Category: Girls Volleyball

  • Notebook: Cross country staying at Norris Penrose, volleyball changes schedule

    State cross country
    Norris Penrose Event Center, pictured during the 2013 state cross country meet. (Jordan Morey)

    The state cross country meets are set to remain at the Norris Penrose Event Center for the next two years

    It means the event will state at the same place it has been held for the past two seasons, pending approval by CHSAA’s board of directors.

    “That community has put a lot of effort into making the event and venue shine,” said assistant commissioner Jenn Roberts-Uhlig, who oversees cross country. “They go above and beyond to make it an amazing experience for kids across the state.”

    Three additional sites — in Jefferson County, Greeley and Lyons — are being considered to host the meet in the future.

    “We believe that the commitment that Norris Penrose has made to the state cross country meet justifies our decision to keep it there for two more years,” Roberts-Uhlig said. “In the meantime, we have three proposals that have come in that we will be evaluating over the next 12 months.

    “As we continue to review the proposals, we are confident that our decision to remain at Norris Penrose will give us the time to make the best decision for cross country students across Colorado.”

    [divider]

    Volleyball schedule changes

    State volleyball Denver Coliseum
    The Denver Coliseum, pictured during the 2013 state volleyball tournament. (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    The volleyball committee is looking to change the schedule at their state tournament. Pending legislative council approval, pool play would feature the top seed in each pool playing twice on Friday.

    Under the current format, the top seed in each pool has one pool play match on Friday and one on Saturday. If that team advances, it means three matches on Saturday, including the semifinals and final.

    With the change, the top seed (Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4) in each pool would finish their pool play matches on Friday and, if they advance, get the advantage of resting prior to the semifinals on Saturday.

    “We are really excited for this change in the match order,” said assistant commissioner Bethany Brookens, who heads volleyball. “We are hoping for more competitive semifinals and finals matches on Saturday evening.”

    The volleyball committee did discuss moving to a 32-team bracket. That would have meant overhauling the entire state format — getting rid of regionals and the four three-team pools at state. Ultimately, though, that proposal was defeated. So the current state format will remain in place, save for the scheduling tweak noted above.

    The changes, if approved by the legislative council at a meeting on Jan. 30, would take effect in 2014.

    [divider]

    Baseball tweaks Wild Card points

    All-City Field during the 2013 state baseball tournament. (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)
    All-City Field during the 2013 state baseball tournament. (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)

    In an effort to ensure its Wild Card points formula is even more accurate, the baseball committee made some small changes during its meeting this week. If the legislative council approves the changes, it will mean teams will get fewer points for a loss, and will also change the way out-of-state teams are handled.

    The wild card formula adds victory points and defeat points, then divides that total by the number of games a team plays. Teams get a certain number of points for beating another team (victory points), or for losing to another team (defeat points). Those points are determined by the number of wins an opponent has. For example, a win over a 5A team with 14 wins is worth 135 points. A loss to that same team is worth 110 points.

    The committee is seeking to reduce defeat points across the board by five points in classes 5A, 4A and 3A. Thus, the loss to that 5A team would instead be worth 105 points.

    “This will help tweak the Wild Card points to get a more true view of strength of schedule,” said assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann, who is in charge of baseball. “It became apparent at midseason (last year) that we needed adjustments to the process to create a more equitable power point formula.”

    Another change the committee made with that goal is mind is to out-of-state opponents. CHSAA schools play a maximum of 19 games during the regular season. However, many other states play more than 19 games. With that, the formula last season only accounted for an out-of-state opponent’s first 19 games.

    The committee is seeking to change that by having a team’s win percentage be factored in. A team’s win percentage would be multiplied by 19 to determine the number of “wins” a team is worth in the Wild Card point formula.

    For example, if a team in Arizona finishes 22-18, but started the season by going 14-5 in its first 19 games, that team would have counted for 14 wins last season. Under the change, that team would be worth 10 “wins.” (Their .550 win percentage would be multiplied by 19, resulting in a figure of 10.45. Figures are rounded accordingly.)

    Again, these changes need to be approved at January’s legislative council meeting.

    [divider]

    Postseason changes in softball

    State softball
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    Pending approval by the legislative council, there will be some changes to softball’s postseason.

    The softball committee is recommending a decrease in the total number of teams reaching the Class 3A postseason. Currently, there are 24 qualifiers and 33 teams playing in the classification. The committee is recommending going down to 18 qualifiers in 3A.

    Classes 5A (32 of 62) and 4A (32 of 67)  have close to 50 percent of their teams make the postseason.

    “They realized the percentage of qualifiers (in 3A) versus the number of teams that played in it was not the same percentage as 4A/5A,” said assistant commissioner Bud Ozzello, who oversees softball. “Eighteen out of 33 is closer to everyone else’s percentage.”

    Additionally, the committee is proposing a reduction to the percentage of automatic postseason qualifiers from leagues in 4A and 5A. As things are now, roughly the top 40 percent of each league qualifies for regionals; they voted to recommend cutting that to 30 percent.

    In 4A, that would mean 19 automatic berths going forward, and 13 at-large selections. In 5A, it means 18 automatics and 14 at-large berths.

    [divider]

    Short stuff

    • Gymnastics’ regionals will held on Saturdays instead of weeknights, if the committee gets its way. The legislative council needs to approve the change.
  • Grandview sweeps Arapahoe to claim 5A volleyball title

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    DENVER — Morgan Montgomery tripped over her teammate, yet still managed to flail an arm at the ball. Somehow, she connected and sent it toward the net. It clipped the top, and fell to the ground for a point.

    Montgomery turned around, almost looking embarrassed, shrugged her shoulders and laughed. As if to say, That was ridiculous.

    “They always say, ‘The team with the momentum, the ball’s going to fall in your court.’ And it definitely did,” Montgomery, a Grandview senior, would say afterward. “Haley (McLaren) and I just went for it. We didn’t know what was going on. It just went in our favor and we’re so thankful for that.”

    Everything, it seemed, went in Grandview’s favor during the Class 5A volleyball championship match against Arapahoe on Saturday night at the Denver Coliseum. The Wolves won a back-and-forth first set, 25-22, then rolled to a 25-12 win in the second and secured the title with a 25-17 win in the third.

    Saturday’s match marked Grandview’s 23rd-straight win this season. In fact, the Wolves hadn’t dropped a set since Oct. 15 before losing one to Cherry Creek in the semifinals.

    “It was a nice run, a great way to finish my high school career,” said senior Alyssa Svalberg.

    It was the fourth title in Grandview’s history. The Wolves also won in 2007, 2005 and 2004. But Grandview’s recent trips to the title game — there have now been nine of them — ended in defeats. The squad was runner-up each of the last two seasons.

    “It’s nice to be on this side again,” Wolves coach Patty Childress said.

    “This is our third time in the state finals, so all the kids — me, Morgan, Sydney (Ederhoff) and Claire (Gordon) — who have been through three state titles now, we just wanted this so bad,” Svalberg said. “Not only for ourselves, but for everyone and our coach.

    “Every single person on our team is a factor, no matter how much they play, no matter what. We’re just such a big family, and all the seniors just came out so strong. We knew from Day 1, even before tryouts, we were like, ‘This is our mission.’”

    So what was the difference? How was Grandview able to make the jump from a two-time bridesmaid? This year, there were eight seniors leading the way.

    “Last year, we had one senior and she was real quiet,” Childress said. “So these kids had to step up and lead as juniors. I think that helped.”

    Saturday was the third meeting between Grandview and Arapahoe this season. Grandview won all three, but, “Every time we’ve played,” Childress said, “it’s just been back-and-forth.”

    Arapahoe actually jumped out to an 8-4 lead in the first set during Saturday’s title match. But Childress called a timeout, calmed her bunch, and they proceeded to chip away. The lead shrunk to 12-9, then it was 14-13, then 16-16. Grandview eventually grabbed a 21-20 lead in that game and held on. For good.

    That’s because Grandview jumped all over Arapahoe in the second game. It was 7-2 before the Warriors blinked. Then Wolves junior Sarah Mullens, who only recently returned from knee surgery, went on an ace binge which sparked a back-breaking seven-point run to make it 17-5.

    “They hadn’t really passed against Sarah because this is the first time she’s played against them,” Childress said. “All the kids on the bench were just saying, ‘Well now they know what we go through everyday in practice. We have to deal with her serving to us.’”

    When the third game rolled around, Grandview again jumped out big. It was 5-1 and 10-4 early. Mongomery’s flailing, falling point made it 11-5, and was fitting at that time. Grandview was a wave, washing over the 5A field.

    “We had,” Svalberg said, “an insane season.”

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
  • Resurrection Christian cruises to 2A volleyball championship

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    DENVER — As the final hit fell out of bounds, Resurrection Christian’s volleyball team had to pause for a moment to await one more ruling from the official.

    Once that last point had been awarded to the Cougars, the celebration began.

    Resurrection Christian put together one of its most impressive matches of the season on the biggest stage, emerging from the Denver Coliseum with a 25-18, 25-19, 25-13 sweep of Lutheran Saturday night in the Class 2A state championship match.

    The victory capped an undefeated season for Resurrection Christian (29-0) and gave the squad its first state title.

    “I’m kind of in shock right now. We’ve been working so hard all season for this,” Cougars sophomore Abby Skipworth said. “This has been our only goal and it’s the only thing we’ve been thinking about. This means everything to us.”

    Junior Preston Lienemann led the way with 15 kills and Skipworth chipped in with nine kills and 17 digs. Senior Carly Whitham had 11 digs and junior Madison Webb tallied 39 assists.

    Resurrection Christian took a tough road to the final. After winning its pool, the Cougars took on ninth-seeded Yuma in the semifinals and had to hold on for a five-game victory after the Indians rallied from two games down.

    Cougars coach Caleb Howard said his team wasn’t on top of its game early Saturday morning against Ridgway, but he knew the squad would be ready when it counted.

    “I really think it was much more that we came out ready to play,” Howard said of the impressive showing in the title match. “What has set this team apart from some of the other great teams that I’ve had is they’ve consistently risen to the challenge.”

    Lutheran (25-3), which had captured the 2A title in 2011 and 2012, knocked off Fowler in four games in the other semifinal. The Lions took an early 7-4 lead in the first game Saturday night, but Resurrection Christian scored seven of the next eight points and never looked back.

    “I think we realized that we’re overthinking things,” Whitham said. “Once we realized ‘we can do this if we try’ it really clicked and we turned on our game.”

    The balance was evident in the Cougars’ lineup, as Lienemann, Skipworth, Jessica Meyer, Maddy Janzen and Webb each had big kills on the night. Lutheran trailed by nine at one point in the second game before closing to within three, but Skipworth put the game away with a kill.

    Lutheran never really got close in the deciding game despite some big kills from senior Connie Olson and sophomore Jordan Meisner down the stretch.

    Last season Lutheran knocked Resurrection Christian out of the state tournament, and the Cougars never quite forgot that moment.

    “We definitely wanted to get revenge on them for sure because we knew that they’re a great team,” Skipworth said. “They have some girls who can hit the ball and we had to play well. It just fueled our fire.”

    The Cougars graduate only two seniors in Whitham and Michaela Boehler, and the players are looking forward to establishing a state tradition in the mold of Fowler and Lutheran.

    Howard hadn’t quite gotten that far yet, wanting to live in the moment for the time being.

    “I haven’t thought about next year too much, but we know we’re returning most of our team,” Howard said. “But we really didn’t think about next year. We knew you have to take each chance you have; we had a chance this year and I’m so glad we took it.”

  • Lewis-Palmer races to 4A volleyball title over Air Academy

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    DENVER — That a new champion would be crowned was the one guarantee going into the Class 4A volleyball state championship match Saturday night at the Denver Coliseum.

    With five-time defending state champion Cheyenne Mountain getting knocked out in pool play, the sixth-seeded Air Academy Kadets and top-seed Lewis-Palmer Rangers battled it out for the championship. Lewis-Palmer cruised to a 3-0 in the title match with game scores of 25-11, 25-18 and 25-10.

    “I didn’t really care who we saw in the championship game. I just wanted to get there. I think that was a great accomplishment in itself,” Lewis-Palmer coach Susan Odenbaugh said about not getting a third match against Cheyenne Mountain, who the Rangers split with during the season.

    It was the fourth volleyball title in the Rangers’ school history, and first since 2002. Lewis-Palmer finished the 2013 season with a 27-2 record. Odenbaugh was in her first year as head coach for the Rangers back in 2002 when Lewis-Palmer won its last championship.

    “I’m not walking away for awhile,” Odenbaugh said with a smile about winning her second state title as head coach.

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Lewis-Palmer dropped just one game in its four matches during the two-day state tournament. Coronado was able to get a game off the Rangers during pool play. Lewis-Palmer defeated Roosevelt and Elizabeth 3-0 on Saturday to set up the championship match against Air Academy. The two had meet earlier during the season with the Rangers taking a 3-1 victory.

    The chemistry was perfect for Lewis-Palmer this season. Junior Alexa Smith, who had 17 kills in the title match, was the center of the Rangers’ offense. Fittingly, Smith’s block ended the match to complete the sweep of Air Academy.

    “It’s been amazing having Alexa on our team,” Lewis-Palmer senior Carson Nicodemus said. “She is a great player and has really set the bar for our offense this year.”

    With defenses having to focus on Smith, it allowed the likes of senior Haley McCurley, junior Nicole Montgomery, freshman Elizabeth Reich and Nicodemus to have plenty of opportunities to get open offensive situations.

    “I think that is the difference from teams past and this present team,” Odenbaugh said. “I’ve got depth and (Smith) isn’t our only weapon. We are just a really solid team.”

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Lewis-Palmer never trailed in the first tw0 games. Even when Air Academy got off to a 3-0 lead in Game 3, the Rangers answered with 12 straight points to regain control.

    Air Academy was coming off the high of knocking off Cheyenne Mountain 3-2 in pool play action Saturday morning before taking out Ponderosa 3-0 in the semifinals.

    “Nobody expected us to get as far as we did,” Air Academy junior Jordan Pingel said. “We were the underdogs. I’m so proud of us. If we had to lose to anyone I wanted it to be LP. They are an incredible team.”

    Pingel is actually club teammates with Smith, who has given a verbal commitment to the Purdue University.

    “I love (Smith),” Pingel said. “She is a great competitor.”

    Air Academy (23-5) will return Pingel and sophomore Ashley Pagan as two key centerpieces next season and will likely challenge for another shot at the school’s first state volleyball title. The championship match Saturday was the first time the Kadets had reached the title game.

  • Fleming wins Logan County bragging rights, 1A volleyball title

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    DENVER — Saturday’s Class 1A state volleyball championship game between Fleming and Caliche was more than about the gold ball.

    The two Logan County schools, separated by 10 miles as the crow flies, played their rubber match on the most grand of stages at the Denver Coliseum for county, northeastern Colorado and state bragging rights.

    With all the other matches well over and done with, the Wildcats and Buffaloes duked it out for an hour and 40 minutes, with Fleming ultimately winning its fourth state title 19-25, 25-22, 25-22, 25-21.

    “We are 10 miles apart and we see each other all the time, and to have both of us in the state title game is a testament to that part of the state,” said Fleming coach Derek Herbert, whose team split with the Buffs during the regular season. “It is a little bit more special when it is someone you know so well.

    “We knew exactly what they were going to do, just like they did for us and trying to get it from each other was really awesome.”

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Fleming (27-3) didn’t have that one standout hitter to turn to on a consistent basis and instead let an impressive defensive effort create offensive chances. McCall Etl, Rachel Frantz, Timmi Keisel and Madison Melvin among others combined to build a wall that the much more formidable hitters of Caliche had trouble getting around.

    “Our game plan all year long was to be an exceptional defensive team and we spent lots and lots of time working on that,” Herbert said. “(Caliche) has way more offense than we do, but we were so smart and came through with timely hits.”

    Said Caliche coach Jeanett Lambrecht, whose team finished 26-3 and lost in the title game to Weldon Valley last season: “And when we did get through a hole, it seemed like their defense was right there. And then we just started making some mistakes and you can’t make those at this point.”

    After dropping the first game, Fleming settled in and was patient offensively. Keisel, a junior, was the recipient of a majority of Kaitlin Bornhoft’s sets and despite a majority of the Buffs attention, still managed to find holes to pound away kills.

    “We knew that they could hammer the heck out of the ball and we knew if we had the chance to beat them it would be defensively,” Keisel said. “It was know use trying to match their power hitters.”

    And Keisel was happy that it was a familiar foe in the finals: “We know their big hitters and where they like to go and it definitely helps that we had seen them before.”

    Rachael Edler, Megan Pierce, Shaylyn Johnson and Sami Morgan had their chances and constantly kept the Buffs, who were in search of their first title since 2000, close — they never trailed by four points in any one game — but just seemed to run out of gas as the match went longer and longer.

    “We came out and got a little down and we tend to do that to ourselves and then we find a way to get fired back up,” Lambrecht said. “But we just could not get things going the way we wanted to.”

    Fleming last won a state title in 2011.

  • Eaton sweeps Manitou Springs to win 3A volleyball

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Coach Gwen Forester wanted her team, Eaton, to have one mindset going into their state volleyball championship final: “Envision greatness.”

    Eaton, the top seed in the tournament, took home the Class 3A volleyball championship after sweeping Manitou Springs 3-0 in the title match Saturday at Denver Coliseum.

    The two teams traded leads multiple times to open the first game. The largest run came in the closing points of the first set after they were tied at 20. Eaton strung together a series of impressive points from their front row and won the next five points to take the game.

    Manitou Springs opened the second game on a 5-2 run. Eaton swiftly battled right back, and won 10-straight points. The streak got snapped when Manitou Springs scored a point off a missed block by Eaton. The game belonged to Eaton, which dominated their serving points in winning it 25-13 and taking a 2-0 set lead.

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Eaton played a near-perfect third set, beating Manitou Springs 25-12. A large part of that was behind solid play from seniors Brittany Pierce, Kinzy Anderson and Haynes. The seniors displayed consistency and strength as they anchored all parts of the court.

    In 2011, Eaton won the 3A state tournament by beating Colorado Academy 3-0 in the final.

    “This biggest difference between that team and this year’s team is that we are now much bigger and stronger,” Foster said. “We’re continuing to build a great program.”

    The team has two state crowns in the past three years, and five in school history. Eaton finished their 2013 season at 27-1 en route to winning the championship. The Reds only loss of came at Manitou Springs on Sept. 7, when Eaton got swept 25-19 and 25-18.

    The longest road to the finals belonged to Manitou Springs, which had to come back from down two sets in their two match prior facing Eaton. In the quarters against Gunnison, Manitou Springs won 23-25, 23-25, 25-13, 25-14, 15-11. It again went five games against Valley in the semis winning, 23-25, 22-25, 25-19, 15-5.

    Manitou Springs made its last state final appearance in 1999, and have participated in the championship game seven times in the schools’ history. Its’ only championship came in 1992.

    In the semifinals, Eaton had a much more challenging opponent in Holy Family. Eaton was able to capture the first two games 25-10 and 25-14 but lost the third and fourth 23-25 and 21-25. In the final game, Eaton mustered their talent and won 15-11.

  • Photo gallery: State volleyball championships handed out

    DENVER — Five teams won state volleyball championships on Saturday: Grandview (5A), Lewis-Palmer (4A), Eaton (3A), Resurrection Christian (2A) and Fleming (1A).

  • State volleyball roundup: No. 9 seeds Elizabeth, Yuma into semis

    State volleyball elizabeth montrose
    Elizabeth is in the 4A volleyball semifinals. (Pam Wagner)

    DENVER — They weren’t supposed to be in the semis. Not as a No. 9 seeds.

    Yet, Class 4A’s Elizabeth and 2A’s Yuma — ninth-seeded, both — were the first two teams to punch their tickets to Saturday’s semifinals during the first day of the state volleyball tournaments at the Denver Coliseum on Friday.

    “Today, we’re just here,” Elizabeth coach Russ Haman said. “Nobody expects much out of us.”

    Haman’s Cardinals topped No. 4 Montrose to start the day, 3-1 (25-22, 23-25, 25-22, 25-10), then ruined No. 5 Thomas Jefferson’s coming-to-state party with another 3-1 win (25-22, 18-25, 25-23, 25-21).

    “We felt we could compete with everybody,” Haman said. “We didn’t set expectations. We were just like, ‘We’re going to do the best we can and play together as a team.’ That’s what we’ve had to work on all year, is playing as a team. That’s what they’ve chosen to do.”

    In preparation for big-time moments and teams his squad faced Friday, Haman scheduled matches and scrimmages with some of the elite programs in the state — including Lewis-Palmer, Cherry Creek, Cherokee Trail and Lakewood.

    “You get with those big-hitting teams and we learned how to try to work a defense around that,” Haman said. “Ideally, we want to play the hard, hard teams and get better and better.”

    Elizabeth could match up with Lewis-Palmer, 4A’s top seed, in the semifinals. It would be a fun personal matchup — Rangers coach Susan Odenbaugh “got me into coaching,” Haman said.

    State volleyball yuma
    Yuma advanced to the 2A semifinals. (Pam Wagner)

    Yuma also took No. 4 and 5 seeds en route to the semis. The Indians beat No. 5 Sangre de Cristo 3-1 (25-12, 25-8, 24-26, 25-13) and No. 4 Paonia 3-0 (25-18, 25-8, 25-19).

    “You know, we were a little disappointed in our seed, but I think it kind of lit a fire under the girls and they wanted to prove it a little bit more,” Yuma coach Megan Martinez said. “They came out ready to play.”

    This week, Martinez scheduled early practices to help her girls acclimate to playing so early in the day.

    “That got them ready to go,” Martinez said.

    Elsewhere, 5A’s top seed Grandview swept Castle View in its only match of the day. The Wolves will face No. 8 Rampart for a semifinal berth on Saturday morning.

    State volleyball cherry creek
    Cherry Creek. (Pam Wagner)

    No. 4 Mountain Vista and No. 5 Cherry Creek both beat No. 9 Fruita Monument, meaning their Saturday morning matchup will also determine a semifinal spot.

    No. 2 Arapahoe and No. 7 Doherty will play for the semis on Saturday following their wins over No. 11 Cherokee Trail. Doherty rallied from a 2-0 hole to beat CT 3-2.

    The final semifinal spot in 5A comes down to No. 3 Fossil Ridge and No. 6 Eaglecrest, who both topped No. 10 Pine Creek on Friday.

    In 4A, No. 1 Lewis-Palmer beat No. 12 Coronado 3-1, and No. 8 Roosevelt swept Coronado. Those teams meet Saturday morning to determine the semifinalist from Pool I.

    No. 2 Longmont and No. 7 Ponderosa will play for a semifinal berth out of Pool II. Both teams beat No. 11 Pueblo West.

    Pool III has a Colorado Springs flavor, with No. 3 Cheyenne Mountain and No. 6 Air Academy battling for the semis after both beating No. 10 Valor Christian.

    In 3A, No. 1 Eaton and No. 8 Bayfield both beat No. 12 Lamar, so they’ll play for a semifinal spot on Saturday. Out of Pool IV, No. 4 Platte Valley and No. 5 Holy Family both topped Coal Ridge and meet for a semifinal berth on Saturday.

    Valley, seeded second, and No. 7 University will play for the semis on Saturday. Both teams beat No. 11 Machebeuf.

    No. 3 Manitou Springs and No. 6 Gunnison are set to play for the final 3A semifinal spot after taking down No. 10 Sterling.

    State volleyball dove creek kit carson
    Dove Creek playing Kit Carson. (Pam Wagner)

    In 2A, No. 12 Meeker upset No. 8 Ridgway in Pool I. Couple with No. 1 Resurrection Christian’s later win over Meeker, it could make Saturday morning’s match between Ridgway and Resurrection Christian interesting. Should Resurrection Christian win, it’ll get the semifinal spot. But if Ridgway wins, the semifinalist will be determined on a tiebreaker.

    No. 2 Lutheran and No. 7 Lyons will battle for the semis after both beat No. 11 C.S. School.

    Pool III sets up like Pool I with No. 10 Akron beating No. 6 Swink on Friday. It means No. 3 Fowler can win the pool with a win over Swink, but a Swink win in that game sets up the tiebreaker scenario.

    In 1A, No. 1 Dove Creek and No. 8 Vail Christian will play for a semifinal spot following wins over No. 12 Kit Carson. Out of Pool IV, No. 4 Fleming and No. 5 Eads will meet for that semifinal spot after both teams beat No. 9 Stratton.

    No. 3 Otis and No. 6 Flager are set to play for the semis on Saturday. Both teams beat No. 10 Rocky Mountain Lutheran.

    Pool II has a potential tiebreaker scenario. No. 11 Idalia beat No. 7 Hi-Plains but lost to No. 2 Caliche on Friday. That means if Caliche beats Hi-Plains on Saturday, it gets the semifinal berth. If Hi-Plains wins, the teams will go to the tiebreak.

  • Photo gallery: Day 1 of the state volleyball tournament

    DENVER — The state volleyball tournament kicked off at the Denver Coliseum on Friday morning. Here’s a gallery of the action.

  • 5A volleyball state tournament bracket

    The schedule for the Class 5A state volleyball tournament.

    A total of 12 teams will play in four pools with the winners advancing to a championship bracket.

    State seeding/pairing criteria:

    • The MaxPreps ranking published Oct. 28 will be the primary seeding consideration.
    • If there are three teams from the same league in the same pool, the committee shall look to make a switch. The committee should first look to switch teams seeded Nos. 9-12.

    [button color=”blue” size=”medium” link=”http://chsaa.ticketleap.com/2013-chsaa-state-volleyball-championships/” target=”blank” ]Buy tickets online[/button]
    [divider]

    Pool Play Standings

    One team per pool advances to the semifinals.

    Pool I
    Seed School W L
    1 Grandview 2 0
    8 Rampart 1 1
    12 Castle View 0 2
    Pool II
    Seed School W L
    2 Arapahoe 2 0
    7 Doherty 1 1
    11 Cherokee Trail 0 2
    Pool III
    Seed School W L
    3 Fossil Ridge 1 1
    6 Eaglecrest 2 0
    10 Pine Creek 0 2
    Pool IV
    Seed School W L
    4 Mountain Vista 1 1
    5 Cherry Creek 2 0
    9 Fruita Monument 0 2

    [divider]

    Schedule

    Play begins at 8 a.m. each day. Matches begin 8 minutes following the completion of the match prior.

    Friday
    Match Pool Team Score Team Score
    1 I Rampart 3 Castle View 0
    2 IV Cherry Creek 3 Fruita Monument 0
    3 I Grandview 3 Castle View 0
    4 IV Mountain Vista 3 Fruita Monument 1
    5 II Arapahoe 3 Cherokee Trail 1
    6 III Fossil Ridge 3 Pine Creek 2
    7 II Doherty 3 Cherokee Trail 2
    8 III Eaglecrest 3 Pine Creek 1
    Saturday
    Match Pool Team Score Team Score
    1 IV Mountain Vista 1 Cherry Creek 3
    2 I Grandview 3 Rampart 0
    3 III Fossil Ridge 2 Eaglecrest 3
    4 II Arapahoe 3 Doherty 0

    [divider]

    Championship bracket

    Pool I winner faces Pool IV winner; Pool II winner faces Pool III winner.

    Semifinals will start immediately following pool play on Saturday. All finals will begin at 7 p.m.

    2013 CHSAA State Volleyball Championships Class 5A