Category: Boys Wrestling

  • Photos: Northglenn wrestling beats Overland in dual meet

    WESTMINSTER — Northglenn wrestling beat Overland in a dual meet, 57-18, at the Standley Lake Wrestling Invitational on Saturday.

  • Regis Jesuit joins this week’s 5A wrestling rankings

    Regis Jesuit joined On The Mat’s wrestling rankings the week. The Raiders are No. 10 in Class 5A.

    Other newcomers include No. 10 Greeley Central in 4A, and No. 9 Fleming/Sedgwick County and No. 10 Baca County in 2A.

    All four No. 1 teams stayed put. Those are Paonia (2A), Brush (3A), Thompson Valley (4A) and Arvada West (5A).

    Complete team rankings for all classes are below.

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    On The Mat Wrestling Rankings

    Tim Yount of On The Mat provides weekly wrestling rankings for teams and individuals in all weight classes. To see individual rankings, you can subscribe to On The Mat’s full rankings.

    To subscribe via PayPal, choose your subscription option on this page click on the corresponding PayPal button. To subscribe by mail or fax and pay by personal check, click here for a printable subscription form. Email Tim Yount at tim@onthematrankings.com with questions.

    To purchase individual weeks of the rankings (as opposed to the entire season), you will need to use the printable subscription form and pay by check. The season ranking subscriptions are offered at a discounted rate.

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    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Paonia 1
    2 Centauri 2
    3 Rocky Ford 3
    4 Meeker 4
    5 Norwood/Nucla 5
    6 Monte Vista 6
    7 Buena Vista 7
    8 Swink 8
    9 Fleming/Sedgwick County
    10 Baca County
    Dropped out
    Wray (9), Cedaredge (10).

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Brush 1
    2 Valley 2
    3 Lamar 3
    4 Dolores Huerta 4
    5 Fort Lupton 5
    6 La Junta 6
    7 Delta 8
    8 Sterling 7
    9 Holy Family 9
    10 Platte Valley 10
    Dropped out
    None.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Thompson Valley 1
    2 Pueblo County 2
    3 Windsor 3
    4 Pueblo East 6
    5 Air Academy 7
    6 Pueblo South 4
    7 Discovery Canyon 8
    8 Pueblo Centennial 9
    9 Mesa Ridge 10
    10 Greeley Central
    Dropped out
    Mountain View (5).

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Arvada West 1
    2 Pine Creek 3
    3 Pomona 2
    4 Grand Junction 4
    5 Rocky Mountain 5
    6 Coronado 7
    7 Ponderosa 6
    8 Mountain Range 8
    9 Adams City 9
    10 Regis Jesuit
    Dropped out
    Cherry Creek (10).
  • Photos: Legacy wrestling beats Broomfield in rivalry dual

    BROOMFIELD — Legacy wrestling beat cross-town rival Broomfield 42-27 in a dual meet on Thursday.

  • Photos: Adams City wrestling wins dual with Westminster

    WESTMINSTER — Adams City, ranked No. 9 in Class 5A, wrestling won a dual meet with Westminster on Thursday, 70-3.

  • Arvada West, Paonia among preseason No. 1 in wrestling rankings

    Lakewood Arvada West wrestling
    Arvada West is the preseason No. 1 in Class 5A. (Mark Adams)

    Defending champions Arvada West and Paonia are preseason No. 1 teams in On The Mat’s wrestling rankings.

    A-West won Class 5A last season, while Paonia captured 2A. 4A’s defending champion Broomfield moved up to 5A — it’s not ranked — and Thompson Valley is the preseason No. 1 in that classification.

    In 3A, Brush is the preseason No. 1. Valley, the defending champion, opens at No. 2.

    Complete team rankings for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    On The Mat Wrestling Rankings

    Tim Yount of On The Mat provides weekly wrestling rankings for teams and individuals in all weight classes. To see individual rankings, you can subscribe to On The Mat’s full rankings.

    To subscribe via PayPal, choose your subscription option on this page click on the corresponding PayPal button. To subscribe by mail or fax and pay by personal check, click here for a printable subscription form. Email Tim Yount at tim@onthematrankings.com with questions.

    To purchase individual weeks of the rankings (as opposed to the entire season), you will need to use the printable subscription form and pay by check. The season ranking subscriptions are offered at a discounted rate.

    [divider]
    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM
    1 Arvada West
    2 Pomona
    3 Pine Creek
    4 Grand Junction
    5 Rocky Mountain
    6 Ponderosa
    7 Coronado
    8 Mountain Range
    9 Adams City
    10 Cherry Creek

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM
    1 Thompson Valley
    2 Pueblo County
    3 Windsor
    4 Pueblo Soiuth
    5 Mountain View
    6 Pueblo East
    7 Air Academy
    8 Discovery Canyon
    9 Pueblo Centennial
    10 Mesa Ridge

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM
    1 Brush
    2 Valley
    3 Lamar
    4 Dolores Huerta
    5 Fort Lupton
    6 La Junta
    7 Sterling
    8 Delta
    9 Holy Family
    10 Platte Valley

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM
    1 Paonia
    2 Centauri
    3 Rocky Ford
    4 Meeker
    5 Norwood/Nucla
    6 Monte Vista
    7 Buena Vista
    8 Swink
    9 Wray
    10 Cedaredge
  • After move to 5A, Broomfield wrestling works to rebuild foundation

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    [dropcap]W[/dropcap]hen Pat DeCamillis took over the powerhouse Broomfield High School wrestling program it didn’t take him long to find success.

    In year one with DeCamillis, the Eagles won the Class 4A state championship last February at the Pepsi Center in Denver.

    Broomfield defeated Thompson Valley 127.50 points to 120 points, thanks to senior state champions Phil Downing (160 pounds) and Zach Stodden (182). Fellow Eagle seniors Jarod Albo (152) and heavyweight Austyn Harris also took second for the Eagles.

    Downing actually became only the 17th wrestler in Colorado prep history to capture four state wrestling titles.

    This season, everything has changed for the Eagles. Not only did they move up to the Class 5A ranks, but they did so after losing six total wrestlers to graduation.

    “With the number of kids we lost to graduation it wouldn’t matter if we were 4A or 5A this year as far as working toward a championship,” DeCamillis said. “We are just trying to rebuild the foundation we have.”

    DeCamillis was a three-time state champ at Arvada from 1988-90. And he is no stranger to 5A. Prior to taking over Broomfield, he spent eight seasons as the head coach at 5A Pomona.

    Fueling the Broomfield charge this season will be senior Darek Huff.

    Huff was a state-runner at 126 pounds last season and is expected to remain at that weight class this year. Huff will be joined by three state qualifiers Brandon Tyson (113), Randall Baker (145) and Connor Ventura (160).

    “It’s not going to be an overnight fix,” DeCamillis said about getting his program back in contention to compete for a state title. “We have about 50 kids out for the program, so we have a lot of young kids, a lot of first timers. It has been a change of philosophy from teaching the elite to kind of having everybody come out and see what we have.”

    This is unfamiliar territory for Broomfield’s wrestling program. Broomfield has won four state wrestling team crowns in the last six years. The Eagles won state titles in 2009, 2010, 2013 and 2014.

    Since 2005, Broomfield finished no worse than fourth in the Class 4A state team standings.

    “I’m going to build from within, and coach the kids who I have in the room,” DeCamillis said. “I wouldn’t expect us to be battling Arvada West and Pomona this year or even next year, but we will be back battling once we kind of get our foundation. With that said, I don’t expect these kids (this season) to be out of the top 10. If we are not in the top 10, I will not consider it a failure, but certainly that we didn’t do our job as coaches.”

    Arvada West is the preseason choice to win the state 5A team title again. A year ago, Arvada West ran away from the competition with 179 points, followed by Pomona with 92 points.

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    Wrestling preview

    • Regular season begins: Dec. 1, 2014
    • Regular season ends: Feb. 7, 2015
    • Championships: Feb. 19-21, Pepsi Center (Denver)

    [divider]

    Defending champions

    • 5A: Arvada West
    • 4A: Broomfield
    • 3A: Valley
    • 2A: Paonia
  • Wrestling’s enrollment cutoffs changed as proposal passes

    State wrestling
    (Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com)

    AURORA — In an effort to even out the number of teams in each classification, wrestling will use its own enrollment number cutoffs to determine classes.

    The change was made Thursday at CHSAA’s Legislative Council meeting after a proposal suggesting the move passed. It means wrestling joins football as the only sports to have separate enrollment cutoffs. Every other sport uses figures primarily determined by the number of basketball schools in each classification.

    Affected are classes 4A, 3A and 2A. The cutoff was not changed in 5A.

    Had a change not been made, wrestling looking at a glaring disparity of teams in each classification. Specifically, Class 4A was set to have 71 teams while 3A would’ve had 38. With the change, 4A and 3A will each have 53 teams.

    “It really helps 3A and 4A the most, because that’s where the gross inequity is in terms of numbers,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Harry Waterman, who oversees wrestling. “When we follow a model based on basketball numbers, that where that falls, because there are 229 wrestling schools and seemingly everybody has a basketball program.

    “This is really about making an individual sport more balanced. It does go against the philosophy of having every sport (use the same cutoff), but this is going to really help a lot.”

    Wednesday’s proposal was a joint effort of the Intermountain, Northern and Colorado Springs Metro (4A and 5A) leagues, but much of the groundwork was laid by the wrestling committee in its meeting.

    “We had a lot of input from a lot of different coaches, with Harry’s guidance and his recommendations,” said committee chair Ernie Dererra, the athletic director at Thompson Valley. “We thought it was a good idea to move forward with it, because we felt it was what’s best for the sport.

    “Most of the schools in the state have basketball, and that’s where most of our classification numbers come from,” Dererra continued. “Not all of the schools in the state have wrestling, and that’s where that disparity in classification, particularly for 3A and 4A, came from. … It just didn’t seem fair to the 4A kid that they’re facing twice the competition for the same number of opportunities to quality for the state tournament.”

    The change will also help solve issues like one that popped up in 2A this year, where one regional only had two wrestlers show up at a specific weight class. That caused CHSAA to pull fifth-place finishers from other regionals to fill a state bracket.

    The proposal needed two-thirds of the vote to pass. It got 82 percent. So wrestling will now use the following numbers for cutoffs during the 2014-16 cycle:

    Wrestling enrollment numbers
    Class Cutoff Schools
    2A 1-275 61
    3A 276-780 53
    4A 781-1410 53
    5A 1411-up 62
  • All-state wrestling teams for 2013-14 season

    The 2013-14 all-state wrestling teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

    These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

    Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A


    [divider]

    Class 5A

    First Team
    Name School Weight
    Ryan Deakin Legacy 113
    Mitch Finesilver Cherry Creek 126
    Zach Finesilver Cherry Creek 138
    Dylan Gabel Ponderosa 182
    PT Garcia Bear Creek 132
    Tomas Gutierrez Pomona 106
    Grant Neal Regis Jesuit 220
    Jorge Rodriguez Mountain Range 285
    Josh Rosales Pomona 120
    Devin Rothrock Arvada West 195
    Tony Silva-Bussey Arvada West 170
    Payton Tawater Arvada West 145
    Deyaun Trueblood Gateway 152
    Jacob Trujillo Grand Junction 160


    [divider]

    Class 4A

    First Team
    Name School Weight
    Sage Budd Mead 126
    Kyle Couch Mead 195
    Phil Downing Broomfield 160
    Jimmy Fate Berthoud 138
    Kennen Lanteri Windsor 152
    Toby McBride Fort Morgan 220
    Seager Oliver Montezuma Cortez 170
    Justin Petrash Air Academy 285
    Parker Simington Thompson Valley 145
    Zach Stodden Broomfield 182
    Sam Turner Discovery Canyon 120
    Josh Villa Windsor 113
    Grant Willits Pueblo County 106
    Hunter Willits Pueblo County 132


    [divider]

    Class 3A

    First Team
    Name School Weight
    Jareb Aziz Centauri 195
    Jason Buhr Centauri 152
    Joel Contreras Sterling 145
    Jose Duran Monte Vista 113
    Diondre Garcia Monte Vista 106
    Brendan Gonzales Valley 160
    Kory Hudson Bennett 182
    Ruben Lucero Valley 126
    Jared Mestas Dolores Huerta 132
    Jacob Ornelas Fort Lupton 220
    Trenton Piatt Olathe 120
    Joseph Prieto Holy Family 138
    Jackson Wright Valley 170
    Creede Wylie Pagosa Springs 285


    [divider]

    Class 2A

    First Team
    Name School Weight
    Jonathan Andreatta John Mall 106
    Ty Coats Paonia 152
    Tony Darling Paonia 285
    Blake Denton Swink 145
    M.C. Griffin Stratton 182
    Talon Harris Norwood 113
    Stetson Loader Baca County 120
    Johnny Loflin Baca County 195
    Luis Mariscal Center 220
    Zach Milner Paonia 160
    Ryan Nordyke Holly 138
    Bo Pipher Paonia 132
    Jesse Reed Paonia 126
    T.J. Shelton Meeker 170
  • Legislative Council notebook: Breaking down the agenda for April’s meeting

    Examining April’s Legislative Council agenda, including notable proposals. The Legislative Council meets April 17. Find full info here.

    In this notebook:


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    5A football seeding committee proposal

    Legacy Stadium. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Legacy Stadium. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    How will Class 5A football determine its playoff field? That is, well, still to be determined.

    In December, the idea of a seeding committee rapidly swept through the football committee meeting. That idea turned into a portion of the committee report which was to be discussed at January’s Legislative Council meeting — but it was ultimately removed before it went to a vote because it was seen as too complicated.

    Yet the 5A football community is intent on changing the way its postseason is done. So, in the months since that January meeting, they sat down and hammered out a new proposal. This one will be heard at the April 17 Legislative Council meeting.

    And, at its root, it’s not so much of a drastic change. The 32 teams that make up the playoff field will still be determined by CHSAA’s Wild Card points formula, which determines a team’s strength based upon the number of wins their opponents have.

    What that proposal would change, though, is the use of a more in-depth seeding committee to place those 32 teams on the bracket. In recent years, a panel of administrators had moved teams up and down a few seeds from their Wild Card points finish to avoid pairing conference opponents in the first round.

    The proposed committee would “true seed the 32 qualifiers,” according to the language used in the proposal. (They would also seed teams Nos. 33-50 for their non-qualifying Week 10 games.) And here is the criteria they would base their decision on, in no particular order:

    • Wild Card points
    • Head-to-head matchups
    • Common opponents
    • Overall record
    • League standing
    • Strength of schedule
    • RockyPrep.com‘s RPI system (link)

    Another big change would do away with seeding teams Nos. 1-32. Instead, the bracket would be divided into four quadrants, with each having seeds Nos. 1-8. This would allow for greater flexibility in placing teams on the bracket (avoiding league matchups early on), and is similar to what basketball does for its 4A and 5A tournaments.

    Additionally, “The committee will attempt to place the top two seeds from each conference in separate quadrants,” according to the proposal. This means strong teams from the same league would likely not meet until the semifinals, should they both advance.

    The proposal — set forth by the Colorado Springs Metro, Continental and Jeffco leagues — will need approval from a simple majority to pass and become part of the 5A football structure. Should it fail, the classification would use the format it has been using in recent years — namely, Wild Card points are in charge.

    [divider]

    Wrestling seeking change in classification numbers

    State wrestling
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Seeking to spread its teams out more evenly across classifications, wrestling will bring a proposal to the Legislative Council to change the numbers it uses as enrollment cutoffs for 2A, 3A and 4A.

    Currently, wrestling is grouped in with the majority of sports in using enrollment classification cutoffs established by the Classification and League Organizing Committee. For the 2014-16 cycle, those enrollment cutoffs are as follows:

    • 1A: 1-92
    • 2A: 93-240
    • 3A: 214-600
    • 4A: 601-1410
    • 5A: 1411-up

    A total of 229 schools have wrestling programs among the CHSAA membership. Based on the CLOC enrollment cutoffs, that would leave the following number of teams in each classification (Note: wrestling doesn’t have a 1A classification, so 2A includes schools with an enrollment of 1-240):

    • 2A: 58
    • 3A: 38
    • 4A: 71
    • 5A: 62

    Recognizing a “gross inequity” in the number of classifications, notably 4A and 3A, the wrestling community put together a proposal that would change their enrollment cutoffs. It is a joint proposal from the Intermountain, Northern and Colorado Springs Metro 4A and 5A leagues.

    The proposed new enrollment cutoffs, with number of teams in parentheses:

    • 2A: 1-275 (61)
    • 3A: 276-780 (53)
    • 4A: 781-1410 (53)
    • 5A: 1411-up (62)

    Spreading out the number of teams would allow for a more equal qualification opportunity to the regional and state tournaments, the proposal argues.

    As the proposal amends the Classification and League Organizing Committee report, it will require two-thirds of the Legislative Council to approve it in order to pass.

    [divider]

    4A basketball tournaments proposal

    Denver South Cheyenne Mountain boys basketball
    (Ray Chen/arrayphoto.com)

    At its February meeting, the basketball committee recommended shrinking the Class 4A tournament fields from 48 to 32 teams. But a proposal from the Jeffco League seeks to stave off that change.

    Citing the fact that “there are 10 more teams in 4A basketball in the next two-year cycle than the previous cycle,” and thus now has the most schools of any class, the proposal argues that the change to 32 qualifiers “does not follow what has been traditionally done in CHSAA postseason qualifiers.”

    When the basketball committee made the recommendation, they cited “the diversity of 4A, with the travel across the state, and the competition levels of the games” as reasons for the reduction in qualifiers. Additionally, a state-wide survey of administrators showed they thought too many teams made the 4A tournaments.

    This proposal needs a simple majority from the Legislative Council to pass.

    [divider]

    Transfer rule proposals

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    There is an administrative proposal from CHSAA’s Board of Directors that seeks to clarify language in the transfer rule, specifically as it relates to a hardship.

    Currently 1800.4 reads:

    The Commissioner may grant varsity eligibility in the case of transfers after the beginning of the school year caused by “hardship”, pursuant to the provisions of Article 25 of these bylaws.

    The change would have 1800.4 read:

    When the definition of a hardship has been met, the Commissioner may grant varsity eligibility pursuant to the provisions of Article 25 of these bylaws.

    This change would make it so a waiver can be granted only if the definition of a hardship is met. That definition is laid out in rule 1800.44:

    “Hardship means an unforeseen, unavoidable and uncorrectable act, condition or event that imposes a severe, non-athletic burden upon the student or his/her family. The Commissioner shall have broad discretion in applying this standard to specific cases. He/She may take into consideration not only the needs of the student and family directly involved, but also the best interest of member schools and interscholastic athletics/activities generally as he/she understands those interests.

    Another administrative proposal from the Board seeks to strengthen the appeals process. It would amend bylaw 2500.23. Currently that rule reads:

    STANDARD OF REVIEW — If judicial review is sought of a decision by the Commissioner, Appeals Committee or Board of Directors, the court shall affirm such decision unless it finds upon clear and convincing evidence that the decision was arbitrary, capricious, or contrary to law.

    The amendment would add this sentence to the end of the rule:

    Note, per state law, arbitration can only take place after all steps in the CHSAA Appeals process have been exhausted.

    Both proposals will require a simply majority to pass.

    [divider]

    Short stuff

    • Hockey’s two-classification proposal will be put to a vote in April. The sport’s committee recommended the split to 5A and 4A in February, basing it upon competitive balance. It needs 60 percent of the vote to pass.
    • Among schools requesting playdowns: Montezuma-Cortez girls basketball (4A to 3A), Pueblo Centennial girls basketball (4A to 3A), Coronado hockey (5A to 4A) and Rampart hockey (5A to 4A). The hockey playdowns would only be voted upon if the hockey classification split is approved.
    • Field hockey, lacrosse and soccer each have separate sport proposals seeking a small increase to the number of halves/quarters a student can play in during the regular season. This change would primarily affect junior varsity players.
    • New Board of Directors members will be voted on. Included: Grand Junction Schools’ district athletic director Paul Cain replacing Dennis Fraser in District 1; Antonito’s Joe Garcia to replace Curt Wilson, who is now board president, in District 8. A rep for District 5, replacing Karen Higel, is still to be determined; as is a rep from the Colorado State Legislature..
  • Broomfield’s Downing captures fourth wrestling championship

    Phil Downing Broomfield wrestling
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    DENVER — With an 11-2 major decision victory in the 160-pound state finals bracket, Broomfield’s Phil Downing gave his opponent one more loss than Dawson ever experienced on the floor at Pepsi Center.

    Dating back to 1956, there had been 16 four-time state champions in the history of Colorado wrestling. Downing was the only competitor in Saturday’s finals that had a chance to add to that list, and in doing so, he derailed history at the same time.

    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Keenean Willits had seen his two younger brothers win state championships earlier in the night and was hoping to join them to become the first trio of siblings in Colorado history to all win state titles. But he ran into arguably one of the best grapplers in Colorado wrestling history and couldn’t overcome the early deficit.

    “I knew once I got the first takedown that I was going to have it,” Downing after his match. “Once I turned him on his back, I knew it was over from there and I just kept pushing the pace.”

    That pace paid dividends for not only Downing, but his teammates as well. His victory gave Broomfield the 2013-14 team state championship on top of the fourth title of his career.

    Going into his match, Downing knew that a single victory would clinch the team title. His goal was to the end the match as fast as possible, but Willits proved too difficult to put away early.

    “I knew we had to get one win to get the state title and I wanted to get the pin,” Downing said. “I could only get the major decision on him, but that was good enough.”

    The match itself is ultimately what makes his fourth title stand out above the rest. On top of facing a tremendous competitor in Willits, Downing also had to fight off illness in order to get to the top of the podium for the fourth time.

    “It was one of my tougher matches,” he said. “It went all three periods and the kid kept coming the entire time. I’ve had a really bad cold and sinus headaches and my wind wasn’t there like it should have been. I felt like I fought through it like I should have.”

    Phil Downing Broomfield wrestling
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    With his high school career officially closed, Downing now has the distinction of being the 17th man to finish his career with four titles. He is the first wrestler to complete his career with four championships since Ponderosa’s Jake Snider won his fourth title in 2010.

    Downing hasn’t had the time to comprehend the end of his high school career, but knows in the back of his mind that his journey is far from over. He hopes to continue his wrestling career in college and isn’t afraid to aim for goals similar to what he accomplished in high school.

    “It’s a lot to take in right now, but I feel like I have a lot more goals to achieve,” he said. “(I plan on) wrestling in college and I definitely want to get four titles there, too.”

    But for right now, Downing and the Eagles just want to take in the victory and enjoy the benefits of the hard work they have put in through the course of the season. The team goal of a state title came to fruition, but for Downing it was the cherry on top of a brilliant grappling career.

    “It’s one of the best feelings I’ve ever felt in my life,” he said. “I just went out and did what I needed to do and mentally prepared myself all day.”

    The team title is the second straight championship for the Eagles, who also won last year on the strength of Downing and teammate Zach Stodden’s individual titles in 2013. Stodden, too, won again on Saturday.

    Phil Downing Broomfield wrestling
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)
    Phil Downing Broomfield wrestling
    (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)