Month: May 2016

  • Girls golf: 5A’s Day 1 results, Day 2 tee times

    AURORA — Complete results after the first day of the 2016 Class 5A girls golf state tournament at CommonGround Golf Course, as well as Day 2 tee times.

    Go to:

    Teams
    Place School R1 To Par
    1 Regis Jesuit 230 +14
    2 Grandview 238 +22
    3 Ralston Valley 244 +28
    4 Arvada West 249 +33
    T5 Cherry Creek 250 +34
    T5 Rock Canyon 250 +34
    7 Heritage 254 +38
    T8 Fossil Ridge 256 +40
    T8 Loveland 256 +40
    10 Monarch 257 +41
    11 Denver East 258 +42
    12 Broomfield 266 +50
    13 Highlands Ranch 270 +54
    14 Legacy 271 +55
    15 Fairview 276 +60
    16 Pine Creek 278 +62
    17 Arapahoe 314 +98
    Individuals
    Place Name School Score To Par Day 2 Tee
    1 Mary Weinstein Regis Jesuit 71 -1 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    T2 Delaney Elliott Monarch 75 +3 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T2 Jordan Remley Ralston Valley 75 +3 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    T2 Morgan Sahm Grandview 75 +3 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    T5 Jaclyn Murray Regis Jesuit 76 +4 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T5 Amy Chitkoksoong Grandview 76 +4 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T7 Jennifer Hankins Legacy 79 +7 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    T7 Leigha Devine Fossil Ridge 79 +7 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    T7 Joanna Kempton Heritage 79 +7 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    T7 Amisha Singh Smoky Hill 79 +7 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    11 Madison McCambridge Fairview 80 +8 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    T12 Lauren Lehigh Loveland 81 +9 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    T12 Stephanie Bang Cherry Creek 81 +9 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    T12 Julia Baroth Denver East 81 +9 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    15 Alexis Chan Rock Canyon 82 +10 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Amelia Lee Rock Canyon 83 +11 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Reagan Robinson Arvada West 83 +11 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Leigh Robinson Arvada West 83 +11 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Brooke Pulver Regis Jesuit 83 +11 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Ali Peper Arvada West 83 +11 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T21 Payton Canon Cherry Creek 84 +12 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T21 Zarena Brown Pomona 84 +12 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T21 Sydney Eye Ralston Valley 84 +12 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T21 Carly Gallant Monarch 84 +12 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Cammie Fowler Fossil Ridge 85 +13 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Andrea Hoos Legacy 85 +13 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Sarah Hunt Denver East 85 +13 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Aili Bundy Loveland 85 +13 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Tabitha Diehl Mountain Vista 85 +13 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Lexi Ringsby Cherry Creek 85 +13 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Brandy McClain Rock Canyon 85 +13 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Riley McKibbon Ralston Valley 85 +13 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T25 Ali Timlin Regis Jesuit 85 +13 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T34 Anna Roh Broomfield 86 +14 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T34 Izzy Ruiz Highlands Ranch 86 +14 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T34 Arielle Keating Rampart 86 +14 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T37 Gabby Esquibel Heritage 87 +15 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T37 Elly Carlson Pine Creek 87 +15 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T37 Caitlin O’Donnell Grandview 87 +15 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Tess Mitchell Columbine 88 +16 8:30 am (Tee: 10)
    T40 Hope Kim Broomfield 88 +16 8:30 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Delaney Benson Heritage 88 +16 8:30 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Jenna Chun Highlands Ranch 88 +16 8:30 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Nicole Tedesco Douglas County 88 +16 8:30 am (Tee: 10)
    T45 Leia Vadeen Northglenn 89 +17 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T45 Avery Hill Grand Junction 89 +17 8:30 am (Tee: 10)
    T45 Miranda Schiffbauer Arvada West 89 +17 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Morgan Ryan Grandview 90 +18 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Allie Garcia Coronado 90 +18 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Hannah Doran Loveland 90 +18 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Kelsey Webster Fairview 90 +18 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T52 Duval Sutherland Legend 91 +19 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T52 Callie Kloenne Castle View 91 +19 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T52 Lexi Mueldener Ralston Valley 91 +19 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T55 Halley McDonald Pine Creek 92 +20 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T55 Maddie Kern Broomfield 92 +20 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T55 Elena Barboza Denver East 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    T55 Paige Gentry Fossil Ridge 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    T55 Kendra George Heritage 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    60 Katie Malcolm Chaparral 93 +21 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Olivia Roper Denver East 94 +22 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Grace Linderman Mountain Vista 94 +22 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Madi Eurich Coronado 94 +22 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Hannah Fey Cherry Creek 94 +22 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Kayla Elder Fossil Ridge 94 +22 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T66 Beth Lebar Arapahoe 95 +23 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    T66 Alix Mees Cherokee Trail 95 +23 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T66 Bailey Summers Grand Junction 95 +23 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Sloane Cape Highlands Ranch 96 +24 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Melia Buckton Legend 96 +24 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Emma Hesse Lakewood 96 +24 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    72 Naura Taqiya Rock Canyon 97 +25 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    73 Emma Teuton Monarch 98 +26 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    T74 Brooke Kramer Cherokee Trail 99 +27 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    T74 Elizabeth Pendleton Pine Creek 99 +27 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    76 Amanda Westrick Thornton 101 +29 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    T77 Hannah Thornburg Fruita-Monument 104 +32 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    T77 Liina Neitenbach Monarch 104 +32 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    T77 Charlotte Cliatt Palmer 104 +32 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    T80 Lauren Quintana Northglenn 105 +33 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    T80 Sarah MacDonald Liberty 105 +33 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    82 Sophie Nelsen Fairview 106 +34 10:27 am (Tee: 10)
    83 Kelley Yoshihara Legacy 107 +35 10:27 am (Tee: 10)
    84 Jacq Pepper Arapahoe 114 +42 10:27 am (Tee: 10)
  • Girls golf: 4A’s Day 1 results, Day 2 tee times

    PUEBLO — Complete results after the first day of the 2016 Class 4A girls golf state tournament at Pueblo Country Club, as well as Day 2 tee times.

    Go to:

    Teams
    Place School R1 To Par
    1 Colorado Academy 244 +28
    2 Cheyenne Mountain 265 +49
    3 Rifle 274 +58
    4 Northridge 275 +59
    5 Golden 283 +67
    6 Windsor 287 +71
    7 Vista Peak 298 +82
    8 Pueblo County 316 +100
    Individuals
    Place Name School Score To Par Day 2 Tee
    1 Erin Sargent Silver Creek 75 +3 10:36 am (Tee: 1)
    2 Caroline Jordaan Colorado Academy 76 +4 10:36 am (Tee: 1)
    3 Kelsey McKenna Air Academy 77 +5 10:36 am (Tee: 1)
    4 Elly Walters Rifle 78 +6 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    5 Kiselya Plewe Dolores 79 +7 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    6 Sydney Prey Golden 80 +8 10:27 am (Tee: 1)
    7 Masi Smith Rifle 81 +9 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T8 Kellsey Sample Palmer Ridge 82 +10 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    T8 Marin Halvorsen Kent Denver 82 +10 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T8 Kacey Godwin Colorado Academy 82 +10 10:18 am (Tee: 1)
    T11 Hannah More Mullen 83 +11 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    T11 Makayla Dahl Valor 83 +11 10:09 am (Tee: 1)
    13 Aryn McLaughlin Thompson Valley 85 +13 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    T14 Trinity Goderstad Colorado Academy 86 +14 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    T14 Claire McPeak Niwot 86 +14 10:00 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Emma Moser Northridge 87 +15 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Regina Dillon Cheyenne Mountain 87 +15 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    T16 Emma Robinson Pueblo Centennial 87 +15 9:51 am (Tee: 1)
    T19 Ashlee Sample Palmer Ridge 88 +16 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T19 Maxine Choi Cheyenne Mountain 88 +16 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T19 Isabella Morfe Valor 88 +16 9:42 am (Tee: 1)
    T19 Taylor Sandoval Eagle Valley 88 +16 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T23 Sarah Hwang St. Mary’s 89 +17 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T23 Caitlyn Olson Northridge 89 +17 9:33 am (Tee: 1)
    T23 Bailey Reed Wray 89 +17 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T26 Casey Fetters Cheyenne Mountain 90 +18 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T26 Cassie Kneen Colorado Academy 90 +18 9:24 am (Tee: 1)
    T28 Lauren Murphy Glenwood Springs 91 +19 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T28 Grace Gunlikson Skyline 91 +19 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T28 Addie Ekhoff Ponderosa 91 +19 9:15 am (Tee: 1)
    T31 Molli Boruff Berthoud 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T31 Ellie Broker Cheyenne Mountain 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T31 Meaghan Ireland Florence 92 +20 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T31 Makena Prey Golden 92 +20 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T31 Natalie Holley Evergreen 92 +20 9:06 am (Tee: 1)
    T36 Sarah Johnson Windsor 93 +21 8:57 am (Tee: 1)
    T36 Larissa Roberts Bishop Machebeuf 93 +21 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T38 Leah Donnelly WheatRidge 94 +22 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T38 Dolores Sharaf Aspen 94 +22 8:48 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Kyree Conaway Vista Peak 95 +23 8:30 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Sarah Rhodes Pueblo West 95 +23 8:30 am (Tee: 10)
    T40 Jolene Carrica Swink 95 +23 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Sam Chaney Vista Peak 95 +23 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Jessica Zapf Windsor 95 +23 8:30 am (Tee: 1)
    T40 Kenzie Fontana The Classical Academy 95 +23 8:39 am (Tee: 1)
    T46 Halle Holmes Ponderosa 96 +24 8:30 am (Tee: 10)
    T46 Sam Caricato Pueblo West 96 +24 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Lorenza Rios Pueblo Central 97 +25 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T48 Shannon Bocquet Discovery Canyon 97 +25 8:39 am (Tee: 10)
    T50 Vanessa Johnson Vista Ridge 98 +26 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T50 Danyka Fetty Pueblo County 98 +26 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T50 Alyson Shuman Palisade 98 +26 8:48 am (Tee: 10)
    T53 Cheyanne Williams Coal Ridge 99 +27 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    T53 Sophia Montoya Pueblo South 99 +27 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T53 Kinsey Smith Windsor 99 +27 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T53 Alli Brown Northridge 99 +27 8:57 am (Tee: 10)
    T57 Keena Strope Niwot 100 +28 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    T57 McKenna Eddy Elizabeth 100 +28 9:06 am (Tee: 10)
    T59 Nicole Cherry Montrose 101 +29 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T59 Courtney Kauffman Standley Lake 101 +29 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Samantha Colletti Pueblo County 102 +30 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Madi Rifkin Kent Denver 102 +30 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T61 Alana Hackett Alamosa 102 +30 9:15 am (Tee: 10)
    T64 Brianna Choman Alamosa 104 +32 9:24 am (Tee: 10)
    T64 Rachel Shaffer Rye 104 +32 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    66 Dani Ortonword Manitou Springs 105 +33 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    T67 Jorie Anaya Pueblo Centennial 106 +34 9:33 am (Tee: 10)
    T67 Nicole Matthews Eagle Valley 106 +34 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Alex Hanley Montrose 107 +35 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Haley Owens Pueblo South 107 +35 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    T69 Jayden Muro Windsor 107 +35 9:42 am (Tee: 10)
    T72 Erin Baum Frederick 108 +36 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    T72 Kylee Shepard Vista Peak 108 +36 9:51 am (Tee: 10)
    T74 MaKenzie Andert Mesa Ridge 109 +37 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    T74 Meghan Witt Mullen 109 +37 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    T76 Kelsey Rodrigue Mesa Ridge 110 +38 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    T76 Ashley Macaluso Trinidad 110 +38 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    T76 Autumn Brown Wray 110 +38 10:00 am (Tee: 10)
    T79 Samantha McConnell Golden 111 +39 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    T79 Olivia Lopez Vista Peak 111 +39 10:09 am (Tee: 10)
    81 Caitlin Morgan Rifle 115 +43 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    82 Sydney Houghton Pueblo County 116 +44 10:18 am (Tee: 10)
    83 Faith Mewmaw Durango 118 +46 10:27 am (Tee: 10)
    T84 Audrey Gunlikson Skyline 121 +49 10:27 am (Tee: 10)
  • Silver Creek’s Erin Sargent takes the lead at 4A girls state golf tournament

    4A girls state golf
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    PUEBLO — Going into the second day of the Class 4A girls state golf tournament a year ago, Eric Sargent was in a position to contend. She came away with third place.

    This year, she comes out of the first day of the tournament with the individual lead. And she’s ready to make it her championship to lose.

    Sargent shot a 3-over 75 to take a one-stroke lead over Colorado Academy’s Caroline Jordaan after day one of the tournament. She made the final the group last year, but was beaten by seniors Jennifer Kupcho of Jefferson Academy and Kylee Sullivan from Cheyenne Mountain.

    This year, she hopes to take a lesson from those seniors and close her season out with a state title.

    “Every time I come out to the golf course I learn something new,” she said. “It’s just another round that gets me more familiar with the course. I was in some places today that I haven’t been before and hopefully I can continue to put myself in situations where I can score well.”

    Sargent teed off on the back nine of the course and bogeyed her second hole of the day. She responded with a birdie on No. 3 and then made a run of four straight pars before adding another birdie. She put up bogeys on 13 and 15, and made double-bogey on 17, but overall kept herself well out of trouble.

    “For the most part I had already made a plan of where I wanted to be,” Sargent said. “When I visualize a shot, I tend to be pretty close to hitting it. There were just a couple of holes where that didn’t happen.”

    4A girls state golf
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    In the team race, Colorado Academy came out of the first round at 28-over as a team. That’s 21 shots better than three-time defending champion Cheyenne Mountain.

    The Mustangs are the only team that will look to have a player in the race for the individual title as well as the team championship when play begins on Tuesday.

    Jordaan finished her round at with a 4-over 76 and is now in the position of trying to take the top spot individually while helping her team fend of Cheyenne Mountain. If she continues swinging the way she did on Monday, she could have herself a nice Tuesday afternoon.

    “I had a good round today,” Jordaan said. “I had a little bit of a rough start getting off the tee, but as the round continued I got some good shots and some birdie opportunities.”

    The Indians are going to have a tough task in climbing back into contention. They sit at 49-over as a team and need to make up ground right away. As winners of their last 10 tournaments, the Indians know they have the talent to get back in the tournament, they just need to focus and execute on Tuesday.

    “Trying to get focused, it’s so hard because it’s state and you want to do well,” Cheyenne Mountain senior Regina Dillon said. “You try to force it and I know I tried to force today which didn’t help me at all.”

    Dillon was the leader for the Indians at 15-over on the day.

    But one day does not a state golf tournament make. The Indians will regroup and turn their attention to playing better on Tuesday.

    “One round is not going to discourage us,” coach John Carricato said. “We’ll come back tomorrow and we’ll play.”

  • Regis Jesuit’s Mary Weinstein has individual lead after first day of 5A girls golf state tourney

    5A girls state golf tournament Mary Weinstein Regis Jesuit
    Regis Jesuit’s Mary Weinstein has the individual lead after the first day of the 5A girls golf state tournament. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    AURORA — As much as the individual and team leaderboards shifted throughout the first day of the Class 5A girls golf state tournament at CommonGround Golf Course on Monday, there was one constant.

    Regis Jesuit, the two-time defending state champions and winners of 4A in 2010 and 2012, took a firm grasp of the team race again as a pair of returning top-10 finishers — leader Mary Weinstein (1-under 71) and Jaclyn Murray (4-over 76, tied for 5th) — played well even in the most challenging of circumstances. Brooke Pulver finished in a tie for 16th for the Raiders with an 83.

    With sustained winds of more than 15 miles per hour spanning several hours, along with an early-afternoon rainstorm, conditions weren’t ideal for long stretches of play. Nonetheless, Weinstein took advantage of an aspect of her game that was in tune Monday.

    “My drives today were not the best,” she said. “I was kind of hooking the ball, but then I would hit my approach shot to like three feet and make the putt. I kind of relied on my approach shots. My putting wasn’t the best, but if I could hit it close enough and make the putt I was perfectly fine with that.”

    After a couple of recent tournament struggles, Weinstein admitted nerves were in play before her final state tournament began.

    “But after I teed off on the first hole, it just got going,” the senior, who finished in a tie for seventh last season, said. “You kind of get into a rhythm and then you just keep going. You try your best and that’s all you can give.”

    In all, Weinstein posted five birdies, four of them during a back nine of 32 that follow a front nine of 39, to take the lead into the second round. The senior, eager to do her part for a Regis team after their fifth state championship in girls golf, was humble but confident after her impressive 71.

    “This is my last year here, so the best I can do is just represent Regis the best that I can,” she said. “If that’s enough to win state, I’m happy with that. I’m going to go into tomorrow with the same mindset and hopefully my game is there again.”

    As Regis gained separation in their title pursuit at 14-over, a healthy lead over Grandview (+22), Ralston Valley (+28) and Arvada West (+33), Weinstein did the same over Monarch’s Delaney Elliott (+3), Ralston Valley’s Jordan Remley (+3), and Grandview’s Morgan Sahm (+3).

    Elliott, the Front Range League champion and top finisher on the day for a Monarch team that claimed the Northern Regional championship, tied for ninth at state a year ago.

    5A girls golf state tournament Jordan Remley Ralston Valley
    Ralston Valley’s Jordan Remley. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    As for Remley, a dedication to her craft has allowed the Jeffco champion to flourish in 2016.

    “I’ve only played golf for two-and-a-half years and what really helped me start the season well was summer tournaments and just being comfortable on the tee,” she said. “You just have to have confidence in yourself.”

    The Ralston Valley junior had four birdies, but was undone by a triple bogey on No. 6 and a double bogey on No. 12. Still, Remley had a fine outing, setting herself up for a potential run on Tuesday.

    “Today I had really good tee shots that put me in good position to be able to get on the green,” she said. “I think the weaker part of my game was putting. I had two three-putts. I think that had a lot to do with weather and rain, getting pelted in the face.”

    Remley tied for 47th at the state tournament last season.

    The Grandview Wolves also feature a pair of individual contenders. Senior Morgan Sahm is tied with Elliott and Remley for second, shooting a 39 and a 36, while freshman Amy Chitkoksoong sits are 4-over. Chitkoksoong had an an eagle on No. 18 to help her tie Regis’ Murray for fifth place at 76.

    Amish Singh (Smoky Hill), Jennifer Hankins (Legacy), Joanna Kempton (Heritage) and Leigha Devine (Fossil Ridge) all shot 79 to place themselves in the top-10 after round one.

    The 5A state tournament will resume at CommonGround Golf Course in Aurora on Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. The lead groups are set to go off at 10:18 and 10:27 a.m.

  • Third-inning rally puts Cherokee Trail in 5A baseball driver’s seat

    Cherokee Trail baseball
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    DENVER — Jerome Bohannon thought he hit just a lazy fly ball in the second inning. It wasn’t until the Cherokee Trail crowd went nuts that he realized the ball had cleared the fence and the Cougars had the lead.

    Then a six-run third inning opened up a seven-run lead for the Cougars and they were able to hold on for a 10-8 win Saturday afternoon at All-City Field.

    “I’m just playing the game, I’m just doing what I can and good things happen,” Bohannon said. “I thought it was a pop-up and then I heard the crowd going crazy. I couldn’t believe it.”

    Cherokee Trail (20-4) entered the seventh inning ahead 10-3, but four walks, two hits and two hit batsmen resulted in the tying sitting in scoring position for Cherry Creek. But leadoff hitter Reid Weber popped up to shortstop to end the game, giving the Cougars the inside track at the Class 5A state baseball championship.

    “It was a great game for six innings,” Cougars coach Allan Dyer said. “That seventh inning, we just couldn’t close them out, but that’s to be expected with these guys.”

    If anything, it seemed like the outcome was going to be the reverse of the end result. The Bruins (17-7) started the game with five of their first seven batters getting base hits, with three of them eventually crossing home plate.

    The Cougars’ first turn at the plate resulted in a couple of base hits of their own. They would get two quick runs to cut the lead to one. Bohannon’s home run would give them the lead, and then a six-run onslaught gave starting pitcher Keven MacKintosh some breathing room.

    Not that breathing room is anything helpful when facing a team as dangerous as Creek.

    “The first half, it still felt like a close game even though we were up by a lot,” MacKintosh said. “I had to keep doing my job.”

    From the second inning on, he cruised. He only allowed one hit while walking three hitters in that span. He was pulled after the sixth inning due to reaching his pitch count limit for the weekend.

    So in the seventh, he was forced to watch as Cherry Creek hitters kept reaching base and kept crossing home.

    “I looked at it and almost had a heart attack,” he said. “I was like ‘what is happening? Just throw a strike.’”

    With the win, Cherokee Trail is now assured of the chance to play for the 5A title next week at All-City Field. They will play Mullen at 12 p.m. on Friday. Should they win, they’ll have to be beaten twice by the winner of Cherry Creek vs. Rocky Mountain.

    Mullen eliminated Grandview and Rocky Mountain eliminated Ralston Valley earlier in the day.

    Should the Cougars lose, three teams will remain in play for the championship. Cherokee Trail will be given a bye and will face the winner of the other two remaining teams, with the winner of that game taking the state title.

    Regardless, the Cougars don’t plan on changing their approach at all. They’re going to stick with what got them to this point.

    “We’re just going to keep doing what we do,” Bohannon said. “Everybody’s hitting right now. It just seems somebody is the guy every day. We’re going to let our pitchers get healthy and then we’re going to give them what we got.”

  • Faith Christian inches closer to 3A baseball title

    Faith Christian baseball team
    Faith Christian is the lone remaining unbeaten team in 3A baseball. More photos. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    A four-run first inning got things going and Faith Christian never looked back.

    The Eagles only needed five innings to get a 14-4 win over Manitou Springs on Saturday, sending them into next weekend with the Class 3A baseball championship in their sights.

    Faith Christian is scheduled to face University on Friday. With a win, the Eagles will have to be beaten twice for anyone else to claim the state title.

    Manitou Springs and Kent Denver will be the other 3A game on Friday. The loser of that game will be eliminated from the state tournament.

    If Faith Christian falls to University, the winner of the Kent/Manitou game will play University in another elimination game, with that winner moving on to face the Eagles for the 3A title. Kent Denver fought off elimination earlier in the day with a 14-1 win over St. Mary’s.

    University edged Lamar 5-4 in an elimination game right after the Savages had eliminated defending 3A champion Eaton.

    [divider]

    Class 2A

    Dawson School 13, Dayspring Christian 3

    Dawson School cruised into the 2A state semifinals with a 13-3 win over Dayspring Christian on Saturday.

    The Mustangs will play at 10 a.m. Saturday at Andenuccio Field in Pueblo for a chance to move on to the 2A state title game.

    Sedgwick County 7, Resurrection Christian 4

    After getting upset a year ago, Sedgwick County is one game away from playing for a state championship.

    The Cougars beat Resurrection Christian 7-4 Saturday and will face Dawson school in the 2A semifinals next weekend.

  • Cheyenne Mountain boys swimming repeats as 4A champion

    (Danielle Ennis/CHSAANow.com)
    (Danielle Ennis/CHSAANow.com)

    THORNTON — Cheyenne Mountain claimed back-to-back Class 4A boys swimming championships with their first-place, 358-point finish on Saturday.

    They gained the lead early, totaling 100 points by the end of the fourth event, and putting a 35-point margin between them and their opponents.

    Last season, Cheyenne Mountain’s win was led by sophomore Daniel Carr, who broke two state records. This year, the reigning champions were without Carr, but Brayden Love, Kyle Leach and other teammates stepped up.

    Love finished first in the 100-yard breaststroke and second in the 100-yard butterfly. The junior also swam the third leg of the 200-yard medley relay, the first race of the night and their first of eight podium finishes. The champions finished second to Air Academy in the 200-yard freestyle relay.

    “We work so hard for what we want,” Love said. “Both years we have been neck-and-neck with the other teams and it drives us to improve in practice everyday.”

    Valor Christian took second place, a position they were bumped into via the diving portion, where freshman Casey Fellows finished first with a score of 530.30.

    “It was really exciting, but it was still stressful, ” Fellows said of his first high school finals, “I felt a lot of pressure.”

    Fellows may be at freshman at Valor but he is no novice to the sport. He began diving when he was six.

    Valor landed on the podium in all three relays, further securing their second-place team finish.

    Air Academy senior Tommy Baker swam just like he did in the prelims, capturing two first-place finishes in the 50-yard and 100-yard freestyle. His 100-yard time of 44.70 earned him an auto All-American honor. Last year, Baker finished third in the same race. Bundy, who missed the podium last year, finished second.

    Caleb Hicks finished first for the second year in a row in the 100-yard butterfly with a time of 49.19, breaking his own record set last season and making the All-American cut. Cheyenne Mountain sophomore Kyle Leach earned the same accolade in the 200-yard freestyle.

    Liam Gately also had the repeat first-place finish and All-American time in his main event, the 500-yard freestyle. The Thompson Valley junior finished second in the 200-yard freestyle and helped his team tie for third place. They shared the podium with Air Academy, as both teams carried 224 total points.

    In the 200-yard freestyle relay, Silver Creek finished right behind Air Academy, but a false-start disqualified the team, bumping Cheyenne to second and bumping Valor into the final podium spot.

    Silver Creek senior Sam Willette won both the 200-yard IM and the 100-yard backstroke.

    “It is more than a personal feeling for me, it’s knowing that I did that because of my team,” Willette said of his dual victories. “There is no way that I would have placed first in both of those if my whole team wasn’t standing on those bleachers cheering me on.”

    The finals concluded with Cheyenne just edging Air Academy in 400-yard freestyle relay, the race they set the record for last year.

  • Fossil Ridge successfully defends its championship in 5A boys swimming

    (Tracy Renck/CHSAANow.com)
    (Tracy Renck/CHSAANow.com)

    COLORADO SPRINGS – Before 2015, Fossil Ridge had never won a boys swim and dive state team championship.

    The Sabercats now have two in a row.

    Thanks to wins by Danny Kovac in the 100-yard backstroke and its 200-yard freestyle relay, Fossil Ridge won its latest title Saturday at the at the Class 5A swim and dive state championships at the Air Force Academy.

    The Sabercats finished with 331.50 points to top Regis Jesuit (252 points). Defeating Regis is no easy task. The Raiders have won 20 state championships, and four in a row from 2011-14. All of Regis’ state crowns have come since 1992.

    “That was our goal from the start of this season to win state again,” Fossil Ridge coach Mark Morehouse said. “It’s pretty awesome to set a goal and reach it. All these guys are unbelievable and this is just great.”

    Fossil Ridge’s charge was all about depth as it had 15 swimmers competing in the championship finals and seven in the consolation finals.

    “We talk about that all the time, you don’t win titles by winning events, you win by having a lot of people scoring and a lot of people making the finals,” Morehouse said. “We also talk about that all the time that you win championships in prelims and we had the best possible day we could (Friday). We had kids who have never scored a point in this meet who made two finals. Depth is what does it.”

    Kovac, a sophomore, won the backstroke (49.69) for the second-consecutive year. The Sabercats 200 freestyle relay team won with a time of 1:24.55.

    “This feels great,” Kovac said. “This is exactly what we set out to do and we wouldn’t have been able to win state without our entire team doing its job. It’s just really cool that we accomplished what we set out to do.”

    The start of the meet was delayed an hour – to 3 p.m. – because of issues with the scoreboard in regards to scoring for diving, but it didn’t dampen the joy on the faces of the state champs.

    Like the face of double state winner Michael Zarian of Fairview.

    The junior captured state glory in the 200 IM (1:49.72) and the 500 freestyle (4:34.45). Zarian also won the 500 free as a sophomore.

    “It is a great honor,” said Zarian following his inaugural 200 IM state crown. “I’ve had great coaching and to win two state championships really means a lot.”

    Boulder’s Chris Nicholson (1:37.85) won the 200-yard freestyle, and Ponderosa’s Max Grogan was the 50-freestyle (21.04) winner.

    Winning a sprint event was the last thing Grogan, a senior, envisioned for himself when he entered high school.

    “This is a great feeling,” said the 6-foot-4, 185-pound Grogan, whose previous best state finish was third in the 50 free last year. “I have been training for a year now for the 50. I went through some trouble in the 200 and 500 when I was a sophomore and I got switched to a sprinter and it paid off. I have a breathing problem called vocal cord dysfunction (abnormal closing of the vocal cords when you breathe in or out). I was really good at distance when I was a freshman, but this disorder kind of caught on, so that’s why now I’m a sprinter. Less yards and more sprinting.”

    Diver Octavio Lucero of Bear Creek (604.65 points) won state and Arapahoe High School’s Griffin Eiber was tops in the100 free (45.07). Eiber just edged Boulder’s Nicholson (45.12). Sasia Gabriele was the 100 butterfly (49.32) winner and Elijah Warren of Regis snared the 100 backstroke championship with a 54.82 second time.

    “This feels really rewarding,” said Eiber, who was a runner-up to Nicholson in the 200 fee. “All my hard work paid off. I know Chris and he’s become really good in the 200 and I just went for it in the 100 free against him. We both had really good swims and I was pleased with my result.”

  • Boys track: Mountain View sends coach out on top with 4A title

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Mountain View won the 4A boys track and field championship. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    LAKEWOOD — It’s fair to say Kevin Clark will be leaving the Mountain View track and field program in good condition.

    After a runner-up finish on the girls side at the Class 4A state championships in 2015, the Mountain Lions took it one step further Saturday at Jefferson County Stadium by winning the boys team title. For a program with one other track crown (the boys also won 4A in 2006) Clark took over the program in Loveland when it was in a bit of a transition.

    “The first year on the boys side in 2008 we took one young man to the state meet,” he said. “We’ve seemed to always have a pretty solid girls program. We highlighted that last year by being runner-up. I feel great about what our staff has accomplished. To be second in 2015 and then to end 2016 with a state championship, this is as good as it gets.”

    The Mountain View track coach, who recently accepted the athletic director position at Loveland High School, also led the Mountain Lions to a 4A girls cross country championship in 2014. But this was his first spring title. And it came in his final go-round before starting a post-coaching chapter of his life.

    “I just have so much excitement for this group of young men,” Clark said. “It’s all juniors and seniors. The work they’ve put in this past year has been unbelievable, so it’s nice to see that pay off.”

    A well-rounded group, Mountain View took down the two-time defending champion Palmer Ridge Bears by tallying points across a wide spectrum of events on the track and in the field:

    • Logan Stewart, after finishing as the runner-up in the long jump as a junior, won the event Friday with a mark of 22 feet, 11 inches.
    • Ramon Salgado, a four-time Northern Conference champion in the pole vault, finished first in winning his first-ever state title on Saturday over teammate and runner-up Brenton Emmons as both went 14 feet, 8 inches, but Salgado won on number of attempts.
    • Scott Sipes, yet another fourth-year, placed eighth in the shot put and third in the discus.
    • Jordan Kress placed in both the 100 and 200, while Nolan Kembel did the same in both hurdle events.
    • Ryan Vomacka shattered the school record in the 800 in placing seventh in a time of 1:55.89.

    The Mountain Lions also finished second in the 400 relay, second in the 800 relay, third in the 1,600 relay and fifth in the 3,200 relay.

    It all added up to an 89-79 margin of victory for Mountain View over Palmer Ridge.

    “Palmer Ridge, they didn’t let it come easy,” Clark said. “Our kids stepped up for three days and put it out there. We had a great state meet. It was going to take a great state meet to win it and we had big kids. At the end of the day, ten points isn’t that much so we’re fortunate to come out the way we did.”

    Clark will walk away from coaching on top.

    During the track and field season’s finale, with several state records being rewritten again, Palmer Ridge senior Caleb Ojennes won the 200 and 400-meter dashes for the second consecutive year. His time of 46.71 seconds in the one-lapper not only shattered the 4A state meet record of 46.78 by Kevin McClanahan of Erie in 2014, but was also the second fastest time ever run on Colorado soil by a prep athlete. J.T Scheuerman remains the record-holder from 2006 during his days at Littleton when he ran a 46.23.

    Ojennes also anchored the first-place 1,600 relay (3:18.92).

    Fountain Fort-Carson senior Christian Lyon won the 100 (10.80) and 200 (21.67) and ran legs on the winning 800 (1:25.96) and 1,600 (3:17.91) relays in 5A.

    Despite the usual firepower from Fountain on the track, Pomona won the 400 relay (42.43), Danny Wiliams won the triple jump (47-3), Jake Moretti won the shot put (54-10) and Max Borghi scored heaps of points in the 100 and 200 on the way to the Panthers’ first-ever team title in boys track and field. Pomona racked up 94.5 points to Fountain’s 79, ending a two-year title run by the Trojans.

    State track Henry Raymond Poudre
    Poudre’s Henry Raymond. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    In other 5A action, Poudre senior Henry Raymond, appearing in the first individual events of his career at state, swept the distance events — the 800 (1:51.97), the 1,600 (4:18.67) and 3,200 (9:25.21). His 1,600 was on the final day, but he overcame tired legs and sealed his third gold medal before heading to Dartmouth University in the fall.

    In each race, Raymond used a devastating kick on the last lap to get the job done.

    “My strategy is always just to be in good position coming up on the last lap,” he said. “I tried to make sure no one passed me at any point, because I wanted to keep the lead and be in control.”

    Asked what he’ll remember most from his spectacular three-day state meet, Raymond smiled when describing his 800 performance.

    “I think the most memorable part for me was just finishing the 800,” he said. “It was so painful and I had been really nervous about that race. I did pretty well and got a good time.”

    The Lutheran boys, in winning the 3A team title for the second straight year — they also claimed 2A in 2014 — had a Saturday highlighted by first-place finishes in the 110 hurdles (Matt Hanson, 14.68), the 100 and 200 (Kent Harris, 10.97, 21.89), and the 400 relay (43.27). They scored a monstrous 137 points as runner-up Platte Valley scored 65.

    In the 2A team race, Cooper Ward won the 100 and 200 for Resurrection Christian, while teammate Evan Anderson outlasted everyone in the 400. The Cougars also claimed gold in the 400 and 1,600 relays, but Cedaredge countered with Shane Gates, the 110 hurdles, 300 hurdles and high jump champion, on their way to a 98-85 team title over the Cougars.

    Cedaredge won their second-ever championship in any sport, adding to a 1A football title won in 2012.

    Heritage Christian tallied 126 points, scoring heavily in relays and distance events, with depth in just about everything else, on their way to a team victory over second place Springfield (91 points). The Eagles, with Robbie Wagner, Caleb Wickstrom, Matt Lee and Taylor Motschall rolling to a winning 3:35.13 in the 1,600 relay, also won 1A in 2013 and 2014.

    The 3A state meet record in the 400-meter dash was broken by both Sunday Abarca of Aspen (48.54) and Jared Keul of Manitou Springs (48.66). The previous top time was held by Brian Black of Yuma from 2002 when he ran 48.70.

    Jordan Cherin, the Shining Mountain Waldorf senior who shattered the 1A 800 record on Friday, came back for the 400 record with a winning 48.80 on Saturday. Clay Russell of North Park had the state meet record of 49.00 from 2014.

    The Longmont 400 relay of Conlan Berger, Eli Sullivan, Logan Goodner and Trevor Cook came close to the 4A record of 41.28 with a 41.39 on Saturday.

    Paul Roberts, the only four-time champion in state history in boys cross country, overtook Aucencio Martinez’s (Center) 2002 state meet record in the 2A 1,600 of 4:21.35 with a 4:19.54. Roberts won the 1,600 four times and the 3,200 three times during a distance career for Lyons that registers as perhaps the greatest ever in the small-school ranks.

    Ian Beckett, a McClave sophomore, broke the 1A record in the high jump by going 6 feet, 3 inches. Manitou Springs laid claim to the 3A 1,600 relay state meet record with a 3:21.46. Gunnison, who held the record of 3:22.42 from 2002, was overtaken by Conner Plackis, Luke Rodholm, Bryce Coop and Jared Keul.