Archive for June, 2018

New NFHS executive director Karissa Niehoff: Kids are “our reason why”

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

CHICAGO — Karissa Niehoff, set to become the sixth full-time executive director of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) on August 1, addressed the gathered membership at the annual summer meeting on Saturday.

Speaking in her role to the group as executive director elect for the first time, Niehoff talked about her background as a teacher and coach, and then transition into a school administrator.

For the past eight years, she has served as the executive director of the Connecticut Association of Schools-Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference.

“I never would have dreamed I would have this opportunity,” Niehoff said. “I can promise you that my commitment to the Federation is as strong as ever. And that commitment will manifest through a willingness to communicate, a willingness to collaborate, and compassion.”

Niehoff will succeed Bob Gardner as executive director. Gardner is retiring this summer following 18 years at the NFHS, including eight as executive director.

“Truly, I think that the work that we do is the greatest work that’s possible to do, and that is building the future of this country through our kids,” Niehoff said. “As Bob said earlier, each of you in this room are the most special people in the country, and the most capable of doing this work.”

She then commented on the importance of high school activities, drawing back to Friday’s opening ceremony which featured a show choir from a local high school, and also awards to recognize individuals in sports and performing arts.

“We invite kids to talk about their reason why (they participate in high school activities),” Niehoff said. “I think, watching the kids, and listening to the kids (on Friday) — inside all of us, that’s our reason why. It’s the kids.”

Niehoff concluded by looking ahead.

“I look forward to taking the Federation forward — being very respectful of the past, realistic about the present, and optimistic about the future,” she said.

Palmer Ridge’s Ty Evans has a competitive edge that makes him stand out on the football field

Ty Evans hates losing.

It doesn’t matter if it’s with his Palmer Ridge teammates on the football field or by himself when he’s playing pickup basketball at lunch against one of his friends.

“We play one-on-one in basketball every day at lunch and it gets heated,” Evans said. “We start throwing elbows and it gets very physical. That’s the way I am and that’s the way I like being. That’s what has gotten me to this point.”

“This point” is his standing as one of the top quarterbacks in the state of Colorado. His talents have also made him a target for some notable football programs in the country.

But his goal has never been to be good enough to get college offers. He wants to be great. His work ethic and attitude have him on track to do just that.

Back in January he decided that he was staying close to home and play for the University of Colorado.

Since then he has picked up offers from Michigan, Texas A&M, Ole Miss and Alabama. With every new offer, he gets asked about changing his commitment. He’s done it before, so what’s to stop him from doing it again?

“I usually don’t go into it in-depth,” Evans said. “It’s gotten to the point where I do look at people and tell them that it’s my decision. Back off. You don’t have to go to workouts at 6 a.m. every day. It might seem cool on Twitter to commit to Texas A&M or wherever, but it’s my journey and that’s where I feel like I need to be.”

When he says it like that on a hot June day, sitting in a Starbucks in Monument, there is no need to press further.

(Chris Fehrm/MaxPreps)

For the last two years he has been preparing himself for the next stage of his football life. And yes, originally it was supposed to be in Arkansas. But things changed. He decided that Boulder was the best fit and he has put himself in a position to graduate in December and enroll at CU in the spring. That way he can get going on spring football where he can hopefully get a head start on his collegiate career.

“Even if I was staying here for the last semester, it’s not like I’d be chilling and not doing anything,” he said. “If I was here, I’d be working out twice as much.

“I see it as I can either stay here and finish out my senior year or I can go to Boulder and start the next chapter and start pushing myself in other ways,” he added. “You know, mentally into the groove of what college football is like. Getting the speed down. It’s honestly just an easy decision to make.”

But before he packs his things and heads up to Boulder, he still has a few loose ends to tie up. Next week, he’ll compete alongside some of the best football players in the country at The Opening in Dallas.

He earned his way there through his performance at the Elite 11 camp earlier this summer. Notable alumni of the Elite 11 camp include NFL quarterbacks Matthew Stafford and Andrew Luck.

That’s pretty good company considering that Evans often hears whispers that his size (he’s listed as 6-2, 190) and his home state don’t set him up to play a high level of football. He hears it quite often and refuses to let it get to him.

“You hear it from other guys on other teams all the time,” Evans said. “It’s more the national guys. ’He’s from Colorado. He’s skinny. He’s a three-star. Why would we offer him?’ Stuff like that. Okay. We’ll see. Every team that doesn’t recruit me, respectfully, you made a mistake.”

His numbers can’t tell the whole story, but they certainly add some substance. He has thrown for 6,788 yards and 73 touchdowns. His career competition percentage is over 60 percent and he’s only been picked off 12 times in his 687 passing attempts.

He was named the Class 3A player of the year, and the Gatorade player of the year in Colorado — the first junior to do so since Christian McCaffrey in 2012.

All this, of course, helped Palmer Ridge win the 3A championship last fall.

On the sideline of any given Palmer Ridge game, local writers and television reporters often stand in awe as he slings the football all over the field.

The chatter is often the same week in and week out. Evans is a dude. And dudes win football games.

(Chris Fehrm/MaxPreps)

“People look on Twitter and they see a nice guy, a QB, all those things,” he says. “When it comes to what’s happening between those hashes, there’s nobody else that’s going to be as competitive as me. We have a job to get done and I’m going to stay calm, cool and collected but I am going to get that job done.”

He wants to get the job done next week at The Opening. He wants to get the job done 14 more times this fall and try to lead the Bears to back-to-back state championships. He wants to get the job done at CU and earn that starting job.

“Personally, I always get to the point where I’m thinking about what’s next,” he said. “What’s the next thing I can be getting ready for? After the state championship game it was about going and winning another one. After that, it’s about going and getting the starting spot at CU no matter how long that takes. Then you have to perform and just keep building on that.”

And that’s what makes him on of Colorado’s standout athletes heading into the 2018-19 year. He never takes the time to rejoice or brag about his most recent victory. He instantly turns and looks at the next task to accomplish.

He enjoys moving forward. And high school sports fans in Colorado enjoy watching him along the way.

Palmer Ridge Erie football

(Matt Daniels/mattdanphoto.com)

Boulder names Ryan Bishop new football coach

Boulder Arapahoe football

(Michael Hankins/TGWstudios.com)

Boulder High School has looked to its own ranks for the next head football coach. According to the school athletic department’s Twitter account, Ryan Bishop has been named as the new coach of the Panthers.

Bishop is also currently listed as the girls golf coach for Boulder.

He has spent time on the football staff for the Panthers and has coached basketball as well.

Boulder went 3-7 in 2017 under coach Vincent Smith. The school made the playoffs in 2015, but lost to Legacy in the first round. The Panthers finished 5-5 that year and have not had a winning season since.

The hire of Bishop is the latest change in football coaches heading into the 2018 season.

Mountain View football coach Bart Mayes recovering from accident

LOVELAND — In the days following Bart Mayes’ injury in a car accident in Loveland on Tuesday, the outpouring of support has meant the world to his family, his wife says.

CHSAA staff and Board members arrive in Chicago for NFHS Summer Meeting

(Mariano Mantel/Flickr)

CHICAGO — Nine CHSAA staff members and members of the Association’s Board of Directors arrived here Thursday to attend the annual NFHS Summer Meeting.

The meeting — which is the 99th in history — is a five-day event featuring various workshops, panels, discussions, sessions and awards. It is an opportunity to exchange ideas on a nationwide scale.

Three CHSAA staff members will be leading discussions:

  • Assistant commissioner Bethany Brookens will lead the fine arts roundtable, which includes music and speech.
  • Assistant commissioner Bert Borgmann is presenting a session on participating in multiple sports and activities.
  • Associate commissioner Tom Robinson is presenting on students participating from home, charter and virtual schools.

The Summer Meeting also includes the NFHS Hall of Fame induction ceremony, as well as the ceremonies for the Spirit of Sport and Heart of the Arts awards.

Next year’s Summer Meeting, the 100th, will be held in Indianapolis — where the NFHS is headquartered.

Anna Hall, Arria Minor named to USA Track and Field’s U20 roster

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

Anna Hall (Valor Christian) and Arria Minor (Denver East) were each named to USA Track and Field’s under-20 roster, and will represent their country at the 2018 IAAF World U20 Championships in Finland next month.

Both girls will be seniors at their schools this fall.

The U20 World Championships are being held in Tampere, Finland from July 10-15.

Hall will be competing in the heptathlon, an event she won at the USATF Junior Outdoor Championships earlier this month. Hall set the national high school heptathlon record at the Great Southwest Track and Field Classic on June 1, scoring 5,798 points.

During the state championships this past spring, Hall won the long jump, and the 100 and 300 hurdles, setting a state meet record for Class 4A, and also breaking the previous all-classification record by finishing in 40.76. She was also second in the 200.

After the season, Hall was named the 4A athlete of the year as part of the all-state teams, and also Colorado’s Gatorade girls track athlete of the year.

State track Arria Minor Denver East

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Minor will represent the U.S. as part of the relay pool in the 4×400. She finished third in the event at the USATF Junior Outdoor Championships, behind two collegiate runners.

An emerging star nationally, Minor set all-classification records in the 200 and 400 at the 5A state meet this season.

Minor’s time of 51.92 in the 400 is the fastest by a high school girl this season. She also had the fastest indoor time (52.74) by a high school girl.

Minor was named the 5A girls track athlete of the year as part of the all-state teams after the season.

The duo now give Colorado three representatives at the 2018 IAAF World U20 Championships. Discovery Canyon’s Lauren Gale will represent Canada.

Discovery Canyon’s Ashten Prechtel announces commitment to Stanford women’s basketball

Ashten Prechtel, one of the state’s top girls basketball players, has committed to Stanford.

Prechtel will be a senior at Discovery Canyon in the fall. She announced her commitment to the Cardinal on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/ash10prechtel/status/1011413639457193984

Rated as the No. 25 recruit nationally by espnW, Prechtel had narrowed her top three choices to UCLA, Texas and Stanford.

As a junior last season, the 6-foot-5 Prechtel averaged 18.4 points and 14.3 rebounds per game in helping the Thunder go 15-9 and reach the Class 4A state tournament. The 14.3 rebounds were the second-most of any player in the state, and led all 3A, 4A and 5A players.

In May, Prechtel tried out for the USA Basketball under-17 national team, and was one of the final 45 players as part of that tryout.

She joins Regis Jesuit’s Fran Belibi (2019) and Cherry Creek’s Jana Van Gytenbeek (2020) in committing to Stanford.

Find more 2019 recruiting commitments in our database.

Eaglecrest’s Jake Wiley commits to play football at CU

Eaglecrest Grandview football

(Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)

Jake Wiley is set to play college football at the University of Colorado.

Wiley, a rising senior from Eaglecrest, committed to CU on Saturday night, announcing his decision on Twitter:

“Thank you to every school who has recruited me to play for their program, but one stuck out the most,” Wiley wrote.

A 6-foot-5, 250-pound offensive guard, Wiley also had offers from Colorado State, Northern Colorado, Arizona State, Oklahoma State, Washington State and UNLV.

Wiley is the fourth in-state player to commit to CU for the 2019 recruiting class, following Ty Evans (Palmer Ridge), Joshia Davis (Valor Christian), and Austin Johnson (Highlands Ranch).

Crested Butte alum Emma Coburn captures steeplechase title at USA Track’s Outdoor Championships

(USATF)

Emma Coburn, who graduated from Crested Butte in 2008, won her seventh national title at the USA Track & Field Outdoor Championships on Saturday.

Coburn won the 3000-meter steeplechase in 9:17.70. It was the seventh consecutive year she’d won the event at the American championship, including Olympic Trials years. A two-time Olympian, Coburn also won the steeplechase at the World Championships last summer.

“I was just trying to be relaxed, trying to run my own race,” Coburn told USATF after the race. “I was just really trying to focus on running a race that maximized my skills, given the conditions, given that it would be maybe warm, maybe a little windy.”

At Crested Butte, Coburn won multiple championships over the course of her career in the 800, 1600 and 3200 races at the state track and field championships.

She went on to compete in track and cross country at the University of Colorado, and won two NCAA championships.

Ralston Valley names Jess Sponenberg its new volleyball coach

Denver East Horizon volleyball

(Pam Wagner/CHSAANow.com)

Ralston Valley has hired Jess Sponenberg to be its new volleyball coach, athletic director Jim Hynes confirmed on Sunday.

Sponenberg was previously the head coach at Horizon from 2010-2015. She is also a founder of the Juggernaut Volleyball club, which started in 2005.

Sponenberg has experience coaching athletes from 5- to 18-years-old.

She has helped more than 70 athletes receive college scholarships.

At Ralston Valley, Sponenberg will take over for Debbie Erickson. The Mustangs finished 12-13 last season in Class 5A.

Since 2013, the program has averaged more than 14 wins per season.