Category: Boys Basketball

  • Ball Fever: Previewing the 5A boys basketball Great 8

    It’s that time, folks! #MileHighMadness has arrived and after our COVID-shortened season the postseason in our big school Class 5A boys hoops has not let us down in terms of excitement.

    Down to our Great 8, our four quadrants are boasting three undefeated squads, rematches, and some who will see each other for the third time. Familiarity will breed some great games and memories, we’re sure!

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    Quadrant 1

    (Steve Abeyta)

    They always say it’s hard to beat a team three times in the same season but that’s exactly what our overall No. 1 seed Cherry Creek Bruins will try to day when they host Eaglecrest. In their first match up the Bruins jumped out to a 22-8 first quarter advantage that led to a 9-point home win. The Raptors didn’t allow that fast of a start in the second tilt but still lost to the Bruins at home by seven.

    This game is littered with two sport studs and the 16-0 Bruins rely heavily on their back court tandem of Myles Purchase and Julian Hammond.

    Purchase, affectionately known as THE HEARTBEAT of 2021 in our camp, is the defensive heart and engine of the Bruins while Hammond is as slick and smooth of a scorer as you will find anywhere averaging 23 points per game.

    Another D1-bound athlete, Arden Walker, controls the paint and leads the Bruins in rebounding.

    The Raptors have a “freakish” athlete of their own in Ty Robinson who is worth the price of admission for his above-the-rim action and averaging 16 points per game on the season himself. It will take a supreme effort from Robinson and crew to knock off No. 1 in their house.

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    Quadrant 2

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    In a year where we’ve gotten used to saying, “that seems weird,” it feels very much that way that Chaparral and ThunderRidge haven’t faced each other this year. With Chap finishing league play with one loss and the Grizzlies undefeated in league play they’ll get to settle the Continental clash in true elimination fashion.

    The Wolverines lead man is junior big man Joel Speckman who is almost averaging a double-double on the season with 15 points and 9 rebounds per outing, while the Grizzlies tout strong senior leadership behind assist machine Garrett Arnold at point guard with fellow senior Nolan Marold who is not afraid to bang with the best of them on the inside.

    For adding scoring punch, keep an eye on guard Luke Williams from Chap and senior Jason Simental for T-Ridge. Both can score in bunches and make a difference down the stretch!

    The Grizzlies boast 4 players who average in double figures and 70 points per game vs. Chap’s 59. The question here will be can Chap match the pace and scoring.

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    Quadrant 3

    George Washington Mullen boys basketball
    (Austin Hogan-McCool)

    This Great 8 Match up doesn’t bring a ton of familiarity and no head to head match up to draw on but it’s one of the most intriguing “public vs private” “city vs suburb” match that could go right down to the wire. 14-1 Regis will host George Washington in an early 4:30 pm start on Tuesday.

    This should be a fun pace with GW averaging 77 points per game and the Raiders not too far behind at 70.

    The Patriots have felt disrespected by the polls and rankings all season and this is their chance to make a huge statement for themselves and the city regarding the attention they feel they earned this season.

    The Patriots earned impressive mid-season wins over Chaparral and ThunderRidge, teams that join them in the Great 8, although T-Ridge did balance that loss with a tight 3-point win in a March rematch. Nonetheless, the Patriots enter the game with extreme confidence behind Jarmell Johnson (19 points per game) and Trey Edmonds (11 points and 8 rebounds).

    The wildcard here for the Patriots could be another senior, Kendale Johnson, who has the ability to step up when it counts.

    The Raiders don’t boast as many seniors as the Patriots but do have four scoring in double figures on the season led by Michael Wolf and Blakely Stoughton’s 18 points per game each.

    The floor general dishing assists all season has been Alonzo Paul who scores in double figures along with dishing out 5 assists each night.

    The first game of the day may just be the best!

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    Quadrant 4

    Rangeview Eaglecrest boys basketball
    (Steve Abeyta/steveabeytaphotography.com)

    Might have spoken too soon about Regis/GW maybe being game of the night. Back on February 1, Rock Canyon gave our state’s team with the longest winning streak a true scare in a 46-44 thriller that unbeaten Rangeview pulled off late.

    The Raiders are veteran heavy and an extremely poised team down the stretch which has led them to winning four games with a margin of four points or less this season. They have been tested but find a way to pull it out in the end.

    Got to see them in person when they were down 18-12 to a talented Fountain Fort Carson squad Sweet 16 and they simply didn’t panic, just stuck to the game plan and their strengths.

    Speaking of strength, it is simply amazing the late run the RC Jags are on late season and doing it without their leading scorer/rebounder DeAngelo Horn (electrifying two sport stud!!). The Jags blew us all away beating a well-coached perennial Ball Fever favorite in Overland by 31 points in round 1 with 17 points from senior Nick Fallin and if that wasn’t enough senior PG Fallin followed that performance up with a 35 point explosion at Fossil Ridge — one of our best, senior heavy teams in the state.

    There’s no doubt the Jags are for real but they’ll have to deal with the savvy guards of Rangeview in Cade Palmer, Demajio Merritt, and Chris Watkins. A tough trio on the perimeter and a mainstay Raider down low in Jayden Foster doing all the dirty work!

    Palmer paces the crew in scoring at 16 points per night and he’ll look to push the Raiders to a faster pace than that 46-44 win back in February.

    That pace and heavy weight “sluggin” favors the Jags, can’t wait to see if the Raiders can speed this up and continue “The Streak”!

  • CHSAA basketball playoff schedule altered by major storm

    Basketball generic boys girls
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Due to the major snowstorm that has hit much of the state, the CHSAA basketball playoff schedule will be modified to accommodate those teams impacted by the storm.

    Great 8 Games

    These games must be completed by Tuesday, March 16. Games MAY be played on Monday or Tuesday to allow for those teams that can play Monday to do so, or those who are battling travel issues with the storm to play Tuesday.

    The amount of travel between sites dictates that the semifinal date be changed to allow for teams to travel. And a change in the dates for the state championships is needed.

    Final 4/Semifinals

    All Semifinals have been moved to Thursday, March 18. This provides travel time and preparation time for all teams.

    State Championships

    The five Friday Championship Games (1A Boys & Girls, 4A Boys & Girls, 5A Girls) will be moved to Sunday, March 21, (CHSAA Bylaw 2310.5) with the same game times. Saturday Championship games would remain (2A Boys & Girls, 3A Boys & Girls, 5A Boys) with the same game times.

  • Photos: No. 8 Englewood boys basketball beats No. 9 Resurrection Christian

    No. 8 seed Englewood boys basketball beat No. 9 Resurrection Christian 53-52 in the 3A Sweet 16 on Thursday.

  • Photos: No. 2 Regis Jesuit storms by No. 18 Doherty and into 5A boys basketball Great 8

    No. 2 Regis Jesuit stormed into the 5A boys basketball Great 8 after a 79-36 win over No. 18 Doherty on Thursday.

  • Photos: No. 3 Rangeview battles to beat No. 14 Fountain-Fort Carson in 5A boys basketball Sweet 16

    No. 3 Rangeview battled to a tough 70-61 win over No. 14 Fountain-Fort Carson to advance to the Class 5A boys basketball Great 8.

  • Saturday’s basketball games postponed to Monday due to snowstorm

    The current forecasts do not present a positive picture for the weather on Saturday, March 13. In the best interests of the safety of those players, coaches and families traveling this weekend, we are postponing all games scheduled for March 13. Those games will be rescheduled to Monday, March 15.

    The new schedule will have the Great 8 games playing March 15 and the semifinal games on March 17. This still allows for a travel day between games.

    Knowing that the potential for significant snowfall is imminent, we will continue to monitor the impact of the storm in the event an additional postponement is needed. Should that be necessary, we will play Great 8 on Tuesday, March 16, but still have the semifinal games on March 17.

    The state championship games remain scheduled for March 19 and 20 at The Broadmoor World Arena.

  • Green Mountain boys basketball clamps down on Frederick in first-round victory

    Green Mountain senior Blake McKibbin (1) soars to the basket during the first-round playoff game. The Rams joined fellow Class 4A Jeffco League members Golden and D’Evelyn to advance to the Sweet 16 of the 4A state tournament. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    LAKEWOOD — Green Mountain boys basketball team didn’t want its season to end Tuesday night on its home court.

    The No. 14-seeded Rams dominated No. 19 Frederick to the tune of 64-32 in the opening round of the Class 4A state tournament.

    “I put a lot on them when it comes to this might be the last time we are together,” Green Mountain coach Mike Puccio said of his Rams that entered the state tournament on a 2-game losing streak. “It’s the nostalgia of why we coach high school basketball. It is a beautiful thing. You play for that guy next to you. We were good tonight.”

    Green Mountain senior Allen Ortiz (33) was one of four Rams to reach double-digit points in the postseason win over Frederick. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    The six Green Mountain seniors for sure didn’t want to lose a third straight game and end their high school career with a loss on their home court.

    “Those two losses were probably the two most sour losses I’ve ever experienced,” Green Mountain senior Allen Ortiz said of back-to-back losses to 4A Jeffco League rivals Golden and Evergreen last week to close out the regular season. “For me personally, there was no way we were coming out of here with a loss.”

    Green Mountain (11-4 record) methodically built its lead to 20 points by midway through the third quarter. Extending it to 30 points when senior Austin Peterson heated up with a pair of 3-pointers in the fourth quarter.

    Frederick (10-5) was held to a season-low 32 points, scoring single-digit points in the final three quarters. Junior Bryce Conniver led the Warriors with 11 points.

    The Rams had tremendous scoring balance with seniors Blake McKibbin, Darius Padilla, Dylan Green, Ortiz, Peterson and junior Corbin Jantzer all scoring between 9 and 12 points on the night.

    Big the biggest story was Green Mountain’s defense and rebounding.

    “We knew if we could control the boards we would definitely come out on top,” Ortiz said. “Dylan Green is phenomenal on the boards. We just try to do our part.”

    Green finished with 22 rebounds on the night to go with his eight points. He actually was double-digits in offensive (10) and defensive (12) rebounds as the Rams had 50 total rebounds on the night.

    Green Mountain senior Austin Peterson (2) battles for the ball with Frederick junior J.J. Heil (3). Peterson heated up with 11 points in the second half. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “That was the focus and that was the focus all year,” Puccio said of rebounding. “Sometimes we execute and sometimes we don’t.”

    Padilla had an outstanding final game on the Rams’ home court with a game-high 12 points. It has been a long road for the multi-sport athlete.

    Padilla had an emergency appendectomy after his appendix ruptured during the middle of the basketball season last year. Then had to deal with an infection after the surgery. He missed more than a month of action dealing the medical issues.

    “I call him the Comeback Player of the Year,” Puccio said of his starting point guard. “The kid was 105 pounds last year after the second infection. He is the toughest kid we have had here in a long time. He is our engine.”

    Padilla was Green Mountain’s starting quarterback this past football season and will transition over the baseball field this spring to conclude his high school career.

    “Honestly, I didn’t think I would recover as well as I did,” Padilla said. “It was a rough, rough six weeks. To be able to play this year is a blessing. You have to be appreciative of everything. That is how I was raised and have been coached.”

    Next up for Green Mountain is a trip to undefeated Montrose (15-0) to face the No. 3 Indians on Thursday night in the Sweet 16.

    “We are looking forward to it,” Puccio said. “Those are great moments to remember forever and great bounding. I don’t mind going over the pass. We’ll have some fun with it.”

    The Rams hope this year’s playoff experience on the Western Slope goes better than last season.

    “Last year we went over the pass,” Padilla said of the Rams’ playoff loss to Glenwood Springs last year. “This year we are ready.”

    Green Mountain junior Corbin Jantzer, left, attempts to get a shot off despite the effort of Frederick junior Alex Sturn during the first half Tuesday night. The Rams doubled-up the Warriors 64-32 in the opening round of the Class 4A state tournament. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: No. 12 Colorado Academy tops No. 21 Alamosa in 3A boys basketball tournament

    No. 12 Colorado Academy earned a trip to the second round of the Class 3A boys basketball tournament with a 57-24 win over No. 21 Alamosa.

  • Photos: No. 12 Holy Family beats No. 21 Grand Junction in 4A boys basketball first round

    No. 12 Holy Family advanced to the second round of the Class 4A boys basketball tournament with a 67-56 win over No. 21 Grand Junction.

  • Photos: No. 3 Rangeview tops No. 30 Columbine in 5A boys basketball tournament

    No. 3 Rangeview advanced to the second round of the Class 5A boys basketball tournament with a 73-49 win over No. 30 Columbine.