PUEBLO — There was plenty of action Thursday on Day 1 of the 2016 Class 4A girls state tennis tournament at Pueblo City Park.
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PUEBLO — There was plenty of action Thursday on Day 1 of the 2016 Class 4A girls state tennis tournament at Pueblo City Park.
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Sand Creek has named former Mitchell and Palmer coach Rob Hawkins as the new boys basketball coach.
Hawkins takes over for Mark Bowers, who left the program after the 2015-16 season.
“I am excited that I have been given the opportunity to coach basketball at Sand Creek High School,” Hawkins said in a release. “I have a vision to build a Scorpion basketball culture that is based on toughness, discipline, and hard work.”
It helps that Hawkins will have guard D’Shawn Schwartz on the roster. Schwartz will be entering his senior season and is regraded as one of the top overall recruits in the state.
It’s the most recent hire for athletic director Jared Felice who recently brought on former Pueblo East coach Dave Ramirez to take over the football program.
Additionally, the Scorpions have brought on former Sierra coach Otis Johnson as an assistant football and basketball coach.
DENVER — The first day of the Class 5A girls tennis state tournament was on Thursday.
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DENVER — For the first time in nearly two decades, there might be a new champion in Class 5A girls tennis.
Emphasis on might.
Fairview and 19-time defending champion Cherry Creek are locked in a battle for the team title at the 5A state championships. Fairview holds a slim 58-56 lead in team points following the second day of competition on Friday.
It is a major development in the world of girls tennis. On top of the 19 consecutive titles, Cherry Creek has won 20 of the past 21 championships. And more often than not, those championships have come in a runaway fashion: The Bruins have bested the second-place finisher by an average of 27.6 points during their streak.
The streak is to a point where, from outsiders looking in, championships are simply expected from Cherry Creek girls tennis.

“We try to really make it about these 11 girls this year. It’s not about the steak,” said Cherry Creek coach Chris Jacob. “But they know about it. They’re smart and they research stuff. … Everybody talks about it at school. They hear about it constantly, so there’s tremendous pressure that goes along with that.
“But they handle it well. I can’t imagine handling myself like that at 17; it’s lovely to see.”
The Knights, on the other hand, have been runner-up four times — 2015, 2012, 2011 and 2010 — in recent seasons.
“We don’t talk about winning,” Fairview coach Susan Stensrud said. “I believe we have the opportunity, the chance, the potential to win it all. But on a day-to-day basis, I don’t talk about winning. I talk about the girls playing their best match, playing their best game, maximizing their potential, and how they can support their teammates.”
Still, Stensrud later, “(The girls) are excited, but they’re very focused on the fact that all of us have a part in it. They’re all trying to think of what their part is.”
Fairview’s current position is made more impressive considering that only four players returned from last season’s varsity team, including the loss of defending No. 1 singles champion Amber Shen, who opted not to play this season as a sophomore.
Seraphin Castelino, a freshman, stepped into the No. 1 singles spot for the Knights, and will play in the final on Saturday. Castelino beat Mountain Vista’s Casey Zhong in three sets (6-7, 6-1, 6-1) to advance. She is the younger sister of former 5A boys No. 1 singles champion Ignatius Castelino.
Castelino will face Poudre’s Ky Ecton in the final. Ecton outlasted Cherry Creek’s Gloria Son in three sets.
“Amber was focused on her studies this year, and Seraphin just stepped right in,” Stensrud said. “For her to — two freshmen, she and Sophie (Pearson) — to drop in our lap this year has been quite a coup this year.”
Pearson will be in a crucial matchup on Saturday, in the No. 3 singles final against Cherry Creek freshman Sayuri Garud. It is one of two remaining head-to-head matchup between the two teams, the other coming in the third-place match at No. 4 doubles.
The Knights also have Clare Lupo and Denali Pinto playing for a title at No. 4 doubles.
Cherry Creek, meanwhile, underwent a rebuild of its own. The Bruins lost three top players to transfers at the January semester break, and returned just five varsity players.
But the transition?
“Not a problem, really,” Jacob said. “It allowed other girls to step up and move into these spots that they’ve worked for.”
The Bruins really gelled during a trip to Chattanooga, Tenn., for a national tournament in March, Jacob said.
And so, “For as tough as that sounds, it was a real smooth transition for us,” Jacob said. “The girls responded, and they get along really well, and they’re supporting each other. We’re in a good spot.”
In addition to Garud, the Bruins have sophomore Micha Handler playing for the No. 2 singles championship, and the duo of Allison Murphy and Emily Wilkens in the No. 2 doubles title match.
Counting playbacks — each team has three positions in third-place matches — both Fairview and Cherry Creek have 15 potential points remaining.
“Some people ask me, ‘Do you want to know what the (team) points are?’” Stensrud said. “And I don’t want to know. I just to know at the end. … It stresses me out too much.”

Mountain Vista is currently in third place with 37 points, ahead of Poudre (29 points). Poudre has two finalists: Ecton and No. 2 singles finalist Alessia Fabiano, who is an exchange student from Italy.
Heritage is in fifth place with 19 points, while Fossil Ridge, Denver East and Ponderosa sit in a tie for sixth at 15 points.
The finals all begin at 9 a.m. on Saturday at Gates Tennis Center. Admission is free.
PUEBLO — Semifinals and playback matches were complete Thursday at the second day of the Class 4A girls state tennis tournament.
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PUEBLO — It’s not going to be easy, but it can still be done.
At the conclusion of semifinals and playbacks at the Class 4A girls state tennis tournament, Kent Denver was still alive. That wasn’t the case a year ago as Cheyenne Mountain was able to wrap up their seventh-consecutive title on the second day of competition.
This year, they’ll have to fight to the end.
The Indians currently sit in first place with 69 points and the Sun Devils are right behind them at 56. Cheyenne Mountain will compete in five championship matches Friday while Kent Denver will compete in four. They’ll go head-to-head in two of those matches.
“It’s hard when you hear of the mystique of Cheyenne Mountain,” Sun Devils No. 3 singles player Natalie Bronsdon said. “I think being the underdog and not having as much pressure on us, we come out and we’re going to fight for it.”
Bronsdon scored a major victory for her team in taking Cheyenne Mountain’s Claire Dibble in the semifinals. She won the match 6-3 6-2.
Dibble was forced to put the loss out of her mind and hit the court for playbacks. She beat Discovery Canyon’s Emma Zamora to earn crucial points for the Indians in the race for the team title.
“(The playbacks) are very important points-wise,” Dibble said. “Coach (David) Adams really stresses the importance that if you lose your first match to really shake that off and look toward the next one because that’s where the team is really counting on you.”
And when matches begin at 9 a.m. Saturday, it’s going to be all about team effort. Cheyenne Mountain has a little more padding with a 13-point lead and Kent Denver knows that in order to prevent the Indians from coming away with their eight-straight title, they’ll have to all battle together.
“Every match is really important,” Bronsdon said. “Even if we’re not playing, it’s really important to be off the court and be cheering on our other teams. The support from your teammates is unbelievable. It helps so much and it makes such a huge difference.”
With so much on the line, it begs the question as to how the Sun Devils will approach their day. They’ve already scored better than they did a year ago and as stated before, still alive for the team title.
With that being the case, Kent Denver coach Gay West doesn’t want to disrupt her players in any way, shape or form. To her, normal is the best case scenario.
“At this point of the tournament, there isn’t really much to say (to them),” she said. “They got here doing what they do and for me to try and tell them anything different than what they’ve been doing would be doing them a disservice. Just keep them confident, keep them going, keep them having fun. It’s not rocket science.”
The Sun Devils will have two chances to take points right out of the Indians’ pockets as they’ll face off in No. 1 and No. 4 doubles.
For the rest of the day, they’ll be looking for some outside help, but none of that matters if they don’t take care of their own business.
“It’s going to be a lot of fun and knowing that our teammates are going to be cheering for us and our families and our coaches,” Bronsdon said. “We’ve done everything this season to prepare for this moment, so I think we’re ready.”

Bob Simmons, who spent the past three seasons as the football coach at Boulder, has resigned. Panthers athletic director Eddie Hartnett confirmed the news on Thursday.
Simmons’ teams were 10-19 in his time leading the program. His resignation was accepted on Wednesday.
Boulder is seeking a replacement immediately, Hartnett said. The job is already posted on BVSD.org.
“Coach Simmons laid a great foundation of a strong football program, and we hope to continue what he has established,” Hartnett said.
Simmons was hired prior to the 2013 season. He has an extensive background coaching college football — including two stints as an assistant at the University of Colorado in the late 80s and early 1990s, and six seasons (1995-2000) as the head coach at Oklahoma State. He also assisted at Notre Dame (2002-04) and Washington (2005-07).
The Panthers went 5-4 in 2015 and made the Class 5A playoffs, where they lost to Legacy in the first round to finish 5-5.
Next season, Boulder is set to return Max Bajza, who will be a senior, and is coming off a season in which he threw for 1,231 yards and six touchdowns. Also back is receiver Mikey Thompson, who hauled in fix scores, and the defense returns five of its six leading tacklers.
The Panthers do lose star running back T.J. Jones, who accounted for 28 rushing touchdowns.
Boulder’s opening is the latest during this offseason. Track all of the movement here.
In addition, Hartnett said that Boulder baseball coach Colt Sedbrook resigned this week. That job will be on BVSD.org shortly.

COLORADO SPRINGS — It seemed so long ago that the Classical Academy stood tall as the No. 1 team in the Class 4A CHSAANow.com girls soccer rankings.
They held the distinction for a week. Then a double-overtime loss to Cheyenne Mountain knocked the Titans off that perch.
Wednesday night, the Titans (13-1-2 overall) cruised into the second round of the 4A state soccer tournament with a 8-0 win over Pueblo West. They’re not Lewis-Palmer and they’re not Cheyenne Mountain, but the Titans are content with flying under the radar in this tournament.
“I know everyone is looking at LP now and waiting for them to make a mistake or just go on and continue to carry their season,” TCA forward Hannah Burgo said. “I don’t think anyone is paying any attention to us because we didn’t have a great start. I think we’re just trying to slip past everyone while everyone is focused on LP.”
Burgo hosted the highlight reel for TCA all night, scoring five of the team’s eight goals in the win over the Cyclones (6-9). It’s the third time this season she’s scored five goals in a game.
And as much as she thinks misdirection will work as long as Lewis-Palmer is alive, most teams will remember that the Titans beat the Rangers 1-0 back on Mar. 12.
From that standpoint, coach Blake Galvin isn’t so sure that his team will be able to remain inconspicuous for long.
“I thought we would be (seeded) somewhere in the four to eight range,” Galvin said. “So great. We’ll go. This is where we should be. We’re working hard and the girls are doing a good job.”
Next up for the Titans is Mullen, which is coming off a 7-0 win over Vista PEAK. Something is going to have to give. Despite scoring eight goals on Thursday, it’s TCA’s defense that has been the most impressive.
Behind that unit, the team hasn’t given up a goal since Apr. 9.
“You definitely can’t win without a strong defense,” Emily Mueller said. “Like coach says, we all want to defend as a team, it’s not just the defense defending. Everyone, no matter if you’re a forward or midfield, everyone defends together as a team. That really gives us a strong defense and helps us shut down the other team.”
That and maybe the ability to sneak by while everyone has their eyes on Lewis-Palmer is what might make this TCA team a legitimate threat in the 4A tournament. The Titans were the No. 2 seed a year ago and lost in the second round to Standley Lake. It’s an experience that they hope to use as a lesson this time around.
“Last year we got in the mindset that we were undefeated and it was going to be easy in a way,” Mueller said. “This year, we’re going to focus on this game and not the long run.”
If the Titans get past Mullen, a potential rematch looms with Air Academy. In their first three games of the season, the Titans recorded a tie, a win and a loss.
Air Academy was the tie. Only time will tell if by that point, the Titans are still able to fly under the radar.
GREENWOOD VILLAGE — Fourth-ranked Cherry Creek boys lacrosse beat No. 13 Chaparral 10-6 on Wednesday in the first round of the Class 5A state tournament.
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AURORA — No. 19-seeded Air Academy girls lacrosse beat No. 14 Grandview 13-12 in overtime in the first round of the state tournament on Wednesday.
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