Month: November 2018

  • Photos: Sedgwick County wins fourth-straight championship in 8-man football

    JULESBURG — Sedgwick County captured a fourth-straight 8-man football championship with a 58-14 win over Hoehne on Saturday.

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  • Photos: Pueblo East tops Erie, soars back into 3A football title game

    PUEBLO — Pueblo East is returning to the Class 3A football championship game after a 35-17 win over Erie on Saturday.

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  • Replay of live coverage: Cherry Creek vs. Columbine in the 5A football semifinals

    LAKEWOOD — Cherry Creek and Columbine are facing off on Friday night in the lone playoff football game in Colorado. Their Class 5A semifinal begins at 7 p.m.

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  • Cherry Creek beats Columbine in tough 5A football semifinal, heads to title game

    LAKEWOOD — Cherry Creek is headed to Mile High following a close win over Columbine in a tough Class 5A football semifinal on Friday night.

    The Bruins got a key fumble recovery from Gus Zilinskas late in the fourth quarter, and Seamus Henderson picked up a crucial first down that allowed them to run out the clock and beat Columbine 10-7.

    Cherry Creek quarterback Alex Padilla (8) gets pressure from Columbine senior Ben Earnest (94) during the first quarter Friday at Jeffco Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “I knew we needed one first down,” said Henderson, who had 25 carries for 109 yards. “I was thinking I can get this.”

    On the final drive of the game, Cherry Creek faced a third down and 13 from their own 47. Henderson took a pitch around the left side for a 28-yard gain. With Columbine out of timeouts, Cherry Creek took a knee twice to seal the win at Jeffco Stadium.

    “He is a tough little joker,” Cherry Creek coach Dave Logan said of Henderson. “He is 170 pounds, but he thinks he is about 195. I thought he made some big runs in the second half.”

    Columbine was marching late in the fourth quarter, and drove all the way down to Cherry Creek’s 25-yard-line, but the Bruins’ defense, led by Marcus Miller, got to Rebels star quarterback Logan DeArment in the backfield, and forced a fumble. Zilinskas recovered, giving Cherry Creek the ball with three minutes remaining.

    “I though our defense made some key stops and that critical turnover at the end was the difference,” Logan said. “(DeArment) is such a great player we thought when the game was on the line he was going to have the ball.”

    Columbine’s lone scoring drive came late in the first half. The Rebels (12-1 record) had a 13-play, 79-yard drive that was capped by a 3-yard touchdown run by DeArment with less than a minute remaining in the opening half. It gave Columbine a 7-3 halftime lead.

    Cherry Creek junior Seamus Henderson (25) works through an arm tackle Friday night at Jeffco Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “We knew coming into it we were both heavy run teams. We knew it would be a dogfight,” Columbine junior running back Adam Harrington said after the season-ending loss. “Every yard and every inch counts. We fought, but unfortunately it didn’t go our way.”

    Cherry Creek’s lone touchdown drive came on a monster 14-play drive that covered 58 yards. Henderson carried the ball eight times on the eventual game-winning driving, including the 6-yard touchdown run with 10:46 left in the fourth quarter.

    The Bruins (12-1) took a 10-7 victory with the score.

    “I just wanted to get into the end zone for my team,” Henderson said of the Bruins’ go-ahead touchdown run. “Jayle (Stacks) was right there. He put on a stellar block and all I had to do was get into the end zone. He set it up for me.”

    The only other score was Cherry Creek striking first with a 37-yard field goal from Mac Willis midway through he second quarter.

    Cherry Creek senior Cormier Euell (7) puts pressure on Columbine quarterback Logan DeArment during the first half Friday at Jeffco Stadium. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    It will be the 17th championship game appearance in program history for the Bruins, and first since 2014. They have won nine championships.

    “What I told my team is we beat a great team,” Logan said. “That is a hellacious Columbine team. I’m proud of my kids for hanging in there.”

    An interesting fact coming into Friday night’s game was it was the first regular or postseason meeting between Cherry Creek and Columbine in more than a decade. The Bruins and Rebels hadn’t played each other since a 5A state semifinal game Nov. 22, 2008 at Stutler Bowl. Creek won that meeting 27-25 to advance to the state title game where Mullen, coached by Logan, came away with a 20-16 victory.

    Columbine coach Andy Lowry and Logan are the top two active career winningest football coaches in the largest classification in Colorado. Lowry has 261 wins to ago along with his five state titles he has coaching the Rebels.

    Logan has piled up 268 victories over the span of 26 careers coaching at Arvada West, Chatfield, Mullen and Cherry Creek. The Wheat Ridge High School and University of Colorado graduate is the only prep coach in Colorado to win 5A state titles at four different schools.

    “We played 48 minutes and that’s a characteristic of this team all year long,” Logan said of his current team. “You need an effort like that to beat really good teams.”

    That 5A title matchup is scheduled for Saturday (Dec. 1) afternoon at Broncos Stadium at Mile High. Cherry Creek will face the winner of tomorrow’s semifinal between Valor Christian and Grandview.

  • Stratton/Liberty strikes early to beat Kit Carson for the 6-man football title

    (JJ Seaward/CHSAANow.com)

    STRATTON — Stratton/Liberty got some redemption for their only regular-season loss, using a big first quarter to defeat Kit Carson 57-18 to claim the 6-man state football championship.

    “It is an amazing feeling — tough loss during the regular season — but we knew that we just had to get back to work and it was time to go again,” Stratton/Liberty sophomore Jaret Lichty said. “We knew that we were probably going to see them again, and when it was time to see them we were ready to go.” 

    During the regular season, Kit Carson (11-1) handed Stratton/Liberty (12-1) their lone loss of the season in a 28-21 nailbiter at Kit Carson High School.

    Putting that loss behind them, the Knighted Eagles used their home field advantage on Saturday to jump up to a quick 23-0 lead to close out the first quarter due to a couple of touchdowns from senior running back Ethan Richmond and Jaret Lichty.

    “They just came out ready to play,” Stratton/Liberty head coach Toby Kechter said, “probably getting beat last year in the state championship was the best thing that could happen for this team. They were just focused and ready to play.”

    Looking to put a stop to the bleeding, Kit Carson was able to kick off the second quarter with a touchdown of their own to cut into the Stratton/Liberty lead. Carrying some momentum, Kit Carson continued to dig into the lead as Chris Bryan found the end zone to make it 23-12.

    But Stratton/Liberty continued to be lifted by the phenomenal performance from Lichty, who closed out the second quarter with two more touchdowns to help the Knighted Eagles take a firm 37-12 lead into halftime.

    “At halftime, he just said that the game is not over yet, we have to go and win the second half and that is how we played all season, we just had to keep on going,” Lichty said.

    Lichty continued to have a phenomenal showing, as he opened up the third quarter with another rushing touchdown to extend Stratton/Liberty’s lead.

    Closing out the game, Stratton/Liberty senior fullback Eltan Yarger put the game to bed with a couple of rushing touchdowns to help the Knighted Eagles come away with the 57-18 victory to claim the 6-man state title.

  • Photos: Cherry Creek football beats Columbine in 5A semifinals

    LAKEWOOD — Cherry Creek used a strong defensive effort, including a late fumble recovery, to beat Columbine 10-7 in the Class 5A football semifinals on Friday night.

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  • Replay of live coverage: Football championship games and semifinals

    The state football playoffs continue on Saturday afternoon with championship games and semifinals across the state.

    On the line today: championships in 2A, 1A, 8-man and 6-man. There are also semifinals in 5A, 4A and 3A.

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    Live games
    Class Game Time Notes
    6-man Stratton/Liberty vs. Kit Carson | Alternate 1 p.m. Video/Audio
    8-man Sedgwick County vs. Hoehne 1 p.m. Video
    1A Strasburg vs. Limon 1 p.m. Video
    2A La Junta vs. Platte Valley | Alternate 1 p.m. Video/Audio
    5A Grandview vs. Valor Christian 1 p.m. Video
    4A Montrose vs. Loveland 1 p.m. Audio
    3A Palisade vs. Palmer Ridge 1 p.m. Audio
    3A Pueblo East vs. Erie 1 p.m. Video
    4A Ponderosa vs. Skyline 1 p.m. Video
      Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show 9:30 p.m. Audio
  • Valor Christian weathers Grandview’s rally to move to 5A football title game

    (Paige Stingley/Valor Christian Athletics)

    AURORA — With the season in the balance, Chase Lopez stepped in front of the pass and secured Valor Christian’s spot in the Class 5A football state championship game.

    Lopez, a junior, picked off Grandview’s two-point conversion attempt with 32 seconds left that would have tied the game. It helped Valor Christian secure a 31-29 win over the Wolves in the 5A semifinals.

    Lopez had given up a touchdown pass moments earlier.

    “I just got caught up in the moment,” he said after the game. “I’d let up a big score. I had to come back for my team. I knew I couldn’t let them down. I just had to make a big play somehow.”

    Said Valor Christian coach Ed McCaffrey: “He doesn’t blink. That’s Chase. It doesn’t matter what happens. He turns the page, and gets ready to play. And he’s a heck of a player.”

    Valor Christian built a 21-0 lead early in the first quarter, but Grandview wasn’t going to go quietly. Grandview rallied to cut the lead to 21-16 at halftime, and, following a late touchdown, 31-29 with 32 seconds to play.

    The ensuing two-point conversion was intercepted by Lopez, and Valor Christian recovered the onside kick. It set off a celebration on the Eagles’ sideline.

    Valor Christian will play Cherry Creek in the title game next Saturday at Broncos Stadium at Mile High.

    “It’s awesome,” said Valor Christian quarterback Luke McCaffrey, who accounted for three touchdowns. “We’re glad to be back. … There’s only two teams playing now, and we’re one of those that is lucky enough to have practice on Monday. We can’t wait to get back to the grind.”

    The wind — which was gusting up to 30 mph — played a huge factor on Saturday. All points, save for a field goal, were scored by teams when their offense was headed toward the south end of Legacy Stadium. 

    “It was really hard to move the ball,” Ed McCaffrey said of the wind.

    Valor Christian’s offense started early, in the form of a one-minute, eight-second opening drive that was capped by a 52-yard touchdown pass from McCaffrey to Marcus Staples.

    Valor Christian forced Grandview to go three-and-out, and then McCaffrey hit Zain Zinicola over his left shoulder for a 20-yard touchdown.

    After another three-and-out, Gavin Sawchuk burst up the middle for a 39-yard touchdown run. It was 21-0 at that point, and the first quarter ended that way.

    “It wasn’t big enough,” Ed McCaffrey said of the lead. “We knew they were good. We took some chances, because we knew 21 wasn’t going to be enough. They had the ability to come back and score.”

    As the second quarter opened, the teams switched sides of the field, and Grandview held Valor Christian with goal-to-go at the 7-yard-line. The Wolves marched down the field, 93 yards, and scored when Noah Schmidt went 29 yards for a touchdown.

    Grandview forced Valor Christian to punt on their next drive, and Trevor Greenlee blocked that punt and recovered it in the end zone. It was 21-13 at that point.

    Grandview forced another punt by Valor Christian, and an impressive 54-yard field goal from the Wolves’ Ian Oltman made it 21-16 at halftime.

    In the third quarter, the two teams traded punts until Valor put together a scoring drive with . Again, it was Luke McCaffrey providing some magic.

    Facing 3rd-and-19, McCaffrey was surrounded by the Grandview defense in the backfield, but he escaped and went 45 yards for a touchdown. That made it 28-16 Valor Christian.

    But Grandview was far from done.

    The Wolves marched down the field for an answering touchdown, this time Jordan Billingsley capped it with a 12-yard score. So it was 28-23 with 8:19 to go.

    By this time, the field was covered in snow — but the wind had all but disappeared. And Valor Christian’s Chase Lopez returned the ensuing kickoff to Grandview’s 25-yard-line. The drive resulted in an important 28-yard field goal by junior Brian Brogan, and a 31-23 lead for the Eagles.

    “If we didn’t get that,” Lopez said of the field goal, “I don’t know where we’d be right now.”

    Said Luke McCaffrey: “He’s stepped up in the best situations.”

    Grandview’s offense drove down the field for a final touchdown with 32 seconds to play, from Jacob Burr to Dayne Prim. But the two-point conversion was intercepted, sealing the Valor Christian win.

    (Paige Stingley/Valor Christian Athletics)
  • La Junta shuts down Platte Valley to win second 2A football title in three years

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    PUEBLO — It was only fitting that in the Home of Heroes heroics were on full display in the Class 2A football state title game.

    With his team up four points, La Junta senior Jon Nuschy sat back in zone coverage and Brendan Bunting slip underneath him. Quarterback Trevon Wehrman saw the route across the middle and took the air, hoping to lead his team to a come from behind win.

    But Nuschy jumped the route and picked off the ball.

    La Junta held on for a 7-3 win at the Neta and Eddie DeRose ThunderBowl, claiming its second state football title in the last three years. Nuschy scored the game’s only touchdown on a two-yard run and also grabbed that interception to kill the Broncos drive, and any chance taking the championship out of the Tigers’ hands.

    “That was a good football from the very start to the very end,” La Junta coach Ty Buderus said. “It was stressful, but the kids played their hearts out. So did Platte Valley. They played a heck of a football game. We were just lucky enough to come out on top.”

    Early on it looked like the game was going to feature a very different result. The Broncos (12-1 overall) went with a heavy dose of their dual rushing attack of Wehrman and Ernesto Rios. The duo accounted for 90 combined rushing yards in the first half.

    La Junta Platte Valley football
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    But finding the end zone proved to be a problem. On Platte Valley’s second drive of the game, Wehrman seemed to find the end zone on a one-yard run but an illegal block pushed them back. They couldn’t convert on third down and opted for a field goal to go up 3-0.

    “I didn’t know if we were going to stop them the whole game after that series,” Buderus said. “They just kept running it and getting first downs. Our kids gritted their teeth. They were pinned back and held them to a field goal and that was a win in my eyes.”

    The Tigers (13-0) started their second drive of the game with 8 minutes, 28 seconds left in the second quarter. Nuschy used a title option to get outside of the tackle box which is where the majority of the offensive yards came on the day.

    He capped it off with the touchdown run to end an aggravating stretch where Platte Valley had completely owned time of possession.

    “It was frustrating, but they have a great offense,” Nuschy said. “They have a great guy running the ball and (Wehrman) is a great player. But we just went out and had to grind.”

    Overall, Nusch ended his day running the ball 19 times for 93 yards.

    Neither team put points on the board in the second half, but Platte Valley nearly took the in the third quarter. From the 19-yard line Wehrman dropped to pass but was forced to scramble. He cut into space and had to get past a couple of defenders to reach the end zone. But the ball came loose.

    The Tigers took over and the Broncos struggled to move the ball again until their final drive of the game when Nuschy created another turnover for La Junta.

    His efforts on offense and defense earned him Most Valuable Player honors, but the state championship trophy was the only award he was searching for on Saturday.

    “(The MVP) doesn’t mean a lot but winning that state championship means the world,” Nuschy said. “I’d rather us have the state championship without me being the MVP. But it’s a great honor and I’m thankful for everything I’ve done and achieved.”

    The Broncos did get the ball back with just over 20 seconds to play in the game. Wehrman got the Broncos into striking distance and had one shot at a heave toward the end zone, but James Waddles broke through the offensive line and dropped Wehrman with a sack to end the game.

    “As soon as I saw him in my vicinity, I knew I had to make the play,” Waddles said. “I grabbed him and took him down and here we are.”

    Prior to the state championship win in 2016, the Tigers had gone through a 58-year stretch between state titles. The 2018 title is the sixth for La Junta’s football program.

    In his first year as head coach after his brother Clint left for Pueblo West, Buderus now has his ring to claim and was grateful that the Tigers didn’t have to wait more than a half-century to get it done.

    But he knew in the end the credit for this championship has to go to his senior class and the leadership that the players instilled in this team.

    “Those guys took control of this team and they knew this year was win it or bust for them,” Buderus said. “They’ve been here twice before so I think the seniors on this team deserve a lot of credit and Jon was a big part of that.”

    La Junta Platte Valley football
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Palmer Ridge returns to 3A football championship game by beating Palisade

    GRAND JUNCTION – For the second consecutive season, Palmer Ridge ousted Palisade from the Class 3A state football playoffs.

    The Bears completely dominated the second half in defeating Palisade 42-7.

    The score was tied until the Bears got a punt return to their own 43 with over three minutes remaining in the first half. After a pair of first downs, they punched it in from the 2 with just 30 seconds remaining in the second quarter to go ahead 14-7.

    With the momentum, Palmer Ridge recovered a fumble at the Palisade 7 and scored in two plays.

    They added a pair of short touchdowns within 17 seconds of each other to take a 35-7 lead into the fourth quarter.

    Raef Ruel, who scored three of the Bears’ touchdowns, said watching film of Palisade during the week gave them confidence to rely on their ground game.

    “We knew we’d be able to run the ball,” said Ruel, who rushed for 116 yards on 20 carries.

    Bears coach Tom Pulford had great respect for Palisade, the No. 1 seed, despite having defeated them in last year’s semifinals.

    “They’re a very disciplined team,” Pulford said. “We were fortunate to take away the things they do well.”

    The win sets up a title game matchup with Pueblo East, which defeated Palmer Ridge earlier this season.

    “We want our revenge on East,” Ruel said.