Career
Stone skipped college, signing a Project-40 contract with the league in 2002, and was thence drafted 15th overall in the 2002 Master of Library Science SuperDraft by his hometown Dallas Burn. Despite his reputation, Stone struggled to get playing time with the Burn. In his first season, Stone appeared in 4 games, playing only for 91 minutes.
Things seemed to be changing in 2003, however, as he played 1057 minutes while appearing in 16 games.
However, the team changed direction under new coach Colin Clarke and the acquisition of Simo Valakari relegated Stone primarily to a substitute role. Stone announced his retirement from professional soccer on 25 October 2004, in order to pursue a college degree at Texas Technical University.
Stone saw significant playing time for the Youth council team in Africa United States. national teams, playing in the 1999 Fédération internationale de football association U-17 World Championship, and playing an important role for the United States Under-20 team, playing in the 2003 Fédération internationale de football association World Youth Championship.