Month: February 2014

  • Lakewood roars past Ralston Valley in top-10 girls hoops tilt

    Lakewood sophomore Mackenzie Forrest goes up for a shot while being surrounded by Ralston Valley defenders, from left to right, Sarah Bevington, Chantel Jacobs and Amanda Lefholz on Friday night at Lakewood High School. Forrest poured in a season-high 30 points in the Tigers' 69-53 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Lakewood sophomore Mackenzie Forrest goes up for a shot while being surrounded by Ralston Valley defenders, from left to right, Sarah Bevington, Chantel Jacobs and Amanda Lefholz on Friday night at Lakewood High School. Forrest poured in a season-high 30 points in the Tigers’ 69-53 victory. (Dennis Pleuss)

    LAKEWOOD — Sometimes a little spark can change everything on the basketball court.

    Lakewood senior Gabby Carbone provided that spark Friday night in a top-10 girls basketball matchup between the No. 7 Tigers and No. 10 Ralston Valley Mustangs. Lakewood eventually won the Class 5A Jeffco League game by a score of 69-53, but it was dicey early on at Lakewood High School.

    Lakewood senior Jessica Brooks elevates for a shot over Ralston Valley senior Sierra Galbreath on Friday night. Lakewood defeated Ralston Valley 69-53 to take a two-game lead in the Class 5A Jeffco League with five conference games remaining. The Tigers are trying to win their first girls basketball league title since 2008. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Lakewood senior Jessica Brooks elevates for a shot over Ralston Valley senior Sierra Galbreath on Friday night. Lakewood defeated Ralston Valley 69-53 to take a two-game lead in the Class 5A Jeffco League with five conference games remaining. The Tigers are trying to win their first girls basketball league title since 2008. (Dennis Pleuss)

    “You’d think I would have chewed them out, but I didn’t. They didn’t need it then,” Lakewood coach Chris Poisson said about what he told him team after taking a timeout with 2:12 left in the first quarter and the Tigers trailing 12-3. “They just needed to calm down. I told them they were fine.”

    Coming out of a timeout, Carbone buried her second 3-pointer of the quarter and start what eventually turned out to be a 21-0 run for Lakewood (17-1, 11-0 in Class 5A Jeffco League).

    “Gabby was awesome tonight. It was the best game she has played,” Poisson said. “Her threes gave us the lift. You could feel it. She was great tonight.”

    Carbone finished with 13 points, including three 3-pointers.

    “We just freak out sometimes and we get caught up in the moment,” Carbone said about trailing early on in front of the big crowd. “I told them to just calm down and keep playing through it.”

    While Carbone provided the ember to give the Tigers the two-game lead over Ralston Valley (13-4, 9-2) in the conference, it was sophomore Mackenzie Forrest who really fanned the flames to victory.

    Forrest scored a season-high 30 points. The sophomore poured in 12 points during the Tigers’ 21-0 run. She also made eight straight free throws in the fourth quarter to seal the victory.

    “We made the mistake of letting (Forrest) dominate the game a little bit,” Ralston Valley coach Jeff Gomer said.

    Gomer added that he didn’t want Lakewood to get going offensively on the inside. Lakewood senior Jessica Brooks and junior McKenna Bishop combined for 38 points in the Tigers’ first victory back on Jan. 4 against Ralston Valley.

    The Tigers took advantage of the Mustangs packing it in on the inside by hitting seven 3-pointer in the first half.

    Lakewood senior Gabby Carbone (15) gets pressure from Ralston Valley senior Janelle Feldmann (11) on Friday night during the first half of the Class 5A Jeffco League game. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Lakewood senior Gabby Carbone (15) gets pressure from Ralston Valley senior Janelle Feldmann (11) on Friday night during the first half of the Class 5A Jeffco League game. (Dennis Pleuss)

    “We got lucky. Some of our shots finally fell,” Forrest said. “Gabby’s threes were huge. All of our threes were great tonight.”

    Defensively, Lakewood patented full-court press also gave Ralston Valley fits and times, leading to breakaway layups.

    “We knew coming in if we didn’t handle the press well we’d be in trouble. We didn’t handle it very well,” Gomer said. “That’s my bad. We’ve got some work to do.”

    Ralston Valley did have a strong fourth quarter, but never was able to cut Lakewood’s lead into single figures. Seniors Sierra Galbreath (13 points) and Chantal Jacobs (11 points) had solid nights for the Mustangs.

    Freshman Ashley Van Sickle showed signs of becoming a possible elite scorer in the near future for Ralston Valley. Van Sickle dropped in 15 points, including three 3-pointer.

    The present looks very bright for Lakewood. The Tigers have a two-game lead in the conference with five games league games remaining.

    “We know what this does in terms of giving us a cushion. Now it’s up to us to finish the job,” said Poisson about the Tigers closing in on their first girls basketball league title since 2008. “We are also playing for a seed. I’d like to get a No. 1 or 2 seed.”

    Ralston Valley heads into the home stretch of its conference schedule when it hosts Pomona at 7 p.m. next Tuesday. Lakewood will face Columbine at 5:30 p.m. next Wednesday at Lakewood High School in the first game of a girls/boys varsity doubleheader.

    “We need to keep on going and play to the best of our abilities,” Carbone said. “We can’t just come out and feel like we are better than everyone. We have to play really hard and keep it going.”

    Ralston Valley freshman Sarah Bevington, far right, tries to get off a shot in traffic Friday night. The Mustangs had their seven-game winning streak snapped with a 69-53 loss to Lakewood. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Ralston Valley freshman Sarah Bevington, far right, tries to get off a shot in traffic Friday night. The Mustangs had their seven-game winning streak snapped with a 69-53 loss to Lakewood. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Ralston Valley freshman Ashley Van Sickle (5) dashes down the court Friday night against Lakewood. The freshman had a team-high 15 points for the Mustangs in the loss. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Ralston Valley freshman Ashley Van Sickle (5) dashes down the court Friday night against Lakewood. The freshman had a team-high 15 points for the Mustangs in the loss. (Dennis Pleuss)
  • ThunderRidge upsets No. 2 Highlands Ranch girls basketball

    (Jordan Morey)
    (Jordan Morey)

    HIGHLANDS RANCH — Four of the top-20 girls basketball teams in all of Colorado play in the Continental League.

    “This league is unlike anything I have been apart of,” ThunderRidge coach Paula Krueger said Friday night. “I spent 17 years at the college level and I still don’t know if I’ve seen from the top, to the middle, to the bottom the kind of parody they have in this league. It’s a fun league to be a part of, and you need to show up everyday to play. There’s no days off.”

    No. 8 ThunderRidge took down the second-ranked team in the state, Highlands Ranch (15-2, 4-1), 55-43 at home on Friday. Sophomore Alyssia Martinez scored a career-high 16 points for ThunderRidge.

    “I would say we should be at the top, since we took down the second-ranked team,” Martinez said. “We can do a lot, and go far.”

    This season, Highlands Ranch has averaged 60.4 points — the 19th most in the state. Those numbers put them on a 12-game winning streak that started on Dec. 7. Their 43 points against ThunderRidge was a season-low for a team that can put up big numbers.

    “Defensively, we planned to keep them off balance a little big by switching things up,” Krueger said. “We went between the man and zone defenses throughout the game, and my kids did a heck of a job. They were fantastic.”

    ThunderRidge never trailed Highlands Ranch. After finishing the first quarter up 11-10, the Grizzlies had a even better second as they led 33-24 behind three 3-pointers from Taylor Rusk. Highlands Ranch started the second-half strong by closing the deficit to 35-40 after three. However, Highlands Ranch couldn’t get past ThunderRidge’s stifling defense in the fourth, as they only scored eight points. Senior Taylor Reinier closed the game out with six of her eight points in the final quarter as ThunderRidge ran away with the lead.

    “Tonight we proved what type of team we are,” Reinier said. “We proved that we can come out and play defense, hit big shots and play confident but calmly.”

    Up next, the teams have polar-opposite schedules. Highlands Ranch will take on No. 1 Regis Jesuit (14-2, 4-0) on Feb. 5, and ThunderRidge will play Heritage (1-15, 0-4) on Feb. 4. ThunderRidge and Regis Jesuit, the top two teams in the Continental League, will face off on Feb. 14 at ThunderRidge High School. Regis Jesuit’s entire girls basketball attended the game between ThunderRidge and Highlands Ranch.

    “This game gives us confidence especially after the losses to Denver East and Broomfield earlier this month,” Martinez said. “This is a tight division, and I can’t wait to play Regis.”

  • No. 3 Monarch hockey wins top-5 showdown with No. 4 Cherry Creek

    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    CENTENNIAL — One, two, three hacks weren’t enough. Neither was the fourth, but it did send the puck — ever so slowly — underneath Cherry Creek goalie Aaron Jatana and toward the goal-line.

    Drew Wagner was there to clean up after the scrum in front of the net. The Monarch forward pushed home a tie-breaking goal early in the second period that ultimately proved to be back-breaking for Cherry Creek. Wagner’s goal held up as the winner as the No. 3 Coyotes topped No. 4 Cherry Creek at Family Sports Center on Friday night, 3-1.

    “It was just a good line effort,” Wagner said after the game. “We all just kept pounding, and eventually it popped out. I buried it.”

    “That second goal gave us a little momentum,” Monarch coach Jimmy Dexter said. “Finally poked it in. Got us going.”

    The goal snapped a 1-1 tie just 3:27 into the second period, and Monarch never really relinquished momentum after that.

    “I thought if we could’ve broken through that scrum, if we could’ve gotten out of that, we would’ve been alright,” Cherry Creek coach Jeff Mielnicki said. “They won the one-on-one war in front of the net there. Watching it from the other end, it was excruciating.”

    Just one minute and 33 seconds later, Blake Bride tipped Justin White’s shot from the point in the slot and made it 3-1.

    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    A period later, Monarch had a signature win that will also go a long way in the Foothills Conference playoff picture. The Coyotes now sit in a tie with Regis Jesuit atop the conference standings with 18 points.

    “We had our chance against Ralston (Valley) and blew it — didn’t really come out to play that game with them,” Monarch’s Walker Harris said, referencing a 4-1 loss to the top-ranked and defending champion Mustangs on Jan. 14. “(Tonight), against the No. 4 team in the state, we felt like we needed to come out and show this state what we can do.”

    Monarch jumped all over Creek on Friday. The Coyotes hit the post twice in the game’s first two minutes. Then, a patient Cameron Taggart wheeled around in the left circle and scored on the power play to give his team a 1-0 lead 6:02 into the game.

    But, while Monarch controlled the play in the first period, there was one major blemish: Cherry Creek captain Jackson Ross capitalized on a turnover along the boards in the offensive zone to bury a short-handed chance which tied the game just prior to intermission.

    “We were excited,” Mielnicki said.

    It could have been deflating for Monarch. It wasn’t.

    “These guys are pretty resilient. We have a confident group,” Dexter said. “After that first period, they knew that they played well. Yeah, it was tied, but they all felt good going into the next period.”

    “It was kind of a bummer, but I don’t think any of us were really that bummed out,” Wagner said. “We knew that that stuff happens and we can play through it.”

    It was Wagner’s goal that provided the lift early in the next period, and Monarch took over from there on out. The Coyotes outshot Cherry Creek 36-16, and were magnificent on the penalty kill as the Bruins went 0-for-4.

    Ian Oden made 15 saves for his third win this season. Cherry Creek’s Jatana made 33 saves, but dropped to 4-2-0.

    Harris, and his 36 points, lead the Foothills Conference this season. In fact, Friday marked the first time all season he didn’t show up on the scoresheet. But that didn’t matter. The junior — who is also a member of Fairview’s baseball team — was a difference-maker all over the ice.

    “He’s unbelievable for us. He’s so smart, he does everything right,” Dexter said of Harris. “He’s always in the right place. If it’s late in the game, he’s going to be the high guy and make sure we have three (defenders) and make sure they don’t get an odd man rush. And he’s obviously — I think he’s leading the league in scoring, too. It’s nice to have him on our club.”

  • Photo gallery: ThunderRidge girls basketball upsets Highlands Ranch

    HIGHLANDS RANCH — No. 8 ThunderRidge girls basketball upset No. 2 Highlands Ranch on Friday night.

  • Photo gallery: Horizon beats Poudre in girls basketball

    THORNTON — Horizon topped Poudre 42-41 in girls basketball on Friday night.

  • Photo gallery: Monarch hockey beats Cherry Creek

    CENTENNIAL — Monarch hockey beat Cherry Creek 3-1 on Friday night.