Month: September 2014

  • Facts about food safety

    So we all know that eating foods like low-fat dairy, lean protein, whole grains, fruits and vegetables are good choices. You may have even heard that you should enjoy a variety foods from each of the Five Food Groups every day to get all of recommended vitamins and minerals your body needs to perform at peak athletic performance.

    But what about the “why” and “how” of keeping your foods stored properly — specifically as an athlete trying to eat healthy lunches packed from home, or packing foods for those times when you find yourself away from home at games and tournaments?

    Certain types of food provide excellent environments for growing harmful bacteria that may make you sick. Getting sick from food that isn’t stored or handled safely is called food-borne illness. A few causes of food-borne illness are improper handling, such as cross-contamination or improper storage, such as keeping food that should be refrigerated left out on the counter.

    Cross-contamination happens when you contaminate one food with the germs of another food. Uncooked meat and poultry can contain harmful bacteria. That’s why we cook meats and poultry to certain temperatures to kill the bacteria, so we won’t get sick.

    If we cut raw chicken on a cutting board, then use the same unwashed knife and cutting board to cut up lettuce for a salad, the bacteria from the chicken, specifically salmonella, is on our lettuce. This is called cross-contamination. To avoid cross-contamination, wash all cutting boards, plates or utensils that have touched raw meat before using them with other foods, such as fruits and vegetables.

    Food should be kept in temperatures outside of the “danger zone” — which is between 40-140 degrees Fahrenheit. When packing your lunch, use a thermos to keep hot food hot. Using a couple of ice packs for your insulated cooler (one pack on top, and one on bottom)  should do the job just fine for keeping your carrots, yogurt and turkey sandwich safe until lunch time.

    Another option to keep your food cold is freezing a juice box or bottle of water and using that in place of one of your ice packs. Some foods don’t need to be kept cold or hot — these include whole raw fruits and vegetables (think produce section of your grocery store), some hard cheeses, canned meat and fish, chips, breads, crackers, peanut butter, jelly, mustard and pickles.

    What about when you want to heat up leftovers for lunch? Keep it cold until you can use the microwave. If you use a microwave to warm up leftovers for lunch, make sure to let the food stand for a minute after you take it out of the microwave. This standing time isn’t just so you don’t burn yourself on your food. Your food will actually continue cooking — allowing for less cold spots in your food and less time in the danger zone. To learn more about food safety, visit foodsafety.gov.

    Athletes can train harder and perform better with proper nutrition. Visit WesternDairyAssociation.org to read more about milk as an exercise recovery beverage and learn how to eat for peak athletic performance. 

  • Back from college ranks, Joe Ramunno enjoying second stint with Palisade

    Palisade football coach Joe Ramunno roams the sidelines prior to his team's win over The Classical Academy last Friday. (Kent Mincer)
    Palisade football coach Joe Ramunno roams the sidelines prior to his team’s win over The Classical Academy last Friday. (Kent Mincer)

    COLORADO SPRINGS — It’s frequently been said, “You can never go home again.” Don’t tell that to Joe Ramunno. He feels right at home on the sidelines coaching the Palisade football team.

    Ramunno was the head coach during the Bulldog’s run to four consecutive state titles in the late 1990s before moving onto what he hoped would be greener pastures at the collegiate level — heading across the Grand Valley to take over at Mesa State College (later Mesa State University and then Colorado Mesa University).

    After a 14-year run at Mesa State, Ramunno was replaced two years ago. He never lost that desire to coach, however. When the head coach at Palisade, John Arledge, offered to put Ramunno back on the sidelines as an assistant, he jumped at the chance.

    It was old home week for Ramunno, back at the school he literally helped build. A year later, he was asked to assume the head coaching reins again.

    When Ramunno took over for his first stint as coach of the Bulldogs, the program was in the doldrums. But a new high school was being built. Taking a page from things he’d learned as a player at the University of Wyoming and from his days on the practice squad of the Chicago Bears, Ramunno realized his first mission was for his players to get stronger.

    “It was a building process,” he said, both literally and figuratively.

    That’s why one of his first priorities was to establish a weight room at the new school.

    The school was rebuilt. Now it was time to rebuild the team. His second mission was to rebuild the mentality.

    “I visited a few sports psychologists, because you had to change the attitude,” he said.

    Still, “It took three years to get us to (a point where) we could compete,” he said;..

    It helped that, beginning in 1994, Ramunno inherited one of those freshman classes that got it, that understood what he was trying to accomplish. That fall began the first of four straight state title runs.

    He’s brought that same mentality back with his for his second run as head coach.

    Ramunno admits that, dealing with high school players instead of collegians, he’s had to back it down a tad.

    “You have to tone it down quite a bit,” he said of practices.

    Still, as he said, coaching football is the same at any level. It’s still X’s and O’s, teaching the fundamentals of blocking and tackling. It’s helped that he retained much of the team’s previous coaching staff, giving the program continuity.

    “All these guys are good people,” he said of his assistant coaches. “And they’re all in it for the kids.”

    That’s what brought him back as well. Coaching is still fun.

    “It’s good to be back involved in it,” he said.

    No matter the level, “I love working with the kids.”

    In his return last season, Palisade went 10-2 and advanced to the second round of the Class 3A playoffs.

    This year, Ramunno’s squad is off to a 1-0 start following a 36-14 road win over The Classical Academy in Week 1. The Bulldogs, No. 8 in the preseason ranking, moved up to No. 7 in this week’s poll.

  • Standley Lake vs. Chatfield on 8/29/2014

    Team scores
    Rank School Score
    1 Standley Lake 166.275
    2 Chatfield 161.375
    Vault
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Jordan Ireland Standley Lake 9.4
    2 Rachel Cody Standley Lake 9.15
    3 Maddi York Standley Lake 8.85
    Bars
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Jordan Ireland Standley Lake 8.65
    2 Maddy Petri Chatfield 8.55
    3 Maddi York Standley Lake 8.125
    Beam
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Elizabeth Dominguez Chatfield 8.575
    2 Kira Woods Chatfield 8.175
    3 Tori Harrel Standley Lake 8.1
    Floor
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Maddi York Standley Lake 9.4
    2 Tori Harrel Standley Lake 9
    3 Elizabeth Dominguez Chatfield 8.9
    All-Around
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Jordan Ireland Standley Lake 34.275
    2 Elizabeth Dominguez Chatfield 34.175
    3 Maddi York Standley Lake 34.1
  • Green Mountain vs Bear Creek on 8/29/2014

    Team scores
    Rank School Score
    1 Green Mountain 163.625
    2 Bear Creek 142.45
    Vault
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Heili Duffin Green Mountain 8.35
    2 Julia Johnson Bear Creek 8.3
    3 Laura Studley Bear Creek 8.15
    Bars
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Hayley Upson Green Mountain 8.65
    2 Morgan Maddox Green Mountain 8.5
    3 Kathy Nguyen Green Mountain 7.975
    Beam
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Morgan Maddox Green Mountain 8.5
    2 Kathy Nguyen Green Mountain 8.275
    3 Makayla Finamore Green Mountain 8.125
    Floor
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Kathy Nguyen Green Mountain 9
    2 Heili Duffin Green Mountain 8.425
    3 Morgan Maddox Green Mountain 8.4
    All-Around
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Morgan Maddox Green Mountain 33.45
    2 Heili Duffin Green Mountain 32.7
    3 Hayley Upson Green Mountain 32.6
  • Bryson Torres keys Pueblo East football’s fast start

    Pueblo East's Bryson Torres. (Daniel Davis Photography)
    Pueblo East’s Bryson Torres. (Daniel Davis Photography)

    PUEBLO — During the entire offseason, Bryson Torres was on a mission to make an impact on Pueblo East High School’s football team.

    Torres’ hard work paid dividends.

    The sophomore has started the first two games for the Eagles and been superb. He rushed for 260 yards and scored four touchdowns in the Eagles’ opening wins over Longmont (41-25) and Coronado (20-14).

    “Bryson has done a phenomenal job,” veteran East coach David Ramirez said. “We are not surprised in any way because he has worked his butt off for this opportunity and it’s nice to see a kid who has worked as hard as Bryson succeed. He just has great character.”

    Torres’ success certainly didn’t come against lesser opponents.

    The Trojans and Cougars are both Class 4A schools. Actually, Coronado won the 3A title a year ago and moved up this season. Those wins vaulted Pueblo East from outside of the Class 3A CHSAAnow.com poll to No. 3 in the latest rankings. East lost to Silver Creek 34-17 in the state quarterfinals a year ago.

    “The season has gone really good,” the 5-foot-9, 180-pound Torres said. “I was little nervous in that Longmont game, but after I made my first run, I just realized I needed to play football like I always have.”

    The play of Torres, who has 45 carries in the first two games, definitely has the attention of junior Eagles’ quarterback Danny Martin.

    “Bryson and I were going to the gym all the time in the offseason and I saw how hard he was working,” the 5-foot-9, 170-pound Martin said. “Still I was surprised how well he has done. The best thing about Bryson is he just puts his head down and runs north and south and he has good speed.”

    On Friday, Torres and the Eagles will get another stiff test when they clash with rival Pueblo South in the Cannon Game at 7 p.m. Friday at Dutch Clark Stadium.

    The 4A Colts advanced to the state semifinals last season before losing to Montrose. South blanked Ponderosa 35-0 in its opening game Friday.

    “There are going to be a lot of emotions running high and two good teams are playing and this should be a good game,” said Torres, who also is a sprinter on East’s track and field team. “If we could get this win it would give us a lot of momentum.”

    The Eagles won the Cannon Game in 2012 and Ramirez knows other victory in this intense game would give his team a jolt.

    “It would be very exciting for our community and it would be great to bring the Cannon back to the east side,” Ramirez said. “For us trying to get to a state championship, if we had three wins over three quality 4A schools, that would be a huge step in that direction.”

  • Mountain Range vs. Rocky Mountain dual on 8/28

    Event type: Dual
    Host: Mountain Range
    Date: 8/28/2014

    Team scores
    Rank School Score
    1 Mountain Range 175.9
    2 Rocky Mountain 156.5
    Vault
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Natalie Prestwich Mountain Range 9
    2 Carrie Bosveld Mountain Range 9
    3 Autumn Bottke Rocky Mountain 9
    4 Caitlyn Paplow Mountain Range 8.9
    5 Rachel Dillmann Mountain Range 8.8
    Bars
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Rachel Dillmann Mountain Range 9.3
    2 Syd Kotar Mountain Range 8.9
    3 Autumn Battke Rocky Mountain 8.8
    Beam
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Carrie Bosveld Mountain Range 8.8
    2 Autumn Bottke Rocky Mountain 8.5
    3 Rachel Dillmann Mountain Range 8.3
    4 Syd Kotar Mountain Range 8.3
    5 Caitlyn Paplow Mountain Range 8.3
    Floor
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Rachel Dillmann Mountain Range 9.65
    2 Autumn Bottke Rocky Mountain 9.5
    3 Marina Larson Mountain Range 9.45
    4 Caitlyn Paplow Mountain Range 9.45
    All-Around
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Rachel Dillmann Mountain Range 36.05
    2 Autumn Bottke Rocky Mountain 35.8
    3 Caitlyn Paplow Mountain Range 35.25
  • Chatfield baseball searching for new coach

    Chatfield senior Matt Jarecki (12) is greeted at home plate by junior Sean O’Dell after his solo home ru in the third inning Friday morning against Cherry Creek at All-City Field in Denver. Chatfield went on to beat Cherry Creek 8-4. (Dennis Pleuss)
    Chatfield went 20-4 last season. (Dennis Pleuss)

    Chatfield is looking for a new baseball coach following consecutive one-year stints by previous managers.

    Even with that turnover, Chatfield has enjoyed a lot of success. And they want to “continue the strong tradition of excellence,” Chargers athletic director Chad Broer said on Tuesday.

    “Despite the short tenure of the previous two coaches, we have enjoyed a lot of success on the field. This is a credit to our talented players, very supportive booster club and the Chatfield community,” Broer said. “The ideal candidate will be someone who wants to build roots in our community, has the passion to work with kids and a baseball mind.”

    Brad Thayer led Chatfield to a 13-10 record in 2013, and Brandon Stone went 20-4 last season as the Chargers entered the state tournament as the No. 1 seed. They went 1-2 in the Final 8 last season.

    Since 2008, Chatfield’s program is 95-56, including a stint under Mike Yansak.

    The Chargers will return a number of key players in 2015, including senior Kyle Winkler, who led the team with a .525 batting average and 34 RBIs. Fellow seniors Sean O’Dell (.448, 13 RBIs) and Jake Carstensen (.420, 12 RBIs) are also back, as is Matt Watson, who went 1-0 with a 1.75 ERA in six appearances last season. O’Dell also recorded two saves on the mound as a junior.

    Interested applicants should send coaching and professional resumes of interest to Chad Broer (cbroer@jeffco.k12.co.us).

  • Pueblo East, Wheat Ridge, Discovery Canyon make big moves in football rankings

    There were a number of major movers as CHSAANow released the first football rankings of the regular season on Monday.

    New Wheat Ridge football coach Dan Reardon. (Tracy Renck)
    New Wheat Ridge football coach Dan Reardon. (Tracy Renck)

    Pueblo East (Class 3A), Discovery Canyon (3A), and Wheat Ridge (4A) all made big jumps after being unranked in the preseason.

    Pueblo East had the biggest climb, and wound up at No. 3 in the 3A poll after winning its first two games. The Eagles beat Longmont, No. 4 in the preseason 4A poll, in Zero Week, then topped Coronado, the defending 3A champion which has since moved up to 4A, in Week 1.

    Discovery Canyon is No. 6 in 3A this week. Last Thursday, the Thunder beat Silver Creek, the 3A runner-up a season ago which has also moved up to 4A.

    And Wheat Ridge, also off to a 2-0 start under new coach Dan Reardon in 4A, has won its games by a combined 91-0. The Farmers are No. 5 in this week’s 4A poll.

    In total, those moves were just a microcosm of the new rankings, which saw massive change. All seven polls got at least one new team, with 4A and 6-man getting four new members, and 3A adding three.

    There’s also a new No. 1 team in 2A, where Brush takes over for Platte Valley.

    The least amount of change occurred in 5A, where Valor Christian continues its stranglehold on the No. 1 spot following its physical win over Pomona. The Eagles received all 13 first-place votes.

    Teams Nos. 2-4 stayed the same behind them: Cherry Creek (which beat Regis Jesuit), Cherokee Trail and Pomona. Grandview joined the top five this week, bumping up three places from its preseason No. 8 spot.

    (Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com)
    More photos. (Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com)

    Chatfield remained at No. 6, Fairview moved up three spots to No. 7, Regis Jesuit fell to No. 8 and Ralston Valley remained at No. 9.

    The lone newcomer in 5A is Overland, which joined at No. 10.

    In addition to Wheat Ridge in 4A, new teams include No. 8 Vista Ridge, No. 9 Falcon and No. 10 Fort Collins. Pine Creek remained atop that poll following its escape of Falcon’s upset bid.

    Besides Pueblo East and Discovery Canyon, D’Evelyn also joined the 3A ranking. Lutheran stayed atop that poll after its overtime win in Texas last week.

    2A added No. 9 Eaton, while 1A added No. 7 Meeker. Paonia is still No. 1 in 1A.

    The 8-man ranking added No. 8 Akron and No. 9 Springfield. Dayspring Christian continues to lead that pack.

    Finally, 6-man added No. 6 Prairie, No. 7 Pawnee, No. 8 Walsh and No. 10 Cotopaxi. Stratton/Liberty remained in the top spot.

    The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, polls will be released each Monday.

    Complete rankings are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Football Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and select media members around the state. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding, except in 5A where they are used as part of the seeding criteria.

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

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Valor Christian (13) 2-0 130 1
    2 Cherry Creek 1-0 115 2
    3 Cherokee Trail 1-0 98 3
    4 Pomona 0-1 73 4
    5 Grandview 1-0 62 8
    6 Chatfield 1-0 54 6
    7 Fairview 1-0 51 10
    8 Regis Jesuit 0-1 44 7
    9 Ralston Valley 1-0 41 9
    10 Overland 2-0 16
    Others receiving votes:
    Lakewood 8, ThunderRidge 7, Columbine 5, Monarch 5, Mullen 4, Doherty 1, Legacy 1.
    Dropped out
    Columbine (5).

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Pine Creek (11) 2-0 119 1
    2 Montrose (1) 2-0 108 2
    3 Pueblo South 1-0 92 3
    4 Denver South 1-0 76 5
    5 Wheat Ridge 2-0 49
    6 Dakota Ridge 1-0 46 8
    7 Windsor 1-0 42 10
    8 Vista Ridge 1-0 34
    9 Falcon 0-1 28
    10 Fort Collins 1-0 15
    Others receiving votes:
    Longmont 13, Broomfield 11, Loveland 9, Pueblo West 9, Pueblo Centennial 3, Coronado 2, Palmer Ridge 2, Greeley West 1, Liberty 1.
    Dropped out
    Longmont (4), Broomfield (6), Standley Lake (7), Pueblo Centennial (9).

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Lutheran (5) 1-0 86 1
    2 Delta (1) 1-1 84 2
    3 Pueblo East (3) 2-0 70
    4 Holy Family (1) 1-0 54 3
    5 Rifle 2-0 52 4
    6 Discovery Canyon 1-0 44
    7 Palisade 1-0 39 8
    8 Evergreen 1-0 28 6
    9 Roosevelt 1-1 25 5
    10 D’Evelyn 1-0 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Erie 11, The Classical Academy 10, Canon City 9, Eagle Valley 8, Conifer 7, Sierra 5, Frederick 4, Berthoud 1, Pueblo County 1.
    Dropped out
    The Classical Academy (7), Lewis-Palmer (9), Vista PEAK (10).

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Brush (6) 1-0 87 3
    2 Faith Christian (3) 1-0 82 2
    3 Kent Denver 1-0 64 5
    4 Strasburg 1-0 59 7
    5 Florence 1-0 43 6
    6 Platte Valley 1-1 39 1
    7 Manitou Springs 0-1 35 4
    8 Lamar 1-0 34 9
    9 Eaton 1-0 18
    10 Olathe 1-0 17 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Montezuma-Cortez 6, Bayfield 3, Gunnison 2, La Junta 2, St. Mary’s 2, Aspen 1, Sheridan 1, The Academy 1.
    Dropped out
    Bennett (8).

    Class 1A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Paonia (7) 1-0 95 1
    2 Centauri (1) 1-0 83 2
    3 Buena Vista (2) 1-0 79 4
    4 Limon 1-0 69 3
    5 Resurrection Christian 1-1 47 5
    6 Monte Vista 0-1 44 7
    7 Meeker 2-0 32
    8 Burlington 0-1 25 6
    9 Wray 1-0 15 9
    10 Yuma 0-1 11 8
    Others receiving votes:
    Crowley County 10, Wiggins 9, Cedaredge 8, Rye 4, Ellicott 3, Hotchkiss 3, Colorado Springs Christian 2, Byers 1, Holyoke 1.
    Dropped out
    Cedaredge (10).

    8-man
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Dayspring Christian (4) 1-0 58 1
    2 Norwood (2) 2-0 56 2
    3 Caliche 1-0 48 3
    4 Hoehne 1-0 40 4
    5 Simla 1-0 36 5
    6 Merino 1-0 32 7
    7 Sanford 2-0 18 8
    8 Akron 1-0 17
    9 Springfield 2-0 13
    10 Sedgwick County 1-0 7 9
    Others receiving votes:
    McClave 2, Rangely 2, Sargent 1.
    Dropped out
    Sargent (6), Dove Creek (10).

    6-man
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Stratton/Liberty (5) 1-0 50 1
    2 Arickaree/Woodlin 1-0 43 3
    3 Eads 1-0 36 2
    4 Fleming 1-0 28 7
    5 Peetz 0-1 23 4
    6 Prairie 1-0 20
    7 Pawnee 1-0 16
    8 Walsh 1-0 14
    9 Kit Carson 1-0 11 10
    10 Cotopaxi 1-0 9
    Others receiving votes:
    Flagler 8, Otis 6, Briggsdale 5, Miami-Yoder 2, Weldon Valley 2, Hanover 1, Idalia 1, .
    Dropped out
    Hi-Plains (5), Briggsdale (6), Idalia (8), Otis (9).
  • Chaparral, Regis Jesuit among newcomers to volleyball rankings

    Chaparral Dakota Ridge volleyball
    Chaparral is No. 5 in this week’s 5A volleyball poll. (Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com)

    Chaparral and Regis Jesuit both joined this week’s CHSAANow.com volleyball ranking in Class 5A.

    Both teams were unranked in the preseason. Chaparral joined the poll at No. 5 after going 4-1 over the first two weeks of the season. Regis Jesuit, meanwhile, is No. 10 after going 3-2.

    Rampart remained atop the 5A ranking. In fact, the only No. 1 team to change this week was in 3A, where Eaton takes over for Manitou Springs. Lewis Palmer (4A), Resurrection Christian (2A) and Fleming (1A) all held firm in their respective top spots.

    Mullen (No. 9) was the lone newcomer in 4A, while Gunnison (No. 10) joined 3A. The 2A poll added Swink (No. 6) and Hoehne (No. 9). Cheraw joined 1A at No. 10.

    The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, polls will be released each Monday.

    Complete rankings for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Volleyball Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A | 1A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Rampart (7) 1-0 94 1
    2 Grandview (1) 1-0 87 4
    3 Fossil Ridge (1) 1-0 75 3
    4 Cherry Creek 1-0 68 5
    5 Chaparral (1) 4-1 53
    6 Cherokee Trail 0-1 45 2
    7 Pine Creek 1-0 41 6
    8 Arapahoe 4-1 30 9
    9 Eaglecrest 0-1 23 7
    10 Regis Jesuit 3-2 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Rock Canyon 9, Castle View 6, Highlands Ranch 6, Monarch 5, Legend 3, Mountain Vista 3, Douglas County 2, Lakewood 1.
    Dropped out
    Legend (8), Mountain Vista (10).

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Lewis-Palmer (9) 1-0 90 1
    2 Cheyenne Mountain 1-0 74 4
    3 Ponderosa 0-0 66 2
    4 Air Academy 0-1 55 3
    5 Elizabeth 0-0 39 5
    6 Pueblo West 0-1 37 8
    7 Montrose 1-0 35 7
    8 Longmont 0-0 32 6
    9 Mullen 2-0 19
    10 Valor Christian 1-1 16 9
    Others receiving votes:
    Thomas Jefferson 10, Windsor 10, Roosevelt 5, Steamboat Springs 3, Woodland Park 3, Holy Family 2, Niwot 2.
    Dropped out
    Thomas Jefferson (10).

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Eaton (7) 2-0 97 2
    2 Manitou Springs (3) 0-0 89 1
    3 Valley 3-0 80 4
    4 Platte Valley 2-0 62 5
    5 Bayfield 1-1 61 3
    6 University 0-1 36 6
    7 Sterling 1-2 26 7
    8 Lutheran 2-4 21 8
    9 Colorado Springs Christian 0-0 16 10
    10 Gunnison 0-1 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Pagosa Springs 10, Coal Ridge 9, St. Mary’s 8, Machebeuf 6, Lamar 5, Faith Christian 4, Frontier Academy 4, Centaurus 1, Grand Valley 1, Olathe 1, The Academy 1.
    Dropped out
    St. Mary’s (9).

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Resurrection Christian (3) 1-0 48 1
    2 Lyons 1-0 40 2
    3 Yuma 1-0 35 7
    4 Akron 2-1 33 3
    5 Caliche 2-0 32 8
    6 Swink (2) 4-0 28
    7 Fowler 2-1 17 4
    8 Paonia 0-0 15 9
    9 Hoehne 3-0 8
    10 Dayspring Christian 0-0 6 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Ridgway 5, Rye 4, Meeker 3, Vail Christian 1.
    Dropped out
    Meeker (5), Ridgway (6).

    Class 1A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Fleming (4) 1-0 49 1
    2 Otis 1-0 44 3
    3 Sangre de Cristo (1) 0-0 41 2
    4 Idalia 1-0 36 4
    5 Eads 1-1 28 5
    6 Flagler 2-0 25 6
    7 Kit Carson 2-0 17 7
    8 Hi-Plains 0-1 13 8
    9 Weldon Valley 1-1 11 9
    10 Cheraw 1-0 5
    Others receiving votes:
    Liberty/Stratton 3, Edison 2, Rocky Mountain Lutheran 1.
    Dropped out
    Edison (10).
  • Grandview joins field hockey ranking at No. 5

    Regis Jesuit Kent Denver field hockey
    Kent Denver stayed in the No. 2 spot in this week’s field hockey ranking. (Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)

    Grandview, off to a 3-0-0 start this season, has joined CHSAANow.com’s field hockey ranking this week.

    The Wolves own victories over Mountain Vista, St. Mary’s Academy and Fossil Ridge and have outscored those opponents by a combined 11-0.

    Colorado Academy, the preseason favorite, stayed in the No. 1 spot this week.

    The ranking, voted upon by coaches, is the official poll of the Association. During the regular season, polls will be released each Monday.

    A complete ranking is below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Field Hockey Poll

    Voted upon by coaches around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. This ranking has no bearing on postseason seeding.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A | 1A

    Field hockey
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Colorado Academy (5) 2-0-0 25 1
    2 Kent Denver 1-0-0 16 2
    3 Cherry Creek 1-0-0 14 3
    4 Palmer Ridge 2-0-0 12 4
    5 Grandview 3-0-0 7
    Others receiving votes:
    Regis Jesuit 6, Cheyenne Mountain 1.
    Dropped out
    Regis Jesuit (5).