BRIGHTON — Melissa Rahrich had yet another outstanding performance as No. 8 Brighton softball upset No. 1 Ralston Valley 9-2 in a big Class 5A game on Wednesday.
Rahrich pitched all seven innings, allowing just one earned run on five hits, and she struck out eight. She also went 4-for-4 at the plate with two RBIs.
DENVER — Shift Why, a national initiative which is seeking to change the culture of youth sports, held an event at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on Thursday for more than 400 coaches and administrators from Colorado’s high schools.
EAGLE — Sam Taylor entered Tuesday final round of the Class 3A boys state golf tournament tied for the individual lead, while his Peak to Peak Pumas held a 10-stroke lead in the hunt for the team championship.
He erased any threat of not winning either category by opening his final round with a 5-under 31 on the front nine, leading to a 3-under 69 on the day to win the individual state championship while helping the Pumas capture the team title. Taylor shot 141 for the entire tournament.
The Pumas shot a total of 453 for the team title, nine strokes ahead of runner-up Kent Denver. (Find full results here.)
“I was struggling with my tee shots on the range so I told myself get it in the fairway and I’d have some chances,” Taylor said. “I was hitting some wedges off some slopes and they were getting close and making birdie putts.”
Entering the round, Taylor was tied with teammate Nishant Datta going into Tuesday’s round. After seeing where they landed in the scoreboard after Monday, Taylor said he would obviously be cheering for Datta but that the guy who played the best deserves to win.
It was Taylor who followed up with that statement.
He started his round with birdies on four of his first five holes, capping that run off with a difficult downhill putt on the par 3 fifth hole putting him on top of the leaderboard by three strokes.
“Last year I had an experience where I was nine back with nine to play,” Taylor said. “So I told myself in this tournament I wouldn’t look at the leaderboard at all.”
By the time he made the turn, he was seven strokes ahead of Basalt’s Linc Kleager who was in second place.
Although Datta had fallen back into the pack, the overall team score wasn’t affected too much and by the Pumas had all but wrapped up the win by the time he and Taylor made the turn.
An individual title would was certainly the hope for Datta but he was thrilled that he didn’t come away empty handed.
“It feels great, especially after a round like (Tuesday), to have positives to look back on,” Datta said. “(It helps) knowing that my round yesterday contributed a lot and helped give us that cushion that we had today to just play our games rather than just stress out about it.”
Taylor did show to be somewhat human as he bogeyed 14 and 15, but quickly bounced back with consecutive pars to wrap up the title.
He made the casual stroll to the 18th tee box holding on to a seven-stroke lead, but that didn’t change mindset.
“It’s just a hole at a time,” Taylor said. “That up-and-down on 17 from the hazard was a decisive moment. It was just a couple of bad shots, but I knew my game was still great.”
Taylor, only a junior, will have a chance to defend his championship in 2016. But for now he’s going to enjoy the feeling of bringing the first boys golf title to Peak to Peak.
“Coming in our goal was to play at our season stroke averages,” Pumas coach John Thornbury said. “Sam just really hit the accelerator on the from nine and blew the rest of the field away.”
Valor Christian won the 4A boys golf team title. More photos. (Aislyn Carrillo/CHSAANow.com)
LONGMONT — Valor Christian came into Tuesday’s Class 4A boys golf state tournament feeling good, and left feeling great — taking the team title.
The team finished the tournament five-over-par with a combined total score of 425, out performing the runner-up team, Silver Creek (453) by a long stretch of 28 strokes.
Valor’s Coby Welch (even par, second overall), Philip Lee (2-over, tied for third), and Tim Amundson (3-over, tied for fifth) helped the Eagles win the title. David Leede also finished in a tie for 11th at 10-over.
Silver Creek’s Jackson Solem won the individual title by shooting 1-under, including a 69 on Tuesday. (Find complete results here.)
Coach Jason Preeo said a majority of his players in the tournament have not had the chance to play in an intense environment like state, and he is proud that they came and performed well under pressure.
After building such an impressive lead in Round 1 — 18 strokes — Valor Christian came in to Round 2 feeling extremely comfortable. Preeo was pleased with his team’s “putting and consistency of hitting in the fairway.”
Preeo recognized one of his seniors in particular, Welch, a Northern Colorado commit who played incredibly well during this tournament.
“He has had a chance at winning state every year,” said Preeo. “I’m proud of him and the growth he has made but I know he is disappointed to have finished second.”
Welch finished Round 1 just one stroke behind Solem and the two ended Round 2 with an identical score of 69.
“I wanted to go out, be calm and make a couple birdies and see what happened,” said Welch. “I did that other than one hole where I didn’t play very good and that was the deciding factor.”
Silver Creek’s Jackson Solem. More photos. (Aislyn Carrillo/CHSAANow.com)
Solem came into Tuesday knowing that from the Round 1 results, he was in close competition with the athletes from Valor and Windsor’s Cole Krantz, who finished in a tie for third at 2-over. Solem started off behind Krantz and Lee but throughout the day, he managed to work his way up.
Going in to the seventh hole, all three of their scores were 1-under across the board. After a few more holes, Solem took the lead with a a 2-under on the 13th hole.
It all came down to the final hole. The three anxiously walked to the hole anticipating the outcome with Solem at 1-under, Krantz at 1-over, and Lee at 2-over.
The well-sported crowd calmly applauded all of the players at the 18th green. Solem’s eager fan section awaited his final putt that put him in the position to take the state title.
“Winning state has been a goal of mine since I even knew what high school golf was,” Solem said. “It’s something really nice to have under the belt.”
Hunter Paugh won the 5A boys golf tournament on Tuesday. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
FORT COLLINS — Hunter Paugh had been here before.
Last season, the Fort Collins golfer was leading Class 5A’s boys golf state tournament after the first day. But, after holding a one-stroke lead with a score of 69, he shot 77 on Day 2, and finished third.
On Tuesday, Paugh was in the same position — leading after Round 1 — although his 67 was a more comfortable four-stroke lead over teammate AJ Ott and three others. And yet, Paugh felt the pressure early and had a double-bogey on the seventh hole. Soon after, his lead was only one stroke over Ott and Regis Jesuit’s Andrew McCormick — 2-under to 1-under — through 10 holes.
That’s when the senior, poised and seasoned, rose to the occasion. He birdied the 11th and 12th holes, giving him a three-shot lead, then he played sound the rest of the way.
It was enough to clinch his first state championship with an even 71 round, giving him 138 total, four-under, and a three-stroke victory over Ott. (Find complete results here.)
“Last year I posted a really good first round,” Paugh said. “I started off pretty solid, but the rest of the second day I just didn’t do what I needed to do. But that gave me good experience going into today. I knew I wasn’t going to let it go this time.”
After his early nerves faded, Paugh was right in his comfort zone and it’s easy to see why as he was playing at his home course, the Fort Collins Country Club.
“There came pressure with knowing the course, but I feel like it was an advantage knowing the greens, knowing where to hit the ball and where not to hit the ball,” he said.
“He knew where he needed to land the ball, he knew where he wanted it to be for his next shot, his putts, and how the greens would roll,” Fort Collins coach Kyle Tregoning said. “He played the course today and he didn’t worry about the other guys that were out there.”
Paugh, a University of South Dakota commit, felt overjoyed to put the finishing touches on a fantastic career for Fort Collins. He was a four-time state qualifier, on top of back-to-back top-3 finishes.
“Winning state is big for anyone, but after last year — having a chance at it, but I didn’t get it done,” he said. “Going into this year at my home course, I’ve been expected to play well. I filled those expectations. It’s a cool feeling.”
Fort Collins’ AJ Ott. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
His teammate, Ott, capped his career as a four-time top-10 finisher at the state tournament. He will continue his golf career as a Colorado State Ram.
“AJ, he’s one of the best players I’ve ever played with or played against and he’s a great friend, as well,” Paugh said. “I knew if anyone was going to get it done and have a shot at me, it was going to be him. It’s always fun playing against him and it’s cool to be one and two at state this year.”
The individual champion was, for the most part, decided long before a team was crowned.
The day began with a two-way tie atop the standings as Lakewood and Regis Jesuit both shot 6-over on Monday. Fossil Ridge was third at 8-over and Coronado, the defending team champions, was fourth at 10-over.
Pretty quickly the Cougars — who returned all four golfers from the 2014 title team — made a major push up the standings. They even took a commanding five-stroke lead over Regis at one point, but it was still early. The Raiders rallied to take a two-stroke lead through 10 holes with Coronado through 13. At that point Lakewood seemed out of it, down nine strokes, three behind Fossil Ridge.
Slowly but surely, Lakewood chipped away at the deficit until it was Coronado at 16-over, Regis 16-over, and the Tigers 17-over with three holes to play for Lakewood and Regis and Coronado on 18. After the next hole, there was a three-way tie.
That’s when one of Regis’ top players, Tyler Zhang, walked up to the 18th hole with virtually everything on the line.
“Tyler is the guy that broke the logjam, the three-way tie,” Regis coach Craig Rogers said. “He had a birdie on 18. I don’t know if I’ll ever see someone play a hole better than that, especially under the circumstances.
“He wasn’t sure if he wanted to hit driver or not, because we were tied, but he hit one of the best drives I’ve ever seen a high school kid hit. It was right down the middle. Then, he was 95 yards out. He placed it 7 feet away from the hole. The putt never left the cup the whole time. He absolutely drained it.”
In one of the closest finishes ever, Zhang’s birdie was the difference as the Raiders claimed their fifth state championship in six years with a score of 15-over. Coronado and Lakewood both went 16-over as Fossil Ridge was fourth in 19-over.
After a streak of four straight titles from 2010-2013, the Raiders were the runner-up last year.
Andrew McCormick was the top individual finished for team champion Regis Jesuit. More photos. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
“I’m just happy for these kids,” Rogers said. “I was thrilled with second, but it was tough on the boys to feel like they lost the run. It’s a little pressure and stress. In golf, you can get first place by winning it or someone else losing it. I’m just happy that somebody won it. Nobody gave it away.”
Andrew McCormick (tie for 3rd place, 1-over) and Zhang (tie for 5th place, 2-over) are the typical headliners of the team, but Rogers was equally proud of Cal McCoy (tie for 38th, 14-over) and Bennett Rogers (tie for 42nd, 15-over), his son. McCoy and Rogers both fought early adversity in their rounds before settling down and playing solid on the back nine.
In the end, it was enough for Regis to claim their sixth state championship overall in boys golf. They are now tied for third most in Colorado history with Mullen and Fort Collins. Cherry Creek and Kent Denver have both won eight.
Coach Rogers walked away overjoyed, but also relieved to have beaten teams the caliber of Lakewood and Coronado.
“Lakewood and Coronado were playing really, really well,” he said. “They are wonderful teams, very talented, and they did nothing wrong. We just happened to get a couple birdies at the end.”
Regis Jesuit won the 5A boys golf team title. (Bert Borgmann/CHSAANow.com)