Category: Ice Hockey

  • Regis Jesuit now No. 1 in hockey poll

    Regis Jesuit Heritage hockey
    Regis Jesuit is now No. 1 in the hockey rankings. (Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)

    Regis Jesuit has taken over atop CHSAANow.com’s hockey poll, three days after former No. 1 Ralston Valley saw its long winning streak come to an end.

    The Raiders received six of the 10 first-place votes, and totalled 94 points. Cherry Creek is now up to No. 2, and had 85 total points.

    Also moving up was No. 3 Monarch and No. 4 Mountain Vista, which ended Ralston’s streak at 38 games on Friday with a 4-3 win.

    Ralston Valley dropped to No. 5 this week.

    Dakota Ridge stayed at No. 6, Resurrection Christian dropped to No. 7 after a loss Saturday to Cherry Creek, and Air Academy held at No. 8.

    Doherty is the lone newcomer to this week’s poll. The Spartans, last ranked on Dec. 8, are No. 9.

    Columbine rounds out the ranking at No. 10.

    The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. Polls are released each Monday.

    Complete rankings are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Hockey Poll

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.

    First-place votes are in parentheses.

    Coaches and media members looking to vote should email rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Hockey
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW
    1 Regis Jesuit (6) 12-0-0 94 2 2-0-0
    2 Cherry Creek (1) 10-0-0 85 3 2-0-0
    3 Monarch (1) 8-0-1 70 4 2-0-0
    4 Mountain Vista 9-1-1 69 7 2-0-0
    5 Ralston Valley (2) 8-1-0 68 1 0-1-0
    6 Dakota Ridge 9-1-0 48 6 2-0-0
    7 Resurrection Christian 9-2-0 41 5 1-1-0
    8 Air Academy 10-1-0 37 8 2-0-0
    9 Doherty 9-3-0 12 2-0-0
    10 Columbine 7-7-0 10 9 0-3-0
    Others receiving votes:
    Lewis-Palmer 7, Aspen 4, Battle Mountain 3, Pine Creek 2, Denver East 1, Palmer 1.
    Dropped out
    Lewis-Palmer (10).
  • Photos: Woodley leads Regis Jesuit hockey over Denver East

    CENTENNIAL — Cale Woodley had two goals and two assists to lead No. 2 Regis Jesuit hockey past Denver East on Saturday, 8-1.

  • Photos: Cheyenne Mountain hockey beats Valor Christian

    LITTLETON — Ryan Case had a hat trick, Doug Klopenstine added four assists, and Cheyenne Mountain hockey topped Valor Christian 8-6 on Saturday.

    Caleb Vigil led Valor Christian with three goals and two assists in the loss.

  • Photos: No. 3 Cherry Creek hockey holds off No. 5 Resurrection Christian

    CENTENNIAL — Tim Keohane had two goals and two assists, Brady Mielnicki made 33 saves, and No. 3 Cherry Creek hockey held off No. 5 Resurrection Christian 5-3 on Saturday.

    Cherry Creek had leads of 3-0 and 4-2, but Resurrection Christian did its best to rally. The Cougars cut it to 3-2 and later to 4-3 but were unable to mount the comeback.

  • Mountain Vista hockey ends Ralston Valley’s 38-game winning streak

    Ralston Valley-Mountain Vista hockey
    Mountain Vista players celebrate their win over Ralston Valley on Friday. More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    LITTLETON — They couldn’t get enough of the ice. So after taking down the two-time defending champions, after ending perhaps the most impressive winning streak in recent high school hockey history in this state, they returned to it with their fans.

    And they celebrated.

    Mountain Vista hockey beat Ralston Valley 4-3 on Friday night. The win ended Ralston Valley’s 38-game winning streak, as well as the Mustangs’ 42-game unbeaten streak.

    The Golden Eagles, ranked No. 7 in this week’s CHSAANow.com poll, did it after being down 2-0 in the second period, and 3-2 in the third. They did it after weathering a two-minute 5-on-3 opportunity.

    Top-ranked Ralston’s streak “didn’t really pop up until today,” said Mountain Vista goalie Tanner Munn, who made 33 saves. “We come to play hockey, and it doesn’t matter who we play. We’re going to show up and play our game.”

    Ralston Valley-Mountain Vista hockey
    More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    “I didn’t really bring it up,” said Mountain Vista co-coach Joel Weeks. “I actually told the boys, ‘It’s just another game, another chance to play hockey with your buddies.’”

    But — “They all knew it, for sure. With social media, they all knew it,” Weeks added. “We definitely tried to downplay it as coaches. It’s not a state championship game. It’s a game to send a message that we’re here to compete.”

    Mountain Vista’s program started in 2011-12. Its been to the quarterfinals each season of play, but no further. Not to overstate the importance of one win, but finally knocking off Ralston Valley — the program in the sport over the past two-plus seasons — could signal the Golden Eagles are ready to take the next step.

    Friday, Ralston Valley seized a 1-0 lead on Stefan Fruhwirth’s tip on the power-play early in a first period. It was a period in which Mountain Vista looked unorganized, and almost disinterested.

    “The first period, the message inbetween was, ‘They haven’t seen us yet. We haven’t played hockey,’” Weeks said.

    When RV made it 2-0 just over two minutes into the second period, you could almost write the script. The Mustangs had done this to so many teams over the past few seasons — grab an early lead, then squeeze.

    But Nicholas Vitale answered 1:10 later on a wrist shot from the point that found its way past Ralston Valley goalie Scott Albertoni, who was screened.

    Three minutes after that, Aiden Kirby knocked home a rebound after a scramble in front of the net. 2-2.

    As the frame ticked on, Ralston Valley found itself going on a 5-on-3 power play. Just under four minutes remained in the period. Here was a chance to not only take the lead, but to potentially bury Mountain Vista.

    Instead, Munn and the Mountain Vista penalty kill turned the Mustangs away. In fact, Ralston Valley managed just one shot during the entire two-minute, two-man advantage.

    “And all of a sudden,” Weeks said, “you can feel that ice tilt, and you get hungrier.”

    “It definitely game us some energy,” Munn said, “some positive energy.”

    Mountain Vista had seized the momentum going into the second intermission. And yet, it was Ralston Valley — Cody Noel, shorthanded — which took a 3-2 lead 3:38 into the third.

    “We told ourselves we were going to face adversity in the third period,” said Bryan Hancock, Mountain Vista’s captain. “We turned to our team and we were like, ‘Alright boys, we knew we were going to face this.’ And everybody just went stone-faced, got focused, we got ready to go back on the ice, and we turned it around just like that.”

    Ralston Valley-Mountain Vista hockey
    More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    Hancock himself provided the answer a minute-and-a-half after Noel’s tally, his snap-shot off the faceoff beating a screened Albertoni on the far side, just above his blocker. Jake Dosen won the faceoff cleanly to set Hancock up.

    “He told me exactly where to be. I was there,” Hancock said. “I knew the goalie was going to go down fast, so I just put it in the far side.”

    As with Mountain Vista’s other goals, the winner came with a lot of traffic in front.

    A group of Ralston Valley players in front of the net tried to clear the puck with Mountain Vista players bearing down. It bounced just outside the crease, and appeared as though a RV player inadvertently knocked it into his own net. Dosen was credited with the goal.

    “Our whole mentality is dirty goals,” Hancock said. “We don’t want the fancy, dipsy-doodle goals. We want the dirty goals. So we have guys going to the net all the time.”

    The win moves Mountain Vista to 9-1-1 this season, and rights a ship that temporarily went off-course with a 7-4 loss to Doherty last week.

    “We lost earlier in the week, and we had to make a statement that we’re legit, we’re here, we’re ready to play,” Hancock said.

    “Our team really is bonding this last half of the season,” he added. “We’ve started to turn it around and become a team, and it’s really, really fun. It’s fun to be a part of.”

    Ralston Valley-Mountain Vista hockey
    More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)
  • Photos: Pine Creek hockey knocks off No. 10 Lewis-Palmer

    MONUMENT — Pine Creek hockey jumped out to a 5-2 lead after two periods then held on to upset No. 10 Lewis-Palmer 5-4 on Friday night.

    Zach Zimmerman had a hat trick and also an assist for Pine Creek, while Dawson Wright added a goal and two assists. Conor Chmelka made 40 saves for the Eagles.

    Christian Perry had a goal and an assist to lead Lewis-Palmer.

  • Ralston Valley’s sustained success is unique in hockey’s history

    Ralston Valley Steamboat Springs hockey
    Ralston Valley has won 38-straight games, and is unbeaten in 42 (41-0-1). (Dennis Pleuss)

    [dropcap]T[/dropcap]his Ralston Valley program is in the midst of one of the greatest runs in Colorado high school hockey history. But you wouldn’t know it at a glance.

    Wednesday, as snow fell sideways outside, the Mustangs filed into Apex Ice Arena for practice. Snow clung to the bags, their clothes, and piled on top of their hair. It was a half-hour to practice, two days before a big showdown with No. 7 Mountain Vista, but they sat near the rink on benches and quietly chatted.

    This is a team that’s won 38 consecutive games, including two-straight state championships?

    There’s no hubris here. Shoot, they don’t even know how long their winning streak is.

    “It’s 38 now?” senior Joe Millar said on Wednesday afternoon.

    It’s a low-key group, which draws its demeanor from a low-key coach, Matt Schoepflin. Last season, minutes before faceoff at the state championship game with Monarch, Schoepflin was informed his starting goalie had broken a skate blade and would be unavailable to start the game. He shrugged.

    “He’s always like that,” said Ian Snedden, another senior. “He keeps us calm with that kind of stuff.”

    On top of the 38-game winning streak, the Mustangs are riding a 42-game unbeaten streak, having gone 41-0-1. Their last loss came Jan. 30, 2013 to Chatfield. It was a Wednesday, and they lost at Apex, their home rink.

    “That’s what made it so much worse,” Millar said. “Losing at home in front of a big crowd and your friends is not something you want to do.”

    Ralston Valley Chatfield hockey
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    The Mustangs went wire-to-wire as the No. 1 team in CHSAANow.com’s hockey poll last season, and — surprise — have been No. 1 since the preseason this season with an 8-0-0 start.

    Schoepflin, who played at Ralston Valley before it became a CHSAA-sanctioned program, took over prior to the 2011-12 season. His teams are 72-4-2.

    Now, hockey programs have won back-to-back championship in hockey before. In fact, since the start of the 2008 season, Regis Jesuit and Lewis-Palmer have both done so. But neither of those programs had such a sustained winning streak during that time.

    So, we drift back, to the king of high school hockey: Cheyenne Mountain. That program has won 14 championships. (No other school has won more than three.) Cheyenne has back-to-back titles in 1996-97, won four-straight from 1988-91, and five-straight from 1982-86. They dominated early high school hockey in this state.

    Here’s the but, and it’s a big one: By and large, over that time, high school hockey in Colorado consisted of eight-to-ten teams, and the overwhelming majority of them were based in Colorado Springs. Many referred to the sport’s championship as a “city” title.

    It wasn’t until the early 2000s that hockey started to expand. Now, the league has 29 teams, and they’re all over the state.

    This is all to say that what Ralston Valley is currently doing is largely unprecedented.

    “It is, obviously, something that’s cool,” Schoepflin said. “It definitely is getting a lot more attention from outside sources than maybe we’re focusing on it.

    “It’s one of those things that I look at, if you can kind of take a step back, you’re like, ‘Man, this is really cool,’” he added later. “It’s just like the undefeated season (last year): To me, that’s a potentially once-in-a-lifetime type of thing. Because it’s so hard, at any level, regardless of sport, to do that.

    “So I think the big thing now, obviously we want to keep winning, but it’s really not a focus for us.”

    • • •

    Ralston Valley Lewis-Palmer hockey
    The Mustangs are a two-time defending champion, and are ranked No. 1 by CHSAANow.com. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    [dropcap]W[/dropcap]hen a new season begins, coaches often harp on the fact that it’s a new team. This is especially common of teams coming off of state titles.

    Well, that may be more true than not with this season’s bunch of Mustangs.

    Ralston Valley lost its entire top line of Greg Dyba, Victor Lombardi and Austin Resseguie from last season’s team. Together, that trio accounted for 120 points, or 37 percent of the team’s production, in 2013-14. And Dyba was the state’s player of the year.

    It also graduated goalies Zack LaRocque and James Madok, who combined to start 22 of Ralston’s 23 games. The defense went through major turnover, as well.

    “I think a lot of people forget the fact that’s it’s pretty much a brand new team,” Schoepflin said. “I mean, we’ve got a small core group that has kind of been there the last couple of years, but for the most part, we’ve got a lot of new guys.”

    Guys like Jeff Moffat, this team’s leading scorer who has eight goals and 15 points. He attends Pomona, so played his freshman season at Standley Lake, but didn’t play last season. This year, he decided to play again, and made Ralston’s team.

    Or Tony Salazar (13 points), who was among the last cuts during last season’s tryouts. Or goalie Scott Albertoni, who played at Ralston as a freshman but then moved around the country playing AAA and junior hockey. He’s now a senior and has a 0.93 GAA to go along with a 5-0-0 record.

    Ralston Valley Chatfield hockey
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    They’ve blended with returners like Millar, Snedden, Kyle Valdez (11 points), Cody Noel (8 points), and Dom Gomez (3-0-0, 0.89 GAA).

    The team has come together nicely, helped in large part that all but one or two play together with the Arvada Hockey Association’s Tier II AA team during the offseason.

    “Every year, when the kids come in, they know we’re a real good team,” Snedden said. “They just know that when they come to play for Ralston Valley, winning is something we do.”

    Another driving force for success: 22 of the 28 players on the roster attend Ralston Valley, which is a rarity in today’s league of district teams made primarily of kids from multiple high schools.

    “That helps, not only because the kids are together all the time, but because they do make it into a cool atmosphere up at the school,” Schoepflin said.

    Added Millar: “After the game, the next day, (everyone at school is) congratulating you, saying, ‘Hey nice goal, nice win.’”

    Schoepflin said last season’s team was the closest he’s ever been around.

    “I’m a huge believer that talent will win you games, but it won’t win you championships,” Schoepflin said. “Obviously, you have to have a lot of talent to win championships, but to me, good team chemistry, working together, getting along with one another, I think that is way more important than necessarily having the most talent. That has been kind of our success.”

    • • •

    Ralston Valley Columbine hockey generic
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    [dropcap]T[/dropcap]he streak won’t last forever. They know that. The question, at least as far as history is concerned, is when will it end?

    If — if — Ralston were to reel off another unbeaten season, including a third-straight title, that’d put the streak at 53 games. At that point, you have to start comparing across sports.

    Realistically, it’s not likely that RV even gets through the regular season unscathed. Still to come are Friday’s matchup with Mountain Vista (“We’re excited about that game,” Snedden said), as well as a game against No. 3 Cherry Creek next Tuesday, and dates with No. 2 Regis Jesuit and No. 4 Monarch. Creek, Regis and Monarch were in the semfinals last year.

    “A lot of those big-name teams we have kind of all bunched up at the end of the season,” Schoepflin said. “But I actually like that, because I think obviously, it’s easy to get up for those games. I also think the big thing is you want to be peaking and playing your best hockey at the best time, so I think you’ve got to be playing the best teams if you want to do that.”

    Conversely, nearly every team looks at Ralston Valley as the best team on its schedule. That means every opponent has a little extra motivation each night.

    “We’re going to be pushed every game,” Schoepflin said. “For the most part — you can see the scores — we have been pushed.”

    Pushed, but not toppled. Thirty-eight straight.

    Enjoy it. Because this has never been done before.

  • Regis Jesuit closing in, but Ralston Valley remains No. 1 in hockey poll

    Ralston Valley Lewis-Palmer hockey
    Ralston Valley is still No. 1 in this week’s hockey ranking. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    Ralston Valley remains atop this week’s CHSAANow.com hockey poll, though the Mustangs’ grip is tenuous.

    Ralston got four of the nine first-place votes and totalled 79 points — one ahead of No. 2 Regis Jesuit, which also got three first-place votes. Last week, the two teams were separated by two total points.

    Elsewhere, No. 3 Cherry Creek and No. 4 Monarch stayed put. Both teams received one first-place vote.

    Resurrection Christian moved into the top five for the first time this season, while Dakota Ridge (No. 6) also moved up one spot. Mountain Vista fell to No. 7 following its loss to Doherty.

    Air Academy, Columbine and Lewis-Palmer round out the top ten. There are no new teams this week.

    The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. Polls are released each Monday.

    Complete rankings are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Hockey Poll

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.

    First-place votes are in parentheses.

    Coaches and media members looking to vote should email rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Hockey
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW
    1 Ralston Valley (5) 8-0-0 79 1 1-0-0
    2 Regis Jesuit (2) 10-0-0 78 2 3-0-0
    3 Cherry Creek (1) 8-0-0 73 3 1-0-0
    4 Monarch (1) 6-0-1 65 4 2-0-0
    5 Resurrection Christian 8-1-0 46 6 1-0-0
    6 Dakota Ridge 7-1-0 40 7 1-0-0
    7 Mountain Vista 7-1-1 39 5 2-1-0
    8 Air Academy 8-1-0 33 8 1-0-0
    9 Columbine 7-4-0 17 10 2-0-0
    10 Lewis-Palmer 6-5-0 7 9 0-1-0
    Others receiving votes:
    Denver East 6, Doherty 5, Battle Mountain 3, Cheyenne Mountain 3, Pine Creek 1.
    Dropped out
    None.
  • Photos: No. 2 Regis Jesuit hockey beats Mullen

    LITTLETON — No. 2-ranked Regis Jesuit hockey beat rival Mullen 7-1 on Wednesday behind two goals and an assist from Cale Woodley.

    The Raiders also got a three-point night from Connor Brennan (goal, two assists), and two goals from Grant Johnson.