Archive for February, 2014

Hockey committee recommends splitting into two classes

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

The hockey committee met at the Denver Coliseum on Friday. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

DENVER — Hockey’s Frozen Four begins at the Denver Coliseum on Friday night. This time next year, might the state have two Frozen Fours?

It’s very possible, but there are hurdles yet to clear.

At its annual meeting at the Coliseum on Friday morning, the hockey committee voted to split the sport into two classifications — 5A and 4A.

The prevailing thought among committee members was that a second classification will make games more competitive, help the sport grow, and could potentially save programs with dwindling numbers.

“When the committee looked at competitive balance, they realized that changes had to be made,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Bud Ozzello, who oversees hockey. “Having one classification made it more difficult for smaller schools to complete. After much discussion, they voted in favor of making two classifications to help not only grow the sport but hopefully help maintain the competitive balance.”

The classes would be determined based upon the enrollment number splits used in other sports, and would result in 16 teams in 5A and 13 in 4A. Those numbers could change based upon playdown requests that would need to be approved.

Committee chair Chad Broer, athletic director at Chatfield high school, will present the committee’s report — including the classification split — to the Legislative Council in April. That Council would then need to approve the change.

Hockey has had one classification since it was first sanctioned in 1976.

A split into 5A and 4A would give each class eight-team playoff brackets. Playoff seeding would continue to be determined by conference finish. First-round and semifinal games would likely be hosted at home sites, with both championship games at one venue.

A survey went out to hockey athletic directors this week, with 27 of 29 responding. According to that survey, 59 percent are in favor of a split, with 41 percent against it.

Ralston Valley boys dunk way into second round with win over Pine Creek

Ralston Valley Pine Creek boys basketball

Ralston Valley sophomore Dallas Walton elevates for his first of three dunks Wednesday night at Ralston Valley High School. The Mustangs defeated Pine Creek 72-54 in the first round of the Class 5A boys basketball state tournament. (Dennis Pleuss)

ARVADA — You don’t want to see Ralston Valley sophomore Dallas Walton when he gets angry.

“I tell him, ‘You are an angry dunker.’ That last one was a little angry,” Ralston Valley coach Mitch Conrad said of his 6-foot-9 sophomore’s third a trio of dunks Walton threw down Wednesday night in a first-round Class 5A boys basketball playoff game against Pine Creek.

No. 5-seeded Ralston Valley took advantage of its height advantage against No. 12 seed Pine Creek to move into the second round with a 72-54 home victory.

“I knew going into this game that (Pine Creek) could shoot,” said Walton, who finished with 15 points. “The only way to beat them was to punish them inside.”

Senior Zac Stevens had a game-high 16 points, doing most of his damage in the paint. Pine Creek senior Joey Black was doing a good job defensively in the middle for the Eagles, but when Black had to leave the game with a left knee injury with 5:03 left in the second quarter the Eagles’ problems down low began.

Ralston Valley Pine Creek boys basketball

Ralston Valley senior Zac Stevens, middle, goes up for a shot as Pine Creek seniors Derek Keirns, left, and Joey Black knocks the ball loose Wednesday night in the opening round of the Class 5A boys basketball state tournament. (Dennis Pleuss)

Pine Creek (8-16) actually jumped out to a 12-5 lead midway through the first quarter.

“That kind of happens some games,” Conrad said of Ralston Valley falling behind early. “You know it is do-or-die for this first one. It was good to get that out of our system and hopefully we’ll play loose. We are the underdog in the next game.”

The Mustangs (17-7) went on a 19-2 run during an eight-minute run in the first half to take a double-digit lead at halftime. Junior Andrew Wingard had a strong game for Ralston Valley with 14 points.

“Right when he (Black) went out of the game, Zac and I looked at each other,” Walton said. “We knew it was time to get it inside.”

Ralston Valley also had a massive advantage at the free-throw line. The Mustangs were 25-for-32 from the charity stripe. The Eagles were just 5-for-7 from the free-throw line.

Pine Creek coach Duke Stewart admitted the loss of Black hurt, but he said was frustrated with the way the game was called.

“When they shoot 32 free throws and we shot seven that makes a big difference,” Stewart said.

The Eagles made five 3-pointers, but it wasn’t enough to pull off the upset. Junior Jared Savage (14 points) and senior Derek Keirns (10 points) led Pine Creek in its season-ending loss.

Ralston Valley Pine Creek boys basketball

Pine Creek senior Grant Morin (12) is challenge in the air by Ralston Valley sophomore Dallas Walton (35) and senior Bryn Finnefrock during the second half Wednesday night in the opening round of the Class 5A state tournament.

Pine Creek came into the state tournament having lost 10 of 11 games to end its regular season, but the Eagles had a handful of close losses during that stretch. Quality wins over strong 4A teams Denver West and Thomas Jefferson — both earned first-round byes in the 4A state tournament — didn’t hurt getting Pine Creek into the 5A tournament.

“It was a rough season. We took our bumps and bruises,” Stewart said. “Every game we played in, minus maybe two, we were right in there. I think Savage will be a huge core of what we are going to do and build on for next year.”

No. 4 seed Fort Collins (18-5) had players and coaches on hand at Ralston Valley High School to scout the team it will host will host at 6 p.m. Saturday, March 1.

The Lambkins won seven of eight games before receiving a first-round bye entering the playoffs. Fort Collins finished second in the 5A Front Range League. Senior Toby Van Ry (18.7 points and 7.3 rebound per game) has been the driving force for the Lambkins this season.

Walton said he was excited to go head-to-head against the 6-foot-9 Van Ry.

“I love playing guys my height,” Walton said. “It’s a great experience for me to see what I can do.”

Conrad is expecting a close game up in Fort Collins on Saturday.

“I think it is two evenly matched teams in my book,” Conrad said. “We played them this summer and it went down to the wire. I’m expecting a great game both ways.”

Ralston Valley Pine Creek boys basketball

Ralston Valley junior Andrew Wingard (1) drives past Pine Creek junior Jared Savage during the first half Wednesday night. Wingard finished with 14 points in the Mustangs’ 72-54 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)

Photos: Mountain Range boys basketball moves on in 5A boys basketball tournament

WESTMINSTER — Mountain Range led Northglenn 33-15 at the half and never looked back in the first round of the Class 5A boys basketball tournament. The Mustangs went on to win 60-40.

12th-seeded Rampart knocks off No. 5 Cherokee Trail as 5A boys hoops tourney opens

(Courtesy Robin Cook)

(Courtesy Robin Cook)

AURORA — A No. 12 seed implies that a team snuck in to the tournament. A 12 seed usually means a first-round exit against a far stronger team.

Rampart is not your typical 12 seed.

On a night when another of the final seeds, Loveland, gave Continental power Legend everything they could handle in a 50-44 Legend survival, Rampart did them one better by taking down fifth-seeded Cherokee Trail in Aurora 67-64.

In one of the more intriguing 5 vs. 12 matchups in years: Rampart entered the playoffs 17-6 and 6-4 in Colorado Springs Metro League, tied for second place in the conference. Cherokee Trail was 9-14, 6-8, but had played one of the toughest schedules in 5A and competed well in the ultra-competitive Centennial League.

Cherokee Trail had superior athleticism and team speed, but Rampart’s poise, experience, half-court offense and zone defense allowed them to go into the Cougar’s Den and snatch a victory.

“Our number one key to the game was try to get it to a half-court game,” said Rampart coach Patrick Simpson. “Once we were there, move it a little bit, try to attack them and get to the free-throw line. We had bursts where we were able to get it into half-court and bursts where we were just chaotic up and down.

“This is a really good team,” Simpson said about Cherokee Trail. “They’re young, they’re aggressive and they’re athletic. They do a lot of good things.”

The game was hotly contested throughout as Cherokee Trail had a slight 15-14 advantage at the end of the first quarter. The Cougars used their speed and fastbreak ability to wreak havoc on Rampart and threatened to run away in the second quarter with a 10-1 run to take a 25-15 lead, but the Rams roared back with an 11-0 run to secure a 26-25 edge at the break.

In a back-and-forth third, Rampart’s Donovan Oldham was fouled on a last-second shot. Oldham buried both free-throws to give the Rams a 43-40 advantage headed into the final quarter.

Rampart jumped on the Cougars right away 50-40 with 5:22 remaining as Cherokee Trail was out of sync offensively and continued its cold shooting from the perimeter. Thomas Fife, a senior guard and co-captain at Rampart, was automatic at the charity-stripe making eight for ten at the line in the last quarter and kept the pressure on Cherokee Trail.

(Courtesy Robin Cook)

(Courtesy Robin Cook)

“We shoot a lot of free-throws,” Simpson said. “One of our goals is to make more free-throws than our opponent shoots, so we talk about defensively how to do that and then offensively we’ve got to be aggressive. We made them tonight and we needed to hit every one of them.”

Rampart imposed their style of play, efficient half-court offense, slower pace and shot-making on Cherokee Trail much of the game, but the Cougars made one desperate final push and applied a full-court press in the fourth to speed up the game. The press worked well for a few minutes and Cherokee Trail finally saw its offense heat up as it went on a late 10-4 run to pull within 63-60 of Rampart with 41 seconds left.

The Cougars had hope when Oldham missed a rare pair of free-throws for Rampart with 19 seconds remaining and a 65-61 lead. David Thornton missed a shot at the other end for Cherokee Trail and Tre Young displayed ice-water in his veins as he buried two at the line.

The young but talented Cougars never gave up as Tyler Larkin, who played big all night, cashed a 3-pointer to make it 67-64 with 2.4 on the clock. In a wild last play, Dillon Garcia stole Rampart’s inbound and launched a trey. It grazed the front of the rim.

“The kids did a great job of staying level and composed,” Simpson said after the dramatic finish. “We talk about that a lot. Last year we played with pretty much the same squad and we made mistakes and we lost those games. We ended up getting a 12 seed last year as well, but we weren’t the same team. This year we stayed way more composed, way more level, and we made our free-throws down the stretch.”

Rampart was bounced in the first round a year ago by Overland 63-55 in a relatively close final score, but was down 29-14 at the half. This year they displayed the poise and leadership, along with several weapons, needed to apply pressure on Cherokee Trail the entire evening.

Rampart’s zone defense frustrated the Cougars into several turnovers and helped slow the game down. The Rams gave up transition points in stretches, but overall they defended the fastbreak well.

“We knew coming in that they would try to push the ball,” said Oldham, a junior guard and Rampart’s leading scorer this season. “We knew we had to get back on defense. Our coach kept stressing that they try to get a lot of shots up. We had to rebound and limit their second-chance points and I think we did that pretty well.”

On offense, Rampart’s balance was impressive. Tre Young, a long and lanky 6-foot-6 forward, was effective in the paint and showed off his versatility and scoring ability with 19 points. Oldham slashed his way to 14 points, Cameron Hacker was a threat from deep and knocked down three triples, scoring eleven points, and Thomas Fife scored all ten of his points at the charity-stripe.

Rampart played confident and loose. They rose to the occasion as the slight underdog, but as an unusually strong low seed.

Oldham said Rampart did feel slightly disrespected by their placement in the tournament, but said he is used to it.

“We know that there’s not a lot of respect for the Metro League and the Springs, so we took it with what we have,” Oldham said. “That’s all we needed to do.”

Said Simpson: “I think I worry about it a little more than the kids do. We felt like we were better than a 12, but there’s a lot of good teams.

“My biggest concern is keeping them level at practice,” he added. “I didn’t want a 12 seed, the disappointment of that, to cause them to lose a game. I thought my captains, Donovan Oldham and Thomas Fife, they did such a good job of just keeping practice business as usual.”

On a team that features some of the premier underclassmen in Colorado in sophomores Ronnie Barfield and David Thornton and freshman Jaizec Lottie, senior guards Tyler Larkin (14 points) and Dillon Garcia (12 points) led the way for Cherokee Trail. Larkin gave Rampart trouble with his quickness and speed in the open floor and Garcia kept the Cougars in the game with several big shots, but in the end it was just too much Rampart.

Cherokee Trail concludes its season 9-15, but have the returning talent to be one of the better teams in the state next year.

Rampart is now 18-6 and will travel to the Western Slope to take on No. 4 Grand Junction on Saturday in a battle between two teams with a chip on their shoulder. Grand Junction earned a No. 4 seed despite a lofty 20-2 record and are eager to prove their worth, as well.

Photos: ThunderRidge boys basketball beats Poudre in 5A

HIGHLANDS RANCH — Elias Tiedgen and Zach Pirog each had 15 points as No. 6 ThunderRidge beat No. 11 Poudre 52-26 on Wednesday night to open the Class 5A boys basketball tournament.

All-state boys cross country teams for 2013 season

The 2013 all-state boys cross country teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

The athletes who won championships at their classification were named runner of the year.

Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A

[divider]

Class 5A

Runner of the year: Cerake Geberkidane, Denver East

First team
Name School Year
Cerake Geberkidane Denver East Senior
Zachary Alhamra Pine Creek Junior
Connor Weaver Mountain Vista Senior
Joshua Joseph Thornton Junior
Sean Paiz Thornton Senior
Blake Yount Smoky Hill Junior
Ben Dingman Rampart Sophomore

[divider]

Class 4A

Runner of the year: Liam Meirow, Summit

First team
Name School Year
Liam Meirow Summit Senior
Ethan Gonzales Broomfield Senior
Michael Duran Pueblo Centennial Sophomore
Conner Wilburn Classical Academy Senior
William Mayhew Cheyenne Mountain Junior
Eric Hamer Palmer Ridge Junior
Ricardo Ocampo Broomfield Senior

[divider]

Class 3A

Runner of the year: Jacob Benson, Platte Canyon

First team
Name School Year
Jacob Benson Platte Canyon Senior
Taylor Stack Salida Sophomore
Josh Davis Lamar Senior
Zach Walsh Basalt Junior
Chris Baker Frontier Academy Senior
Luke Yeager Faith Christian Senior
Isaiah Delacerda Alamosa Freshman

[divider]

Class 2A

Runner of the year: Paul Roberts, Lyons

First team
Name School Year
Paul Roberts Lyons Sophomore
Marcel Such Lyons Senior
Joel Such Lyons Sophomore
Ben Butler SkyView Academy Sophomore
Forrest Smith Crested Butte Senior
Jack Plantz Telluride Sophomore

All-state girls cross country teams for 2013 season

The 2013 all-state girls cross country teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

The athletes who won championships at their classification were named runner of the year.

Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A

[divider]

Class 5A

Runner of the year: Lauren Gregory, Fort Collins

First team
Name School Year
Lauren Gregory Fort Collins Freshman
Erin McLaughlin Boulder Senior
Erin Norton Grandview Senior
Maya Browning Fairview Freshman
Ashley Litoff Monarch Senior
Isabelle Kennedy Fairview Senior
Claire Green Monarch Senior

[divider]

Class 4A

Runner of the year: Elise Cranny, Niwot

First team
Name School Year
Elise Cranny Niwot Senior
Katie Rainsberger Air Academy Sophomore
Alison Deitsch Palmer Ridge Senior
Valerie Constien Battle Mountain Senior
Greta VanCalcar Palisade Sophomore
Lexi Reed D’Evelyn Sophomore
Riley Cooney Mountain View Junior

[divider]

Class 3A

Runner of the year: Eva Lou Edwards, Bayfield

First team
Name School Year
Eva Lou Edwards Bayfield Senior
Makayla Santos Frontier Academy Senior
Sydney Fesenmeyer Salida Sophomore
kelsi lasota Estes park Senior
Emily Bryant Pagosa Springs Senior
Phoebe Powell Salida Sophomore
Taylor Bancroft Frontier Academy Senior

[divider]

Class 2A

Runner of the year: Miriam Roberts, Lyons

First team
Name School Year
Miriam Roberts Lyons Senior
Natalie Anderson Hotchkiss Senior
Rachel Rairdon Heritage Christian Academy Sophomore
Jennifer Celis Hotchkiss Senior
Taylor Polson Paonnia Senior
Ginger Hutton Shining Mountain Waldorf Junior

All-state gymnastics teams for 2013 season

The 2013 all-state gymnastics teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

The athletes who won championships at their classification were named gymnast of the year.

Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

Go to: 5A | 4A

[divider]

Class 5A

Gymnast of the year: Taylor Molliconi, Mountain Range

First team
Name School
Devin Bundas Overland
Sela Buted Cherry Creek
Sarah Holbrook Broomfield
Jordan Ireland Standley Lake
Katlin Kerl Arvada West
Taylor Molliconi Mountain Range
Kellyn Toole Overland
Baylie Trammell Columbine
Rachel Wong Cherry Creek

[divider]

Class 4A

Gymnast of the year: Alyssa Carroll, Thompson Valley

First team
Name School
Anisha Alvarodo Thompson Valley
Alyssa Carroll Thompson Valley
Callie Cohen Evergreen
Emily Reynolds Elizabeth

All-state boys golf teams for 2013 season

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Regis Jesuit’s Spencer Painton. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

The 2013 all-state boys golf teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

The athletes who won championships at their classification were named golfers of the year.

Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A

[divider]

Class 5A

Golfer of the year: Spencer Painton, Regis Jesuit

First team
Name School
Spencer Painton Regis Jesuit
Jake Kelley Regis Jesuit
Li Chen Legacy
Grant Rogers Boulder
Devyn Solano Grandview
Aj Ott Fort Collins
Troy Dangler Fruita Monument
Chris Korte Regis Jesuit
Donny Kinnaman Grand Junction
Hunter Lee Heritage
Neil Tillman Ralston Valley
Sam Marley Arapahoe
Kobe Padilla Cherry Creek

[divider]

Class 4A

Golfer of the year: Isaac Petersilie, Coronado

First team
Name School
Isaac Petersilie Coronado
Wilson Belk Cheyenne Mountain
Glenn Workman Pueblo West
Jake Staiano Valor Christian
Jakob Rudosky Montezuma-Cortez
Andrew Rademacher-Howe Silver Creek
Ross Macdonald Valor Christian
Trevor Bogus Durango
Jackson Solem Silver Creek
Josh Seiple Valor Christian

[divider]

Class 3A

Golfer of the year: Tristan Rohrbaugh, Basalt

First team
Name School
Tristan Rohrbaugh Basalt
Behrod Keshtavar Peak to Peak
Cole Folwell Alexander Dawson
Cameron Connor Alexander Dawson
Hayden Nicholaides Lutheran
Payton DeVencenty Lutheran
Clayton Crawford Aspen
Matt Benavidas Alamosa
Yale Kim Alexander Dawson
Gary Schlatter Kent Denver

All-state boys tennis teams for 2013 season

The 2013 all-state boys tennis teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

The athletes who won championships at their classification were named players of the year.

Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.

Go to: 5A | 4A

[divider]

Class 5A

Player of the year: Zach Fryer, Cherry Creek

First team
Name School
Jacob Bendalin Cherry Creek
Ignatius Castelino Fairview
Wyatt Dale Cherry Creek
Harshil Dwivedi Cherry Creek
Zach Fryer Cherry Creek
Matt Gross Cherry Creek 
Ethan Hillis Cherry Creek
Teller Hoskins Cherry Creek
Connor McPherson Cherry Creek
Jake Miller Cherry Creek
Erin Norwood Cherry Creek 
Ben Schlichting Cherry Creek

[divider]

Class 4A

Player of the year: Luke Lorenz, Discovery Canyon

First team
Name School
Kevin Adams Kent Denver 
Ryan Beyer Kent Denver 
Daniel Dilzell Colorado Academy
Willie Gold Kent Denver
Peter Hillary Colorado Academy
Luke Lorenz Discovery Canyon
Seth Miller Colorado Academy
David Mitchell Kent Denver
Ethan Pollock Colorado Academy
Casey Ross Kent Denver
Brad Soderberg Kent Denver
Jack Trueblood Kent Denver