Archive for June, 2018

Valarie Allman, Silver Creek alum, wins discus at USATF Outdoor Championships

Silver Creek alum Valarie Allman won a national title on Thursday when she won the discus at the U.S.A. Track and Field Outdoor Championships.

Allman, who graduated from Silver Creek in 2013, won the event with a throw of 63.55 meters, or 208 feet, six inches. It is her first national title.

“During it, you’re kind of just taking it moment by moment,” Allman told USATF after the event. “We always say that the train’s gonna take off, and you’ve got to jump on when it starts to go.”

Allman recently graduated from Stanford, where she was a six-time All-American, and twice won the discus at the Pac-12 championships.

Her championship-winning throw on Thursday also broke a Stanford record that had stood since 1983.

Allman’s throw is the longest by an American this season.

At Silver Creek, Allman set the all-classification state record in the discus, a mark (183-03) which still stands through this past season. She was a two-time champion in the discus.

Allman was also co-valedictorian at Silver Creek.

Q&A: New CSSD 11 athletic director Chris Noll on challenges that come with his new job

Doherty Chris Noll

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

For years, Chris Noll has preached we before me. It has been a big part in his construction of the athletic culture that stands today at Doherty High School.

Expectations are high for the athletes, both on the field and in the classroom.

Now Noll is taking on a greater challenge. Two weeks ago, he was named the Colorado Springs School District 11 athletic and activities director. Now he’s tasked with giving four high schools the devotion that he gave to Sparta.

His new role will be filled with learning curves and challenges, but after a conversation with Noll about expectations for himself and the schools, he seems more than up to the task.

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Question: What’s the biggest challenge that you see when it comes to taking on an entire district rather than being in charge of a single athletic department?

Noll: Truly, finding the culture and how things work at every single school. That’s going to be the biggest challenge and once you figure that out, then you can start making some suggestions and start helping shape and mold and form (each athletic department).

Mitchell is going to be a complete rebuild with a brand new athletic director; the whole nine yards. It’s going to be getting in there and helping somebody. It’s assisting Coronado and Palmer with what they already have going and then helping (new Doherty AD) Stephanie (Leasure) get her feet under and figuring out what she wants to keep at Doherty and what she wants to change.

Ultimately though, figuring out the culture for all the buildings.

Music Mitchell

(Jenn Roberts-Uhlig/CHSAANow.com)

Q: Do you find that with a situation with Mitchell where it’s going to be a complete rebuild that your attention will be there more than the other schools because they have a foundation in place?

Noll: I do think that (at first) I’m going to spend more time at Mitchell and Doherty than I will at Coronado and Palmer.

At Doherty, it’s going to be mentoring and assisting Stephanie as she gets her feet underneath herself and learning the role of athletic director. The culture at Doherty is pretty much set. Everybody knows it’s a “we before me” thing and she is going to keep that. The coaches want to keep that and it’s just going to be taking it and running with it.

At Mitchell, there’s a brand new athletic director and at the end of the day, I think they’re looking to make some major changes and do some things, so I’m going to spend a lot of time there, not only helping a new athletic director that hasn’t been in that building, but helping a guy figure out how to be an AD. How to follow CHSAA rules, how to do all this stuff for CHSAA and those things.

I think I’ll be spending more time in those two schools, but I think I’m going to spend a lot of time in the schools in general. I’m committed to the schools as a part of this new job. I’m not a paper pusher, it’s just not who I am and not how I’m built. I’m a people-person so I need to get where the people are which is in the schools.

Q: I always hear people talk about getting into education to impact kids, but it always feels like the deeper they get into administration, the further away they get from the kids. You’re a very student-oriented guy so what are you going to do to make sure that doesn’t happen?

Noll: That’s part of what I have to figure out. I’m a big student recognition person. I’m all about student recognition. Part of it is just getting with the kids and getting in the buildings.

Mountain Vista Coronado baseball

(Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

We’re going to start a program where we recognize a male and female athlete of the month. One of the schools has already asked me to help with a leadership council and come in and work with the male population of that school in terms of their captains and student leaders.

Part of it is working with each athletic director and figuring out how I can be more involved and more active with their kids and how can I assist building what they’re trying to build with their kids.

Q: As a D11 alum, a former teacher, coach and athletic director and now the district athletic director, do you have a strong sense of what this district is about and what needs to happen for each school to be successful?

Noll: I do have a strong sense of it. You don’t truly understand exactly what’s going on until you get into the building and get your feet on the ground.

We played Coronado and Palmer in almost every sport and we play them twice in most sports so I have an idea of what’s going on in those schools, but part of our deal is that we have a brand new superintendent. I got a chance to sit down today with our new superintendent, Michael Thomas. I’m super excited to work for Michael Thomas.

He’s coming to us from Minnesota and he wants to hear our vision and he’s all about students and recognizing students and doing what’s best for students. I’m looking forward to that as well.

I am challenging myself and I have sold it to my district that I will be in buildings and not in Garry Barry Stadium.

Q: When you look at what you’ve done with the CHSAA Legislative Council, as a district AD you’re just as tied in to the Class 4A Colorado Springs Metro League as well as the 5A CSML. How will you make sure you’re acting in the interests of everyone and not one side over the other?

Noll: I think there’s an opportunity for your voice to be heard in different ways. It’s obvious that I have a different voice now. I just don’t speak on behalf of Sparta, but I speak on behalf of Colorado Springs School District 11.

I am no longer on the Legislative Council representing the 5A Colorado Springs Metro League. I think there’s a different way for my voice to be heard for our district. I’m the football (committee) chairperson.

When you serve as the chair of a committee like football you, in essence, are serving all of Colorado football and not just 5A.

I’m still on the basketball committee and recently, (commissioner) Rhonda Blanford-Green has asked me to serve on the handbook committee. That handbook committee is starting to get a bit of traction and it’s going to make it’s going make some policy and do some things that will help all schools.

My voice is different and I do represent four schools now, but I do think there’s an opportunity for your voice to be heard and you just have to go about it different.

Q: What are some of the great things going on at D11 that you’re going to be able to promote and put out there that maybe haven’t been as much in the spotlight in recent years?

Noll: I think that’s part of me going in and finding culture. When you look at the academic success that the Palmer teams have had, they won three or four academic team championships this year.

That’s a big deal.

I’m anxious to see what Coronado does now that they’re going from 5A to 4A because I think their success is going to go through the roof.

And when you look at Mitchell you have to look at what they’re doing. There’s an excitement that I’ve already felt from Mitchell. I sat in on an open community night where they selected their new athletic director. There’s an excitement there. The parents are excited. The coaches are excited. I attended a 7-on-7 (football) practice with Mitchell and met with their soccer coach. There’s an excitement there and you have to publicize that excitement.

Yesterday we established three social media accounts: Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. I don’t know if it’s one big thing that I know of yet, but I know of a bunch of small, exciting things and positivity and being positive is contagious.

If you can bring energy and positive energy to things, that’s contagious and people get excited about that.

And then you have to push that out and there and let people know about that. Our first step is getting that social media up and running, you see what we’ve done with the DHS Athletics accounts.

It’s doing the small things that ultimately lead to big things.

Q: I know that by the time your career is over, you want to leave D11 in a better place than you found it. What is your vision for district athletics over the next five to 10 years?

Noll: My vision is to make sure all kids in District 11 have access and availability to compete. We have some things going right now that are going to help some of our lower socio-economic schools with their activity fees and transportation and things like that.

One of of my big visions is how do we get some of our lower socio-economic areas the ability to compete with club sports. How do we give those kids the access and ability to go compete at that and really just compete.

I want there to be a big push in terms of facilities. Our facilities are lacking. When you look at the number of 4A and 5A high schools throughout the state of Colorado, most of them have turf fields, synthetic tracks and good facilities. We’re behind the times in terms of some of our athletic facilities.

People understanding their “why.” I’m a firm believer in that if you do business the right way, meaning having high-energy and being unbelievably positive and knowing your “why.” Coaches need to know their “why” and if their “why” is to win games and championships, then they’ve lost out on the meaning of high school athletics.

Getting coaches in there to really focus on the why will have a significant impact in league standing and what we’re doing. The winning and all that will take care of itself.

I want to make sure that we have a systematic approach in recognizing our student-athletes. How do we recognize what has been there before us at District 11 and get it back into our schools and back into our communities and get some excitement built around that?

That’s something I want to do. District 11 athletics has always been something special. I’ve been a part of it since I was in kindergarten. I’m 46-years-old. I’ve been a part of District 11 for 41 years.

We have to get some of that old guard back in to connect with some of our new folks and reboot what we do and how we do it and why we do it.

Doherty Palmer boys basketball

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

Valor Christian’s Anna Hall and Cole Sprout named Gatorade track athletes of the year

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics).

Anna Hall and Cole Sprout, both from Valor Christian, have been named the girls and boys track athletes of the year by Gatorade.

Each are the first track athlete from their school to be named a Gatorade player of the year.

Hall, a junior, recently set the national heptathlon record at the Great Southwest Classic. She also won the heptathlon at the USA Track & Field Junior National Championships to qualify for the World Junior Championships.

During the high school season, Hall won the 100- and 300-meter hurdles, as well as the long jump. She also finished second in the 200 meter dash.

After the season, Hall was named first-team all-state and the Class 4A athlete of the year.

Hall has a 4.15 GPA.

“Anna Hall is just exceptional in all areas,” said Niwot coach Maurice Henriques. “She’s probably the best athlete in the state, and maybe the best in the nation. She’s a role model for the state for her attention to detail to this sport in every area.”

Sprout, meanwhile, won both the 1,600 and 3,200 at the 4A state meet. He also set the all-classification record in the 3,200 during the Jeffco League Meet.

He was named first-team all-state in 4A after the season.

Sprout, who just finished his sophomore year, has a 3.98 GPA.

“Cole is an amazing kid with great discipline and determination to be the best he can be,” said Valor Christian head coach Brian Kula. “He is an outstanding student and goes about life with high character and humility.”

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

Participation database updated with 2017-18 figures

The CHSAA Participation Database has been updated with the latest info from the 2017-18 season for all sports and activities.

Shane Forrest is back as the volleyball coach at Montrose

State volleyball Montrose team

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Shane Forrest, who turned Montrose into a perennial participant at the state volleyball tournament, is returning as the coach of the school’s volleyball program.

The school announced her hire on Twitter on Wednesday:

Forrest stepped down from Montrose after the 2016 season following 20 seasons at the helm of the team. Included were six trips to the state tournament in her final 10 seasons. Over that span, Forrest’s teams went 180-84, averaging 18 wins per season.

Montrose finished 10-15 in Class 4A in its lone season under Heidi Voehringer last season.

Erie names Nick Mandia its first boys lacrosse coach, hiring him from Chatfield

Dakota Ridge Chatfield boys lacrosse

(Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com)

Nick Mandia will be charged with starting Erie’s new boys lacrosse program.

The Tigers announced Mandia’s hiring as coach on Wednesday morning. Mandia will be Erie’s first boys lacrosse coach as the team gets set to compete in Class 4A next spring. He spent the past two seasons as the coach at Chatfield, a 5A team.

Mandia’s Chargers were 13-19 in his time as coach.

“We are very excited to move forward with Coach Mandia as part of our athletic staff,” Erie athletic director Justin Carpenter said in a statement. “He has a wealth of experience in the sport, is a dynamic coach and teacher, and will push our kids to excellence!”

In addition to coaching at Chatfield, Mandia has also worked as a private coach/coordinator at LXTC/Denver Elite Lacrosse.

Mandia played at coached college lacrosse at Eastern University in Pennsylvania.

Discovery Canyon’s Lauren Gale will represent Team Canada at the 2018 IAAF U20 World Championships

Lauren Gale Discovery Canyon girls track

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

Lauren Gale is heading to Finland.

Gale, a recent graduate of Discovery Canyon, has been selected to be a part of Team Canada as it competes at the 2018 IAAF under-20 World Championships.

The 32-member team will travel to Tampere, Finland for the competition, which takes place from July 10-15.

Gale will run the 200 meters for Canada at Worlds. Her time of 23.96 at the Class 4A state meet in May is the third-fastest Canadian time in her age group this season.

A native of Ottawa, Gale moved to Colorado Springs from Canada in the summer of 2015. She made an immediate impact on the Colorado track scene.

In 2016, she finished first in the 100-, 200- and 400-meter 4A races.

Gale had hip surgery as a junior, and missed most of the 2017 track season, but still managed to qualify for three events at the state meet, and finished second in the 200, fourth in the 100 and helped Discovery Canyon placed second in the sprint medley relay.

This past spring, Gale again swept 4A’s 100, 200 and 400 races.

Gale, who previously represented Canada at the 2017 Youth Commonwealth Games, is signed to run track for Colorado State University.

Air Academy names Brandon Buchanan its new baseball coach

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

Air Academy has hired a coach with deep Colorado roots to take over its baseball program.

The Kadets announced that Brandon Buchanan will be the school’s new baseball coach on Twitter late Monday evening.

(Courtesy of Air Academy HS)

Buchanan was most recently an assistant at St. Mary’s under Bill Percy. He played high school baseball at Rocky Mountain under Scott Bullock, and then went on to play college baseball at Otero Junior College in La Junta before transferring to Nebraska-Kearney to finish his career.

Air Academy finished 8-11 this past spring under Ron Gorr. It was Gorr’s only season as coach.

In 2017, the Kadets went 19-6 in reaching the Class 4A state tournament for the second consecutive season.

Volleyballs donated at state tournament delivered to schools in Puerto Rico

Each year, CHSAA participates in USA Volleyball’s Leave a Ball Behind program during its state volleyball tournament.

The program encourages teams to donate gently used volleyballs signed with messages of encouragement and hope. Those balls are then provided to children in undeserved parts of the United States and countries around the world, in the hopes it gives them an opportunity to play and enjoy the sport of volleyball.

Last month, Bradley University in Illinois took those volleyballs, including the ones donated during the CHSAA state tournament, to schools in Morovis, Puerto Rico. Morovis was hit heavily by Hurricane Maria last September, and went nine months without electricity.

Photos of those volleyballs being donated are below.

Chicago to host 99th annual NFHS Summer Meeting

(Roman Boed/Flickr)

INDIANAPOLIS, IN — The 99th annual National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Summer Meeting will be held June 28-July 2 at the Chicago Marriott Downtown Magnificent Mile in Chicago, Illinois.

The NFHS is the national leadership organization for high school athletic and performing arts activities and is composed of state high school associations in the 50 states plus the District of Columbia.

More than 800 individuals are expected to attend the Summer Meeting, including staff members and board members from the 51-member associations.

CHSAA’s Tom Robinson and Bert Borgmann are both scheduled to present during the meeting. All CHSAA administrative staff members and many members of the CHSAA Board of Directors will also be in attendance to attend various workshops, discussions and panels.

The 36th annual induction ceremony of the National High School Hall of Fame and discussion of several key issues affecting high school sports and performing arts highlight this year’s agenda.

Twelve individuals will be inducted into the National High School Hall of Fame, including Tom Osborne and Dick Fosbury.

Osborne was a three-sport standout (football, basketball, track and field) at Hastings (Nebraska) High School in the early 1950s before becoming one of the most successful coaches in college football history. Fosbury developed the upside-down, back-layout leap known as the Fosbury Flop at Medford (Oregon) High School and later perfected it by winning the gold medal at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City.

Other former high school athletes in the 2018 class are Nicole Powell, one of Arizona’s top all-time girls basketball players during her days at Mountain Pointe High School in Phoenix who later excelled at Stanford University and in the WNBA, and Carrie Tollefson, who won five state cross country championships and eight individual track titles at Dawson-Boyd High School in Dawson, Minnesota, before winning individual and team NCAA titles while competing at Villanova University and qualifying for the 2004 U.S. Olympic team.

Five outstanding coaches will be inducted in the 2018 class, including Miller Bugliari, No. 2 nationally in boys soccer coaching victories with a 850-116-75 record in 58 years at The Pingry School in Basking Ridge, New Jersey, and Dorothy Gaters, the Illinois state leader with 1,106 career victories in 42 years as girls basketball coach at John Marshall High School in Chicago who won her ninth Illinois High School Association state title earlier this year.

Other coaches who will be honored this year are Buddy Anderson, the winningest football coach in Alabama history with 329 victories the past 40 years at Vestavia Hills High School; Jeff Meister, girls and boys swimming coach at Punahou School in Honolulu, Hawaii, who has led his teams to a combined 34 Hawaii High School Athletic Association state championships; and Bill O’Neil, who retired last year after winning almost 1,300 games as the boys ice hockey, girls soccer and girls softball coach at Essex High School in Essex Junction, Vermont.

The other three members of the 2018 class are Roger Barr, who retired in 2015 after a 43-year career in high school officiating in Iowa, including the final 13 years as director of officials for the Iowa High School Athletic Association; Dick Neal, who retired in 2013 after a 34-year career as executive director of the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association; and Bill Zurkey, who retired in 2012 after an outstanding 35-year career as a choral director in three Ohio schools, including the final 25 years at Avon Lake High School.

Among the topics that will be discussed at the 52 workshops during the NFHS Summer Meeting are esports, recruiting and retaining officials, overuse and sport specialization, crowd control, social media, inclusion, digital ticketing, and participation by students in home, charter and virtual schools.

In addition, the Legal/Sports Medicine Workshop will be held at 1:00 p.m. on June 30. This event provides an ideal opportunity to discuss current legal and medical issues, as well as an open exchange among the attendees.

The Summer Meeting will kick off on June 29 with the Opening General Session featuring Mark Wood, original member and string master of the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Along with the 11th annual National High School Spirit of Sport Award ceremony, the NFHS will present its performing arts counterpart – the National High School Heart of the Arts Award – for the fifth time.

Marissa Walker of Waterford (Connecticut) High School will receive the National High School Spirit of Sport Award, and Cecelia Egan of Riverside St. Mary Academy-Bay View (Rhode Island) will receive the National High School Heart of the Arts Award.

The Second General Session on June 30 will feature NFHS President Jerome Singleton and NFHS Executive Director Bob Gardner, and the Closing General Session on July 2 will feature speaker and author, Aaron Davis.

The Summer Meeting Luncheon will be held at 12 p.m. on July 1 and will feature the presentation of NFHS Citations to 12 individuals. State association honorees include Steve Timko of New Jersey, Melissa Mertz of Pennsylvania, Keith Alexander of Louisiana, Craig Ihnen of Iowa, David Cherry of Kansas, T.J. Parks of New Mexico, Becky Anderson of Utah and Trevor Wilson of Wyoming.

Other Citation recipients are Joe Manjone of Alabama (NFHS Officials Association), Scott Evans of New Mexico (NFHS Coaches Association), Alan Greiner of Iowa (NFHS Music Association) and Tara Tate of Illinois (NFHS Speech/Debate/Theatre Association).

The NFHS Summer Meeting will conclude at 6 p.m. July 2 with the induction of the 2018 class of the National High School Hall of Fame.