Category: Baseball

  • Green Mountain baseball has 17-run inning in win over Alameda

    Green Mountain junior Caton Lodice (22) is greeted at home plate by teammates after his grand slam in the first inning. The home run tied things up 4-4 against Alameda late Thursday afternoon at Green Mountain High School. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    LAKEWOOD — Green Mountain senior Jose Luis Cedillo had himself an impressive first inning late Thursday afternoon.

    The Rams’ lead-off batter went 3-for-3 from the plate with four RBIs in the opening frame against Alameda International. Cedillo came to the plate three times as Green Mountain scored 17 runs in the bottom of the first inning.

    Green Mountain junior Dylan Hearn fouls off a pitch at the plate during the second inning Thursday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “It’s always good to see that bats come alive,” said Cedillo, who finished 4-for-5 from the plate with five RBIs in the Rams eventual 26-6 victory. “When we string the hits together it takes the pressure of the pitching. They just have to go in there and throw strikes.”

    Green Mountain (3-4, 3-2 in Class 4A Jeffco League) actually fell behind 4-0 against the Pirates (1-5, 0-4). The Pirates scored 4 runs on three hits, including a 2-run single by sophomore Oscar Nguyen to cap off the nice top of the first inning.

    However, it didn’t stand up to what the Rams did in the bottom of the frame. The first eight batters reached the scored. Green Mountain sent 21 batters to the plate in the inning.

    Junior Caton Lodice delivered the most impressive hit that nobody saw. With the bases loaded and no outs, the Rams’ clean-up hitter rocketed a high shot to dead centerfield. With the sun behind home plate nobody really picked up the flight off the ball of the bat, including Lodice.

    “I did not see that ball,” Lodice said. “It was launched straight up.”

    Alameda’s centerfield didn’t pick the ball up either. It wasn’t until everyone could see the ball land beyond the centerfield fence did people realize it was a grand slam home run.

    “It definitely sparked something,” Lodice said. “It started our offense off strong and finished strong.”

    Green Mountain sophomore Donovan Baca was solid on the mound striking out four of the five batters he faced in an inning and 2/3 work against Alameda. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    It was the start of the largest scoring output of the season for Green Mountain. The Rams scored seven more runs in the bottom of the second inning to extend the lead to 24-6. Green Mountain induced the 20-run mercy rule to end the game in the bottom of the third inning with a RBI pinch-hit single by Sebastian King.

    Sophomore Donovan Baca picked up the win on the mound. He took over for junior Luke Davis on the mound in the top of the first inning after Davis had some control issues. Baca struck out the first two batters he faced in the second inning and gave up just a single in the third inning.

    “We didn’t get to see him earlier in the year because of the weather during tryouts,” Green Mountain coach Brad Kidwell said of his sophomore pitcher. “We are seeing what he can do and he’s been impressive.”

    Pitching will be a key element as Green Mountain has four games in six days starting Saturday, May 22, against Golden.

    “Of course Golden is going to be tough competition,” Cedillo said of the showdown against the Demons. “We need to compete through seven innings and hopefully string some hits together and the pitching comes in clutch as well.”

    Behind focusing on finishing strong to hopefully make a run at qualifying for the 24-team postseason, Green Mountain’s handful of seniors also have graduation on their minds.

    “It has been hard because everyone’s mindset has been different,” said Cedillo, who is one of the four seniors that will graduate Friday at Red Rocks. “It has been a little tough.”

    It has been a rough season with the Rams losing three games by 1-run. The latest was Wednesday with a heartbreaking walk-off victory by Ralston Valley.

    Green Mountain senior Dylan Green laces a base hit during the Rams’ 17-run bottom of the first inning Thursday against Alameda. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: No. 10 Douglas County baseball bashes its way to a win over Castle View

    Sophomore Finley Bates went 3-for-4 with a home run and two RBI’s to lead Class 5A No. 10 Douglas County baseball to a 13-3 win over Castle View.

  • Standley Lake baseball doubles up Wheat Ridge in 4A Jeffco action

    Standley Lake junior Luke Root, right, slides into home before Wheat Ridge catcher Jack Hamilton can apply a tag during the Gators’ 5-run fifth inning Wednesday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    WHEAT RIDGE — It was a first for Standley Lake senior Connor Peck on Wednesday.

    “We have never beat Wheat Ridge in my four years here,” Peck said after the Gators took a 12-6 victory on the Farmers’ home baseball field. “It feels really great to beat Wheat Ridge finally. It’s a big win for us. We really needed this today.”

    Standley Lake senior Connor Peck eyes the ball during his 3-run triple during the fifth inning Wednesday against Wheat Ridge. The Gators took a 12-6 victory on the Farmers’ home field. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    The Gators (3-2, 3-2 in Class 4A Jeffco League) find themselves just one game in the loss column behind Evergreen (4-1), D’Evelyn (4-1) and Golden (3-1) for the conference lead midway through the league season.

    Standley Lake has league losses to Evergreen and Green Mountain, but has a quality win over Golden. The Demons actually handed Evergreen its first conference loss Wednesday at All-Star Park in Lakewood.

    “This team has so much talent. We just need something to bring it all together,” Standley Lake coach Jesse Lopez said. “ We are starting to find out who we are after facing some tough competition like Wheat Ridge, Golden and Evergreen.”

    The Gators found several different ways to score against Wheat Ridge (2-5, 2-3). Standley Lake took advantage of control issues by the Farmer pitchers and had a number of bunts with runners at third that resulted in runs.

    “We work really hard on the small ball,” Lopez said. “Everything we do is precision based, but it doesn’t work without the long game as well. They go hand-in-hand.”

    Wheat Ridge took a 2-0 lead thanks to a 2-run home run by senior Scott Kingman in the bottom of the first inning, but Standley Lake answered with a 4-run bottom of the second.

    The big inning for the Gators came in the top of the fifth. Standley Lake had a 5-run inning that was topped off with a 3-run triple by Peck.

    Wheat Ridge senior Scott Kingman (8) is greeted at home plate by junior Devon Zurcher (10) after Kingman’s 2-run home run in the bottom of the first inning. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “It felt great off the bat,” Peck said of the drive to deep right-center field that gave the Gators a commanding 10-4 lead. “That was a real big game-changer. We needed all those runs.”

    On the hill, Lopez utilized four different pitchers. Junior lefty Logan Schmidt went the first three innings. Sophomore Ian Rasmussen threw the next three innings for the Gators. Senior Jakob Worm struck out a pair of batters in the seventh, but was pulled after a pair of walks. Sophomore Cannon Frost got the final out with a strikeout to close out the game.

    “This year we have been so fortunate to have so much depth in our bullpen,” Lopez said. “This is really going to benefit us when we have back-to-back-to-back games. They did great. They threw strikes and the defense got out when they needed to.”

    Wheat Ridge had some chances. The Farmers left a dozen runners on the bases, including leaving the bases loaded in each of the final three innings.

    “Sooner or later we’ve got to get a big hit,” Wheat Ridge coach Adam Miller said. “We squared some ball up today, but they were hit right at guys.”

    It was the third straight loss for the Farmers.

    “We weren’t sharp,” Miller said. “We are in a bad stretch right now. We just aren’t very good right now. I hope that changes.”

    Wheat Ridge returns to action Saturday with a big game against Evergreen before facing rival Golden on Tuesday next week.

    “We’ve got to reel off four or five in a row or it’s ‘Goodnight, Irene’,” Miller said.

    Standley Lake junior Logan Schmidt was one of four Gator pitchers that combined to get a big Class 4A Jeffco League victory over Wheat Ridge on Wednesday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: Ralston Valley baseball rallies to beat Green Mountain

    Drew Spencer worked three relief innings and gave up just one earned run to help Ralston Valley baseball beat Green Mountain 10-9.

  • Photos: Big fourth inning lifts No. 5 Cherry Creek baseball over Smoky Hill

    A four-run fourth inning powered Class 5A No. 5 Cherry Creek baseball to a 5-1 win over Smoky Hill on Wednesday.

  • Cherry Creek baseball coach Marc Johnson reflects on his record-setting win

    Regis Jesuit Cherry Creek baseball
    (Tim Bourke)

    It’s not hard for Marc Johnson to reflect on this coaching at career at Cherry Creek. He’s been the man in charge of the program since 1973 and has built it into arguably the most prestigious baseball program in the state’s history.

    A chapter was added to that prestige last week when the Bruins beat Grandview 6-5 (in extra innings) to get Johnson his 808th win, which became the most by a coach in the state’s history passing Eaton’s Jim Danley. At that moment, he was able to enjoy the accomplishment but he also couldn’t help but think of everything that led up to that moment.

    “It means to me that I’ve been blessed with a lot of good players over the years,” Johnson said. “A lot of the kids have bought into the system I teach.”

    It’s a system that has certainly worked. Since Johnson took over in 1973, Cherry Creek has claimed eight state baseball titles and played in a total of 14 state title games. To go with that, Creek players have been selected 51 times in the MLB Draft.

    While success in the playoffs and the number of players drafted can certainly be measurements of a program’s success, it’s far from the only ones.

    And they aren’t the ones that Johnson himself uses.

    “It’s meant a lot to me that each team, I truly believe this, got better from the time that they started to the time that they finished,” Johnson said. “And on a personal basis, it’s that that these kids became great people.”

    That a byproduct of the high school product, according to Johnson. He points to high school baseball (and high school athletics in general) as a crucial developmental piece for kids. He understands the value that can come with getting exposure outside of the high school setting, but doesn’t think that the life lessons associated with interscholastic athletics are prevalent during summer club seasons.

    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    “You don’t that community involvement,” Johnson said. “All that school involvement, the kids get so excited. You have your tournaments and you get your games but the high school experience is something that I don’t think a lot of kids ever forget.”

    If there’s an authority on that subject, it would have to be Johnson.

    At the conclusion of the game against Grandview, he started hearing from former players that had scattered themselves away from Colorado. He said he had received a phone call from Germany as well as players that had established themselves throughout the United States.

    His phone wouldn’t stop buzzing.

    “I had 253 messages,” he said.

    Although the 808 (and counting) wins will be attributed to him, he knows this accomplishments is the result of the work of a lot people.

    He couldn’t have done it without the players on his rosters and he couldn’t have done without the support of the athletic office at Cherry Creek as well as his coaching staffs.

    And now that he’s broken the record, the only thing that will change is having a conversation leading into it. People have asked him if he’ll retire now that he’s the winningest coach in state history. He says no. He still enjoys coaching kids and being a part of their development into adults.

    “I’ll leave when I’m no longer having an impact,” Johnson said.

    With the record now in his hands, he’ll turn his attention to getting the 2021 Bruins through the season. The team is 5-1 on the year and looks like it could get Johnson his ninth state title ring as a head coach. When it’s all over, he’ll be able to look back at this season and how much that 808th win really means to him.

    “I’d be lying if I said it meant nothing,” Johnson said. “I’d also be lying if I said it meant everything.”

    In a lot of ways, it was just another game. And Johnson was reminded of that when Scott Burk, a member of Johnson’s first team in 1973, embraced his old coach after the game was over.

    All the people in attendance got to witness history with Johnson claiming win No. 808. Burk couldn’t help but remind his old coach that he had been there for win No. 1.

    ThunderRidge Cherry Creek baseball
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
  • Photos: ThunderRidge and Highlands Ranch baseball meet in league showdown

    ThunderRidge baseball took the field for a Continental League showdown with rival Highlands Ranch on Monday.

  • Baseball rankings: Holly moves into top spot in Class 1A

    In the latest coaches poll, Holly moved into the top spot in Class 1A.

    The rankings, voted upon by coaches, are the official polls of the Association.

    Complete rankings for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Baseball Polls

    Coaches looking to vote should email bcochi@chsaa.org.

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Regis Jesuit (14) 4-1 165 1
    2 Mountain Vista 3-1 121 2
    3 Chatfield (2) 3-0 119 4
    4 Heritage (1) 6-1 103 3
    5 Cherry Creek 4-1 87 8
    6 Broomfield 5-0 61
    7 Valor Christian 2-2 60 6
    8 Legacy 4-1 49 7
    9 Fairview 3-1 34 5
    10 Douglas County 3-1 32 8
    Others receiving votes:
    Cherokee Trail 28, Rocky Mountain 17, Pomona 10, Grandview 9, Horizon 9, Rock Canyon 7, Legend 6, Fort Collins 5, Ralston Valley 4, Mullen 4, ThunderRidge 2, Fossil Ridge 1, Brighton 1, Eaglecrest 1
    Dropped out
    None
    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Cheyenne Mountain (8) 5-0 128 1
    2 Holy Family (1) 2-0 90 2
    3 Ponderosa (2) 3-0 83 7
    4 Lewis-Palmer (2) 3-0 70
    5 Windsor 3-0 53 4
    6 Falcon (1) 0-0 44 5
    7 Fort Morgan 2-0 35 6
    8 Palisade 6-0 28
    9 Longmont 1-2 27
    10 Montrose 0-2 25 3
    Others receiving votes:
    Pueblo County 25, Erie 24, Golden 23, Mead 19, Riverdale Ridge 15, Frederick 15, Evergreen 15, Denver North 13, Durango 12, Silver Creek 11, Thomas Jefferson 10, Skyview 9, Palmer Ridge 7, D’Evelyn 6, Severance 6, Elizabeth 5, Battle Mountain 5, Greeley West 4, Niwot 4, Mountain View 3, Discovery Canyon 3, Pueblo Central 2, Pueblo East 2, Air Academy 2, Wheat Ridge 1, Roosevelt 1
    Dropped out
    Silver Creek (8)
    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Eaton (6) 6-0 116 1
    2 University (4) 5-0 98 2
    3 Lutheran 5-0 80 3
    4 Faith Christian 6-1 69 4
    5 Sterling 4-1 54 5
    6 Resurrection Christian 2-3 44 6
    7 Brush 1-3 34 7
    8 Delta 2-0 26 8
    9 Alamosa 1-0 25
    10 Kent Denver 3-1 21 8
    Others receiving votes:
    Bennett 20, Lamar 19, Colorado Academy 18, Montezuma-Cortez 17, Bayfield 16, Pagosa Springs 10, Salida 9, Gunnison 7, Bishop Machebeuf 7, The Academy 7, Aspen 6, Strasburg 3, La Junta 3, Berthoud 2, Manitou Springs 2, Moffat County 1, Middle Park 1
    Dropped out
    None
    Class 2A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Peyton (9) 2-0 99 1
    2 Hotchkiss 3-0 73 3
    3 Limon (1) 1-0 68 2
    4 Cedaredge 5-0 51 5
    5 Wray 4-0 46 4
    6 Highland 1-0 38 8
    7 St. Mary’s 0-2 37 7
    8 Swink 2-0 32 6
    9 Rye 0-0 20 8
    10 Calhan 1-0 16
    Others receiving votes:
    Dawson School 15, Yuma 10, Lyons 8, Holly 7, Burlington 7, Front Range Christian 6, Fowler 5, Meeker 4, Byers 2, Clear Creek 2, Estes Park 1, Buena Vista 1, Ignacio 1, Monte Vista 1
    Dropped out
    None
    Class 1A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Holly (1) 1-0 69 2
    2 Flatirons Academy (5) 0-0 68 1
    3 Eads (2) 5-0 57 7
    4 Nucla 1-0 47 5
    5 Merino (1) 2-1 39
    6 Cheyenne Wells 2-2 30 10
    7 Evangelical Christian 2-0 28 4
    8 Caliche 2-1 27 3
    9 Haxtun 3-2 23
    10 Stratton/Liberty 0-0 21
    Others receiving votes:
    Dove Creek 20, Otis 17, Dayspring Christian 16, Granada 15, Springfield 8, Cotopaxi 5, Rocky Mountain Lutheran 3, Elbert 2
    Dropped out
    None
  • Photos: Legend baseball hands No. 2 Mountain Vista its first loss

    Aaron Kidd went 4-for-4 with a home run and drove in three runs to lead Legend baseball to a 14-4 win over Class 5A No. 2 Mountain Vista.