LAKEWOOD — Heat sheets for the third and final day of the boys and girls track and field meets are below. Find Day 2 results, as well as live Day 3 results, on this page.
LAKEWOOD — Live results, via co.milesplit.com, from the 2014 state track and field meet are below. Navigate to the event of your choosing with the menu at left.
LAKEWOOD — Fort Collins distance coach Chris Suppes knew his freshman phenom, Lauren Gregory, was in perfect position in the Class 5A 3,200-meter final on Thursday at Jeffco Stadium.
“Our gameplan fell right into place,” Suppes said of Gregory’s race. “You always come up with a strategy and then you have all these alternate strategies just in case. For some reason, that two mile just fell right into her lap. The strategy was perfect, to hang with the front pack.”
“That was more the strategy,” Gregory added. “I haven’t run strategy since cross-country really. It was nice to not have to think about how many more laps I had or how much pain I was in. I just thought about what I had to do next. I felt so strong the whole time.”
Fort Collins’ Lauren Gregory. (Brock Laue)
Gregory’s strength brought her a state title in the 3,200 meters in arguably the best girls two-mile field in Colorado history with an impressive time of 10:39. She was merely five seconds off of legendary Boulder High runner Melody Fairchild’s state meet record of 10:34 set in 1990. Gregory’s 10:39 was also the new Fort Collins school record, a feat at a school with as much distance running tradition as any in the state.
Gregory, George Washington’s Darby Gilfillan and Fairview’s Isabelle Kennedy — all tremendous talents who had run sub 11 minutes in the 3,200 meters before — broke from the field during the first 1,600 on Thursday. They controlled the pace, a quick 10:20 3,200 clip early, and vied for the 5A crown.
Gregory moved to lane two at the start of the sixth lap, opened up her stride, and made a commanding move to leave her fellow leaders.
“I told her she couldn’t lead it until the sixth lap and then finish hard the last three and that’s what she did,” Suppes said.
The move was strong, the lead was twenty meters and growing, and Gregory could almost taste her first state championship in track.
“I kind of knew she had it about lap five, because she was very comfortable through the first five laps,” Suppes said of Gregory’s victory. “Even though the pace was fast, I know what she’s capable of and I was pretty confident at that point that she was going to win it.”
Gilfillan finished second in 10:46, Kennedy crossed at 10:47, and Horizon’s Megan Mooney (10:57) and Monarch’s Kaitlyn Benner (10:58) all broke 11.
Fort Collins’ freshman superstar had an outstanding Thursday morning at the state meet, but her day was far from finished.
The Lambkins were seeded second in the 3,200 relay with a time of 9:15 and were expected to battle Front Range Conference rivals Fairview, seeded No. 1 (9:14), and Monarch, seeded No. 3 (9:16). Fort Collins and Monarch girls both placed top-10 at the Nike National Cross-Country Team Championships this past fall and had several of the same girls on their 3,200 relays.
Fort Collins turned an ultra-competitive relay into a laugher. Monarch and the Lambkins ran away from the field early, but Fort Collins’ third leg ran away from Monarch. Gregory got the anchor baton clear of the Coyotes by 75 meters and never looked back as she cruised to another convincing state championship in a time of 9:06. Monarch was second in 9:13, Fairview finished third in 9:19. Gregory led the Lambkins to a second school record a few hours after a great 3200.
“We chose to lead off Devynn (Miller) just because we thought she had the potential to drop a 2:15,” Suppes said. “She did and we knew that if we could lead off with a 2:15 and throw in a couple 2:17s, we could give Gregory the type of lead that would help her.
“I didn’t expect it to be that big honestly,” he added. “She’s capable of running a 2:12 in the open. I knew she probably wouldn’t be able to run that fast coming off the two mile, so we knew we had to give her a lead, but we didn’t think the lead would be that good.”
Gregory, who also claimed the 5A crown in cross-country this past fall, has been known as an exceptional talent for years.
“I think anybody who knows her kind of expected this in a way,” Suppes said. “She’s been an amazing runner at the national level since she was a little kid. For her to come out and challenge 5A the way she is, it’s not a huge surprise to me or anyone whose been coaching distance in this area.
“I’ve always wanted to have a girl that, as a freshman, just comes out and destroys things.”
Gregory hopes to add to her already mighty credentials in the 800-meter run on Friday and 1,600-meter Run on Saturday. Just as importantly to the freshman, she wants to score more points for her team, the state title favorites.
“Right now, it’s just placing, because I want our team to win so bad,” Gregory said of her gameplan for the rest of the weekend. “I’m just trying to place as high as humanly possible.”
“The coolest thing about her is she’s all about the team,” Suppes said of her star.
Whether in individual races, relays, or team pursuits, Lauren Gregory is certainly a phenomenal talent.
Jeffco Stadium’s new videoboard has live video capability, and also displays results and lineups. (Dennis Pleuss)
Over the course of the past year, Jeffco Stadium has undergone a transformation. When the state track meet begins on Thursday, the facility will, in effect, cut the ribbon on a variety of new improvements.
Included: a resurfaced track, a new video scoreboard, a new timing system and a new drainage system.
“We made some real investment into it that’s really going to bring us into the future,” Jeffco executive director of athletics Jim Thyfault said Monday.
“Trust me,” added Ezra Paddock, manager of operations for Jeffco, “this has taken effort from every department in the district.”
A big driving force behind much of the improvements?
“We take seriously the opportunity we have to host the state track meet every year.” Thyfault said. “We feel like our part of that, besides providing a facility, is providing a quality facility.
“Time was rolling around where we needed to resurface the track. We felt if we could upgrade the surface and make it an even better one, then that’s what we’re going to do because we feel the state deserves that.”
The surface was part one to the project, along with the new drainage system. “Our surface was at the end of its lifespan,” Paddock said. The new surface is what’s known as a sandwich system and is used by many colleges and universities.
“It’s state-of-the-art,” Paddock said. “It’s the same thing colleges run on.”
And whereas before Jeffco workers often were reduced to five-gallon buckets to be rid of standing water during larger rainstorms, the new drainage system easily handles a lot of moisture. That was tested early on during last fall’s massive flooding.
Jeffco Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss)
At the same time of the resurfacing, Jeffco buried all wires that had once surrounded the track.
Next came the new videoboard. The process started last summer when Thyfault was talking with a track coach, who asked about running the timing clock on the scoreboard.
“It just got me to thinking, and I got talking to Ezra about it,” Thyfault said. “Anyway, I ran it by my immediate supervisor here, and he thought it was great idea.”
Eventually, Jeffco secured a board from Daktronics, a national company which provides videoboards for some of the biggest sporting facilities in the world — including the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Madison Square Garden and Auburn’s Jordan-Hare Stadium.
“Our job now is to go out and sell some advertising to help offset the funding,” Thyfault said.
The video board was first fired up about a week ago. It has live video capability, and also displays results and lineups.
“It really adds to the experience for our kids,” Paddock said. “It’s just such a big difference. We’ve only had it up for a week, and they enjoy it so much.”
During the state meet, the board will provide live results — delivered by the new timing system, which was the final piece to the project.
The Lynx system is “the same system that they use at the Olympics,” Paddock said, and is wired directly to the new videoboard.
Thyfault said Jeffco is mulling putting new videoboards at its other stadiums — the North Area Athletic Complex, and Trailblazer Stadium — as well.
“It just all depends,” Thyfault said. “We’re going to go out and meet with some businesses and hope to partner up with them, and try and make it a win-win for both of us. If it ends up being a good process, then it could move us into being able to get scoreboards.”
Among other future ideas? Family move nights, using Jeffco Stadium’s new video screen, during the summer.
Thursday will mark the 30th year of the past 32 that Jeffco has hosted the state track meet. It doesn’t look to be going anywhere else anytime soon.
“We love to represent Jeffco when CHSAA comes out and hosts the state meet here,” Paddock said. “We try to make it as first class as it can be.”
TJ grad listed as No. 5 prospect for MLB Draft
Baseball America released its top 100 prospects for the 2014 MLB Draft on Wednesday. Thomas Jefferson grad Kyle Freeland, a junior at the University of Evansville, is No. 5 on that list.
Freeland, a left-handed pitcher, is 9-1 with a 1.75 ERA in 12 starts this season, and has 111 strikeouts to just seven walks. His stock really took off during a breakout summer in the Cape Cod League, where he was an All-Star after leading all players in strikeouts (48 in nine regular season games, and another 10 in a playoff game).
Also making the top 100 is Regis Jesuit senior David Peterson, who broke his fibula just prior to the season but made a quick recovery to return and pitch in mid-April. Peterson is 1-0 with a 1.17 ERA in 12 innings pitched this season. As a junior, Peterson was 6-3 with a 3.26 ERA.
Peterson is committed to Oregon.
Short stuff
Valor Christian graduate Wyndham Clark was featured by the Golf Channel on Mother’s Day. Now at Oklahoma State, Clark shared the story of his mother’s battle with breast cancer and how he honors her through his game.
Kent Denver dedicated a new sports pavilion last night, naming it for longtime football coach and athletic director Scott Yates and his family. The new facility — known as the Yates Pavilion — will house basketball and volleyball, and seat 850 people this fall. Here’s a photo. Coaching icon Dick Katte, a longtime figure at Denver Christian, attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday, as did a number of former players and coaches. “It is gorgeous,” boys basketball coach Todd Schayes said of the facility. “Now I have to make sure to put a strong basketball product in there next year.”
Valor Christian swim coach Rob Nasser regularly puts out rankings during the season which essentially comprise the best times around Colorado. His most anticipated rankings come out just prior to the state meet, and are based upon the psych sheets. Well, they came out Wednesday and amount to a projected finish at state. The favorites are Air Academy in 4A and Regis Jesuit in 5A. Find the full rankings at cohsswimanddive.blogspot.com.
Joe Rausch, largely successful as the boys basketball coach at Sand Creek for the past four seasons, will take over the same position at Pine Creek, according to the Colorado Springs Gazette. Rausch was 73-30 at Sand Creek, and led the 4A Scorpions to the Final 4 in March.
Arapahoe’s Austin Shindoll scored an incredible behind-the-back game-winner in overtime during the 5A boys lacrosse quarterfinals. Check out this photo. There’s also video here; the goal comes right around 1:56.
If you missed it, here was what Jeffco Stadium looked like on Monday during the snowstorm. Presumably, the new drainage system had no problem with the melt.
Courtesy/CHSCA Cards and online ticket entry Team Entrance (Northeast Gate) Only
Packets:
Team packets are available once doors open (7:30 a.m.) and throughout the day of competition.
Only coach or school designee can sign for team packet.
Parking:
No Parking Fee (Security Staff will direct vehicles to designated lots on west and north side of stadium).
Handicap parking will be located east of stadium.
Vehicles parked in non-designated areas will be ticketed and towed.
Bus parking:
Limited parking on the frontage road. Once the spaces are full, buses will be directed to park at Trailblazer stadium which is a 5-minute walk from Jeffco stadium.
Bus drivers must have school issued ID and can enter at no charge at the competitor/coaches northeast entrance.
RV parking:
Spaces are limited. We ask that you call Ezra Paddock (720-331-7289) to reserve your spot.
Please do not call Ezra for event organization questions. Instead, contact Jenn Roberts-Uhlig, CHSAA at 303-344-5050.
Thompson Valley’s Andrew Bradberry won both the 100 and 200 (pictured) meter races on Friday. (Brock Laue)
LOVELAND — Heather Waite, a fourth-place finisher at Class 5A state meet in the pole vault as a junior, was looking for a breakout performance to kick start her senior year.
Friday, she seized it. At the R2-J Invitational, a high-level midseason meet at Loveland High School, Waite won the pole vault by over a foot with a towering mark of 12 feet and half of an inch. The mark was a new personal best, a school record, and places her second in 5A.
“It was 11-8,” Waite said of her previous best. “I haven’t been able to clear anything higher than 11-6 yet this season, so I’m super excited for this.”
Waite, who won the prestigious Mullen Runners Roost Invitational last weekend over defending 5A state champion Megan McCabe of Cherry Creek, set the tone for the Loveland Indians Friday in their quest for another district title.
This year’s edition of the R2-J Meet featured 12 teams, including strong programs from Cheyenne Mountain, Eaton, The Classical Academy, and a portion of Valor Christian’s squad.
The overall meet was scored separately from the R2-J district meet, which is comprised of Loveland, Thompson Valley, Mountain View and Berthoud. The ultimate prize for the district teams is the overall team championship, decided by the total points for both boys and girls teams.
Loveland has won every district championship since the meet began in 1999 and was able to claim another on the strength of its girls program. Loveland’s girls finished first in both the overall and district meets and had a whopping 143 points, 60 ahead of their nearest competitor, The Classical Academy, in the overall meet.
“Our kids really competed well, which is what we ask for,” Loveland coach Paul Quere said about his team’s performance. “There’s a lot of pride on the Loveland side in the R2-J Meet and Thompson Valley, Mountain View and Berthoud all have great teams. We kind of separate that really from the bigger meet, because it means more to our kids and more to our coaches. Obviously, boys and girls, for what we had, had a really outstanding day and I’m just proud of the way they competed.”
Waite’s eye-opening pole vault was the headliner, but the Indians got contributions from Taylor Buschy (fourth in the 100 meters, second in the 200 meters, second in the 400 meters), Alex Koschel (second in the triple jump) and Ashley Krawczuk (second in the 100 meter hurdles, fourth in the high jump).
Loveland’s distance runners also made noise with two sizzling finishes. Ashlyn Brent had a 32-second personal best in the 3,200 with a time of 11:39. She ran a meter behind Thompson Valley’s Ellie Colpitts, who placed fourth in 11:45, the entire race and then turned on the jets the last lap to earn third place and a spot in the top 20 in 5A.
(Brock Laue)
On the boys side, Loveland’s Kyle Brinkman used a similar tactic to win a district championship. Brinkman stayed within 10 feet of Thompson Valley’s Kaleb Simington in the 1,600. Simington boasts the fourth-best 3,200 meter time in 4A at 9:49 and has been the best distance runner in the town of Loveland this spring, but Brinkman had him in sight with 200 meters to go.
A crowded lead pack began their kick together, but Brinkman “found a little gap and got through,” he said. “The last 200 I shifted into gear and took off.”
The closing kick was enough to secure the district title with a time of 4:34.56, just over three seconds clear of Simington.
Mountain View’s boys, one of the top teams in 4A this season, ran away from the field with a commanding 132.5 points. The Classical Academy was second with 97 points.
The Mountain Lions displayed their talent with an 8:13 3,200 meter relay.
“The (4-by-800) went really well, because it was the first time we’ve run our ‘A’ team,” Nick Olson, one of Mountain View’s top sprinters, said afterward. “We ran the fastest time in the state so far for 4A.
“As a team, we’re definitely looking really strong,” Olson added. “Our (4-by-200) is one of the top five teams in the state for 4A, so is our (4-by-400) team, and just now with the (4-by-800), that sets us really high. The boys team is looking really strong and we’re competing really well.”
Thompson Valley also had several great performances. Andrew Bradberry won the 100 and 200 meters with a 10.80 and 22.49 double. His 100 time places him first in the classification. Jake Martinson won the pole vault with a mark of 14 feet, 3 inches — a new Thompson Valley record and the second best vault in 4A this year.
The story of the day was breakout performances. Waite hopes her top-shelf mark leads to greater heights.
“By the end of the season, a really ambitious goal I have is 13-0,” Waite said. “A more realistic one is 12-7.”
After Friday, several R2-J tracksters are leaning towards the ambitious side.