Castle View and Mountain Range both scored second-half goals en route to a 1-1 tie on Saturday.
Junior Kiley O’Connor had Castle View’s goal, while Tyler Vos scored for Mountain Range.
Castle View and Mountain Range both scored second-half goals en route to a 1-1 tie on Saturday.
Junior Kiley O’Connor had Castle View’s goal, while Tyler Vos scored for Mountain Range.

COLORADO SPRINGS — Here was the initial roster: Seven boys, three girls. Six of those kids were still in middle school.
“We were running as individuals,” coach Alan Versaw said recently. “But it was fun.”
“To this day,” he added, “the things I learned from them, the sort of team things they set in place, are still present. It is uncanny how much harkens back to the first year or two when there were just so few kids there. They just wanted to go out and conquer everything they could conquer.”
Versaw’s program has grown to the point that it is now among the state’s elite. The girls have won ten consecutive state championships dating to 2003 and the boys have five in that same span.
“I was completely unaware of the sort of stuff that would follow,” Versaw said. “Not in my wildest dreams could I imagine the kind of program it became.”
The coach himself didn’t even run cross country in high school. He went to Sangre de Cristo, near Alamosa, where he played football and ran track. The school didn’t have a cross country program.
“I don’t think I would’ve run cross country if we had,” Versaw said. “I wasn’t tuned that way quite yet.”
In college, he started participating in road races, but a bone chip in his knee forced surgery and he stopped running — for 20 years. He didn’t pick it back up again until started TCA’s program.
“I knew that I really, really liked the kind of mindset that came out for cross country,” Versaw said.
By 2003, the girls had won a Class 3A state title. A year later, the boys won their first. Things exploded from there, and Versaw’s Titans started to dominate. In 2006, both teams won state championships. In 2009, TCA girls went 1-2-3, placed five runners in the top ten and six in the top 13.
Last year, both programs made the leap to 4A. The boys finished eighth — “Last year was kind of a tough year for the guys to bridge up to 4A,” Versaw said, noting they returned just one runner from the 2011 state meet — and the girls won.
“The depth of the other teams is so different” in 4A, Versaw said. “3A has some really talented individuals, but we were going, any given year, seven or eight or nine girls deep and there weren’t 3A schools that could match up.
“You know, a couple of (the girls) told me that at the end of the season: ‘Coach, I was really kind of skeptical at the beginning of the season, not sure what to make of it, but it was a lot more fun at the end,’ ” Versaw added. “And that’s easy to understand. What’s more fun? Going up a 14er where you’ve got to use your hands and you’re hanging out in the air a little, or just strolling up? That’s the kind of difference it is.”
This season, the girls opened as the No. 1 team in the preseason 4A Colorado Track XC/CHSAANow.com poll. The boys are No. 3.
So, yeah, expectations are high. Again.
The girls return five of the seven girls from last year’s state meet team.
“We went about 11 girls deep, really strong last year, and we only lost two as seniors,” Versaw said. “We just had a really good summer. A lot of dedication from the kids. Yes, they lifted the level of their training, but I think they also did it in a smart way. There’s a pretty tight bonding among these girls, and I think they’re committed to one another.
“They know what it takes,” he continued. “The eyes were open kind of wide last year, in 4A, and they didn’t know what to expect. I think they made some adjustments over the last year and I think that’s why I saw the kind of summer I did with their training.”
Six of seven boys from last year’s state meet team are back.
“Eighth isn’t bad, but they had a whole new picture and a whole new mindset this year of what it takes,” Versaw said. “They worked harder this summer than ever before, and their sights are high.”
[divider]
A look at how TCA’s cross country teams have fared at the state meet since 2001, including a breakdown of how individual runners finished.
| Girls | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Team | Class | No. 1 | No. 2 | No. 3 | No. 4 | No. 5 | No. 6 | No. 7 |
| 2012 | 1st | 4A | 6th | 7th | 16th | 18th | 51st | 64th | 99th |
| 2011 | 1st | 3A | 2nd | 3rd | 7th | 8th | 18th | 28th | |
| 2010 | 1st | 3A | 7th | 9th | 11th | 12th | 13th | 20th | |
| 2009 | 1st | 3A | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 9th | 10th | 13th | |
| 2008 | 1st | 3A | 1st | 3rd | 5th | 7th | 17th | 21th | |
| 2007 | 1st | 3A | 1st | 3rd | 7th | 17th | 23rd | ||
| 2006 | 1st | 3A | 2nd | 8th | 11th | 22th | 47th | ||
| 2005 | 1st | 3A | 2nd | 14th | 17th | 46th | 147th | ||
| 2004 | 1st | 3A | 12th | 28th | 30th | 31st | |||
| 2003 | 1st | 3A | 6th | 13th | 25th | 38th | |||
| 2002 | 3rd | 3A | 5th | 32nd | 35th | 39th | |||
| 2001 | – | 3A | 74th | 78th | |||||
| Boys | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Team | Class | No. 1 | No. 2 | No. 3 | No. 4 | No. 5 | No. 6 | No. 7 |
| 2012 | 8th | 4A | 8th | 36th | 41st | 60th | 102nd | 109th | 111th |
| 2011 | 1st | 3A | 2nd | 3rd | 10th | 21st | 23rd | 46th | |
| 2010 | 1st | 3A | 2nd | 3rd | 12th | 23rd | 25th | 37th | |
| 2009 | 2nd | 3A | 4th | 13th | 24th | 26th | 38th | 54th | |
| 2008 | 1st | 3A | 4th | 11th | 18th | 20th | 45th | 52nd | |
| 2007 | 3rd | 3A | 4th | 5th | 30th | 50th | 72nd | ||
| 2006 | 1st | 3A | 3rd | 13th | 19th | 45th | 92nd | ||
| 2005 | 3rd | 3A | 2nd | 16th | 37th | 40th | 90th | ||
| 2004 | 1st | 3A | 1st | 15th | 21st | 25th | |||
| 2003 | 4th | 3A | 6th | 24th | 33rd | 50th | |||
| 2002 | 4th | 3A | 5th | 24th | 67th | 87th | |||
| 2001 | – | 3A | 78th | ||||||

A hot topic in the aftermath of football’s Zero Week was the fact that referees are now identifying players by their numbers on penalty calls. We caught up with CHSAA assistant commissioner Tom Robinson, who oversees officials, for an explanation.
First and foremost: the new addition is not a new rule, but instead a mechanic. Mechanics are designed to help relay information to the players, coaches and crowd. And because of that, “It’s not one of those where you have to be in 100 percent compliance with it as you would with a rule book,” Robinson said.
The new mechanic should help reduce instances where coaches are trying to figure out who a penalty was called on. But don’t expect it to be called in every stadium across the state — at least not right away.
“That’s going to be the learning curve for them in terms of getting the number,” Robinson said. “So, probably you’re not going to get (the numbers) all the time, it’s going to be an afterthought until we get more experience doing it.”
Here’s a Q & A on the new mechanic with Robinson, who was a college football official for 25 years, including the last 12 as referee of his crew.
Can you take us through the basis of it and where it originated?
“I guess it got its roots not through this office (CHSAA) but through some other conversations I was having with officials in general. Really, it was from that whole topic of, ‘Are officials accountable?’ So we were just trying to come up with some different ways with all of our (officials) associations to do some things a little differently and to add to what we’re doing.
“That was a conversation I had in June, and even before. And so as the CFOA was getting ready for their season, that was one of the suggestions: Could we, instead of having a bunch of coaches asking, ‘Well, who was (the penalty) on?’ … have a mechanic where we relay the number of a fouling player (to the coach)? But a lot of times, it depends on how close you are … and there’s always a delay (in getting that information to the coach). So the question was, why don’t we alleviate the pressure around getting that number (to the coach) by just calling that number out right away when they signal the penalty?”
Are there any other states doing this?
“We’re probably one of a handful of states.”
Have you gotten any feedback from officials with it?
“I have not seen via email one thing about announcing the numbers. Not since Zero Week, which is when it started. We went out to football clinics and some of the officials were not happy about it. It’s probably one of a few. Others may have had similar feelings, because, if you’re old school, it’s just the way we’ve done it (to not call numbers) all the time. And I’m old school, too, but I always thought it would be helpful (to call numbers out), because our mechanics are designed to be a guide for people in the stands who don’t know what’s going on: the signals, signaling touchdown, all of that is important to the game, and this is just one more thing.
“I would say this: In every other sport, we identify the fouling player. … (In basketball) the announcer announces the fouling player, it goes up on a lot of scoreboards. I think (not calling numbers) was just a tradition that football had.”
Ralston Valley beat Mullen 43-0 to open the season during Zero Week.
Photos from the game:

HENDERSON — Mother Nature threatened to ruin the 2013 football opener for Grand Junction and Prairie View, but the teams got the last laugh in staging one of the wildest games of the early season.
After a delayed start, the visitors walked off the field at 11:12 p.m. with a 61-42 win that resembled more of a 6-man football game.
The game was scheduled to begin at 7 p.m., but a severe thunderstorm prompted game managers to, wisely, postpone the start until 8:05. The teams started an abbreviated warm-up only to be pulled off the field by game officials for another delay. By the time the teams returned, it was nearly 8:45.

The Tigers opened the game by trying an onside kick, but Prairie View covered the kick. PVHS struggled on it first possession and GJHS’s Tanner Griffin blocked the punt and then recovered it in the end zone. PVHS got its first score when Anthony Prespotino recovered a muffed punt in the end zone. Jessica Dunn’s first of six PATs gave the Thunderhawks a short-lived lead at 7-6.
That started the scoring onslaught and created nightmares for both defenses. The score was 21-18 after the first quarter in favor of Prairie View and 31-28 Grand Junction at the half.
Grand Junction added a pair of scores early in the third, took at 46-28 lead at 9:37 in the third and thwarted numerous attempts from the potent Thunderhawk offense to start 1-0.
Both teams’ offenses had plenty of stars. The Tigers quarterback Tyler Heinsma threw for over 250 yards and three TDs. Theron Verna was a force in the game, scoring on passes of 73 and 22 yards and taking a pitch from Heinsma and sprinting 58 yards to score. Austin Lewis had three scores on a pass and two runs.
Not to be outdone, Prairie View’s RJ Martinez is a home run threat every time he touches the ball, especially on kickoffs where he amassed over 100 return yards and had an 80-yard kickoff return called back by penalty. Cole Barone had two scoreds on runs of 56 and 68 yards for Prairie View, while quarterback Ben Meraz added a 46-yard TD run of his own.

COLORADO SPRINGS — The biggest difference in Doherty’s gym as the 2013 volleyball season opens? It’s not the new championship banner watching over practice. It’s all the new faces.
The Spartans graduated seven seniors off of last season’s team which went unbeaten en route to winning the Class 5A title. In fact, just four varsity players return in 2013.

“It’s been terrifying, actually,” said Haleigh Washington, one of those returners. “It’s scary! Because last year, you’re in this comfort zone, there’s a bunch of seniors, there’s a bunch of upperclassmen.
“So this year, we’re in this new environment. We have younger kids, we have kids that need to learn. We have kids that kind of know what they’re doing, but still need to learn. So it’s scary, because we don’t know what the next step is.”
Early-season practice has completely changed from this point last season.
“Last year, we were able to focus on the strategy earlier on in the season,” coach Tara Hittle said. “This year, the main focus is on the skill and the technique of the skill. We’ll get to strategy a little bit later on.”
Hittle has three freshmen on the varsity roster, and moved a number of girls up from last year’s lower-level teams.
“There are a lot of unfamiliar faces, a lot of new people,” said senior Gabby Simpson.
But Doherty’s cupboard isn’t bare.
Washington, a Penn State commit, is the reigning Gatorade player of the year in Colorado. (The only other volleyball player to do that in Doherty’s history? Hittle, who also led the school to a championship in 2003.)
Simpson, a setter, is bound for Colorado State. Seniors Rachel Staudte, an outside hitter, and Kaylee Bussinger, the libero, also return experience.
“It’s a pretty big change,” Hittle said. “However, in the returners that we have, we have four good players.”
The seniors have each embraced a leadership role.
“You’re the leader now, you’re the top dog,” Bussinger said. “You want to show them how we do things on varsity.”
Added Washington: “We try to explain to them things you wouldn’t typically picture in a winning team. We don’t say, ‘You need to hit hard,’ and ‘You need to pass the ball perfectly.’ It’s things like, ‘You need to be confident in yourself,’ ‘You need to know that you can do what we teach you,’ ‘You need to be willing to learn,’ or ‘You need to be willing to change what you already do.’ ”
Despite graduation’s impact, Doherty opened the season atop CHSAANow.com’s 5A volleyball poll on Monday. It’s yet another challenge added to an early season full of them.
“It’s a lot of pressure and everything to hold up to,” Bussinger said, “but, sure, give us that, we’ll try to defend it.”
“We have a target on our back, definitely,” Staudte said.
The Spartans begin the season on Aug. 31 at home against No. 2 Grandview, the team they beat in the 2012 final which graduated just one senior. It makes for a quick test.
“Are we going to go 29-0 (again) this season? Probably not,” Hittle said. “Is that the goal? Yeah, we would love to. But I’m not so concerned with how we do at the beginning of the season. I’m more concerned about us learning and growing. I would love to win the last game of the season.”

Football is back, and things seem to be picking up right where we left them.
Valor Christian leads the first-ever CHSAANow.com 5A football poll, which is voted on by coaches and media members across the state. The Eagles are four-time defending champions across three classifications, and beat Cherokee Trail to win last year’s 5A crown. Cherokee Trail, not surprisingly, is No. 2 in the preseason poll.
ThunderRidge, a semifinalist a year ago, is third, followed by Cherry Creek and Pomona. Grandview is No. 6 to begin the season, Ralston Valley is No. 7, while Columbine (No. 8), Chaparral (No. 9) and Regis Jesuit (No. 10) round out the 5A poll.
A total of three teams received first-place votes in the ranking: Valor Christian got 14, while Cherokee Trail and Cherry Creek received one each.
Monarch, the defending 4A champion, leads the preseason ranking in that classification, while Denver South, runner-up a year ago, is second. Wheat Ridge, Pine Creek and Pueblo West round out 4A’s top five teams.
In fact, each of the defending champions lead their respective preseason rankings. That includes Silver Creek (3A), Kent Denver (2A), Cedaredge (1A), Hoehne (8-man) and Fleming (6-man).
Complete polls for all classifications are below.
[divider]
Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.
Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A | 1A | 8-man | 6-man
| Class 5A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Valor Christian (14) | 0-0 | 157 | – |
| 2 | Cherokee Trail (1) | 0-0 | 139 | – |
| 3 | ThunderRidge | 0-0 | 102 | – |
| 4 | Cherry Creek (1) | 0-0 | 98 | – |
| 5 | Pomona | 0-0 | 81 | – |
| 6 | Grandview | 0-0 | 71 | – |
| 7 | Ralston Valley | 0-0 | 62 | – |
| 8 | Columbine | 0-0 | 37 | – |
| 9 | Chaparral | 0-0 | 35 | – |
| 10 | Regis Jesuit | 0-0 | 23 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Mullen 22, Fairview 15, Fountain-Ft. Carson 9, Arapahoe 8, Eaglecrest 7, Mountain Vista 5, Douglas County 3, Chatfield 2, Grand Junction 2, Lakewood 2, Fort Collins 1. | ||||
| Class 4A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Monarch (14) | 0-0 | 140 | – |
| 2 | Denver South | 0-0 | 103 | – |
| 3 | Wheat Ridge | 0-0 | 93 | – |
| 4 | Pine Creek | 0-0 | 71 | – |
| 5 | Pueblo West | 0-0 | 64 | – |
| 6 | Vista Ridge | 0-0 | 58 | – |
| 7 | Ponderosa | 0-0 | 57 | – |
| 8 | Windsor | 0-0 | 39 | – |
| 9 | Mesa Ridge | 0-0 | 35 | – |
| 10 | Falcon | 0-0 | 32 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Dakota Ridge 20, Longmont 19, Loveland 10, Standley Lake 8, Montrose 7, Broomfield 5, Green Mountain 5, Cañon City 2, Mountain View 2, Cheyenne Mountain 1. | ||||
| Class 3A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Silver Creek (8) | 0-0 | 97 | – |
| 2 | Rifle (2) | 0-0 | 63 | – |
| 3 | Elizabeth | 0-0 | 61 | – |
| 4 | Pueblo East | 0-0 | 58 | – |
| 5 | Conifer | 0-0 | 47 | – |
| 6 | Discovery Canyon | 0-0 | 37 | – |
| 7 | Pueblo Central | 0-0 | 32 | – |
| 8 | Roosevelt | 0-0 | 31 | – |
| 9 | Holy Family | 0-0 | 30 | – |
| 10 | The Classical Academy | 0-0 | 18 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Glenwood Springs 17, Lutheran 14, Eagle Valley 12, Palisade 9, Delta 8, Erie 7, D’Evelyn 5, Northridge 3, Evergreen 2, Skyline 2. | ||||
| Class 2A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Kent Denver (8) | 0-0 | 80 | – |
| 2 | Platte Valley | 0-0 | 68 | – |
| 3 | Florence | 0-0 | 62 | – |
| 4 | Eaton | 0-0 | 53 | – |
| 5 | Bayfield | 0-0 | 46 | – |
| 6 | Brush | 0-0 | 38 | – |
| 7 | La Junta | 0-0 | 30 | – |
| 8 | Faith Christian | 0-0 | 27 | – |
| 9 | Grand Valley | 0-0 | 17 | – |
| 10 | Strasburg | 0-0 | 8 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Manitou Springs 3, Middle Park 3, Bennett 2, Trinidad 2, The Academy 1. | ||||
| Class 1A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Cedaredge (8) | 0-0 | 90 | – |
| 2 | Buena Vista (1) | 0-0 | 74 | – |
| 3 | Limon | 0-0 | 71 | – |
| 4 | Centauri | 0-0 | 49 | – |
| 5 | Wray | 0-0 | 47 | – |
| 6 | Monte Vista | 0-0 | 43 | – |
| 7 | Wiggins (1) | 0-0 | 41 | – |
| 8 | Hotchkiss | 0-0 | 37 | – |
| 9 | Holyoke | 0-0 | 28 | – |
| 10 | Resurrection Christian | 0-0 | 23 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Burlington 14, Ignacio 9, Paonia 8, Crowley County 4, Platte Canyon 4, Rye 4, Byers 2, C.S. Christian 2. | ||||
| Class 8-man | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Hoehne (7) | 0-0 | 70 | – |
| 2 | Granada | 0-0 | 57 | – |
| 3 | Fowler | 0-0 | 55 | – |
| 4 | Dayspring Christian | 0-0 | 38 | – |
| 5 | Elbert | 0-0 | 32 | – |
| 6 | Walsh | 0-0 | 26 | – |
| 7 | Akron | 0-0 | 22 | – |
| 8 | Caliche | 0-0 | 20 | – |
| 9 | Dove Creek | 0-0 | 16 | – |
| 10 | Hayden | 0-0 | 9 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| McClave 8, Swink 8, Cheyenne Wells 6, Kiowa 5, Haxtun 4, Merino 3, La Veta 2, Sargent 2, Springfield 2. | ||||
| Class 6-man | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RK | TEAM | W-L | PTS | PVS |
| 1 | Fleming (5) | 0-0 | 25 | – |
| 2 | Eads | 0-0 | 17 | – |
| 3 | Deer Trail | 0-0 | 12 | – |
| 4 | Hi-Plains | 0-0 | 10 | – |
| 5 | Liberty/Stratton | 0-0 | 7 | – |
| Others receiving votes: | ||||
| Otis 3, Briggsdale 1. | ||||

AURORA — He scanned the weight room and could nearly count everyone on two hands. There were 12 kids. You can’t build a football program with 12 kids. Twelve kids is barely enough to field an offense.
“All of a sudden,” Justin Hoffman said on Monday, “it was a kick to the gut.”
It was the day after the football coach had been introduced to his new players at Smoky Hill last winter. Thirty-five kids came to the introduction. Not great, but better than 12.
“You start thinking, ‘Oh, what’d I do?’ ” said Hoffman, who was hired in January.
The football coach spent six seasons heading nearby Gateway, where he had transformed a program that went 0-9 in 2007 to one that went 7-3 last season. And then traded that in for a place where football wasn’t a priority.
Or so it seemed.
The following day, 15 players showed up to the weight room.
“And the next day, there was 17,” Hoffman said. “And the next day, there was 19.”
A slow trickle turned into an open faucet. By the time the spring sports ended their season, more than 60 players were showing up to work out. To put that number in perspective, Smoky Hill’s program ended last season with a combined 31 players between its varsity and junior varsity teams.
“Now,” said running back Tylor Brown, a senior, “what he’s done is basically made us compete. Former years, it was usually only the seniors that would start on varsity, and now he’s giving everybody a chance to play on that varsity level. That’s a huge difference.”
Smoky Hill has a rough enrollment of 2,300, and is a large Class 5A school. Thirty-one players isn’t enough to make a large 5A program viable. And though the Buffaloes went 4-6 last season, they are 13-35 since 2008.

“First thing we did is we were like, ‘You can’t change anything from the past. We’re moving forward,’ ” Hoffman said.
When practice opened on Monday, Smoky Hill did so with 76 players. Most of that growth is due to the seniors, who helped recruit other students in the hallways and on Twitter.
“We were all excited,” said quarterback Trent Clay, one of those seniors. “We were like, ‘Hey, are you going to come out for football?’ Kids are excited and everybody’s hearing about what we’re doing. It’s great.”
Added running back Isaiah Alexander, another senior, “He inspired us to go out there and get people.”
And while “it doesn’t feel all the way right,” Brown said, “because we know we should have 100 kids out here,” Hoffman has numbers to play with. It’s part of the reason he calls Smoky Hill a “top-7 job in Colorado.” A school this size could quickly become very relevant in 5A.
His players know it starts in practice.
“Last year (during practice), there was a lot of standing around and just people hanging out on the sidelines, not doing any drills,” said senior Frank Thomas, last year’s leading receiver. “Now, you can look at any drill, and if somebody’s not involved, some of the seniors or juniors will yell at them, ‘Get in the drill!’ ”
Now, practice is merely an extension of what Smoky Hill does.
“Before he arrived,” Clay said, “there wasn’t a culture built up. I feel like everybody played football but we weren’t exactly a football family. We didn’t do anything together. We practiced together, but that was about it. I think when coach Hoff came, he really emphasized family and culture and bonded us together.”
The Buffaloes open the 2013 season against Hoffman’s old Gateway squad.
“I’m glad it’s Week 1,” Hoffman said. “If it was Week 9, I think it would kill me.”
This year, Hoffman will stray — slightly — from his rush-heavy attack. In 2012, Hoffman’s Gateway team threw the ball just 14 percent of the time. At Smoky, his offense will be closer to a 60-40 rush-to-pass split — especially considering the Buffs return Clay, who threw for 1,500 yards last season, and Thomas, who hauled in 34 passes and six touchdowns. There’s also Dominique Carrasco, a 6-foot-5 transfer from Kansas with speed and a 30-inch vertical jump who will play wide receiver.
Ah, but the option offense isn’t totally going away. Hoffman has three running backs he’s fond of — Brown, Alexander and Malik Pompey — and he said he’ll rotate each through to keep them fresh.
“We’ve got some kids that can be part of something,” Hoffman said.
[divider]
Photo gallery: Smoky Hill opens football practice
[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he room sits quiet and dark under the iconic clock tower. A switch in the corner is flipped, and the lights flicker. They shine on history.
There are photos noting the ’00 and ’01 athletic teams. That’s 1900 and 1901. Follow the wall and watch the decades pass. There’s a picture of the girls basketball squad from 1914. They’re wearing dresses. Further down, a band uniform from the 1940s.
It’s only a room—small, somewhat cramped, with a low ceiling—tucked above the fourth floor at Denver East High School. Yet, in moments, this museum tells a story that nearly everyone else has trouble putting into words: History is palpable here, perhaps like no other high school in Colorado. And it pulls you in.

Denver East—known as Arapahoe School, Denver Eastside or East Denver through the years—has won 96 state championships in 16 sports. Yes, Cherry Creek has won more than 200 titles, but these Angels have athletic success dating to 1895. For perspective, the Colorado High School Activities Association wasn’t formed until 1921.
The school itself was founded in 1876, and has known three homes: 19th and Arapahoe (hence, Arapahoe School) until 1889; 20th and Stout (known as “Old East” to alumni) until the spring of 1925; and the current campus just off of Colfax Avenue near York Street.
The current building was part of Mayor Robert Speer’s City Beautiful program in the early-to-mid 1900s. It opened, along with the current campuses for Denver South and Denver West high schools, in the fall of 1925. South was placed at Washington Park, West at Sunken Gardens Park. East was built adjacent to City Park.
East’s clock tower, 162-feet high, can be seen for blocks around and is the lasting image visitors carry with them.
“A lot of people have fond memories of high school. Not too many people say, ‘Oh, boy, I love my building,’ ” Dick Nelson, a longtime English teacher at East and historian of Denver Public Schools, said recently. “It’s usually some program or some kids or some teachers that you remember. You don’t remember the building. But I think East kids remember the building.
“It kind of rises out of the ground,” Nelson said. “It’s amazing architecture, and made possible the fact that it was built before the depression.”
• • •

The school’s old gym was state-of-the-art when it was built in 1925, and hosted the state wrestling tournament three times in the 1930s. East won its only wrestling championship one of those years, in 1937. But that old gym, which features seating above the floor, isn’t quite suited for today’s basketball games and so another one was built in 1982.
The baseball field butts up against 17th Avenue, and across the street the tennis teams have a grandfathered permit to use City Park’s courts. There’s a field turf facility across City Park Esplanade for soccer, lacrosse, field hockey, and football, as well as a track outlining the field.
East’s location—smack in the middle of a major American city—makes it unique. An open campus policy during lunch sends many of its nearly 2,500 students flooding out to Colfax each weekday afternoon.
“There’s a real sense of pride, and (the students) feel pride of going on Colfax for lunch,” said Michelle Topf, an English teacher and girls tennis coach. “Even though they make fun of it, they’re very proud of being in the inner-city, they’re very proud of their neighborhood.”
Said Aspen Miles, East’s dean of students and a graduate of the school, “It’s so diverse. Our campus is a good picture of what the world’s going to be like when you get out there. You meet a little bit of everyone doing everything.”
• • •
A staggering number of notable alumni have passed under the clock tower through windowed doors to attend class. Widely known Olympians, actors, professional athletes, governors, musicians, writers and professors are Angels. There’s even a First Lady (Mamie Eisenhower, Dwight’s wife), and an astronaut (Jack Swigert, of Apollo 13 fame).
Nearly every one of them participated in some form of school activity—athletic or otherwise. T.J. Miller, the comedian, co-star of Cloverfield, and lead in Fox’s new series The Goodwin Games, played lacrosse. Swigert, a 1949 grad, played football.
These alums, and their feats, are never far from the minds of today’s students.
“Our halls are filled with it,” said Miles, one of those notable alumni, herself an Olympic-level runner whose state record in the 200-meter dash stood until Regis Jesuit’s Ana Holland broke it in April.

Heritage Hall, on the third floor, spotlights the best of East’s alumni. East’s clock tower room, home to the museum, sits above classrooms, up a short stairway. There’s also an athletic Hall of Fame outside of the school’s gym. It’s dedicated to Nelson for his tireless work in preserving the history of the school.
It all leads to an expectation of excellence at East—a tradition that, as Miles put it, rests on a “history of excellence that we’ve had for a hundred years.”
“It’s self-perpetuating,” said Susan McHugh, a coach with the school’s debate team. “So, kids that come to East, and families, they feel pride and they want to uphold the standards and they want to be a part of the history that’s always been a positive history.”
Said Miles, “It was a challenge: What am I going to do to make East proud, to add another chapter in East’s book?”
Yes, a lot of that tradition is athletic success. The boys soccer team owns the most recent title, capturing Class 5A in 2011, and the boys basketball squad was upset in the 5A final last spring. From 1931 to 1968, the school won 73 state championships.
But there’s also the Constitutional Scholars team which routinely wins, or at least earns a place at, the national competition in Washington D.C. Its speech and debate program is widely known. The woodshop course designed and built new shelves in the school library.
“When I was there,” Miles said, “it was about me being the best runner I could be and still understanding that the academic foundation they were giving me is what was going to take me in life. It wasn’t just, ‘You’re an athlete.’ I was one whole student that they were putting together to go out and make an impact in this world.”
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What makes East so special? Once it touches you, the history and tradition never seem to let you leave.
“There’s kind of the rich sense of, ‘Once you’re an Angel, you’re always an Angel,’ ” said Lisa Porter, the school’s athletic director who played soccer, basketball, volleyball and softball at East before graduating in 1993. “Once you get a job at East, whether it’s teaching or coaching, you don’t leave.”
Seven coaches or heads of activities have been at East for at least 10 years. There are stalwarts like boys basketball coach Rudy Carey, who graduated from the school in 1970. Or Andy Mendelsberg, who has been at the school for more than 20 years. He was a softball coach, dean and athletic director before becoming principal last year.
One major reason coaches stay put is because East has outstanding participation numbers. More than 100 girls came out for field hockey last year—105 for tennis. The East Theatre Company routinely has between 275 and 300 members. Everyone, it seems, is involved in something.
And through the years, many of those students have found their way to big things. It makes for a legendary alumni base.

“I was talking to a group of freshman last year: ‘Anybody know anyone famous from East High School?’ Not a hand went up,” said Nelson, the historian. “So I said, ‘Well, I’ll give you a hint on one. This was an African American actor, he had a tremendous movie called Hotel Rwanda.’ I said, ‘Anybody know who that kid is?’ ”
Nelson was speaking of Don Cheadle, who graduated from East in 1982.
“Not one hand went up,” Nelson said. “And then I realized, they don’t know Hotel Rwanda. So I go to another one: ‘This guy was an Apollo 13 astronaut.’ A kid’s hand shot up, and he goes, ‘Oh, I know that one!’ I said, ‘What’s his name?’ He said, ‘Kevin Bacon.’ I said, ‘Well, that’s the guy that played him in the movie.’ ”
It’s something you won’t find at many other schools, these stories of astronauts who roamed the halls, of actors, or athletes. All Angels.
“Other high schools that I’ve worked in, they’ve worked to get that (tradition), but East has it naturally,” Porter said. “It’s just part of the culture, part of the fabric of East High School. It’s the rich community of pride and tradition in things we’ve all done. It happens as a school and as a community.”
“And then,” Porter said, after graduating, “we all come back.”
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Related: Photo gallery: Denver East’s campus, facilities and history

DENVER — A sixth classification may well be in CHSAA’s future, but it won’t be coming in the next two-year cycle.
Mark Kanagy, the athletic director at Windsor, presented the possibility of adding a classification to his peers gathered at the association’s All-School Summit on Thursday. His 16-person committee, tasked with exploring the future of classification structure, is set to present recommendations to CHSAA’s Classification and League Organizing Committee (CLOC) soon.
Any change to the state’s classification structure would need to come from CLOC and then be voted upon by the membership.
While Kanagy stressed multiple times that “there is no way we go to six classifications in the next cycle,” he did say that an additional class could be added with the two-year cycle which starts in 2016-17. Still, Kanagy’s committee is only exploratory, seeking to determine if a move to six classes should be made.
“We’re planning for growth,” Kanagy told the meeting.
CHSAA last has a sixth classification with Class 6A from 1990-93. Since then, more than 100 new schools have joined the association.
Over the past year and a half, Kanagy’s committee has looked at a number of factors, including:
It is possible that a sixth class is added in 2016-17, but the move is more likely to happen when the association reaches 384 member schools. Currently, 346 schools are part of CHSAA. At 384 schools, six classifications could be evenly divided into 64.
CHSAA commissioner Paul Angelico said that if a move to six classes were to take place, “there aren’t more than maybe two sports that would have six classes.”
Football, of course, already has seven classifications, including 8-man and 6-man.