A major piece to our plan for the 2013-14 school year is live coverage. And you’ll get your first taste of it next Friday during Zero Week.
First and foremost, get familiar with our Live Coverage hub. You’ll find it at rcasey.wpengine.com/live. There, we will list our upcoming live events, as well as archive past coverage.
So, what will we be doing? For starters, we’ll be all over Friday night football from Zero Week through the end of the season. Some weeks, we’ll host the chat from a big game. Other times, we’ll host it from our office. But you can always expect the same features:
Live updates and scores from around the state. This is thanks in large part to our partnership with MaxPreps (our official stat partner) and their Qwixcore functionality. Everything will feed into a scrolling scoreboard.
CHSAA.tv integration. Our network is live-streaming games around the state.
Reader interaction. At a game? Comment on your phone. Looking for a score? Ask for it.
Multimedia. Photos and video from games as they’re happening.
Aggregated updates from Twitter users around the state using the #copreps hashtag.
Behind-the-scenes access and insights.
And much more.
The football season technically gets underway with Silver Creek’s Zero Week game in Florida next Thursday. But, with 16 games slated for next Friday, we will open our live coverage for the season then.
Aside from football, we’re also planning live coverage from major state championship events, such as the softball playoffs or the state volleyball tournament.
Bottom line? If a major event is happening in Colorado high school sports, you’ll find live coverage of it here.
Silver Creek, the defending 3A champion, opens Colorado’s high school football schedule. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
The casual high school football observer might think that scheduling football games is an easy process. After all, a school has a specified number of conference games and, then fill in with non-conference opponents.
Well, for some schools, it’s not that easy. There be an odd number of schools in their conference, creating a “bye” that might be much later in the season than the usual bye week. Or, the team may not be able to match up with any other school for a variety of reasons, including competitive level, classification or geography.
The CHSAA tackled that issue a number of years ago and may allow teams to play a “zero week” game when those teams can provide enough information to show that after an exhaustive search, the school was unable to find an opponent during the established 10-week period.
The school then requests permission for the “zero week” games from CHSAA Assistant Commissioner Harry Waterman. Once approval is given, the schools playing that “zero week” game give up one of their two allowable scrimmages in order to play that week. This year, “zero week” falls on August 22-24.
This year, there are 29 “zero week” games scheduled, including Valor Christian’s nationally televised game (ESPN2) against Fresno, Calif., Central East High School in Highlands Ranch. The complete list of “zero week” games includes:
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.
Gateway went 7-3 last season, including a narrow loss to Regis Jesuit in the first round of the 5A playoffs. The team is heading into its first season under new coach Ashour Peera, who was a longtime assistant at a high school in Miami.
But Peera won’t be the only new thing on the sidelines. Take a look:
Yes, boys golfers have been at it for about a week now. Monday, they were joined by the companions competing in every other sport — boys and girls cross country, field hockey, football, gymnastics, boys soccer, softball, boys tennis and volleyball.
Athletes, teams and schools are taking to Twitter:
Today's the day boys, lets start the reason right today and go get us a ring! Senior year of high school make it count #Work#BrotherHood
Sports Authority Field at Mile High. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
VAIL — The championship football games in classes 4A and 5A will remain at Sports Authority Field at Mile High for at least the next four seasons.
In a deal signed this week, CHSAA and the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame extended a relationship which has existed since 2005. The contract includes two options to extend the deal by additional three-year periods.
“We’re excited to extend our relationship with the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame, and be back at Sports Authority Field at Mile High,” said assistant commissioner Harry Waterman, who oversees football.
The 2013 games were already scheduled to be held at Mile High, so the new deal runs through the 2016 season with options to extend to 2019 and 2022. This year’s 5A and 4A title games are Nov. 30.
Championship games from 6-man through 3A will all be held at a home site. Class 3A’s move to a home site is new this season. Last year’s championship was held at Legacy Stadium in Aurora.
The scoreboard during last year’s championship game. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
We will be launching coaches polls this fall as a way of presenting weekly team rankings. However, we need voters. Coaches: that’s where you come in.
Our rankings will be released each Monday, and available for any media outlet to run in their paper, online, or on their broadcast.
This fall, we hope to have coaches polls in every sport, in every classification. So we’re looking for coaches from the following sports:
Boys cross country
Girls cross country
Field hockey
Football
Boys golf
Gymnastics
Boys soccer
Softball
Boys tennis
Volleyball
Your athletic director received an email this morning with more information on the voting process. If you are interested, shoot me an email at rcasey@chsaa.org.
Please note that these polls will have no bearing postseason seeding or bracket placement.