Two have moved on to college sports, while one remains at Oakton High School, but all three Toole-family siblings are plenty busy and productive in athletics.
Girls basketball and softball player Sophie Toole is a junior standout in both sports at Oakton, currently helping the hoop team to a 15-1 record this winter season. She leads the team in many statistical categories.
Toole had a typical hard-playing game in Oakton’s recent victory over Madison. She wreaked plenty of havoc against the opponent, scoring 15 points, with six assists, five rebounds, three steals and multiple deflections on defense.
Toole will finish her high-school basketball career by scoring in excess of 1,000 points.
During spring seasons, Toole is a standout shortstop on the Cougars’ softball team.
Madison girls head basketball coach Kirsten Stone consistently praised Toole for her hard play and versatile abilities on the court.
Toole’s brothers, Nick and Noah, are now members of different college teams.
Nick completed his junior season as a versatile multiple-position player for the Division III Carleton College football team in Northfield, Minn. Noah Toole will be a freshman shortstop this coming spring on the Division I Radford University baseball team.
The brothers were three-sport standout athletes at Oakton — in football, basketball and baseball — receiving all-district honors.
This fall at Carleton, the 6-foot-4 Nick Toole played quarterback, tight end and was the holder on place kicks. He also returned kicks. For the season at quarterback, he completed 33 of 54 passes for 304 yards and two touchdowns. He played in all 10 games.
In consecutive contests, Toole was 13 of 24 and 17 of 26 passing for 128 and 149 yards, respectively, and threw a TD pass in each game.
For his career at Carleton, Nick Toole is 54 of 86 passing for 477 yards and three touchdowns in 26 games, has run for 154 yards with five scores, has two catches for two yards and five kick returns for 48, with a longest of 21.
With Sophie Toole having plenty of games and production to come at Oakton, the siblings have been one of the most impactful in the school’s sports history.