Month: September 2016

  • Cheyenne Mountain volleyball rallies to top Chaparral in five sets

    PARKER — Cheyenne Mountain shook off some early jitters and then stormed back to beat Chaparral in a marquee volleyball match to open the season on Thursday.

    The Indians, ranked No. 1 in Class 4A’s preseason poll, rallied from down 2-0 to be the 5A No. 6 Wolverines 19-25, 23-25, 25-21, 25-18, and 15-9.

    “The way they responded, I was so proud,” Cheyenne Mountain coach David Barkley said after the match. “We’ve got a lot work on. We’ve got some inexperience in certain places. We know that this is going to be a work in progress all year. But to show the heart that they did there — holy cow.

    “I can’t say enough about Chaparral,” Barklet added. “They are so good. We are very fortunate to come out of here with a win.”

    Chaparral (0-1) stormed out early in the first set, and then raced to an 23-15 lead in the second. That’s when things seemed to change for Cheyenne Mountain (1-0). The reigning 4A champs went on an 8-1 run to cut the lead to 24-23 before Chaparral put the Indians away to take the 2-0 lead in sets.

    Chaparral jumped out again in the third set, with leads of 10-5 and 15-10, but Cheyenne Mountain slowly chipped away and eventually tied the set at 18-18. Then, in a flash, the Indians then captured the third game 25-21.

    “They just got comfortable,” Barkley said. “You know, first-match jitters. That might have been some of it. Once they got the confidence, that helped.”

    The fourth set was also back-and-forth before Cheyenne Mountain closed with the final eight points to win 25-18.

    By the time the fifth set began, Cheyenne Mountain was rolling. It jumped out to a 9-3 lead, and then traded points the rest of the way to win 15-9.

    “We started out a little shaky,” said Cheyenne Mountain senior Ellie Gubser. “It was our first game of the season. We have a lot of new people on our team, and we’re trying to get used to playing with each other. But I think we worked out a lot of kinks this game.”

    Cheyenne Mountain Chaparral Volleyball
    More photos. (Renee Bourcier/CHSAANow.com)

    Gubser finished with 16 kills, including three in the final set.

    “She’s our leader,” Barkley said. “She’s a competitor. She loves to play. She doesn’t care who is on the other side.”

    Cheyenne Mountain seemed to change the match with its service game, led by senior Maddi Brown. Brown had five aces in the match, including a crucial one in the third set which gave her team a 23-20 lead.

    “In the end, that was the difference,” Barkley said. “We served well.”

    Grace Wilder and Casey Ahrendsen each added 12 kills for Cheyenne Mountain.

    Chaparral, a senior-heavy team which went to the state tournament last season, was led by Grace Miles and her 16 kills. Makenna Davis added 15, and Jasmine Schmidt had 12 to go along with two aces and four blocks.

    Ava Larkin had 46 assists for the Wolverines.

    The match, an annual season-opening meeting since 2012, served as a measuring stick for both programs. And if Thursday was any indication, both should be playing into November.

    “This tells us where we are,” Barkley said.

    Cheyenne Mountain Chaparral Volleyball
    More photos. (Renee Bourcier/CHSAANow.com)
  • No. 10 Fairview football capitalizes on Horizon mistakes to win

    (Kai Casey/kaicasey.com)
    More photos. (Kai Casey/kaicasey.com)

    BOULDER — Fairview football came into Thursday’s season opener against Horizon expecting adversity and hungry for revenge.

    The Knights didn’t let the showering rain, the lightning striking in the distance, or even the lengthy delay get in the way of a 38-24 win, which avenged a loss to the Hawks last season.

    “We have a saying, lex talionis — an eye for an eye. We got ’em back this year and I’m very excited about that,” said senior wide receiver David McWilliams.

    Fairview, ranked No. 10 in Class 5A, capitalized on Horizon mistakes whether it was the missed field goal, the fumble, the turnover on downs inside the five yard line, or the 55-yard touchdown run by Horizon running back Cade Verkler that was negated by penalty.

    And the Knights capitalized in a big way. Fairview scored a touchdown on the ensuing drive after the aforementioned events, looking adversity straight in the eyes.

    “We really focus on adversity, after I had an unfortunate mistake — I threw an interception — we were able to stare that adversity in the face,” Fairview’s senior quarterback Jake Willemsen said after making his debut at the helm of the Fairview offense. “They didn’t get any points off of that, and our offense was really able to capitalize off those turnovers that they gave us.”

    Willemsen finished with 349 yards on 26-of-43 passing and four touchdowns. The dual-threat QB also got it done on the ground, chipping in 67 yards and another score.

    “He’s had a tremendous offseason, I mean really really good,” Fairview coach Tom McCartney said. “We’ve got 100 percent belief and faith in him. Tough guy, he got banged up a little bit and came back in and finish that drive and get us in the end zone because it’s a one-score game at that point.

    “He was making a lot of plays with his arm. A huge first performance. Outstanding.”

    Added Willemsen: “Me being able to scramble is a great asset I have, but honestly none of that happens without my offensive line.”

    Fairview football team
    More photos. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Willemsen and McWilliams have a clear connection on the field as quarterback and receiver.

    “We’ve been doing it since we were in ninth grade, just slinging it back and forth,” McWilliams said. “We connect on pretty much anything, we have our own calls, we have our own audibles, we can run anything anytime and we just know that we’re going to see each other and meet on the same page.”

    McWilliams and the veteran receiving core around Willemsen, which includes Tommy Wakefield (87 yards, one TD) and Quinn Sharp (141 yards, one TD), embody the prototypical Fairview offense of recent years.

    “Offensively we like to throw it, and so we want to find the best grass and we feel like we’ve got a lot of veteran receivers back and we believe in all of them and a quarterback we feel like can make plays,” McCartney said.

    Horizon gave Fairview a scare after Verkler broke free for an 80-yard rushing touchdown on the first play of the second half, and quarterback Amado Capetillo snuck in on a 1-yard rush to cut the score to just 31-24. Verkler turned in his own incredible effort with 206 yards and two touchdowns on the ground.

    “We came in, we circled up, we stared adversity in the face and buckled down and came out,” Willemsen said.

    Willemsen took Fairview down the field making plays with his arm and legs in a drive that ate up just under six minutes, ending with a shovel pass to Sharp for a 4-yard touchdown to seal the game at 38-24.

    “You always try to expect that adversity is going to hit in some fashion,” McCartney said. “So, when they got that game back to within reach for them — and you have to make plays as an offense to churn out some first downs or get in the endzone.”

    Fairview (1-0) will face crosstown rival Boulder next week, while Horizon (0-1) looks to get into the win column against Overland.

    “We’re excited to get to 1-0. That’s always the goal: find a way to get to 1-0,” McCartney said. “I’m proud of them because we met that goal.”

  • Photos: No. 10 Fairview football beats Horizon

    BOULDER — Tenth-ranked Fairview football avenged a loss to Horizon last season with a 38-24 win on Thursday.

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  • Photos: Gateway football tops Littleton

    AURORA — Gateway football opened its season with a 31-2 win over Littleton on Thursday evening.

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  • Photos: Grandview softball tops Wheat Ridge at Erie Tournament

    ERIE — Grandview softball beat Wheat Ridge 8-4 on Thursday in a big game at the Erie Tournament.

    The Wolves are ranked No. 8 in Class 5A, while Wheat Ridge is No. 3 in 4A.

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  • Football highlights: Grandview over Chaparral; Gateway tops Littleton

    Blake Olson brings you highlights of Week 1 in Colorado high school football, including Chaparral vs. Grandview in 5A and Littleton vs. Gateway in 4A.

  • Photos: Cheyenne Mountain volleyball outlasts Chaparral

    PARKER — After dropping the first two sets, Cheyenne Mountain rallied back to beat Chaparral 19-25, 23-25, 25-21, 25-18, and 15-9 in five sets.

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  • Photos: Rampart volleyball comes out strong, sweeps TCA

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Rampart looked to be in mid-season form Thursday night as the Rams swept TCA 25-12, 25-18, and 25-12 to move to improve to 2-0.

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  • Replay: Week 1 football games around the state

    Links

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

    Live Blog Football’s Week 1(9/2/2016)
     


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    Live games
    Class Game Time Notes
    8-man (4) Norwood vs. Soroco 4 p.m. Video
    2A Eaton vs. Lamar 6:30 p.m. Radio
    8-man Wiley vs. Miami-Yoder 6:45 p.m. Radio
    4A/3A Greeley Central vs. Berthoud 6:45 p.m. Video
    1A Rocky Ford vs. (5) Limon 7 p.m. Radio
    2A Gunnison vs. (7) La Junta 7 p.m. Radio
    1A (6) Strasburg vs. (3) Burlington 7 p.m. Radio
    8-man Las Animas vs. Fowler 7 p.m. Radio
    4A Grand Junction vs. Grand Junction Central 7 p.m. Radio
    4A/3A Montrose vs. (7) Rifle 7 p.m. Radio
    1A Wray vs. Ellicott 7 p.m. Radio
    1A/2A (1) Buena Vista vs. Alamosa 7 p.m. Radio
    3A Erie vs. Vista PEAK 7 p.m. Video
    4A/5A Fort Collins vs. Fossil Ridge 7 p.m. Video
    4A Chatfield vs. (2) Pine Creek 7 p.m. Video
    5A Legend vs. Ponderosa 7 p.m. Video
    5A Overland vs. Denver East 7 p.m. Video
    5A (3) Mullen vs. (1) Valor Christian 7 p.m. Video
    5A (8) Regis Jesuit vs. (4) Cherry Creek 7 p.m. Video
    2A Lamar vs. Eaton 7 p.m. Video
    2A/3A (3) Platte Valley vs. Lutheran 7 p.m. Video
    8-man/1A (1) Sedgwick County vs. Yuma 7 p.m. Video
    5A/4A Legacy vs. (10) Broomfield 7 p.m. Video
    3A Aztec (N.M.) vs. Durango 7 p.m. Video
    Scoreboard Show 9:30 p.m. Colorado Preps
  • Cherry Creek and Regis Jesuit football on tap for crucial Week 1 showdown

    Cherry Creek Regis Jesuit football
    (Jack Eberhard/JacksActionShots.com)

    AURORA — Friday night, a big non-conference rivalry game will add another chapter to its book as the Regis Jesuit plays host to Cherry Creek.

    The Bruins are winners of the last three meetings, two of which have been at Regis.

    Both teams have a lot to look forward to coming into the year, the host Raiders are ranked No. 8 in the CHSAANow.com preseason poll and the Bruins are ranked fourth. Both teams are well coached and always capable of making a deep playoff run.

    Cherry Creek in particular is looking to get the season started on the right foot.

    “(We are excited to) see how well we play because we are a young team. It would put us off to a great start to the season,” running back Trey Windham said. “With a win and good play from our older guys, (we would) set the example for our younger, inexperienced guys.”

    This offensive unit is young but with experienced leadership like Windham and Stanley, the Bruins will look to prove some doubters wrong.

    The defense for Creek has been highlighted as their strong suit and will look to live up to the hype come game time.

    The Raiders will be looking to start the year with a marquee win and have shown signs of confidence and excitement towards this game. They will look to take advantage of their home field and finally find a solution to the problem that has been Cherry Creek football.

    As two established programs are looking to set the standard for the season on opening night, this game is bound to be an exciting one as the football season gets underway for some more schools.