Month: March 2016

  • Photos: ThunderRidge opens girls lacrosse season with win over Chatfield

    The ThunderRidge girls lacrosse team opened the season with a big 17-7 win over Chatfield on Friday.

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  • Photos: 2A boys and girls basketball Final 4

    PUEBLO — The boys and girls Class 2A Final 4 games were played at Massari Arena at CSU-Pueblo Friday night.

    Coverage:

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  • Replay: State basketball championships in all five classes

    LOVELAND, PUEBLO, DENVER and BOULDER — The state basketball championships in all classes are on Saturday.

    Live coverage is below. Additionally, all championship and third-place games will be streamed live on the NFHS Network, save for 4A/5A, which will be available on Altitude TV.

    Brackets:

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    Live Blog 2016 state basketball championships
     

  • Valor Christian girls basketball repeats as 4A champion

    BOULDER — Valor Christian repeated as the Class 4A girls basketball champion on Thursday, and did it against a familiar opponent.

    The Eagles, in the three contests this season, pulled away from Evergreen by a total of 37 points, finishing the Cougars off in the 4A finals by a 55-40 margin on Saturday at Coors Events Center.

    Valor has now won back-to-back state championships in girls basketball, their fifth championship total in girls sports and their 16th overall championship in school history.

    As much as Evergreen (24-4), a No. 2 seed, clawed their way back into the game with the offensive fireworks of freshman post player Claudia Dillon (14 points, 9 rebounds) and senior forward Samantha Kisiel (13, 8 rebounds), the Cougar hot streaks never quite matched the consistent play at both ends for Valor, a No. 1 seed and pre-tournament favorite.

    Valor led the entire game and held leads of 32-20 at the break and 42-33 after the third. Evergreen closed within six multiple times in the final frame, but Valor had three scorers in double-figures with 5:32 remaining and a 46-36 lead. Kim Childress (19 points), Heidi Hammond (11) and Madison McCoy (14), a senior trio, all had offensive grooves, sparking runs that ultimately decided the game.

    Valor Christian Evergreen 4A state basketball
    More photos. (Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com)

    Kisiel also fouled out for Evergreen with 1:52 left, but the Cougars’ fate had already appeared sealed while down 11 points. Evergreen was appearing in their first-ever girls basketball final.

    “One of our biggest keys was keeping them out of the middle during our full-court trap,” Childress said. “That was all we talked about all week. Once we started getting stops, we got more stops and more stops.”

    Valor Christian rolled over Sand Creek 73-47 in the 4A finals last season, but a return trip to the last game was anything but guaranteed after graduating standouts like Kendall Bradbury and Caroline Bryan from a 26-3 team. Instead of taking a slight step backward, the Eagles took a step forward this season by claiming back-to-back, finishing with a 27-1 record, and cementing their legacy as a 4A powerhouse.

    “It just shows how successful the plays are, how good Coach Jess is and really the unity that we build throughout the season shows that this is a team that you want to be with,” Childress said.

    Coach Jessika Caldwell said the latest group of fourth-year players, led by Hammond, Childress, McCoy and Sara Gibson, carried a heavy load and performed admirably.

    “Each piece was there and each person bought into their role,” Caldwell said. “I’m just really thankful to be at Valor, to coach these young ladies. I really consider it such a privilege.”

    And so, Valor Christian is writing another chapter in their hoops tradition. Caldwell pointed out that the Highlands Ranch hoops community, with Highlands Ranch and ThunderRidge facing off in the 5A girls final, has helped to inspire the competitiveness in the area.

    “Being in the vicinity of Highlands Ranch and ThunderRidge, who are playing for their state championship, we’re all about five miles away from each other,” Caldwell said. “I just think that for our school and for our girls, they worked extremely hard. I don’t think a lot of people thought we would be in this position, but we just refused to buy into that.”

    Valor Christian Evergreen 4A state basketball
    More photos. (Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com)

  • Photos: Valor Christian beats Evergreen to win 4A girls basketball title

    BOULDER — Valor Christian girls basketball won the Class 4A championship with a 55-40 win over Evergreen on Saturday.

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  • ThunderRidge caps amazing tourney run with 5A girls basketball title

    BOULDER – ThunderRidge’s run through the Class 5A state girls basketball tournament was one to remember.

    The Grizzlies took down three of the four No. 1 seeds in the field, capped by a dominating defensive performance Saturday afternoon in the championship game. ThunderRidge shut down a potent Highlands Ranch offense en route to a 47-32 victory at Coors Events Center.

    It was the Grizzlies’ first state championship since winning three in a row from 2003-05 and avenged a loss in the 2015 title game. Along the way ThunderRidge (25-3) eliminated Lakewood, previously undefeated Grandview and a Highlands Ranch team that had not lost an in-state game this season.

    “We just took it one game at a time,” Grizzlies senior Jaz’myne Snipes said. “You can’t think ahead and you can’t think about what you did in the past, because the past no longer matters.”

    ThunderRidge Highlands Ranch girls basketball
    More photos. (Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com)

    The Falcons (26-2) had averaged 74 points through their first four playoff games but couldn’t get their shots to fall Saturday. Highlands Ranch shot just 33 percent on the day and turned the ball over 23 times against its Continental League rival.

    “Our defense won it for us, definitely,” Grizzlies senior Taylor Rusk said. “We worked really hard on that, and defense wins championships.”

    Snipes and Alyssia Martinez combined to score 33 points for ThunderRidge. Martinez had 17 points and Snipes scored 16 to go along with four steals.

    Leilah Vigil led the Falcons with 13 points and nine rebounds, but as a team Highlands Ranch lost the rebound battle 30-23.

    “They out-rebounded us, and that’s always our goal, to out-rebound the other team,” Falcons coach Caryn Jarocki said. “That didn’t happen today, and when we don’t out-rebound the other team, we struggle on the offensive end.”

    After a low-scoring first half ThunderRidge owned a 16-12 lead, but a 10-2 run to open the third quarter put Highlands Ranch into a hole from which it couldn’t recover. Martinez scored six of her 17 points during that stretch, and the Falcons didn’t get on the board until Vigil scored with three minutes, 40 seconds remaining.

    “We were up 25-12 on them at our place, and then, before you knew it, we lost by nine points,” Grizzlies coach Matt Asik said of the teams’ regular-season meeting. “That third quarter was huge absolutely. To extend the lead, it calmed us down.”

    The lead grew to 13 points headed into the fourth quarter, and ThunderRidge padded it to as many as 19 points.

    “Last time we played them we felt like we played not to lose,” Rusk said. “We just kept attacking. They told us ‘don’t let up’ and it paid off.”

    ThunderRidge had some added inspiration in the words of former Grizzlies standout Abby Waner, who spoke with the team before the playoffs began and told them their goal hadn’t been denied – it was just delayed.

    Those words were written on a board in the team’s locker room before each game.

    “Everything she said it was just like, ‘Wow.’ We really needed that talk,” said Snipes, one of eight seniors on the roster. “The ‘Delayed, not denied,’ that really stuck with us. It was like yeah, we lost last year, but so what? We’ll get it this year.”

    Highlands Ranch was playing in its first title game since 2013. The Falcons will graduate only three seniors, and leading scorers Vigil and Tommi Olson were sophomores.

    “This group was great. They’ve done everything I asked them to do,” Jarocki said. “They’ve been really focused and really fun. They couldn’t be a better group to coach.”

    ThunderRidge girls basketball team champions
    More photos. (Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com)

  • Photos: No. 9 Grandview boys lacrosse beats Chatfield

    AURORA — Ninth-ranked Grandview opened its season with a 16-7 win over Chatfield on Friday.

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  • Sand Creek hires former Pueblo East football coach Dave Ramirez

    CHSAA 3A State Football Championship
    Dave Ramirez (front) watches his Pueblo East team take the field during the 2014 Class 3A state championship game. (Mark Adams)

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Sand Creek has hired Dave Ramirez, the former Pueblo East coach who won a Class 3A state title in 2014, as its head football coach. Athletic director Jared Felice confirmed the hire to CHSAANow.com.

    Ramirez stepped down as the coach of the Eagles after winning a state title and joined the coaching staff at Liberty for the 2015 season.

    But after one year as an assistant, Ramirez was ready to to get back in the saddle as a head coach. The opening at Sand Creek was turned out to be the right opportunity.

    “As we begin this new era of Scorpion Football I want to clearly state that our goal from day one is to build a championship program,” Ramirez said in a statement. “I truly believe we have the players, the tools, and the necessary fire to take those steps. I am eager to meet my team and begin the process.”

    The Scorpions went 0-10 last year and the prospect of bringing in a coach that has taken a team to a state title was just too good for Felice to pass up.

    “Coach Ramirez possesses all the essential qualities of a successful program leader,” Felice said. “We are excited and fortunate to have him on board.”

    Ramirez will see the Lancers for the next two seasons as both teams have been placed in the “Southern 3” conference in the recently approved 4A conference alignments.

    Follow all of this offseason’s coaching movement in our tracker.

  • Chatfield’s Cameron Pearson, driven by belief, has Chargers in 5A boys basketball’s Final 4

    Chatfield boys basketball team
    Chatfield senior Cameron Pearson. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    [dropcap]S[/dropcap]ix-foot-1 shooting guard Cameron Pearson has Chatfield basketball in its first Final 4 since 1996.

    “There weren’t many other people that believed that we could make it this far,” Pearson, a senior, said this week. “It’s been pretty cool to see that us believing has turned into something so special.”

    Belief is something that Pearson has always been big on. Heading into his freshman year, Pearson was 5-foot-1. Throughout his life, he was always the smallest kid on the court, so he dedicated his time to developing his skills with the belief that height would come.

    “He never lost hope,” Chatfield coach Steve Schimpeler said. “He just continued to work and had faith that he would one day grow.”

    Before his freshman year, Pearson was diagnosed with a growth hormone deficiency. The medical term, pituitary dwarfism, is a condition in which the pituitary gland does not make enough growth hormone. This results in a slow growth pattern and below average height.

    Chatfield Cherry Creek boys basketball
    Pearson had 18 points in a Great 8 win against Cherry Creek. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    “Knowing that I could find a way to get to an average height was an incredible relief,” Pearson said. He had grown accustomed to “always being the smallest guy, always thinking I’m going to have to be so much better skilled than everyone else just to have a shot to make the team.”

    Pearson was prescribed growth hormones to get him to the height that he should be at without the deficiency.

    “He has an unbelievable work ethic. Probably a greater work ethic than anyone I’ve ever had at Chatfield,” Schimpeler said. “We’ve had a lot of great players at Chatfield, and Cameron is right up there with them if not at the top.”

    The height might have come late, but the work ethic that Pearson possesses has been around since middle school.

    “In seventh grade, I started to realize that other kids were getting bigger and faster, more athletic so I just decided one January to make a New Year’s resolution to go to the gym at least five days a week, and it turned out that I happened to go every day,” Pearson said. “I went every single day for over 1,400 days.”

    His mom, Jacquie Pearson, recounted the resolution: “One day he came up to me and said, ‘Mom, when I was playing against this player, he said, Push him right. Push him right, he can’t dribble right. I don’t want anyone to ever say that. I want to be so good that it doesn’t matter if they push me left or push me right.’”

    Pearson was so dedicated with the resolution that he has brought a basketball on family trips everywhere from Lake Powell to Costa Rica.

    “He has shot in some of the weirdest, unconventional, crazy places to make sure that he got his shots up and his dribbling in,” Jacquie Pearson said.

    Pearson remembered times of her son getting his shots in, no matter what. In eighth grade, Pearson was skiing and got a concussion. On the way home from the hospital, the family stopped at the gym so he could get his shots in.

    The Pearsons structured their life schedule around Cameron getting his work in.

    “Christmas morning, 6 a.m. It’s snowing outside,” Jacquie Pearson said. “He’s in our backyard shooting before we start Christmas.”

    All the extra practice has paid off for Pearson this year. According to coach Schimpeler, Pearson is shooting 65 percent from two-point range and above 50 percent from 3-point range during league play.

    “That’s amazing. That’s better stats from what the bigs are shooting from two-point range,” Schimpeler said. “And to shoot above 50 percent from 3-point range? Unreal.”

    Pearson’s 13.6 points per game lead his team. He is also averaging 3.3 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.6 steals per game.

    His mom attributes his play to the adversity that he has overcome.

    “Since he was always so short, he had to learn to overcome that,” Jacquie Pearson said. “He learned the game from a different perspective. He has a new view of the game now, but he has all the advantages of the things that he learned from being short.”

    Cherry Creek Chatfield boys basketball
    (Matt Minton/JacksActionShots.com)

    Schimpeler said that Pearson didn’t have much impact in his early seasons. That, like everything else, has changed. According to Schimpeler, Pearson is leading the team in almost every category.

    “Now he’s able to completely take over games and at times dominate,” Schimpeler said.

    Take, for example, the Great 8 round in which Pearson had 18 points and nine rebounds in a 63-55 overtime win against Cherry Creek last Saturday. Included was a clutch free throw with three seconds left that sent the game to overtime.

    Pearson chalks that ability to trust. Team chemistry is founded on trust, and Pearson noted the fact that anyone on the team has the ability to score and score in bunches.

    “We know that if we have to help, then someone is going to help us, and if we pass to the open guy, he’s going to make the shot,” Cameron Pearson said. “We trust each other, we trust our system, and it’s helped us out and it’s gotten us to where we are. We’re all really a family on the team.”

    The hard work and drive that Pearson has branches out into the whole team.

    “All of our team knows how much and how hard he’s worked. I think a lot of our players think, ‘You know what? This guy has worked so hard, we have to do our part,’” Schimpeler said. “He pulls guys in and gets them to the gym and things like that. He’s one of those leaders.”

    Pearson currently doesn’t have any offers from colleges, but is drawing interest. Instead of attending college next year, Pearson will serve a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Chile Antofagasta Mission.

    “This year, it’s just been more than I could have ever asked for. I’ve grown so much physically, I’m average-sized on the court, I’m shooting a percentage that’s way better than I ever could have asked for, I’m rebounding the ball better than I ever would have thought possible,” Pearson said. “It’s really humbling to me that something I decided to do kind of casually in seventh grade brought me to the Final 4 in the 5A state playoffs.

    “No matter how grim things look for you and how bad things are going, that hard work will eventually pay off.”

    For now, the goal is to make it to Saturday’s championship game. To do that, Pearson and Chatfield have to get by No. 1-seeded Overland Friday night at 8:30 p.m. in the Coors Events Center.

    “It’s going to be a monumental task,” Schimpeler said. “David vs. Goliath.”

    You can bet Pearson won’t shy away from the challenge.

    “The kid never rests,” Schimpeler said. “We have to tell him to take days off. He is a true gym rat.”

    Cherry Creek Chatfield boys basketball
    (Matt Minton/JacksActionShots.com)
  • Photos: Action from the 3A basketball Great 8

    DENVER — The Class 3A Great 8 was completed on Thursday in boys and girls basketball.

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