Denver East beat Kent Denver last week, and stayed at No. 4 as a result. (Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)
Columbine and Ralston Valley both joined the girls lacrosse poll this week.
The Rebels are ranked eighth in CHSAANow.com’s poll, while the Mustangs are tenth.
Cherry Creek held firm atop the ranking, and is a unanimous pick with all nine first-place votes. In fact teams Nos. 1-7 all stayed put, including No. 2 Centaurus, No. 3 Colorado Academy, No. 4 Denver East, No. 5 Arapahoe, No. 6 Mullen and No. 7 ThunderRidge.
Kent Denver fell one place to ninth this week following its loss to Denver East.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
Summer Stafford (2) and Chatfield are ranked No. 10 in this week’s girls lacrosse poll. (Dennis Pleuss)
Kent Denver and Chatfield both joined CHSAANow.com’s girls lacrosse rankings this week.
The Sun Devils (3-3) are No. 8 this week, while the Chargers (6-4) are No. 10.
Cherry Creek remained atop the poll with six of the nine first-place votes. Centaurus jumped up to No. 2 after beating then-No. 3 Mullen and then-No. 7 Air Academy last week.
Colorado Academy is up to No. 3. The Mustangs beat then-No. 2 Denver East last week.
East dropped to No. 4. Arapahoe rounds out the top five.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
Cherry Creek leads this week’s girls lacrosse rankings. (Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)
Cherry Creek is the new No. 1 team in this week’s girls lacrosse poll from CHSAANow.com.
The Bruins are the third team to be ranked No. 1 in girls lacrosse this season, following preseason No. 1 Air Academy and Colorado Academy. They took over for CA after receiving four of the nine first-place votes and totalling 83 points.
Denver East got three first-place votes and is No. 2 this week. Mullen got the other two first place votes and is third. The Mustangs upset former No. 1 Colorado Academy last week.
Ralston Valley is the lone newcomer to the poll, joining at No. 10.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
Chatfield’s McKenna Milton (21) fires a shot on goal during the Chargers’ 23-4 victory Thursday at Trailblazer Stadium in Lakewood. Chatfield is attempting to win its third straight Jeffco League title this season. (Dennis Pleuss)
LAKEWOOD — Chatfield, two-time defending Jeffco League champion in girls lacrosse, opened conference play Thursday with a statement victory.
The Chargers defeated Wheat Ridge 23-4 at Trailblazer Stadium in Lakewood in the league opener for both teams. Clearly, Chatfield has no intention of handing off its conference trophy anytime soon.
“League is really important for us to win. We want to have the three-peat,” Chatfield senior Kendra Lanuza said after her seven-goal, five-assist performance. “That’s our main goal and focus.”
The focus was definitely there early for the Chargers. Kendra and her younger sister Jen combined to score Chatfield’s first five goals in the first three minutes of the game to put the Chargers in control early. The Lanuza sisters racked up 10 goals and five assists in the first half.
Chatfield senior Kendra Lanuza (4) gets off a shot in a crowd of Wheat Ridge defenders Thursday during the first half of the Chargers’ 23-4 victory. Kendra and her younger sister Jen combined for 13 goals in the Jeffco League opener at Trailblazer Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss)
“They (Lanuza sisters) are definitely leaders on the field. They have been great for us,” Chatfield coach Adam Everett said of Kendra and Jen, who have both started on varsity since they were freshmen. “They are the offensive weapons we need.”
Jen Lanuza, a junior, finished with six goals and two assists against Wheat Ridge.
“We really rely on each other down on attack because we trust each other,” Kendra said of her sister. “We have been playing together for a long time and we’ve got that chemistry.”
Seniors Summer Stafford and Brielle Rumsey each contributed three goals each for the Chargers. Freshman Riley Leischner had two goals. Ellie Cassel and Tess Albert closed out the scoring with one tally each for Chatfield.
Chatfield (4-4, 1-0 in Jeffco) has four losses already this season, but three were close games against ThunderRidge, Arapahoe and Cherry Creek. All of which are ranked in the top-10 of the CHSAANow.com girls lacrosse poll.
“I’m glad we played those tough non-league games, but those were tough. Against (Colorado Academy) we just didn’t show up,” Everett said of Chatfield’s 18-3 loss Tuesday to top-ranked Colorado Academy. “It was a bad game for us.”
Chatfield advanced to the state semifinals last year before suffering its lone loss of the season to eventual state champion Air Academy. Kendra Lanuza had three goals and a pair of assists in the 22-8 semifinal loss to the Kadets.
The University of Denver-bound midfielder has already surpassed the 200-career goal mark. She currently has 228 goals and 97 assists during her stellar career.
While the Chargers graduated several key components from last year’s 17-1 squad, a third-straight Jeffco League title is still a reachable goal.
“We set our goal on going through the league undefeated,” Everett said. “I think the league is tougher than it has been in the past. We need to respect all our league opponents because pretty much anybody can beat us.”
Chatfield returns to Trailblazer Stadium for a conference game against Green Mountain at 4 p.m. on April 7.
Wheat Ridge senior Ryann Pierce was a bright spot for the Farmers. Pierce had a hand in all four of Wheat Ridge’s goals with three tallies and an assist on senior Amanda Malecki’s goal.
Wheat Ridge faces rival Golden at 7 p.m. on April 9, at Trailblazer Stadium.
Chatfield senior Kendra Lanuza (4) gets off a shot in a crowd of Wheat Ridge defenders Thursday during the first half of the Chargers’ 23-4 victory. Kendra and her younger sister Jen combined for 13 goals in the Jeffco League opener at Trailblazer Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss)
DENVER — Trailing midway through the first half, Mullen girls lacrosse used a 5-0 run to grab a 7-4 halftime lead. It was the spark that ignited the upset, as the No. 6 Mustangs went on to hold off No. 1 Colorado Academy 9-8 on Thursday.
Ali Vanek had four goals, and Kami Cisneros had a monster game in goal with nine saves.
Cali Edgar added two goals, two assists and two ground balls, while Sarah Merrifield had two goals and four ground balls. Zoe Ryan the Mustangs’ other goal.
Mullen is now 4-2, though both losses came in California two weeks ago. It is 4-0 against in-state competition.
The schedule doesn’t get much easier — Mullen plays at No. 4 Centaurus next Monday. The Warriors are 4-2, but 4-1 against in-state foes with the lone loss coming 10-9 to then-No. 3 Cherry Creek on March 18.
Colorado Academy, meanwhile, is now 5-3 this season. The Mustangs, though, are 5-1 in the state, meaning the loss on Thursday was their first.
Rampart, off to a 3-1 start this season, has joined CHSAANow.com’s girls lacrosse poll at No. 5 this week.
The Rams made the biggest leap of the week, and are joined by Regis Jesuit (No. 10) as a newcomer.
Colorado Academy retained the No. 1 spot in the poll, receiving eight of the nine first-place votes. Cherry Creek moved up to No. 2, and Denver East vaulted from sixth to third.
With many programs heading out of state for spring break, or simply taking time off, the next rankings will release on April 6.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
With a number of coaching changes this offseason, teams like Wheat Ridge and Chatfield could emerge as contenders. (Dennis Pleuss)
It’s a whole new ballgame.
At least for the scope of the Colorado girls lacrosse scene, which underwent several changes this past offseason.
It wasn’t the rulebook or the addition of classifications that were changed since teams last took the field in May. It was the turnover of coaches in the sport that dominated headlines in the summer and through the early part of the fall season.
At least 10 programs went through coaching changes in the offseason, which accounts for nearly 20 percent of the teams that compete in the sport. The most notable of those changes include traditional powerhouses Cherry Creek and Air Academy.
In June, longtime Kadets coach Sean Harmon — the only coach in program history — resigned to spend more time with his family. Harmon brought three state championships to Air Academy in his time as coach, including the 2014 title. In December, the school announced that Chelsea Beal — a 2008 Air Academy graduate — would fill the position.
“(Beal) comes from a blueprint,” Chaparral coach Dix Baines said. “She was one of Sean’s former players who went out and got some college experience and is back with that experience. I would assume the coaching style will be different but they’re going to continue to be good.”
For Cherry Creek, the search for a new coach is nothing new as they have named three new coaches since 2009. The team named assistant Kathryn Ames as the successor to Brianne Tierney who led the Bruins to the state title game in both seasons as coach. Cherry Creek won the title in 2013.
With Harmon and Tierney gone, it now begs the question as to what the landscape of girls lacrosse will look like. One would have to look all the way back to 2005 for the last time Air Academy or Cherry Creek did not walk away with a state championship.
The departure of Harmon officially makes Wheat Ridge’s Carol Degenhart the longest tenured girls lacrosse coach in the state. The impact of changes to the coaching ranks certainly isn’t lost on her.
“This year has been unusual in that all of the top four programs from last year changed coaches,” Degenhart said. “Several of them had been around for a long time so I think it was a little bit of pure chance that it all came at once.”
With the influx of these fresh-faced coaches comes new ways to teach and play to the game. The good news for the veteran coaches like Degenhart and Baines, who is now the second-longest tenured coach, is that the change in styles force them to adjust their systems on a yearly basis.
“If you’re going to stay current with the game, I don’t think that it’s any different than football,” Baines said. “Look at the New England Patriots, who re-invent themselves every year. Whatever worked last year, you just throw it out the window, look at the pieces you have now and try to put the pieces together again.”
This year stands out more than any other in recent memory because the playing field may actually be more level than it has been in some time. There is a feeling that schools such as Arapahoe, Chatfield and Cheyenne Mountain could compete at the same high level that Cherry Creek and Air Academy have for the last 10 years.
“There is more of a changing of positions at the top,” Degenhart said. “I think there will be some people sliding in and some of those top programs may be fighting to keep the positions (at the top) that they’ve held for so long.”
When CHSAANow.com’s preseason poll was released on Monday, Air Academy was No. 1. Centaurus, another team with a coaching change, is No. 2.
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Girls lacrosse preview
Season begins: March 5
Postseason begins: May 3
State championship: May 20
Returning all-state athletes: Kendra Lanuza, senior, Chatfield, middle/attacker; Andrea Kim, junior, Centaurus, attacker; Alexis Lindhart, senior, Arapahoe, middle; Kathleen Roe, junior, Regis Jesuit, middle