Month: January 2016

  • No. 3 Manitou Springs girls basketball battles back to beat No. 6 Lutheran

    Manitou Springs Lutheran girls basketball
    Manitou’s Gala Jensen (20) and Lutheran’s Kate Webster (21) battle for position during the Mustangs’ 52-42 win over the Lions. MORE PHOTOS (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    MANITOU SPRINGS — Lutheran had built a 10-2 lead over Manitou Springs in the opening minutes of Tuesday’s clash between the Class 3A top 10 teams.

    But the Mustangs were able to battle back and eventually take the lead at the end of the quarter. It was pretty much the theme of the night as the Mustangs were able to come away with a 52-42 win in their biggest test of the season.

    “I think this is a big win,” Manitou coach Jon Asp said. “Just to be able to come back like that showed a lot of grit and perseverance and I think we can take that into the second half of this season.”

    Asp said that before the game, he emphasized to his girls that the biggest thing that could hurt them was allowing too many 3-pointers. That proved to be the case as Lutheran (5-3 overall) was able to snag a 30-24 halftime lead thanks to senior Morgan Barone who buried four triples in the first half.

    Taylor Stuckey added three 3-pointers of her own and the Lions were inflicting damage in the one way the Mustangs were hoping to avoid.

    Knowing that a lot was at stake with this game, Asp and the Mustangs (7-0) had to do a better job of containing the perimeter shooting in the second half.

    “I didn’t do anything different (in the second half),” Asp said. “It was the girls that shifted things. Nothing (in the game plan) changed. I just had to reiterate what our goal was and that if we could do some things differently, we could win the game.”

    It also helped that junior standout Shelby Megyeri upped her offensive performance in the second half. The Mustangs began forcing turnovers and getting the ball out to her in transition, which helped alleviate her struggles from behind the arc.

    “When we start playing good defensive, it really brings things together for us,” Megyeri said. “We’re dangerous when we get our defense going and get out on the fast break.”

    Megyeri finished with 14 points on the night and only knocked down one 3-pointer, but it came at a crucial moment and gave the Mustangs a 46-42 lead. Senior Gala Jensen led all scorers with 18 points.

    The Lions couldn’t maintain their offensive pace from the first half and totaled only 12 points in the final 16 minutes of regulation.

    “They obviously deserve credit for finishing that second half,” Lions coach Mark Duitsman said. “They did everything good teams do down the stretch. I can’t help but feel like a lot of things that went against us were self-inflicted.”

    But even with the loss, Duitsman feels playing a high-level opponent will only pay dividends for his team going forward.

    “No matter what, it’s a win-win for us,” he said. “We’re in the business of getting better. No one is where they want to be right now, the Manitou Mustangs included.”

    But a win over a fellow top-10 team has given the Mustangs a jolt of confidence. They started the season as the CHSAANow.com No. 1 team in 3A, but lost that top spot despite not losing any games.

    “It shows that regardless of the talent level, we can compete,” Megyeri said. “Whoever in 3A, I mean, we’re ranked No. 3 and I think we can play with anyone if we play as a team.”

  • Photos: Manitou Springs girls basketball tops Lutheran

    MANITOU SPRINGS — Manitou Springs overcame a 30-24 halftime deficit to win a battle of top 10 teams, taking down Lutheran 52-42.

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  • Regis Jesuit boys basketball coach Ken Shaw wins 700th game

    Regis Jesuit Overland boys basketball Ken Shaw 700
    Regis Jesuit players celebrate Ken Shaw’s 700th career win with the coach on Tuesday night. More photos. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    Ken Shaw, the longtime boys basketball coach at Regis Jesuit, won the 700th game of his career on Tuesday night when his fifth-ranked Raiders upset No. 1 Overland 66-60.

    Shaw, who has also coached at Rocky Mountain, Smoky Hill, Yuma and Sterling, entered the season with 692 career wins against 225 losses. His team has started out 8-0 this season, which put him at the 700 mark.

    ThunderRidge Regis Jesuit boys basketball
    Ken Shaw. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Shaw, now in his 41st season, is just the third coach — boys or girls — to reach the mark, following all-time wins leader Dick Katte of Denver Christian, who finished with 876, and current Denver East coach Rudy Carey Jr., who sits at 764 and counting.

    Current Highlands Ranch girls coach Caryn Jarocki is the all-time leader in girls wins with 558 and counting.

    In his time, Shaw has won five state titles as a coach, including three at Regis Jesuit. He also won championships with Yuma and Sterling. His teams have appeared in the state tournament a record 27 times.

    He was a prolific high school athlete at Merino, and held the career scoring record when his career was over. That mark has since been broken, but Shaw’s name still dots the basketball record book as a player, and he’s one of many tied for the state record for free-throw percentage in a game at 100 percent.

    Additionally, Shaw was a standout football player, and also has his name in that sport’s record book — both for passing touchdowns in a game, and for career PATs kicked.

    In Tuesday’s game, Michael Wambsganss led three Raiders in double figures with 14 points. Geoffrey Kelley added 13, and Dante Drennan had 12. Gage Dyer had eight points, seven rebounds and five assists.

    Regis Jesuit boys basketball coach Ken Shaw talks to his team before a game during the 2014 season. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
    Regis Jesuit boys basketball coach Ken Shaw talks to his team before a game during the 2014 season. (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)
  • Photos: Regis Jesuit boys basketball upsets No. 1 Overland as Ken Shaw wins No. 700

    AURORA — No. 5 Regis Jesuit boys basketball upset No. 1 Overland 66-60 to give Ken Shaw his 700th career win.

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  • Valor Christian’s Dylan McCaffrey selected as MaxPreps football All-American

    Valor Christian Pomona football
    Valor Christian quarterback Dylan McCaffrey. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Valor Christian quarterback Dylan McCaffrey, who just finished his junior season, has been named an All-American.

    McCaffrey was selected to MaxPreps’ Junior All-American football team, and is on the first team as an athlete. The 6-foot-5, 200-pound quarterback threw for exactly 2,800 yards during the 2015 season, along with 27 touchdowns against just four interceptions. He also ran for 592 yards and 13 scores — and caught two touchdown passes on trick plays.

    McCaffrey helped lead Valor Christian to the Class 5A football championship in December, a 29-26 win over Pomona. After the season, he was a first-team all-state pick, and was voted as the player of the year in 5A.

    That followed a standout sophomore season in which McCaffrey threw for 2,378 yards and 22 touchdowns, and also rushed for 296 and six scores.

    As a result, McCaffrey’s recruitment has exploded nationally. According to Rivals.com, he has offers from 14 schools, including the likes of Michigan, LSU, UCLA, Penn State and Missouri. Colorado and Colorado State have also offered.

    McCaffrey is a four-star recruit according to ever major recruiting service, and is a top-100 prospect nationally.

    He is the younger brother of Christian McCaffrey, the runner-up in the Heisman this past season at Stanford, and Max McCaffrey, who just completed a standout career at Duke as a wide receiver. His younger brother, Luke, is a freshman for Valor Christian.

    Dylan McCaffrey also plays basketball, and is averaging 10.0 points and 4.0 rebounds so far this season.

  • Squires, Davis hoping to lead Sand Creek girls hoops to new heights

    Sand Creek girls basketball
    Sand Creek’s Liah Davis. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    [dropcap]O[/dropcap]liana Squires and Liah Davis have rare chemistry on the basketball court. The senior tandem, now Division I recruits — Squires will soon be off to Montana State, Davis to Colorado State — have played on the same team since sixth grade.

    As freshmen three years ago at Sand Creek in Colorado Springs, a recent girls hoops power in Class 4A, Squires and Davis were the team’s leading scorers, the only two to average double figures, for a team that reached the Great 8. As sophomores, they made the Great 8 again.

    Then, during their junior year, Squires, a 5-foot-8 electric guard, averaged 17.8 points, 4.5, 4.1 rebounds and 3.4 steals while earning first team all-state honors in 4A. Davis, a 6-foot-2 powerhouse in the paint, racked up 15.6 point and 11.5 rebound averages while garnering second team all-state honors.

    The Scorpions accomplished something no other girls basketball team in school history had ever attained — they reached the state championship game. Valor Christian ended a magical season for Sand Creek, who finished with a 23-4 record, with an emphatic 73-47 state finals victory. Nonetheless, history was made for the Scorpions.

    Now the duo, arguably the best in 4A as both are Player of the Year candidates, have started to write the final chapter of their high school careers. With a career record of 71-14 thus far, 42-0 in the Pikes Peak League, the tandem has been everything any program could ask for. The only thing missing on their resume is a state championship.

    “It brings a lot of motivation,” Davis said. “This is how we want to leave the program. To have that memory and to keep that memory for years and years from now would be really cool.”

    The No. 1-ranked team in 4A every week so far, this group of Sand Creek Scorpions has always had high expectations, but perhaps never higher than during the 2015-16 season.

    They know what’s at stake. They also know the competition in 4A means nothing is a given.

    Kylee Shook, a 6-foot-4 University of Louisville recruit, hopes to lead her Mesa Ridge Grizzlies to their second state crown in three years. The No. 18-ranked recruit in her class by ESPN, Shook is off to a historically strong start with averages of 29.3 points, 15.5 rebounds, 5.1 blocks and 3.4 steals for a 7-1 team.

    Valor Christian is rolling at 6-1, and Longmont — featuring 6-foot-1 Sydney Wetterstrom, one of the state’s elite athletes in volleyball (Michigan recruit), basketball and track — also has a 6-1 record.

    Sand Creek girls basketball
    Oliana Squires. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    New head coach BJ Johnson, an assistant for Sand Creek a couple of seasons ago, is the third head coach in the past four years for the Scorpions. Squires doesn’t think the coaching changes has led to adversity. The team has been able to hum along.

    “Having different coaches hasn’t really affected anything, because we’ve had the same girls,” she said. “We’ve just had to adjust to the different coaching styles. Our coach this year, BJ Johnson, he was the assistant coach my freshman year so that wasn’t too much of a difference there.”

    Squires did say Johnson has extra high standards, expectations for the young ladies that have pushed them to work even harder. And yes, there still has been a bit of a transition period with a new person at the helm. The Scorpions dropped their first game of the season to Poudre, a 5A team with a 7-1 record, before finishing December with five straight wins.

    They’ve had some injury setbacks and a period of time when the expectations for this group needed to be set. Johnson is excited for games to resume, because he’s already seeing progress being made.

    “We’re settling into roles,” he said. “We’ve really only played about one half with our standard starting lineup, which was last game. I think the girls are working really hard. They like each other. I think they like me. We’re in a good place.”

    With a likely starting lineup of Deja Derrell, Shayla Armstrong and Moriah Ceballes, to go along with the obvious ones (Squires and Davis), the rest of the way, the Scorpions appear every bit as tough and talented as their No. 1 ranking would indicate.

    The usual standbys, one game at a time with a focus on their own team were mentioned by Johnson and his two top seniors, but Johnson also has an ultimate goal. Sure, he wants to win a state championship as much as anyone. After all, Sand Creek has yet to claim a team championship in any sport since the school opened their doors in 1997.

    But, he’s more focused on what his team can control.

    “The biggest thing is that I want to see all the girls in our program reach their full potential,” he said. “I feel like if that happens, I’m OK with whatever happens at the end of the season.”

    Sand Creek girls basketball
    Sand Creek is taking aim at a state title. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Photos: Doherty boys basketball cruises by Lincoln in first game back from break

    COLORADO SPRINGS – The Doherty Spartans got 30 points from Brevin Brimble as they cruised to a 97-55 win over Lincoln Monday night.

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  • Photos: Brooks, Cunniff lead Pine Creek hockey over Palmer

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Alexander Brooks and Noah Cunniff each had two goals as Pine Creek beat Palmer 8-4 in hockey on Monday.

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  • With season back underway, first championship just around the corner

    Ralston Valley Resurrection Christian hockey generic
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    AURORA — The annual winter break has come and gone. And, with the season back in full swing, the first championship of the winter is just about a month away.

    The 2015-16 winter season officially resumed with a light slate of events this past Saturday, but things will really pick back up this week. After that, the championship season nears at a rapid pace.

    Girls swimming’s state meets are Feb. 12-13 in Thornton and Fort Collins, and begin a frenzy of championship activity over the final month of the winter sports season.

    The state wrestling meet is Feb. 18-20 at the Pepsi Center, a great annual event which routinely draws tens of thousands of fans.

    Following that, the state skiing meet is Feb. 25-26 in Aspen. The ice hockey playoffs conclude March 4-5 at the Budweiser Events Center in Loveland, and the state basketball finals for both boys and girls are March 10-12 at various locations around the state.

    Prior to those any of those events, the Legislative Council will meet in January to vote on a number of important proposals. Included is a transfer rule proposal which is sure to generate some discussion.

  • Photos: Cherry Creek boys basketball beats Pine Creek

    GREENWOOD VILLAGE — Will Halfon and Hayden Parr led Cherry Creek to a 68-60 win over Pine Creek in boys basketball on Saturday.

    Halfon scored 25 points, and Parr added 18.

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