LAKEWOOD — Dakota Ridge managed to get its first Class 5A Jeffco League victory of the season Friday night at Lakewood Memorial Field.
The Eagles (4-4, 1-2 in league) ended a 2-game losing streak with a 4-3 victory over rival Bear Creek (3-6, 0-3). The Eagles got goals from four different players. Senior Mimi Pavlova, juniors Isabelle Camann and Maggie Hawley, along with sophomore Alyssa Sheehan found the back of the net for Dakota Ridge.
Senior Kailyn Chavira had a pair of goals and sophomore Taryn O’Brien put in one score for the Bears in the loss.
LAKEWOOD — It’s early, but Columbine took the driver’s seat in the girls soccer Class 5A Jeffco League on Friday night.
With the temps in the 30s, the Rebels (7-2, 3-0 in league) stayed hot at Lakewood Memorial Field with a 2-0 victory over Arvada West. The win gave Columbine a 1-game lead over the rest of the field in 5A Jeffco three games into conference play.
Arvada West senior Hallie Smith (6) goes up for a header with Columbine senior Kaitlyn Weiser. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
“You always want to be in the lead and control your own destiny,” Columbine coach Brian Todd said after the Rebels’ fifth straight victory. “We’ve got a tough league. Jeffco is a great league in 5A and 4A.”
Columbine, No. 6 in the CHSAANow.com 5A girls soccer poll, haven’t lost since a 1-0 setback to defending 5A state champion Mountain Vista on March 15.
Chatfield (5-3-1, 2-1) dropped its first conference game of the season earlier in the day at the North Area Athletic Complex. Ralston Valley (4-5, 2-1) defeated the Chargers 2-0 to give the winner of the A-West/Columbine showdown sole possession of first in the conference.
“We want to lead the league all season and our goal is to be league champs again,” Columbine senior Skylar Alward said. “Our main goal is to win league and go far in playoffs.”
Arvada West junior Madison Johnson (17) and Columbine sophomore Peyton Weber (15) battle at Lakewood Memorial Field. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
The current Rebels’ senior class has never not finished atop of the 5A Jeffco standings. Columbine has earned at least a share of the conference title since the 2014 season. During that stretch the Rebels have a 28-3-1 conference record.
Columbine pushed it league unbeaten streak to 17 games thanks to a stellar defensive effort and first-half goals from seniors Kaitlyn Weiser (13th minute) and Alward (31st minute).
“I thought the first half of the game we played really good soccer,” Todd said. “We sprayed the ball around, played the feet, shared the ball and put on a really good performance that resulted in two goals.”
A highlight for A-West (5-2, 2-1) was goalie Ashleigh Burr. The junior made a number of great saves to keep the Wildcats within striking distance.
Columbine junior Morgan Penrose (17) clears the ball away from Arvada West junior Hailey Johns. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
However, A-West offense couldn’t generate many offensive threats on Columbine senior goalie Madeline Samuelson, who recorded her sixth shutout in net this season.
“They are doing really well,” Alward said of the Rebels’ defensive back. “We strive for those shutouts. We are really doing well back there.”
The low scoring affair wasn’t shocking by any means. Columbine and A-West had combined to give up just eight goals and tallied eight shutout victories in their previous 14 games.
“It was a great dominate effort on our part,” Todd added.
Columbine squares off against Lakewood at 7 p.m. Monday, April 16, at Lakewood Memorial Field. The Rebels can extend their winning streak to six games.
The Wildcats return to Lakewood Memorial Field with a pair of conference games next week. A-West faces Chatfield (Tuesday, April 17) and Dakota Ridge (Friday, April 20) back at LMF.
Arvada West senior Jenna Colombo (9) keeps her feet as Columbine senior Skylar Alward takes a spill in the first half Friday at Lakewood Memorial Field. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
LITTLETON — Columbine has rebounded nicely since dropping its first loss of the season over a week ago. The Class 5A No. 4 Rebels beat Chatfield 16-5 on Friday.
LAKEWOOD — After taking its first loss of the year earlier this week, Class 5A No. 7 Lakewood boys lacrosse rebounded with a 18-10 win over Pine Creek on Friday.
LITTLETON — A walk-off victory is even sweeter when it comes against your biggest rival.
“It feels great,” Chatfield senior Kasey Koppelmaa said after the Chargers’ 6-5 victory over their chief baseball rival. “Columbine is always a good team. We’ve always had a really good game against them. It’s just unbelievable that we were able to get a great team victory today and climb through the adversity.”
Chatfield senior Will Russom delivered the game-winning hit for the Chargers against Columbine. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Chatfield (8-4, 3-0 in Class 5A Jeffco League) tasted the sweet taste of victory with a walk-off RBI single by senior Will Russom in the bottom of the eighth inning against Columbine on the Chargers’ home field. Russom drove in Koppelmaa to give Chatfield the victory in extra innings.
Columbine (8-3, 2-1) actually needed a huge hit of its own in the top of the seventh inning. The Rebels were trailing 5-4 and down to their final out. Junior Logan DeArment came through with an RBI single down the left-field line to drive in senior Frankie Shearn and tie the game at 5-5.
“I just needed to put the ball into play any way I could,” DeArment said with a 2-strike count. “I just tried to poke it over the infield. That’s what happened.”
A double-play in the top of the eighth inning put an abrupt end to the Rebels’ attempt to take the lead. Chatfield made quick work of ending the game in the bottom half of the frame to win its third straight conference game.
Chatfield coach Daniel Medina made all the right line-up moves as the Chargers stayed atop of the league standings. Medina allowed sophomore Jared Olsen to hit for himself after Olsen replaced Koppelmaa on the mound in the fifth inning.
“We made some good moves today,” Medina said. “It’s just great to have confidence in each kid.”
Columbine sophomores Luke Folsom (25) and Brady McLean (12) combined for 2 home runs and 3 RBIs on Saturday against Chatfield. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Olsen, who eventually picked up the win on the mound, delivered with a 2-run double with 2-outs in the bottom of the fifth inning that allowed Chatfield to regain the lead 5-4.
“I just told him (Olsen) it was his time to shine,” Koppelmaa said to Olsen before the sophomore’s at-bat in the bottom of the fifth inning. “I knew he would get the job done. He really grew as a baseball player today.”
Media decided to re-enter Koppelmaa, who hit a 2-run home run in the first inning, for Olsen in the bottom of the eighth inning. Koppelmaa did his job with a lead-off single and stole second base to get into scoring position for Russom.
“It’s a cool, calm and collective type of approach we are trying to have with these kids,” Medina said. “If we play fundamentally sound deep into the game we are going to be where we want to be. I think that happened today for sure.”
Chatfield is on the road against Bear Creek (Tuesday) and Arvada West (Thursday). The game against the Wildcats will be at Keli McGregor Field at All Star Park in Lakewood.
“I tell the guys to just take it pitch-by-pitch everyday,” Koppelmaa said. “Just play for your team and not yourself. We really did that today. I’m really excited to see where we’ll go.”
Columbine has another critical conference game when the Rebels host Ralston Valley (10-2, 3-0) on Tuesday, April 17. The Rebels are on the road later in the week when they travel to Dakota Ridge on Thursday, April 19.
“We have Ralston Valley next week and they have been doing really well,” DeArment said of the Mustangs that won their ninth straight game Saturday with a 7-4 league win over Lakewood. “That’s going to be a test for us. Hopefully we can beat them and get back into the swing of things.”
Chatfield senior Kasey Koppelmaa, left, fires to the plate as Columbine senior Frankie Shearn grabs a lead off first base. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Clear Creek has hired Scott Haebe, the longtime coach at Evergreen, to take over its boys basketball program.
Golddiggers athletic director David Schuessler announced the hire on Thursday night.
Haebe had been the head boys basketball coach at Evergreen for the past 26 seasons.
“Coach Haebe will bring his 26 years of head-coaching experience and a very successful philosophy with him to take on the challenge of building the same type of program that he built at Evergreen High School over the past 26 years,” Schuessler said.
Haebe will move from the Class 4A Cougars to the 2A Golddiggers, taking over for Jon Walker, whose team was 15-8 in his lone season last year. Clear Creek lost in the regional round last season.
Evergreen finished 19-6 last season, advancing to the 4A Sweet 16. They made the Great 8 in 2017, and have made the tournament every year since 2012 under Haebe. That includes five trips to at least the Sweet 16.
Sometimes, just before a race, a thought creeps into Arria Minor’s head.
You can’t do this, it says.
Then she fights back.
No, she says, I can do this.
And away she flies.
Minor, a junior at Denver East, has emerged as one of the top sprinters in the country. Last month, she ran the fastest 400-meter indoor time of any high school girl in the nation. Now, she’s turning her attention to the outdoor season — where she is a two-time defending Class 5A champion in the 100-, 200- and 400-meter races, as well as the reigning Gatorade athlete of the year.
And yet: “I feel like every time I run, I surprise myself, just being able to finish the race,” Minor said this week during practice at East.
(Renee Partridge/CHSAANow.com)
Last month, Minor ran a 52.74 at the New Balance Nationals Indoor, held annually at The Armory Track & Field Center in New York. No high school girl has run the event faster indoors this year.
“It’s not exactly an easy environment,” Denver East coach Steven Kiper said of that meet, noting the East Coast mentality that creeps into the competition, as well as the cramped Armory itself. “It can be really intimidating.”
So it allowed Minor to work on her approach to running, something she admitted she struggles with at times.
“When I run, I get anxiety, so that’s not good,” Minor said with a laugh. “But it definitely helps (going to an event like that). I learned new coping skills, things to calm me down before I run. That was good. And I think it was a good experience going all the way out there to the East Coast to run.”
Minor burst onto the scene as a freshman in 2016 at the prestigious Mullen Invite, setting meet records in the 100- and 200-meter races.
“It was my first really big meet in Colorado,” Minor recalled of the meet. “I wouldn’t say I was sheltered, but I didn’t really go to that many meets as a freshman. It was kinda scary, but I enjoyed it. And ever since then, I’ve still enjoyed the sport equally as much as I had when I was younger.”
Kiper has been working with Minor since she was in seventh grade. That meet showed a glimpse of something he’d seen in her early on.
“You could see that she had ability. It just needed to be developed,” he said. “I knew then by the end of her eighth-grade summer — she was starting to grow, she was starting to get taller and starting to get some muscles and fibers instead of those twigs — she’d be special.
“We just took our time. That was our thing: We were going to take our time. I’m in no hurry, there’s going to be plenty of time to grow, so let’s just take our time.”
Minor went on to win the 100, 200 and 400 at the 5A state meet that year — and then followed that up by doing the same as a sophomore last spring.
She is a two–time Class 5A girls track athlete of the year, and last season, she was named the state’s Gatorade athlete of the year, as well.
Now that she’s only a junior, Minor feels she’s shown major growth in her pre-race approach.
“Sometimes, before I run, I’m a mess, which isn’t good,” Minor said. “But I’ve gotten better at it. Especially being able to grow up, getting older, because my first state (meet), I was only 15. Now, I’m just more comfortable in my training and what I’m doing so I can perform better.”
Part of that pre-race approach has been managing expectations. Minor said she stays away from social media “before big meets,” and Kiper said they regularly talk about how to handle pressure.
“Media creates a lot of pressure,” the coach said, “so I said, ‘Hey you’ve got to somewhat ignore that, and just understand the excitement that they’re trying to generate. But don’t put it on yourself and wear pressure, because you’re going to do well.’”
(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Another part of that pre-race approach is something she seems to have a good grip on: “I’m usually pretty relaxed and chill,” Minor said. “But when I’m running, I’m definitely a whole nother person. I get super serious. I go over my race a million times in my head. Yeah, I turn into a different person.”
Said Kiper: “The mind of a focused athlete in competition is amazing.”
Minor took a three-week break after the indoor season, and then again starred at the Mullen Invite during her outdoor debut this spring. She won the 100 in 11.38 and the 200 in 23.23. Both marks would rank first in the state at this point, with the 200 time fast enough to break the state record of 23.29, but there was too much of a wind factor during each heat for the times to count toward state ranking.
Kiper stresses that he doesn’t like his athletes to worry about times, nor records.
“The thing about state records is you never know what conditions you’re going to get,” Kiper said. “The wind, the weather, the temperature, it factors in so drastically. And we just haven’t had a perfect hot Colorado meet towards state to really nail those times. So you’ve just got to say, ‘If they come, they come.’
“But the talent is there, the training is there, her ability is there to get them — if the weather cooperates,” Kiper added.
That’s not to say those records aren’t in Minor’s crosshairs.
“As long as I’m progressing within myself, I think the records will come,” Minor said. “But I just want to make sure I’m not falling back and I’m just keeping on moving forward.”
Remember this about Arria Minor: She’s only a junior. Her future is wide open. She has a long list of colleges recruiting her — “Pretty much everybody,” Kiper said — and the 2020 Olympics Trials are “a focus, definitely,” Minor said. Kiper said that Minor has a great chance of hitting qualifying-standards for the Olympic Trials as soon as this summer.
“She’s capable of being super, especially in the (400),” Kiper said, “but I think, and I see, a lot of growth in the 100 and the 200, as well, in her future past her college years. It’s there.”
For now, Minor is focused on what’s immediately ahead. Including the state meet this spring.
Among her goals in May?
“Weather,” she said with a laugh, referencing the massive snowstorm that delayed last year’s state meet. “I hope the weather is good so I can drop some good times.”
LAKEWOOD — Green Mountain sophomore Trey Towndrow’s laser shot late in the fourth quarter Wednesday afternoon gave the Rams’ boys lacrosse program something it couldn’t get last year: a victory over rival Conifer.
The Rams (5-2, 1-0 in Class 4A Foothills League) scored an impressive 4-3 victory over the defending conference champions at Trailblazer Stadium.
Conifer goalie Rocko Fillweber (1) gets some help from the post as Green Mountain’s Ben Fonte (6) has his shot ring off the post. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
“It’s really big,” said Towndrow, who scored a pair of goals. “We needed this one being our first conference win and moving forward with it.”
The Lobos, ranked No. 10 in the latest CHSAANow.com 4A boys lacrosse poll, easily handled Green Mountain 16-3 last season. Conifer (3-5, 0-2) got out to a good start with an 8-5 victory over two-time defending 4A state champion Valor Christian, but since that win the Lobos have lost 5 of 6 games.
“There are so many teams that have upset other teams we didn’t know what was going to happen,” Towndrow said. “Obviously, Conifer was really good last year and lost some good seniors. Every team is different every year.”
The difference in the first of a boys lacrosse triple-header Wednesday at Trailblazer Stadium was the goaltending by Green Mountain’s Ryan Burdi. The junior shut out the Lobos until Conifer sophomore Hayden Lieberman scored back-to-back goals with under six minutes to play in the third quarter.
Green Mountain goalie Ryan Burdi has held five opponents to 5 goals or less in 5 games this season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Green Mountain led 3-0 in the second half, but three straight goals tied things up with just less than 10 minutes left in the fourth quarter. However, the Rams’ defense and Burdi didn’t allow the Lobos to score in the final minutes.
“Our goalie (Ryan Burdi) is probably the best goalie in 4A,” Green Mountain coach Nate Hallahan said. “He is doing a really good job leading our defense.”
Hallahan admitted his squad is having problems scoring goals at times, but the Rams’ offense put just enough in the back of the net against another solid goalie performance by Conifer junior Rocko Fillweber.
Junior Tanner Wagner scored the lone goal of the first half to give Green Mountain a 1-0 lead. Towndrow and senior Ben Fonte extended the Rams’ lead to 3-0 early in the third quarter before Conifer made its run.
Conifer senior Kyle Butler tied the game at 3-3 with 9:56 left in the fourth quarter before Towndrow put in the final goal of the game.
Conifer’s Cole Hollander (16) attempts to get a shot off despite the effort of Green Mountain freshman Ethan Domagala. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
“Give the ball to No. 2 and do something with it,” Hallahan joked talking about drawing up the eventual game-winning goal by Towndrow. “He is a special athlete and becoming a better and better lacrosse player for sure.”
Conifer has an uphill battle to repeat as conference champions with two league losses already. Rival Evergreen (8-1, 1-1) defeated the Lobos 8-6 before spring break.
“We’ve just got to get back to physical, hard practices,” Conifer coach Dak Riecke said about regrouping after the Lobos’ fifth loss in six games. “We’ve got to get back to the drawing board and what we know … the basics of lacrosse.”
The Lobos are back on the field with a non-league game against Eagle Valley in Gypsum on Monday, April 16.
Green Mountain has a huge showdown against Golden at 7:30 p.m. this Friday night back at Trailblazer Stadium. The Demons (7-3, 1-0) won their league opener Wednesday against Clear Creek by a score of 20-0.
Green Mountain junior Gavin Forrest (33) absorbs a check by Conifer junior Mitch Marinaro. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)