Archive for the ‘Staff’ Category

The CHSAA is hiring a finance director

The Colorado High School Activities Association is currently accepting applicants to fill its Finance Director position. The application deadline is Aug. 6.

Please send a cover letter with preferred salary range, resume, and three references with mobile phone numbers (no letters). Send these application materials to svernonbrunner@chsaa.org and clenz@chsaa.org with the job title in the subject line.

Here is a link to the job descriptions and details.

[pdf-embedder url=”https://old.chsaanow.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/CHSAA-Job-Description-Finance-Director.pdf”]

Brad Cochi named CHSAA Director of Digital Media

Brad Cochi

Brad Cochi.

Veteran prep sportswriter, photographer, digital producer and editor Brad Cochi has been named Director of Digital Media, CHSAA Commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green announced Wednesday. Cochi will assume his new duties on April 12.

“We are excited for the national opportunity presented to Ryan Casey to work with MaxPreps. Ryan opened the door for the Association to think outside of the paper-pencil box. He will be greatly missed but will continue to work with our team through our long-standing corporate partnership. We are equally excited for our membership and prep athletes across the state, and our high school communities as Brad Cochi takes the helm to begin the grass root initiative of building the CHSAA Digital Media Department as its director. He is a great addition to our staff,” Blanford-Green said.

Cochi replaces Casey, who held the position for the past eight years.

Cochi has extensive experience in multi-media journalism and has worked the past 10 years for BoCoPreps.com, part of Prairie Mountain Publishing, whose holdings include the Longmont Times-Call and Boulder Daily Camera.

His duties included producing and editing written copy for award-winning online and print media, shooting and editing video interviews and highlights, producing video talk shows and special series, along with marketing and administrative strategy.

His experience includes maintaining web sites and he was the creator and producer for the video series Brad vs. BoCoPreps and BoCoPreps.com Podcast.

“I can’t wait to get started,” Cochi said. “I have really enjoyed covering Colorado high school activities in multiple capacities for more than 12 years now, and I couldn’t be more excited for this new opportunity to continue covering, promoting and supporting student-athletes across Colorado.”

Cochi served as sports editor for the Canon City Daily Record, was sports editor of the CU Independent while in college and was a research intern for longtime Sports Illustrated and ESPN report, Rick Reilly.

He has an MBA in Management/Marketing from the University of Colorado-Denver after completing his BS in Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Colorado-Boulder. Cochi has won a number of awards for writing and website work.

CHSAA’s Tom Robinson serves as replay coordinator for college football national championship

5A girls golf Tom Robinson

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

CHSAA associate commissioner Tom Robinson served as the replay coordinator during college football’s National Championship game on Monday.

Robinson oversees officials, boys and girls golf and sportsmanship in the CHSAA office, and has worked for the Association for the past 19 years. He also serves as the replay coordinator for the Big XII Conference, and oversees the replay operation each weekend during the fall at the conference’s Replay Operations Center.

A Big XII officiating crew was assigned to work the national title game. So as part of that, Robinson served as the replay coordinator of the National Championship game, which saw Alabama beat Ohio State.

“I’m blessed, man,” Robinson said last week.

Robinson also served in the same capacity for the national semifinal game between Ohio State and Clemson.

This was the second National Championship game Robinson has worked. He was the game’s replay official in 2017.

“Not as nerve-wracking as the first one,” Robinson said. “It feels like you’re back in the hot seat, for sure. There’s just not a lot of people that get to do it, that get to go, that get to be in the front row. It’s pretty amazing that I’m the one walking through the door.”

Prior to becoming the replay coordinator for the Big XII, Robinson worked in the Replay Operations Center for two years.

Robinson was an on-field official in the Western Athletic Conference and Mountain West from 1975-2000, and worked the Bluebonnet, Fiesta, Rose, Cotton, Gator, Independence and Citrus Bowls during his career. He was also a high school official from 1969-75.

He was named CHSAA’s associate commissioner in 2014, and is in charge of golf and sportsmanship for the Association. He has served on the football and basketball rules committees for the National Federation of State High School Associations.

Robinson is a 1969 graduate of Colorado State University where he ran track, played basketball and football.

Prior to joining CHSAA in 2001, he was a math teacher and coach at Regis Jesuit for 30 years, and also served as the school’s director of diversity for six years.

Job opening: Financial Officer in CHSAA office

We have an opening for a Financial Officer in our office. Click inside to view more information.

Former commissioner Paul Angelico to receive NFHS Citation award

State track graduation

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

INDIANAPOLIS — Twelve leaders in high school activity programs across the country have been selected to receive National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Citations, including former CHSAA commissioner Paul Angelico.

An award designed to honor individuals who have made contributions to the NFHS, state high school associations, athletic director and coaching professions, the officiating avocation and fine arts/performing arts programs, the NFHS Citation is one of the most highly regarded achievements in high school athletics and performing arts.

The 2020 NFHS Citation recipients will receive their awards June 30 at the annual NFHS Summer Meeting in Denver, Colorado.      

Eight of the 12 award winners represent NFHS-member state high school associations, and four represent NFHS professional organizations for officials, coaches, music leaders and speech/debate/theatre directors.

The eight state association recipients are Tom Mezzanotte, Section 1, executive director, Rhode Island Interscholastic League, Warwick, Rhode Island; Mark Byers, Section 2, chief operating officer, Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania; Nessie Harris, Section 3, retired associate commissioner, South Carolina High School League, Columbia, South Carolina; Kurt Gibson, Section 4, associate commissioner, Illinois High School Association, Bloomington, Illinois; Kathy Long, Section 5, administrative assistant, Missouri State High School Activities Association, Columbia, Missouri; Paul Angelico, Section 6, retired commissioner, Colorado High School Activities Association, Aurora, Colorado; Thomas Yoshida, Section 7, Hawaii High School Athletic Association, Honolulu, Hawaii; and Russell Schreckenghost, Section 8, associate director, Alaska School Activities Association, Anchorage, Alaska. 

The four Citation recipients representing the NFHS professional organizations are Joe Tonelli, NFHS Officials Association, executive staff member, Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference, Cheshire, Connecticut; Rob Younger, NFHS Coaches Association, executive director, Oregon Athletic Coaches Association, Sweet Home, Oregon; Cathleen Britton, NFHS Music Association, retired director of music, O’Gorman High School, Sioux Falls, South Dakota; and Cheryl Frazier, NFHS Speech/Debate/Theatre/Academics Association, director of forensics and theatre, Southland College Prep High School, Richton Park, Illinois.  

Assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann to be inducted into Colorado Dugout Club Hall of Fame

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

CHSAA assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann is among eight inductees to the Colorado Dugout Club Coaches Hall of Fame class of 2020, the organization announced on Wednesday.

The Colorado Dugout Club is baseball’s coaches association, and annually inducts new members into the Hall of Fame. The ceremony for the 2020 class is Jan. 17, 2020 at the Marriott Tech Center.

In a statement announcing the class, the Dugout Club wrote:

Along the way, many of these nominees again crossed paths with previous classes inductees, and intertwined with a single purpose — to add their special touch to unify players, coaches and schools. And they did that with an uncanny ability and grace that has helped develop the highest standard for others to follow.

These men, as did the previous year’s groups and the inaugural class, have achieved above the norm. Their contributions and influence created legacies along the way that impacted those throughout the state, region, nation and internationally. Their involvement within and outside their respective communities have led others to refer to them as “Baseball Guys” and “Mr. Baseball.”

The list of 2020 inductees includes:

  • CHSAA Assistant Commissioner Bert Borgmann
  • Long time former head baseball coach at Colorado University Frank “Chief” Prentup
  • Former head coach at Mullen HS and Metro State University Vince Porreco
  • Long time baseball coach at Colorado School of Mines Jim Darden
  • Longtime baseball coach and tournament organizer in Pueblo Joe Andenucio
  • Former head baseball coach in Rifle Gordon Cooper
  • Current head baseball coach at Sargent HS Terry Van Bibber
  • Longtime Denver area head and assistant coach Bob Dampier
Legislative Council

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Rhonda Blanford-Green inducted into Nebraska’s Hall of Fame

(CHSAANow.com)

Rhonda Blanford-Green, CHSAA’s commissioner, was inducted into the University of Nebraska Hall of Fame on Saturday.

One of seven inductees who was honored during the school’s football game, Blanford-Green competed for the Huskers from 1982-85 and was an 18-time Big Eight champion and eight-time All-American. She holds the school mark in the 50-meter hurdles, 60-yard hurdles and the 55-meter hurdles.

A member of three national championship teams, the Huskers swept the indoor and outdoor Big Eight titles throughout her career. She was one of the first athletes – male or female – to win five gold medals in a conference championship meet.

Blanford-Green worked at CHSAA both as assistant commissioner and associate commissioner from 1996-2012 and was named CHSAA commissioner in 2017.

She was executive director at the Nebraska School Activities Association from 2012-15 and was assistant executive director at the Louisiana High School Athletic Association from 2015-2017. At various times in Colorado, she oversaw boys’ soccer, spirit, track and field, cross country, hockey and skiing. She also oversaw equity, marketing, public relations and legislative relations.

She started many initiatives at CHSAA, including the creation of the Association’s transgender policy, which has since become a national model used by other states.

In 2012, Blanford-Green was named the executive director of the Nebraska School Activities Association, becoming the first African-American woman in the country to serve in that capacity. She is the first female to serve as CHSAA’s commissioner, as well as the first African-American.

A 1981 graduate of Aurora Central High School, where she starred in track and also competed in spirit and volleyball, Blanford-Green went on to excel in track at the University of Nebraska.

She was the national prep leader in the 30-inch hurdles and held three state records in the 100-meter hurdles, 100-meter dash and long jump. After college, she twice qualified for the U.S. Olympic trials.

She was coached at the University of Wyoming for several years before joining CHSAA.

Blanford-Green is a member of the CHSAA Hall of Fame as a participant (2012 inductee), the Sportswoman of Colorado Hall of Fame, the Nebraska Black Sports Hall of Fame, and the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame.

(CHSAANow.com)

(CHSAANow.com)

Commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green named to Nebraska Hall of Fame

Rhonda Blanford-Green

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Colorado High School Activities Association Commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green is one of seven inductees into the University of Nebraska Hall of Fame, joining “pioneer inductees” Carol Frost, Ed Weir, Greichaly Cepero (volleyball/basketball, 1999-2003), Wes Suter (gymnastics 1983-86), Grant Winstrom (football, 1994-97) and Francis Allen (gymnastics coach, 1970-2009).

Commissioner Blanford-Green competed for the Huskers from 1982-85 and was an 18-time Big Eight champion and eight-time All-American. She holds the school mark in the 50-meter hurdles, 60-yard hurdles and the 55-meter hurdles. A member of three national championship teams, the Huskers swept the indoor and outdoor Big Eight titles throughout her career. She was one of the first athletes – male or female – to win five gold medals in a conference championship meet.

Blanford-Green worked at CHSAA both as assistant commissioner and associate commissioner from 1996-2012 and was named CHSAA commissioner in 2017. She was executive director at the Nebraska School Activities Association from 2012-15 and was assistant executive director at the Louisiana High School Athletic Association from 2015-2017. At various times in Colorado, she oversaw boys’ soccer, spirit, track and field, cross country, hockey and skiing. She also oversaw equity, marketing, public relations and legislative relations. She started many initiatives at CHSAA, including the creation of the Association’s transgender policy, which has since become a national model used by other states.

In 2012, Blanford-Green was named the executive director of the Nebraska School Activities Association, becoming the first African-American woman in the country to serve in that capacity. She is the first female to serve as CHSAA’s commissioner, as well as the first African-American.

A 1981 graduate of Aurora Central High School, where she starred in track and also competed in spirit and volleyball, Blanford-Green went on to excel in track at the University of Nebraska. She was the national prep leader in the 30-inch hurdles and held three state records in the 100-meter hurdles, 100-meter dash and long jump. After college, she twice qualified for the U.S. Olympic trials. She was coached at the University of Wyoming for several years before joining CHSAA.

Blanford-Green is a member of the CHSAA Hall of Fame as a participant (2012 inductee), the Sportswoman of Colorado Hall of Fame, the Nebraska Black Sports Hall of Fame, and the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame.

The 2019 class will be introduced August 30, then recognized during the university’s football game the next day.

CHSAA hires Adam Bright and Justin Saylor as new assistant commissioners

CHSAA seal plaque

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

AURORA — Seeing a fit as trailblazers and innovative thinkers who come from backgrounds as coaches and athletic administrators, commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green has announced the hires of Adam Bright and Justin Saylor to the CHSAA staff.

Bright is currently the athletic director in Durango, and Saylor is the manager of high school athletics for Denver Public Schools. Bright and Saylor, hired as assistant commissioners, will begin their new roles on July 1.

“I am unbelievably excited to announce these new additions to our team,” Blanford-Green said. “They will both bring valuable experience from their current and past roles, and also bring the type of forward-thinking mentality necessary to stay relevant with the future of interscholastic administration and student participation.

“Both Justin and Adam have a combination of educationally-based leadership and diverse backgrounds that will continue to keep Colorado at the forefront nationally,” Blanford-Green added. “They are each difference-makers with student-participants across the state.”

Said Saylor: “It is something that I have always been passionate about, and I am interested in. When the job opened up this year, I felt like it was perfect timing for myself, and I was really excited about the possibility of working at CHSAA. When I found out that I did get the job, I was really excited, and I am also ready to hit the ground running when that time comes.”

Said Bright: “It’s exciting, and I’m humbled. There’s a great tradition at CHSAA, and I want to be a part of that tradition. We’ve got the 100-year mark coming up here in a couple of years, and I want to be a part of that, and continue where CHSAA’s going, and be part of that journey.”

Blanford-Green will officially assign their duties, including the sports and activities they will oversee, prior to their start date.

The duo replace Bud Ozzello, who is retiring after nine years at CHSAA, and Ernie Derrera, who has accepted a job as an assistant principal/athletic director at the new Severance High School.

Adam Bright

Bright has most recently been the athletic director at Durango, a role that has since grown to a district athletic director position.

At Durango, Bright has sought to make each game or meet he held a spectacular event. His forte is raising the bar for high school events, including when he recently spearheaded the school’s hosting of the state skiing championships last month, and set up an opening ceremony complete with fireworks.

“For me, our purpose in being in education-based athletics and activities is to help teach life lessons,” Bright said. “But I think life lessons really get attached to different degrees through experiences. If we can make our events something that’s a big experience, that will make all of those life lessons that our coaches want to teach more impactful.”

On a state level, Bright has served on the Classification and League Organizing and Appeals Committee, as well as the Bylaw Handbook Committee.

Bright stressed that he would miss living in Durango and being part of that community on a day-to-day basis.

“We’re going to miss living in the community,” Bright said. “If CHSAA was located in Durango, it’d be a win-win.”

Prior to Durango, Bright was the athletic director and football coach at Middle Park from 2013-16.

A native of Texas, he was also the head football coach and athletic director at Winters High School, and an assistant football coach at Caprock in Amarillo, Tex. Bright also was a football assistant at Southeastern Oklahoma State University.

Bright’s other experience includes time as a general manager in minor league baseball — with the Greenville (Miss.) Bluesman and West Tenn Jaxx in Jackson, Tenn. — and in the front office of the MLB’s Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Bright and his wife, Jessica, have a son, Preston.

Bright said that working at CHSAA was “an opportunity to do what we do through educationally-based activities for our students at Durango High School, and we get to do that for numerous kids across the state. While it may be less of a day-to-day, one-on-one impact, I think the ripple effect is bigger.”

5A boys state golf

Justin Saylor, left. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Saylor has been with Denver Public Schools since 2008, helping to facilitate the district’s athletics for more than 90,000 students. He started with the district’s middle school athletics, and has been involved with their high school athletics since 2011. Saylor is a Certified Master Athletic Administrator.

“I think it’s an exciting new challenge for me to now work at the state level,” Saylor said. “It’s an opportunity for me, as a former collegiate soccer player, as a lacrosse player, to kind of give some exposure at the state level to some sports that aren’t quite as visible and to hopefully take some of those sports to the next level.”

Saylor’s sports roots started in his native Ohio, where he grew up playing soccer, lacrosse and football in Cleveland. After high school, he played college soccer at Hofstra and Wilmington College. His dad has served as the girls lacrosse coach at Cleveland Heights High School for more than 30 years.

“I grew up the son of a coach,” Saylor said. “High school athletics have always been a passion of mine. It really shaped me as a person growing up playing sports in high school.”

Saylor got his professional start in athletics as the head lacrosse coach at Dublin Coffman (Ohio). After moving to DPS, he became the chair of the CHSAA soccer committee from 2012-18. At DPS, he serves on the district-wide waiver committee regarding student eligibility.

He has also been very involved in event management at the state level, serving as a state tournament site host for field hockey, boys lacrosse, boys soccer, girls soccer and boys golf. He was also a regional host for wrestling, cross country, boys golf, girls golf and softball.

Additionally, Saylor has served on seeding committees for baseball, basketball, girls soccer, boys soccer and softball.

Outside of high school sports, Saylor has also worked as part of the event management team for the NCAA women’s basketball Final Four in Denver, and in Cleveland.

Saylor said it was a hard decision to leave DPS, and that he was looking forward to what’s ahead.

“I’ve made a lot of really, really great hopefully lifetime friends over the last 11 years at Denver Public Schools,” Saylor said. “I’ve always said to myself that the only way I would leave Denver Public Schools was if it was the perfect and the right situation for me, and I feel like this is. It’s the right decision for me, and I’m looking forward to continuing to working with a lot of my friends, just in a little bit different capacity, and serving the state of Colorado.”

Blanford-Green said she was inspired by the applicant pool the positions drew.

“Thank you to all the administrators and community advocates that sought to be a part of the CHSAA team,” Blanford-Green said. “I was inspired by the candidate pool for these positions, as we know we will continue to have excellence in the field, as well as in our office.”

CHSAA office announces two Assistant Commissioner positions

Bud Ozzello

Bud Ozzello. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

AURORA — The CHSAA office announced two job openings on Monday for an Assistant Commissioner during its round table for all member schools.

Bud Ozzello, who has been at CHSAA since 2009, is set to retire this summer. A graduate of La Junta, Ozzello later taught business and coached baseball, softball and girls basketball at the school before becoming the Tigers’ athletic director, and later, principal.

Ozzello’s LJHS softball team won the 1999 3A title. He is a graduate of CSU and Adams State.

Ozzello served on the CHSAA Board of Directors prior to his appointment to the staff, and served on the CHSAA’s baseball, softball and Hall of Fame committees. He oversees football, softball, ice hockey and speech for the Association.

In addition, assistant commissioner Ernie Derrera has accepted a job as an assistant principal and athletic director at the new Severance High School, which is set to open in the Northern part of the state next fall.

Prior to joining CHSAA in 2017, Derrera was an athletic director and coach at Thompson Valley, Roosevelt and Frederick. He currently oversees wrestling, soccer, and student leadership for the Association.

“Our Association will truly miss the contributions Bud Ozzello has made to students and high school activities,” CHSAA commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green said. “We look forward to celebrating both Bud and Ernie’s impact to our state in the coming months, and are excited to add new members to the CHSAA team!”

Both jobs are posted at CHSAANow.com/apply.

State wrestling Ernie Derrera

Ernie Derrera. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)