Month: November 2013

  • Marquez, Russell carry Pomona football over Chatfield

    Pomona running back Chris Marquez, far left, follows the blocks of seniors Lukas Russell (28) and Kendall Ryan (77) during the second half Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. Marquez had 31 carries for 265 yards and four touchdowns in the Panthers' 49-35 victory over Chatfield. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Pomona running back Chris Marquez, far left, follows the blocks of seniors Lukas Russell (28) and Kendall Ryan (77) during the second half Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex in Arvada. Marquez had 31 carries for 265 yards and four touchdowns in the Panthers’ 49-35 victory over Chatfield. (Dennis Pleuss)

    ARVADA — Pomona used its running back tandem of Chris Marquez and Lukas Russell to pound out a 49-35 victory against Chatfield on Friday night at the North Area Athletic Complex.

    Marquez and Russell combined for 51 carries, 354 yards and six touchdowns on the ground as the eighth-seeded Panthers advanced to the Class 5A state football quarterfinals. Pomona (9-2) will face top-seed and undefeated Fairview next week at Recht Field in Boulder. The Knights kicked a game-winning field goal to beat Pomona 33-30 in a 5A North Metro meeting on Oct. 18 at NAAC.

    “We have a lot of work to do to have a chance to beat (Fairview) this time,” Pomona coach Jay Madden said. “They have a great offense and defense.”

    Pomona senior Hunter Hogoboom is tackled by Chatfield junior Lucas Gunkel on Friday night in the second-round 5A playoff game. Hogoboom had five catches for 92 yards in the Panthers' victory. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Pomona senior Hunter Hogoboom is tackled by Chatfield junior Lucas Gunkel on Friday night in the second-round 5A playoff game. Hogoboom had five catches for 92 yards in the Panthers’ victory. (Dennis Pleuss)

    Pomona needed a second-half surge to advance past No. 9 seed Chatfield (8-3) in the second-round playoff game. The Chargers scored a pair of 4-yard touchdown runs by junior Michael Callahan-Harris in the final minute of the second quarter to tie the game at 21.

    The second-half didn’t start well with Pomona taking over on its own 7-yard line. However, Marquez and Russell went to work. The Panthers chewed up half the third quarter with a 13-play drive, capped off with a 3-yard touchdown run by Russell.

    “When (Russell) is properly motivated he is a hell of a football player,” Madden said. “In big games he is properly motivated. We knew he would come out big tonight.”

    Russell had just one carry in the first half. He carried the football 11 times for 78 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the second half. He also was key on defense with two fumble recoveries and two sacks on Chatfield junior quarterback Kyle Winkler.

    Chatfield had just one offensive possession in the third quarter and turned the ball over on its first possession of the fourth quarter. Marquez, who went over the 2,000-yard mark on the season, gave the Panthers a 42-21 lead with 8:09 left in the fourth quarter with a 58-yard touchdown run right after the turnover.

    Marquez finished the night with 31 carries for 265 yards and four touchdowns. He had 29 rushing touchdowns on the season.

    Chatfield quarterback Kyle Winkler is sacked by Pomona senior Lukas Russell on Friday night. Russell had a big night on both sides of the football for the Panthers with two fumble recoveries, two sacks and 89 yards rushing. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Chatfield quarterback Kyle Winkler is sacked by Pomona senior Lukas Russell on Friday night. Russell had a big night on both sides of the football for the Panthers with two fumble recoveries, two sacks and 89 yards rushing. (Dennis Pleuss)

    Pomona also had solid contributions from seniors Chris Benefiel and Hunter Hogoboom. Benefiel had five carries for 67 yards and Hogoboom had five catches for 92 yards and a touchdown. Pomona junior quarterback Justin Roberts was 8-for-13 passing for 115 yards and the touchdown pass to Hogoboom.

    “I felt like we had a good game plan,” said Winkler, who was 16-for-29 for 205 yards and a touchdown through the air. “The turnovers just killed us.”

    The Chargers turned the ball over four times, three times in the second half. The final turnover came when senior Gus Karr picked off Winkler deep inside Pomona territory and returned it to Chatfield’s 8-yard line.

    “That was a big play,” Marquez said of Karr’s interception. “That put the nail in the coffin.”

    Russell scored on an 8-yard touchdown run with 3:28 left in the game to put the Panthers up 49-28.

    Callahan-Harris did score his fourth touchdown of the night with less than two minutes to go. The junior running back had 34 carries for 179 yards in the season-ending loss for Chatfield.

    The Chargers will return several key juniors who have been playing football together since the fifth grade, according to Winkler.

    “We are really close and I’m excited about next year,” Winkler said.

    Chatfield junior running back Michael Callahan-Harris, far right, had 34 carries for 179 yards and four touchdowns in the season-ending loss for the Chargers. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Chatfield junior running back Michael Callahan-Harris, far right, had 34 carries for 179 yards and four touchdowns in the season-ending loss for the Chargers. (Dennis Pleuss)
  • Late goal lifts Cheyenne Mountain to 4A boys soccer crown

    Cheyenne Mountain Air Academy Boys Soccer 4A state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    COMMERCE CITY — Forward Christian Nehme knew his team would win the state title after he blasted in a goal from eight yards with 3:59 remaining.

    “As soon as the ball went back into the net,” Nehme said, “I realized we were going to win.”

    Nehme and Cheyenne Mountain were crowned Class 4A boys soccer state champions after beating Pikes Peak league rival Air Academy 2-1 at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park on Saturday.

    “We knew we could hang with them,” Cheyenne Mountain coach Tomas Martinez said. “ We just needed to weather their storms.”

    Cheyenne Mountain Air Academy Boys Soccer 4A state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    Cheyenne Mountain and Air Academy each played tough defense throughout the first 38 minutes. After 25 minutes, Air Academy led Cheyenne Mountain with three in shots on goal to one. But the offensive pressure shifted in Cheyenne Mountain’s favor with around 20 minutes left when John Herd got his legs taken out from underneath him, and was fouled. Herd took the shot from the top of the 18, but it sailed over the top right corner with 12 minutes left in the half.

    Herd made sure his very next shot found the back of the net. With 2:18 left in the first half, he scored on a left-footed strike at the back-right corner past Air Academy goalkeeper Matthew Pipan from 15 yards. Herd’s goal put Cheyenne Mountain up 1-0 before the whistle for halftime.

    The goal was Herd’s second goal of the tournament, and 13th of the season — tying midfielder David McDermed for the team-high. Coming into Saturday’s game, Pippan had allowed just one goal in the state tournament.

    Air Academy applied a ton of offensive pressure in the second half. Their pesky offense frustrated Cheyenne Mountain’s defense. Defender Doug Quirk got a yellow card with 17 minutes after arguing a call with an official that an Air Academy’s forward pushed Cheyenne Mountain’s goalie.

    Cheyenne Mountain Air Academy Boys Soccer 4A state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    Alex Granados ended Air Academy’s drought by placing a penalty shot in the bottom-right corner past Cheyenne Academy goalkeeper Erich Frey with 6:09 remaining.

    After that, Nehme said, “We just told our back line, and our team, that we’re not losing our heads. ‘In the next six minutes we’re going to get one — it’s ours.’ We did just that.”

    Nehme responded with a goal of his own, and Cheyenne Mountain ran out the clock to earn their first 4A state title since 1995.

    “I didn’t even think about anything, I told myself to just go to goal,” Nehme said. “I went behind two defenders and put it on frame. I don’t even know how I did it, I’m just so thankful.”

    On Oct. 9, Air Academy won an overtime thriller at Cheyenne Mountain 4-3. Herd and Nehme each scored a goal in that contest as well.

    “I told the guys we only need to be better than them today, and that’s all that matter,” Martinez said. “They can say they dominated possession, or everybody outplayed us, but it doesn’t matter. We got the better score today, and we have a great group of kids.”

    Cheyenne Mountain Air Academy Boys Soccer 4A state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)
  • Colorado Academy caps unbeaten season with 3A boys soccer title

    The Classical Academy Colorado Academy 3A boys soccer state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    COMMERCE CITY — Over the past two seasons, Colorado Academy has accumulated a combined record of 38-0-2. And, at the end of the 2013 season, the Mustangs found themselves in a familiar place.

    Colorado Academy won its second-consecutive Class 3A soccer state championship title at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, defeating The Classical Academy 4-2 on Saturday.

    Both teams came into the game with offensive intensity. The Classical Academy freshman Titus Grant opened up the scoring with a breakaway goal in the fourth minute. Colorado Academy had allowed two goals through 19 games this season before Grant’s score.

    One minute later, Colorado Academy forward Robert Wright slotted-in a shot that rebounded off of Classical Academy keeper Micah Mesward to tie it up 1-1. Wright continued his dominance in the half by placing another shot in the right side of the net from five yards giving Colorado Academy the 2-1 lead.

    The Classical Academy Colorado Academy 3A boys soccer state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    “Throughout this entire season we’ve had trouble scoring the ball,” Wright said. “Our defense has really held us in all these games. We have a fantastic keeper in Jack Thomas. So (Saturday) we felt like this was our time to brings some goals onto the table — and we we’re able to capitalize.”

    The ball hit the nylon once again when Colorado Academy senior J.J. Meyers snuck a shot past Mesward on a breakaway from inside the five-yard box. With that goal, the striker extended his goal total to 14 — tops among Colorado Academy players.

    Colorado Academy led The Classical Academy 3-1 at half.

    After 15 minutes of battling back-and-forth to open the second half, The Classical Academy added another goal off the foot of Grant. The forward punched in a ball that rolled out of Colorado Academy’s keeper Jack Thomas’ hands.

    In the 77th minute, Colorado Academy’s Alex Clinkscales extend his team’s lead 4-2 by finishing a volley from five yards out off a cross from the left wing. The Classical Academy couldn’t battle back, and Colorado Academy took home the title.

    The Classical Academy Colorado Academy 3A boys soccer state
    More photos. (Pam Wagner)

    “It’s all down to my brothers on my team,” Wright said. “It’s been unbelievable, I can’t put words to it. Its been a while since I’ve lost, so all day today I have been thinking how horrible it would be to go out on that note.”

    Coach Gabe Bernstein finishes his first season as the coach for Colorado Academy at 19-0-1.

    “I counted a lot on our staff,” Bernstein said. “I also counted on my senior boys who have been here (in the title game), they knew what to expect and I think it was a matter of executing our game plan.”

  • Chat replay: Football’s playoffs continue in all classes

    Tools

    The live event will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Friday.
    [divider]

    Live chat

     


    [divider]

    Live games
    Class Game Time Notes
    5A Valor Christian vs. Ralston Valley 7 p.m. 2nd Round
    5A Chatfield vs. Pomona 7 p.m. 2nd Round
    5A Grand Junction at Columbine 7 p.m. 2nd Round (Audio only)
    4A Monarch vs. Vista Ridge 7 p.m. 1st Round
  • Boys soccer roundup: Pine Creek downs defending champ Boulder in OT

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

    AURORA — Alex Cullen sent Pine Creek to its first boys soccer state championship game in school history with a golden goal 7:29 into overtime.

    The senior corralled a loose ball after a Pine Creek free kick attempt and fired a shot from 20 yards out. It was deflected multiple times on the way to the net, and when it hit the twine, it meant No. 4 Pine Creek had knocked out No. 9 Boulder, the defending Class 5A champion, with a 1-0 victory.

    It was Cullen’s sixth goal this season, and the first goal Boulder had surrendered in 11 games. The last also came in overtime, in a 1-0 loss to Fairview on Sept. 26.

    Pine Creek (16-1-2) spent a good portion of the game on the shoulders of keeper David Meyer, who made five saves, a number of them brilliant. Included was an early one-on-one stop against Boulder star Mason Douillard, and an acrobatic, diving defense of the net later off a corner kick.

    The Eagles will face Rock Canyon in the championship. (See the full 5A bracket.)

    The Jaguars, making their third appearance in a state title game in school history, got a goal from Andrew Greiner with 30:44 remaining in the game. Greiner made a great transfer on a free kick attempt and beat the keeper to his left.

    Rock Canyon also advanced to the championship games in 2009 (a loss in 4A) and 2008 (winning 4A).

    [divider]

    Class 4A

    (Bud Ozzello/CHSAANow.com)
    (Bud Ozzello/CHSAANow.com)

    Top-seeded Air Academy held a slim 1-0 lead at halftime before exploding for three goals in the second frame to claim a 4-0 win over No. 5 Ponderosa in the first 4A semifinal.

    Air Academy got two goals from Gabriel Stuger, Alex Granados and Austin Dewing.

    The win means the Kadets will play in a championship game for the sixth time in school history. Air Academy won championships in 2010 (4A) and 1990 (5A).

    Air Academy will face third-seeded Cheyenne Mountain, a Pikes Peak league rival, following the Indians’ 1-0 win over No. 7 Evergreen. (See the full 4A bracket.)

    Cheyenne Mountain scored with nine minutes to play and will play in the title game for the third time in school history. The Indians won championship in 1995 (3A) and 1994 (4A/1A).

    Air Academy beat Cheyenne Mountain 4-3 in overtime on Oct. 1.

    [divider]

    Class 3A

    (Jenn Roberts-Uhlig/CHSAANow.com)
    (Jenn Roberts-Uhlig/CHSAANow.com)

    No. 1 Colorado Academy scored late in the second half to beat No. 5 Kent Denver and move on in the 3A semifinal with a 1-0 win.

    The Mustangs will make their fifth appearance in a title game. They won championships in 2012, 1999 and 1998.

    On the opposing side will be No. 3 The Classical Academy. The Titans beat No. 2 Salida 1-0 after a first-half goal held up. (See the full 3A bracket.)

    The two finalists have not played this season.

  • CLOC meeting info: Agenda, playdowns, exemptions and league changes

    [googlemap src=”https://www.google.com/maps?t=m&ll=39.71815890000015%2C-104.80583429999999&q=15701+e+1st+ave&spn=0.012957107330450872%2C0.022460083307282268&output=classic&dg=opt” width=”620″ height=”400″]

    The Classification and League Organizing Committee will meet at the Aurora Conference Center on Nov. 12.

    Below are links to pertinent information.

  • Highlights heading into next week’s CLOC meeting

    Next week, the Classification and League Organizing Committee will finalize the alignment for the 2014-16 cycle. The agenda, released today, revealed a number of interesting situations the committee will discuss next Tuesday.

    If you missed our Q&A with CLOC chair Tom Arensdorf, it’s a good way to get caught up on how CLOC works.

    That said, let’s dive in.

    [divider]

    League Changes (pdf)

    Valor Christian may soon find a home for its non-football sports. The school has requested to join the Centennial League, but it is worth noting that Valor’s teams would remain in Class 4A.

    Though a Centennial League vote has already said no — basing it on Mullen’s decision to remain in the league — it shows how strong the Eagles’ desire is to get in a league that they are willing to join arguably the toughest 5A league as a 4A school.

    Aside from that, though, the Centennial League schools are in close proximity of Valor Christian. The furthest school would be Cherokee Trail at a little more than 19 miles away.

    A “no” vote from the league doesn’t necessarily mean the move won’t happen — it just means it won’t be as easy as league changes other schools are making. CLOC has the final say on league alignment. If Valor’s move is approved, it would give a nine-team Centennial League two private schools.

    Additionally, of note:

    • Broomfield is seeking to move from the Northern to the Front Range League. Both leagues have signed off on the move, which is sparked by the Eagles’ move to 5A in all sports but football.
    • Canon City and The Classical Academy are both seeking entrance to the 4A Colorado Springs Metro League. TCA’s move is because enrollment numbers are bumping the school up to 4A.
    • Holy Family is hoping to move from the Patriot to the Mile High League because of an enrollment bump which has them going to 3A.
    • Littleton is seeking a change from the 5A Continental to 4A Jefferson County. This is another move on the heels of a class change.

    [divider]

    Playdown requests (pdf)

    Among the schools that have requested to play down in certain sports:

    • Adams City football (5A to 4A)
    • Aurora Central football (5A to 4A)
    • Boulder softball (5A to 4A)
    • Central (G.J.) football (4A to 3A)
    • Denver North football (3A to 2A)
    • Greeley West boys soccer (5A to 4A)
    • Miami-Yoder football (8-man to 6-man) as well as baseball, boys/girls basketball and volleyball (2A to 1A)
    • Montbello girls soccer (5A to 4A)
    • Montezuma-Cortez football (3A to 2A)
    • Nederland football (1A to 8-man)
    • Niwot football (4A to 3A)
    • South Park football (8-man to 6-man)

    [divider]

    Other notes:

    • Four new schools are seeking membership. They are: Caprock Charter Academy in Grand Junction, which is seeking to join either the San Juan or Western Slope League at the 1A or 2A level; Denver School of Science & Technology – Green Valley Ranch, which is hoping to join the Metro, Frontier or Confluence leagues in 3A; Venture Preparatory School in Denver, which will be 3A; and the Vail Ski & Snowboard Academy, which still needs to determine its classification. Based on the enrollment, however, Vail Ski & Snowboard will likely be 1A or 2A.
    • In addition, there are 14 schools which have either inquired about CHSAA membership or have been sent information regarding membership.
  • Playoff football schedule and scoreboard

    A complete schedule and scoreboard for football’s playoffs this week.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A | 1A | 8-man | 6-man

    Class 5A (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Friday
    (1) Fairview 45 (16) Douglas County 17
    (2) Valor Christian 49 (15) Ralston Valley 20
    (3) Cherry Creek 49 (19) Overland 14
    (5) ThunderRidge 56 (12) Doherty 35
    (6) Cherokee Trail 41 (11) Mountain Range 7
    (7) Columbine 41 (10) Grand Junction 6
    (8) Pomona 49 (9) Chatfield 35
    Saturday
    (4) Regis Jesuit 21 (20) Grandview 31

    Class 4A (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Friday
    (2) Monarch 62 (15) Vista Ridge 28
    (3) Pine Creek 35 (14) Pueblo West 18
    (5) Pueblo South 38 (12) Longmont 27
    (7) Loveland 33 (10) Broomfield 6
    Saturday
    (1) Montrose 31 (16) Montbello 25
    (4) Falcon 41 (13) Dakota Ridge 42
    (6) Windsor 28 (11) Standley Lake 15
    (8) Denver South 36 (9) Durango 26

    Class 3A (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Friday
    (3) Roosevelt 47 (14) Frederick 13
    (7) The Classical Academy 14 (10) Conifer 12
    Saturday
    (1) Discovery Canyon 13 (16) Pueblo East 47
    (2) Palisade 35 (15) Lutheran 25
    (4) Holy Family 41 (13) Delta 42
    (5) Elizabeth 13 (12) Glenwood Springs 14
    (6) Coronado 34 (11) Rifle 31
    (8) Evergreen 14 (9) Silver Creek 47

    Class 2A (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Saturday
    (1) Brush 33 (8) Florence 14
    (2) Manitou Springs 9 (7) Kent Denver 7
    (3) Platte Valley 48 (6) Bennett 11
    (4) Faith Christian 48 (5) Gunnison 0

    Class 1A (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Saturday
    (1) Buena Vista 42 (9) Resurrection Christian 35
    (2) Limon 22 (7) Yuma 0
    (3) Centauri 27 (11) Burlington 13
    (4) Paonia 31 (5) Monte Vista 15

    8-man (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Saturday
    (1) Hoehne 34 (9) Sanford 22
    (2) Dayspring Christian 43 (7) Sargent 28
    (3) Norwood 6 (6) Kiowa 12
    (4) Simla 28 (5) Caliche 46

    6-man (Playoffs: 1st Round)
    Saturday
    (1) Liberty/Stratton 84 (4) Prairie 38
    (2) Hi-Plains 71 (3) Eads 23
  • Q&A: Tom Arensdorf talks how leagues and classifications are formed

    Tom Arensdorf
    Tom Arensdorf

    Tom Arensdorf is the chair of the Classification and League Organizing Committee (CLOC). That committee sets and creates alignment for two-years cycles in all sports — except for football, which is handled by that sport’s committee.

    Currently the superintendent of Arriba-Flagler Consolidated School District No. 20, he served as the president for what is now the CHSAA Board of Directors from 2001-03.

    Next week, CLOC will meet to set the 2014-16 alignment. We caught up with Arensdorf to get an overview of how CLOC works and look towards potential changes in the future.

    [divider]

    What are some of the biggest challenges you deal with on the CLOC?

    “Colorado is a state that is going in two directions with enrollment. Outside the I-25 corridor in the Front Range, enrollments continue to decline. So we see more and more schools needing to move down a classification because they’ve lost enrollment. While in the Front Range area, enrollments are increasing, and more schools are being built. Typically, when they build a new school nowadays, they model it over a plan that would have about a 1,600 population for a high school. That puts them up into the 4A bracket when the start. Or some of them start out with just one class, then they add a class every year. But very quickly, they’re up in the 4A or even 5A levels.

    “We’re going in both directions. And the economy affects the enrollments in private schools almost more than it does in public schools. When the economy was down, we saw a lot of the smaller private schools struggling and close. In the meantime, it seems like some of the bigger, maybe more affluent private schools have flourished as they’ve picked up enrollment from other schools. Some of the longtime private schools that were strong members like Denver Christian and Denver Lutheran were around forever, and Christian’s had to go down a classification, Lutheran’s closed now [after combining with Lutheran-Parker].

    “Schools, as groups, kind of take [league alignment] on their own. They’ll get together and have discussions and come up with a plan. You know, ‘We want to create a league out of these schools’ – maybe because enrollment changes or schools open up. And they have to bring those plans to us. There’s a process they have to go through if they’re leaving a league or if they are potentially getting into a league. Usually, it kind of takes care of itself, but sometimes, some schools aren’t a great fit for a league, and people don’t want them. We have to, if a league will not accept them, then we’ll have to make a decision and place them into a league.”

    How do you go about doing that? Do you try and look at geography, or is it a combination? If you are forced to put a team into a league, what are the factors you look at?

    “Well, geography’s certainly one. In the metro area, it’s not quite as big a deal, because schools are so close together that travel’s not that big of an issue. But in outlying areas, you try and consider geography. [Other factors are] competition and competitive balance, having like programs. Say it’s a 5A or 4A school and they have all the programs like lacrosse, swimming and all those different kinds of things, they want to be in a league that also has those types of sports.”

    Schools have to go to a league meeting in order to be accepted into that league. Is that right?

    “They have to petition to a league and try and get the league’s blessing to have them come in. They also have to petition their own league and ask to leave the league. If you had a league of seven schools, and all of a sudden, three of them decided they wanted to leave that league, it becomes a league of four, and that doesn’t work.

    “But usually schools do a pretty good job of researching where’s a good fit for them, or why they want to make that change. It’s not a sudden event. They may be looking at that for a year or two, so the schools that maybe are going to be left in that league, they may go look to join up with another league or something like that. Sometimes leagues totally get disbanded.

    “The main issue that people have nowadays is they want to try and compete against schools, at some point or another, that they’re probably going to be facing in their districts or regionals. … Schools want to have some semblance of who they’re going to be competing against if they have the type of program that’s going to be competing in the upper echelon of that sport. They want the opportunity to play against some of those teams before they get into those playoffs.”

    I know you take everything into account, but are classifications and leagues, by-and-large, based on basketball?

    “Yeah, because that’s the sport that almost every school has. When we’re looking at, if there’s 70 schools in 1A, pretty much everyone plays basketball and volleyball. They may not have track or they may not have some other sports. Football and basketball, pretty much everybody has and participates in. But football has a whole different set of numbers.”

    The biggest change (to the classification system) for the next cycle is that there’s not going to be a set number for 1A and 2A. Instead, it’s going to be a split down the middle. Do you have an idea yet of where that might be?

    “We’ll decide that at the meeting. What’s happening with some of the very small schools is a lot of them are forming co-ops, so they have they have enough to have a team. So you have to count two of those schools as one. I’ve been looking at some numbers there, and it looks like there’s probably going to be about 68 teams in each classification.

    “When we decided to do the split in the middle, people thought it was going to lower that [enrollment] number. Eight or 10 kids may not seem like a lot, but when you’re one of those bubble schools, it is. As more teams have co-oped together, [the new split] may not make that much of a difference. We’ll just have to see.

    “There will be some schools there that will ask to play down a classification. We implemented a bylaw – it’s probably been 10 years now – that if a school, in a certain sport, meets the criteria of winning less than 25 percent of their games in the last four seasons, they can petition to play down a classification. So if some teams would petition out of 3A to play down into 2A, and that is granted, then it will add more teams into that pool.”

    Is that a hard-and-fast, ‘If they hit this number,’ they’ll be approved to play down?

    “Yeah. We usually approve it. It’s worked really well for a couple of schools in certain sports that have been able to kind of get their numbers going again and get their programs to go back up. It hasn’t worked for everybody. But they don’t get beat up as bad, especially in football.”

    So you guys approve play-downs for football, too?

    “Yes. We approve all the play-downs.”

    Now, lacrosse is kind of a different animal, and I know there are other sports like that. Is that another challenge of trying to match different programs up?

    “In those kind of sports, that usually goes back to that sport’s committee for a recommendation. Sports like lacrosse, when they first started up, there may have been only 14 or 15 schools playing lacrosse. So everybody that played lacrosse was in one classification. Well, as the sport has grown – and we see that in soccer, in cross country – and maybe more smaller schools have decided to add that program, we had too many schools for one classification. … The [sport’s] committee usually will come and say, ‘We have too many schools for one classification, we need to make a split.’ And usually they’ll make a recommendation to us on where to make that split.”

    This is down the line, but a lot of talk has centered on potentially adding Class 6A. What are your thoughts on adding another classification?

    “I really don’t feel strongly about it one way or another. We had six classifications at one time. There are some people that think the more classifications you have, you kind of water down whatever sport it might be.

    “There are probably 80 schools that have less than 100 kids in school. We added 1A track a few years ago. Honestly, there are probably 50 1A schools that don’t even have 50 kids in school. And they don’t field a complete track team. Sometimes, you’ll have events, like relay teams and stuff like that, that, honestly, there are some pretty poor teams in those events. Just not enough manpower to create great relay teams for that many schools. So you get some criticism that way, that we water things down.

    “On the other hand, when you look at classifications, there is two ways to look at it: Is it more fair to have the same number of schools in each classification, so we’re all competing against 65 schools for that state championship? Or is it more fair that you shouldn’t have to compete against anybody that’s more than two-and-a-half times bigger than you? So we’ve kind of gone both ways, trying to be middle of the road.

    “At one time, 3A only had about 35 schools in it. At that time, a lot of those were private schools, and they had enrollments of about 600. The public schools, they’re not going to operate a public school that small. You get more bang for your buck if you have 1,200 or 1,600 kids. So there’s not a lot of schools that size. But [those private schools] were too big to participate against 2A schools that would have maybe 235 kids at the top enrollment. So 3A wasn’t very big, and it caught a lot of angst among the lower classifications or the ones above them that 3A was having 35 schools compete for a basketball championship, and 1A and 2A were having 70.

    “So you have those two ways of looking at how to set up classifications. If you add a classification, you can narrow that enrollment gap so you don’t have a school of 100 having to play against a school of 300 kids, or a school of 600 playing against a school that has 1,500. That’s really what adding a classification would do, shrink some of that enrollment gap within each classification.

    “You’re going to have outsiders like Cherry Creek. No one else is near that big. And you have high schools with 13 kids. They’ll still have a basketball team.”

    What are some of the things the CLOC committee now faces on a regular basis?

    “Over the last decade, the disparity in the direction that enrollments are going has really changed as rural and non-Front Range schools, their enrollments continue to decline. There are lots of schools that are playing 2A basketball and volleyball and all those things that were really strong 3A schools, say, 18 years ago. That’s hard for a guy that’s been a 2A school to swallow: All of a sudden, here’s all these schools that used to be in 3A now in my classification.

    “In football, there have been lots of [1A] teams that have gone down to 8-man and 8-man teams that have to go down to 6-man. That never feels right for those people that have never had to compete against those bigger schools.

    “Then on the other end, there are just more and more 5A schools being created and enrollments continue to increase in those urban areas and metro areas. So, the bigger the spread, the more issues it causes.”

    Big-picture, what changes do you see?

    “[A committee commissioned by assistant commissioner Bud Ozzello] has looked into lots of different things and studied a lot of other states, methodologies that they use to set their classifications. So things like factors you can put in, maybe a poverty factor. It’s very clear that schools of poverty have way less participation than schools that don’t face poverty. The participation isn’t the same.

    “There’s a huge debate, and there has been for a long time in Colorado, because our private schools play with public schools. And there’s not a factor for being a private school. There’s no secret there that private schools have done very well in the last two decades, and there’s always the idea that private schools can “recruit.” Private schools have to recruit students, that’s how they get students to come to their schools, they’re paying to be there. So, for private schools, it’s very competitive to get kids to come to their schools. … And most of those schools don’t have a poverty factor, and they probably don’t have a special needs population. They’re not required by law to have federal special-ed programs. So a lot of people don’t think that their enrollment numbers are equitable to a public school enrollment number.”

    There was a similar bylaw considered last Legislative Council meeting, wasn’t there?

    “What they looked at was a success factor. And, honestly, the way the bylaw was written, by the time it went into effect – say I’m a small private school in 2A, and I have a group of four boys that are stallions and we win basketball and maybe we do really good in baseball because I have these really good athletes that can carry a program. Well, by the time they [would have had] to change classification, those kids would all be out of school. And, in smaller schools, even up to 3A, you can go from the penthouse to the outhouse in a couple of years.

    “That’s what that looked at, if they had so much success, they would have had to move up a classification. It wouldn’t have worked very well. It was probably good that it didn’t pass.

    “But that committee that Bud’s been working with on this classification question, they’re looking at some of those different factors, like poverty. It could be that at some point, there is more of a formula to determine your enrollment number rather than just taking a set number from [the Colorado Department of Education]. We use those CDE numbers because that’s how schools are funded, based on your population, and so no one’s going to cheat on that. They want all the money they can get.”

    [Creating an enrollment formula] would take a bylaw change, wouldn’t it?

    “Yes, it would.”

    Would that come from you guys, or the membership?

    “Our committee might write the bylaw and send it to the membership, or the Board of Directors might write that bylaw and send it to us to see what we think about it, and we could pass it forward to the Legislative Council to see if they think it would work for our organization.

    “Classification numbers are always a hot topic, because everybody wants to feel like they’re getting a fair shot. … The emotional factor of changing leagues and classifications is pretty huge in some situations.”

  • CHSAA begins 93rd winter sports season

    Eaglecrest celebrates winning the 2013 5A boys basketball championship. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
    Eaglecrest celebrates winning the 2013 5A boys basketball championship. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    AURORA — The 93rd year of Colorado High School Activities Association practice for winter sports begins just as most of the fall sports are just winding down. Official practice starts Wednesday, November 13 for basketball, wrestling, ice hockey and girls’ swimming. Please note the first day of practice and other information for Skiing on CHSAANow.com.

    Teams may begin interscholastic scrimmages on November 19 in these sports, while the first contests may begin on Monday, December 2.

    In May, 1921, a group of superintendents and principals met in Boulder and organized the Colorado High School Athletic Conference. The purpose of this organization was to better regulate and develop the interscholastic school athletic program.

    There were nine leagues by the time the first constitution was published, including the Northern, North Central, Western Slope, Suburban, Southeastern, Arkansas Valley, South Central and San Juan Basin leagues.

    The first champions crowned that school year were Colorado Springs in football, Greeley in basketball, and Fort Collins in track and field.

    In 1924, the Colorado High School Athletic Conference joined the National Federation of State High School Associations and has remained an active member of that organization ever since.

    Loveland’s R.W. Truscott was the Association’s first president and Eaton’s J.C. Casey its first secretary (commissioner). Truscott replaced Casey as secretary in December, 1926 and held that post until July, 1948 when Glenn T. Wilson became commissioner. Ray C. Ball took over the commissioner’s post in 1966 and remained in the office until August, 1986 when Ray Plutko assumed the duties. Bob Ottewill became the Association’s sixth commissioner in July, 1990, followed by Bill Reader who served as Commissioner from 2002 until 2010. Angelico assumed the reins on July 1, 2010

    The CHSAA has had 58 presidents dating back to 1921. Its current president, Centauri High School Principal Curt Wilson, is in the first year of a two-year term as president.

    Defending Winter State Champions
    Sport 1A 2A 3A 4A 5A First Champ*
    B. Basketball McClave Denver Christian Pagosa Springs Lewis-Palmer Eaglecrest Greeley (’21)
    G. Basketball Wiley Akron Holy Family Pueblo South Regis Jesuit Golden (’76)
    G. Swimming Thompson Vly. Regis Jesuit Cherry Crk (’74)
    B. Skiing Summit Middle Prk (’65)
    G. Skiing Summit Middle Prk (’75)
    Ice Hockey Ralston Vly Littleton (’76)
    Wrestling Paonia Alamosa Broomfield Pomona Greeley (’36)

    * – Large school champion listed.