Month: August 2013

  • Cherry Creek, Kent Denver on top of first boys tennis rankings

    Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) lead the first CHSAANow.com boys tennis polls of the season.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (7) 70
    2 Fairview 63
    3 Arapahoe 46
    4 Grand Junction 39
    5 Fossil Ridge 35
    6 Regis Jesuit 31
    7 Mountain Vista 30
    8 Boulder 24
    9 Denver East 17
    10 Chatfield 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Highlands Ranch 7, Chaparral 5, Fort Collins 2, Heritage 2, Loveland 2, Poudre 1.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (2) 45
    2 Niwot (1) 44
    3 Cheyenne Mountain (2) 42
    4 Colorado Academy 39
    5 Air Academy 30
    6 Discovery Canyon 25
    7 Mullen 17
    8 Valor Christian 12
    9 Steamboat Springs 10
    10 Aspen 6
    Others receiving votes:
    Broomfield 3, Alexander Dawson 2.
  • Eaglecrest on top of 2013’s first 5A softball ranking

    Eaglecrest, coming off a 19-5 season, opens the season as the No. 1 team in the CHSAANow.com 5A softball rankings.

    The other top-ranked teams are Pueblo East (4A) and Strasburg (3A).

    Complete rankings for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Softball Polls

    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

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Eaglecrest (4) 0-0 48
    2 Legacy 0-0 47
    3 Rock Canyon 0-0 45
    4 Dakota Ridge 0-0 43
    5 Loveland (2) 0-0 39
    6 Chatfield 0-0 30
    7 Castle View 0-0 23
    8 Arvada West 0-0 17
    9 Mountain Vista 0-0 15
    10 Grandview 0-0 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Brighton 6, Legend 5, Fossil Ridge 3, Ralston Valley 3, Cherry Creek 2, Douglas County 2.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Pueblo East (4) 0-0 58
    2 Wheat Ridge (2) 0-0 51
    3 Erie 0-0 34
    4 Niwot 0-0 32
    5 Ponderosa 0-0 26
    6 Berthoud 0-0 22
    7 Discovery Canyon 0-0 21
    8 Broomfield 0-0 15
    9 Frederick 0-0 13
    10 Mountain View 0-0 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Pueblo South 11, Silver Creek 9, Thompson Valley 9, D’Evelyn 8, Valor Christian 7, Pueblo West 3, Montrose 1.

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Strasburg (4) 0-0 40
    2 Valley 0-0 36
    3 Holy Family 0-0 31
    4 Rocky Ford 0-0 29
    5 Sterling 0-0 22
    6 Eaton 0-0 17
    7 La Junta 0-0 15
    8 Burlington 0-0 12
    9 Florence 0-0 10
    10 Basalt 0-0 5
    Others receiving votes:
    Lamar 3.
  • Defending champions head preseason volleyball rankings

    Doherty (5A), Lewis-Palmer (4A), Valley (3A), Lutheran (2A) and Caliche (1A) lead the preseason CHSAANow.com volleyball polls.

    Lewis-Palmer is the lone top-ranked team not coming off a championship in 2012. Cheyenne Mountain won 4A last season.

    Complete rankings are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Volleyball Polls

    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

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Doherty (5) 0-0 66
    2 Grandview (2) 0-0 60
    3 Cherry Creek 0-0 52
    4 Chaparral 0-0 42
    5 Eaglecrest 0-0 41
    6 Mountain Vista 0-0 32
    7 Cherokee Trail 0-0 28
    8 Lakewood 0-0 15
    9 Arapahoe 0-0 12
    10 Legend 0-0 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Pine Creek 7, Chatfield 6, Highlands Ranch 5, Regis Jesuit 5, Fossil Ridge 4.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Lewis-Palmer (4) 0-0 66
    2 Cheyenne Mountain (3) 0-0 65
    3 Valor Christian 0-0 49
    4 Longmont 0-0 40
    5 Coronado 0-0 36
    6 Windsor 0-0 32
    7 Ponderosa 0-0 29
    8 Thomas Jefferson 0-0 20
    9 Durango 0-0 16
    10 Thompson Valley 0-0 11
    Others receiving votes:
    Air Academy 7, Elizabeth 6, Pueblo West 5, D’Evelyn 2, Mullen 1.

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Valley (5) 0-0 50
    2 Gunnison 0-0 40
    3 Platte Valley 0-0 37
    4 St. Mary’s 0-0 33
    5 Bayfield 0-0 31
    6 Eaton 0-0 25
    7 Roaring Fork 0-0 22
    8 University 0-0 15
    9 Manitou Springs 0-0 10
    10 C.S. Christian 0-0 6
    Others receiving votes:
    Holy Family 3, Sterling 2, Lamar 1.

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Lutheran (4) 0-0 49
    2 Swink 0-0 39
    3 Akron 0-0 38
    4 Simla 0-0 35
    5 Yuma (1) 0-0 29
    6 Resurrection Christian 0-0 25
    7 Rye 0-0 22
    8 Paonia 0-0 17
    9 Fowler 0-0 11
    10 Meeker 0-0 8
    Others receiving votes:
    Springfield 2.

    Class 1A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Caliche (3) 0-0 39
    2 Fleming 0-0 32
    3 Otis 0-0 31
    4 Hi-Plains 0-0 25
    5 Kit Carson 0-0 21
    6 Stratton 0-0 17
    7 Weldon Valley (1) 0-0 15
    8 Eads 0-0 11
    9 Flagler 0-0 9
    10 Idalia 0-0 8
    Others receiving votes:
    Pawnee 3, Walsh 3, Wiley 3, Edison 2, Norwood 1.
  • Valor Christian grabs preseason No. 1 ranking in CHSAANow.com football poll

    Valor Christian is the preseason No. 1 team in Class 5A. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
    Valor Christian is the preseason No. 1 team in Class 5A. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    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]

    CHSAANow.com Football Polls

    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.
  • Live coverage plans during the 2013-14 season kick off with Zero Week chat

    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.

  • NFHS concussion course hits one million users

    INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — One million concussion courses have now been taken by coaches and other individuals since the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed the online course in May 2010.

    Earlier this week, the millionth “Concussion in Sports – What You Need to Know” course was taken through the NFHS Coach Education Program at nfhslearn.com. This free online course provides an overview of how a person can recognize signs and symptoms of a concussion and the appropriate action to take. The course includes each state’s return-to-play guidelines required for high schools.

    “We place great emphasis on concussion recognition and treatment, and the extraordinary success of our online course has been gratifying,” said Bob Gardner, NFHS executive director. “The course is 20 minutes long and it’s free. We commend everyone who has taken it.”

    The NFHS and its Sports Medicine Advisory Committee (SMAC) have worked with the CDC on recent updates to the concussion course. Recommendations have been added regarding the prevention of concussions, and the course test has been updated. The tests (pre-test and post-test) now include 11 questions and provide immediate feedback to the user, thereby creating a better learning experience.

    Michael Koester, M.D., former chair of the NFHS SMAC and director of the Sports Concussion Program at the Slocum Center for Orthopedics and Sports Medicine in Eugene, Oregon, is the on-screen host of the concussion course. Individuals have access to the course’s printable resources, including a parent’s guide to concussion in sports, a coach’s guide, an athlete fact sheet and materials to implement a protocol for concussion treatment.

    “In addition to coaches, we are pleased that many contest officials, administrators, parents and students are among the one million individuals who have taken the concussion course,” said Tim Flannery, NFHS director of coach education.

    The NFHS has been a leader among national sports organizations in establishing guidelines to deal with concussions. In 2008, the SMAC advocated that a concussed athlete must be removed from play and not allowed to play on the same day. For the past four years, all NFHS rules publications have contained guidelines for the management of a student exhibiting signs, symptoms or behaviors consistent with a concussion.

    A total of 34 online courses are now offered through the NFHS Coach Education Program, including the two core courses – “Fundamentals of Coaching” and “First Aid, Health and Safety for Coaches.” The NFHS also offers 14 sport-specific courses and 18 elective courses, including 13 that are free.

    All NFHS Coach Education Program courses are available at nfhslearn.com.

  • 29 games mark CHSAA’s “Zero Week” football schedule

    Silver Creek, the defending 3A champion, opens Colorado's high school football schedule.
    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:

    August 22

    3A Silver Creek @ Poinciana, Fla. – 7:30 p.m.

    August 23

    2A Bishop Machebeuf @ 2A Manual – 7:00 p.m.

    2A Bennett @ 2A Faith Christian – 7:00 p.m.

    2A Eaton @ 2A The Academy – 7:00 p.m.

    2A Basalt @ 1A Paonia – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Coronado @ 3A Pueblo County – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Battle Mountain @ 3A Glenwood Springs – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Lutheran @ Faith Lutheran, NV – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Weld Central @ 3A Evergreen – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Vista Peak @ 5A Hinkley – 6:00 p.m.

    1A Cedaredge @ 3A Eagle Valley – 7:00 p.m.

    4A Littleton @ 4A Standley Lake – 7:00 p.m. (NAAC)

    4A Vista Ridge @ 4A Montrose – 7:00 p.m.

    5A Ralston Valley @ 5A Mullen – 7:00 p.m.

    5A Grand Junction @ 5A Prairie View – 7:00 p.m.

    5A Fruita Monument @ 5A Adams City – 7:00 p.m.

    A8 Dayspring Academy @ A8 Kiowa – 7:00 p.m.

    A8 Sargent @ A8 Fowler – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Mitchell at 3A La Junta – 7:00 p.m.

    3A Discovery Canyon at 3A Pueblo Central – 7:00 p.m.

    August 24

    1A Jefferson @ 2A Pinnacle – 7:00 p.m. (5 Star Stadium)

    1A Cornerstone Christian @ 1A Nederland – 1:00 p.m.

    2A Middle Park @ 3A Sierra – 1:00 p.m.

    3A Lewis-Palmer @ 3A Pueblo East – 7:00 p.m.

    Fresno, Calif., Central East @ 5A Valor Christian – 8:00 p.m.

    A8 Dove Creek @ A8 Simla – 3:00 p.m.

    A8 Gilpin County @ A8 Miami-Yoder – 1:00 p.m.

    A8 Rocky Mountain Lutheran @ A8 Antonito – 1:00 p.m.

    A8 Holly @ A8 Sangre de Cristo – 1:00 (@Hoehne)

  • Changes in substitution procedures highlight boys lacrosse rules changes

    INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Major changes in substitution procedures in high school boys lacrosse will take effect with the 2014 season. For stoppages of play due to an out-of-bounds ball, a horn will no longer be sounded to allow time for substitution. Instead, players may substitute “on the fly” as they can during normal play.

    This was one of 19 rules changes approved by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Boys Lacrosse Rules Committee at its July 16-18 meeting in Indianapolis. All rules changes were subsequently approved by the NFHS Board of Directors.

    While substitution may occur during playing action, Rule 4-22 lists the various conditions under which substitution may occur. In addition, substitution may take place while play is suspended as follows: end of a period, scoring of a goal, injury time-out, equipment adjustment, after a time-serving penalty and during a team time-out.

    A new article was added to Rule 7-2 to reduce congestion in the penalty area. A maximum of three players from the same team can be in the penalty area serving penalties at the same time. The penalty time of any additional players(s) shall not start until the penalty time of one of the three players in the penalty area expires.

    Kent Summers, NFHS director of performing arts and sports and liaison to the Boys Lacrosse Rules Committee, said any additional penalized player(s) shall wait in the bench area immediately next to the scorer’s table but not in the table area. A team shall not be required to play with fewer than seven on-field players solely because of players serving penalties. In addition, a player’s penalty cannot be released by a goal until he is in the penalty area and the time on his penalty has started to elapse.

    “The Boys Lacrosse Rules Committee believes this change should minimize risk for participants and clarify procedures for administration of penalties and substitution,” Summers said.

    In another change designed to minimize risk, the committee added a fifth example of an illegal body-check. Rule 5-3-5 will state that an illegal body-check is one that targets a player in a defenseless position. This includes but is not limited to: a) body-checking a player from his “blind side”; b) body-checking a player who has his head down in an attempt to play a loose ball; and c) body-checking a player whose head is turned away to receive a pass, even if that player turns toward the contact immediately before the body-check. A minimum of a two- or three-minute non releasable penalty is assessed for this violation.

    “Intentional player-to-player collisions with players in a defenseless position are a concern, and this revision will reinforce the need to eliminate these collisions from the game,” Summers said.

    In Rule 5-4 – Checks Involving the Head/Neck – the penalty for a violation was strengthened by dropping the possibility of a one-minute penalty. Thus, a minimum two- or three-minute non releasable penalty will now be enforced for this violation. Summers said this increased penalty will reinforce the need to eliminate hits to the head/neck from the game.

    Besides the substitution procedures changes, the committee altered three other rules in Rule 4 – Play of the Game. In Rule 4-4-3, during the faceoff in all penalty situations, there now must be four players in the defensive area and three players in the offensive area. An exception is when a team has three players in the penalty area, a player may come out of his defensive area to take the faceoff but must remain onside.

    In Rule 4-10 regarding offside, a team now is considered offside when it has more than six players in its offensive half of the field, including players in the penalty box, or more than seven players in its defensive half of the field, including players in the penalty box.

    “The unfair advantage in an offside situation is created by too many players on one side of the field – not too few,” Summers said. “This change lets the foul reflect the unfair advantage and minimizes risk by allowing officials to ‘count forward,’ keeping their attention on the active side of the field.”

    In Rule 4-12, Article 4 and Article 5 were deleted to address confusion with enforcement of the offside rule.

    As with other NFHS rules committee, the Boys Lacrosse Rules Committee revised the rule regarding use of electronic devices. Rule 1-10-2 will now allow the use of electronic equipment by coaches and players on the sideline. However, Rule 6-6-3 still prohibits the use of electronic devices to communicate with any of the 10 on-field players.

    Rules 2-6-1 and 2-6-7 were revised to state that the officials’ authority concludes when they leave the “immediate playing facility” rather than when they leave the “field of play.”

    “Officials should continue to have some jurisdiction if there is an incident after they step off the ‘field of play,’” Summers said. “This revision is consistent with the language that gives state associations the ability to address situations that happen before, during and after the game.”

    In Rule 2-5, it is now recommended that a minimum of three officials be used to control the game (referee, umpire and field judge). While not a requirement, Summers said this change in philosophy is indicated in order to better control play, especially with the increased speed of the game.

    Following are other changes approved by the Boys Lacrosse Rules Committee:

    Rules 1-2-7, 8, 9: Increases the size of the substitution/table area to allow more space for players to get on and off the field and create better sight-lines for table personnel.

    Rule 1-7-5: Any crosse used in a faceoff may not have tape on the plastic throat of the head.

    Rule 1-9-1: Beginning with the 2017-18 school year, legal numbers are 0-99. This would prohibit double-digit numbers from zero through 9 (00, 01, 02, etc.).

    Rule 1-10-1h: Eye shade that is not a solid stroke or includes words, numbers logos or other symbols within the eye shade is prohibited.

    Rule 2-5-2: Part (e) of the recommended uniform for officials was changed as follows: “black stirrup socks with white over-the-calf crew socks on top or knee-length one-piece white with 4-inch black top or short black socks that cover the ankle.”

    Rule 2-6-1Note: Clarifies that the officials maintain jurisdiction of interrupted and/or suspended contests.

    Rule 2-10-1: At the start of each period, a minimum of four balls should be spaced equidistant from each other five yards beyond the end line and four on both sidelines. On the bench side, balls should be placed at the scorer’s table.

    Rule 7-8-2k: During a Flag Down situation (Slow Whistle), the officials will now stop play to enforce penalties on a second defensive foul “during the final two minutes of regulation play with the team that is ahead and possessing the ball in the goal/attack area, unless a scoring play is imminent.”

    According to the 2011-12 NFHS Athletics Participation Survey, 2,338 schools sponsor boys lacrosse at the high school level with 100,641 participants nationwide.

  • Photo gallery: Smoky Hill opens football practice

    Smoky Hill has a new level of excitement with new coach Justin Hoffman. Here are shots from his first official practice with the Buffaloes.

  • Hoffman bringing excitement to Smoky Hill’s football program

    Smoky Hill's team huddles during practice on Monday.
    Smoky Hill’s team huddles during practice on Monday. More photos. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    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.

    New Smoky Hill coach Justin Hoffman.
    New Smoky Hill coach Justin Hoffman. More photos. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    “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