An eight-run fourth inning powered Class 5A No. 8 Chatfield baseball to a 10-5 win over D’Evelyn on Thursday.
Category: Baseball
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Photos: Bats come alive as No. 3 Mountain Vista baseball beats No. 5 Rocky Mountain
Griffin Huiatt went 2-for-2 and drove in six runs to lead Class 5A No. 3 Mountain Vista baseball to a 17-2 win over No. 5 Rocky Mountain.
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Photos: Chaparral baseball beats crosstown rival Legend
Nick Miszuk threw four innings and allowed just one earned run as Chaparral baseball beat crosstown rival Legend 6-1.
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Photos: Legacy baseball gets late rally to beat No. 2 Valor Christian
Blake Roberts went 2-for-3, scored two runs and drove in another as Legacy baseball beat Class 5A Valor Christian 6-3.
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Baseball rankings: The preseason poll for Season D

(Lisa Hayes/StillOfTheMomentPhotography.com) In the first polls of Season D, Regis Jesuit, Cheyenne Mountain, Eaton, Peyton and Granada are preseason No. 1s.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches, are the official polls of the Association.
Complete rankings for all classes are below.
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CHSAANow.com Baseball Polls
Voted upon by coaches and select media members around the state. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.
Coaches and media members looking to vote should email bcochi@chsaa.org.
Class 5A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Regis Jesuit (5) 0-0 117 2 Valor Christian (3) 0-0 80 3 Mountain Vista (3) 0-0 78 4 Cherry Creek (2) 0-0 76 5 Rocky Mountain 0-0 69 6 Fairview (1) 0-0 61 7 Heritage 0-0 49 8 Chatfield 0-0 45 9 Rock Canyon 0-0 30 10 Douglas County 0-0 25 Others receiving votes: Legend 23, Grandview 20, Mullen 13, Ralston Valley 11, Cherokee Trail 11, ThunderRidge 10, Pueblo West 9, Legacy 9, Pine Creek 7, Fossil Ridge 6, Fort Collins 5, Broomfield 4, Grand Junction 3, Denver South 2, Arapahoe 2, Chaparral 2, Lakewood 1, Brighton 1, Mountain Range 1 Class 4A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Cheyenne Mountain (4) 0-0 90 2 Silver Creek (3) 0-0 72 3 Holy Family (1) 0-0 57 4 Golden (2) 0-0 55 5 Fort Morgan 0-0 49 6 Windsor (1) 0-0 45 7 Montrose 1-0 29 8 Longmont 0-0 26 9 Erie 0-0 25 10 Ponderosa (1) 0-0 23 Others receiving votes: Lewis-Palmer 19, Palisade 18, Pueblo County 15, Skyview 14, D’Evelyn 14, Mead 13, Severance 13, Pueblo South 9, Falcon 9, Elizabeth 8, Frederick 7, Denver North 7, Palmer Ridge 6, Centaurus 5, Evergreen 5, Niwot 4, Wheat Ridge 4, Roosevelt 4, Durango 4, Eagle Valley 3, Pueblo East 2, Thomas Jefferson 2, Air Academy 2, Pueblo Central 1, Mountain View 1 Class 3A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Eaton (3) 0-0 72 2 University (3) 0-0 67 3 Resurrection Christian (1) 0-0 49 4 Lutheran 0-0 43 5 Delta 0-0 35 6 Faith Christian 0-0 31 7 Colorado Academy 0-0 29 7 Sterling 0-0 29 9 Brush 0-0 20 9 Kent Denver 0-0 20 Others receiving votes: Lamar 19, Alamosa 12, La Junta 12, Bayfield 11, Montezuma-Cortez 10, Pagosa Springs 9, Peak to Peak 8, Gunnison 5, Manitou Springs 4, Salida 4, Bennett 3, Strasburg 3, Basalt 2, Moffat County 1, Valley 1 Class 2A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Peyton (5) 0-0 68 2 Limon (1) 0-0 44 3 Fowler 0-0 42 4 Rye (1) 0-0 36 5 Hotchkiss 0-0 30 6 Buena Vista 0-0 22 7 St. Mary’s 0-0 19 8 Rocky Ford 0-0 17 9 Wray 0-0 14 10 Dayspring Christian Academy 0-0 12 Others receiving votes: Calhan 8, Cedaredge 8, Swink 8, Yuma 8, Holyoke 7, Colorado Springs Christian School 7, Front Range Christian 6, Highland 5, Dawson School 3, Clear Creek 3, Wiggins 2, Meeker 1, Burlington 1, County Line [Wiley/McClave] 1, Monte Vista 1 Class 1A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Granada (3) 0-0 56 2 Dove Creek 0-0 35 3 Flatirons Academy (2) 0-0 34 4 Nucla 0-0 32 5 Holly (1) 0-0 30 6 Caliche 0-0 28 7 Otis (1) 0-0 27 8 Cotopaxi 0-0 23 9 Evangelical Christian 0-0 22 10 Haxtun 0-0 21 Others receiving votes: Merino 17, Stratton/Liberty 15, Eads 13, Simla 7, Rocky Mountain Lutheran 7, Longmont Christian 7, Sanford 3, Mile High Academy 3, Cripple Creek-Victor 2, Manzanola 1, Springfield 1, Cheyenne Wells 1 -
Photos: Mountain Vista and Arvada West take the diamond to start baseball season
Mountain Vista and Arvada West took advantage of the chance to play ball as both teams kicked off their baseball seasons on Saturday.
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Jeffco student-athletes ink on first National Letter of Intent Signing Day
It didn’t looked like a normal National Letter of Intent Signing Day on Wednesday.

Conifer’s Zack Gacnik
(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)The current COVID-19 pandemic didn’t allow for the normal signing celebrations across Jeffco during the first of four signing days coming up for the Class of 2021. However, a number of Jeffco Public Schools student-athletes signed on Nov. 11 to continue their college careers.
Ralston Valley had nine girls sign, highlighted by last year’s Class 5A girls diving state champion Isabel Gregersen. She will dive for Florida State University. Sydney Bevington is taking her basketball talent to Santa Clara University and Jordan West is staying close to home to play softball at Colorado State University.

Columbine’s Korbe Otis
(photo provided)Columbine’s Korbe Otis, who helped the Rebels to their first state softball title in 2019, officially signed with the University of Louisville.
The University of Colorado added Conifer’s Zack Gacnik to its roster. Gacnik placed third at the 4A boys cross country state championship last month in Colorado Springs.
The next National Letter of Intent Signing Day is Dec. 16 and includes the early football signing period.
Green Mountain High School
Connor Brauch, diving, University of Cincinnati
Isaias Estrada, wrestling, University of North Carolina
KC Ossello, lacrosse, Missouri Western State UniversityRalston Valley High School
Makena Geist, softball, University of Colorado-Colorado Springs
Jaiden Geist, softball, Metro State University
Madison Hauffman, lacrosse, Notre Dame College (Ohio)
Jordan West, softball, Colorado State University
Brooklyn Seymour, basketball, Western Colorado University
Isabel Gregersen, diving, Florida State University
Megan Jackson, lacrosse, Palm Beach Atlantic University
Sydney Bevington, basketball, Santa Clara University
Sydney Metzler, swimming, University of WyomingGolden High School
Ben Kirschner, lacrosse, University of Massachusetts-Lowell
Marla Goodspeed, softball, Oregon Tech
Sydney Benson, volleyball, Mercer
Maci Jones, soccer, Bentley University
Hank Ohlen, lacrosse, Belmont Abbey
Jadyn Goodrich, soccer, University of DenverConifer High School
Zack Gacnik, cross country, University of Colorado
Addie Hollander, lacrosse, Franklin & MarshallColumbine High School
Korbe Otis, softball, University of LouisvilleEvergreen High School
Margo Miller, lacrosse, Cornell University
Lauren Spence, lacrosse, Loyola University-Maryland
Madeline Mancini, lacrosse, Notre Dame College
Jared Stiller, lacrosse, Williams College
Thomas Schreffler, baseball, Mesa Community College (AZ)
George Hogan, baseball, Dordt UniversityLakewood High School
Lila Maddux, swimming, Niagara University (NY)Chatfield High School
Izzy DiNapoli, softball, University of Northern ColoradoWheat Ridge High School
Wes Miller, baseball, Regis UniversityArvada West High School
Alexis Kilgroe, water polo, Salem International University -
Officials associations donate to Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver

DFOA Area Directors John Conklin, Jeff Penney and Joel Pogar presenting the check to Trish Wales, Event Director for the Boys and Girls Clubs of Metro Denver. (Submitted photo) Two officials association joined up to make a difference in their community.
The Denver Football Officials Association and the Colorado High School Baseball Umpires Association teamed up to jointly present a check of $1,000 to the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver this week.
The money came from proceeds of the recent annual golf tournament held by the associations.
If you want to help make a difference in your community, sign up to be a high school sports official.
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Q&A: Cherry Creek coach Marc Johnson’s love for baseball is never-ending

(Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com) Baseball has a funny way about bringing out the romance in sports. Perhaps no one in Colorado knows that more than Cherry Creek coach Marc Johnson.
Nearly 50 years and 800-plus wins into his coaching career, his love for the game has never wavered. It has helped him develop relationships with countless kids that have come through his program and he’s hoping that’s a trend that will continue for years to come.
With baseball set to return at the professional level, Johnson couldn’t help but stress just how badly the game has been missed and how much it has meant to him and the hundreds of kids that have made their way through the Cherry Creek program.
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Question: How much have we missed baseball over the last few months?
Johnson: Oh, I think tremendously. I think the kids have missed it. I know the players, the major league players, have missed it. The fans have missed it. It’s been a real adjustment for everybody. I was watching a couple of summer camp games and it just looked so odd because there was nobody in the stands. I can tell you the businesses in LoDo miss it. Everybody that I know has missed it. The game has been missed very very much.
Q: When you think on your career at Cherry Creek, are you able to appreciate more now than maybe you did a year or two ago?
Johnson: Yes, absolutely. I will be starting my 49th year and I’ve never had a year like this, I think the one thing it does do is make you appreciate what you can do when you can do it.
Q: You have over 800 wins now, is there a point where you’ve considered slowing down or is this a game that’s just going to keep you in it as long as possible?
Johnson: As long as I’m healthy and as long as I feel the kids are still responding; the game is not about me or it’s not about even the sport itself, it’s about the kids that are playing it. As long as the kids are playing it are enjoying it, they’re getting better, and every kid’s not meant to play collegiately or professionally.
But I get to look back on my own personal time in baseball, and I’ve loved every second of it for the time I was five, six years old. People ask me all the time when I’m going to stop and that’s when kids don’t respond anymore or kids don’t show the passion that I love to see. I have a genuine love of the game itself and I’m not in coaching contrary to what a lot of people believe, they think I’m about winning games or setting records or something like that, but that has nothing to do with why I’m coaching. That’s meaningless to me. If it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be, if it’s not, it’s not. I’m not concerned about that. My point is that I love to watch guys walk on the field and smile and be humble and gracious that they get the opportunity to play the game that I love. And I hope that I can transfer the passion, the love of the game to the kids.
One thing that I ask my players at the end of every season is to give something back to the game. Whether you play it again or you don’t. Whether you play collegiately or professionally. IF you’re a dad be a coach to a team, provide uniforms, be a sponsor, pay for umpires or help sponsor a team. Do something to keep the game going. This is a different era. Now you got all the clubs and these kids have three, four or five uniforms. They’re traveling at 10 years old. I used to wear a tee shirt with somebody’s auto shop or Joe’s Barbershop on the back. That was our sponsorship and we bought own pants. It hasn’t changed, the game itself for the love of the game, but what I want is I want to teach the kids to enjoy the game. And then if it’s meant to be that they play further on, then more power to them.
It’s a game that’s very valuable for life because there’s a lot of failure you have to deal with. The game itself, baseball, one of the beauties of it in my opinion is it’s life like. It’s very much like life. You can be riding up high and then it can slam you to the ground. And that’s true for big leaguers, minor leaguers, college players, even 10 year olds. But you know what? You have to learn how to handle that. And I think that’s a great life skill. You have to learn how to handle the things that don’t go well. How do I react to adversity? How do I make adjustments? How do I teach myself to be patient, to be persistent and to persevere?
It’s been a blessing and an honor for me to coach it. The game has kept me young because the players are young. I’m coaching guys that are 15, 18, 19, maybe, but you know what? They’re just young enough to keep you, keep you young and fired up and interested in going for it.

(Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com) Q: Is there a point where you’ve either seen a player that’s come through your program, that’s made it to the majors or just gone on to have a regular job and made his way back to say hello where you truly believe you’re in the right spot to help kids be successful?
Johnson: I do. And I felt it from both sides. I get a lot of response from my former players. Usually it’s one of two things. It’s something that’s going well in their life or getting married or having a baby, or when things are not going very well. I just try to respond and say, perseverance, stay with it, you’ll get through it. I’ve had the player who has gone on who didn’t play collegiately, but he’s gone on to be a great businessman, his kid is playing ball. I had someone the other day, because I’ve had a lot of my former players kids, and I’ve had players ask me if I’m going to give it up when you get the grandkids. I have my own grandkids and I’m watching them play.
Baseball’s a part of my blood. I feel that that’s where God has decided that I would best serve the community and the country. I still love doing it and I’m hoping to get another year of doing all that. These sports do so much for kids at the youth level, not just high school, but I just think it’s so important to them to have that experience, to learn how to compete ethically, to learn how to have fun and to learn how to handle losing with grace and not teach them that they have to love losing. I tell the guys every day for you, whether you’re playing a game or not, it’s a practice. That’s all it is. It’s a practice. It’s a practice for you for later. Baseball-wise, it’s a practice for life. It’s just a practice.
All of these kids, they all think I have to be this and I have be that. I have to be a big leaguer and I have to tell them fact. The fact is 10% of Division I players never play professionally. Four-point-five of those play in the big leagues. One of every 10,000 boys, not baseball players, but boys play in the major leagues. You shouldn’t be playing to be a major leaguer. You should be playing to be the best you can be.
Q: You have a vault of memories in your head from all the time that you’ve been coaching. If someone were to ask you, what’s the first memory that pops into your head when you think about your time at Cherry Creek, what pops in there?
Johnson: Two things. One thing is just having the pleasantness to be able to coach kids, that’s number one. And the second one would be when we won five straight titles in a row. That’s pretty rare from a winning thing. But working with the kids is much more important for me and every kid that ever played there. I’m hoping that they had a positive experience and I fully know that you can’t please all the people all the time, but I I’m hoping that their baseball experience transferred to their life. That’s a hope that I have. I’ve had great players, unbelievable coaches, a great administration. I’m one of the most blessed people on Earth doing what I love to do.I have people say we appreciate what you do and I appreciate the opportunity to do it.
Q: You wouldn’t be in this if you weren’t a baseball fan, what’s going to be your first thought when you can sit down, turn on the TV and watch the Rockies play after everything that’s gone on in the last few months?
Johnson: I’ll be very excited. I worked part time for the Rockies for seven or eight years. I love my home team. I’ll be excited and I’ll be fine just watching them, even if there aren’t fans. I certainly wish there were. I’m hoping that the gets back to what it’s about. It’s an entertaining game. It’s not a lot different than people who love to go to concerts. I love to watch college sports, I love to watch professional sports and obviously I’m a huge Broncos fan, a huge Nuggets fan and a huge Rockies fan, the Outlaws, it doesn’t matter to me. This is where I live. So I’m really looking forward to watching a game that is meaningful, even though I loved watching them last night or two at summer camp. But I’ll love it when it’s for real. Even a 60-game season is better than a zero-game season.
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Pueblo West baseball alum bet on himself on path to signing MLB contract

(Anthony Sandstrom) If there’s one thing that former Pueblo West pitcher RJ Dabovich learned the last couple months, it’s that there is no one way to achieve an ultimate goal.
His ultimate goal was to get to the professional baseball level. His path involved betting on himself and taking the right steps to make it happen, not necessarily the biggest steps.
Dabovich had Division I plans after high school. He had initially committed to Wichita State to continue his baseball career. A coaching change halted those plans as he didn’t feel the same connection with the new staff as he did the one that recruited him.
A change had to be made and a guy that had proven he could generate the interest of D-1 level schools made a decision that on the surface looked like a step backwards.
The reality is it was anything but.
“I didn’t really have any big-time offers or any schools that I was comfortable going to,” Dabovich said. “One because I wasn’t good enough and two, it was so late (in the process). So I sat down with my parents and coaches and people I really trusted and talked about going the (junior college) route and what it meant for me.”
He knew one thing that it was going to mean. He was going to have to put his head down and work. His path was only just the beginning. For a lot of high school recruits, the post-high school aim is to head at a Division I school.
For Dabovich, he was going to use the benefits that the JuCo route offered to improve his game and get the next step in the process.
“There are no restrictions on how many practices you can get in baseball,” West coach Dan Sanchez said. “For any kid that has a ton of potential, it’s a great route. Knowing that he was going to figure that out and grow into that body, I think it was a great decision.”
Dabovich made his way to Central Arizona College and finished his freshman year with a 9-3 record and a 1.81 ERA. The Division I calls came quick and the very next year Dabovich was suiting up for the Arizona State Sun Devils.
But he had the option to skip that step all together. He was taken by the Kansas City Royals in the 18th round of the MLB Draft, but opted to go to Tempe instead.
“My goal, my dream was right there in front of me,” Dabovich said. “It was a hard decision to make and it actually took me a while. I talked with my family and advisors and we decided that I should bet on myself again so I went to Arizona State.”
The decision paid off.
Last month he was taken by the San Francisco Giants in the fourth round of the MLB Draft. He was taken just four picks after Douglas County senior Case Williams.
Dabovich signed his contract with the Giants organization and is now officially a Major League Baseball prospect. But his journey is far from over. And if he’s learned anything in the last three years, it’s that there is no one way to get to his desired location.
The important part is knowing how to navigate the trail and he’s done fine with it so far.