Month: February 2016

  • Photos: St. Mary’s girls basketball wins top 10 battle with La Junta

    COLORADO SPRINGS – St. Mary’s capitalized on early mistakes to take down La Junta 69-59 in a Tri-Peaks League showdown Thursday night.

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  • Photos: SkyView Academy boys basketball tops Denver Christian

    LAKEWOOD – SkyView Academy exploded for 25 points in the fourth quarter to take down Denver Christian 56-47 Thursday night.

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  • No. 5 Overland boys basketball sends a message, gives No. 2 Eaglecrest first loss

    Overland Eaglecrest boys basketball
    More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    AURORA — To beat a giant — a Goliath of sorts — it takes courage and discipline, among other things. And unless one is aided by some divine intervention, it takes more than just the miraculous efforts of just one man.

    The Overland Trailblazers knew this as they paid a visit to Eaglecrest High School Wednesday night and behind a dominant total team effort, they pulled off the 63–41 upset over the CHSAANow.com No. 2-ranked school in the state and the recently dubbed ninth best team in the country by MaxPreps.

    However, don’t be fooled as the Traiblazers (14-3 overall, 7-2 Centennial League) are no “David”; in large part because they have a giant of their own in senior De’Ron Davis. He not only willed his team to victory through his leadership and communication on the floor, but his physical presence was a game-changing factor.

    “The thing with De’Ron is he’s a really good basketball player and he doesn’t need to score for his team to be successful,” Eaglecrest coach John Olander said after the loss. “You’re not going to get very many rebounds when he’s in there, but they’re a really good basketball team and when you have De’Ron sitting underneath the basket, every single shot is contested. With him in there, you have to play a perfect game.”

    Unfortunately for the Raptors (17-1, 8-1), they played anything but a perfect game, while the Trailblazers themselves exuded near perfection.

    From the opening tip, Overland was extremely aggressive, specifically on the perimeter. Colbey Ross, the Raptors’ star junior guard, was faced with suffocating defense every time he had the ball in his hands, practically eliminating him from the contest. Senior guard Jervae Robinson of Overland led the charge when it came to shutting down Eaglecrest’s top playmaker.

    “We pulled this off by team defense. We came out to play hard,” Robinson said. “We wanted to get back to where we were at the beginning of the season and just get some dog in us, just fight.”

    When asked about the game-plan coming into tonight’s game, Overland coach Danny Fisher couldn’t stress enough how important defensive execution was from his team and how it was his team’s senior leadership that really placed the hones on themselves to come out prepared, rather than him preparing them.

    “It was nothing I did, it was the seniors taking accountability and taking ownership of the team and holding each other accountable, especially defensively,” Fisher explained. “After Grandview, we were all just a little bit confused and that shook us a bit and that next day, our seniors put their arms around the team and said ‘here’s how we need to ride this out’.”

    Going into halftime, Overland converted two separate and-one opportunities in the final minute of the second quarter, helping push them to a 34-20 lead.

    With the home crowd and student section stunned, Olander knew he had to make some adjustments to change the tide of the game and get Ross going, should his team look to hold onto their undefeated record.

    “We tried to spread the floor a little bit to give (Colby) a little bit more space where we weren’t screening, we were just cutting, to try to get some backdoors,” Olander said. “Just try to get a little more space; they’re aggressive defensively so we were trying to get some hand-check calls, try to get to the free throw line. We just couldn’t make enough shots and I thought we missed some critical free throws…and that’s going to be hard to come back from against those guys.”

    The third quarter turned disastrous for Eaglecrest as the Raptors couldn’t find any momentum, as all of it was being thrown into their net on fast-break dunks by Overland.

    Turnovers continued to plague Olander’s squad and by the end of the third period, the game was blown open as the horned sounded shortly following a highlight reel worthy alley-oop that was flushed home by Robinson. The Raptors were held to a minuscule six points in the third. Going into the final quarter, Overland held a comfortable 48-26 lead.

    Midway through the fourth, Fiasher his bench and as they were set to check in, De’Ron Davis made sure they knew to keep their foot on the gas pedal as he demanded his team keep up the intensity.

    “That’s what changed. Him, Jervae, and Reggie, they have been very, very, vocal for the last week,” Fisher said. “They’re coming to me asking to run things ‘we need to do this, we need to do that.’ Now we’re having basketball conversations and they’re wanting to do things they see on the floor.”

    When Davis was asked about it, he stated that in order to reach his potential, he must improve on his vocal leadership.

    “I’m trying to be an overall player and I feel like from a high school standpoint, I could always get better,” he said. “My game is there, but it’s time for me to work on the other parts of my game and that’s being a leader”

  • Pueblo South boys hoops knocks off Pueblo West at the buzzer

    Pueblo South Pueblo West boys basketball
    (Lauren Renck/CHSAANow.com)

    PUEBLO — Kids dream about this moment.

    Pueblo South’s Deshiloh Stanley lived it Wednesday night.

    The junior hit a runner in the lane off the glass at the buzzer, propelling the fourth-ranked Colts to a dramatic 59-57 win over No. 5 Pueblo West in a South-Central League boys basketball game.

    “I got the ball and I drove to the basket in the lane and shot it, and I thought it was going in,” the 5-foot-11 Stanley said. “Coach (D.J. Johnson) and my teammates all give me confidence, and that was going through my head when I shot it. I wasn’t planning on banking it, I was just trying to get my team win. This was definitely the biggest shot I’ve ever hit.”

    A nanosecond after the ball fell through the hoop, the standing-room only crowd at the SHS gym rushed the court and mobbed Stanley.

    “It was very crazy,” said Stanley, who drove past West’s David Simental to nail the winning shot and give him 10 points for the game. “I’ve never experienced anything like that before.”

    South, No. 4 in the latest CHSAANow.com Class 4A poll, ran its record to 16-1 overall and alone atop the S-CL with a 5-0 mark. The Colts, who were ranked No. 1 in the state last week, regrouped after suffering their first loss of the season – 54-52 to Air Academy Jan. 30.

    West dropped to 15-3 overall and to 4-1 in the S-CL, and also saw its four-game winning streak snapped.

    Johnson, South’s veteran coach, praised Stanley for his heroics.

    “We wanted to run a high pick and roll and let Maleek (Johnson) try to get loose and they did a great job of taking him away, but you know Deshiloh is a good second option for us to have,” Johnson said. “He got himself in position to score and when he shot it, I was saying to myself, ‘Please go in,’ and it was exciting when he made it.”

    Johnson, who finished with a team-high 18 points, scored six consecutive points, the final two giving the Colts a 57-55 lead with 39 seconds remaining.

    “I was just try to be a leader and do what coach told me to do and that was take over,” the 6-foot-1 Johnson said. “They (West) took me out of the last play and Deshiloh took it to the paint and made a great shot. I was really glad he made it because I didn’t want to go to overtime.”

    Simental, who had a game-high 22 points, tied the game with a bucket with 26 seconds ticks left, setting the stage for Stanley.

    West’s Kenny Tack, who had 12 points, was trying to digest the tough defeat.

    “We had our eyes on Maleek,” said Tack about the final play. “Of course Deshiloh is a good shooter and it just got away from us and hopefully we can get it next time. There were just too many plays in that game that got away from us.”

    Johnson acknowledged his team’s victory against West was crucial – especially at home. The Colts will visit Pueblo West Feb. 19 in the final regular season game of the season for both teams.

    “West is a great team and we feel fortunate to beat a team like that,” Johnson said. “There are not too many teams better than them in the state. We are lucky to have them in our league and get to see them twice and get prepared for the playoffs, but we had to protect our own court.

    “We’re going to have to face them out there in their place in a couple of weeks and that’s a very tough place to play, so it was very important for us to try and hold serve if you will, here at home.”

  • Photos: No. 5 Overland boys basketball beats No. 2 Eaglecrest

    AURORA — Fifth-ranked Overland boys basketball gave No. 2 Eaglecrest its first loss on Wednesday night.

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  • Photos: No. 2 Grandview beats No. 8 Cherry Creek in girls basketball

    AURORA — Grandview girls basketball, ranked No. 2 in 5A, moved to 17-0 with a 72-42 win over No. 8 Cherry Creek on Wednesday.

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  • Basketball committee recommends going to 64-team brackets for 4A and 5A state tournaments

    basketball committee
    Members of the CHSAA basketball committee talk through various playoff format changes. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    AURORA — The basketball committee met at the CHSAA offices Thursday to discuss the inclusion of RPI into the next two-year cycle (beginning with the 2016-17 school year) and how it will change playoff formatting in the five classes.

    But playoff formatting in Class 4A and 5A proved to be the big change of the day as each class is slated to move to a 64-team bracket beginning in 2017. The move must be approved at the next Legislative Council meeting in April.

    The move to a bracket that includes almost every team in the state is driven by the idea that any team in 1A, 2A and 3A can qualify for state through a district tournament. A 64-team bracket would give a 4A or 5A team who had ineligible players or injuries at the start of the year, a chance to play themselves into contention once the tournament started.

    “If you look at those other classes, everyone has a chance to play their way into the tournament,” committee chair Paul Cain said. “In 4A and 5A, we don’t have those opportunities, so if you have some kids who were or ineligible at the start of the season, they may never get that chance to play their way into the tournament. This provides that chance.”

    Unlike what is seen in NCAA basketball tournament every year, the 4A and 5A state brackets will not pit the best team in the field against the worst. Seeds 1-16 will be given a double-bye in the tournament and seeds 17-32 will be given a single-bye.

    That means in the first round of the tournament, it will be the No. 33 team hosting No. 64, No. 34 hosting No. 63 and so on. The seeding committee does have the latitude to adjust the bracket for geographical considerations.

    For 5A, the plan to play the Great 8 at the Denver Coliseum and the Final 4 at the Coors Events Center in Boulder went unchanged.

    “We’ve been back and forth over what the membership wants and it’s been kind of a split,” Cain said. “We thought this was a way to do it so that we weren’t matching that 1 vs. 64. We put in those byes so some of the other schools can work their way into the tournament.”

    The seeding will be determined based on RPI, but league champions will automatically be placed within the top 32 seeded teams in order to receive at least one bye. If a league champion happens to fall outside the top 32, they will be placed in and the lowest non-automatic qualifier will be placed outside of that window.

    From an administrative and coaching standpoint, there is hope that a bigger bracket will encourage participation in the waning months of the season. Coaches and players will be able to track their RPI status daily, so knowing that there is potential of postseason play will hopefully provide motivation from those teams on the bubble.

    “What we were seeing and hearing from coaches and from programs was that kids were excited about participating in the postseason, but if they knew they were out of the postseason, that really caused some problems for coaches to keep kids excited about playing basketball,” CHSAA assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann said. “That’s not what we wanted. We want that excitement to continue. By expanding to the 64-team bracket, that gives some of the others a chance to do that.”

    Borgmann added that the first round matchup should pit teams with similar records and similar abilities against each other which ideally results in competitive games early in the tournament.

    It is still possible for this proposal to be amended as it gets in front of the Legislative Council, but the group that proposed the change saw a chance for more student-athletes to get recognized on a higher state.

    “I think the basketball committee saw this as an opportunity to put more teams on center stage and this is a way to do that,” Borgmann said. “And they get to do that against teams who are similar in ability the chance to do that, certainly in the first two rounds.”

    Other playoff format changes

    • The bracket in 3A will remain at 32 teams. District tournament champions and runners-up will automatically qualify for state with the rest of the field determined by RPI. The seven district champions and the top RPI team will host the first weekend of the tournaments. Seeds 9-23 will be determined by straight RPI with seeds 24-32 being geographically based.
    • There were no changes to the district format for 2A. For regionals, they will take four teams from each district, with the exception of District 3 who will only take three. Whichever district they are pitted against in regionals will then take five teams. The teams are seeded in regionals by RPI. The top two teams from each region will then head to state.
    • There were no major changes to the playoff format for 1A, but seeding will be done by RPI.

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    Notables

    • In addition to expanding the state bracket to 64 teams, there was discussion to add a third- and fourth-place game for 4A.
    • There was talk of expanding 3A to a 48-team bracket. Committee members wanted to continue the discussion while seeing how RPI factors into the current playoff format. They are leaving the possibility of expanding the bracket open for future committee meetings.
    • The Colorado High School Coaches Association broached the subject of adding a 45-second shot clock. A formal rule change proposal would have to be submitted to and approved by CHSAA and then submitted to the National Federation of High Schools.
    • There was casual talk in 2A about moving to a Final 4 format, but the discussion was not discussed among the entire committee.
    • A conversation involving the potential move of championship sites was had. One idea that was pitched was moving the 4A and 5A Final 4 to the Denver Coliseum, the site that is currently used for the 5A Great 8.
  • Photos: Class of 2016’s National Signing Day around the state

    National Signing Day for the Class of 2016 is here. Photos from the day’s events around the state are below.

    Find Class of 2016 commitments listed here.

    To submit photos from your event, use this form.

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  • Four top-10 boys basketball games delayed by snow

    Colorado state wrestling
    (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    What was supposed to be a week filled with marquee boys basketball games has turned into a puzzle to make everything fit together.

    The snowstorm that pushed its way through Colorado forced the postponement of several basketball games across the state and forced teams to find new dates for those games to be played.

    CHSAANow.com was slated to be at some of those key match-ups.

    In Class 5A, a much anticipated game between No. 3 Regis Jesuit and No. 4 Rock Canyon was slated to be played Tuesday, but called due to both districts not having school. No makeup date is listed on MaxPreps.

    A couple of very high profile 4A were supposed to be played during the week. District rivals No. 4 Pueblo South and No. 5 Pueblo West were supposed to square off Tuesday, but the game was pushed back one night. They will instead play Wednesday night at Pueblo South.

    Lewis-Palmer, the newly crowned No. 1 team in 4A will not play No. 9 Vista Ridge Wednesday night. Instead, the game has been pushed back to Saturday. That game will be played at Lewis-Palmer High School. The Wolves nearly handed the Rangers their second loss of the season earlier in the year, but Lewis-Palmer came away with a 39-36 win.

    A crucial league game between two top-10 3A teams was also postponed. Manitou Springs was set to travel to CSCS on Tuesday night, but the league rivals will instead meet on Feb. 15. The Mustangs currently sit in first place of the Tri-Peaks League and the Lions are looking to regain the top spot, which they lost when they suffered an upset at the hands of St. Mary’s on Jan. 22.

    The severity of the storm appears to be over which would be a welcome sight for coaches and players that are looking to get back on the floor.

  • Basketball committee set to discuss including all teams in 4A/5A state tournaments

    Valor Christian Sand Creek girls basketball
    (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    AURORA — The basketball committee meets on Thursday, and among proposals the group will discuss is an idea that would put all teams from the 4A and 5A classifications on the state tournament brackets.

    The exact format would need to be ironed out, but the proposal the group will hear involves a 64-team bracket, with additional play-in games that may be necessary if either 4A or 5A has more teams than that.

    The 5A boys are set to have 66 teams in 2016-17, and girls will have 64. 4A is projected to have 69 boys teams and 70 girls teams.

    The number of play-in games in each tournament would depend on how many are needed to get to a 64-team field.

    Under the new state tournament proposal, after the bracket is narrowed to 64 teams, seeds Nos. 33-64 would play in the first round. Those teams would advance to play seeds Nos. 1-32 in the second round based on a predetermined bracket. This means seeds Nos. 1-32 would have a first-round bye.

    Currently, 5A’s boys and girls have a 48-team first with the top 16 seeds receiving a bye. The 4A boys and girls play a 32-team tournament, and no team gets a bye.

    “Every team gets to control their own destiny and their play on the court will determine how far they will go,” said Bert Borgmann, the CHSAA assistant commissioner in charge of basketball. “Additionally, the feedback we’ve gotten from schools is that they’d like to finish the season against teams that are closer to their own ability.”

    The proposed format would take roughly three-and-a-half weeks as compared to the current three week format.

    Teams would be seeded according to the RPI (Ratings Percentage Index) formula, with league champions guaranteed a top-32 seed. Seeds Nos. 33-66 would also be determined by the RPI, with slight adjustments based on “reasonable geographic considerations.”

    Other items on Thursday’s agenda at the basketball committee meeting:

    • Whether or not to keep the current consolation format in 3A. If the consolation format is removed, there is potential to move 3A to the same venue as the 4A and 5A Final 4 events. That proposal, too, will be discussed.
    • With 3A now having the most teams (72), they committee will discuss whether or not to expand that tournament from 32 to 48 teams.
    • The possibility of moving the 1A and 2A sites closer together, or simply having them at the same site.
    • A tweak to the 2A postseason format to account for RPI in the selection of the state tournament fields.
    • The host venues of each classification will be discussed in general, as well.

    CHSAANow will have complete coverage of Thursday’s meeting.