"If I'm not mistaken, the Jets were the No. 1 special teams in the country," Stout said. "We knew that, so we all were going out there trying to prove that it was us."
Stout's career was a rocky one his first three years. There were flashes of why the Ravens invested a fourth-round pick into the big-legged punter out of Penn State, but there wasn't enough consistency.
It was a lot of pressure replacing Sam Koch, who set a high bar in Baltimore for 16 seasons. After Sunday's game, Stout said it seemed "impossible" to accomplish such a feat. Stout admits it was a make-or-break season in his career as he entered a contract year.
"\[Senior Special Teams Coach\] Randy Brown tells me, 'If you do poorly, we're going to cut you. If you do OK, we'll re-sign you. If you do too well …' I'm going to leave that part out," Stout said with a laugh. "It's going well."
Koch hung around to coach Stout for his first three seasons, and they still talk frequently. Part of why Stout has boomed this year is because he's gotten the hang of hitting the unpredictable "boomerang" punt that Koch fathered.
"I had a bad last five games last year," Stout said. "Him being there for me was what got me through it and is part of why I'm having a great year this year.