Month: August 2016

  • Photos: ThunderRidge boys soccer tops Chatfield

    HIGHLANDS RANCH — Seth Heck scored the game’s lone goal in the second half as ThunderRidge edged Chatfield 1-0 Thursday.

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  • Replay: Football season begins in Zero Week

    Links

    The live event will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Friday.
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    Live coverage

    Live Blog Football’s Zero Week (8/26/2016)
     


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    Live games
    Class Game Time Notes
    4A/3A Skyline vs. Green Mountain 4 p.m. NFHS Network
    5A (3) Mullen vs. (2) Pomona 7 p.m. Altitude (TV)
    8-man (1) Sedgwick County vs. Creek Valley (Neb.) 7 p.m. NFHS Network
    2A Middle Park vs. Aspen 7 p.m. NFHS Network
    2A/3A (4) Delta vs. Durango 7 p.m. Radio
    4A/3A Grand Junction Central vs. (6) Palisade 7 p.m. Radio
    2A/3A Basalt vs. (7) Rifle 7 p.m. Radio
    2A (9) Sterling vs. (8) Resurrection Christian 7 p.m. Radio
  • Video: Pomona football prepared as Moretti watches from sideline

    Blake Olson talks to Ohio State commit Jake Moretti and Pomona coach Jay Madden about the upcoming season. Moretti suffered a season ending knee injury at an Ohio State camp over the summer.

    Despite the injury, he’s at practice and supporting his teammates as they fight to return to the 5A state championship game.

  • Football preview: Bevy of talented running backs ready to lead teams in 2016

    Marcus Lindsay knows a thing or two about the running back position.

    His father, Phillip Troy Lindsay, and his uncle, Tony, played the position at Thomas Jefferson. His older brothers Phillip and Zach were standouts at Denver South. So when he says he takes pride in following in their footsteps, you can be sure that he means it.

    Lining up in the backfield for the Rebels carries plenty of weight. A number of great ones came before Marcus, and when he took his turn as the featured back as a junior, all he did was rush for more than 1,500 yards.

    It’s no different for backs like Grandview’s Hayden Blubaugh or Fort Morgan’s Tate Kembel. Blubaugh led the entire state in rushing yards as a junior, following in the footsteps of former Wolves like Bo Bolen and Chukwuma Obinnah.

    Kembel, 3A’s leading rusher a year ago, has back-to-back seasons of more than 1,000 yards. His predecessors include Dusty Quick — third all-time in state history in rushing yards — and Chris Cobbley.

    Lindsay, Blubaugh and Kembel are just a sampling of why the running back position is so deep and talented headed into the 2016 season, which gets underway this weekend. Spread offenses and aerial attacks may get a lot of attention, but there is something to said for being able to pound the ball into the interior of the defense 30 times a game.

    “Being a running back, that’s a big job. You have to be able to run, you have to be able to catch and block,” Lindsay said. “If you don’t have any running game, you’re not going to have any passing game because they’re just going to drop everyone back.

    “I feel a good running back has to be able to run inside. If the defense stacks the box with nine people, then you’re doing something right.”

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    Class 5A

    Grandview Cherry Creek football
    Grandview’s Hayden Blubaugh. (Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com)

    All Blubaugh did last fall was erupt for 2,386 yards and 28 touchdowns in his first year with the Wolves. As a sophomore at Smoky Hill he showed signs of that talent, but given the opportunity to carry the ball for Grandview, he ran with it — literally.

    “He exceeded (expectations) a great deal. We knew he was going to be a good running back for us,” Wolves coach John Schultz said. “But he learned how to read blocking really well and what we do.

    “When he gets in open space he’s really tough to handle. He’s very explosive and usually finishes. That’s the exciting part about Hayden — when you block the play right, he’s capable of taking it all the way.”

    But he’s hardly the only one. Five of the top six players at the position in 2015 were juniors (Columbine’s Mikey Griebel, who rushed for 1,480 yards, will play quarterback this season).

    Pomona’s Cameron Gonzales, Mullen’s Marcus McElroy Jr. and Horizon’s Cade Verkler each topped 1,400 yards on the ground. Gonzales’ teammate, Max Borghi, finished two yards shy of 1,000 yards in his sophomore season.

    Valor Christian, which has captured a state title in six of its previous seven seasons — including a thrilling comeback victory over Pomona last December — returns the 5A player of the year in quarterback Dylan McCaffrey, who has verbally committed to Michigan.

    Pomona has Gonzales and Borghi and a host of others. Columbine and Cherry Creek came close to reaching the title game, and McElroy Jr. and Mullen opens the season ranked third in the CHSAANow.com preseason poll.

    Grandview, which fell to Pomona in the quarterfinals last season, is ranked fifth. The Wolves return nine starters on offense — four on the offensive line — and a defense that was young in 2015 but will only get better.

    “What’s even more important in 5A is having someone capable of taking over the game and having either an offensive line or defensive line that’s able to wear people down,” Schultz said. “That’s what both Valor and Pomona had last year. By the time the fourth quarter hits, it’s tough to keep going against them.

    “We hope we have that this year.”

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    Class 4A

    Denver South Eaglecrest football
    Marcus Lindsay. (Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com)

    Denver South fell short of its ultimate goal in 2015 when the team’s season came to a close in the quarterfinals.

    “As a team we just learned that we need to go harder,” Lindsay said. “We need to get stronger and get faster and get meaner.”

    Lindsay led an offense that had a combined 2,831 yards on the ground and 36 touchdowns. Five players had at least four rushing TDs.

    Dakota Ridge’s Jeremy Lujan led 4A in rushing, followed by Lindsay. Broomfield’s Jalon Torres rushed for 1,375 yards as a junior, and Windsor quarterback Brad Peeples went for 1,368 yards and 20 touchdowns.

    “A lot of times Marcus would come out. He played both ways and starts at linebacker,” South coach Tony Lindsay said. “Our backup tailback, Darius Pinkett, had (567) yards. He broke about three or four 80-yard touchdown runs.”

    South returns eight starters on defense and six on offense.

    “Since I’ve been at South, we’ve just built this program up,” Tony Lindsay said. “I’ve been really happy with our program. With this year and these seniors, we have leaders this year.”

    Windsor is still the team to beat in 4A though after winning 13 games and capturing the state championship in 2015. Peeples, Corte Tapia and Storm Fox were each first-team all-state selections as juniors.

    Pine Creek, which won state titles in 2013 and 2014, graduated 4A player of the year JoJo Domann off a team that was undefeated before falling to Loveland in the semifinals.

    Denver South enters the season ranked third, followed by Loveland and Heritage, which drops down from 5A.

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    Class 3A

    Holy Family Fort Morgan football
    Fort Morgan’s Tate Kembel. (Pam Wagner/CHSAANow.com)

    In a classification that prides itself on its ability to run the ball, the 2016 season has no shortage of standout rushers.

    Seventeen players topped the 1,000-yard mark last fall, seven of who were juniors. Kembel led the way with 1,893 yards and 29 touchdowns for a Fort Morgan team that lost in the 3A semis to defending state champion Pueblo East.

    “That’s the mentality of a lot of programs,” Mustangs coach Harrison Chisum said. “You’ve got to be able to run the football and you’ve got to be able to stop the run. That’s just been a thing forever.”

    Look no further than Pueblo East, which had two players finish just shy of 1,500 yards on the ground. Quarterback Daniel Martin, the 3A POY, graduated, but running back Bryson Torres scored 24 touchdowns as a junior.

    Roosevelt, the 3A runner-up, had a pair of players go for more than 1,200 yards on the ground, as did Rifle.

    Kembel and Toby McBride combined for more than 2,500 yard between them and scored 40 touchdowns.

    “Obviously it helped with a 6-foot-3, 240-pound fullback leading the way,” Chisum said of McBride, who graduated. “That definitely helps, and (Tate) will tell you that. But Tate is the type of kid that would trade any touchdown and carry and yards for wins. He wants to make sure whatever is best for the team is being done.”

    The coach added that Kembel has maybe the best vision he has seen, and he did a lot of his damage last season in the first half before being taken out at halftime because of big leads.

    “He’s a workhorse. He’s a tough kid, he takes hits and he’s just matured now to where he puts his head down and gets as many yards as he can,” Chisum said. “He used to try to outrun everybody but he’s even better now between the tackles.”

    Fort Morgan returns eight starters on offense and six on defense, and comes into the season ranked third in 3A. Two-time defending champion Pueblo East is first, followed by Roosevelt.

    Longmont, a 4A semifinalist last season, drops down to 3A and is ranked fourth. Discovery Canyon is fifth, followed by Western Slope powers Palisade and Rifle.

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    Class 5A

    Defending Champion: Valor Christian

    Season Begins: Aug. 25

    Playoffs Begin: Nov. 5

    Championship: Dec. 3

    Returning all-state players: Hayden Blubaugh, Sr., Grandview (1st team); Max Borghi, Jr., Pomona (1st team); Noah Elliss, Sr., Valor Christian (1st team); Cameron Gonzales, Sr., Pomona (2nd team); Mikey Griebel, Sr., Columbine (1st team); Santino Marchiol, Sr., Cherry creek (1st team); Dylan McCaffrey, Sr., Valor Christian (1st team); Marcus McElroy Jr., Sr., Mullen (2nd team); Jake Moretti, Sr., Pomona (1st team); Robert Moss, Sr., Grandview (2nd team); Jonathan Van diest, Sr., Cherry Creek (1st team); Tommy Wakefield, Sr., Fairview (2nd team).

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    Class 4A

    Defending Champion: Windsor

    Season Begins: Aug. 25

    Playoffs Begin: Dec. 3

    Championship: Nov. 11-12, Denver Coliseum

    Returning all-state players: Keegan Cryder, Sr., Dakota Ridge (2nd team); Storm Fox, Sr., Windsor (1st team); Dremond Griffin, Sr., Denver South (2nd team); Marcus Lindsay, Sr., Denver South (1st team); Zach Moser, Sr., Windsor (2nd team); Brad Peeples, Sr., Windsor (1st team); Donovan Roker, Sr., Greeley West (2nd team); Kasheem Stevenson, Sr., Denver South (2nd team); Zach Swartwout, Sr., Loveland (1st team); Corte Tapia, Sr., Windsor (1st team).

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    Class 3A

    Defending Champion: Pueblo East

    Season Begins: Aug. 25

    Playoffs Begin: Nov. 12

    Championship: Dec. 3

    Returning all-state players: Dylan Holt, Sr., Vista PEAK Prep (2nd team); Tate Kembel, Sr., Fort Morgan (1st team); Isaac Maestas, Sr., Palisade (1st team); Trey McBride, Jr., Fort Morgan (2nd team); PD Riddle, Sr., Palisade (2nd team); Jack Roy, Sr., Discovery Canyon (2nd team); Livan Santander, Sr., Delta (2nd team).

  • Football preview: La Junta returns strong senior class with championship ambitions

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    A 47-7 loss in the Class 2A state semifinals is not the way the La Junta Tigers envisioned ending their season.

    Especially considering that in the 11 games prior to their loss at the hands of eventual state champion, Bayfield, the Tigers surrendered less than six points per game.

    But with 11 starters returning on the defensive side of the ball, La Junta is looking to put its stamp on the 2016 season and reach heights that will they hope will include a state title trophy at the end of the year.

    “We have to play great defense,” coach Clint Buderus said. “That’s a big emphasis for us and if we can stay in a game and keep it close, that’s all we can ask for.”

    It’s not just the defense that will provide the experience that the Tigers will need to overcome last year’s loss. For the last two seasons, La Junta has steadily become a better team and the senior class as a whole has had its eyes on this season as one that can be truly special.

    “The first time we went (to the playoffs) three years ago, these kids were all sophomores and they were all playing,” Buderus said. “This class has been together for a long time. The majority of them got a taste of it and they’re excited to get going again.”

    But excited doesn’t quite cover the range of feelings going through this senior class. The players were dominant in the regular season and for their first two playoff games.

    With Bayfield proving to be just as good as advertised, the Tigers know that they have something to prove as the regular season prepares to kick-off.

    “Our mentality right now is to ficus on one game at a time,” running back/linebacker Dax Bender said. “We know our expectations and we just need to be solid throughout the year.”

    Bender was one of the key two-way players for the Tigers a year ago, running for over 500 yards while registering six turnovers on the defensive end.

    He’ll be just one La Junta player amongst a strong senior class that Buderus will lean on for the Tigers.

    “I really think we have a 12 leaders,” Buderus said. “I really do. Our kids are so close. They do everything together, they spend all their time together. It’s good to have a leader (like Bender) to put everybody on his back and take you.”

    And that’s exactly what he plans on doing. The Tigers have been without a state football championship since 1958 and there is no doubt in their mind that they have the talent on the field this season to end that streak.

    “We’ve been working really hard since our freshman year and we have a lot of varsity experience,” Bender said. “That’s the plan (to bring home a title) but we have to play really hard every game. We can’t let anyone undercut us.”

    And if anything, that disappointing loss to Bayfield will only serve as firewood for La Junta. Buderus knows that that the season ending the way it did will only provide fruitful longterm results.

    “The kids were upset,” Buderus said. “But I think it was good for us to get there. Obviously we wanted to get the win, but I don’t think the outcome should’ve been what it was. I think we were a little in the spotlight and we’d never been there. I think you need to knock on the door before you can kick it in.”

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    Small-school football preview

    Defending champions:

    Returning All-State athletes:

    • 2A: Cade Becker (Sr.) Bennett, Jesse Rodriquez (Jr.) Bennett, Isaiah Sanchez (Sr.) The Academy, Livan Santander (Sr.) Delta, Michael Stevenson, (Sr.) Resurrection Christian, William Wallace, (Sr.) Strasburg, Sam Westbrook (Sr.) Bayfield
    • 1A: Kevin Bailey (Sr.) Rye, Jack Baroni (Sr.) Buena Vista, Jett County (Sr.) Burlington, Matthew Davidson (Sr.) Ellicott, Keith Dunagan (Sr.) Crowley County, Justin Engesser (Sr.) Colorado Springs Christian, Tyler Illgen (Sr.) Meeker, Braden Kappel (Sr.) Limon, Justis Marshall (Sr.) Burlington, Jason Murphy (Sr.) John Mall, Connor Peterson (Sr.) Platte Canyon, Dagan Rienks (Sr.) Paonia, Trevor Smith (Sr.) Paonia
    • 8-man: Trenton Armintrout (Sr.) Norwood, Levi Basler (Sr.) Akron, Justin Hacsi (Sr.) Sargent, Chad Mikelson (Sr.) Sedgwick County, Bridger Reese (Sr.) Akron, Hunter Robins (Sr.) Hoehne, Caleb Urwiller (Sr.) Dayspring Christian
    • 6-man: Jaxon Crawford (Sr.) Kit Carson, Jaxon King (Sr.) Fleming, Fred Turner (Sr.) Eads, Alex Vandenbark (Sr.) Fleming, Darian Wagner (Sr.) Arickaree/Woodlin, Trevor Warren (Sr.) La Veta

    Regular season begins: Aug. 25

    Postseason begins: Oct. 29

    State championship: Nov. 19 (6-man), Nov. 26 (8-man, 1A and 2A)

  • Chris Brown, Scott Yates enter 2016 football season on verge of breaking all-time wins record

    Chris Brown won’t forget his exasperating “welcome to coaching football” moment — a dazzling fourth quarter play that led to a fleeting shot at victory halted by a pull-your-hair-out penalty in his very first high school game.

    The year was 1976, and Brown was a young, rookie coach in his first season with 10-time state champion Limon. The opening game was a sloppy one against Bishop Machebeuf, a team led by legendary veteran Pat Panek, who was on the brink of retiring as Colorado’s all-time winningest football coach.

    There were less than two minutes in regulation when Machebeuf was up on Limon, 13-7, driving with the ball for one last touchdown and Limon caused a fumble inside the 10-yard-line.  When the ball popped up, a Limon safety snatched it and went 95 yards to tie the game.

    CLUTCH. Had the touchdown counted.

    The pick-six was no good because of a mouth guard penalty: a new rule that went into effect this game. The mouth guard that popped out of a player’s mouth way on the other side of the field called for a five-yard penalty and the TD was called back.

    Brown’s Badgers fell to Panek’s Buffaloes.

    “As a young coach, I didn’t handle that too well,” Brown said with a sentimental laugh. “The papers called.”

    Four state championships and 40 seasons later, Brown’s career has circled back to where it all began: in good company of the great Panek.

    In West Grand’s last victory of the 2015 season, Brown, who has been with the 8-man program in Kremmling since 1980, notched his 306th win, tying Panek for Colorado’s career wins record.

    “There are probably not too many coaches around who are still coaching that have connections to Pat Panek,” Brown said.

    But there is another coach with his own Panek memories — a coach who has also been chasing the state’s career wins record alongside Brown.

    “I was a little guy when my dad, Dick Yates, was coaching during the Pat Panek era,” said longtime Kent Denver football coach and athletic director Scott Yates. “My dad spoke so highly of him as one of the best football coaches around.”

    Yates, who has 304 career wins, missed the Panek era (1939-77), and started coaching the Class 2A Sun Devils in 1981. Since then, Yates has dedicated himself to developing a quality football program, won three state titles during his 304-74 tenure and is just below only Panek/Brown and Dolores County’s Ken Soper (305) in career wins. They are the only four coaches in state history to reach the 300-victory club.

    Both the Kent Denver and West Grand coaches are very successful, yes, but bring up that state record in conversation and they agree: to be mentioned even in the same sentence as Panek is absolutely ridiculous, and also very humbling.

    Panek was known for dedicating himself to young people and developing their talents. Much like Panek, both Brown and Yates have longevity and success in their careers and have also used their time coaching to serve as great role models in high school athletes’ lives, striving for players to leave their respective programs as better people than when they first started.

    Brown and Yates enter the 2016 season in record-breaking territory, without a question. But it’s really not about the record, it’s about the teams. It’s about what each coach is doing right now to make connections with young people, be positive influences on their players and help provide a quality foundation for athletes’ futures.

    They may not put much focus on it — if any at all — but Brown and Yates are chasing a longtime record together that has stood since 1977. Before December, Panek’s mark could very well fall at the hands of these two coaches who have persevered with time and built extremely successful careers based on similar coaching philosophies.

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    Scott Yates, Kent Denver

    304 career wins

    Scott Yates Kent Denver football 300th win
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Yates, who enters his 36th season coaching, started building Kent Denver’s dilapidated program from the ground up as a 24-year-old in 1981.

    “When I started at Kent Denver, the school had not won a league game,” Yates said. “By our fifth year, we won our first state championship, and over the course of the following years, we’ve been able to maintain a high-level program.”

    He has won three state titles (1986, 1991, 2012) in five trips to the championship, and has been the Gatorade national coach of the year once. The Sun Devils have gone 31-5 since the most recent state championship and produced three Class 2A all-state first-teamers per year the last three seasons.

    “When Yates took over that program, it was at the bottom of the old Metro League, probably lower than a doormat,” Brown said. “And he stayed there all these years and he’s just done a great job of building up a terrific program.”

    Even though Kent Denver was a struggling program when Yates took over, he stuck with it with a “never give up” and “grass isn’t always greener” mentality. After all these years with new players, teams, games, what really amazes Yates the most is the transformation — of the entire program, from where it was in 1981 to where it is now — and the transformation of individual players.

    “I marvel the most at a young, skinny little ninth grader who is slow, and that you engage, encourage and keep in the program,” Yates said. “By the time they’re juniors or seniors, they’re significant contributors to what you’re doing.”

    Scott Yates Kent Denver football 300th win
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Encouragement and understanding are big parts of Yates’ coaching philosophy, which is to use football as a tool to help great guys become great young men. Establishing relationships is the No. 1 goal.

    Junior tailbacker/linebacker Josh McDonald said Yates is one of the most influential people in his life, and was also an important mentor to his father, Ross McDonald, who graduated from Kent Denver in 1991.

    “My dad to this day says that Coach Yates was his biggest influence growing up,” McDonald said. “He says Yates was one of his biggest father figures, and being able to experience this for myself is extraordinary.

    Yates explained the importance of establishing relationships begins with understanding there are hard times and great times, and recognizing when players are dejected or elated and being able to help them climb out of the dark times, and be humble during the good times

    This gets very challenging with the way society has evolved over the years. There are new pressures facing high school students now, namely in the social media realm, that didn’t even exist when Yates and Brown were that age.

    “There’s a lot more to coaching than it used to be,” Yates said. “Someone who stays in there has a lot of grit.”

    He added: “I admire the longevity of Chris Brown’s career, the endurance he’s demonstrated, the dedication he’s shown to young people, and the time, effort and sacrifices I know I’ve made, he’s certainly made as well.”

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    Chris Brown, West Grand

    306 career wins

    West Grand football coach Chris Brown. (Photo courtesy of Mike Wilson)
    West Grand football coach Chris Brown. (Photo courtesy of Mike Wilson)

    Brown, also West Grand’s athletic director, enters his 41st season of coaching football with a 306-123 mark and four state titles: two with Limon (1976 and 1978), two with West Grand in (1996 and 1998).

    On Sept. 3, at West Grand’s first game of the season against Sanford, Brown could pick up his 307th victory, making him Colorado’s winningest football coach.

    “I think we’ll win at least one this year,” Brown said.

    After taking over for longtime Limon coach Lloyd Gaskill, who won 10 state championships, Brown claimed two more for the school.  The ’76 title was with the ‘Comeback Kids,’ who started out with the mouth guard fiasco-loss to Panek’s Machebeuf before continuing on to a 1-3 start.

    “At that time and era, it was three too many losses at Limon,” Brown said. “Then we ran the table and won the state title and had a great group of seniors. We came from behind in the fourth quarter in four of the last five games. They just refused to lose.”

    One of Brown’s main coaching mottos and philosophies is to never quit, and he’s seen his fair share of perseverance during his coaching tenure, as well as the impact he’s made on young people.

    “There was one former player who had a tough time. He was in jail and was contemplating suicide,” Brown said. “Every time he thought of committing suicide, he also thought of what I taught him about, ‘Never give up, never give up.’ Then he came back and told me that years later.”

    And “never give up” was also a motto than ran very deep last season. Brown said out of all the games he has ever coached, including seven state final appearances, his last victory in 2015 – No. 306 – was the most important game of his life.

    Dove Creek football Chris Brown
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    On a Tuesday the week West Grand was playing the league championship against Vail Christian on a Friday, junior starting quarterback JD Guess died in a car crash driving home from practice.

    “We wouldn’t have played. We were going to forfeit,” Brown said. “Then JD’s dad, Eric Guess, and brother, Will, who used to play for us, talked to the kids. And we decided to play because of them. I had no clue how we were going to play.”

    He added: “It wasn’t the winning. It was going out and playing the best we could in that circumstance.”

    They never gave up, and won 34-8.

    Former West Grand principle and track coach Joe Shields said in a small school, fall sports coaches have an awful lot of power in the attitude kids have at the beginning of the school year, and since Brown has been at West Grand, students have always responded very well to him.

    “Brown was a major factor in West Grand students getting started out very well inside and outside the classroom,” Shields said. “He works very hard at his craft and he’s very fair, loyal, supportive and consistent with his athletes.”

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    It’s just a number to them — the 300-plus wins, the state record. It’s a major milestone, of course, for Brown and Yates. But the real focus for each coach has been and will always be on the team and players that are here and now, and how they can continue to serve as a positive influence for young people.

    Neither coach has plans of retiring at this point, and until then, the two will continue to shimmy up the state record books side by side.

  • Photos: Stoneking lifts Arapahoe softball over Bear Creek

    CENTENNIAL — Rachel Stoneking went 2-for-4 with two RBIs as Arapahoe softball beat Bear Creek 5-4 on Tuesday.

    Stoneking also pitched all seven innings of the win, allowing ten hits.

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  • Photos: Strasburg softball wins 3A top-5 matchup with Sterling

    STRASBURG — Top-ranked Strasburg softball beat No. 5 Sterling 14-4 in a big Class 3A game early in the season on Tuesday.

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  • Chatfield volleyball returns everybody from a state tournament team

    Chatfield coach Stephanie Schick returns every player from her squad that had a 24-3 record last season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Chatfield coach Stephanie Schick returns every player from last season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    LITTLETON — Chatfield volleyball coach Stephanie Schick will have the luxury of seeing several familiar faces on court this season.

    “We’ve got all 11 back and we added three. We are carrying 14,” Schick said of her varsity squad. “It’s the biggest varsity team I’ve ever suited up. We’re excited, to say the least.”

    The Chargers had an impressive 24-3 record last season with no seniors on their squad. However, a loss to Fairview in pool play at the state tournament and tiebreaker set loss to Coronado sent top-seed Chatfield home earlier than expected.

    Even more frustrating, Cherokee Trail eventually lifted the state trophy. A team the Chargers defeated twice during the regular season.

    “Last year it really hurt losing at state,” Chatfield senior Sierra Bartley said. “We know coming back we have a lot of returners and we’ll have more experience playing down at the Denver Coliseum. It really motivates us. We were so close sophomore year (2014) and I could taste it last year being ranked No. 1, but we just lost it at state. This year we are really ready to come back and get it.”

    Sierra Bartley led the Chargers with 247 kills last season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Sierra Bartley led the Chargers with 247 kills last season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    The Chargers can reflect back on the past two successful seasons. In 2014, Chatfield had an underdog run all the way to the 5A state championship match as the No. 12 seed in the 12-team state tournament.

    “I hope it benefits a lot,” Schick said of the experience this year’s squad has with back-to-back state appearances under its belt. “We have five or six girls who played in the state championship match two years ago. That has to matter. They have to be able to share the experience in a meaningful and impactful way.”

    Bartley, 5A second team all-conference selection as a junior, leads the way for the talented Chargers. The four-year varsity player led the team with 247 kills last season from her outside hitter position.

    Seniors Haley Fuller (181 kills), JayCee Jones (360 digs), Addy Plant (474 assists) and Nicole Langford (364 assists), along with juniors Breanna Jones (163 kills and 334 digs) and Julia Eiken (97 blocks), not to mention sophomore Shea Fuller gives Schick plenty of options when it comes to how she wants to attack teams.

    “I know it’s the deepest team I’ve ever coached,” Schick said. “With 14 players it does add playing time options. I’ve got a long list of which way do I want to go.”

    The Chargers have set themselves up nicely to make a run at a 5A state title. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    The Chargers have set themselves up nicely to make a run at a 5A state title. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    Schick admits she isn’t sure how things will look until the Chargers take the court in their season opener at home Tuesday, Aug. 30, against Valor Christian. However, there is a clearcut goal for Chatfield.

    “Can we be unbeatable? Can we put the team together and build it with chemistry, trust and believe in each other so that we become unbeatable? That’s our goal,” Schick said.

    While the talent is there, Haley Fuller knows it takes more than just skills to claim the ultimate prize at the end of the season.

    “I think we have to remember to stay together as a team,” Fuller said. “We can’t be 14 different girls. We have to be one. We have to remember we are here for each other. You have to play for the person next to you.”

    History might not be on Chatfield’s side when it comes to brining a volleyball state championship. The last Jeffco school to win a volleyball state title was Wheat Ridge in 1990.

    “I want to be that team to bring the gold to Jeffco. We all want to win state,” Fuller said. “We want to get this program a gold trophy. These seniors have done a lot. We just want it.”

    Chatfield opens it season Tuesday, Aug. 30, at home against Valor Christian. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Chatfield opens it season Tuesday, Aug. 30, at home against Valor Christian. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Cherry Creek football has bounce heading into 2016 season

    Blake Olson talks to Cherry Creek coach Dave Logan about the upcoming season. Despite losing two star players to IMG Academy (FL) in the offseason, the Bruins have bounce in their step.

    Colorado commit Jonathan VanDiest returns on the defensive kine and there’s plenty of promise with the young offense. The Bruins lost to state champion Valor Christian in the semifinals in 2015.