This much is certain about Legacy junior Brynn Siles: She never relents once she hits the ground running.
Category: Girls Cross Country
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Vanguard School has a new athletic director, and three new coaches
There are quite a few changes are The Vanguard School this year, starting with a new athletic director.
Rick Jensen, who has 13 years of experience as a high school athletic director and several years of experience as a coach and athletic administrator on the high school and college levels, is the Coursers’ new AD.
He announced three hires on Monday:
- Sergio Rangel will take over as the coach of the school’s volleyball team, which went 7-16 in Class 3A last season. Rangel has previously been the head volleyball coach at Fountain-Fort Carson H.S. (2015-16) and at Palmer H.S. (2010-14).
- Brandon Burrell will be the new boys soccer coach, taking over for Scott Simons. The 3A program was 5-10 a season ago. Burrell played his collegiate soccer at Georgia’s LaGrange College.
- In cross country, Leroy Neal is the new coach, replacing Kari Miller. Coach Neal comes to The Vanguard School with more than 30 years of collegiate head coaching experience, in cross country and track, at Biola University and at the California Institute of Technology.
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Simplification of uniform rule continues in track and field, and cross country

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) INDIANAPOLIS — Further simplification of the uniform rule in track and field, and clarification on the method of determining the order of finish in cross country highlight 2019 rules changes in those two high school sports.
Seven changes were recommended by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Track and Field and Cross Country Rules Committee at its June 11-13 meeting in Indianapolis, and all changes were subsequently approved by the NFHS Board of Directors.
In Rule 4-3-1, the interpretation of a foundation garment was expanded to include any item worn under the uniform top and/or bottom. The rule now states that “any visible garment worn underneath the uniform top and/or bottom is considered a foundation garment. A foundation garment is not subject to logo/trademark/reference or color restrictions.”
In addition, Rule 4-3-2 was rewritten to allow schools more options in meeting the uniform rule. The rule now states that “all relay and cross country team members must wear uniforms clearly indicating, through predominant color, school logo and color combination of all outer garments worn as a uniform, that members are from the same team.”
“It has become increasingly more difficult to officiate the uniform rule given the increase in the number of programs nationwide that are allowing individual team members the option of independently purchasing either all or part of their team uniform,” said Julie Cochran, NFHS director of sports and liaison to the Track and Field/Cross Country Rules Committee. “Slight differences in design of uniform do not negatively impact the identification of a relay or cross country team. The expectation of this rule is that all relay and cross country team members can be clearly identified as representing the same school.”
The revised 4-3-2 NOTE states that “the official shall have no uncertainty in determining that all members are from the same team.”
In cross country, regardless of the system used to determine the places of runners, the order of finish should be based on when the torso of the runner crosses the finish line. Changes in Rule 8-3 state that whether hand timing, transponder/chip or image-based timing systems are used, the torso is the determining factor in order of finish.
The committee also revised Rule 8-1-1 regarding the cross country course which better describes a legal course layout.
The remaining changes concern field events in Rule 6. In the discus and javelin, measurement shall be recorded to the nearest lesser inch or centimeter. The addition of centimeter allows states using the metric system to give a fairer depiction of the actual performance.
In Rule 6-9 regarding the long jump and triple jump, the committee established ranges of distances in the events. Rule 6-9-5 NOTE states that the “distance from the foul line or takeoff board may be adjusted to accommodate different levels of competition. Competitors may change which foul line or takeoff board they are using during competition, but only with the prior notification and confirmation of the event judge.”
According to the 2016-17 NFHS High School Athletics Participation Survey, track and field is the most popular sport for girls with 494,477 participants and is No. 2 for boys with 600,136. Cross country ranks sixth for girls with 226,039 and sixth for boys with 266,271 participants.
A complete listing of the track and field/cross country rules changes will be available on the NFHS website at www.nfhs.org. Click on “Activities & Sports” at the top of the home page and select “Track and Field/Cross Country.”
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Jeffco Athletics HOF inducts five new members

Kent Waryan, Laura Probst, Chris Peterson, Liz Armbrustmacher and Kevin Williams (not pictured) were inducted into the Jeffco Athletic Hall of Fame on Thursday at the Arvada Center. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) ARVADA — Laura Probst never won a state championship.
The 2002 graduate of Arvada West High School finished runner-up 11 times in state cross country and track individual races. However, 16 years after leaving Jeffco and after a stellar soccer career at Texas A&M University, Probst was inducted into the Jeffco Athletic Hall of Fame on Thursday afternoon at the Arvada Center — along with Chris Peterson, Liz Armbrustmacher, Kevin Williams and Kent Waryan.
“It’s incredibly special. Part of the reason it was so unexpected,” said Probst, who is now a primary care doctor at a Veterans Hospital in Albuquerque, NM. “Being a student-athlete in Colorado and Jefferson County was such an important time in my life, but it seem so far in the past.”
Despite all the second-place finishes, Probst’s attitude was always positive.
“I think you have to remember why you are doing it and what it is all about,” said Probst, who won the coveted Freddie Joe Steinmark Award in 2002. “For me I was competing against myself. As long as I knew I gave my best and left it all out on the track I was satisfied.”
Chris Peterson
The Jefferson High School graduate might have been a little ahead of his time. The sharp-shooting basketball guard led the state in scoring his senior year in guiding the Saints to an appearance in the Final 4 of the state tournament.
Peterson’s youngest son —Lakewood High School graduate Kolton Peterson — broke the all-time Class 5A 3-point record just a few years ago. All the scoring Chris Peterson did in his time in the mid-1970s came without the 3-point line in existence.
“I thought it was going to be a roast at first,” Peterson said during his speech. “My boys were all sitting around last tonight and said I would probably be the first basketball player to go into the (Jeffco) Hall of Fame who never made a 3-point shot.”
Peterson went on to coach softball at Green Mountain, along with boys basketball at Arvada West.
Liz Armbrustmacher
This Evergreen High School graduate was apart of the volleyball juggernaut the Cougars build under coach Lo Hunter in the 1980s, which included a 182-match winning streak.
Armbrustmacher went on to play Indiana University before returning to Jeffco. She led Lakewood High School to a remarkable run starting in the late 1990s.
“All of us in this room understand the impact of sports and activities,” said Armbrustmacher, who is still a teacher at Lakewood. “The lessons learned and taught on the field, the court, the pitch, the diamond and the track that those lessons learned expand far more than the game.”
Kevin Williams
Williams was a seven-time state champion in cross country and track at D’Evelyn Junior/Senior High School. He still holds the Class 4A state record in the 3,200-meter run that he set his senior year in 2008 with a time of 9:06.27.
“Looking back at my athlete career a feel very lucky to have attended Jefferson County and D’Evelyn,” Williams wrote in a statement read by his high school track coach Micah Porter. “When I arrived at D’Evelyn in 7th-grade and I no idea I would become a distance runner and how big of a role that would play in my life.”
Williams went on to run at the University of Oklahoma from 2008-13 where he had three consecutive top-10 finishes at the NCAA Cross Country National Championships. He is currently the head cross country coach at North Texas University and assistant track coach for the Mean Green.
Kent Waryan
Waryan came to Jeffco in the mid-1970s. He was a teacher, coach and administrator at a number of schools before retiring a handful of years ago from the district. He spent his final years at Jeffco at the athletic director at Wheat Ridge and Lakewood before sharing duties with Kevin Land as the Executive Director of Athletics and Activities in Jeffco.
Jim Thyfault, current Executive Director of Athletics and Activities, said that Waryan served as a mentor to so many current athletic directors in Jeffco.
“The scoreboard is not the most important thing and communication,” Waryan said of the two valuable things his wife has taught him over the years.
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Pomona graduate Ryan Marquez, middle, stands with family members after receiving the 5A Jeffco Male Athlete of the Year and Freddie Joe Steinmark Award at the 32nd Annual Jeffco Athletics Hall of Fame Banquet on Thursday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) Jeffco Athletics 2017-18 Awards
Athletes of the Year
Jeffco 5A Male: Ryan Marquez, Pomona
Jeffco 5A Female: Camilla Emsbo, Lakewood
Jeffco 4A Male: Adam Thistlewood, Golden
Jeffco 4A Female: Kristina Schreiber, EvergreenCoaches of the Year
Jeffco 5A Coach of Male Sports: Jay Madden, Pomona
Jeffco 5A Coach of Female Sports: Tracey Boychuk, Pomona
Jeffco 4A Coach of Male Sports: Brian Kula, Valor Christian
Jeffco 4A Coach of Female Sports: Amy Bahl, EvergreenAssistant Coaches of the Year
Jeffco 5A Asst. of Male Sports: Shane Fugita, Dakota Ridge
Jeffco 5A Asst. of Female Sports: Steve Hadley, Lakewood
Jeffco 4A Asst. of Male Sports: Brian Zehnder, Standley Lake
Jeffco 4A Asst. of Female Sports: Ali Meyers, EvergreenFred Steinmark Team Award
Jeffco 5A: Ralston Valley
Jeffco 4A: D’EvelynPaul Davis Sportsmanship Award
Jeffco 5A: Bear Creek
Jeffco 4A: Golden -
Telluride’s Soleil Gaylord named 2018 girls Freddie Steinmark Award winner

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com) Growing up in Telluride, one of the most scenic parts of the state, Soleil Gaylord knows quite a lot about the beauty that surrounds her. When Soleil remarked that winning the 2018 Freddie Steinmark Award was a beautiful way to end her high school career, she was not exaggerating.
“Oh my gosh, this is absolutely amazing. What a beautiful way to end my high school career. I graduate next week, this is huge!” said Soleil.
Another thing that is huge is the list of accomplishments and community activities put together in the mountains around Telluride. Her running talent has taken Soleil far from her hometown, as she has competed in world championships in Spain. But, the training she has completed on the worn track at Wheat Ridge High School means as much to her as any track and gives her a unique connection to the Freddie Steinmark story.
Soleil’s mother, Ramona, graduated from Wheat Ridge High School and was familiar with the legacy of Freddie Steinmark. When the Gaylord family visited Soleil’s grandmother in Wheat Ridge, Soleil would jog down to the Wheat Ridge High School track and complete her workout for the day.
In her nomination letter Soleil wrote, “I imagine Freddie Steinmark must have spent hundreds of hours practicing and playing games on that field. Through the proximity to his high school, I feel a kinship with the young Freddie when I stride along the track. I am inspired by the legend of Mr. Steinmark, and I ponder what being nominated for this prestigious Colorado award means to me.”
Now Soleil will have to consider what the impact will be on being the 46th recipient of the Steinmark Award.
The Steinmark Award was established in 1972 and honors Freddie Steinmark, who excelled in football, basketball, and baseball while attending Wheat Ridge High School in the 1960s. He was also an outstanding student and was active in several school and community-oriented endeavors before attending the University of Texas, where he helped the Longhorns to the national football title in 1969. He died from cancer in 1971 at the age of 22.
Soleil has been a standout on the Colorado cross country and track scene for her four years of high school. In cross country, she placed in the top 7 all four years — with a runner-up medal in 2017 — and was a member of the 2A state championship cross country team in 2015 and 2016. In 2014, the Telluride Miners were runner-up in the team race.
On the track, Soleil was atop the 2A girls podium for three straight years in the 1600m and 3200m races. In 2018, she finished 5th in the 800m, and in 2017 was a member of the state champion 4x800m relay.
Pretty good performances for a school without a track! An understandable fact given the massive amounts of snow that Telluride is famous for. This minor setback gave rise to other outlets for Soleil’s tremendous passion for running, a passion she credits to her father, Kent Gaylord.
Soleil began training in the winter by snowshoe running and in the summer was training in the spectacular mountains above the Valley Floor area. Before long she was competing at mountain running and snowshoe running…competing and winning state, national, and international titles.

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) Soleil has traveled the world as a member of the silver medal team at the 2017 World Mountain Running Championships in Italy and as a two-time world champion at the World Snowshoe Federation World Championships in New York (2017) and Spain (2018). For these accomplishments, Soleil was named the 2017 Outstanding Snowshoe and Overall Outstanding Athlete by the Sportswomen of Colorado.
As if this was not impressive enough, Soleil was named the 2017 Wendy’s High School Heisman National Winner. She was recognized for her courage and dedication in overcoming a mountain-sized obstacle of her own.
Early in life Soleil was diagnosed with selective mutism, an anxiety disorder that made it difficult for her to communicate in social settings. Instead of running away from her problem, she sprinted at it full speed. Soleil says she knew “being able to communicate was vital to bringing change to her community.”
After years of tackling the condition head on, Soleil became the Student Body President, host of her own radio show, and started her school’s greenhouse.
A special tone seeps into Soleil’s voice when she talks about her work in the school and community of Telluride. Her radio show, “Valley Floor-a and Fauna” shares information about the environmental aspects of the valley floor and the wildlife that can be found on her training runs.
Soleil was joined by other schoolmates in refurbishing the school’s greenhouse and started a program to teach elementary school students about healthy eating habits. The vegetables grown in the school greenhouse are harvested and shared with the school food program to make a local food source the students can enjoy year- round.
For these and many other activities, Soleil was awarded The Congressional Award Bronze Medal for her goal- setting and community service.
Soleil will continue her community-service activities, athletic career, and academic pursuits next year at Dartmouth College. She noted that she took her college visit to the Hanover, New Hampshire school in the height of the fall colors and instantly fell in love with the area, the college, and the distance coach and team.
Soleil Gaylord is the 46th winner of the girls Steinmark Award since it was first presented to girls in 1974. The first girl to win the Steinmark Award was Anne Vento of Pueblo Centennial in 1974. There were two winners of the award in 1984. Soleil will be honored as part of the CHSCA All-State Games on June 8, 2018, at Adams State University in Alamosa, CO. Soleil will be honored along with Pomona’s Ryan Marquez, who will receive the boys 2018 Steinmark Award.
Last year, Jordan Acosta of Douglas County was the recipient of the girls Steinmark and Brandon Micale of Pomona the boys Steinmark.
Finalists for the 2018 Steinmark Award: Rylee Anderson, Silver Creek; Addi Iken, Littleton; Micayla Isenbart, Kit Carson; Skylar Lodice, Dakota Ridge; Gabriella McDonald, Rocky Mountain.

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) -
Mountain Vista’s Jenna Fitzsimmons named girls XC runner of the year by Gatorade

(Cannon Casey/CHSAANow.com) Mountain Vista’s Jenna Fitzsimmons, the reigning Class 5A individual champion, has been named Colorado’s girls cross country runner of the year by Gatorade.
She is the first girl from Mountain Vista to win the XC award. Fitzsimmons is the fourth recipient from the school in any sport.
Fitzsimmons, a sophomore, won the 5A title with a time of 18:10.3, and also helped the Golden Eagles win the team title. She placed sixth at the Nike Cross Nationals Southwest Regional championships, and 30th at the NXN Final.
After the season, she was named the 5A runner of the year as part of the all-state teams.
Fitzsimmons also has a 4.0 GPA, and volunteers locally to assist special needs children.
“Jenna works extremely hard and is one of the most coachable athletes to come through our program,” Mountain Vista coach Eric Selle said in a statement. “She’s very humble and always puts the team goals ahead of any individual goals she may have.”
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Legislative Council notebook: Changes to football’s calendar; volleyball moves to bracket format

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) AURORA — Football’s calendar will align with the national setup, allowing for more consistency with surrounding states, and flexibility within the state’s current format.
Additionally, volleyball is heading to a bracket format, there will be a new process for adding a new sport, teams will be allowed to play an exhibition game to raise money for their program, and baseball’s move to a 23-game regular season in 3A, 4A and 5A was approved.
Those were among changes made by the CHSAA Legislative Council during the first of their two annual meetings on Thursday.
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Football changes

(Dustin Price/dustinpricephotography.com) For the immediate 2018 season, football’s changes means that the start of practice will move up by a week, and begin on Aug. 6. Additionally, this change will build in a bye week for classes 4A through 6-man, and allow for 5A to move to a 24-team playoff — something that was also approved on Thursday.
The lead up to full contact will be as follows: two days in helmets, two days of full pads with limited contact, and one day of full pads and full contact. Scrimmages will be allowed on Aug. 16, with the first regular season games allowed on Aug. 23.
No longer will the first week of competition be known as Zero Week — the former scrimmage/contest hybrid week. Instead, it’ll simply be Week 1.
Because the existing approved dates of the postseason remain in place, it leaves a bye week during the regular season for 6-man through 4A, and a bye week for the top eight seeds in the 5A football playoffs while seeds Nos. 9-24 play in the first round.
Elsewhere in football:
- 2A and 3A will play their championship games at a neutral site.
- The proposed league alignments were all approved and are now final.
- As noted above, 5A is moving from a 16-team playoff to a 24-team playoff.
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Volleyball bracket

(Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com) All five classes of the state volleyball tournament, held annually at the Denver Coliseum, will change from pool play to a bracket starting this fall.
The bracket format will be a 12-team Olympic crossover, meaning it will be double-elimination up until the semifinals, where the tournament will change to a single-elimination.
“We are really excited to be moving in this direction,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Bethany Brookens said following the volleyball committee meeting last November.
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New process for adding activities and sports

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) The process for adding a new sport or activity — something that was in the spotlight last January with boys volleyball — has been overhauled.
Now, the process will be as follows:
- The Board of Directors must approve the new activity for a piloting process, while taking into account things like “longevity and history of the activity, support from the activity’s governing body, ability to host a coach’s clinic on skills and safety (sports only),” and “adequate number of officials (sports only).” The pilot program must last at least one year. New activities can ask for a pilot program from the Board at any point.
- The new activity must have support from the Classification and League Organizing Committee, the Sports Medicine Committee, the Equity Committee, the and Board of Directors before the Legislative Council can vote on it.
The new bylaw additions also outlines step-by-step what each new activity should be doing, and when.
It seems likely that boys volleyball and girls wrestling will approach the Board to begin the piloting process. Both sports have expressed interest.
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Foundation Showcase creates exhibitions to raise money
A new bylaw which allows teams to participate in a “Foundation Benefit Contest” beyond the game limits was approved.
This will allow schools the opportunity to schedule exhibition games where they charge admission, keep score and raise money for their programs or a cause.
These games will not have any impact on postseason/playoff considerations.
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Elsewhere:
- Here’s a full breakdown of baseball’s increase to 23 games in 5A, 4A and 3A.
- The Technology Committee gave a report on their recommendation with the RPI.
- Seven new schools were approved for initial membership: DSST-Byers, KIPP Northeast, Loveland Classical, Riverdale Ridge, Strive Prep Rise, Strive Prep Smart, Thomas MacLaren. This gives CHSAA 358 member schools.
- Stargate, Golden View Academy and Victory Prep Academy were approved as full members.
- The cross country proposal to score four of the six runners at the 2A state meet was amended, so 2A will remain with three scoring runners.
- Field hockey officially changed its OT procedure for the playoffs. Now, games will play 11 on 11 in the first OT. If still tied, they will play 7 on 7 in a second OT. If the game remains tied, they will go to a shootout.
- 3A girls soccer’s postseason field will expand from 24 to 32 teams in 2019.
- New CHSAA Board members to start in 2018-19: Luke DeWolfe, Steamboat Springs; Chase McBride, Niwot; Obafemi Alao, DSST-Green Valley Ranch; Don Steiner, Evangelical Christian.
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Telluride’s Soleil Gaylord wins Wendy’s High School Heisman

(Simon Russell/Getty Images for Wendy’s) Telluride senior Soleil Gaylord was named this year’s female Wendy’s High School Heisman winner on Friday.
The prestigious national award honors high school seniors who give back to their communities, treat people with respect, seek to continue their education, and excel in athletics.
Gaylord was one of five national female finalists for the award. Longmont’s Brandon Staple was one of the five male finalists. The male winner was Jackson Destine of Delray Beach, Fla.

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) For winning, Gaylord will receive a $10,000 college scholarship. Staple will receive a $5,000 scholarship for being a finalist.
Gaylord is the first Colorado winner of the Wendy’s High School Heisman since Wiggins’ Kyle Pollock won in 2009.
Gaylord is a multi-sport athlete who competes in track and cross country, and is also the student body president at Telluride.
She is the two-time defending champion in both the 1,600 and 3,200-meter races at the 2A state track meet, and also finished second in the 800 last season. Gaylord was also part of Telluride’s championship-winning 4×800 relay.
Gaylord finished second at last month’s 2A state cross country championships, and was named first-team all-state earlier this week. She was fifth as a junior, third as a sophomore, and seventh as a freshman.
Outside of high school athletics, Gaylord has also competed in the World Mountain Running Championships, and is a World Champion snowshoe runner.
She is passionate about the environment. From the release announcing Gaylord as a finalist:
She presents to her town government two times a year about a native species garden that she designed and maintains on 500 acres of protected land. She also founded a program to save and rebuild Telluride’s Monarch butterfly population, and works in her school’s greenhouse to promote healthy eating and supply low-income families with fresh produce. In everything she does, Soleil passionately believes in putting in the hard work. As her long list of accomplishments shows, the rewards are well worth the effort.

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) -
Colorado has two finalists for Wendy’s High School Heisman

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) Two of the ten finalists for this year’s Wendy’s High School Heisman award are seniors from Colorado high schools.
Telluride’s Soleil Gaylord is a finalist for the girls award, while Longmont’s Brandon Staple is a finalist for the boys award. Both will attend Heisman Weekend in New York City, with the winner announced on Dec. 8 during the Heisman Memorial Trophy Presentation.
The one boys and one girls will will each receive a $10,000 college scholarship, and the four finalists who do not win will receive a $5,000 scholarship.
Gaylord is a multi-sport athlete who competes in track and cross country, who is also student body president at Telluride.
She is the two-time defending champion in both the 1,600 and 3,200-meter races at the 2A state track meet, and also finished second in the 800 last season. Gaylor was also part of Telluride’s championship-winning 4×800 relay.
Gaylord finished second at last month’s 2A state cross country championships, and was named first-team all-state earlier this week. She was fifth as a junior, third as a sophomore, and seventh as a freshman.
Outside of high school athletics, Gaylord has also competed in the World Mountain Running Championships, and is a World Champion snowshoe runner.
She is passionate about the environment. From the release announcing Gaylord as a finalist:
She presents to her town government two times a year about a native species garden that she designed and maintains on 500 acres of protected land. She also founded a program to save and rebuild Telluride’s Monarch butterfly population, and works in her school’s greenhouse to promote healthy eating and supply low-income families with fresh produce. In everything she does, Soleil passionately believes in putting in the hard work. As her long list of accomplishments shows, the rewards are well worth the effort.
Staple is also a multi-sport athlete, competing in soccer and track for Longmont.
In his recently-completed high school soccer career, Staple scored 29 goals and had 13 assists in 52 games played. That included a senior campaign where he led the Trojans with 15 goals.
Last season, Staple was named second-team all-state in Class 4A. This year’s all-state boys soccer teams have not yet been announced.
Outside of athletics, Staple is a leader of a variety of math and science clubs at Longmont. He plans to start the orthopedic surgery study program at Stanford after he graduates.
He’s also heavily involved and interested in solving social problems. From the press release announcing Staple as a finalist:
Brandon is committed to doing his part to solve social problems as well. Leveraging his love of technology, he came up with a plan to create an app that promotes positive police-youth engagements in his own neighborhood. He’s working to improve conditions much further from home, too. After visiting his father’s native country of Jamaica, and witnessing kids playing soccer in the streets with no shoes, Brandon started a program to provide soccer gear for underprivileged Jamaican youth. Every Christmas, he works with his soccer team and the local community to gather old uniforms, cleats, and balls. Then, Brandon ships the items to Jamaica to be distributed to those in need.

(Courtesy of Wendy’s HS Heisman) -
All-state girls cross country teams for the 2017 season
The 2017 all-state girls cross country teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.
These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.
The athletes who won championships at their classification were named runner of the year.
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Class 2A
Runner of the year: Helen Cross, Nederland
Coach of the year: Kory Skattum, NederlandFirst Team Name Year School Helen Cross Sophomore Nederland Sarah Davidson Senior Nederland Lucca Fulkerson Freshman Dawson Soleil Gaylord Senior Telluride Maria O’Neal Senior Crested Butte Chloe Veilleux Junior Soroco Second Team Name Year School Katie Fankhouser Sophomore Lyons Sydney Petersen Senior Crested Butte Emma Schaefer Senior Shining Mountain Katya Schwietermann Sophomore Paonia Linnea Sherman Freshman Colorado Rocky Mountain Kylee Udovich Junior Lyons Honorable mention: Ashlyn Alvey, Freshman, Rocky Ford; Caitlyn Anderson, Sophomore, Highland; Cecilia Davies, Freshman, Clear Creek; Kate Griffin, Sophomore, The Colorado Springs School; Emilee Haefeli, Senior, Del Norte; Brooke Hillman, Senior, Paonia; Bria Johnson, Sophomore, The Vanguard School; Abby Leuchten, Junior, Shining Mountain; Grace Manning, Freshman, Mancos; Samantha O’Brien, Senior, Clear Creek; Sarah Roberts, Sophomore, Lyons; Tawnee Roberts, Freshman, Paonia; Madeline Watts, Senior, Lyons.
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Class 3A
Runner of the year: Quinn McConnell, Peak to Peak
Coach of the year: Kim McConnell, Peak to PeakFirst Team Name Year School Tiana Bradfield Junior Peak to Peak Maggi Congdon Sophomore Steamboat Springs Hannah Ellis Senior Frontier Academy Quinn McConnell Junior Peak to Peak Anna Shults Junior Peak to Peak Alyssa Wells Freshman Holy Family Second Team Name Year School Winter Boese Junior Steamboat Springs McKenzie Elliott Senior Classical Academy Rachel Ingram Junior Colorado Springs Christian Ashten Loeks Junior Elizabeth Hannah McReavy Senior St Mary’s Kaylee Thompson Junior Classical Academy Honorable mention: Allison Beasley, Freshman, Peak to Peak; Ruby Brown, Sophomore, Salida; Katie Flaherty, Junior, Classical Academy; Payton Grove, Senior, SkyView Academy; Taylor Haerbig, Freshman, D’Evelyn; Alaina Jones, Junior, Elizabeth; Kylie Kravig, Freshman, University; Dasha Kutnetsova, Senior, Steamboat Springs; Lilly Lavier, Sophomore, Alamosa; Laura Romero, Freshman, Denver North; Taylor Santangelo, Senior, Holy Family; Kylie Simshauser, Freshman, Florence; Sarah Wagler, Senior, Rifle.
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Class 4A
Runner of the year: Elizabeth Constien, Battle Mountain
Coach of the year: Rob Parish, Battle MountainFirst Team Name Year School Elizabeth Constien Senior Battle Mountain Paige Embaugh Junior Air Academy Morgan Hykes Junior Windsor Addi Iken Senior Littleton Tatum Miller Sophomore Air Academy Isabella Prosceno Freshman Palmer Ridge Second Team Name Year School Joslin Blair Sophomore Eagle Valley Tiya Chamberlin Junior Wheat Ridge Riley Geldean Sophomore Centaurus Lizzy Harding Junior Battle Mountain Madi Kenyon Junior Roosevelt Taylor Whitfield Freshman Valor Christian Honorable mention: Kyndel Anderson, Sophomore, Windsor; Madeleine Burns, Sophomore, Durango; Maren Busath, Freshman, Palmer Ridge; Cami Fischmann, Sophomore, Silver Creek; Mary Fox, Junior, Golden; Kiara Hamlin, Sophomore, Durango; Naomi Harding, Junior, Battle Mountain; Katie Hooten, Sophomore, Centaurus; Kasey Klocek, Sophomore, Green Mountain; Kenadi Krueger, Sophomore, Thompson Valley; Alex Raichart, Senior, Battle Mountain; Liberty Ricca, Junior, Discovery Canyon; Maggie Smith, Junior, Niwot.
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Class 5A
Runner of the year: Jenna Fitzsimmons, Mountain Vista
Coach of the year: Eric Selle, Mountain VistaFirst Team Name Year School Claudia Burgess Senior Boulder Stephanie Carrasco Senior Thornton Caroline Eck Junior Mountain Vista Jenna Fitzsimmons Sophomore Mountain Vista Ivy Gonzales Senior Broomfield Sarah O’Sullivan Sophomore Mountain Vista Second Team Name Year School Isalina Colsman Sophomore Regis Jesuit Lina Corrales Senior Douglas County Caitlin McConnell Junior Cherokee Trail Kaitlyn Mercer Junior Grandview Kyla Ramsey Senior Rampart Julia Schlepp Junior Rocky Mountain Honorable mention: Carley Bennett, Junior, Lakewood; Isabella Bowland, Senior, Fairview; Katie Doucette, Senior, Arvada West; Liz Hogan, Senior, Monarch; Hope James, Sophomore, Rock Canyon; Lynzie Kutsner, Junior, Rampart; Callin Naddy, Senior, Rocky Mountain; Shannon Osoba, Junior, Rock Canyon; Claire Pauley, Senior, Arvada West; Madison Reed, Sophomore, Mountain Vista; Michelle Renner, Senior, Dakota Ridge; Ellie Schweiker, Sophomore, Ralston Valley; Sydney Swanker, Sophomore, Broomfield.