Month: October 2016

  • No. 7 Weld Central football emerging as legitimate Class 2A title contender

    FORT LUPTON — Each member of Weld Central football’s coaching staff delivers a message to the team in a huddle at the end of every game.

    After the Rebels’ 48-7 triumph over Fort Lupton on Friday, every coach reminded the players this is a very special team, and bringing a winning atmosphere back to the school is a huge deal.

    “This is our first winning season since 2009,” defensive coordinator Kyle Haffner said to the players. “Brush is going to lose to Valley tonight, and they’re going to be out looking for blood, so our next game is going to be against a very good Brush team — a bunch of giant dudes smashing it in our mouths. We need to lock it up to be a championship football team.”

    Weld Central, ranked No. 7 in Class 2A this week, remains unbeaten and improves to a 6-0 mark after taking down Fort Lupton on the Bluedevils’ home turf. Since the Rebels didn’t make the playoffs last season, the team’s now 11-game winning streak is the current longest in Colorado, regardless of classification.

    Weld Central Fort Lupton football

    “We have an incredible fan base right now,” second-year head coach James Canaday said. “It’s unreal what’s going on at the school. Everyone is full of spirit and very prideful. It makes me happy our football team is being responsible and it’s turning the whole community around.”

    The Rebels remain positive on their status as a legitimate contender for a state championship run this season.

    Four of Weld Central’s six victories have been determined by at least a 30-point victory margin. The Rebels took down Valley 28-21 last weekend, and now turn their focus to beating Brush, a perennial football powerhouse that lost 28-14 to Valley on Friday night.

    The Rebels’ last three games of the season will be the toughest, going up against Brush, Sterling and then Platte Valley, respectively.

    Canaday spoke in the huddle after the Fort Lupton game and really stressed not letting the teams’ goals slip away.

    “Go out and dominate. Take care of your grades. Don’t do anything stupid this weekend,” Canaday said, as other coaches echoed similar variations of that message to the team.

    Senior captain running back/linebacker Alex Ries said the team has really been coming together and playing very well upon preparation, determination and never giving up.

    “We haven’t had a winning streak in so many years and it feels incredible to have that right now,” Ries said. “We’re trying our hardest to come out on top. We’ve always been a great fundamental team and that’s what we’ve been really working on.”

    He added: “We have the talent and heart to be the championship team.”

    No doubt the coaches are a huge chunk of Weld Central’s recent success. Canaday implemented summer workouts like the team had never done before when he started in 2015.

    With more than 20 years of coaching experience, he came from Monte Vista and started the Rebels out with a basically clean slate of nine assistant coaches, bringing his offensive coordinator with from Monte Vista, and keeping defensive coordinator Haffner, who is a Weld Central alum.

    “I started the team on summer workouts and the kids just really bought into hard work and perseverance,” Canaday said. “They bought into setting goals, and it really carries over season after season. We’ve been meeting expectations, and our 13 seniors are all great leaders and have been developing the younger players to become leaders and the program is heading in the right direction.”

    Weld Central football team
    (Morgan Dzak/CHSAANow.com)

    The team has been feeling the emotion of playing hard and getting better. Canaday said each week a new player comes out big and realizes his role.

    “I don’t mention any standout names because there are new guys making big plays every week,” Canaday said. “It’s important for athletes to understand their roles on the field.”

    Senior quarterback Bryan Gudka has been having a phenomenal running season and has improved on his passing as well.

    “And our wide receiver, DeVante Fleming, hasn’t dropped the ball this season,” Ries said.

    He added: “We just have the best coaches that we’ve had in a long time. They all talk after the game and are always motivating and supporting us.”

    Canaday his coaches are true leaders, and along with his excellent staff and players buying into dedication to the program, Weld Central has as good a shot as anyone else at the 2A title.

    “As long as we keep practicing right and stay stable and don’t get high-headed, we think we have what it takes.”

  • La Junta football continues dominant run with win over Manitou Springs

    La Junta Manitou Springs football
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    LA JUNTA — If there was any doubt that the La Junta Tigers are the measuring stick of Class 2A football in Colorado, they should be extinguised.

    In their third game against a CHSAANow.com top-five opponent is as many weeks, the top-ranked Tigers once again emerged victorious 40-0 over No. 4 Manitou Springs.

    This comes one week after the Tigers (6-0 overall, 2-0 2A Tri-Peaks) beat The Classical Academy on a last-second Hail Mary and two weeks after topping then-No. 1 Kent Denver in dominant fashion.

    “We have a big target on our back,” La Junta coach Clint Buderus said. “Everybody is going to give us their best game and we have to prepare like that.”

    If that’s the case, then they prepared well against the Mustangs (5-1, 1-1).

    Manitou came out, running its single wing offense with the intent to keep the ball out of the Tigers and they’re three-man option attack of John Nuschy, Dax Bender and Carlos Triana.

    They couldn’t get anything going on the first drive and forced a turnover on the Tigers’ second drive of the game, but was unable to capitalize on that opportunity as well.

    Nuschy got the ball rolling for La Junta breaking off a 43-yard run to get the ball to the Manitou one-yard line. He would punch it in on the next play to put the Tigers up 7-0.

    On the next drive, he went to the air, finding Izahiah Peteque to make it a 14-0 game. From then on the offense was in rhythm and the Tigers looked unstoppable.

    “We were out of sync on our first two drives,” Nuschy said. “Once we got to them and scored, it just kept coming and coming.”

    And the defense was more than ready to match that effort. The Tigers only allowed the Mustangs into the red zone one time. The single wing attack that had scored an average of 42.8 points per game for the Mustangs.

    “We’re as good as we think we are,” Manitou coach Cory Archuleta said. “We’re just not La Junta good. We need to get back to the basics, get back to work and start working hard. A piece of humble pie is not a bad thing.”

    Manitou was without wingback Bryce Coop, who suffered a concussion in last week’s game and the two-headed rushing attack of Cole Sienknecht and Davyn Adamscheck were was unable to drive the Mustangs down the field.

    For the Tigers, they have league games against Lamar, Salida and Florence remaining, but have gotten through the worst of their schedule.

    Still, they don’t plan on taking anything lightly.

    “We think the same every week,” Nuschy said. “We have to come out strong and work Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Keep the grind going.”

    Because at the end of the day, they want the grind to pay off with a state championship. They looked the part of a state championship team a year ago, but got derailed with a 47-7 loss to eventual champion Bayfield.

    “We think about it every day during practice,” Bender said. “It is what it is and we just have to do what we can to make it turn out different.”

  • No. 6 Broomfield football shuts out No. 3 Loveland on the road

    (Quentin Sickafoose/CHSAANow.com)
    (Quentin Sickafoose/CHSAANow.com)

    LOVELAND – The task at hand had shaped up to be no easy feat. But Broomfield knew what it had to do to get it done.

    The No. 6 Eagles would have to go on the road and throw No. 3 Loveland off of its own game in order to contend in the Class 4A football top-10 showdown with valuable Longs Peak Conference standings on the line.

    And they did just that, halting Loveland’s run-heavy offense in route to a 14-0 shutout at Ray Patterson Stadium on Friday night.

    “They have a great run game, so we knew if we could get them out of their element and get them to pass the ball that we could take control of the game and drive it from there,” Broomfield linebacker Ryan Mazzola said.

    The Indians entered the game boasting 4A leading rusher Noah Pangrac, who had racked up 1,050 yards through their first five games. As a team, Loveland was averaging more than 380 yards each game on the ground.

    But on Friday night, the Indians (5-1, 0-1 Longs Peak) were unable to match that production against the physical defense of Broomfield (5-1, 1-0 LP), which held Loveland to just 123 yards and limited Pangrac to 65 on 16 carries.

    On the other hand, Loveland’s defense posted an impressive performance of its own that kept them in the game long after Broomfield’s first possession that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run from quarterback Steven Croell.

    “I knew we were going to get to a point where we were going to struggle, but our defense played tough. They got a couple scores but usually that wins games,” Loveland coach Wayne McGinn said. “Our defense stepped up and kept us in the game. It could have gone either way going into the fourth quarter.”

    After taking an early lead in the first quarter, Broomfield’s offense ran into its own troubles after being forced to punt after two consecutive three and outs. The Eagles reached field-goal range at the end of the first half but went into the break with only a narrow 7-0 lead following a missed 27-yard attempt.

    Pangrac then exited the game in the third quarter, forcing Loveland to put the ball in the air in order to keep the game alive. That’s when the Eagles took control.

    Quarterbacks Riley Kinney and Zach Weinmaster each threw one interception, both of them landing in the hands of Mazzola. Jaxon Pallone recorded a key blocked punt and Kevin Burkel had a sack to seal Loveland’s fate.

    The Eagles added a second touchdown late in the game on another 1-yard run from Croell for the fifth straight win, taking the outright lead in the conference standings. Jalon Torres finished the game as Broomfield’s leading rusher with 131 yards on 30 carries, while Tanner Garner had eight touches for 42 yards.

    “It’s a battle in the trenches against offenses like that,” Broomfield coach Blair Hubbard said. “Our kids have really stepped up, on both sides, and we hope we can keep it rolling.”

  • TD barrage surges Conifer football past Green Mountain

    Conifer senior Mason Meyer, left, runs past Green Mountain senior Ben Schlieper on Friday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Conifer senior Mason Meyer, left, runs past Green Mountain senior Ben Schlieper on Friday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    LAKEWOOD — Conifer football coach Larry Fitzmaurice has seen a lot during his two decades coaching the Lobos, but nothing quite what he witnessed Friday night at Trailblazer Stadium.

    The Lobos scored seven touchdowns on seven straight offensive possessions to erase an early 17-0 lead by Green Mountain. Conifer eventually grabbed a 47-31 victory in the Class 3A West Metro League opener for both Jeffco programs.

    “That would be the first time for that,” Fitzmaurice said of the scoring outburst. “It was great effort by the kids. We knew we could do something to (Green Mountain). We just kept at it. It turned out good.”

    Conifer senior Mason Meyer led the way for the Lobos racking up nearly 200 yards of total offense from scrimmage. Meyer finished with 10 carries for 80 yards on the ground that included a pair of touchdowns. He also had six catches for 114 yards and another score.

    “We just kept driving. Don’t even look at the scoreboard,” Meyer said. “We just did what we do and we got it done.”

    Green Mountain got the upper hand early on with an opening 12-play, 64-yard scoring drive that was capped off with a 13-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Dylan Jacob to Justin Booher. The senior wide receiver had five catches for 122 yards at halftime.

    Green Mountain senior Justin Booher (81) celebrates a touchdown with quarterback Dylan Jacob. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Green Mountain senior Justin Booher (81) celebrates a touchdown with quarterback Dylan Jacob. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    A pair of Conifer turnovers allowed the Rams (3-3, 0-1 in league) to take a 17-0 lead with a little more than four minutes remaining in the first quarter. Jacob hit Booher for a 9-yard touchdown pass and Green Mountain added a field goal with Conifer having just two offensive snaps.

    “It’s stressful getting down like that early,” Meyer said. “I made a couple of mistakes early and I put that on me. We just needed to play our game because I knew we could beat them.”

    Meyer started the offensive barrage with a 2-yard touchdown run with 3:26 left in the first quarter, but Green Mountain answered with a 25-yard touchdown run by senior Kyle Clabaugh with just more than a minute left in the first quarter.

    Conifer senior Jack Prentner scored his first of two touchdowns with a 6-yard score with 8:14 left in the second quarter. However, Green Mountain pushed its lead back to 17 points with a 2-yard touchdown run by Ben Schlieper midway through the second quarter. It would eventually be the final score for the Rams.

    Conifer (5-1, 1-0) outscored Green Mountain 33-0 the rest of the way to get the conference victory.

    Senior quarterback Matt Aceto finished 14-for-21 passing for 189 yards and two touchdowns. Prentner had 91 yards on the ground and two touchdowns and junior Kasim Rana bulled his way to 36 yards and a touchdown. Senior John Paulus hauled in a 4-yard touchdown pass for the Lobos too.

    “Coming out of that Rifle loss last week we wanted to make a statement in this first league game,” Meyer said. “This was a very important game for us. Our most important game thus far. We had to make a statement and that is what we did.”

    Winning a conference title and automatic postseason bid won’t be easy for any time in the 3A West Metro. Coming into the start of league play, five of six teams had winning recorders during their non-conference schedule. Conifer, Skyview, Green Mountain, Evergreen and Lutheran should be in the mix for the league title with Alameda also trying get in the picture.

    Green Mountain hits the road next Friday night to face Skyview in Thornton. Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. Oct. 14. The Rams’ first-year head football coach Matt Pees has put an emphasis of winning a title and he knows that task will be an uphill climb now.

    “It all starts with Skyview. We really can’t think about a four-game season. We have to think about a one-game season,” Pees said. “Each week is a playoff game for us and it starts with Skyview.”

    Conifer faces Alameda at 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at Trailblazer Stadium.

    “I told our kids that this game could be a big one,” Fitzmaurice said of getting the win over the Rams. “Getting this one is a step in the right direction.”

    Conifer opened its Class 3A Metro West League schedule with a 47-31 victory over Green Mountain. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
    Conifer opened its Class 3A Metro West League schedule with a 47-31 victory over Green Mountain. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: LeCompte leads Legend softball past Regis Jesuit

    AURORA — Zoey LeCompte pitched seven shutout innings to lead No. 3 Legend softball to a 3-0 win over Regis Jesuit on Friday.

    LeCompte allowed just two hits and walked one while striking out eight batters.

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  • Highlights and photos: Regis Jesuit football runs past Legacy

    AURORA — No. 7 Regis Jesuit football rallied from down at halftime to beat Legacy 36-9 on Friday.

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  • Photos: Cherry Creek football rebounds with big win over Fossil Ridge

    GREENWOOD VILLAGE — Cherry Creek showed it is still a team to be reckoned with, topping Fossil Ridge 42-7 on Friday night. The Bruins are back at .500.

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  • Video: Week 6 football highlights

    Blake Olson of Football America highlights select games during Week 6 of the football season.

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    Longmont vs. Thompson Valley

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    Valor Christian vs. Legend; Regis Jesuit vs. Legacy

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    Denver South vs. Fruita Monument

  • Photos: Brighton softball rides early lead to win over Grandview

    AURORA — Brighton scored 10 runs in the first three innings and came away with a 17-6 win over Grandview on Friday afternoon.

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  • Thornton vs. Rocky Mtn-10/6/16

    Team scores
    Rank School Score
    1 Rocky Mountain 178.975
    2 Thornton 176.4
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    Vault
    Rank Name School Score
    1 Kwanli Young Thornton 9.3
    2 Krysta Cotier Rocky Mountain 9.3
    3 Julianna Piz Rocky Mountain 9.1
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    Bars
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    Floor
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    All-Around
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