Month: October 2013

  • 4A softball state championship bracket

    The 2013 state softball bracket for Class 4A.

    2013 CHSAA State Softball Championships 2013 4A Bracket

  • 3A softball state championship bracket

    The 2013 state softball bracket for Class 3A.

    2013 CHSAA State Softball Championships 2013 3A Bracket

  • Broomfield football grinds out an upset win over No. 3 Standley Lake

    Standley Lake senior Trey Jarvis makes a leaping grab between Broomfield defenders Kyle Holbrook and Matt Hawkins on Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. Broomfield knocked off the previously undefeated Gators 27-23 in the Class 4A Mountain League match up. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Standley Lake senior Trey Jarvis makes a leaping grab between Broomfield defenders Kyle Holbrook and Matt Hawkins on Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. Broomfield knocked off the previously undefeated Gators 27-23 in the Class 4A Mountain League match up. (Dennis Pleuss)

    ARVADA — Broomfield wasted little time on its offensive opportunities Friday on the football field at the North Area Athletic Complex.

    The Eagles used a trio of quick scoring drives — four plays and a pair of three-play possessions — before grinding out a 10-play, go-ahead scoring drive to open the fourth quarter against previously undefeated Standley Lake. Broomfield senior Noah Tripp scored on a 20-yard touchdown run for the final score in a 27-23 victory against the No. 3-ranked Gators in the Class 4A Mountain League tilt.

    “Our defense was on the field way too much,” said Tripp, who finished with 15 carries for 133 yards and touchdown runs of 62 and 20 yards. “We had to make the most of our offensive series.”

    Broomfield (4-2, 2-0) had only 37 offensive plays from scrimmage. Standley Lake (6-1, 1-1), on the other hand, ran 70 offensive plays.

    The Gators got a solid night from junior quarterback Jacob Naranjo was 19-for-26 passing for 267 yards and a pair of touchdown passes to senior Matt Fujinami. The loss ended Standley Lake’s chance for a school record 7-0 start to the season.

    “It hurts. You have to use that hurt to fuel you along the way,” Fujinami said. “We aren’t done. It’s only one loss.”

    Fujinami had touchdown catches of 7 and 24 yards, along with a 16-yard touchdown run in the second quarter that gave the Gators a 16-7 lead.

    Broomfield senior Alec McLain gets off a pass during the first half Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex. McLain threw a pair of touchdowns in the Eagles' fourth straight victory of the season. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Broomfield senior Alec McLain gets off a pass during the first half Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex. McLain threw a pair of touchdowns in the Eagles’ fourth straight victory of the season. (Dennis Pleuss)

    Tripp quickly answered Fujinami with his 62-yard sprint to the end zone. The Eagles then had a key defensive stop at the end of the first half. Senior Kyle Tacoronte broke up a pass intended for Fujinami in the end zone. Standley Lake had to settle for a field goal attempt that sailed wide left just before halftime.

    Broomfield coach Gary Davies called the defensive stop the “play of the game.” The Eagles took the lead early in the third quarter on a 57-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Alec McLain to senior Simeon Combs. It was the second McLain-to-Combs touchdown connection of the game. The two hooked up for a 16-yard touchdown in the first quarter.

    “We told these guys that this is probably the biggest game of their lives, which it was,” Davies said. “Most of these guys weren’t varsity last year.”

    Standley Lake drove down to the Eagles’ 5-yard line with under five minutes to play in the fourth quarter with a shot of regaining the lead. However, after a conference between the officiating crew, it was ruled that senior Trey Muller fumbled and Broomfield recovered on the 9-yard line.

    The Gators got the ball back with less than three minutes to play, but eventually turned the ball over on downs on their last possession.

    “We made mistakes along the road,” Fujinami said. “We are going to work on fixing those and control what we can control.”

    Broomfield has a pair of tough tests coming up the following two weeks. The Eagles host a resurgent Montbello team at 7 p.m. Oct. 18 before going on the road to face Monarch, the defending 4A state champions, on Oct. 25.

    Standley Lake faces Jeffco rival Golden at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 18 at NAAC. The Demons are coming off their first victory of the season with a win against George Washington.

    Standley Lake senior Matt Fujinami looks for some running room as Broomfield seniors Riley Derus and Luke McAninch close in Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex. Fujinami scored three touchdowns for the Gators, but it wasn't enough as the Eagles improved to 4-2 on the season with a 27-23 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Standley Lake senior Matt Fujinami looks for some running room as Broomfield seniors Riley Derus and Luke McAninch close in Friday at the North Area Athletic Complex. Fujinami scored three touchdowns for the Gators, but it wasn’t enough as the Eagles improved to 4-2 on the season with a 27-23 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)
  • Football roundup: Lakewood upsets No. 8 Arapahoe in final minutes

    Lakewood quarterback Casey Nicholls, pictures during a game against Fairview earlier this season.
    Lakewood quarterback Casey Nicholls, pictured during a game against Fairview earlier this season.

    Eighth-ranked Arapahoe was poised to escape with another slim win. Only, no one told Lakewood.

    The Tigers’ Anthony Brown returned a punt 48 yards to Arapahoe’s 7-yard-line with under two minutes to play. Quarterback Casey Nicholls scored what turned out to be the winning touchdown on a sneak two plays later in a 46-39 upset.

    Arapahoe needed overtime to beat Mullen last week. This week, the Warriors rallied from a 32-23 halftime deficit to take a 39-32 lead. But Lakewood dialed up a wide receiver pass to Tevin Lucas on third-and-17 to tie the game at 39 with 6:50 to play. The Tigers forced Arapahoe to punt on the ensuing drive, setting up Brown’s big return.

    Lakewood improves to 2-5 this season, while Arapahoe falls to 5-2.

    Elsewhere in 5A, No. 10 Cherokee Trail shook off some first-half rust to rally and beat Grandview 21-7. The Cougars trailed 7-0 at the break.

    “We’re happy with how we played in second half,”coach Monte Thelen told ColoradoPreps.com’s Built Ford Tough Scoreboard Show on Friday night. “Beating Grandview at any time is a great achievement for us, so we feel good about our performance, especially in the second half tonight.”

    Cameron Smith rushed 22 times for 132 yards and two scores for Cherokee Trail. Quarterback Aric Johnson was 9-of-18 with 121 yards passing.

    Cherokee Trail turned the ball over three times in the first half, and also had a touchdown called back due to a penalty.

    “We’re really happy with how our defense played the entire game to be honest with you, because we put them in a number of negative situations in the first half,” Thelen said. “They were able to come through. We just felt like if we could calm down and play our game in the second half that we could definitely get back into the game. We were fortunate to be able to do that.”

    In 4A, No. 6 Falcon rebounded from a tough loss last week to Pine Creek to come back and top Ponderosa, 24-14. The Falcons scored the game’s final 24 points.

    “What was interesting is that it was like a reciprocal of our game last week with Pine Creek,” co-head coach Brian Green told the Scoreboard Show. “We were up at half and Pine Creek came storming back. We kind of followed their same formula to victory this week.

    “It was really just coming out and making plays. We made some good defensive plays that put us in position to score and kind of capture the momentum early in the third quarter and never looked back after that.”

    Running back Kalen Ballage carried the ball 21 times for 68 yards and a touchdown. Justin Barron also had a rushing score, but the game turned on Dylan Cutkomp’s 51-yard interception return for a touchdown.

    “That one put us on top, and we just carried that wave of momentum to the finish line,” Green said.

    Eighth-ranked Mead stayed unbeaten in the 3A ranks with a 41-14 win over Northridge. Quarterback Griffin Nelson was 19-of-28 for 195 yards and two scores, while the Mavericks also racked up 415 yards and four scores on the ground.

    “I was really proud of the fact that we rushed the ball really well tonight,” coach Jason Klatt told the Scoreboard Show. “And Griffin was just a real leader tonight. He hung in there and threw a bunch of key completions that kept drives alive and it was just a great all-around win.”

    Mead is now 6-0, but isn’t worried about any outside pressures.

    “That’s been a big question that we didn’t really know how that was going to go, but we have a senior-led group that is very resilient,” Klatt said. “They’ve bought into what we’re telling them and they are beginning to be mentally tough to where we don’t listen to that stuff and we’re not concerned about outside stuff and Wild Card points and all that stuff. The only thing that we can control is our attitude and our effort. That’s what we’re doing right now.”

    Holy Family, ranked No. 6 in 3A, needed a stop of a two-point conversion to season a 20-19 win at Erie.

    “They had a great drive, they put together a couple of plays, and they went for the two-point conversion,” coach Mike Gabriel told the Scoreboard Show. “It came down to I think about the 1-inch line, but we kept them out of the end zone.”

    Holy Family is 3-0 since a crushing 45-14 loss to Silver Creek on Sept. 20.

    “I think Silver Creek kind of revealed some stuff to us as a staff that we needed to work harder in practice and challenge the kids more in practice and just get after it a little more,” Gabriel said. “We’ve changed things, and the kids have responded. We’re starting to see the results.”

    In all, Week 7 has belonged to the ranked teams. Ranked teams are 43-4 against unranked opponents across all classifications through Friday’s games.

  • No. 9 Pomona football runs wild against rival Ralston Valley

    Pomona senior Chris Marquez fights for extra yards as Ralston Valley sophomore Matt Faltz hangs on for the tackle Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex. Marquez rushed for 263 yards and three touchdowns in the Panthers' 42-30 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Pomona senior Chris Marquez fights for extra yards as Ralston Valley sophomore Matt Faltz hangs on for the tackle Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex. Marquez rushed for 263 yards and three touchdowns in the Panthers’ 42-30 victory. More photos. (Dennis Pleuss)

    ARVADA — The shortest distance between two points was a straight line Friday night on the football field at the North Area Athletic Complex.

    Pomona broke out its wildcat offensive formation with tailback Chris Marquez taking a direct snap in the Class 5A North Metro League game against cross-town rival Ralston Valley. Marquez racked up 263 yards rushing on 31 carries as the No. 9-ranked Panthers (6-1, 3-0) took a 42-30 victory.

    “We’ve got two great running backs, a great offensive line and two great tight ends,” Pomona coach Jay Madden said of the smash-mouth style running attack. “Ralston Valley has skilled kids. Every time we went sideways they made plays. The best way to handle it was go right at them.”

    Marquez threw only one pass on the night that fell incomplete. He had much more success weaving through holes provided by Pomona’s massive offensive line. The 5-foot-5 senior had three touchdowns on the night as he went over the 1,300-yard mark on the ground this season.

    “(Marquez) is what high school football is all about,” Madden said. “You don’t have to be 6-foot-5. You don’t have to be the fastest guy on the planet. You just have to be a kid with a huge heart and some pretty good God-given quickness. You can be a special player.”

    Pomona senior Jack Sale, left, zeros in on Ralston Valley junior running back Andrew Wingard during the Class 5A Metro North League game Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Pomona senior Jack Sale, left, zeros in on Ralston Valley junior running back Andrew Wingard during the Class 5A Metro North League game Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. More photos. (Dennis Pleuss)

    The Panthers jumped out to a 28-0 lead, scoring on four of their first five possessions. Senior Lukas Russell scored his first of three touchdowns for Pomona late in the first half with a 15-yard score, making the score 21-0 at halftime.

    After a 69-yard kickoff return to start the second half, Russell scored again on a 27-yard scamper to widen the lead to 28-0. He finished with 14 carries for 93 yards.

    Fittingly, Marquez scored on a 27-yard touchdown run on his final carry of the night to cap off Pomona’s fifth-straight victory.

    The victory marked a little revenge for the Panthers against their rival. Ralston Valley defeated Pomona in the regular season last year and also eliminated the Panthers in the quarterfinals of the state playoffs.

    “I told my whole team to remember how it felt losing to Ralston Valley in the playoffs,” Marquez said. “We came out and executed.”

    The Mustangs (4-3, 1-2) got their offense going in the second half. Senior quarterback Josh Knipp finished the night 30-for-45 passing for 353 yards and two touchdowns. Senior John Morales was Knipp’s favorite target catching 10 balls for 115 yards.

    Despite the offensive outburst after halftime, Ralston Valley fell short on mounting a complete comeback.

    “We’ve got to start earlier,” Knipp said. “We’ve got to start like we played in the second half.”

    Ralston Valley senior John Morales is able to elude Pomona senior Colin Pratt after catching a pass in the first half. Morales had 10 receptions for 115 yards, but it wasn't enough as the Mustangs lost 42-30 to rival Pomona. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Ralston Valley senior John Morales is able to elude Pomona senior Colin Pratt after catching a pass in the first half. Morales had 10 receptions for 115 yards, but it wasn’t enough as the Mustangs lost 42-30 to rival Pomona. More photos. (Dennis Pleuss)

    One positive for Ralston Valley was the return of junior running back Andrew Wingard. After missing the previous two games because of injury, Wingard was back on the field and had a solid night. He finished with 79 yards on the ground, including two rushing touchdowns. He also caught a 10-yard touchdown pass from Knipp for the final score of the game.

    “(Wingard) makes a ton of big plays for this offense,” Knipp said. “He kind of makes this offense tick. It’s great to have him back.”

    Ralston Valley faces rival in Arvada West at 7 p.m. next Thursday, Oct. 17, at NAAC before closing out the regular season on the road against Legacy on Oct. 25.

    Pomona has another critical conference game next week that will likely decide the 5A North Metro League title. The Panthers square off against No. 2 Fairview (6-0, 3-0) at 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 18, at NAAC. The Knights are the lone undefeated team remaining in 5A.

    “It will be fun,” Madden said of next week’s game against Fairview.

  • Photo gallery: No. 3 Regis football beats Chaparral

    AURORA — Jalen Williams rushed for 167 yards and a touchdown as third-ranked Regis Jesuit beat Chaparral 42-7 on Friday night.

  • Photo gallery: No. 9 Pomona beats Ralston Valley in football

    ARVADA — Pomona took out rival Ralston Valley on Friday night. Read the full story here.

  • State tennis: Final results from 5A and 4A

    The boys tennis state championships are in the books. Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) took the team titles.

    Chaparral (5A) and Mullen (4A) won the sportsmanship awards.

    Full results:

    Earlier results:

    [divider]

    Team Results

    Class 5A
    Rank Team Points
    1 Cherry Creek 98
    2 Fairview 73
    3 Mountain Vista 46
    4 Regis Jesuit 22
    5 Chatfield 20
    6 Fossil Ridge 19
    7 Grand Junction 13
    8 Monarch 10
    9 Denver East 8
    10 Arapahoe 5
    11 Legend 3
    12 Boulder 2
    13 Fruita Monument 2
    14 Castle View 1
    15 Chaparral 1
    16 Cherokee Trail 1
    17 Columbine 1
    18 Legacy 1
    19 Ralston Valley 1
    20 Rock Canyon 1
    Class 4A
    Rank Team Points
    1 Kent Denver 91
    2 Colorad Academy 54
    3 Niwot 50
    4 Cheyenne Mountain 25
    5 Mullen 21
    6 Air Academy 18
    7 Aspen 17
    8 Discovery Canyon 17
    9 Pueblo Central 13
    10 Broomfield 5
    11 Valor Christian 4
    12 Durango 4
    13 Silver Creek 2
    14 Steamboat 2
    15 D’Evelyn 2
    16 Fountain Valley 1
    17 Greeley Central 1
    18 Longmont 1
    19 Palmer Ridge 1

    [divider]

    Individual results

    Class 5A

    Singles

    1. Zach Fryer, Cherry Creek def. Ignatius Castelino, Fairview; 6-4, 6-4
    2. Connor McPherson, Cherry Creek def. Ben Antonsen, Mountain Vista; 6-1, 6-2
    3. Ethan Hillis, Cherry Creek def. Thomas Mason, Fairview; 6-4, 6-4

    Doubles

    1. Harshil Dwivedi/Jake Miller, Cherry Creek def. Brock DeHaven/Max Petrak, Fairview; 6-4, 4-6, 6-2
    2. Erin Norwood/Matt Gross, Cherry Creek def. Randall Ball/Andrew Pollack, Fairview; 7-6, 6-3
    3. Teller Hoskins/Ben Schlichting, Cherry Creek def. Steven Bummer/Truett Davis, Regis Jesuit; 6-0, 6-3
    4. Jacob Bendalin/Wyatt Dale, Cherry Creek def. Charlie Strand/Jake Kearney, Fairview; 6-2, 3-6, 6-1

    Class 4A

    Singles

    1. Luke Lorenz, Discovery Canyon def. David Mitchell, Kent Denver; 7-5, 6-4
    2. Willie Gold, Kent Denver def. Allen Fu, Niwot; 6-3, 6-3
    3. Casey Ross, Kent Denver def. Naish Ganbatz, Air Academy; 6-0, 6-0

    Doubles

    1. Kevin Adams/Ryan Beyer, Kent Denver def. Griffin Prall/William McDermid, Colorado Academy; 4-6, 6-2, 6-0
    2. Daniel Dilzell/Seth Miller, Colorado Academy def. Josh Rubin/Niko Hereford, Kent Denver; 6-4, 6-4
    3. Andrew Thompson/Blake Parsons, Kent Denver def. Peter Hillary/Ethan Pollock, Colorado Academy; 6-1, 6-4
    4. Brad Soderberg/Jack Trueblood, Kent Denver def. Keegan Mehall/Andy Vernier, Aspen; 6-3, 6-0
  • Photo gallery: Boys tennis state championships

    The 5A and 4A boys tennis state championships wrapped up on Saturday. Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) captured team titles.

  • Cherry Creek sweeps in rolling to 5A boys tennis championship

    Cherry Creek players celebrate their team championship with the trophy. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Cherry Creek players celebrate their team championship with the trophy. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    DENVER — It was not a forgone conclusion when the day started. But by the time everyone was gathered around the East Center Court at Gates Tennis Center? Yeah, Cherry Creek’s domination was clear.

    The Bruins set a Class 5A boys tennis record with 98 points and swept all seven positions en route to a third-consecutive team title. It is the school’s 38th championship in the sport over the past 41 seasons.

    “It’s quite a run,” coach Art Quinn said afterward. “The boys did a great job.”

    No 5A school had swept all seven positions since 1998. That school? Creek.

    “We’re blessed with a large and dedicated student body,” Quinn said. “We’ve got a lot of players that put in a lot of time. We’ve got a wonderful program that supports us all the way down.

    “We put in the work every day and the kids put in extra work every week. It really is an accumulation of years and years of blood, sweat and tears and hopes and dreams and chunking off lots of hours on the tennis court, in the classroom and in the training room.”

    Cherry Creek's Zach Fryer. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Cherry Creek’s Zach Fryer. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    When the day started, Cherry Creek had 77 points to second-place Fairview’s 69. The Knights had a legitimate shot at their first-ever championship, but needed to dominate the five head-to-head matches with the Bruins they had on Saturday. Instead, Cherry Creek went 5-0 and 7-0 overall. (Full results.)

    “We can’t exist without the players and the teams on the other side of the net,” Quinn said. “We can’t exist without the programs that help push us. It’s not up to your opponent to make you better, it’s up to you to make you better. But the relationship between you and your opponent is a valuable one. We’re all out here to make each other better.

    “The fact of the matter is, going into today, this was a very close tournament,” Quinn said. “And (Fairview coach Chad) Tsuda and the players he had should be very proud of that.”

    Included in Cherry Creek’s run was Zach Fryer’s individual title at No. 1 singles — the school’s first at the position since 2005. He beat Fairview’s Ignatius Castelino (6-4, 6-4) by holding serve after narrowly missing out on match point in the previous game.

    “I’ve had to close out a few matches. Actually, that was exactly where I wanted to be: serving it out,” Fryer said. “I just did what I practiced before in closing out games.”

    By constantly moving him side-to-side, Fryer was able to wear Castelino down late in the match, and rallied from down 2-1 in the second set to secure the win.

    “It feels great,” Fryer said. “I love the atmosphere here, and then to just help the team, as well.  It’s a lot different than playing USTA tournaments because (there) it’s all individual. Here you have your team behind you and supporting you, and you also want to win for your team, too, because you don’t want to let them down.”

    Fairview finished second with 73 team points. Mountain Vista was third with 46.

    Fairview's Ignatius Castelino serves during the 5A No. 1 singles final. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Fairview’s Ignatius Castelino serves during the 5A No. 1 singles final. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)