Month: September 2013

  • No. 2 Limon wins its homecoming over Burlington

    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)
    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)

    LIMON — The Limon Badgers, ranked No. 2 in 1A by CHSAANow.com, totaled more than 500 yards total offense in downing Burlington 35-14 at Lloyd Gaskill Field. The game was Limon High School’s 51st Homecoming win in 68 tries.

    With the win, Coach Mike O’Dwyer’s Badgers start the season 4-0, while Glynn Higgs’ Cougars fall to 1-3.

    But miscues by the Badgers throughout the game gave life to the Cougars, who came back in the second half to make a game of it.

    In the first half, Gavin Liggett was the key to Limon’s 21-0 lead. At 9:12 in the first quarter, Liggett scored from 21 yards out, but his PAT try missed, leaving Limon up 6-0 after one quarter. Liggett, who scored on a 38-yard run late in the second, ran for 117 yards in the first half.

    Kerigan Kappel scored early in the second on a 6-yard run and Liggett added a two-point conversion to make it 14-0 in favor of the home team. Liggett’s 38-yard sideline to sideline romp and subsequent PAT made it 21-0 Limon at halftime.

    Burlington, looking for a big defensive stand late in the third, saw Ligget slip around left end and ramble 92 yards for a touchdown. His PAT made it 28-0 and Limon looked to be cruising along.

    The Cougars kept the pressure on, though, when Martin Torres rumbled off tackle for 58 yards and a score with 40.7 seconds left in the third. A Jonathan Lopez PAT made the score 28-7.

    The fourth quarter saw both teams move up and down the field, with Burlington ultimately threatening at the 1-yard-line at 3:20 when Chance Carlin and Eloy Sandoval missed on a handoff. Liggett recovered the fumble and it looked like the game might be over. One the very next play, Liggett mishandled the snap and the Cougars’ Lopez fell on the ball in the end zone for a touchdown. His PAT made it 28-14 and the Cougars were right back in the game with 3:10 remaining.

    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)
    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)

    Several long passes and timely runs had Limon at Burlington’s 20-yard line with about 1:40 left. Liggett took a knee, but on the next two plays, Burlington’s defense stifled two attempts by Kappel. So, with 1:01 remaining Liggett dropped back to pass and hit Kappel in the end zone for a 22-yard score. His PAT made it 35-14.

    Carlin moved the Cougars to midfield, but his final last gasp throw went just out of the reach of Mitchell Richardson and time ran out.

    In end, Liggett had run nine times for 214 yards and three TDs, while completing 6-of-11 passes for 105 yards and the scoring toss to Kappel. He was intercepted by linebacker Josh Satterly in the third quarter.

    Kappel had 155 yards on 23 carries and one TD, but also caught the TD pass. Luke Meier added 58 yards for the Badgers, while James Larson had 13. In all, Limon ran for 440 yards on 39 carries. The Badgers lost four of five fumbles.

    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)
    (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)

    For the Cougars, Torres pounded out 108 yards on 12 carries including his 58-yard TD run. Sandoval had 68 yards on 16 carries, while Nik Reese added 4 yards and Carlin 2. Carlin was 9-of-17 for 96 yards and one interception. Burlington lost one of two fumbles.

    Limon plays host to Las Animas next Friday at 7:00 p.m., while Burlington plays host to Calhan Friday at 6:00 p.m.

  • Photo gallery: Pomona beats Chaparral 20-9 in football

    Pomona’s defense held firm in the final minute and got a pick-six in the final minute to seal a 20-9 win over Chaparral on Friday night.

  • Thompson’s scramble gives Montbello a big win over Denver South

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    DENVER — Facing third-and-forever, A.J. Thompson heard a voice in his head. It belonged to his coach.

    Stay calm, it said. Stay poised.

    Thompson dropped back on third down and 43 from his own 48-yard-line. His No. 9 Montbello Warriors were tied at 24 with No. 2 Denver South, and less than three minutes remained in regulation time.

    He scanned his receivers, and saw no opening. So Thompson pulled the ball down, cut through the mass of bodies at the line, and took off. He dodged a defender at South’s 30, then cut to the sideline to his right. He was gone.

    Fifty-two yards later: Touchdown, Montbello. Game, Montbello.

    “Forcing the pass wasn’t going to help anything,” Thompson said afterward. “I just watch quarterbacks, and the great ones make plays, no matter what. You can’t settle for one style.”

    The 31-24 victory on Saturday at Evie Dennis Sports Complex was Montbello’s first over South since 2005. The Rebels had won the three previous meetings by a combined score of 135-9.

    “They beat us two years in a row — embarrassed us, not just beat us, but embarrassed us,” said Thompson, a senior who finished with three total touchdowns. “We came in here, and we told ourselves it wasn’t going to happen again, especially on our own turf.”

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Montbello (4-0) jumped all over South (3-1) in the first half and opened a 17-0 lead with touchdowns separated by 21 seconds in the second quarter. Thompson scored on a 10-yard run with 8:59 remaining in the half, and Montbello recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff. Two plays later, Thompson eluded the rush in the pocket and found Jante Gadson for a 20-yard passing score.

    South was stunned, but battled back to cut things to 17-9 on a field goal and Zach Lindsay’s 18-yard run with 3:49 remaining before the half.

    Montbello answered. The Warriors marched right down and Jarrell Nettles had a 1-yard plunge that made it 24-9 at the break.

    During that break, the Rebels corrected some mistakes — namely nine penalties for 85 yards — and started to claw its way back. In the third quarter, a long drive was capped by a 1-yard sneak from quarterback Tyson Purifoy. That made it 24-16.

    Following a Montbello punt, another long drive from South was finished off by a second Purifoy sneak. A nice play-call, which sent Shun Johnson on a flat route to the right side of the end zone for a two-point conversion, tied the game at 24. At that point, 7:12 remained, and South was in complete command.

    Montbello’s final drive started from its 23-yard-line. Nettles’ steady running helped reverse the momentum, and then Thompson found Giovanni Torres for a big 32-yard reception. A personal foul on the Rebels moved the ball deep into South territory.

    However, two sacks and two delay-of-game flags quickly brought up third-and-43 from Montbello’s 48. Things were dire.

    “We were breaking apart, to be honest,” Thompson said. “But, as a quarterback, my coach (assistant Stanley Richardson) just tells me all the time just to be a leader.”

    Thompson’s scramble gave his team the 31-24 lead.

    “We’ve been trying to tell everybody for the last two years: we think we have the best quarterback around, and nobody’s giving him offers or anything,” said Montbello coach John Trahan. “Hopefully today, they see what type of talent he has, not only with his arm, but with his legs, and he thinks the game through.”

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Denver South did drive down to Montbello’s 16, and had two shots at the end zone, but turned the ball over on downs.

    “They know how to play tight games, they’ve been there, they have big linemen, all the things, and they know how to win a close game,” Trahan said of South. “Our kids grew up a lot today, and they hung in there.”

    Montbello has now matched its win total from all of last season, when the Warriors were 4-6. The program, which was 3-26 from 2009-11, is in search of its first playoff appearance since 2008.

    Saturday, the Warriors got their first real test of the 2013 season. Even with the 3-0 start, Montbello’s opponents were a combined 1-10 and the Warriors had outscored those foes 140-33. Montbello’s next three games are against Wheat Ridge, Standley Lake and Monarch — three teams all ranked in CHSAANow.com’s 4A top-10.

    “One thing we said even before we left our school today: I said, ‘I hope that we’re in a tight game, because we need to build some character with the rest of the schedule we have the rest of the year,’ ” Trahan said.

    “We’ve been blowing teams out and winning by big margins, but you learn how to win in a dogfight game. We knew South was going to come out extremely hard in the third quarter and we talked about that. We had the character to endure that, and then bounce back. Great thing we had A.J. Thompson to make that play.”

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
  • Photo gallery: No. 1 Silver Creek handles No. 3 Holy Family in football

    Silver Creek jumped out to a 38-0 lead on Friday night, then cruised to a 45-14 win.

  • Live scores: 5A boys golf Southern regional at Colorado Springs CC

    Live scores from the 5A boys golf Southern regional qualifier held at Colorado Springs Country Club.

    Find a mobile-friendly scoreboard here.

  • Chat replay: Football continues in Week 4

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  • Defense, special teams pitch in as Wheat Ridge shuts out rival Golden

    Wheat Ridge junior Anthony McGinnis turns up field during the Farmers' 28-point second quarter Thursday night at Jeffco Stadium. The Farmers had four rushing touchdowns and freshmen quarterback Ryen Kahl threw for two more scores in Wheat Ridge's 42-0 victory over Golden. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Wheat Ridge junior Anthony McGinnis turns up field during the Farmers’ 28-point second quarter Thursday night at Jeffco Stadium. The Farmers had four rushing touchdowns and freshmen quarterback Ryen Kahl threw for two more scores in Wheat Ridge’s 42-0 victory over Golden. (Dennis Pleuss)

    LAKEWOOD — A smothering defense and huge special teams play turned out to be the biggest helping hand for Wheat Ridge and its new starting freshmen quarterback.

    Wheat Ridge (3-1) gave its homecoming crowd something to cheer about with a 42-0 victory against rival Golden (0-4) on Thursday night at Jeffco Stadium. It was also the first start under center for Ryen Kahl, son of Wheat Ridge head coach Reid Kahl.

    “Anybody who know me knows I want to win,” Coach Kahl said about giving his son his first varsity start. “I want what’s best for Wheat Ridge football.”

    The Farmers’ defense carried its share of the load, never allowing Golden to get anything going offensively. The Demons didn’t have a first down on offense until their first drive in the second half. However, the game remained scoreless through almost the first quarter.

    Wheat Ridge, ranked No. 6 in this week’s CHSAANow.com 4A poll, got a much-needed spark to put some points on the scoreboard late in the first quarter. Junior Dakota Koenecke came through with a blocked punt, giving the Farmers the ball on the Demons’ 6-yard-line.

    “We came out excited, but at first we were a little flat,” Koenecke said. “Once we had that punt block we came together as a team. We went from there and played good.”

    Two plays after the punt block, senior Tanner Weakland scored a 1-yard touchdown to begin a 35-point scoring burst over a span of 11 minutes by the Farmers. When the halftime festivities rolled around, Wheat Ridge had a comfortable 35-0 lead.

    Junior Jordan Jones had a pair of two touchdown runs in the second quarter. Weakland crossed the goal line for the second time on the night, and the young quarterback got into the action with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Koenecke.

    “Playing as a freshman is pretty hard, but as soon as I threw that first touchdown (nerves) just went away,” Ryen Kahl said. “It was awesome and a great experience.”

    Kahl finished the game 4-for-8 passing for 116 yards and two touchdowns. His 59-yard touchdown strike to senior Averee Mason midway through the third quarter was the lone score in the second half as the 40-point running clock rule went into affect.

    Coach Kahl believes the move at quarterback will make his offensive more diverse.

    “Teams put eight or nine in the box trying to stop our running game,” Coach Kahl said. “This opens up the running game because we’ll be able to stretch the field.”

    Golden had some positive plays on offense in the second half by juniors Jake McCormick and Devin Rothrock. Still, the Farmers kept the Demons scoreless.

    “Bright spots are hard to find right now,” Golden first-year coach Jason Neely said. “Defensively at times when we do what we are supposed to do we look OK.”

    The Demons forced two punts and a turnover on downs on Wheat Ridge’s first three offensive drives before the Farmers got things going.

    Golden will attempt to get in the win column when it faces Littleton in the Demons’ homecoming game at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27, at Campbell Field on the Colorado School of Mines campus in Golden.

    Wheat Ridge has a tough test against Montbello (3-0) at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27, at All-City Stadium in Denver. The Warriors entered the CHSAANow.com football poll at No. 9 this week.

    “It will be a tough one,” Koenecke said looking ahead to Montbello. “But I think we’ll come out ready.”

    Golden sophomore running back Dvaris Johnson is tackled by a trio of Wheat Ridge defenders that includes Anthony McGinnis, Emilo Herrera and Brandon Saunders on Thursday night at Jeffco Stadium. The Farmers' defense shut out the Demons on the way at a 42-0 victory for No. 6 Wheat Ridge. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Golden sophomore running back Dvaris Johnson is tackled by a trio of Wheat Ridge defenders that includes Anthony McGinnis, Emilo Herrera and Brandon Saunders on Thursday night at Jeffco Stadium. The Farmers’ defense shut out the Demons on the way at a 42-0 victory for No. 6 Wheat Ridge. (Dennis Pleuss)
  • Notebook: With recent wet weather, mosquito repellent recommended

    With the recent wet weather, causing high levels of humidity, dampness and the reality of a growing mosquito population, the Colorado High School Activities Association’s Sport Medicine Advisory Committee is recommending the use of mosquito repellent as a deterrent to the West Nile Virus.

    Football helmets: heat and cold acclimation

    During the high heat, the CHSAA Sports Medicine Advisory Committee is recommending that football players remove their helmets during all breaks in the practice or game action to help keep body temperatures regulated.

    In cold weather, it is recommended that players keep their helmets on to maintain a proper core temperature and help the headwear retain its proper fit and function.

    Basketball rules changes: Uniforms/electronic devices

    Among the NFHS Basketball Rules changes for 2013-14 are two that may impact planning for the upcoming season.

    A rule change approved by the committee for the 2013-14 season will permit a single, visible manufacturer’s logo/trademark/reference on the team jersey, not to exceed 2¼ square inches with no dimension more than 2¼ inches.

    The manufacturer’s logo may be located no more than 5 inches below the shoulder seam on the front of the jersey, or 2 inches from the neckline on the back of the jersey, or in either side insert. This change will bring basketball in agreement with other NFHS sports rules and allow the use of a single manufacturer’s logo on the jersey of the playing uniform.

    Another rule change approved the use of electronic devices during the game in certain instances. Rule 1-19 now will allow a coach to take advantage of electronic devices for use in coaching and gathering statistics. Teams, however, cannot use electronic equipment for voice communication

  • Photo gallery: Legacy beats Mountain Range 6-1 in boys tennis

    Legacy won No. 1 and 2 singles and swept doubles en route to a 6-1 win over Mountain Range boys tennis on Thursday.

  • Live scores: 5A boys golf Northern regional at Broadlands

    Live scores from the 5A boys golf Northern regional qualifier held at Broadlands.

    Find a mobile-friendly scoreboard here.