Category: Alumni

  • Five former Colorado high school football players selected in the NFL Draft

    (Matt McGee/Flickr)

    Kalen Ballage, Daniel Carlson, JK Scott, Sam Jones and Jacob Martin — five former Colorado high school football players — were all selected in the NFL Draft on Saturday.

    It is the first time since 2006 that five Colorado products have been selected in the same draft.

    Ballage, a 2014 graduate of Falcon High School, was selected in the fourth round by the Miami Dolphins.

    Carlson, a 2013 graduate of The Classical Academy, went in the fifth round to the Minnesota Vikings.

    Scott, who graduated from Mullen in 2014, was also drafted in the fifth round, going to the Green Bay Packers.

    Jones, a ThunderRidge alum from 2013, went in the sixth round to the Denver Broncos.

    Martin graduated from Cherokee Trail in 2014. He was also drafted in the sixth round, selected by the Seattle Seahawks.

    Ballage, Carlson, Jones and Martin are the first players from their respective high schools to ever be selected in the NFL Draft. Scott is the fifth former Mullen Mustang to be drafted.

    Ballage, a senior running back out of Arizona State, went to the Dolphins with the No. 131 overall pick. 

    Kalen Ballage as a senior at Falcon. (Tim Visser/MaxPreps)

    At Falcon, Ballage rushed for 2,690 yards and 35 touchdowns during the course of his career, including nearly 1,943 and 25 scores as a senior. As a senior, he was the Class 4A player of the year, and a member of the first-team all-state team.

    Ballage measured at 6-foot-2 and 228 pounds during the NFL Combine, where he also ran a 4.46 40-yard dash.

    Ballage was the first Colorado product to be selected in this year’s NFL Draft. Last season, Valor Christian graduate Christian McCaffrey was the lone product selected, going in the first round.

    This is the first time since 2012 and 2013 that products of Colorado high schools have been selected in consecutive drafts.

    Carlson, a senior kicker at Auburn, was selected a round after Ballage, going No. 167 overall to the Vikings. He was the first kicker selected in the 2018 NFL Draft.

    At Auburn, Carlson didn’t miss a point-after attempt in his career, going 198-of-198. He also made 92 of 114 field goal attempts, including 23 of 31 as a senior.

    Carlson stood out at TCA, too, in both football and soccer. He made 14 of 20 field goal attempts for the Titans.

    Carlson is just the third kicker from Colorado to ever be drafted, and the first since 1987, when Cherry Creek product Steve DeLine went to the San Francisco 49ers.

    Scott, a senior punter at Alabama, went five picks after Carlson, at No. 172 to the Packers. He is the third punter from Colorado to ever be taken, and first since 1988 (Simla’s Barry Helton).

    Scott set the Alabama record for career punting yards, as well as career punting average, and was part of two national championship teams.

    At Mullen, Scott averaged 43.8 yards per punt as a senior. He also made 8 of 15 field goals as a senior, and 23 of 24 extra points. He also made a a 59- and 58-yard field goal with the Mustangs, and was named first-team all-state as a senior.

    Fairview ThunderRidge football 5A playoffs
    Sam Jones during his time at ThunderRidge. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Jones was drafted by his hometown Denver Broncos with the No. 183rd overall selection, in the sixth round. 

    He finished his redshirt junior season at Arizona State last fall. He was a team captain for the Sun Devils last season, and was a three-year starter on the offensive line.

    At ThunderRidge, he was a first-team all-state pick as a senior.

    Martin, a senior defensive end from Temple, went to the Seahawks at No. 186 overall.

    He had a stellar career at Temple, notching 11.5 career sacks, as well as 17.5 tackles for a loss. 

    During his career at Cherokee Trail, Martin helped the Cougars reach the Class 5A championship game.

    He was a first-team all-state pick as a senior.

    Find a complete list of former Colorado high school football players selected in the draft in our NFL Draft database.

  • Video: Arvada West honors Roy Halladay

    Before the Class 5A Jeffco League baseball game April 23 between Dakota Ridge and Arvada West, the Wildcats honored graduate and former Major League Baseball great Roy Halladay.

    Members of the Halladay Family, along with former teammates and coaches who were on A-West’s 1994 state championship team were on hand for the celebration.

    Halladay pitched for the Toronto Blue Jays and Philadelphia Phillies, winning the CY Young Award in 2003 and 2010.

  • Mountain Vista alum Graham Smith selected in MLS SuperDraft’s first round

    (Courtesy of DU athletics)

    Graham Smith, a 2014 alum of Mountain Vista, was selected in the first round of the MLS SuperDraft on Friday.

    Smith, a senior defender and midfielder at the University of Denver, was selected by Sporting Kansas City in the first round, at No. 18 overall.

    Smith began his college career at Oregon State, and transferred to DU following his sophomore season. After his transfer, he started all 42 games in appeared in for the Pioneers, scoring six goals and notching seven assists. As a senior, he had three goals.

    Following his senior season, Smith was named a first-team selection on the CoSIDA Academic All-American team. He carries a 3.94 GPA in finance.

    At Mountain Vista, Smith played soccer and basketball.

    His selection in the first round means former Colorado high school players have now been selected in the first round of the most recent NFL (Christian McCaffrey), MLB (David Peterson), NBA (Derrick White) and MLS drafts.

    (Courtesy of Dan Watkins)
  • Two Colorado athletes break into U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship

    5A girls golf state tournament Jaclyn Murray Regis Jesuit
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Regis Jesuit’s Jaclyn Murray and Kent Denver’s Charlotte Hillary qualified for the U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship at Boone Valley Golf Club (Augusta, Mo.), which begins today.

    Hillary’s score of 73 at Elks Country Club (Columbus, Neb.) was the best score in her qualifying group.

    The sophomore-to-be came in second place in this year’s Class 3A state tournament.

    Murray qualified close to home at Valley Country Club in Centennial, Colo. with a score of 73.

    Murray, a 2017 graduate, came in 13th place at the Class 5A state tournament.

    The U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship will be played July 24-29.

    The tournament starts out with two rounds of stroke play, then the top 64 golfers are grouped for match play.

    The field is narrowed from the Round of 64 to the championship match, which is 36 holes.

    [divider]

    The schedule and format are listed below:

    Monday, July 24 (Stroke Play, Round 1, 18 holes)

    Tuesday, July 25 (Stroke Play, Round 2, 18 holes)

    Wednesday, July 26 (Round of 64, match play)

    Thursday, July 27 (Round of 32/Round of 16, match play)

    Friday, July 28 (Quarterfinals/Semifinals, match play)

    Saturday, July 29 (Championship Match, 36 holes)

  • Q&A: Valor Christian alum Wyndham Clark outlines his journey to the PGA

    Golf is hard.

    And according to Valor Christian alum Wyndham Clark, it’s even harder if you come from Colorado. But like any sport, reaching a professional level requires the right mix of talent, motivation and work ethic.

    It appears Clark has enough of all three. In 2011, he won the Class 4A boys golf championship. He recently graduated from the University of Oregon and has officially joined the ranks as a professional golfer.

    He doesn’t quite have his PGA tour card, but he is taking a path that he hopes will end with regular appearances on the pro circuit.

    [divider]

    Wyndham Clark Valor Christian boys golf
    (Cliff Grasmick/Oregon Athletics)

    Question: The path to the pros in sports like football and basketball is really transparent, but what does it take on the golf side?

    Clark: It’s definitely a lot tougher than any other sport, just because if you’re coming out of college for football and basketball and you get drafted, you’re guaranteed to be on a team and guaranteed at least a few years.

    Yet, in golf, that’s not necessarily the case. You’re not getting a PGA card, regardless if you’re the No. 1 player coming out of college.

    The process pretty much goes that you have to try and get your Web card and you spend one year out on the Web.com Tour. If you finish roughly top 40, but mainly top 25, you get your PGA Tour card. That’s one route.

    Another route that I’m trying to do is that I’ve been fortunate enough to get sponsorship exemptions into PGA events. Through that, if I play well, I can get my card based on FedEx Cup points.

    You can also earn enough points to go to the Web.com finals and from there you can earn your card.

    There are tons of different avenues to get on the PGA Tour.

    Q: When you won your state championship back in 2011, did you have an idea at that point that you were good enough and this was a path that you seriously wanted to pursue?

    Clark: Yeah, I’ve always dreamt about it. Winning my high school state championship didn’t necessarily make me believe that I could. I already believed that.

    But that was definitely a stepping stone in my career. And as I’ve played in college and played against good players, growing up playing against guys like Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas and players like that, I knew my game compared to players like theirs. I just need to play more consistent and when I have the opportunity, take advantage of it like they did.

    I always believed I could, now I just have to go out and show it at the right time.

    Q: Golf is different in the sense that you’re not directly competing against other players, you’re competing against the course. Other athletes talk about how much faster the game is at the pro level, how is golf different from the high school level to the professional level?

    Clark: From the high school level, there is no comparison other than the fact that you’re playing the same game. In college, there’s a little bit of a comparison but still, it’s definitely different.

    The conditions of the golf courses are way different. Not only are they nice and well-manicured, but it’s so much firmer than people see on TV week-in and week-out. The pin placements are so tough.

    You really learn how to manage your golf ball and put it in the right spot, you really can’t short-side yourself on tour. Short-siding yourself on tour is so bad pretty much every week because the greens are firm, usually the rough is really high and obviously the greens are relatively quick.

    When you short-side yourself, you almost have no chance to make par.

    That’s one of the biggest differences that I’ve noticed from high school and collegiate golf is how they set up golf courses compared to amateur golf.

    Wyndham Clark Valor Christian boys golf
    (Cliff Grasmick/Oregon Athletics)

    Q: Is there an advantage or a disadvantage coming from the state of Colorado?

    Clark: I think it’s a disadvantage, personally. Because you don’t ever really play at altitude at any of these events. The most you play at is maybe 1,000 feet.

    I think growing up in Colorado, not only are you playing different distances, but the ball actually spins less and is affect by the air less. So the ball goes straighter and doesn’t go offline as much.

    When you go play in Florida or other places where the air is thick, your misses are exaggerated a lot more. I think that’s definitely a disadvantage.

    And then I would also say over the years, there has been a lot of good competition but there are states like Texas, California, Florida and Georgia that have produced more PGA Tour players.

    Playing against really good competition only makes you better.

    But there are also some advantages to playing in Colorado. I think time off is huge. Having distractions from the game and playing other sports helped me. Not being able to play at all can be great, but overall I would say it’s a disadvantage.

    Q: So for a golf like yourself who is able to adjust and make it into professional events, is that more of a testament to your ability more or less overcome those disadvantages?

    Clark: I think any guy that makes it from Colorado really put in the time and work, is really talented or really took advantage of whatever college they went to. And if they stayed in Colorado then their game is that good that they can adjust to those disadvantages that there are in Colorado.

    If you can make it being from Colorado, it actually then becomes an advantage because I think you have a chip on your shoulder, it’s a tougher route. When you do have adverse conditions or just adversity, you can handle it a lot better than if you came from California where it’s 75 and perfect every day.

    I definitely think it’s a big accomplishment to make to the next level in general, but especially coming from Colorado or Utah or any place like that.

    Q: What was it like standing on your first tee box at your first professional event?

    Clark: It was pretty surreal. Unfortunately, actually rather fortunately, I started on No. 10 so there weren’t as many people on the first tee. I think that helped the first tee nerves a little bit.

    I barely missed the fairway, but I was in the first cut so it wasn’t too bad.

    But it was definitely a surreal feeling because I had dreamt about it for so long. I saw a lot of my peers getting starts in PGA events as amateurs because they had an event in their hometown or home state and we don’t in Colorado.

    I was never fortunate enough to play in one so it felt long overdue. But it was a great feeling.

    Q: Was there ever a moment during that round when you could soak it all in and really appreciate what you had accomplished at that point?

    Clark: It was tough. I struggled focusing that week, I had a lot going on and obviously it was my first event and I wanted to do well but there were a lot of distractions.

    I was out there trying to grind and get ahead and try and make the cut, but I played terribly and didn’t.

    I did make a birdie putt on my last hole of the tournament and that was pretty cool. There was a handful of people and I got a loud cheer. I at least had some positives in the event and it gave me some encouragement going into the next week.

    I went into the next week and played a lot better and made the cut.

    So I would say that putt on 18 after I missed the cut, I was able to soak it in. I didn’t play well, but it was a fun week and it was awesome to get my first start under my belt.

    Q: What’s your outlook now in terms of how soon do you want to be playing in majors and just playing well on tour consistently?

    Clark: I’d like to do it this year. My goal is to get on tour as fast as possible whether that’s playing well in my starts on the PGA Tour here in the next few months and having one really good week and getting my card, that’d be my first goal.

    If not, then try to do it through the Web.com and the dream would be to be playing next year with my card.

    But if that doesn’t happen, you have to have a longterm mindset. And mine is that it usually takes good players anywhere between two and four years. I’m giving myself that amount of time to try and make it, but if it happens earlier, that’s even better.

    As far as majors, I think that comes with getting your card and that all comes relatively at the same time. Obviously qualifying for the U.S. Open I’ve tried many times.

    That would be fun to have that be my first major, but it all happens in due time.

    Q: What would you tell any high school kid right now who is looking at becoming a professional golfer.

    Clark: I would say you have to really monitor how you practice and how you view your path to the tour. There are different routes. You don’t necessarily have to go to a top college to make it on tour. There are guys that played D-II or D-III golf that are on tour.

    You don’t have to be so concerned with where you go, but obviously some places help.

    As far as your practice and preparation, I used to just practice the things I like. I didn’t work on things that are applicable to playing golf. What I’ve learned out here are things like gaining shots on the putting green, working getting up and down from certain situations.

    I go out and have to work on hitting fairways or having to miss on a certain side of the hole. Work on my wedge distances.

    I used to just go to the range and go to the putting green and do a bunch of drills, but none of them really translated to the golf course. Playing a lot and trying to score and get your ball in the hole is really the biggest thing.

    I think that would really help a high school player and that’s what separates the PGA from the rest of the world is how they prepare and how they practice.

    That’s why they play so well.

    Wyndham Clark Valor Christian boys golf
    (Cliff Grasmick/Oregon Athletics)
  • Q&A: CHSAA hall of famer Justin Armour dishes on today’s landscape of high school athletics

    MANITOU SPRINGS — This past spring, Justin Armour decided to get back into the world of high school coaching. He spent two years as the head football coach at his alma mater of Manitou Springs before stepping down to open a restaurant in his hometown.

    This winter, he’ll roam the sidelines as the Mustangs’ girls basketball coach.

    It’s been quite a ride for the 2011 CHSAA hall of fame inductee. After a star-studded career with the Mustangs he found college football success at Stanford. Then he made his way to the NFL.

    As one of the rare standouts who has reached the highest level of athletic success, he was able to look back at how high school sports worked in his day and how today they’re better in some ways and not as good in others.

    [divider]

    Question: What’s the biggest thing you expect in your second go around as a varsity head coach?

    Armour: Probably less surprises. Just from an administrative point of view and the handling of communication with the parents and all that will be a lot easier.

    Football is different venture. It’s more complex on a day-to-day basis. There’s a lot more film review required, there’s a lot more strategic planning for a particular opponent each week. That’s why you have the collaboration of all these coaches and it’s a much larger process than playing basketball.

    I don’t expect it to be quite as much (of a time commitment) as being the head coach of football requires. Obviously I have a vested interest in that I get to be around my daughter and her friends that all play basketball that I’ve been coaching for a while.

    Probably the most important thing that I expect is that I didn’t just move here. I was trying to open a restaurant with my family. I wasn’t just starting to work full-time (at the school district). Now I’m just running a business, spending a lot more time with my family. It’s a much better time-management time of my life to be doing this.

    Q: You’re now pulling double duty as a parent and a coach. Between those two, what do you see now from kids, parents or coaches in general that you’ve from or used as an example of what not to do?

    Armour: I would say my coaching style has matured for sure. It’s from observing parents, observing other coaches – particularly good coaches.

    I’ve definitely become less feisty, or tried to, and stopped blaming officials or other factors in the game other than how you’re team is playing. I’ve kind of matured to and become much more friendly with officials and the environment instead of going in there with a hot head of steam wanting to compete.

    It’s funny how it’s taken a while. I’m 44 now, so I’m mellowing out for sure.

    Q: Back when you were 17 or 18, could have imagined that the high school sports world would blow up to the size it is now with 24-hour recruiting services and kids who are always looking for the next best offer?

    Armour: Not so much. It’s funny, because I always tell the kids that I got through college basically without the internet. It pretty much arrived right when I got out.

    Back then you had fewer teams, very select tournaments. Not as many kids traveling.

    You certainly played against teams with superstars, kids who were really good and really great shooters. Nowadays every player on every team is good. Really good. I think the competition is way better. It’s much more available. It’s available all year long, through every season.

    So that and the fact that everyone communicates immediately, it’s a frenzy. Once you get on the field level or the court level, I don’t know, I don’t think it’s that different.

    You have kids that love it and some that don’t. The kids that love it are fun to coach.

    Q: What was your decision-making process like compared to what it is today? Now, kids announce what they do on Twitter. What was happening in 1990 or 1991 when you decided to sign and play football at Stanford? How did people hear about it?

    Armour: That’s a good question. I would say, honestly the majority of the people who knew me or followed me found out through the newspaper.

    That’s a good question…

    My family knew immediately. Probably some of my best friends. I’m sure it spread through my own close-knit circle.

    My only concern with these kids is that they have to remember that they have to remain personable with these people. Communicating via text, especially emotional things or important things, really diminishes the value of what you’re saying.

    Of course, you’re always giving these kids your corny speeches over dinner and whatever chance you get. I think they’re listening.

    Q: Going to Stanford, going to the NFL, sometimes people don’t grasp how rare and unique of a situation that is. What do you tell your kids and the kids you coach when they tell you that they want to reach such a high level?

    Armour: I think that my main thing would be that a lot of things have to come together for a student-athlete to get that opportunity.

    In my case, one of my recruiters told me that my academics, my grade-point-average, my test scores and really all the participation in all the things that my school offered – school plays, student council – basically said that it was a slam dunk application.

    So that piece has to be in place. And then you have to have some gifts in place that hopefully you’ve worked on and developed enough that they want those too.

    That has to happen.

    If a kid really wants to create that opportunity for himself, he really has to learn to want it early. In high school, you really have to keep all your ducks in a row at school.

    And then maybe if you’re good enough, you practice hard enough and you want it badly enough you can get a chance to go play and someone will pay for your college tuition and education.

    I wish I had been more organized about it or more aware of what was happening.

    I didn’t really have have much of a college plan per se. I thought I’d just go to business school or law school basically. So my undergraduate degree was in public policy, which I was drawn to and what I was interested in.

    But beyond that, I didn’t have much of a plan.

    There’s a lot of race to nowhere going on with these parents and these kids. I feel like we’re overdoing it, putting them in these camps and tournaments everywhere and spending a lot of money with no guarantee of a return.

    You have to look at your kids and see if they’re having fun. Are they looking forward to this? Are they excited to go to Wisconsin and compete or whatever you’re doing.

    If the kid is excited and passionate about it, then support him and go for it. But I’d encourage parents to not corner their kid into things that they don’t have passion for.

    You have to like practice, you have to like the process of it.

    Q: So as a parent, how do you deal with that when it comes to your own kids?

    Armour: It’s tough. It’s very tough. They know who I am as an adult. They know my personality isn’t that much different. I’m kind of a charger-like person. My wife is laid back, my son is a blend of our personality and so is my daughter.

    I feel like if anything, and my kids will attest to this, I probably don’t push them enough. I talk to them and I support them, but I want them to enjoy it. They don’t have to go this route. Scholar athletes.

    My biggest sell is that it’s a great way to get through school and create opportunities for yourself. If you create that for yourself then you’ve already learned how to work really hard. Because you’re going to have to starting right now.

    My son turned 14 this year so he works (at my restaurant) during the week and has practice all week. He’s a busy kid and he’s a fit kid and he’s healthy. Because he plays.

    He’ll have to set his own goals.

    I wish I would’ve had the goal to play NFL football when I was in high school, but I certainly did not. It wasn’t a conscious goal. I think my goal was to get a scholarship. Once I was there, my goal was to win at the first conditioning exercise.

    I think when I got to the NFL, on some level I was shocked. I don’t know how to explain it. So many people would naysay and tell me I’m not fast enough or just that it wouldn’t happen.

    By the time I was a senior, it looked like I would get the opportunity and then I had a pretty good first year.

    And then, I don’t know. If my goal had been to become a professional football player, I would’ve been more professional about it when I got there instead of moving all over the place.

    I probably should’ve moved to Buffalo and lived there for 10 years and gone in (to the facility) every day. But on the other side, I would leave and meet the people who eventually gave me my jobs after football.

    You look back and think if I had just gone one different direction, I could’ve maybe made a different move here or there and gotten to play five more years.

    Q: Everybody in this area knows Justin Armour the football guy. What would Justin Armour the basketball guy have been like? Not everybody knows that basketball was your primary sport.

    Armour: Yeah, they don’t associate me with basketball. Few people realize that’s what I love. I love basketball and spent all my time doing it.

    (Former Manitou football coach George) Rykovich had to talk me into pretty going on the field as a sophomore. I did not want to.

    I was a super-physical basketball player, but getting the ball every play and getting hammered, I wasn’t there yet. It evolved later.

    Most of the schools that ended up offering me football opportunities only knew me because of seeing me at the Nike Camp and playing in tournaments against the Fab Five and those type of high-level tournaments and games.

    That’s how most colleges saw my athleticism and ability to compete at that level. It certainly wasn’t here at Manitou. Then they would come back and realize ‘oh, he plays football too.’ Then they would tell people that this kid they were looking at for basketball was also on the football field.

    That’s how it worked back then.

    And when you go to school on a scholarship, you have to take the scholarship that offers more. Football programs offer more.

    But my intention was honestly to focus on basketball there.

    I think they would be surprised at how much I like it. Even today, it’s probably what I watch more than anything else. My son gets to play a lot and I love watching his games.

    It’s a fast game, they’re quick games. The weather is always perfect.

    It’s probably one of the most athletic games there is just with the way you have to transition in the game and use a lot of technical skills, make difficult shots. Then there’s the team component. It’s exciting to watch. I love watching, especially when my kids play.

    I’m looking forward to it. We’ve had open gyms all June, I’ve had a lot of the girls that are playing next year. I’m excited about what I see. We pretty much scrimmage together and push each other around.

    I just give them the freedom to play ball and go attack the basket right now, don’t worry about whether or not it goes in.

    There’s a lot of enthusiasm at the middle school. I think 20 to 25 girls are interested in basketball. That’s a good fleet coming up.

    I’m excited to be around the gym.

    I’m excited to have (Amelia) Schofield, and for a lot of people who follow local basketball, they know she was a phenom at Manitou a couple of years ago.

    And then there’s another girl, Jessie Black who works in the district. She’s a local, Woodland Park, girl and she’s been coming to all the open gyms and scrimmaging with the girls.

    We’re going to have fun. We have some good teams in that league the next couple of years so we’ll probably learn how to play really good defense and take a pounding a few times.

    St. Mary’s looks good, CSCS obviously and Lamar. All those teams are going to be beasts for the next couple of years.

    Q: You said earlier you were mellowing out. Now that you have, where do you put your emphasis on learning, having fun and winning?

    Armour: Having fun and learning… if you’re paying attention in practice you’re into it and having fun, you win. I think it goes that way naturally.

    It’ll be different this time. I don’t have any expectations. I want to just go coach basketball.

    I considered it last year when the job opened up and they had a pretty good senior team. I talked to my family and I wasn’t quite ready. At the end of the year, I knew it was available and I had talked to Ed (Longfield) and Danny (Gieck) and it gave me more thought.

    Needless to say it hasn’t been a super-popular position in the last little while. I didn’t exactly weed through a bunch of applicants.

    I think it’ll be a good fit. The other reality is that my son is going to be a freshman. The way that the boys and girls teams travel together, I’ll be traveling to all those games anyway.

    I was already planning on the time commitment because I love watching him play.

    I’ve learned that basketball is coached in practice. When you get to the game, you let them play and see what they got. Maybe talk to them a little along the way.

    When I say I’ve mellowed, I mean I’m done trying to verbally force the game with energy. That was my style to bring a lot of energy. While I try to bring it, I don’t bring it toward the officials anymore. I just act like they’re not there.

    I really do. And I’ve learned that from other good coaches.

    I just take a deep breath because I’ve never seen an official change a call. Even if it was a bad call. Even if they know it was a bad call. In the NBA they do now, I guess. But at our level, they don’t and they’re not going to.

    It’s a tough job. It’s a lot like being a restaurant server, I’m sure, except you don’t get tipped, but you do get yelled at.

  • Legend boys basketball alum Derrick White taken in first round of NBA draft

    Derrick White
    (Photo courtesy of CU Athletics)

    Former Legend basketball standout Derrick White is headed to the NBA.

    White was selected by the San Antonio Spurs with the 29th pick in the first round of Thursday’s NBA Draft, completing one of the more interesting basketball journeys in Colorado history.

    He is the first former Colorado high school basketball player drafted since Palmer alum Reggie Jackson was taken in the 2011 draft, and 14th ever drafted in the first round.

    His first-round selection means that a Colorado high school product was taken in the first round of the NBA, MLB (Regis Jesuit’s David Peterson) and NFL (Valor Christian’s Christian McCaffrey) drafts in 2017. That is the first time that has ever happened.

    White ended his collegiate basketball career with the University of Colorado, playing just one season for the Buffs. His first three seasons came at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs where he helped the Mountain Lions to Division II NCAA Tournament appearances in 2014 and 2015.

    He put up staggering numbers in his three years in Colorado Springs. He averaged over 22 points per game while shooting better than 48 percent from the field.

    After the 2014-15 season, White decided to transfer to the CU’s Boulder campus where basketball coach Tad Boyle welcomed him with open arms.

    He was forced to sit out the 2015-16 season because of NCAA transfer rules, but once he took the court in the fall of 2016, he gave CU fans plenty to cheer for.

    White ended his one season with the Buffs averaging 18.1 one points per game. He also led the team in 3-point shots made (57), 3-point shooting percentage (39.6), assists (148), blocks (49) and steals (42).

    Derrick White
    (Photo courtesy of CU Athletics)

    He had quite the senior season at CU considering he didn’t get a single Division I scholarship offer out of high school. Throughout his time at UCCS, he was always told that he was nothing more than a D-II player. And not even one good enough to get a full scholarship offer.

    He took a partial to play at UCCS and let his play on the court do his talking for him. He began his post-high school basketball career playing in front of hundreds on the campus at UCCS.

    He was able to close it out playing in front of more than 8,000 at the Coors Events Center.

    At Legend, he averaged 17.1 points, 3.8 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game as a 6-foot, 150-pound senior in 2012.

    Five years made a big difference: White measured out at 6-foot-4 and 190 pounds at the NBA combine

    After Thursday’s selection, he’ll now have the chance to play in front of tens of thousands of basketball fans.

    He didn’t there by coming out of high school with a ton of hype and bolting for the NBA after his freshman year of college.

    He worked for it. And he earned it.

  • List of Colorado products selected in 2017 MLB Draft

    (Arturo Pardavila III/Flickr)

    The 2017 MLB Draft was June 12-14. Below is a list of Colorado products selected.

    Last season, 22 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:

    [divider]

    Local selections in the 2017 MLB Draft

    Alumni
    RD OVR Team Name POS High School Grad College
    1 20 New York Mets David Peterson LHP Regis Jesuit 2014 Oregon
    7 206 Colorado Rockies Lucas Gilbreath LHP Legacy 2014 Minnesota
    8 238 Pittsburgh Pirates Blake Weiman LHP Columbine 2014 Kansas
    10 308 Baltimore Orioles Josh Keaton RHP Sand Creek 2012 Adams State
    17 525 Chicago Cubs Peyton Remy RHP Legend 2015 Central Arizona College
    18 535 Los Angeles Angels Tyler Stevens RHP Rocky Mountain 2014 New Mexico
    18 547 New York Mets Carl Stajduhar 3B Rocky Mountain 2014 New Mexico
    31 926 Colorado Rockies Reagan Biechler LHP Pine Creek 2013 Wichita State
    2017 graduates
    RD OVR Team Name POS High School Commit
    20 599 Miami Marlins Matt Givin RHP Rock Canyon Xavier
    22 675 Chicago Cubs Skyler Messinger SS Niwot Kansas
    27 823 Cleveland Indians Casey Opitz C Heritage Arkansas
    28 854 Texas Rangers Jacob Hilton RHP Heritage New Mexico
    35 1046 Colorado Rockies James Notary RHP Broomfield TCU
    38 1136 Colorado Rockies Drake Davis RHP Ralston Valley Arizona State
  • Regis Jesuit alum David Peterson selected in first round of the MLB Draft

    (Courtesy GoDucks.com/Eric Evans)

    David Peterson, a 2014 graduate of Regis Jesuit, was selected in the first round of the 2017 MLB Draft on Monday night.

    Now the ace at Oregon, Peterson went with the No. 20 overall pick to the New York Mets.

    “It’s been a dream of mine since I was 3 years old,” Peterson told GoDucks.com. “To have this come true, it’s an honor and a pleasure, and I’m very excited.”

    Peterson recently finished his junior season at Oregon, where he went 11-4 with a 2.51 ERA and 140 strikeouts against just 15 walks. On May 1, he tied the school record with 20 strikeouts in a game against Arizona State.

    Last week, he was named a third-team All-American by Baseball America, becoming the first Oregon Duck to do so since the school restarted its baseball program nine years ago. He was also named a first-team All-American by Collegiate Baseball, is a semifinalist for the Golden Spikes Award, and was first-team All-Pac-12.

    Peterson becomes the 24th first-round pick in Colorado history, and the first since Thomas Jefferson alum Kyle Freeland went No. 8 overall in 2014.

    This is the highest a Regis Jesuit alum has ever been drafted, topping the selection by Peterson’s former classmate Max George, who went No. 173 overall in 2014.

    The Raiders have a long draft history, and now have had 26 former players drafted — second only to Cherry Creek in state history. In fact, they’ve had multiple alums selected every year since 2012, and have had at least one player drafted every year since 2009.

    Regis Jesuit Mountain Vista baseball
    David Peterson at Regis Jesuit. (Dennis Pleuss)

    At Regis Jesuit, Peterson finished his career 13-5 with a 2.23 ERA as a three-year varsity player.

    He fractured his fibula just before his senior season, but returned a month-and-a-half later to help his team reach the Final 8. Peterson was a second-team all-state selection that season even though he appeared in just seven games.

    Coming out of high school, Peterson was drafted in the 28th round by the Boston Red Sox. He opted not to sign, and instead enrolled at Oregon.

    That decision has paid off with a first-round selection.

  • MLB Draft: Regis Jesuit’s Caleb Sloan, Peak to Peak’s Brayden Weyer among local prospects

    Caleb Sloan. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    Regis Jesuit’s Caleb Sloan finds himself facing a great predicament next week.

    “It’s kind of a no-lose situation,” said Sloan, a standout right-handed pitcher who committed to TCU in last summer. “Either way, I’m going to be perfectly happy because both roads are great opportunities. It’s a fun predicament to be put in.”

    That predicament: Whether he’ll attend TCU, or sign with whichever MLB team drafts him next week. The 2017 MLB Draft begins on Monday, and Sloan is the consensus top high school draft prospect from Colorado this season.

    “It’s been a dream of mine to play professional baseball for a long time and that goal is attainable thanks to all the help I’ve had,” he said. “I’m excited for the process and I’m excited for what lies ahead.”

    Sloan saw his innings double from junior to senior year — and for good reason. A 2.4 strikeout-to-walk ratio and an 8-2 record this past spring speaks for itself.

    “I think we haven’t even reached the ceiling on him yet,” Regis Jesuit coach Matt Darr said. “Here’s a kid from a physical statement where he may project and may end up throwing high 90s or maybe even touching 100. I don’t think he’s done from a velocity standpoint, and continuing to learn how to really pitch is going to help him as well.”

    And now, a potential pick in the top five rounds of next week’s MLB Draft could be the result.

    “You hear all kinds of different stuff on these kids from a draft perspective when you talk to scouts,” Darr said. “I’ve heard on him — and again, this is just hearsay going around — he could land anywhere from the third to the fifth round.”

    Four Colorado high school athletes cracked into Baseball America’s top 500: Sloan (172), Heritage’s Casey Opitz (306), Rock Canyon’s Matt Givin (401) and Peak to Peak’s Brayden Weyer (494).

    Lutheran Peak to Peak baseball
    Brayden Weyer. (Jeff Tucker/jefferywtucker.zenfolio.com)

    Weyer is the only athlete from a team that doesn’t play in Class 5A. If he’s picked, Weyer would become the first player ever drafted from Peak to Peak, according to CHSAANow.com’s historical MLB Draft database. (The school opened in 1999.)

    “I think it’s crazy to come from a small 3A school. We’re not known for athletics, so to be able to do that for my school, it’s something I’ve always dreamed about,” Weyer said. “Getting drafted, that’s a crazy idea and it’s crazy that it might just happen.

    “There’s millions of players that play baseball and to be one of those who gets selected out of all of those players would be a real honor.”

    Both Sloan and Weyer are extremely humble for the amount of talent that they possess.

    “The thing that was most impressive to me was the way that (Sloan) led with humility,” Darr said. “He treats everybody the same, he doesn’t big-time anybody. He’s always the guy that’s encouraging other guys, and that’s going to serve him well especially as he moves to the next levels. He’s not going to be the guy right away whether it’s in the (minor) leagues or at TCU.

    Weyer echoed Darr’s comment: “I don’t like to put out there what I’ve accomplished or what’s happening to me, so I like to stay humble to who I am. I know a lot of guys would try and play it up, but I don’t like to do that at all.”

    What Sloan has struggled with, as most young pitchers with exceptional velocity do, is working in offspeed pitches.

    “You can tell a kid or coach a kid on the importance of the offspeed or the importance of pitching,” Darr said. “But, until they experience for themselves some failure because they only have velocity, they need to feel that and experience it themselves. And when they do, then they realize they’ve got to learn how to pitch, too. I think it’s still somewhat of a work in progress for Caleb.”

    But, Sloan possesses the raw talent — a 6-foot-3, 205-pound frame that creates a wicked downward angle towards the plate.

    “He’s a kid that regularly sits at 94-95 and has touched 97. That’s just rare for a high school kid,” Darr said. “He’s also got the frame and the makeup from a size standpoint to land there. The arm talent makes him special if you just look at sheer tools. His work ethic makes him special from a makeup standpoint.

    “He doesn’t take his talent for granted. Some kids that are exceptionally talented don’t necessarily work hard.”

    Weyer is pitted between academics and athletics.

    Weyer went to Peak to Peak because of its high academic ranking, choosing the academic path versus the athletic path. The 6-foot-11, 200-pound right-hander is committed to Seattle University.

    Now, he must make a choice between the two again.

    “We’re going to look at every offer with full intent to take it and see what we get,” Weyer said. “School is a big thing for us, but we won’t turn down any offer.”

    David Peterson. (Courtesy GoDucks.com/Sam Marshall)

    David Peterson, a Regis Jesuit alum who is now the ace at the University of Oregon, is 19th on MLB.com’s Prospect Watch and 17th in Baseball America’s top 500. Peterson was previously drafted by the Red Sox in Round 28 of the 2014 draft.

    This season, he is 11-4 with a 2.51 ERA, and 140 strikeouts against just 15 walks. He struck out 20 batters against Arizona State on May 1, tying a program record.

    If he’s drafted in the first round, Peterson would become the 24th Colorado product selected that high. The most recent first-round pick was former Thomas Jefferson pitcher Kyle Freeland in 2014. He is now in the Rockies’ starting rotation.

    So Regis Jesuit could potentially have two top picks in this year’s draft in Peterson and Sloan.

    “The thing that’s most impressive about Caleb is his development the last few years,” Darr said. “He’s got all the intangibles that I would hope would make him super appealing to the Major League clubs, but you just never know in the draft what’s going to happen and what’s out there.”

    “He’s got two great options ahead of him, whether he signs professionally and starts his career or goes to TCU. I don’t think he’s going to go wrong either way.”

    Lucas Gilbreath. (Photo: University of Minnesota Athletics)

    Legacy alum Lucas Gilbreath, now at Minnesota, is listed at 219 on Baseball America’s list, while former Rocky Mountain standout Carl Stajduhar (New Mexico) is listed at 357.

    Both were previously drafted as high school seniors in 2014.

    Others who were previously drafted and are now eligible again include Grand Junction’s Owen Taylor (Kansas), Pueblo South’s Cory Voss (Arizona), Fairview’s Ryan Kokora (Friends University in Kansas), and Chaparral’s Keenan Eaton (Colorado Mesa).