pain.

Because Sean Toomey-Stout doesn’t quit.

Never has. Never will.

He came back off the field because his coaches, being responsible adults, made the decision for him, but in the moments afterward, as he paced the sidelines, you knew it took every last bit of self control for him not to sneak back out there on the very next play.

When we look back at his career, we will remember Sean’s dramatic touchdowns, especially the one that went viral on the internet when a deer dashed on the field last year to become his lead blocker.

We’ll remember the scorching runs. The death-defying catches. The spine-crushing tackles, of which he laid down another 2,000 against Interlake.

But, most of all, we will remember this small slice of time, a moment when #1 refused to leave his teammates behind.

Because it’s what Sean did, every moment of every game of his whole career.

That will resonate far longer than any of the plays, even the 31-yard touchdown run by Sage Downes late in the fourth quarter, which kept Coupeville from being shut out in any games this season.

Toomey-Stout’s leadership and refusal to quit, traits mirrored by fellow seniors Martin, Dawson Houston, Gavin Knoblich, St Onge, Jonathan Partida, and Gavin Straub, have set up the program for future success.

As the team mingled with coaches and families after the game, a mix of tears, exhaustion, and a sense of completion all in the mix, Knoblich turned and motioned to Straub.

“Come here, G3!!” he softly said, and the duo, who have grown up together from tentative underclassmen to seasoned upperclassmen, hugged under the glow of their last Friday Night Lights.

The game they had just played had stayed scoreless through much of the first quarter, with Coupeville looking like the better team.

Wolf freshman Scott Hilborn picked off a pass, his second interception of the season, to snuff out Interlake’s opening drive.

After that, CHS used a couple of Martin rumbles on the ground and a Houston-to-Partida pass play to come tantalizingly close to scoring.

Facing fourth-and-12 from the Interlake 34, the Wolves used a little razzle-dazzle to get the ball into Knoblich’s hands, and the Wolf receiver pegged a pass towards the end zone.

Interlake had Toomey-Stout double-teamed, however, and the ball was batted up, then down, as the Wolves just missed out on landing a hay-maker.

The Saints broke through on a two-yard run up the middle by senior QB Charlie Galanti with 2:37 to play in the opening quarter.

A safety early in the second quarter, thanks to Interlake blowing up an intended pitch right outside the end zone, stretched the lead to 9-0, before Galanti found Luke Hirsch on a 33-yard scoring strike to make it 16-0 at the half.

In between, Coupeville’s defense came up big after giving up a ginormous 53-yard pass play.

Interlake had the ball at the Wolf 13, got it to the eight, then went down with a whimper when Toomey-Stout burst up the middle, before body-slamming the runner to the turf on fourth down.

After some early success moving the ball, Coupeville’s offense sputtered through the end of the first half, then found its groove on the opening drive of the second half.

With Martin slamming through the line on three successive plays, the Wolves had the Saints on their heels, and looked like a team about to cut a two-score margin to one.

It wasn’t to be, however, as Houston’s pass to the end zone was plucked out of the air by a guy in the wrong uniform, ending the drive, and the Wolves last great shot.

Galanti and Hirsch struck one more time, hooking up on a 70-yard TD pass five plays later, and most of the air went out of Coupeville.

The Wolves didn’t quit, with freshman Joven Light picking off a pass right in front of the end zone, but Interlake eventually wore the Wolves down, especially after they started losing key players.

A pair of two-yard scoring runs, from seniors Grady Fleming and Tyler Turman, made the local fans happy and sent the Interlake band (which was pretty dang good) into endless renditions of “When the Saints Go Marching In.”

Toss in a robot which was programmed to shoot t-shirts into the crowd, created by Interlake’s robotics department, and the locals got to enjoy one of their few happy Fridays this season.

For Coupeville, in the waning moments, it was a time for the coaches to look at the players of the future.

Dakota Eck ran strongly, to the joy of mom Cheridan, lil’ sis Aubrey, and family, while sophomore QB Cole Hutchinson hooked up with freshman receiver Kevin Partida on a fourth-down pass that netted a first down and could be a sign of good things to come.

Every season ends, and there are only a few who get to walk away 100% happy.

For Coupeville’s 2019 team, the final game, the final moments, weren’t what they hoped for. That doesn’t change everything which came before.

Charles Clark, who has spent a lifetime around football, as a player, coach, and fan, gazed out across the field as the Wolves embraced on a cool, clear evening with the stars sparkling in the sky above.

“They played a game they love, a game not everyone can play, and they played it well,” he said. “They should look back and be proud.”

Read Full Post »

Gavin St Onge is a key part of the first Coupeville High School football team to post a winning record since 2005. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It is done.

All the big plays on the turf, all the work off the field, all the blood, sweat, and tears in the locker room, the weight room, and on the practice field, paid off Friday night.

Unleashing a dominating defense, the Coupeville High School football squad stuffed visiting Anacortes 18-7, claiming their fourth win in their last five games and clinching the program’s first winning season since 2005.

Now 5-3, with just a trip to Bellevue to play Interlake left on the schedule, the Wolves have silenced the ghosts of the past.

There have been 13 complete seasons since the last time a Coupeville gridiron team finished on the plus side of the ledger.

Twelve losing years and one .500 mark in 2014.

Six head coaches, numerous assistants and managers and ball boys, and hundreds of players.

It’s been a lifetime.

Literally, since none of this year’s Wolf seniors were even in kindergarten in 2005.

But there they were Friday night, Coupeville’s seven seniors, Andrew Martin, Jonathan Partida, Sean Toomey-Stout, Dawson Houston and the three Gavin’s – Straub, Knoblich, and St Onge.

Each one pulling off big plays, each one writing a memory they will never forget, each one walking off Mickey Clark Field for the final time, having accomplished what so many others before them had been unable to achieve.

And, in the midst of a field full of celebrating players, family members, classmates, friends and fans, second-year Coupeville coach Marcus Carr stood off to the side, a giant, quiet smile gracing his face.

“It means a lot; I really wanted this for these seniors,” he said. “We’ve been rebuilding the program, and changing the culture, and sending them out on this high note … it means everything.

“This team as a whole has put in the work, on the field, and in the times when no one sees it,” Carr added. “I am so proud of them all.”

Coming into their home finale, the big question was how the Wolves would bounce back after a hard-fought loss last week to Island rival South Whidbey.

Anacortes was a bit of an unknown, as well.

The Seahawks rep a solidly-sized 2A school, while Coupeville is among the smallest 1A schools in the state.

With Coupeville breaking from the North Sound Conference and playing an independent schedule this season, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith had to scramble to pull together a schedule.

With Anacortes also being in a severe rebuilding phase, the Wolf head man rolled the dice on this one, and it paid off with a very-competitive game between comparable teams.

The visitors had a 32-25 advantage in players, but have no seniors this season and just three juniors, including fleet-footed starting quarterback Joseph Cutter.

With 18 freshmen on the roster, the Seahawks scheduled three games against varsity teams such as Coupeville and six against JV squads, and entered Friday at 5-2 and on a five-game winning streak.

The Wolves, who boast 10 freshmen of their own, came out strong however, and never backed down.

On offense, Coupeville employed a ferocious running attack, with Andrew Martin putting together a career-best night under the lights to key a Wolf attack which rang up 200+ yards.

Running like equally hard-nosed older brother Jacob did before him, #42 doesn’t always get enough credit for how he has played through countless nagging injuries while wreaking havoc as a two-way warrior.

I’ve seen Andy hobble into an IHop after a game, moving like an 80-year-old man, but pity anyone who gets between “Ham-bone” and the biscuits ‘n gravy awaiting him.

When he runs, slamming at full tilt into every potential tackler, daring them to bring him to the ground, the youngest heir to the Martin football legacy defines the word “beast.”

Friday night, legs churning through the grass on his home field for the final time, he racked up an unofficial 137 rushing yards on 27 carries, scoring all three of Coupeville’s touchdowns.

Add nice runs from Dakota Eck, Scott Hilborn, and Toomey-Stout, plus big-time catches by Knoblich and Toomey-Stout and the Wolves were moving the ball.

When they had the ball, that is.

Coupeville only had a single possession in the first quarter, yet led 6-0 when the teams went to the break.

Wolf frosh Daylon Houston, showing off his big leg, mashed the opening kickoff, giving Anacortes the first crack at scoring, and the Seahawks came out with a mix of plays.

Well, that’s not entirely true.

In the early going, Anacortes had exactly one play it ran. Maybe 1.5.

Using a little razzle-dazzle and trickery to keep the Wolf defense guessing where the ball was going, the result was always the same — Cutter kept the ball and dodged would-be tacklers.

The half of a play was the Seahawks QB’s ability to use deceptive hand claps when signalling his center to hike the ball, getting Coupeville to jump off-sides several times on the opening drive.

Anacortes had the end zone in its sights, and then, whammo, one play changed everything.

Facing a third-and-two from Coupeville’s 25, the Seahawks went to their bread-and-butter play, and Martin, throwing blockers out of his way with both hands, stepped up and tried to rip Cutter in half.

Burying the Anacortes QB in the backfield, he dropped him for a five-yard loss, and effectively ended the drive on the spot.

Sure, Cutter still had one more play, but it was a wobbly fourth-down pass from a guy still trying to get the stars out of his eyes, and it fell harmlessly over the middle.

Handed the ball for the first time, Coupeville QB Dawson Houston and Co. made short work of it, piling up 69 yards on seven plays, with Martin eventually crashing in for a three-yard touchdown run.

Before we got to that point, Eck ripped off back-to-back 10-yard-plus runs, and Martin blew up the Hawk defense on a 36-yard rumble.

On that one, he went up the middle, hit a different gear, skidded to a halt midway through the run to lurch around a tackler, then carried a pack of screaming Seahawks on his back for another couple steps.

Anacortes had some fight in it, however, and actually took the lead for a short time, using a three-yard scoring run from Cutter on the first play of the second quarter.

It was a pretty, pretty play, as the Hawk gunslinger went right, skidded back to his left, dodged a potential sack, then swept around the left side and beat three Wolves to the goal line by a step.

Coupeville’s answer? A nine-play, 62-yard drive on the next possession, with Martin’s 15-yard scoring run giving the Wolves a lead they would never relinquish.

While the running game kept the Seahawks on their heels, the big play on the drive was an 18-yard pass to Knoblich, with Houston zinging the ball over the middle to his tall target as he slashed from left to right.

With the score 12-7 in favor of CHS, the two teams went into a defensive stalemate across the remainder of the second quarter.

The Wolves recovered an onside kick, with Partida flying in from the left side to snag Daylon Houston’s perfectly-placed kick, but their next drive stalled out at the Anacortes 20 thanks to a lost fumble.

Coming out of the halftime break, Coupeville put the game on ice with a nine-play, 69-yard drive which wore five minutes off the clock.

Martin was a battering ram, and ended things with a one-yard TD plunge, but it was Toomey-Stout who made the highlight reel pop with a 30-yard catch-and-run.

Dawson Houston’s pass was crisp and on the hands, but it was the work after the catch, when “The Torpedo” picked up the final 10 yards while fighting through three defenders, which made the crowd lose it.

Anacortes should have brought Toomey-Stout down, but, every muscle in his body poppin’, the Wolf senior kept on churning, each step sweet agony as he drove the Hawk trio back, step by step.

When the Seahawks get up Saturday morning, and every part of their bodies ache, they will remember that play, and they will wince. And then wince some more for years to come.

For four years, Sean, like older brother Cameron and twin sister Maya, has been a relentless worker, in the weight room, in the classroom, and on the practice field.

Plays like that, when you make dang sure they will always remember you, is why he does what he does.

From that point on, the scoring was done, but the big plays weren’t.

With Coupeville Defensive Coordinator Bennett Richter sending his guys running wild, the Wolves got savage.

Eck came flying around the side and dragged a runner down in the backfield for a big loss.

Straub hammered another Hawk, also driving him backwards when he wanted to go forward.

Ben Smith, who always brings the fire and the energy, lived out the words of Muhammad Ali, to “rumble, young man, rumble.”

Gabe Shaw and St Onge and Kai Wong and Isaiah Bittner and all the linemen stepped up and smacked people.

And then, to close out the game, the home stand, and 13 long seasons of struggle, Coupeville put the ball in the hands of Andrew Martin.

One, two, three, four, five times in a row he ran the ball, each time charging into the heart of the defense with a laugh on his lips as he crushed those who dared to step into his path.

Across the five plays, Martin picked up the final 27 yards of his night, but each play meant more than that.

Each thump, each thwack, each crunch, echoed up, through the stands, and across the prairie.

The sounds of Martin’s success, the sounds of his team’s rebirth, carried on the slight Whidbey breeze which wafted through the stadium, and the message was loud and clear.

The past is dead.

It’s a new day for Wolf football.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »