Archive for the ‘Alumni’ Category

Wiggins grad Dalton Risner selected by the Broncos in the second round of the NFL Draft

Pomona Eaglecrest 5A State

(Renee Bourcier/bourcierphoto.com)

Dalton Risner, a 2014 graduate of Wiggins, was selected in the second round of the NFL Draft by the hometown Denver Broncos on Friday night.

Risner, an offensive lineman who became an All-American at Kansas State, was selected with the ninth pick in the second round, with the No. 41 overall pick.

He is the first former Colorado high school football player to be selected in this year’s NFL Draft, and also the first-ever product of Wiggins to ever be drafted.

This marks the second consecutive year that the Broncos have drafted a local player, having selected ThunderRidge grad Sam Jones last season.

Find a complete list of former Colorado players to be drafted throughout history in our database. This is the third year in a row a Colorado product has been selected. The longest streak is 18 straight years from 1982-2000.

At Kansas State, Risner redshirted his freshman season, then started 50 games over the next four years and was a three-year team captain.

Risner’s profile exploded during his senior season at Kansas State, where he was named a first-team All-American by CBS Sports, Sporting News, Pro Football Focus and ESPN.

He was also named the Big 12 offensive lineman of the year as a senior, and was a first-team All-Big 12 pick as a sophomore, junior and a senior — becoming the third offensive lineman in conference history to become a three-time selection.

At Wiggins, Risner was on varsity for three seasons, and played under his father, Mitcheal, who continues to be the school’s coach. As a sophomore, he helped lead the Tigers to the Class 1A championship game.

By the time he was a senior, Risner was named the 1A player of the year as part of the all-state teams.

Lamar’s Scott Elarton set to enter Hall of Fame

Scott Elarton has landed at the top of his class. The Lamar standout was one of six individuals along with a team to be named to the 30th anniversary CHSAA Hall of Fame class.

Q&A: Cheyenne Mountain baseball alum Brandon McCarthy dishes on pitch counts and social media

Brandon McCarthy

(Pouya Dianat/Atlanta Braves)

Brandon McCarthy didn’t get to live out his childhood dream. So he decided to play professional baseball instead.

McCarthy, an alum of Cheyenne Mountain High School, had dreams of playing Division I baseball at Louisiana State University. His freshman year, he opted to go the junior college route. He went 12-0 as a starter in his lone year of junior college ball. The Chicago White Sox liked what they saw enough to draft McCarthy in 2002.

Throughout his career, he has pitched for seven major league teams and remained in the league for the better part of the last 13 years.

He’s an avid Twitter user, often receiving praise for his comic delivery. He maintains perspective regardless of how well he’s throwing on any given day.

Currently pitching for the Atlanta Braves, McCarthy took the time to talk with CHSAANow.com about topics ranging from pitch counts to whether or not altitude is really a factor when it comes to pitching.

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Question: Something that Colorado has done in recent years is institute a pitch count rule, getting away from the limits of innings. If you can think back to when you were playing and with what you know now, is a pitch count a better way to develop kids and limit injuries?

McCarthy: I think that’s a really good question. And I don’t know. I think more than anything, the pitch count limits the adult influence over a kid’s career which I think is somewhat important. Being really competitive from ages 14 to 17 is a good thing for people who have aspirations for doing more. The wins and losses at that level aren’t as important.

You get a coach, you get a parent, you get someone who desperately wants to win this for whatever reason and it puts the kid at risk. That’s what you’re protecting from.

I don’t actually remember having innings limits when I was there, but it could be that I’ve forgotten it or wasn’t aware it. I’m not sure. I think those things are good, but I think over time I don’t know if they’ll lessen injuries.

For years we thought in professional baseball we should come back to down to 100 pitches and let’s go backwards that way. I don’t know if we’ve seen injuries go down other than shoulder injuries. Maybe throwing a baseball is just what does it. If you’re lowering the percentage even somewhat, I think it’s a good thing.

Q: You took the route of going to junior college for a year, you got drafted and then signed. It seems like these days, kids are going after the biggest D-I offer they can get ahold of. Is baseball different from football or baseball in that sense that there is no one path to play professionally and is it more important to find the right fit rather than the best offer?

McCarthy: Yeah. And I think the hardest thing about being 18 or having kids that will be 18 is that you don’t know what that route looks like. So the best fit is what you think at the current moment and then four months later, it’s the completely wrong fit. I’ve heard of a lot of kids at D-I schools where it was just the wrong choice but they picked it because their friends were going there or it was the most prestigious or whatever.

I forever will advocate for the junior college level for people who want to monitor themselves year after year. I think having to wait three years at a Division I school before you turn pro is a little bit tough for some kids in terms of striking while the iron is hot.

A good junior college that’s run properly and doing everything it’s supposed to do to develop kids, I think you can get good quickly and it’s less of a crazy situation that the NCAA has. You have to do your research and find the best fit for you, but it’s so different for each individual player.

Q: How did you know you were ready to turn pro?

McCarthy: I don’t really know. My whole goal was to play at LSU, playing professional ball was more of a side thought. As it got closer, it became something I knew I had to think about.

My freshman year (of college) I pitched really well that whole year and it was more of a thought that I might be bored if I go back. I think that’s how I knew. I had to take the next step I either had to go Division I and go to LSU or go pro. Some weird things happened with LSU so the pro thing was the next natural fit.

I feel like I was getting better and better on a daily basis and I felt like I had matured a lot in that one year. Looking back, you realize that you don’t know half the things you think you knew so you go in kind of ignorant. I think I was just of the mentality to go to another level and be better, I guess.

Q: Social media has become a big thing especially for high athletes these days. You’re one of the best general Twitter followers just in terms of your personality and comic delivery. Would you have behaved the way you do now when you were in high school if social media was around?

McCarthy: That’s a good question. I don’t know that I would’ve had tremendously stupid thoughts at that time or at least ones where kids are nuking their own careers because of it. But it’s hard to say not having grown up in an era of social media. I don’t think I would be pumping out nonsense left and write. For me, I think if I just had a kids in that situation I would tell them to be unbelievably careful with it.

Don’t say controversial, use your personality, try to always be positive. Until you’re in a place where you have the leverage to really say what you want, I guess, whether it’s controversial or not. Until you’re in that place, make sure everything is positive and make sure everything will be read by someone you don’t want to read it.

Q: I feel like when I look at your tweets I get the sense you’re very grounded and you know who you are, what you’re doing and you also know what the big scheme of life looks like. How have you been able to maintain that perspective despite pitching in the majors for over 13 years?

McCarthy: I really don’t know. I think my parents did a great job at giving me a life outlook that was solid. I try to surround myself with people who wouldn’t let you blow yourself up and treating you like you’re the greatest thing on Earth. Because you’re not. You’re just doing something different than what everyone else does for work.

Something it makes you feel special inside, but sometimes you have to round that out with remembering that I just go to a different work place and that’s it. The more you try to think that everyone is just doing what they can to get from one day to the next, you’re not that important I guess, it helps tame those thoughts that I can do whatever I want and be whoever I want because I’m better than people. Once you get rid of that I’m better than anybody thought, I think it helps you.

Brandon McCarthy

(Pouya Dianat/Atlanta Braves)

Q: Growing up in Colorado, is it a myth or is it real that it’s tougher to throw at altitude?

McCarthy: Oh no, it’s incredibly tougher to throw at altitude. When you’re growing up there, you don’t know the difference because you’re not doing it anywhere else. Once you get to another level where you’re in tune with the feel of what pitches do and it’s less of a guessing game than it is maybe at the high school level, even the college level, once you figure it out professionally you realize this pitch didn’t do what it was supposed to do, that pitch went a little farther, it becomes a mental battle.

When you’re in high school, you’re just throwing and wanting to get this guy out and you simplify it more. Once it’s more technique based, you realize altitude is an absolute nightmare.

Q: Does it a kid to have a reputation that he learned how to throw at altitude or does it not matter at that level?

McCarthy: I wouldn’t think it matters that much. Maybe it does. It all normalizes. So maybe if you have an unbelievable curveball at altitude then that bodes really well for you when you’re not at altitude or same with a slider or sinker. But it’s that same thing, if you don’t know any different, there’s no mental thing, it’s adjusting to the way the rest of the world is at sea-level and then all of a sudden coming back to high altitude.

I don’t think Colorado guys coming back and pitching in Denver have had any more success, at least that I can think of anecdotally, but maybe if someone looked that up, they’d see I was wrong. I go there and I feel like everybody else does, which is pretty neutered.

Q: Does it feel like your pitches looked the same way they did in high school?

McCarthy: No, it’s just a throwing difference. Other than a curveball, I don’t throw anything the same way. You’ve done so much working at refining and touching and changing little things here and there that if I even watched, I don’t know if video of me in high school exists, but if I saw it I’m pretty sure I’d be shocked at what it looks like. The similarities 17 years ago and now are probably next to none other than I’m tall and skinny.

Q: With the career you had, what advice would you give high school pitchers who aspire to go this route, whether it’s their dream school or that ambition of making it to the majors?

McCarthy: Act like you have a job earlier than you do. It’s weird to call playing baseball at the high school level or even earlier than that a job because it’s not. But I always approaching things fairly professionally in a sense where I wanted to really work hard or thought a lot about what I was doing and then kept trying to get better. It was less of a three-hour activity in the afternoon. It was a focused three-hour activity with something specific I was trying to do with the goal always to be better than I was before.

I think that’s the most important thing. It can’t just be something you’re doing. It has to be something that you’re really drilled in on every day and trying to get better. It’s the only way to keep moving forward.

Q: What’s the one thing you remember about pitching for Cheyenne Mountain?

McCarthy: I remember a lot of my senior year. I pitched really well that year and I had a lot of fun. Our team was really good. I think we lost in the state semis. As far as I know, Cheyenne hadn’t gotten anywhere baseball-wise or advanced very far. It was a surprise to all of us that we were really good and going really far. I remember that was a fun thing and the school got swept up in it.

We had a playoff game at home and most of the school came out and watched it. It was a very fun thing that it was the first time we were playing baseball and felt like people were paying attention and that meant a lot growing up, especially in Colorado. It was just really fun to play when there were real stakes on the line.

Legend alum Derrick White continues to make most of his chances in pursuit of NBA career

Derrick White

(Photo courtesy of CU Athletics)

All Derrick White needs is a chance to prove himself. Once he has it, he has no problem showing just how talented he is.

That was the case when he played at Legend High School. The theory held through his time at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs and certainly in his final year of college where he shined for the CU Buffs.

And in his young professional career, White continues to take advantage of every opportunity he’s been afforded. At this rate, he could into something that is rare for Colorado kids. He could become an NBA star.

“I just have to take every opportunity and make the most of it, whether its in the G-League or wherever,” White said. “I have to get better and learn down there and be a better player.”

White was selected with the 29th pick in the 2017 NBA Draft. He was scooped up by the San Antonio Spurs, giving fans of his from Legend, Colorado Springs and Boulder reason to be optimistic about his future.

After all, if Spurs coach Gregg Popovich saw something in White, there is reason to believe he had the chance to be something special. After all, if anyone in the league can get White’s development to stay on track it would be Popovich.

“There is no doubt in my mind,” Legend basketball coach Kevin Boley said. “I got called during the draft process and talked to seven or eight different GMs. I talked to a handful of personnel people and they all asked the same question.”

Is White going to continue to get better?

If the infancy of his professional career is any indication, he is going to remain on track.

White was limited to just 17 games with the Spurs in his rookie season. He averaged just 3.2 points per game and scored a season-high 14 in a loss to Houston on Mar. 12.

Just like he had experienced when he made the jump from high school to college, he understood there’s an adjustment to the professional game.

“Everybody is a little bigger and a little faster and a little stronger,” White said. “You have to find different ways to get your shot off and get into your spots. It takes some getting used to because everybody is a little longer than the guys you’re used to playing against.”

Derrick White

(Photo courtesy of CU Athletics)

Eventually White was sent to the Austin Spurs in the G-League where he began getting used to things. In 24 games, he scored an average of 20 points. He helped the Spurs advance to the G-League championship series where they swept the Raptors 905.

White then returned to San Antonio and played with the Spurs in their playoff series loss to the Golden State Warriors.

And then he went into the NBA’s summer league where his development continued. He led the Utah summer league with 23 points per game and judging from his past and the thoughts of Boley, this is going to be a pivotal point in his professional career.

“I knew when he got in the gym with the professional guys, I knew he would get better,” Boley said. “Then he went to the G-League and played well so he gained some confidence. And you can see know when you look at pictures, he’s so much thicker and so much stronger.”

More importantly, he continues to get better. Throughout his development, whether it was through high school or college, he has done nothing but continue to get bigger and better.

Through his entire journey, he’s learned that chances will always come along. It’s the way that they’re prepared for that will make the difference for those trying to get to the next level.

“Be ready for your opportunity when it comes,” White advises. “Get ready, stay ready and have confidence in yourself. The more confidence you have in yourself, the better you’ll play and the more fun you’ll have.”

And for a kid from Parker who has done nothing to but reach new levels with every chance he’s been given, he looks like he’s having a lot of fun.

Crested Butte alum Emma Coburn captures steeplechase title at USA Track’s Outdoor Championships

(USATF)

Emma Coburn, who graduated from Crested Butte in 2008, won her seventh national title at the USA Track & Field Outdoor Championships on Saturday.

Coburn won the 3000-meter steeplechase in 9:17.70. It was the seventh consecutive year she’d won the event at the American championship, including Olympic Trials years. A two-time Olympian, Coburn also won the steeplechase at the World Championships last summer.

“I was just trying to be relaxed, trying to run my own race,” Coburn told USATF after the race. “I was just really trying to focus on running a race that maximized my skills, given the conditions, given that it would be maybe warm, maybe a little windy.”

At Crested Butte, Coburn won multiple championships over the course of her career in the 800, 1600 and 3200 races at the state track and field championships.

She went on to compete in track and cross country at the University of Colorado, and won two NCAA championships.

Valarie Allman, Silver Creek alum, wins discus at USATF Outdoor Championships

Silver Creek alum Valarie Allman won a national title on Thursday when she won the discus at the U.S.A. Track and Field Outdoor Championships.

Allman, who graduated from Silver Creek in 2013, won the event with a throw of 63.55 meters, or 208 feet, six inches. It is her first national title.

“During it, you’re kind of just taking it moment by moment,” Allman told USATF after the event. “We always say that the train’s gonna take off, and you’ve got to jump on when it starts to go.”

Allman recently graduated from Stanford, where she was a six-time All-American, and twice won the discus at the Pac-12 championships.

Her championship-winning throw on Thursday also broke a Stanford record that had stood since 1983.

Allman’s throw is the longest by an American this season.

At Silver Creek, Allman set the all-classification state record in the discus, a mark (183-03) which still stands through this past season. She was a two-time champion in the discus.

Allman was also co-valedictorian at Silver Creek.

Chris Noll accepts job as District 11 athletic director; Stephanie Leasure assumes Doherty job

Doherty Chris Noll

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

COLORADO SPRINGS — Chris Noll will have a larger roll in the athletic world of Colorado Springs School District 11.

Noll confirmed to CHSAANow.com that he has been named the new district athletic director, taking over for the retiring Dave Eichman.

Noll has led Doherty’s athletic department for the last 13 years and thought he could serve the student-athletes of D-11 on a larger scale by taking over as the district activities and athletic director. He will also serve as the physical education content facilitator.

For Noll, the appeal of the job was the ability to widen the impact he has had at Doherty to the other schools in the district.

“At the end of the day, it’s about the impact on kids,” Noll said. “I have the ability in this new role to impact more kids. And one of my favorite things in the world to do is work with kids and impact kids through athletics and work with coaches. I am super excited to work with more kids and I am super excited to work with more coaches and I’m really excited to mentor athletic directors.”

To fill the void for the Spartans principal Kevin Gardner turned to a familiar face in the Doherty athletic world. Stephanie Leasure has been named as the new athletic director.

The name should ring a bell for those familiar with the Spartans.

Leasure was on the 1995 Class 5A state championship team for Doherty. She was also on the all-state team that year and would go on to play college basketball at New Mexico State and the University of Colorado – Colorado Springs. She was inducted into the UCCS hall of fame in 2014.

Leasure has coached at Doherty and served time as an assistant principal, first at Harrison before coming back to her alma mater in 2016.

In the last two years, she has had a chance to see the culture that Noll has built with the Spartans and knows that keeping the program moving forward will be no easy task.

Stephanie Leasure (Photo courtesy of Doherty High School)

“I’m going to have to put in the work because he’s done an excellent job making sure that Doherty athletics is on the forefront and branded well and that kids and parents have high expectations coming into the program,” Leasure said.

Her experience as a player, coach and administrator gives her the needed makeup to fill the role. It was something that Gardner saw in from the moment he started the process of filling the vacant AD job.

“What I said to people was that we were hiring an AD, not replacing Chris Noll because you can’t do that,” he said. “(I love) the idea that you have someone who is a legacy and has been a part of that culture of every level and knowing that tradition that is Sparta. One of my responsibilities is making sure I do take care of that legacy and tradition of that entire place and the role it plays in Colorado Springs.”

As Leasure begins her work building on top of the foundation that Noll has constructed over the last 13 years, the newly named district AD will begin the task of widening his impact through the rest of the district, which includes schools such as Coronado, Palmer and Mitchell, and follow the model that Eichman built in his time in the role.

Noll worked with Eichman when both were at Wasson High School. In his role as a basketball coach and the athletic director at Doherty, Noll came to understand and respect how Eichman was was able to lead athletics from an administration standpoint.

“When I was the head basketball coach at Wasson, Dave was the athletic director,” Noll said. “I’ve known Dave Eichman for 18 years. Dave has such a calm about him and he is so meticulous in the way he goes about business that I still to this day I continue to learn from him and the way he goes about business. Sometimes you need to slow down rather than go fast. And Dave has a passion for doing business the right way.”

And that’s the way Noll hopes to keep things running. Doherty isn’t necessarily losing the man that has ran the athletic department in the last 13 years, it just has to share him. But Gardner knows it won’t quite be the same without him in the building on a daily basis.

“He’s all about kids and he gets them excited,” Gardner said. “He motivates and inspires and we’re going to miss that piece.”

The benefit for the Spartans is that Leasure has what Noll refers to as a “passion for improvement.”

So while he’s doing what he can to impact more kids in Colorado Springs, he has no doubt that Leasure will make Doherty athletics a better place than she found it.

Several high school players and more alums taken on final day of MLB draft

(Ryan Szepan/Flickr)

The St. Louis Cardinals were the first team to dip into the Colorado talent pool on the final day of the 2018 MLB Draft.

The Cardinals looked west and grabbed Colorado Mesa pitcher Kyle Leahy with the 513th overall pick.

Leahy had a career 1.22 ERA with the Tigers and totaled 15 wins and 172 strikeouts. Opposing hitters had just a .174 batting average against him.

He went 7-2 at Colorado Mesa this last season.

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Cherry Creek’s Milligan goes to Red Sox

Lane Milligan, a 2013 graduate from Cherry Creek, was taken by the Boston Red Sox with the 520th pick.

In two years at Oklahoma City University, Milligan batted .441 with 20 home runs while driving in 117 runs.

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Pueblo West’s Dabovich heads to the Royals

RJ Dabovich became the first Pueblo West alum to go in the MLB draft. The former Cyclones pitcher was taken by the Kansas City Royals with the 542nd overall pick.

In two years with the Cyclones, Dabovich won seven games and held an ERA of 0.80 over 69.2 innings.

He started 13 games at Central Arizona, going 9-3 with a 1.81 ERA and 63 strikeouts. He also recorded one save.

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Standley Lake’s Martin becomes first high school senior drafted in 2018

It took until the 22nd round, but a Colorado high school senior was drafted on Wednesday. Standley Lake’s Garrett Martin was selected by the Baltimore Orioles with the 655th overall selection. He was taken as a third baseman.

Martin batted .453 in 106 at-bats in his career with the Gators. He is committed to play collegiately at McClennan Junior College in Texas.

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Legend alum Michael Baird to join Leahy in St. Louis

Six rounds after selecting Leahy, the St. Louis Cardinals grabbed more Colorado talent, taking Legend alum Michael Baird.

Baird went 5-5 with a 3.16 ERA this season at Southern Illinois.

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Rockies take 2014 Regis Jesuit grad

Reagan Todd gets to stay home. The 2014 Regis Jesuit graduate was taken by the Colorado Rockies with the 966th overall pick in the draft.

Todd originally went to Arizona State to play in college but ended up transferring to Colorado Mesa in Grand Junction. The Rockies rookie ball is also located in Grand Junction.

Todd went 5-2 and struck out 85 hitters for the Mavericks in 2018.

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Heritage’s Egloff taken by Marlins

Cherry Creek Heritage baseball

(Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

The Miami Marlins looked to the Class 5A state runner-up to bolster its pitching. Heritage’s Riley Egloff was selected with the 1,077th overall pick.

Egloff has committed to Yavapai to play junior college ball. He and the Eagles advanced to the state championship game this spring.

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Rockies draft Rock Canyon shortstop

The Colorado Rockies ended up looking within the state’s talent pool twice on Wednesday. After taking Todd in the 32nd round, the Rockies looked to Highlands Ranch for a shortstop.

They found Rock Canyon’s Cayden Zimmerman. The recent graduate has committed to play baseball at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.

He batted .371 this year for the Jaguars.

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Detroit drafts former Chatfield outfielder

The Detroit Tigers added depth in their outfield by drafting a former Chatfield Charger. They selected Matthew Jarecki with the 1,095th pick.

Jarecki played his college ball at Benedictine and was a career .500 hitter at Chatfield.

Colorado prospects taken on Day 2 of Major League Baseball draft

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

Grant Witherspoon, the former two-sport star at D’Evelyn, was taken in the fourth round of the 2018 Major League Baseball Draft.

He is the 120th overall pick.

According the CHSAA database, he is the first player from D’Evelyn to be selected in the MLB Draft.

In his senior year with the Jags, Witherspoon earned All-Jeffco player of the year honors while batting .364, blasting three home runs and racking up 23 RBIs. He also went 7-1 on the mound that year with a 1.19 ERA.

He was a late college commitment, choosing Tulane in July of 2015, more than a month after he graduated high school.

Witherspoon was also a standout basketball player for the Jags.

He was taken by the Rays as a centerfielder. This last year at Tulane, he batted .330 and hit 12 home runs.

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White Sox take 2015 Fossil Ridge grad

The Chicago White Sox selected 2015 Fossil Ridge graduate Code Heuer in the sixth round of the draft. Heuer was taken with the 168th overall pick.

The White Sox selected Heuer as a pitcher.

Heuer went 10-6 in 21 career appearances with the SaberCats. He is the second player from Fossil Ridge to be drafted.

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Holy Family alum goes to the Red Sox

Holy Family’s Devlin Granberg was taken by the Boston Red Sox with the 190th overall pick by the Boston Red Sox.

Granberg graduated from Holy Family in 2014 and played his last two years of college ball at Dallas Baptist. He previously played at Creighton and Cisco College.

He batted .443 for the Patriots in 2018.

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Dakota Ridge alum heads to Padres organization

Steven Wilson, a 2012 graduate of Dakota Ridge, was taken by the San Diego Padres with the 231st pick of the draft.

He is the second Colorado pitcher taken this year following the selection of Heuer in the sixth round.

Wilson was drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies following his senior year, but opted to head to college rather than sign with the team.

He appeared in 54 games for Santa Clara, going 13-13 with four saves. His career ERA was 3.88.

List of Colorado products selected in 2018 MLB Draft

(Eric Drost/Flickr)

The 2018 MLB Draft is June 4-6. Below is a list of Colorado products selected.

Last season, 14 players who played high school baseball in Colorado were taken.

For a list of all previous Colorado players drafted, browse our historical MLB Draft database.

Coverage:

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Local selections in the 2018 MLB Draft

Alumni
RD OVR Team Name POS High School Grad College
4 120 Tampa Bay Rays Grant Witherspoon CF D’Evelyn 2015 Tulane
6 168 Chicago White Sox Codi Heuer RHP Fossil Ridge 2015 Wichita State
6 190 Boston Red Sox Devlin Granberg OF Holy Family 2014 Dallas Baptist
8 231 San Diego Padres Steven Wilson P Dakota Ridge 2012 Santa Clara
17 513 St. Louis Cardinals Kyle Leahy RHP Erie 2015 Colorado Mesa University
17 520 Boston Red Sox Lane Milligan CF Cherry Creek 2013 Oklahoma City University
18 542 Kansas City Royals RJ Dabovich RHP Pueblo West 2017 Central Arizona College
23 693 St. Louis Cardinals Michael Baird P Legend 2014 Southern Illinois
32 966 Colorado Rockies Reagan Todd P Regis Jesuit 2014 Colorado Mesa University
37 1095 Detroit Tigers Matthew Jarecki LF Chatfield 2014 Benedictine College
2018 graduates
RD OVR Team Name POS High School Commit
22 655 Baltimore Orioles Garrett Martin 3B Standley Lake McClennan JC
36 1077 Miami Marlins Riley Egloff P Heritage Yavapai JC
36 1086 Colorado Rockies Cayden Zimmerman SS Rock Canyon Air Force