INDIANAPOLIS – Led by an encouraging report in football participation nationwide, the number of participants in high school sports increased for the 27th consecutive year in 2015-16 according to the annual High School Athletics Participation Survey conducted by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS).
Based on figures from the 51 NFHS member state high school associations, which includes the District of Columbia, the number of participants in high school sports reached an all-time high of 7,868,900 – an increase of 61,853 from the previous year.
After a decline of almost 10,000 participants in football the previous year, the number of boys playing 11-player football in 2015 was almost identical to 2014 with a drop of just 309 – from 1,083,617 to 1,083,308.
While some states reported a decline in football participation in 2015, 24 states registered increases in boys participation in 11-player football. When combining boys and girls participation in 6-, 8-, 9- and 11-player football, the number of participants increased 138 – from 1,114,253 to 1,114,391.
“The NFHS and its member state associations have taken significant steps over the past 10 years to minimize the risk of participation in football and all high school sports, so this report on the continued strong interest and participation in high school football is very encouraging,” said Bob Gardner, NFHS executive director. “With the adoption of state laws and protocols for concussion management in place, we continue to believe that the sport of football at the high school level is as safe as it has been since the first rules were written in 1932 – and we believe this year’s participation report is confirmation of that belief.”
After a decline the previous year, boys participation increased about 25,000 to an all-time high of 4,544,574, while girls participation increased for the 27th consecutive year with an additional 36,591 participants and set an all-time high of 3,324,326.
Track and field registered the largest increase in participants for both boys and girls, with an additional 12,501 boys and 7,243 girls. Track and field ranks second to football in boys participants with 591,133, and remains the most popular sport for girls with 485,969 participants.
In addition to track and field, six other top 10 girls sports registered increases in 2015-16, including volleyball, soccer, softball, cross country, tennis and lacrosse. The top 10 girls sports remained the same as the previous year: track and field, volleyball, basketball, soccer, fast-pitch softball, cross country, tennis, swimming and diving, competitive spirit squads, and lacrosse.
After track and field among the top 10 boys sports, soccer registered the largest gain with an additional 7,753 participants, followed by cross country (up 6,710), basketball (up 4,949) and baseball (up 2,248). Although the top five boys sports remained the same as last year – 11-player football, track and field, basketball, baseball and soccer – cross country moved to sixth place ahead of wrestling, which dropped to seventh after a decline of 7,555 participants. Tennis, golf and swimming and diving complete the top 10 listing of boys sports.
Lacrosse continued its rise among emerging sports with 197,572 total participants to rank 10th in girls participation and 11th for boys. Among some of the non-traditional high school sports on this year’s survey, archery (8,668), badminton (17,645) and flag football (12,093) continued to register increases in participation. Also, while boys wrestling had a drop in participation, an additional 2,000 girls participated in the sport last year for an all-time high of 13,496.
Participation in adapted sports also increased in 2015-16 from 8,483 participants to 9,491 with schools in 12 states now offering these programs for students with disabilities.
The top 10 states by participants remained the same; however, Florida moved ahead of New Jersey to eighth position this year. Texas and California topped the list again with 809,075 and 802,117, respectively, followed by New York (372,772), Illinois (344,143), Ohio (319,929), Pennsylvania (319,853), Michigan (295,436), Florida (285,885), New Jersey (279,371) and Minnesota (237,686). Thirty-three of the 51 NFHS member state associations reported increases in participation in 2015-16.
The participation survey has been compiled since 1971 by the NFHS through numbers it receives from its member associations. The complete 2015-16 High School Athletics Participation Survey is attached in PDF format and will be posted soon on the NFHS website at www.nfhs.org.
Mallory Pugh, pictured during the Class 5A girls soccer championship game in May. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Mallory Pugh scored a crucial goal to help the United States women’s soccer team win their group at the Olympics on Tuesday.
Pugh, who graduated from Mountain Vista in May, corralled a cross on the right side of the box, took a touch toward the center, and then used her left foot to score. It gave the U.S. a 2-1 lead against Columbia in the 59th minute:
Columbia went on to tie the game in the 90th minute, but the United States still secured its spot atop Group G with seven total points. The Americans advance to the knockout stages, starting with the quarterfinals on Friday.
Another former Colorado high school soccer player — Valor Christian grad Janine Beckie — will be in the quarterfinals, too.
Beckie, a star for Canada, helped her team win Group F. Beckie didn’t play in Canada’s 2-1 win over Germany, but had three goals in the first two games.
Pugh was the national high school soccer player of the year as a junior, and then did not play as a senior following a call-up to the women’s national team. But she was part of Mountain Vista’s team in the spring, attending games and practices.
The first week of the Olympics saw a few Colorado products shining on the highest stage. That includes Valor Christian graduate Janine Beckie, the star of Canada’s women’s soccer team.
Others will get their first crack at the 2016 Games this week, most notably Missy Franklin, the 2013 Regis Jesuit graduate.
Women’s Swimming: 200-meter freestyle prelims, 10:17 a.m. Former Regis Jesuit superstar Missy Franklin gets in the pool for the first time when the fourth heat of the 200-meter freestyle prelims get underway.
Women’s Basketball: Serbia vs. Canada, 2:15 p.m. Lewis-Palmer graduate Danielle Page (2004) had a heck of a game in Serbia’s first outing on Sunday — 14 points, five rebounds and two blocks — but the team lost to Spain. Now, they’ll look to bounce back against Canada in the second game of their group stage.
Women’s Swimming: 200-meter freestyle semifinals, 7:03 p.m. Missy Franklin is set for the semifinals following a time of 1:57.21 in the prelims. She qualified 12th.
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Tuesday, Aug. 9
Men’s Rugby: United States vs. Argentina, 7 a.m. Ben Pinkelman, a 2012 alum of Cherry Creek, and the USA begin their Olympic season with their first game in Group A.
Men’s Swimming: 4×200-meter relay, 11:17 a.m. Regis Jesuit graduate Clark Smith, now a senior at the University of Texas, is among those eligible for selection in the prelims of the 4×200 relay for the United States. The final is at 8:38 p.m. on Tuesday.
Men’s Rugby: United States vs. Brazil, 12 p.m. It’s a quick turnaround for Ben Pinkelman and the U.S. rugby squad. Their second game comes shortly after their first.
Women’s Soccer: Germany vs. Canada, 1 p.m. Valor Christian alum Janine Beckie has scored three goals in two games to help the Canadians go 2-0 and secure a spot in the knockout stages. This is their final game in Group F.
Women’s Soccer: Colombia vs. United States, 4 p.m.Mallory Pugh, the 2016 graduate of Mountain Vista, and the United States look to remain unbeaten in their final match of Group G. The Americans, now 2-0, have some work left to do to secure a spot in the knockout stage. Pugh started the USA’s first game, but missed the second after tweaking her ankle in that start.
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Wednesday, Aug. 10
Taylor Phinney. (Rudi Riet/Flickr)
Men’s Cycling: Individual Time Trial, 7 a.m. Fairview alum Taylor Phinney takes part in his second event of these Olympics. He did not finish in Saturday’s road race.
Men’s Rugby: Fiji vs. United States, 10:30 a.m. Cherry Creek’s Ben Pinkelman and the USA play their final game in Group A. Regardless of how they fare, another game will be played on Wednesday, be it a placing match (for ninth-12th place), or a quarterfinal.
Women’s Swimming: 4×200 relay, 11:31 a.m. Missy Franklin is among those who are eligible to be selected for the USA in the prelims. The final of the event is also on Wednesday, at 8:55 p.m.
Women’s Basketball: Serbia vs. United States, 12:30 p.m. Danielle Page, the Lewis-Palmer grad, and Serbia play in the third game of their group.
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Thursday, Aug. 11
Men’s Rugby: United States vs. Spain, 10 a.m. The U.S. rugby squad (and Cherry Creek alum Ben Pinkelman) are in a placing match to determine if they will finish ninth or 10th at the Olympics.
Women’s Swimming: 200-meter backstroke prelims, 11:41 a.m. Regis Jesuit’s Missy Franklin is back again for the prelims of the 200-meter backstroke. She’s in the second heat. Franklin won gold in the event at the 2012 London Olympics. Should she qualify, the semifinals begin at 7:35 p.m.
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Friday, Aug. 12
Mason Finley. (Courtesy of Mason Finley)
Men’s Track: Discus throw prelims, 6:30 a.m.Mason Finley, the 2009 alum of Buena Vista, makes his Olympic debut in the first round of the discus throw. Finley won the U.S. Olympic Trials.
Men’s Track: 800-meter prelims, 7:10 a.m. Boris Berian, a 2011 graduate of Widefield, hits the track for the first time in the prelims for the United States.
Women’s Basketball: Serbia vs. China, 9:15 a.m. Danielle Page (Lewis-Palmer) and Serbia play the fourth game in their Group B.
Women’s Soccer: United States vs. Sweden, 10 a.m. Mallory Pugh (Mountain Vista) scored to help the U.S. secure this spot in their final group stage game on Tuesday. Now, the squad has an early game to try and advance to the semifinals.
Women’s Soccer: Canada vs. France, 4 p.m. Janine Beckie (Valor Christian) scored two goals in Canada’s first two games of the Olympics, and was then rested as the Canadians had already secured this spot in the knockout stages. Their shot at the semifinals comes in the late afternoon.
Women’s Swimming: 200-meter backstroke final, 7:03 p.m. If Missy Franklin advances from the earlier rounds, she will swim in the final in the evening.
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Saturday, Aug. 13
Women’s Track: 3000-meter steeplechase, 7:05 a.m. Emma Coburn, a 2008 graduate of Crested Butte, returns to the Olympics in the event that she reached the finals of at the 2012 Games. The prelims of the 3000 steeplechase are Saturday, with the finals awaiting Monday, should she advance.
Men’s Track: Discus throw final, 7:50 a.m. If Buena Vista’s Mason Finley advances, he will throw in Saturday’s final.
Men’s Track: 800-meter semifinals, 7:08 p.m. If Widefield’s Boris Berian advances out of the prelims, he will race in Saturday’s semifinals. The final is on Monday.
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Sunday, Aug. 14
Women’s Basketball: Senegal vs. Serbia, 12:30 p.m. Lewis-Palmer’s Danielle Page and Serbia continue their schedule in Group B. Should they advance out of the group stage, the quarterfinals are on Tuesday.
The fall season is nearing, and so are preseason rankings.
Today, we sent out emails to nearly 250 voters to cast their ballots for the preseason polls. Those rankings will be tallied and then released on Friday.
Once again this season, CHSAANow.com will provide weekly rankings for all team sports. In the fall, that is boys soccer, field hockey, football, softball and volleyball. During the regular season, rankings will post on Monday mornings.
Our panel of voters includes head coaches, as well as media members. Additional coaches or media members who have not yet signed up, and who wish to vote, should email rcasey@chsaa.org with their interest.
Four days after opening her Olympic career in spectacular fashion, Janine Beckie continued to shine on Saturday.
Beckie, the graduate of Valor Christian, scored two goals to help Canada’s women’s soccer team beat Zimbabwe 3-1 in group play on Saturday. Both goals came in the first half as Canada improved to 2-0 during the Summer Olympics in Rio.
Beckie scored in the seventh minute, and then added her second goal in the 35th minute.
Beckie, born in Highlands Ranch, graduated from Valor Christian in 2012. She was named the Gatorade girls soccer player of the year as a senior, and then went on to play college soccer at Texas Tech.
Both of Beckie’s parents are from Saskatchewan, and her three older siblings were born in Canada. She has dual citizenship.
This story originally appeared in two parts in the Manitou Springs-based Pikes Peak Bulletin.
A brand new trophy sitting in the coaches’ office at Manitou Springs High School provides the most concrete evidence of a memorable run at the Class 3A state baseball championship this past May.
Nothing can take such an achievement away from a group of kids who played their best baseball at the right time. They have the hardware to prove. Soon, a state runner-up banner will join several baseball league championship and state final four banners already hanging on the north wall.
The state runner-up banner will be the first of its kind for the Mustangs.
But it shouldn’t be.
Manitou had achieved that level of baseball success 50 years, one week and a day earlier than the most recent group of kids donning the uniforms of the Mustangs.
But after a search of the trophy case in the commons at the high school and the banners that cover the walls of the gym, there wasn’t a shred of evidence to prove it.
The only evidence is a search of the championship game archives of CHSAANow.com. The Mustangs lost to Broomfield 7-0 in the 2A state title game on a hot, dusty Saturday in 1966.
“To me it was just another game,” shortstop Bruce Heidenreich recalls. “Of course you want to do well because your friends and family were there.”
The odd part was that the 7-0 was very uncharacteristic of the Mustangs. While finding information outside of the memories of Heidenreich, Bill Harper and Tom Miller proved to be difficult, the information that was found showed the Mustangs to be an all-around solid baseball team.
And it was early that Manitou showed they had a chance to be something special.
From left to right: Bruce Heidenreich, Bill Harper, Tom Miller (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Harper was the staff ace and unlike today, was never limited by innings or pitch counts. The very first game of the season, he took the hill against a Woodland Park team whose baseball program was very much in its infancy.
“I pitched four innings and struck out 11 out of 12 hitters,” Harper said. “Kenny Stubbs came in for the last three innings and struck out eight out of nine. So we struck out 19 out of 21 batters in that game and no one reached base.”
The Mustangs won the combined perfect game by a score of 23-0.
They showed early that they could hit and they could pitch. Harper can only recall either himself or Stubbs taking the mound for Manitou. And Stubbs would only pitch when two games were played close enough together that Manitou’s star lefty in Harper needed a few days rest.
After the win against Woodland Park, the Mustangs were on cruise control, save for their only regular season loss which came against St. Mary’s.
Much like today’s Mustangs, a loss to the Pirates was unacceptable.
“We beat St. Mary’s the first time,” Harper recalled. “But my wife and I almost didn’t get married because when St. Mary’s beat us the second time we played, she told me that it wasn’t that big of a deal (laughs). We were disappointed, let’s put it that way. And I’m not a good loser.”
But the results for the rest of the season gave the Mustangs one of the most successful runs in program history.
They beat Crowley County on Apr. 30 of that year to outright win the Pikes Peak League for the first time since 1960.
They had to travel to Burlington to earn the right to play for what would have been the school’s first team state championship. Harper admitted that he thought the Mustangs were going to lose that game.
But his successful run on the mound and the offense, led by Heidenreich, continued its onslaught against opposing pitchers. The Mustangs earned a trip to Broomfield on May 21, with a state title on the line.
And that’s where everything fell apart.
Harper, who had been so dominant on the mound during the season gave up four early runs. What didn’t help was that Heidenreich – who was hitting .352 going into the title game – and his teammates suddenly forgot how to hit.
“There must’ve been a lot of mental pressure on people because we were a good hitting team and that game we hit terrible,” Heidenreich said. “I don’t think we had half a dozen hits between us. Everybody sort of choked.”
But the result of the game proved to be historical nonetheless. It would take half a century for the Mustangs to once again reach that level of success.
But there remains no sign of what was accomplished in 1966.
No banner hangs on the wall of the gym (for now). If a runner-up trophy was given out like they are today, no one knows where to find out.
Heidenreich ventured a guess that if one was given, head coach Rupert Sullivan may have kept it.
Sullivan loved that team according to Heidenreich, Harper and Miller.
And they loved him. In the first revelation of what the teams from 1966 and 2016 had in common, they both had coaches that the kids loved playing for. And the results of both seasons certainly reflected that.
Sullivan and Archuleta never crossed paths. But in listening to their players, it’s not hard to see that they shared a similar passion for their players and always pushed them to be better.
Heidenreich and Harper fondly remember the relationship they had with Sullivan both in terms of that title hunt in 1966 and their general relationship with each other.
“He was very proud of us,” Heidenreich said. “He liked us a lot.”
And it went both ways.
“We all loved him,” Harper added. “He was the best.”
Prior to teaching and coaching at Manitou Springs, Sullivan was a minor league pitcher in the New York Giants organization. He amassed a 14-24 career record with a 5.24 ERA.
After three years in the minor leagues he moved on. His next baseball adventure pitted him as the coach and a P.E. and shop teacher for the Mustangs. There were times where he could come off as a little intense, but there was never a doubt from members of the baseball team that his heart was in the right place.
“A lot of people maybe thought that he was a little sadistic because of what he did in P.E. class,” Heidenreich recalled. “When he wanted to get the kids on the team in shape, we’d go out and run three cross-countries. Everybody would do it so the baseball players would get in shape.”
From a conditioning standpoint, the baseball team was in far better shape than the football or basketball teams.
But that’s not where Sullivan’s love for his players ended. He hosted a barbeque every year at his house in Black Forrest and the players would flock over there.
There was respect, admiration and love for Sullivan that the players would hold onto until the coach’s death in July, 2006.
And one glance at the relationship that Archuleta has with his current team will show a similar pattern. It’s something that former Manitou Springs football coach George Rykovich certainly sees. He had the opportunity to see Sullivan work up close with those kids all those years ago and now stands side by side with Archuleta in the current landscape of Manitou athletics.
“Do they do the same things? No, they don’t” Rykovich said. “The kids always went to (Sullivan) when he was in shop, not on the baseball, and want to talk about baseball. What do you think these kids today want to talk about with Arch even (on the football field)? They want to talk about baseball.”
But similar to the 1966 team, the relationship that Arch’s players have runs much deeper than baseball. It might be baseball that brings coach and players together, but it’s then that bond grows strong.
Like Heidenreich and Harper used to with Sullivan, Arch’s player find themselves at his house for gatherings or summer barbeques.
And like in 1966, the results on the field tend to be positive and the strong bond certainly plays a role.
“Arch is the best if not one of the best coaches I’ve ever had growing up,” Davyn Adamscheck said. “To be able to go through high school with him and have the fun we’ve had and put in the work that we’ve put in, it just means a whole lot to all of us.”
And it means a lot to Arch.
But with a different era comes different ways to show it. Harper and Heidenreich were unsure if Manitou was ever given anything to commemorate their second place finish in state. But the one guess they ventured was that if anything was given, Sullivan hung on to it because that team and that finish meant so much to him.
The baseball banners at Manitou Springs High School. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
For Archuleta, he wouldn’t remove a single thing. The runner-up trophy that the Mustangs earned currently sits in the varsity coaches’ office, but soon it will sit in its rightful place in the school’s trophy case.
As Archuleta has begun to understand the history of the baseball program, he knows above all else that the trophy represents more than just this year’s accomplishments. There is currently no physical recognition of what happened in 1966. So Arch wants the award for those guys as well.
They stand in rare company at Manitou Springs, but they should stand together. When Archuleta looks at the hardware, he doesn’t just see Adamscheck, Dominic Archuleta and Travis Struble.
He knows it also represents Heidenreich, Harper and Sullivan.
The two teams might be 50 years apart, but when talking to those involved, they share so much in common.
And in another 50 years, Manitou baseball teams will use a common word to describe both those teams. They’ll see them as legendary.
Heading into the 2016 season, five football teams have put together winning streaks in the double digits.
Each of those schools — Buena Vista, Pueblo East, Sedgwick County, Bayfield and Valor Christian — won state titles last season. Not surprisingly, the other champions — Windsor and Eads — also rank highly on the in-state winning streak list.
Each are chasing history. The longest winning streak in state history belongs to Limon, which won 50-straight games from 2003-06. The longest current streak nationally belongs to Pahranagat Valley, a 1A program in Nevada, which has won 93 consecutive games dating to the 2008 season. The national record is 151.
History, of course, is what makes the grueling offseason and preseason practices in triple-digit weather worth it.
Here’s a list of the longest current winning streaks of in-state football teams:
Although Opening Ceremonies takes place on Friday, the Rio 2016 games are officially underway Thursday with the start of soccer group play.
The U.S. women begin their journey toward the gold, and former Mountain Vista standout Mallory Pugh is looking to play a major role. The Americans play New Zealand at 4 p.m. MDT.
With the games officially underway, there are several events now through Sunday with Colorado athletes participating.
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Women’s Soccer: Canada vs. Australia, Wed. 1 p.m.
Valor Christian alum Janine Beckie gets her Olympic career started with Team Canada’s first game in the afternoon. She played college soccer at Texas Tech.
Both of Beckie’s parents are from Saskatchewan, and her three older siblings were born in Canada. She has dual citizenship.
Women’s Soccer: USA vs. New Zealand, Wed. 4 p.m.
Mallory Pugh became the youngest player U.S. women’s history to play in an Olympic qualifier this year. In her 14 appearances with the national team, she has scored three goals and could break out over the next few weeks as the next star for the defending World Cup champions.
Cycling: Road men’s race, Sat. 6:30 a.m.
Boulder grad Taylor Phinney gets an early start to the 2016 games as he hits the road for Team USA in the men’s road race Saturday morning.
Phinney has several world championship gold medals to his name, but is looking for his first Olympic medal.
Women’s Basketball: Serbia vs. Spain, Sun. 11:15 a.m.
Danielle Page, a 2004 Lewis-Palmer graduate, takes the court for Serbia in their first game against Spain.
In her four years at Nebraska, she averaged seven points and five rebounds per game. She has spent most of her career playing international basketball and obtained her Serbian citizenship in 2015 in order to play for the national team.