WESTMINSTER — Aimee Thorstensen and Lauren Bohan each scored as Mountain Range’s girls soccer team beat Fort Collins on Thursday, 2-1.
Month: April 2014
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Photos: Horizon gets late run to edge Legacy in baseball
BROOMFIELD — Horizon scored in the top of the seventh inning to beat Legacy, 2-1.
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Photos: Mountain Range downs Legacy in girls tennis dual
BROOMFIELD — Mountain Range girls tennis improved to 8-1 in dual meets with a 5-2 win over Legacy on Thursday.
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Mountain Vista upsets top-ranked ThunderRidge in 5A baseball

More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com) HIGHLANDS RANCH — This was an old-fashioned pitchers’ duel.
It ultimately came down to one inning — in effect, one pitch.
Nick Leonard got the best of Wednesday’s duel as he outlasted ThunderRidge’s AJ Jones to help his Mountain Vista team defeat the Grizzlies 3-0.
The win was significant for the Golden Eagles. First, it was on the Grizzlies’ home field. Second, it helped Mountain Vista maintain a perfect Continental League record at 4-0 (11-1 overall) and handed ThunderRidge its first league loss (3-1, 8-3).

Mountain Vista’s Nick Leonard. More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com) And, finally, it meant No. 7 Mountain Vista had knocked off the defending Class 5A champion Grizzlies, currently the No. 1 team in the state.
But perhaps more important for Leonard, it helped him avenge a loss to the Grizzlies in last year’s playoffs.
“They got to me for seven runs (in the playoff game),” Leonard said. “I don’t think I even made it out of the first inning.”
He and Jones were the men in the spotlight on Wednesday. At one point, the two combined to retire 20 straight batters.
Jones gave up four hits and struck out eight.
“That was a phenomenal performance by him,” Leonard said, tipping his cap to his counterpart.
But Leonard was even more dominant. Leonard, who is headed to Washington State this fall on a scholarship, recorded 13 strikeouts, including the final out.
The teams were scoreless through the first five innings. Leonard wasn’t worried.
“I had no doubt in these guys,” he said of believing his teammates would eventually produce at the plate.
Jones’ difficulty came in the top of the sixth. Although he only walked four batters, two of them came to lead off the inning. With one out, he then intentionally walked a batter to load the bases and set up a potential double-play ball. That set the table for Michael Dunnebecke.

More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com) “I was thinking, put the ball in play,” Dunnebecke said of his thought process of having the bases loaded in a scoreless game.
He did, hitting the left-centerfield cap for a run-scoring triple for the only runs the Golden Eagles needed.
Mountain Vista coach Ron Quintana was elated to escape the Grizzlies’ field with the victory.
“That was a great high school game,” he said. “It shows that one game in our league is huge.”
Dunnebecke got the key hit, but he passed out the compliments.
“This shows how good of a team we are,” he said.
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Photos: No. 7 Mountain Vista baseball beats No. 1 ThunderRidge
HIGHLANDS RANCH — Seventh-ranked Mountain Vista upset No. 1 ThunderRidge in 5A baseball on Wednesday.
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Baseball’s Wild Card point standings, April 17
Wild Card points help determine the postseason fields in 3A, 4A and 5A, with 4A and 5A also using them for seeding. Find a more detailed breakdown here.
Baseball’s Wild Card point standings for April 17 are below.
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Class 5A Rank School Points 1 Chatfield 114.833 2 Regis Jesuit 110.538 3 Fairview 110.333 4 Columbine 108.833 5 ThunderRidge 108.000 6 Mountain Vista 107.462 7 Chaparral 104.385 8 Arapahoe 104.083 9 Ralston Valley 101.727 10 Pine Creek 100.833 11 Grand Junction 100.786 12 Rock Canyon 100.538 13 Cherry Creek 100.167 14 Brighton 99.833 15 Grand Junction Central 99.769 16 Monarch 99.636 17 Fruita Monument 98.588 18 Prairie View 98.500 19 Castle View 96.333 20 Arvada West 95.917 21 Northglenn 95.417 22 Rocky Mountain 95.000 23 Dakota Ridge 94.500 24 Mountain Range 94.333 25 Grandview 92.417 26 Douglas County 91.154 27 Fossil Ridge 90.917 28 Horizon 90.750 29 Lincoln 90.571 30 Denver East 89.692 31 Bear Creek 89.545 32 Eaglecrest 88.900 33 Lakewood 88.833 34 Liberty 87.909 35 Mullen 86.545 36 Heritage 85.462 37 Greeley West 85.333 38 Westminster 85.154 39 Cherokee Trail 84.583 40 Legend 84.231 41 Rangeview 83.667 42 Doherty 83.333 43 Palmer 82.667 44 Boulder 82.538 45 Fort Collins 82.400 46 Aurora Central 82.000 47 George Washington 81.333 48 Legacy 80.833 49 Standley Lake 80.727 50 Smoky Hill 80.500 51 Highlands Ranch 79.385 52 Pomona 79.154 53 Fountain-Fort Carson 78.692 54 Poudre 78.182 55 Overland 77.000 56 Littleton 74.667 57 Montbello 72.333 58 Loveland 70.833 59 Rampart 70.273 60 Gateway 70.000 61 Hinkley 69.286 62 Adams City 64.385 63 Thornton 56.667 Class 4A Rank School Points 1 Niwot 103.250 2 Montrose 101.909 3 Wheat Ridge 101.000 4 Evergreen 100.400 5 Lewis-Palmer 99.583 6 Elizabeth 98.500 7 Durango 97.385 8 Ponderosa 96.462 9 Windsor 96.385 10 Valor Christian 94.357 11 Longmont 93.182 12 Delta 92.615 13 Pueblo East 91.833 14 Green Mountain 91.667 15 Palisade 91.583 16 Thomas Jefferson 91.462 17 Palmer Ridge 90.750 18 Canon City 90.455 19 Kennedy 89.000 20 Mesa Ridge 87.929 21 Skyview 87.385 22 Rifle 87.308 23 Pueblo Centennial 86.417 24 D’Evelyn 86.333 25 Erie 86.091 26 Eagle Valley 86.000 27 Pueblo South 85.846 28 Golden 85.364 29 Air Academy 85.200 30 Thompson Valley 83.667 31 Mead 83.455 32 Widefield 82.154 33 Fort Morgan 82.071 34 Northridge 81.917 35 Frederick 81.917 36 Falcon 81.500 37 Cheyenne Mountain 80.500 38 Skyline 80.417 39 Glenwood Springs 79.500 40 Mountain View 79.417 41 Steamboat Springs 79.385 42 Denver North 79.364 43 Vista PEAK Prep 78.786 44 Montezuma-Cortez 78.714 45 Greeley Central 78.500 46 Roosevelt 77.000 47 Coronado 76.091 48 Denver West 75.778 49 Pueblo Central 75.167 50 Sand Creek 74.917 51 Broomfield 74.769 52 Berthoud 74.083 53 Pueblo West 73.667 54 Conifer 73.167 55 Discovery Canyon 73.000 56 Pueblo County 72.000 57 Silver Creek 71.538 58 Englewood 70.455 59 Woodland Park 69.818 60 Summit 69.444 61 Vista Ridge 68.833 62 Battle Mountain 68.000 63 Centaurus 67.083 64 Arvada 65.091 65 Alameda 64.800 66 Denver South 60.462 67 Weld Central 59.889 68 Sierra 55.900 69 Mitchell 50.500 70 Harrison 48.222 Class 3A Rank School Points 1 Bayfield 95.000 2 Eaton 91.889 3 Holy Family 87.769 4 Valley 87.000 5 Brush 86.889 6 Faith Christian 85.545 7 The Classical Academy 83.400 8 Gunnison 82.000 9 University 80.700 10 Lamar 79.750 11 Cedaredge 79.667 12 Kent Denver 78.667 13 Arrupe Jesuit 77.400 14 St. Mary’s 74.636 15 Platte Valley 74.300 16 Florence 74.273 17 Sterling 73.364 18 Basalt 72.778 19 Olathe 72.300 20 Peak to Peak 71.250 21 La Junta 70.083 22 Alamosa 68.750 23 Fort Lupton 68.500 24 Manitou Springs 68.455 25 Bennett 68.333 26 Bishop Machebeuf 66.786 27 The Academy 66.333 28 Colorado Springs Christian 64.818 29 Moffat County 64.692 30 Sheridan 64.667 31 Clear Creek/Gilpin County 63.154 32 Colorado Academy 63.111 33 Trinidad 63.077 34 Coal Ridge 62.778 35 Buena Vista 62.636 36 Jefferson Academy 62.250 37 Centauri 62.143 38 Roaring Fork 60.364 39 Estes Park 59.556 40 Strasburg 58.778 41 Pagosa Springs 58.727 42 Bruce Randolph 58.375 43 Monte Vista 56.333 44 Ellicott 56.182 45 Platte Canyon 54.818 46 Manual 54.545 47 Grand Valley 54.364 48 Dolores Huerta Prep 52.000 49 Middle Park 49.364 50 Denver Science & Tech Stapleton 48.833 51 Jefferson 46.429 52 Aspen 45.556 53 Salida 42.100 54 KIPP Denver Collegiate 39.286 Class 2A Rank School Points 1 Rye 79.800 2 Resurrection Christian 77.364 3 Swink 76.667 4 Hotchkiss 75.231 5 Peyton 74.200 6 Kiowa 73.250 7 Sedgwick County 70.600 8 Lyons 69.727 9 Lutheran 67.600 10 Holyoke 66.400 11 Limon 65.400 12 Rocky Ford 64.417 13 Custer County 64.375 14 Paonia 64.100 15 Haxtun 63.455 16 Nucla 63.400 17 Denver Christian 63.375 18 Front Range Christian 62.000 19 Ignacio 62.000 20 Byers 60.750 21 Calhan 60.700 22 Rangely 59.455 23 Las Animas 58.833 24 Center 58.700 25 Crowley County 58.700 26 Merino 58.400 27 Alexander Dawson 58.300 28 Yuma 57.000 29 Dolores 56.444 30 South Park 53.636 31 Burlington 53.000 32 Evangelical Christian 51.800 33 Fowler 51.800 34 Dayspring Christian Academy 51.111 35 Sargent 50.375 36 Sierra Grande 50.143 37 Wray 50.111 38 Highland 48.800 39 Springfield 47.333 40 Akron 47.200 41 Simla 46.857 42 County Line [Wiley/McClave] 45.833 43 Sanford 45.500 44 Liberty Common 44.833 45 Antonito 44.143 46 John Mall 43.500 47 Meeker 38.889 48 Longmont Christian 36.100 49 Wiggins 35.000 50 Denver Academy 34.000 51 Pikes Peak Christian 29.000 52 Cripple Creek-Victor 25.909 Class 1A Rank School Points 1 Stratton 59.167 2 Elbert 57.857 3 Granada 55.800 4 Dove Creek 52.875 5 Community Christian 49.333 6 Fleming 45.125 7 Caliche 43.636 8 Cotopaxi 43.429 9 Manzanola 42.800 10 Eads 42.583 11 Peetz 36.400 12 Holly 34.857 13 Cornerstone Christian Academy 31.000 14 Briggsdale 28.778 15 Rocky Mountain Lutheran 26.909 16 Cheyenne Wells 23.571 17 Primero 20.000 18 Weldon Valley 19.000 19 Denver Jewish Day 19.000 20 Walsh 15.000 -
Legislative Council notebook: 4A basketball tourneys reduced to 32 teams

CHSAA’s Legislative Council met on Thursday at the Red Lion Hotel Southeast in Aurora. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com) AURORA — The fields for the Class 4A boys and girls basketball tournaments have been reduced from 48 to 32 teams.
The change, first proposed by the basketball committee in February, was approved by CHSAA’s Legislative Council on Thursday morning. An amendment put forth by the Jeffco League specifically sought to keep the fields at 48 teams, but it was defeated 38-32.
The change was made in hopes of making the tournaments more competitive, as well as reducing travel across the state.
“They knew that wasn’t going to be popular in some areas, but 4A is not unlike 1A, 2A or 3A in terms of the amount of travel,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann, who oversees basketball. “So there were a lot of travel issues in the tournament, particularly in the first round.

(Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com) “Additionally, the committee did some hard work in looking at previous first-round games, and looking at the margin of victory in those games. They found they were quite a few blowouts in those games, and wanted to eliminate that and get a more competitive bracket in going to 32.
“That being said, who knows how long the 32-team bracket will be. 4A has gone back and forth with that concept a couple of times.”
The basketball committee sent out a survey to administrators in the winter, and results showed people favored cutting the field.
“It was overwhelming from the 4A administrators,” Borgmann said. “They felt like 48 was too large a field for the state basketball tournament, so they dropped that number down to 32.”
Jeffco’s amendment argued that since the 4A classification was actually adding teams in the 2014-16 cycle, playoff spots shouldn’t be reduced.
“The basketball committee looked at all of that, and it still seemed to be an overwhelming number that wanted it at 32,” Borgmann said. “Jeffco’s amendment certainly had some logic to it. Again, we’ll see where it goes with this.”
Additionally, the 4A boys and girls Great 8s have been moved to home sites.
An amendment changed 5A basketball’s seeding from a two-day process to a one-day event, as well.
5A football seeding committee set

(Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com) In December, the football committee generated a lot of buzz when it announced its desire to use a seeding committee in determining the 5A playoff field.
A proposal was brought forward at January’s Legislative Council meeting, but ultimately struck because it wasn’t yet polished. Well, a more refined proposal was back at this Legislative Council meeting — and passed by a wide (66-6) margin.
It means 5A football’s field of 32 will still be set by the Wild Card points, but their placement on the bracket will be determined by a seeding committee. Those teams will be seeded Nos. 1-8 into four quadrants, something similar to what basketball does for its larger-classification tournaments.
The seeding committee will be made up of administrators, one from each conference. No coaches will be allowed. In addition to seeding teams Nos. 1-32, they’ll also seed Nos. 33-5o to determine Week 10 matchups.
Among the criteria that the seeding committee will use:
- Wild Card points
- Head-to-head competition
- Common opponents
- Overall record
- League standing
- Strength of schedule
- An RPI ranking system developed by RockyPrep.com
Conference champions will be guaranteed a top-16 seed, and thus a first-round home game. The committee “will attempt to place the top two seeds from each conference in separate quadrants.” Conference opponents will not face one another in the first round.
Short stuff
- Wrestling’s enrollment number cutoffs have changed. Here’s a separate story on that development.
- Hockey’s attempt to split into two classifications was shot down. The proposal needed 60 percent of the votes to pass, but only got 46. So the sport will remain unclassified, as it has been since it started in 1976.
- A proposal to move the boys tennis state championships back one week overwhelmingly failed, 62-7. It sought to avoid a schedule conflict with two national tournaments.
- Wheat Ridge boys lacrosse will move up to 5A starting next season.
- An increase in the number of halves or quarters players are allowed to play was approved for field hockey (30 to 36), lacrosse (girls: 34 to 36 halves; boys: 68 to 72 quarters), and soccer (30 to 36 halves). The rationale was that the change will help smaller schools to build their programs by allowing so-called “swing” players to go back and fourth between the JV and varsity programs more often.
- Swimming’s state meets next season were originally going to be spread out over three days. However, an amendment kept the meets at two days.
- CHSAA board president Curt Wilson cited Akron guard Brady Baer as an example of great sportsmanship, specifically his actions during the state tournament.
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Wrestling’s enrollment cutoffs changed as proposal passes

(Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com) AURORA — In an effort to even out the number of teams in each classification, wrestling will use its own enrollment number cutoffs to determine classes.
The change was made Thursday at CHSAA’s Legislative Council meeting after a proposal suggesting the move passed. It means wrestling joins football as the only sports to have separate enrollment cutoffs. Every other sport uses figures primarily determined by the number of basketball schools in each classification.
Affected are classes 4A, 3A and 2A. The cutoff was not changed in 5A.
Had a change not been made, wrestling looking at a glaring disparity of teams in each classification. Specifically, Class 4A was set to have 71 teams while 3A would’ve had 38. With the change, 4A and 3A will each have 53 teams.
“It really helps 3A and 4A the most, because that’s where the gross inequity is in terms of numbers,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Harry Waterman, who oversees wrestling. “When we follow a model based on basketball numbers, that where that falls, because there are 229 wrestling schools and seemingly everybody has a basketball program.
“This is really about making an individual sport more balanced. It does go against the philosophy of having every sport (use the same cutoff), but this is going to really help a lot.”
Wednesday’s proposal was a joint effort of the Intermountain, Northern and Colorado Springs Metro (4A and 5A) leagues, but much of the groundwork was laid by the wrestling committee in its meeting.
“We had a lot of input from a lot of different coaches, with Harry’s guidance and his recommendations,” said committee chair Ernie Dererra, the athletic director at Thompson Valley. “We thought it was a good idea to move forward with it, because we felt it was what’s best for the sport.
“Most of the schools in the state have basketball, and that’s where most of our classification numbers come from,” Dererra continued. “Not all of the schools in the state have wrestling, and that’s where that disparity in classification, particularly for 3A and 4A, came from. … It just didn’t seem fair to the 4A kid that they’re facing twice the competition for the same number of opportunities to quality for the state tournament.”
The change will also help solve issues like one that popped up in 2A this year, where one regional only had two wrestlers show up at a specific weight class. That caused CHSAA to pull fifth-place finishers from other regionals to fill a state bracket.
The proposal needed two-thirds of the vote to pass. It got 82 percent. So wrestling will now use the following numbers for cutoffs during the 2014-16 cycle:
Wrestling enrollment numbers Class Cutoff Schools 2A 1-275 61 3A 276-780 53 4A 781-1410 53 5A 1411-up 62 -
Photos: CHSAA Legislative Council meets in Aurora
AURORA — CHSAA’s Legislative Council met at the Red Lion Hotel Southeast on Thursday.
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Photos: Sanchez’s hat trick helps The Academy girls soccer beat Middle Park
WESTMINSTER — Raeanne Sanchez had a hat trick in leading No. 9 The Academy to a 7-0 win over Middle Park in Class 3A girls soccer on Wednesday.
Alexis Loera, Tatiana Garcia, Allie Falagrady and Antionette Carrera also scored for the Wildcats. Emily Bunch made three saves in recording the shutout.
