Scoring wasn’t a problem as No. 7 ThunderRidge girls lacrosse rolled to a 14-2 win over Castle View on Friday.
Category: Girls Lacrosse
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Dakota Ridge nets win over Green Mountain as girls lacrosse returns

Dakota Ridge sophomore Monroe McClimans (17) winds up to take a shot on goal during the first half Tuesday. The Eagles took an 11-8 victory over Green Mountain during the opening day for girls lacrosse action at Trailblazer Stadium in Lakewood. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) LAKEWOOD — Trailblazer Stadium in Lakewood has been the mecca for boys and girls lacrosse teams in Jeffco for several years.
However, the COVID-19 pandemic silenced the high school lacrosse action last spring.

Dakota Ridge junior Stella Nefs (15) runs past Green Mountain sophomore Louisa Steinbock (13) on Tuesday at Trailblazer Stadium. Nefs had a team-high four goals in the Eagles’ 11-8 victory. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) “It’s been rough, mainly because we couldn’t see the girls and see your team,” Green Mountain girls lacrosse coach Maddie Ossello said talking about last year’s lost season. “They girls were ready to get back. I know the coaches were excited to walk back into Trailblazer. It felt so good.”
Tuesday marked the return of girls lacrosse at Trailblazer Stadium with Green Mountain and Dakota Ridge opening up play with a non-league contest. It was the first of over 60 regular-season boys and girls lacrosse games that Trailblazer Stadium will host over the span of the next six weeks.
“It was amazing. It was incredible,” Dakota Ridge junior Stella Nefs said. “At the start when the (public address announcer) speaker when off for the first time since my freshman year it was just joy. We were all so hyped up to play. It was so fun.”
Nefs helped lead Dakota Ridge to an 11-8 victory. The junior had a team-high four goals. She scored back-to-back goals to start a 4-0 run by the Eagles in the first half that opened up a 6-2 lead for Dakota Ridge.
Green Mountain closed the gap to 7-5 at halftime with goals by Sophie Warren, Trisha Le and Bailey Stokes, but Dakota Ridge hung on with a solid performance in goal by sophomore Rosella Martinez.
“This give us some momentum and hypes us up,” Nefs said after she sealed the victory with her fourth goal in the final minute. “It’s a great start to a great season.”
Dakota Ridge coach Demi Riecke, who was actually a teammate of Ossello when both played at Green Mountain together, was excited to be back coaching her girls on the sidelines after missing out on last season.

Green Mountain junior Trish Le (2) races down the field at Trailblazer Stadium during the season opener Tuesday, May 4. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) “We definitely missed the girls and missed being apart of something,” Riecke said. “This is what they needed and it’s great to be back.”
While Riecke has a dozen seniors on the squad this season, she has plenty of young talent as Dakota Ridge’s numbers have grown to 39 players.
“The future of the program is huge,” Riecke said. “A lot of my stud athletes are young and they are going to build this program.”
Green Mountain came in ranked No. 8 in the preseason CHSAANow.com Class 4A girls lacrosse poll. The Rams do have a clear focus this season.
“Playoffs,” Ossello said without hesitation when asked about the goal of the Rams this season. “Green Mountain has never made it to the playoffs. The girls have made that goal of making the playoffs.”
It won’t be an easy path for Green Mountain. Jeffco rivals Evergreen, Conifer and Golden were all ranked in the top-4 in the preseason rankings.
“It’s going to be a tough season going into our league season,” Ossello admitted. “But these girls are hungry. We have a tough road ahead, but we are ready.”
It will be a quick season for girls lacrosse. The regular season goes for just six weeks and the playoff extend into mid-June for the Season D.
“It’s been tough with the season splits and kids in dual sports. And kids in quarantines over and over, ” Riecke said. “Being about to get out here is a huge success. We are doing what we can with what we have. We are excited.”

Dakota Ridge sophomore Kendall Holmberg (15) is met by a trio of Green Mountain defenders during the non-league game Tuesday at Trailblazer Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) -
Photos: No. 1 Cheyenne Mountain boys lacrosse pulls away from Jefferson Academy
Zak Paige and Vance Maready each scored three goals as Class 4A No. 1 Cheyenne Mountain boys lacrosse beat Jefferson Academy 19-5.
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Girls lacrosse rankings: Colorado Academy, Evergreen top preseason polls

(Theodore Stark/tstark.com) In the first poll of Season D, Colorado Academy and Evergreen are preseason No. 1s.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
Complete rankings for all classes are below.
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CHSAANow.com Girls Lacrosse Poll
Voted upon by coaches around the state. Coaches and media members looking to vote should email bcochi@chsaa.org.
Class 5A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Colorado Academy (7) 0-0 102 2 Cherry Creek 0-0 98 3 Valor Christian 0-0 83 4 Fairview (1) 0-0 75 5 Regis Jesuit 0-0 73 6 Denver East 0-0 58 7 ThunderRidge (1) 0-0 56 8 Kent Denver 0-0 45 9 Chaparral 0-0 25 10 Air Academy 0-0 17 11 Arapahoe 0-0 14 12 Mullen 0-0 13 Others receiving votes: Pine Creek 10, Chatfield 10, Columbine 8, Rock Canyon 6, Palmer Ridge 4, Cheyenne Mountain 3, Dakota Ridge 1, Grandview 1 Class 4A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Evergreen (2) 0-0 57 2 Conifer 0-0 48 3 Aspen (2) 0-0 44 4 Golden (1) 0-0 40 5 Rocky Mountain 0-0 34 6 Steamboat Springs 0-0 32 7 Castle View 0-0 26 8 Green Mountain 0-0 22 9 Palmer 0-0 14 10 Fruita Monument 0-0 12 11 Battle Mountain 0-0 10 12 Grand Junction 0-0 9 Others receiving votes: Grand Junction 8, Liberty 8, Battle Mountain 8, Pueblo West 7, St. Mary’s Academy 4, Bear Creek 3, Heritage 2, Smoky Hill 1, Durango 1 -
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 -
Field hockey has been vital to making Colorado Academy’s Katharine Merrifield a better girls lacrosse player

(Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com) Katharine Merrifield didn’t fancy herself much of an offensive lacrosse player until she started playing field hockey. It was that sport that taught her the benefits of being aggressive on the attack.
That mentality has worked wonders for Colorado Academy.
The Mustangs are the defending champions in both sports and Merrifield has been a big part of those wins. A big part of the reason is Merrifield and her ability to attack and score almost at will, something she didn’t adapt to until she started playing field hockey in middle school.
“In field hockey, I’m really attack-based,” she said. “That’s a different mindset for me that I had to pick and learn while playing forward. It’s really helped me with lacrosse.”
She scored 48 goals for the girls lacrosse team as a freshman and added 59 more as a sophomore. Her freshman year she scored one goal as the Mustangs beat Cherry Creek 13-7 to claim their fourth straight state championship. She would claim another her sophomore year then added a field hockey championship last fall. She scored one goal to help her team edge Regis Jesuit 2-1.
“Winning your first state championship regardless of sport; I think lacrosse was more memorable,” Merrifield said. “It was my freshman year and there was a lot of build up to it. Field hockey though was definitely a sport where I felt like I had to work at it more and we didn’t succeed as a team in my first two years. That build up was also very special.”
The success that she’s now found on both fields has paid in the way of a college scholarship. She’ll attend the University of Michigan to play lacrosse.
She’s been playing lacrosse seemingly since she was able to hold a stick and wanted to pursue that sport after high school. But she acknowledges that field hockey has been crucial in the development of her lacrosse skills.
“They’re both games where you don’t have full control and they overlap in that sense,” she said.
She started playing field hockey in middle school and when she started, she was playing the game on grass. When she got to high school the Mustangs were playing on a turf field and she instantly noticed the different.
“It was a lot faster,” she said.
Initially the idea of playing field hockey boiled down to the fact that the time of the season is different than lacrosse. It was a way to refine her skills in a sport played on an open field with a stick.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that the sports are interchangable. Learning to play with a ball that is ground-based over air-based was definitely a challenge. But in all, they’ve complimented her and her growth in each avenue, something that has paid off with the opportunity to play collegiately.
“They’re completely different sports,” she said. “They have some similarities when it comes to stick skills and footwork and that’s why I was attracted to (field hockey).”
Playing both sports has certainly made her a better athlete and with championship banners as proof, multiple Colorado Academy teams have seen the benefits.

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Grace Weigand brings toughness and grit to multiple Regis Jesuit teams

(Paul Soriano) Grace Weigand sat at the end of the Regis Jesuit girls basketball bench with her knee encased in a bag of ice. Anyone who saw the way she crumbled to the floor just a few minutes earlier could tell something wasn’t right.
It wasn’t long after that the extent of the damage was realized. She was going to need surgery. She needed to rehab. Any thoughts of playing lacrosse, her sport of choice and the sport that is getting her a scholarship the University of Notre Dame, went up in smoke.
She knew one thing, though. The faster she got her knee repaired meant she could start physical therapy sooner. And she has every intention of returning to the lacrosse field stronger than she was.
“I had surgery 10 days after I got hurt,” Weigand said. “I got hurt on March 6 and I had surgery on March 16, right before everything got shut down from coronavirus. That was a huge blessing to get it done before everything was shut down. I was also an essential patient for physical therapy and I was lucky to be able to go.”
The timetable of her recovery is unclear, but she’s shown that she has the work ethic to pull anything off. Since she got to high school, Weigand has been a three-sport athlete at Regis Jesuit. In the fall and spring she’s on the grass playing field hockey and lacrosse and in the winter she helps the girls basketball team as one of the better defenders on the roster.
She refuses to ease into each sport at the start of each season. The turnaround is quick and the transition from sport to sport isn’t easy for anyone to handle.
“Gracie makes that transition,” Raiders girls basketball coach Carl Mattei said. “She plays field hockey right up into finals and then overlaps into a winter sport. She doesn’t skip a beat and she doesn’t take a single day off.”
Mattei knows that she’s one of the premiere girls lacrosse players not just in the state of Colorado, but in the entire nation.

(Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com) In her sophomore campaign, she was second on the team in overall points and goals scored. The only person to edge her in those categories was her older sister, Sidney. When Notre Dame came calling, Grace was quick to jump on the offer. When her injury happened during basketball season there was a brief moment of disbelief that playing something other than her primary sport dealt her such a tough break.
“I’m not even doing what I’m going to be doing in the future and this happens,” Weigand said. “There was a bit of ‘Why me?’ But after the surgery, it’s now full speed ahead and not looking back. There are a lot of things out of my control and I just need to focus on what I can do.”
What she can do is take on her latest opponent: rehab. That’s a game that she knows she can win and those around her know she can win. The biggest tool an athlete can have in a battle against rehabbing an injury is toughness is there may not be an athlete more suited for that battle than Weigand.
“She already well beyond where any normal person would be in their recovery,” Mattei said. “That’s the difference. She can mentally push herself to where she knows she can beat it.”
Weigand has no plans to slow down. It’s too early to determine if she can get back on the field for the field hockey season and she admits that her basketball future is unclear. That can be a tough pill to take for someone who started playing sports for all the right reasons.
“I played field hockey my freshman year to make friends,” she said. “Going into freshman year I didn’t know as many people so field hockey was all about making friends.”
As she’s grown into a lacrosse standout, she never gave up on field hockey and she never gave up on basketball. Time will tell if she’ll be back on the floor next winter, but Mattei insists there is a spot for her in the program regardless of the role she decides take.
She’s the kind of athlete that can make a team better without even stepping on the playing field because she understands that to achieve the desired result, the effort must be there every step of the way.
“That’s what makes her so special,” Mattei said. “She doesn’t stop. She doesn’t take a break.”

(Tim Bourke/TimBourke.com) -
A rundown of the votes and changes implemented by the Legislative Council
The CHSAA Legislative Council met virtually for the first time in its 99-year history on Friday.
They voted on more than 50 items, and made a number of changes to the Association’s bylaws, which impacted things from alignment to the transfer rule. We have rounded up most of those changes here.
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Two classes of hockey

(PaulDiSalvoPhotography.com) Hockey will split into two classifications, beginning with the 2020-21 season.
The two-class split, which was recommended by the hockey committee during its meeting in February, places 20 teams into Class 5A, and 17 in 4A. The committee used a variety of factors to place teams from bylaw 1500.21, including enrollment, geography, competitive history, competitive balance, participation rate, and the entry or selection process that places an athlete at a program.
The committee recognized the need for two classes because there isn’t much, if any, parity in the sport. Over the past four years, only 14 different schools have advanced to the quarterfinals of the state tournament. Hockey currently has 37 teams.
The alignments for the sport can be found in this story from February.
Hockey will use the CHSAA Seeding Index to seed its two state tournaments: RPI, MaxPreps, and the CHSAANow coaches poll.
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New seeding criteria for 5A basketball

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) An amendment during the meeting changed the seeding criteria that 4A and 5A basketball will use for their state tournaments: The two classes will now use a combination of the RPI standings, MaxPreps rankings and the CHSAANow coaches pool — bringing them in line with what a number of other sports are now using.
1A will also use the same criteria, but will also use the Packard Ratings.
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2A baseball changes postseason

(Lisa Hayes/StillOfTheMomentPhotography.com) The 2A baseball postseason will now mirror what is done in 3A, 4A and 5A, with a 32-team regional bracket. All teams will qualify for the bracket via the RPI standings, and seeded by RPI. The top eight seeds will host regionals, and seeds Nos. 20-32 can be moved for geographic reasons.
The state tournament also got an overhaul, and will move to an eight-team single-elimination bracket. Previously, 2A had a 16-team bracket.
With this change, 2A schools can now schedule 23 games.
Baseball also created a game minimum to be able to qualify for the postseason: 12 games in 1A, 17 in 2A and 3A, 19 in 4A and 5A.
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New field hockey tournament

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) In an effort to help the growth of the sport, the state field hockey tournament will expand from eight teams to 12.
The top six seeds will receive a bye while the next six will compete in a play-in bracket.
In one of those brackets, No. 9 and No. 12 will play, with the winner playing No. 8. The winner of that game will face No. 1.
In the other bracket, No. 10 and No. 11 will play, with the winner facing No. 7. The winner of that game will face the No. 2 overall seed.
During that same round, the No. 4 and No. 5 seed will play, with No. 3 and No. 6 also playing.
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The transfer rule
A number of proposals involved the transfer rule. Among the changes which passed:
- An adjustment to clarify that a student doesn’t have to transfer from a member school, in or out of state, in order for the rule to apply.
- A proposal better explained the transfer consequence for transferring to another school, and a return to the original school — also known as an A-B-A transfer. Specifically, a student who transfers from School A, transfers to School B and plays at School B, and the returns to School A, will only be eligible for sub-varsity competition at School A in the sports they participated in at School B for 365 days.
- A new bylaw passed allowing for students to participate with “restricted varsity eligibility during the regular season” if their high school does not offer a JV team, or if their school doesn’t allow seniors to play on sub-varsity teams.
- The definition of a hardship was rewritten to read: “‘Hardship’ means a situation, condition or event which must impost a severe non-athletic burden upon the student or his/her family and require a transfer of schools. This does not include the personal or initial choice of enrollment and/or participation.”
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Notables:
- The alignments for sports were finalized with the approval of each sports report. Those new alignments will be posted in the near future.
- The season of sport was changed in boys swimming, allowing for those championships to be moved up a week and have their own spotlight.
- 6-man and 8-man football will use the same four data points of seeding that was used in 1A-5A this season.
- In 5A football, all playoff games will be hosted by the higher seed.
- 1A girls volleyball will move from districts to regionals. The sport will also require that all teams play a minimum of 18 matches against member schools and varsity opponents in order to qualify for the postseason.
- Boys volleyball will have one classification during its inaugural season in spring 2021.
- Girls wrestling will use the same weight classes that were used in the pilot season.
- The 4A and 5A boys lacrosse state tournaments will each grow from 16 to 24 teams starting in spring 2021.
- The new format that will be used for a two-classification setup in girls lacrosse was approved. Find the structure for that format here.
- 2A soccer will increase its state tournament field from 12 teams to 16.
- The regional field in 3A softball will grow to 32 teams, bringing it in line with 4A and 5A.
- The requirements for qualifying for the state skiing championships were made more strict, to make the state field slightly smaller.
- The state spirit championships will move to a three-day format beginning this year. Schools will only be able to participate in one cheer category and one dance category at the state championships. Cheer and dance are now considered separate sports.
- Schools will be eligible to join CHSAA as activity-only schools, and not offer sports.
- The process for classifying programs was clarified with an amendment to bylaw 1510, which deals with the Classification, Appeals and League Organizing Committee (CLOC). Now, the CHSAA staff can offer adjustments “in extraordinary circumstances” that are based upon bylaw 1500.21 (the bylaw allowing for classification based upon factors other than enrollment) in even years. These adjustments will need to be voted on by CLOC. Typically in even years, the classifications are already set and ready to go for the following cycle, so there would be very few adjustments, if any.
- The amateur status bylaw was reworked, and now reads that student-athletes “must maintain his/her amateur status” and notes that they “may not sign a professional athletic contract.” A new note defines a professional as “being paid in any form for playing in an athletic contest, or if you sign a contract or verbally commit with an agent or professional sports organization.” Notably, student-athletes will be allowed to play with or against professionals in certain situations, such as in the Olympics or a World Cup.
- The coach ejection bylaw was updated to give it a more consistent level of suspension across all sports. Now, the first ejection is penalized by a suspension equal to 10% of that sports season, and a second ejection is 20%.
- All-Star games were added to bylaw 2300, allowing for “up to two All-Star Games after the completion of the state championship in that sport.” No all-star games are permitted in football.
- Middle schoolers from “feeder” schools will be permitted to practice with high school teams in volleyball, basketball, soccer and football “when they cannot field enough high school athletes to hold an intra-squad practice in game-type conditions.” There are a number of limitations guiding this new bylaw.
- The number of practices required for students to participate in prior to competition in contact sports was reduced from five to three in all sports but football, which will still require nine.
- Schools can now form a team with only one participant, if they choose to.
- Adding a new sport or activity will now require approval from the Budget Committee in addition to CLOC, Sports Medicine, Equity and the Board of Directors.
- The full membership of the following schools is now official: DSST – Byers, KIPP Northeast, Loveland Classical, Strive Prep – Rise, Strive Prep – Smart, and Thomas MacLaren. KIPP Northeast and Strive Prep – Rise play together are a co-op: Regis Groff.
- Officials’ fees increased with a 2% cost of living adjustment across the board, for all levels.
- The alignment of State Festival and State Tournament will now be permanent in speech.
- Student Leadership’s fall conference will move to a regional model beginning this year.
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Photos: Chaparral girls lacrosse beats Arapahoe
Chaparral girls lacrosse beat Arapahoe 14-10 on Thursday.
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Colorado Academy is the preseason No. 1 team in girls lacrosse

(Theodore Stark/tstark.com) Colorado Academy is on top of the 2020 preseason girls lacrosse poll.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association.
During the regular season, polls are announced each Monday.
Complete rankings for all classes are below.
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CHSAANow.com Girls Lacrosse Poll
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 rcasey@chsaa.org.
Class 5A RK TEAM W-L PTS 1 Colorado Academy (10) 0-0 117 2 Cherry Creek (1) 0-0 100 3 Regis Jesuit 0-0 71 4 Valor Christian 0-0 69 5 Denver East (1) 0-0 68 6 ThunderRidge 0-0 52 7 Fairview 0-0 36 8 Aspen 0-0 24 9 Kent Denver 0-0 21 10 Pine Creek 0-0 20 Others receiving votes: Chaparral 19, Evergreen 11, Columbine 9, Arapahoe 6, Air Academy 5, Cheyenne Mountain 5, Golden 5, Grandview 5, Conifer 4, Mullen 4, Rocky Mountain 4, Rock Canyon 3, Chatfield 2.