MANITOU SPRINGS – The No. 1 team in Class 3A started looking like a top team. The Manitou Springs Mustangs rolled to a 74-34 win over Bishop Machebeuf Tuesday night.
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MANITOU SPRINGS – The No. 1 team in Class 3A started looking like a top team. The Manitou Springs Mustangs rolled to a 74-34 win over Bishop Machebeuf Tuesday night.
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LITTLETON — Littleton beat Heritage 32-28 in the season-opener for both teams.
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MONUMENT – Lewis-Palmer overcame 39 points from Michael Ranson to beat Pueblo Central 55-54.
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DENVER — There’s no better way to start the boys basketball season off than two top teams in the Class 5A facing off in a physical matchup.
Tuesday night, the No. 2 Legend Titans defeated the No. 7 Denver East Angels 77-74 in a dramatic ending that came down to last seconds of the game.
Legend’s 6-foot-8 center Connor McCord took over in the fourth quarter propelling his team to a win with two crucial rebounds and two clutch layups to tie and take the lead with 16 seconds left on the clock. McCord finished the game with 16 points.
“I knew our team was still in the game,” said McCord. “Our team is so good at fighting through adversity. I knew we were still in the game and were going to comeback and win it.”
Legend started the fourth quarter with a one-point lead, but Denver East quickly took the lead with a layup from senior Samba Dioum. Shortly after that, the Angels hit back-to-back 3-pointers from senior Ian Osburn and senior Jack Buckmelter to put their team up 63-58.
Legend went cold at the 3-point line and struggled to score throughout the quarter.
Denver East had all the momentum at that point, giving the Angels the biggest lead on either side at 67-58. To add more fuel to the fire, the Angels’ leading scorer of the game, Buckmelter, with 24 points, hit another 3-pointer to put the team up 70-60.
But Just when it looked like the Angeles were going run off with a win, the Titans stepped up their defense and rallied back.
McCord stood strong in the paint and took a charge with 1:30 left in the game that lead to a 3-pointer from Monroe Porter, and brought the score within just two points at 74-72.
Legend forced a steal from Denver East that set up a shot for the Titans which was rebounded and put back up by McCord to tie the game.
The Titans were able to get the ball back and McCord got the rebound again with another put-back to put his team up 76-74 with 16 seconds left in the game. The Angels went for the win with a three from Buckmelter that missed.
“I think we played great. We fought through adversity,” McCord said. “We played a really good Denver East team.”
Denver East and Legend went back and forth starting from the tip-off. On the Angels’ first possession of the game, Jared Small stole the ball layup and foul. The Titans are a high-percentage 3-point shooting team, and were able to hit four 3s in the first quarter.
Denver East was able to stay in the game with free throws making it 22-21.
Legend controlled much of the second quarter going 8-8 from the free throw line, giving them 32-24 lead. Denver East was getting frustrated and struggled to get anything going.
The Angles rallied back with the help of senior Daytone Jennings controlling the paint with rebounds and layups. He finished the game with 14 points. Denver East took the lead before half with a layup from Deron Harrell, who finished the game with 11 points.
In the third quarter, Legend regain the lead after Denver East gave up multiple turnovers from sloppy passes. Both teams continued to go back and forth the remainder of quarter with Legend leading 56-55.
“I thought we played through a lot of adversity,” said Legend coach Kevin Boley. “So many fouls, being in foul trouble. It was about a 10-0 run at the end of the game. So to come here and win and do it that way feels really rewarding.”
“We got to clean up a lot of stuff in terms of fouling less. Gave up way to many second chance shots, but I thought we showed a lot of heart and character and found a way to win.”
Legend plays Fort Collins in an away game on Friday night. Denver East looks to bounce back against No. 6 Regis Jesuit at home on Thursday night.

AURORA — A hardwood clash between George Washington and Overland wasn’t just another season opener.
With super athletes, a rocking atmosphere, a defending Class 5A champion and a collection of some of the finest young guards in Colorado, Tuesday’s non-conference showdown at Overland had a playoff atmosphere on the first day of December.
After mounting a huge lead for much of the game, the Trailblazers, the No. 1-ranked team in the Class 5A preseason poll, held off the youthful, guard-driven and No. 4-ranked Patriots 86-79 to begin their title defense 1-0.
With four senior starters, 6-foot-10 Indiana recruit De’Ron Davis, Reggie Gibson, Alijah Halliburton, and Jervae Robinson, along with junior Asad Yousef, Overland appeared the more seasoned team from the get-go as they led 8-0 two minutes in.
Davis had a monstrous early dunk, with several more coming later, and a beautiful block on back-to-back plays in the first quarter and the home team held a 19-10 lead at the end of the first quarter. They pushed the lead to 25-11 and 34-15 soon after, before a George Washington 13-5 run trimmed the deficit to 39-28 at the break.
Davis (13 points) and Robinson (11) had wonderful chemistry early as the Trailblazers worked the ball inside and out.
In the third, Overland pushed the margin to around 20 points much of the quarter as Halliburton had two dunks, one of which was an inbounds alley-oop, crowd-hyping flush. Davis continued his strong play with a hard spin move into a one-handed dunk. He was aggressive throughout and found success with a soft mid-range jump shot, as well.
Through three quarters, Overland led George Washington 59-42. With 5 minutes and 43 seconds to go, the game seemed just about in the books as the home team still held a 65-50 lead.
That’s when the Patriots, short on experience but with a boat load of athleticism and skill, began to mount a comeback.
Slowly, they trimmed the lead down to 76-65 with 1:37 to go, then 78-71 with just over a minute left. Junior guard Calvin Fugett, who went absolutely crazy in the second half with 23 points — every last one of them critical down the stretch — buried a three with just under a minute to go to make it 80-74.
Jervay Green, after an Overland turnover and foul, made a pair of free throws to make it 80-76 with 49 seconds left. Halliburton and Robinson went a combined three of four from the line to push the lead to 83-76, but Fugett just wouldn’t go away as he was fouled on a three-pointer, cashed every one of them, and the Patriots were still alive only down 83-79 with 20 seconds on the clock.
In the end, despite a monstrous 29 points in the game’s final 5 minutes and 43 seconds, George Washington came up just short as Overland freshman Steven Hayes made a fastbreak layup and Davis one of two showing from the free throw line preserved the win.
For the Overland players and coaches alike, with such lofty expectations placed on them with a loaded roster back from a state championship season, Tuesday’s win came with a mixture of feelings afterwards.
“I’m trying to keep perspective and realize that opening night we just beat a really, really good team, but I’m also pretty frustrated,” Overland coach Danny Fisher said. “With so much senior leadership, we finished the game really, really bad. There’s so many things that happened that we can learn from that are just kind of digging at me right now.”
“It was a sloppy win,” Davis added. “We just have to tighten up our overall guard play and our all-around team play. We just have to work on a couple key things and cut down our turnovers.”
Nonetheless, a win is a win and a season opening victory over the defending Denver Prep League champions was a solid debut. Davis finished the game with 26 points. Halliburton, a great energy guy with explosive leaping ability, had 19.
Robinson, after starting on a Final Four team as a sophomore, went to a prep school in Oklahoma last season. He’s back in Aurora, looking poised to provide scoring punch to take some pressure off Davis. He had 11 first half points and finished the game with 19.
“He brings so much skill,” Fisher said of Robinson. “He and Reggie can play really well off each other. He’s a guy we can isolate who can take a little pressure off De’Ron. He’ll be big for us.”
And so, the Trailblazers — even with a great point guard in Austin Conway now playing in the Mountain West at Wyoming, and a starting guard in Padiet Wang moving out-of-state his senior year —could be powerful again. They’ll look to clean up a few mistakes that helped George Washington get back into Tuesday’s game.
“We have to make free throws and we have to close out a little better.” Fisher said. “We have to handle pressure a little better. That’ll be the main thing.”
As for the Patriots, with a starting lineup comprised of only juniors and sophomores, with juniors and sophomores coming off the bench for key minutes, they are still learning. But there’s talent, a lot of it.
Both Fugett and Kountz racked up 29 points. Kountz, generally considered the best sophomore prospect in Colorado, is a 6-foot-3 left-handed guard with a ton of ability. Fugett is one of the fastest players around.
A number of others, including Calvin’s brother Jon’il, a sophomore, and junior guard Jervay Green, are outstanding athletes themselves.
Kountz said the Patriots have a goal of making it to Boulder for the Final Four this season. For now, they are just taking it one game at a time as they continue to grow together.
“We just have to get going earlier,” he said. “We started off too slow. We tried to win it in the last six minutes.”

MONUMENT — Jonathan Scott has shot thousands of free throws in his lifetime. So when he went to the line with less than a second on the clock and his Lewis-Palmer Rangers tied with Pueblo Central 54-54, he wasn’t worried.
Not even close.
He missed the first, but knocked down the second to give the CHSAANow.com No. 3 Lewis-Palmer a 55-54 win over the No. 4 Wildcats.
“I wasn’t worried about it,” Scott said about missing the first one. “I’ve shot a million free throws a million times so I wasn’t worried at all.”
But there was a point where he, his teammates and the fans packed into the gym at Lewis-Palmer High School had to be worried. Late in the fourth quarter, Lewis-Palmer trailed by as many as four. Pueblo Central’s Michael Ranson seemed like he could hit a behind the back shot from the stands with the way he was shooting.
Lewis-Palmer was in trouble. Especially considering that the Wildcats were without one of their captains. In a scrimmage last Saturday, Kobi Betts tore his meniscus and partially tore his ACL. He will have surgery in two weeks and will miss his senior season.
From the start, it was clear that Pueblo Central missed him.
“It was evident,” Wildcats coach Brad Ranson said. “We have a lot of inexperienced players and it showed late.”
But the one thing that Pueblo Central did have was Brad’s son Michael. Despite a slow start in which he came away with zero points in the first quarter, Ranson exploded in the second half, finishing with 39 points.
With the way his shots were falling, he was becoming a matchup nightmare for the Rangers, especially when Scott went out of the game with foul trouble.

“Johnny’s a great defender,” Rangers guard Kyle Owens said. “But we have a mentality of next man up. With that, we put Joe (DeCoud) on him to try and get Mike different looks.”
When the Wildcats took a 45-43 lead in the fourth quarter Scott, who finished with 24 points, was brought back into the game. He would get to the free throw line and sink both to pull the Rangers to a 50-50 tie.
From there, Ranson and Scott would keep trading free throws. Scott hit two more to tie the game 54-54 with under a minute left. Lewis-Palmer coach Bill Benton called for a zone press, which paid off as the Rangers stole the ball and called timeout with four second left on the clock.
“There’s a part of you that says I wish we had done that a little bit sooner,” Benton said. “Here’s what I love about this group. They came over and said ‘Coach, let’s get in our 35 and stay in that.’ Then they’d talk about the next defense they wanted to go into and I let them do that.”
With four seconds left, Benton drew up an inbound play that would put the ball in the hands of either Scott or Owens. Whoever got it would then attack the basket and try to get fouled. The ball fell into Scott’s hands and that’s exactly what he did.
He got fouled with 0.5 seconds left on the clock and made a free throw to put his team ahead for good.
“We knew it was going to be tough with first game jitters,” Benton said. “We have to figure out our system and what works. I’m much happier to learning from a win, though, rather than a loss.”

[dropcap]B[/dropcap]ill Bradley is a legendary girls basketball coach. Now in his first season at Monarch, Bradley guided ThunderRidge to two state championships in 2004 and 2005.
During his ten seasons with the program, the Grizzlies reached the Great 8 eight times. One of his players, Abby Waner, who played at Duke, is considered one of the elite players in Colorado history. Another, Emily Fox, was drafted into the WNBA. By all measures, ThunderRidge was one of the best programs in the Centennial State under Bradley from 2003-13.
So when a coach of that caliber departs, how does a program respond?
“I think the image of the program kind of changed and the girls had to prove that this program is still very strong and I think we really showed that last year,” Taylor Rusk, a returning first-team all-state pick in 5A, said.
Paula Krueger took the reins and led ThunderRidge to a 42-10 record over two seasons and a state runner-up finish to Broomfield last season. And now, after Krueger accepted an assistant coaching position at Northern State University in Aberdeen, S.D., the Grizzlies have their third head coach in four years as Matt Asik takes over.
As they proved under Krueger, ThunderRidge girls hoops lives on and thrives.
“I was honored to get this job,” Asik said. “We always have a tradition and end goal of winning a state championship. That’s our tradition and that’s our culture. That’s what we teach from our feeder kids up. These younger kids want to be Grizzlies.
“It’s a family that’s been building for years and years and years. Credit to all these different coaches that have been here that have maintained this tradition.”
Asik, an assistant under both Bradley and Krueger, has the pleasure of inheriting a very talented group during his first go-round as the head man.
“We have eight seniors, which is unique,” Asik said. “We have a lot of experience. We’re really deep at all the positions, especially with that senior leadership. We have talent at every position.”
At the forefront of that senior class is Rusk, a 5-foot-11 Wyoming signee who plays guard, wing, and forward. She averaged 14 points, 7 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 2.5 steals per game as a junior. Rusk will be a four-year starter this winter.

“Taylor can do everything,” Asik said. “She’s on par with some of the great kids that have come through ThunderRidge. She really shoots the three well, she can finish and she can rebound. If we need her to play point guard, she can play point guard. She can play all five positions. She’s really a versatile player.”
Rusk isn’t the only returning starter. Alyssia Martinez, Madison Ward and Jaz’myne Snipes, all seniors, are all back. Rusk, Martinez, a Black Hills State signee, and Ward are the stalwarts in the backcourt, while Snipes is an imposing forward and Regis University signee.
“We have a lot of the same team,” Rusk said. “We’re obviously a little ticked off with how last season ended, but I think it’ll make us play harder. Obviously our goal at the end is to win the state championship. We know what it takes to get there. Now we just have to know what it takes to pull through.”
For ThunderRidge, the preseason No. 1-ranked team, to accomplish their ultimate goal this season, they’ll have to navigate a talented 5A field that includes Michaela Onyenwere, another first-team all-state pick, and Grandview, three Division I signees (Blaire Braxton, Symone Starks, Bri Stiers) from Highlands Ranch, defending champion Broomfield and Lakewood.
Asik is confident in his Grizzlies, but he knows the talent around the state, as well.
“There’s probably seven, eight, or nine teams that could win it,” Asik said. “It’s going to be a good tournament.”
In 4A, Sand Creek is the preseason No. 1 team. The Scorpions finished as the runner-up to Valor Christian, the No. 2 team going in, last year, but they return their top five scorers. Oliana Squires (Montana State) and Liah Davis (New Mexico) are Division I signees.
Pagosa Springs, the No. 3 team in the opening 3A poll, claimed the state title over Sterling, the No. 2 ranked team, last year. Manitou Springs is No. 1 going in after a Final Four run.
As for 2A, the Yuma Indians, the state runner-up the past three seasons, is the No. 1 team in the initial rankings. Yuma returns nearly their entire team. Akron, winners of three of the past four titles, is No. 3 after graduating 2A player of the year Jordan Baer.
In 1A, the defending champion Idalia Wolves are the preseason No. 1 team. Reagan Shaffer (first-team) and Susana Herarra (second-team) return for Idalia with all-state credentials.
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Girls Basketball preview
Class 5A
Class 4A
Class 3A
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Class 1A

DENVER — The finalists in the Class 4A and 5A state football championship games have each met before. Though, they’re quick to tell you, don’t read too much into the rematch.
Pomona and Valor Christian, the 5A finalists, played on Sept. 4, a 28-14 Panthers win. Windsor and Loveland, the 4A finalists, met on Oct. 22, when Windsor won 6-0.
“You get ready, and you go play football. It doesn’t matter who you’re going against,” Loveland coach Wayne McGinn said at a press conference on Tuesday. “Yeah, we know each other pretty well, and that’s going to make it an even better game.”
“The fact that we beat them the first time means nothing this time. We all know that,” added Pomona coach Jay Madden of his team’s matchup. “It does seem like (the game) was two years ago. Literally, it was forever ago.”
McGinn and Windsor coach Chris Jones actually talked about the possibility of a rematch recently.
“We were sitting down having some pizza, and Wayne said, ‘Hey, Chris, wouldn’t it be neat if we met each other in the finals?’” Jones said. “I said, ‘Coach, we’ve got our work cut out for us. We’ve got to win six games — three each.’ Then, at the end of our game last week, they told us you guys were winning, that was the first thing that popped into my head: ‘You told me all about that.’”

Windsor and Loveland both play in the Longs Peak Conference, which produced three of the four semifinalists in 4A. The schools are about 25 minutes apart in the Northern part of the state.
“The advantage of playing each other is, yes, you have film and you can look at tendencies,” Jones said. “The disadvantages, you know, what are each of us going to do to exploit something the other hasn’t seen? So do we want to spend time on something new or just stick to the old? It is neat that we have a common opponent, but it is even better because we have a good relationship.”
Valor Christian and Pomona have played three times in the past two seasons, including a quarterfinal game last season.
“The reason we schedule teams like Valor and Creek, and we played Grandview, and we scrimmaged Cherokee Trail, is to try to toughen our kids up,” Madden said. “Because this is the cream of the crop. If you’re going to be a state champion, you’re going to have to beat Centennial League teams. We know that.”
Pomona led the first matchup 21-0 after the third quarter, and “Frankly,” Sherman said, “they probably deserved to win by more than they did.”
“You can probably look back and say, ‘Oh, I wish I would’ve done that differently,’” Sherman said. “Coach Madden and I were saying earlier that it seems like our game in early September was sure a long time ago. You look back at that game and you see a Pomona team that came into our game and beat us physically, and frankly beat us in all three phases of the game, and deserved to win that game.”
Madden said his players were fired up after that win, which was a Week 1 matchup.
“Because when you beat Valor, that’s a big deal,” Madden said. “How many times does Valor lose in Colorado? Once in a decade, or so? So you celebrate that.”
But, the coach added, “I told them, ‘You know what? If you want to be champions, you’re going to have to beat them again.’ Here we are.”
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Each of the four coaches were asked if they thought it was important for high school athletes to play multiple sports. And all of them stressed that it was.
McGinn: “I think there’s an advantage. I tell all my players to play as many as you can, because you only get to play them for three years in high school. But they learn how to be competitive in those others sports, they learn how to move. They continue their lifting, yeah, but lifting isn’t everything. You’ve got to be active. I know I was a three-sport athlete, and I just love it. I’m totally for that, and think that’s the only way to go.”
Jones: “I also believe that being involved in another sport, there’s that academic component where these kids are being held accountable to the academic standards of CHSAA and also Windsor High School. … And another thing is, they get to experience different leadership. You can’t all just follow Coach Jones, there are other coaches in our building who have great ideas and great ways to motivate these young men on and off the field. I think you can be exposed to different kinds of leadership so you can pick and choose and mold your own way.”
Sherman: “I think it’s one that’s one of the thing that’s worst about our youth sports culture, is the early push for specialization. I think that’s why you see more student-athletes burn out as they get older. I look out here at our young men and I see a young man that’s a scholarship lacrosse player to the University of Delaware. And I would actually encourage that it’s not just about multiple sports. It’s about multiple activities. We have a young man on our team that’s in the school play. I see many young men travel across the world on mission trips.
“I see some of our coaches who were able to play at the highest level, in the NFL. And none of them woke up everyday and just thought about football and worried about football. They were able to be young men that grew in wisdom and stature in multiple sports and activities. And I think that kids should do that more. But I think, unfortunately, there’s a push from, at times, outside trainers, parents, to specialize earlier.”
Madden: “I agree 100 percent. I look out here at my players I have here, and all of them play more than one sport. And if I could get them to play three, I would. You’re only young once. Life is all about experiences, and experiences is not lifting in the weight room. … (It’s about) basketball practice, or wrestling practice, or track. Obviously, my brother’s a baseball coach, so I love all the other sports. I wish this club sports thing would disappear, but obviously we know it’s not going to.
“With all of the scholarship money out there and everything that everyone thinks you’re going to get by specializing — great athletes are great athletes. You don’t create a great athlete, folks. It doesn’t happen. If you’ve got the talent, you’ve got the talent. Christian [McCaffrey, the Valor graduate who is now a Heisman Trophy candidate at Stanford] played three sports, didn’t he? And he’s probably going to make money playing sports someday. But most people are not. So why not play as many sports as you can while you’re young?”
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DENVER — The finalists for the 4A and 5A football championship games gathered at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on Tuesday for a walkthrough of the facility and a press conference.
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COLORADO SPRINGS — Colorado Springs Christian School basketball coach Mark Engesser hates losing. Can’t stand it. His desire to win coupled with his players’ hard work and motivation helped the Lions come away with the Class 3A state championship last March.
And oh boy, do they want to get back to the top of that mountain.
It helps that the Lions are returning two all-state players in forward Sam Howard and guard Justin Engesser. It also helps that those two guys were also two of the primary catalysts of last year’s title team. This year, they take the court with not only the hope of winning another championship, but with the pressure of trying to repeat.
“I wouldn’t necessarily say pressure,” Howard said. “We always want to do our best and no matter what people expect of us, we want to do what we think we can do. We’re just going to focus on playing our best and staying humble and whatever happens, we’re okay with.”
Staying humble may be the key. In the first month and a half of last season, the Lions were barely tested. It looked like they were going to cruise through their regular season schedule without a blemish.
But then something unexpected happened. On Jan. 23, the Lions hosted Tri-Peaks rival St. Mary’s and things did not go as planned. The Pirates kept the game close and were able to come away with a 51-49 win, ending CSCS’s chance at a perfect season.
“Nobody wants to lose,” Justin Engesser said. “If we learn from that, I guess, mistake; it’s better that we learn it early in the season rather than in the state tournament.”
That loss to St. Mary’s set the tone for the remainder of the season. It was a great reminder that nothing is given and for the Lions to reach the level that they wanted, they would have to continue to get better through the course of the season.

“When you’re winning all of your games, (Coach Engesser) has no reason to yell at us,” Howard said. “When you lose, it really gets your attention. There’s a lot of stuff you can work on. We looked at the film of that game and that’s what really carried us. We saw where we were weak.”
And they improved those weaknesses.
Like in any classification, there’s no ease to getting through a state tournament. Schools such as Jefferson Academy, Colorado Academy and Kent Denver routinely play for state titles. There are also programs like Faith Christian that have the ability to rattle off multiple state championships in a row.
“I thought we played harder than some of those teams,” Coach Engesser said. “We were diving on the floor, taking charges, playing harder. If you play hard on every single possession, good things will happen.”
And they did happen. When it was all said and done, the Lions came away as champions. Now as CSCS comes into the 2015-16 season with the expectations of winning another title, it’s also feeling a little bit of that pressure to defend that title.
But which comes more into play, the pressure or the expectation?
“I think the expectation,” Coach Engesser said. “It was a great moment for those guys and they want to experience that again. Expecting that moment… I guess it puts pressure on you too. I’ll say both. Pressure and expectation.”
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Class 5A
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Class 4A
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Class 3A
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Class 2A
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Class 1A