COLORADO SPRINGS – Colorado Springs Christian bounced back from a close loss to St. Mary’s by topping Holyoke 71-33 Saturday afternoon.
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COLORADO SPRINGS – Colorado Springs Christian bounced back from a close loss to St. Mary’s by topping Holyoke 71-33 Saturday afternoon.
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CENTENNIAL — In a battle of unbeaten teams, No. 1 Monarch hockey jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the first period, then cruised to a 9-2 win over No. 3 Cherry Creek on Saturday.
Jake Young had four goals and an assist for the Coyotes. Andrew Pickner added two goals.
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THORNTON — Fairview girls swimming and diving won the Boulder County Invitational on Saturday, finishing with a total of 879 points.
Lewis-Palmer was second with 515 points, while Monarch placed third with 368.
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HIGHLANDS RANCH — The Friday night crowd was electric at The Grizzly Den where No. 1 Highlands Ranch traveled just down to the road to take on No. 2 Thunder Ridge.
And though Class 5A’s No. 1 team trailed at half, Highlands Ranch rallied to take a 46-37 win on the road.
With a full capacity gym, all the energy seemed to shake up both teams at the start of play. It took over three minutes of missed layups and frequent unfinished possessions for the first basket to drop. After a few back-and-forth shots, the first quarter ended with an 11-6 Thunder Ridge lead, and an even louder bleacher buzz.
But in the second quarter, the Grizzlies wasted no time getting to the hoop, hitting an immediate 3-pointer to force an early timeout for the Falcons. The home squad continued to make plays and outside shots, with seniors Taylor Rusk and Madison Ward taking turns from the 3-point line.
The Falcons, meanwhile, could not get a break, with nearly each shot rolling off the rim.
At the close of the first half, Rusk hit a buzzer-beater from the paint to extend the Grizzlies lead and head to the locker room with an unexpected score of 25-12, holding their visitors — a team that has recorded four 80-plus point games this season — to merely six points in each the first and second quarter.
But the game was far from over.
In the second half, the Falcons came to life under the lead of sophomore sensation Leilah Vigil, who was under the basket for nearly every rebound, started executing at the line, and used her strength and post moves to cut the gap quickly.

Suddenly the game was within four and the Grizzlies’ student section was silenced.
A 3-pointer from senior Brianne Stiers made it a one-point game and finished off a 14-2 Falcons run. In those eight minutes of play, Highlands Ranch tallied 18 points — three times what they scored in both the first and second quarter — to enter the final quarter down only 33-30.
The Falcons finally took their first lead of the game with just under six minutes left to play at 34-33. Rusk and her Grizzlies kept it close for a few possessions, but Vigil could not be stopped, hitting a fate-sealing, impossible hook shot as time trickled away.
The buzzer sounded with a scoreboard reading a come-from-behind Highlands Ranch victory of 46-37 as a flood of blue-clad students stormed the court.
Vigil finished with a double-double, tallying 15 rebounds and 21 points.
“In the first half we were unfocused and listening to the crowd. But coach told us that she knew we could do what we had been practicing, so we did,” said the 16-year-old of her team’s second-half transformation. “Without the positivity, we wouldn’t have pulled the win. There was a lot of noise in this gym, but as a good player, you just have to focus in on the game.”
Her head coach, Caryn Jarocki, found the reason for the latter half change, and ultimately the win, to be a simple product of performance.
“We shot the ball better and we played better defense,” said Jarocki.
Highlands Ranch (14-1) will take on Legend at home next Tuesday, while Thunder Ridge (12-2) travels to Grandview the same evening.

AURORA — Being a defending, Class 5A state champion can be exhausting. Overland, the No. 3 ranked team in the state, can attest to it.
Night-in and night-out, they get each team’s best effort and understandably so. Without question, they have the proverbial “target” on their backs.
Going on the road to play an Centennial League opponent is never an easy task, in any sport; yet Overland handled it with such admirable poise and tenacity, as they squeaked out a 63-55 win over No. 10 Cherokee Trail.
The game had a hesitant beginning in the first quarter of play, with each team seemingly trying to figure each other out, but unable to capture any offensive rhythm. No player scored more than four points, and the game went into the second quarter eager to see some sort of offensive output.
Overland did just that.
That quarter was dominated by Overland, thanks to 6-foot-10 senior, De’Ron Davis. Davis opened the floodgates as he alone accounted for close to half of his team’s second quarter points.
Yet Davis did most of his damage on the defensive end, as his four rebounds and two blocks in the quarter helped limit the Cougars to only 10 total points in the period, helping Overland go into halftime up 32-23.
“With a guy like him, ‘intimidating’ isn’t the word, but it changes the game when there is someone that size at the rim,” Cherokee Trail head coach Morgan Gregory said. “So our guys in the first half, I thought were too hesitant to get in there and we weren’t attacking in transition, where we can have some success against them. When their defense is set and he’s just sitting there in the paint, there real tough to score on”
In the third quarter, the Cougars came out with an urgency and intensity, as they were able to get into transition off of an extended trap-zone scheme defensively.
As a result, momentum suddenly shifted completely in favor of Cherokee Trail late in the quarter as on a broken play offensively, leading scorer senior David Thorton came flying in from the perimeter for a one-handed putback dunk over two Trailblazer defenders, cutting the Overland lead to one as the Cougar crowd erupted.
Thorton also received much needed contributions in the quarter from fellow junior teammates Jaizec Lottie and Ian Kelly.
Overland was able to stop the bleeding a little bit with clutch buckets of their own, one of those coming from Sr. Padiet Wang, as he weaved through the Cherokee Trail 2-3 zone for an acrobatic layup.
“We didn’t rebound as well and we gave up second chance opportunities,” Overland head coach Danny Fisher said. “They’re really talented and skilled everywhere, so they’re gonna make a run at you.”
The fourth quarter was a stark contrast from the first, as both teams traded punches like two heavyweight fighters tossing haymaker after haymaker. After knocking down two free throws to begin the fourth, Cherokee Trail exploded and eventually took a 47-46 lead, its first lead since the opening minutes, with six minutes left in regulation.
At this point coach Fisher decided to put the game in the very large hands of his star player and Division I-bound prospect. Each time down after Cherokee Trail took the lead, the Trailblazers were feeding and sometimes force feeding the ball into Davis on the blocks and he responded with dunks and drawing fouls.
The slow-motion pace stymied all momentum the Cougars had, ultimately, leading to Overland regaining control of the game with a minute left to play. Ronnie Barfield tried to inject life back into Cherokee Trail with a timely three from the corner, cutting the deficit to four at 59-55, but Overland’s poise was the prevailing factor down the stretch.
Reggie Gibson cashed in three of four free throws to put the game out of reach, while Davis provided the dagger with two free throws of his own within the final 15 seconds. The defending state champs held on to earn a 63-55 victory.
“You know ever since our staff and this 2016 class has been here, Cherokee Trail has been a knockout-dragout game,” Fisher said. “We’ve had a five overtime game, so they knew what to expect coming in here. One thing we talked about was valuing possession and making tough plays and that’s what we did here.”
Nevertheless, to repeat as 5A champions, Fisher knows his team has a little more work to do.
“Closing out games (needs to be) a little bit better,” he said. “We have six seniors we lean on and they’re starting to get their rhythm. Closing out games, taking care of the ball, just trying to understand what we’re trying to accomplish on every possession at the end of games.”

COLORADO SPRINGS — Once the buzzer sounded, there was elation throughout the gym at St. Mary’s High School.
The fans, parents and players that all don the green and white of the Pirates had just upset the defending Class 3A state champion — and the CHSAANow.com No. 1-ranked — Colorado Springs Christian Lions 54-51.
In the bowels of the visiting locker room, CSCS coach Mark Engesser was in disbelief. But deep down, he knew the Lions (7-4 overall, 4-1 3A Tri-Peaks) had it coming.
“I’m frustrated with everything. Our offense, our defense,” Engesser said. “It’s the same thing that happened last year. Things slide. Things slide when you play three out of state teams with Division I players all over the roster and we compete well and we think we’re all that. And then we don’t practice hard for over a month.”
On the side of the coin, the Pirates (7-5, 5-2) earned a win that could be the turning point in a very difficult season. They dropped league games to James Irwin and Trinidad that had them knocked down.
But Friday night, they showed they were anything but out. Ryan Englert scored a team-high 18 points and Ben Padrnos added 17 to lead the Pirates scoring effort. But it was the lockdown defense and ball distribution of Jimmy Velten that played a key a role in St. Mary’s knocking off their league rival for the second year in a row.
“We just stayed together, we knew we were brothers out there,” Velten said. “We knew we could do it. We haven’t had the best year so far, we lost a few in league that we don’t feel like we should’ve lost and we knew what we were capable of.”
The Lions’ one-two combination of Sam Howard and Justin Engesser did everything they could to keep their team in the game. Howard scored a game-high 19 points and Engesser helped out with 18. But the Pirates were able to shut them down in key moments.
Howard was facing double- and triple-teams early and was held to one field goal in the first quarter. With the Lions trailing 24-21 at halftime Engesser’s only points of the third quarter came on two free throws.
“You have to have help,” St. Mary’s coach Mark Beranek said. “So we got help defensively out of our man and matchup zone in various ways and I think that helped a lot.”
With the Pirates holding consistent two-score lead late in the fourth quarter, frustration finally boiled over for Coach Engesser and he was hit with a technical foul. Padrnos hit one of two free throws to make the score 52-47 with less than a minute left and the Lions couldn’t overcome the deficit.
“They hadn’t beat us in 10 or 12 years and now it’s twice in a row,” Engesser said. “They play really good and they play really hard and we don’t. We stink.”
Although it’s still early in league play, it appeared that with the loss to James Irwin, the Tri-Peaks was shaping into a three-team race between the Jaguars, CSCS and Manitou Springs. But the Pirates emphatically put themselves back in the mix by slaying the defending state champs.
Looking up in the standings, St. Mary’s knows that a showdown with the Mustangs is looming and, without overlooking everyone, are anxious to mix it up with their other longtime rival.
“I’m excited,” Velten said. “Feb. 9 at Manitou. That’s going to be a good one; boys and girls double-header.”
COLORADO SPRINGS — Cheyenne Mountain hockey rallied from down 3-0 to beat Pine Creek 5-4 in overtime on Friday.
Brian Suslow had the winner in overtime, his second goal of the game.
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LITTLETON — Three different players scored as No. 3 Cherry Creek hockey beat Columbine 3-2 on Friday.
Joseph Whitmore, Rhys Phelps and Samuel Harris each had goals for the Bruins.
Nick Stasch had both goals for Columbine, while Forest Czarnecki made 47 saves.
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HIGHLANDS RANCH — Top-ranked Highlands Ranch girls basketball rallied to beat No. 2 ThunderRidge in Class 5A on Friday.
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GREENWOOD VILLAGE — Cherry Creek boys basketball beat Arapahoe 48-39 on Friday night.
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