Archive for October, 2015

Jeffco League Championships

Post content:
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Event type: Invite
Host: Columbine

Team scores
Rank School Score
1 Pomona 187.6
2 Elizabeth 174.75
3 Lakewood 173.175
4 Arvada West 172.425
5 Bear Creek 170.8
6 Green Mountain 167.4
7 Chatfield 163.425
8 Standley Lake 159.5
9 Evergreen 156.025
10 Columbine 145.475
Vault
Rank Name School Score
1 Kelsey Boychuck Pomona 9.75
2 Brooke Weins Pomona 9.75
3 Alyssa Minyard Pomona 9.675
4 Annabel Spence Pomona 9.575
5 Amanda Taylor Elizabeth 9.325
6 Shea Zeman Pomona 9.3
7 Amanda Melton Bear Creek 9.2
8 Sierra Schwegel Elizabeth 9.275
9 Mya Sinha 9.175
10 Kiki Neff 9.1
Bars
Rank Name School Score
1 Brooke Weins Pomona 9.775
2 Kelsey Boychuck Pomona 9.7
3 Alyssa Minyard Pomona 9.625
4 Amanda Melton Bear Creek 9.45
5 Carly Schnebal Lakewood 9.125
6 Abby Anderson Arvada West 9
7 Annabel Spence Pomona 8.95
8 Rachel Cody Standley Lake 8.925
9 Shea Zeman 8.85
10 Bridget Langello 8.825
Beam
Rank Name School Score
1 Kelsey Boychuck Pomona 9.625
2 Amanda Melton Bear Creek 9.35
3 Hadley Hagemann Pomona 9.3
4 Abbie Moore Arvada West 9.275
5 Kiki Neff Lakewood 9.25
6 Shaye Mathias Arvada West 9.2
7 Amanda Taylor Elizabeth 9.1
8 Alyssa Minyard Pomona 9.075
9 Annabel Spence 9.025
10 Brook Weins 8.975
Floor
Rank Name School Score
1 Kelsey Boychuck Pomona 9.525
2 Brooke Weins Pomona 9.425
3 Lexye Wood Elizabeth 9.4
4 Amanda Melton Bear Creek 9.375
5 Alyssa Minyard Pomona 9.3
6 Kiki Neff Lakewood 9.275
7 Annabel Spence Pomona 9.25
8 Rachel Cody Standley Lake 9.2
9 Hadley Hagemann 9.15
10 Mya Sinha 9.15
All-Around
Rank Name School Score
1 Kelsey Boychuck Pomona 38.6
2 Brooke Weins Pomona 37.925
3 Alyssa Minyard Pomona 37.625
4 Amanda Melton Bear Creek 37.375
5 Annabel Spence Pomona 36.8
6 Kiki Neff Lakewood 36.275
7 Amanda Taylor Elizabeth 35.9
8 Abbie Moore Arvada West 35.75
9 Rachel Cody 35.6
10 Carly Schnebal 35.325

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Replay: Week 9 football games around the state

Links

The live event will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Friday.
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Live coverage

Live Blog Colorado high school football’s Week 9 (2015)
 


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Live games
Class Game Time Notes
5A Fruita Monument vs. (6) Regis Jesuit 6 p.m. Video
8-man (2) Akron vs. (1) Sedgwick County 6 p.m. Audio
3A Frederick vs. Berthoud 6:45 p.m. Audio
1A (7) Burlington vs. Holyoke 6:45 p.m. Audio
4A Widefield vs. Montrose 6:45 p.m. Audio
1A (3) Paonia vs. (9) Cedaredge 6:50 p.m. Audio
5A ThunderRidge vs. Rock Canyon 6:55 p.m. Video
5A Castle View vs. Chaparral 7 p.m. Video
4A Fort Collins vs. Broomfield 7 p.m. Video
2A (7) Eaton vs. (10) Brush 7 p.m. Video
5A Mountain Vista vs. Highlands Ranch 7 p.m. Video
3A Erie vs. (3) Roosevelt 7 p.m. Video
2A Alamosa vs. Montezuma-Cortez 7 p.m. Video
2A (6) Sterling vs. (3) Platte Valley 7 p.m. Video
5A Legacy vs. (10) Fairview 7 p.m. Video
3A (4) Rifle vs. Glenwood Springs 7 p.m. Audio
2A Trinidad vs. (4) La Junta 7 p.m. Audio

Field hockey roundup: Colorado Academy and Cherry Creek advance to state title game

Colorado Academy Palmer Ridge Field Hockey

(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)

(1) Colorado Academy 4, (4) Palmer Ridge 2

DENVER — Palmer Ridge forward Sydney Chytka placed Colorado Academy in an unfamiliar position.

During a now 69-game unbeaten streak, the Mustangs haven’t exactly been used to trailing. But, Chytka, a sophomore, applied pressure early with a goal one minute and 26 seconds into the Bears’ semifinal showdown with CA on Wednesday. Palmer Ridge was rolling.

Colorado Academy Palmer Ridge Field Hockey

(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)

Then, a goal by Clara Petch, the state’s leading scorer, twelve minutes later righted the ship. Two more goals by Emma Richards opened up a lead and before the Bears could fully recover, Colorado Academy earned their way to a fifth consecutive state championship appearance with a 4-2 victory.

Colorado Academy coach Veronica Scott was quick to credit Palmer Ridge though, a team the ‘Stangs have knocked out of the playoffs five times in a row, for challenging them.

“We played a really good team,” Scott said. “They came out and you have to give them absolute respect. I’m really proud of the girls. We came from a position we haven’t experienced that much during the year. They came out hard, hit us with that first goal, and our girls had to dig deep.”

They did just that, even as Palmer Ridge, after trailing 2-1 at the half and 3-1 with 27 minutes remaining, pulled within 3-2 on a Shannon Snediker goal off an assist from Liz Phillips. Nellie Turnage got the insurance goal for the Mustangs with 4:44 left.

With the win, Colorado Academy improves to 16-0-1 on the season. They also beat the Bears 1-0 Sept. 12 and 4-1 on Oct. 12 and, as mentioned, have a long history of success against Palmer Ridge (12-4-1), even while the Bears have been arguably the second best program in the state in recent years.

CA took out Palmer Ridge in the state finals in 2014, the semifinals in 2013, the state finals in 2012, and the semifinals in 2011.

Bottom line, Colorado Academy will be going for their fourth consecutive state championship on Saturday at All-City Stadium, a feat only Kent Denver (2003-2006) has accomplished. The Mustangs did become the first program in history to reach five consecutive finals as only Kent and CA (runner-up every year from 2004-2007) had ever reached four in a row.

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(3) Cherry Creek 1, (2) Regis Jesuit 0

Cherry Creek field hockey

(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)

In a scoreless game through 37 minutes, and while going against a returning all-state goalie in Claire Stemper, the Bruins knew they needed an offensive sparkplug.

They found one in Ashley Hilyard, a senior midfielder who was able to rifle a shot past Stemper with just under 23 minutes to play. The goal proved the difference in a 1-0 semifinals victory over Regis Jesuit, sealing a 6th state finals appearance for Cherry Creek (11-3-1) and their first since 2013, when they were the runner-up to Colorado Academy.

After splitting the regular season series with the Raiders (8-3-5) as Creek won 1-0 on the road on Sept. 8 but lost at home 2-0 on Oct. 6, the Bruins had plenty of scoring opportunities in the first half, but were never able to garner a lead. That is, until Hilyard came through.

“We had so many opportunities,” the senior said. “I was just glad we could finish one.”

“We knew it was going to be a battle,” Cherry Creek coach Taylor Silvestro added. “We played Regis twice during the season and those were great games. They are a hard working team and they have a lot of strong players. We knew we had to win fifty-fifty balls and we were able to do that.”

And so, Creek is back in the championship game against the dynasty that is Colorado Academy. The Bruins have reached the finals in not only 2013, but also 2007 (won), 2003, 2002 (won), and 2000. Their last crown was, in fact, earned with a 1-0 victory over CA.

“I think if we just go out there and play our game and just really connect passes and play with intensity, we have a great chance of beating them,” Hilyard said confidently.

The state championship game will be played at All-City Stadium on Saturday, October 31 at 7:30 p.m. The Mustangs beat Cherry Creek 2-1 on the road on Oct. 3.

Littleton boys soccer edges Harrison in 4A playoff opener

Littleton boys soccer

(Andre Lyseight/CHSAANow.com)

LITTLETON — The opening round of the Class 4A soccer playoffs played out exactly like a playoff matchup between two good teams should, physical and low scoring.

Littleton senior forward Hamadi Ali Abid lead the way by scoring the first and only goal of the game in the first half to help the No. 7 Lions come away with a win 1-0 over No. 26 Harrison.

“I think we played great,” Abid said. “The first ten minutes we kind of needed to sort them out and see how their game style is and figure out how to combat that. But second half we absolutely killed it. I was very happy with the boys. The goal was a teamwork play and it was amazing. It’s been amazing playing with these boys”

The first half was slow for both teams as neither was able to take advantage of any opportunities in a matchup that became more physical as time expired. Littleton controlled the ball for much of the half and Abid had few early opportunities that indicated he would eventually score.

The Lions were able to get handful of shot attempts keeping Harrison goalie Mario Chamorro busy. Panthers midfielder Bryan Zamora displayed great ball control looking like he was the verge of scoring but was not able to get the ball in the net.

Abid scored on quick crossover move that setup a nice kick to the left of the net giving his team a 1-0 lead and the momentum just before halftime. Abid gave props to his teammate senior midfield Joe Director for the assist setting up the goal.

“Joe got the ball to me, he’s been doing that all season,” Abid said. “He is an amazing player I love that kid.”

In the second half Littleton controlled the ball in Harrison’s territory for majority of the time. Harrison showed resilience with great defense. Chamorro prevented Littleton from scoring numerous goals throughout the game.

Harrison was able to get clean shots at the Lions goal late in the game and got another late opportunity to score when Littleton goalie Theo Jensen mishandled the ball giving junior Francisco Silva a chance to attack that was prevent by Lions defense. Littleton couldn’t score again but it was capable of preventing Harrison from getting any goals to win the game.

“I think we played well,” said Littleton coach Pedja Vajzovic. “We moved the ball very well and we looked dangerous. We tried to be more patient but when we don’t score a goal the first 15 to 20 minutes then we start panicking pushing for that goal. Then we got one in the first half. I thought it was going to be easier second half. I thought we dominated and created the chances”

Harrison coach Chris Mason says his team played well and battled throughout the game just couldn’t turn their chances into points.

“This was a great season for us. We made tremendous jumps in the standings as well as just skill and playing as team. It really came down to getting the right people in the right places and getting our boys in the right set to play good team soccer”

The Lions will look to redeem themselves from last years loss in the quarterfinals against defending champion Air Academy next Tuesday in the second round of the playoffs. Air Academy beat Skyview in the first round.

Photos: Air Academy boys soccer tops Skyview in first round of 4A state tournament

COLORADO SPRINGS — The Class 4A defending state champions are moving on as the Air Academy Kadets topped Skyview 3-1 in the first round of the state tournament.

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Photos: Ponderosa boys soccer beats Pueblo West to move on in 4A

PARKER — No. 8-seeded Ponderosa beat No. 25 Pueblo West in the first round of the Class 4A boys soccer playoffs.

Thomas Green and Parker Klein scored for the Mustangs, who got 78 shutout minutes from Cole Keith and two from Spencer Eyers.

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Photos: Valor Christian boys soccer upsets Lewis-Palmer in 4A playoffs

MONUMENT — Robert Lanz had two goals as No. 19-seeded Valor Christian upset No. 14 Lewis-Palmer in the first round of the Class 4A boys soccer playoffs on Wednesday.

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Top-10 football schedule and scoreboard for Week 9 games

Valor Christian football generic entrance

No. 3 Valor Christian beat No. 2 Grandview in a big 5A game at Valor on Friday. The Eagles won the Centennial League. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)


A complete schedule and scoreboard for football’s top-10 teams during Week 9 of the 2015 season.

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

Class 5A
1 Columbine 9-0
Thurs: W 42-14 vs. Lakewood
2 Grandview 7-2
Fri: L 14-31 at (3) Valor Christian
3 Valor Christian 7-2
Fri: W 31-14 vs. (2) Grandview
4 Arapahoe 9-0
Fri: W 42-0 vs. Smoky Hill
5 Cherry Creek 7-2
Fri: W 42-7 vs. Eaglecrest
6 Regis Jesuit 7-2
Fri: W 31-7 vs. Fruita Monument
7 Pomona 6-3
Fri: W 35-13 at Chatfield
8 Mullen 6-3
Fri: L 21-31 vs. (9) Ralston Valley
9 Ralston Valley 7-2
Fri: W 31-21 at (8) Mullen
10 Fairview 7-2
Fri: L 29-36 vs. Legacy

Class 4A
1 Pine Creek 9-0
Fri: W 35-0 at Rampart
2 Longmont 8-0
Sat: vs. Greeley West
3 Vista Ridge 8-1
Fri: W 55-7 at Sand Creek
4 Windsor 8-1
Fri: W 7-6 vs. Thompson Valley
5 Dakota Ridge 7-1
Sat: at Lincoln
6 Durango 8-1
Fri: W 48-6 at Air Academy
7 Palmer Ridge 7-2
Thurs: W 49-14 vs. Liberty
8 Ponderosa 7-2
Thurs: W 45-0 at Littleton
9 Denver South 7-2
Thurs: W 42-0 at Aurora Central
10 Wheat Ridge 7-2
Fri: W 52-19 at Golden

Class 3A
1 Pueblo East 8-1
Fri: W 31-24 at Pueblo County
2 Fort Morgan 9-0
Fri: W 56-7 at Elizabeth
3 Roosevelt 8-1
Fri: W 24-6 vs. Erie
4 Rifle 8-1
Fri: W 55-6 vs. Glenwood Springs
5 Palisade 8-1
Fri: W 42-0 vs. Eagle Valley
6 Delta 8-1
Thurs: W 56-32 at Grand Junction Central
7 Lewis-Palmer 7-2
Fri: L 7-42 vs. Discovery Canyon
8 Holy Family 7-2
Fri: W 37-23 vs. (9) Mead
9 Mead 7-2
Fri: L 23-37 at (8) Holy Family
10 The Classical Academy 6-3
Off this week.

Class 2A
1 Bayfield 8-0
Fri: W 47-9 at Pagosa Springs
2 Kent Denver 9-0
Fri: W 43-6 at (5) Alameda
3 Platte Valley 8-1
Fri: W 35-21 vs. (6) Sterling
4 La Junta 9-0
Fri: W 26-0 at Trinidad
5 Alameda 8-1
Fri: L 6-43 vs. (2) Kent Denver
6 Sterling 7-2
Fri: L 21-35 at (3) Platte Valley
7 Eaton 5-4
Fri: L 13-18 at (10) Brush
8 Moffat County 7-2
Fri: W 49-23 vs. Roaring Fork
9 Bennett 7-2
Fri: W 2-0 vs. KIPP
10 Brush 6-3
Fri: W 18-13 vs. (7) Eaton

Class 1A
1 Buena Vista 9-0
Fri: W 54-6 at Rye
2 Resurrection Christian 9-0
Fri: W 65-6 vs. Front Range Christian
3 Paonia 8-1
Fri: W 48-7 vs. (9) Cedaredge
4 Monte Vista 8-1
Fri: W 23-14 at Centauri
5 Platte Canyon 6-1
Sat: vs. Estes Park
6 Crowley County 8-1
Fri: W 54-7 at Calhan
7 Burlington 8-1
Fri: W 20-0 vs. Holyoke
8 Meeker 6-3
Fri: W 36-14 vs. Hotchkiss
9 Cedaredge 7-2
Fri: L 7-48 at (3) Paonia
10 Wiggins 7-2
Fri: W 43-0 vs. Yuma

Class 8-man
1 Sedgwick County 9-0
Fri: W 22-3 at (2) Akron
2 Akron 7-2
Fri: L 3-22 vs. (1) Sedgwick County
3 Norwood 8-1
Off this week.
4 Sargent 8-1
Thurs: W 58-6 vs. Sierra Grande
5 Dayspring Christian 6-2
Sat: vs. Haxtun
6 Granada 7-2
Fri: L 28-48 vs. Springfield
7 Vail Christian 7-1
Fri: L 8-34 vs. West Grand
8 Holly 6-3
Fri: L 20-40 vs. Wiley
9 Dove Creek 7-2
Fri: W 80-44 at Mancos
10 Hoehne 7-2
Fri: W 49-14 vs. Custer County

Class 6-man
1 Fleming 9-0
Fri: W 55-8 vs. Stratton/Liberty
2 Kit Carson 8-0
Sat: vs. Primero
3 Eads 7-1
Sat: vs. Genoa-Hugo/Karval
4 Arickaree/Woodlin 8-1
Fri: W 52-6 vs. Cheyenne Wells
5 Hanover 7-1
Sat: vs. Idalia
6 La Veta 8-0
Sat: vs. Briggsdale
7 Peetz 5-3
Sat: at (9) Cheraw
8 Pawnee 6-2
Fri: W 63-12 vs. (10) Cotopaxi
9 Cheraw 6-2
Sat: vs. (7) Peetz
10 Cotopaxi 6-3
Fri: L 12-63 at (8) Pawnee

Schedule for boys, girls state cross country meets

Boys cross country Lyons generic

(Photo: Renée Haip)

The 73rd annual boys and 38th annual girls state cross country meets are October 31. Full schedule information is below.

Date: Saturday, Oct. 31

Site: Norris-Penrose Event Center, Colorado Springs

Host: CHSAA, Cheyenne Mountain HS, Runner’s Roost

Meet Director: Jenn Roberts-Uhlig, Assistant Commissioner, CHSAA

Site Director: Darryl Abeyta, activities director, Primero (CHSAA); Kris Roberts, athletic director, Cheyenne Mountain; Stan Lambros, coach, Cheyenne Mountain; Gary Staines, special events, Runner’s Roost

Time Schedule:

Time Race
8:20 a.m. Unified race
9:20 a.m. 2A girls
10 a.m. 3A boys
10:30 a.m. 4A boys
11 a.m. 5A girls
11:30 a.m. 2A boys
12 p.m. 3A girls
12:30 p.m. 4A girls
1 p.m. 5A boys

Lewis-Palmer volleyball fends off Chaparral comeback

Lewis-Palmer Chaparral volleyball

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

MONUMENT — Fresh off their first in-state loss in two years, the Lewis-Palmer Rangers were looking forward to getting back on track. But that task seemed easier said than done.

The Class 4A No. 2 Rangers (20-3 overall) took everything that 5A’s No. 5 Chaparral could throw at them and were able to escape with a 3-2 (25-13, 25-14 23-25, 23-25, 15-8) win.

“We realized after that Cheyenne game that we needed to serve better and pass better so we made some tweaks to our lineup,” coach Susan Odenbaugh said. “It’s a lineup that we hadn’t played before and I think what happens is you’re not used to playing next to people and so it’s paramount that you have good communication. I think our communication died at one point.”

For four of the Rangers’ seniors, there couldn’t have been a better send off. Nicole Mack, Tylar Fugate, Emily McCurley and Mariah Evans played their final regular season match and tried to take in the experience as much as possible.

“It was a blast, it means a lot,” Evans said. “It’s a big family here and we always have a huge crowd. It’s cool to be able to go out there and represent our school.”

Unforced errors doomed the Wolverines (13-6) in the first two sets as Lewis-Palmer ran away with scores of 25-13 and 25-14. Fewer errors in set three led to a much tighter score and giving Chaparral its first sign of life all night.

Sarah Vang contributed a clutch block followed shortly with a kill that kept the Wolverines in the set and helped them to a 25-23 win to avoid the sweep.

“They didn’t give us anything,” Wolverines coach Amanda West said. “We had to fight for what we got and they had to fight for what they got and I love volleyball that’s like that.”

Juniors Lydia Bartalo (14) and Michaela Putnicki (12) led the Rangers in kills, coming up big on the offensive end. Bartalo scored back-to-back kills in the fourth set to give Lewis-Palmer a 22-20 lead, but Chaparral was able to battle back and take it 25-23 to force a fifth and final set.

Putnicki and Elizabeth Reich connected on four straight kills for the Rangers in the fifth build a 8-4 lead and never looked back.

“We always want to get out there and battle against a great team like Chap,” Mack said. “We got really tense in that third game and had to come back out and focus on us and just battle.”

At a time when teams are hoping to be playing their best volleyball of the season, the Rangers have struggled in their last two matches. Odenbaugh stated early in the year that this team’s identity would be different from a year ago and that these battles against tough teams will only serve them well in the postseason.

“There are little things that we need to work on,” Odenbaugh said. “But these kids take pride in what they’re doing and the biggest thing that’s going to be a factor for us is that we have a week and a half without any competition before regionals.”

For the Wolverines, it was crucial to schedule a top-tier team as the playoffs approach and as far as West is concerned, there is no better postseason prep than the Rangers.

“(Lewis-Palmer is) someone that’s going to force you to fight,” West said. “We could find teams that we could just beat but I don’t think that’s necessarily what we need to do.”