Month: January 2019

  • Photos: 5A No. 4 Cherry Creek girls basketball rolls past 4A No. 4 Mullen

    DENVER — Fourth-ranked Cherry Creek girls basketball picked up a road win to begin league play, beating 4A No. 4 Mullen 57-32 on Thursday.

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  • Wrestling rankings: Windsor moves up to No. 1 in Class 4A

    Below are this week’s wrestling rankings from On The Mat.

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    On The Mat Wrestling Rankings

    Tim Yount of On The Mat provides weekly wrestling rankings for teams and individuals in all weight classes. To see individual rankings, you can subscribe to On The Mat’s full rankings.

    To subscribe via PayPal, choose your subscription option on this page click on the corresponding PayPal button. To subscribe by mail or fax and pay by personal check, click here for a printable subscription form. Email Tim Yount at tim@onthematrankings.com with questions.

    To purchase individual weeks of the rankings (as opposed to the entire season), you will need to use the printable subscription form and pay by check. The season ranking subscriptions are offered at a discounted rate.

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    Class 2A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Wray 1
    2 Paonia 4
    3 Cedaredge 2
    4 Rocky Ford 3
    5 John Mall 7
    6 Rye 10
    7 Highland 5
    8 County Line
    9 Crowley County 8
    10 Centauri 6
    Dropped out
    Trinidad (9).
    Class 3A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Alamosa 1
    2 Pagosa Springs 3
    3 Jefferson 2
    4 Eaton 4
    5 Berthoud 8
    6 Lamar 7
    7 Eagle Valley 6
    8 Woodland Park 9
    9 Brush 5
    10 Fort Morgan
    Dropped out
    Sterling (10).
    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Windsor 2
    2 Pueblo County 3
    3 Pueblo East 1
    4 Grand Junction Central 5
    5 Pueblo Centennial 6
    6 Broomfield 4
    7 Thompson Valley 9
    8 Thomas Jefferson
    9 Pueblo South
    10 Discovery Canyon 7
    Dropped out
    Roosevelt (8), Longmont (10).
    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Pomona 1
    2 Grand Junction 3
    3 Grandview 2
    4 Ponderosa 4
    5 Monarch 5
    6 Rocky Mountain 7
    7 Brighton 6
    8 Eaglecrest 9
    9 Arvada West 10
    10 Castle View
    Dropped out
    Legacy (8).
  • Southern Colorado basketball official Nick Lave calls it a career after 41 years

    Basketball official Nick Lave
    Nick Lave (left) spent 41 years officiating high school basketball in Colorado. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    For one last time on Thursday night, Nick Lave took the court to do what he has done for 41 years as a basketball official in Colorado. He wanted to make the playing field level and let the kids decide the outcome of the game.

    Lave headed the crew that officiated Thursday’s game between the top-ranked teams in Class 5A and 4A. Lewis-Palmer beat Chaparral 71-59 in the game, but each team will move on to play another day.

    At the end of the night, Lave took off his officials shirt for the last time as he has decided to retire as a referee. And there’s going to be plenty about the job that he’ll miss.

    “The excitement of going out and having to do your best and give 100 percent to what you do, be the best that you can be and let the players decide what’s going to happen,” Lave said. “Not a call and not you.”

    His résumé isn’t short of accomplishments. On top of his work as a high school basketball official in Colorado, he has worked as a football official in the Big 12 conference. At times, he has even worked at the side of CHSAA associate commissioner Tom Robinson.

    But he never big-timed his colleagues or the kids and that’s what made him a special individual to his peers.

    “He’s an official,” fellow Colorado Springs official and Cheyenne Mountain golf coach John Carricato said. “Every game is important to him. He came back and worked last night’s game and that was just as important to him as that Peach Bowl game was in late December.”

    Lave was on the field as Florida beat Michigan 41-15. He’s also retiring from the college football ranks.

    Basketball official Nick Lave
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    Prior to tip-off at Lewis-Palmer on Thursday he was acknowledged for his career which included eight state championship games that he worked. But it won’t be his ability to get to the big games that will be missed the most. Carricato is among those that sees the loss of a mentor and a good man to have on the court.

    “I worked a game with him in late December and we were with a young official who is trying to climb the officiating ranks here in Colorado,” Carricato said. “Nick took the time to talk with him and give him ways to improve and grow. I learned a lot just from listening to him that night. We’re not just losing a great official, but we’re going to miss that leadership.”

    For a man on his way out the door with his work, he treated that young official just as he would have several years ago. Lave knows the importance of raising up a new generation of referees and helping them understand the importance of his primary goal, making the game fair. He’s always more than willing to pass on advice for those looking to not just get into officiating, but get better.

    “Be patient and put your heart into it,” Lave said. “The game has changed tremendously from when I started. It was a two-person game and there was more of a buy-in. You have to have thick skin. There are going to be some critical evaluations, but you have to understand how to take that and take the positives and better your game management and game performance.”

    It’s not just his fellow referees who will miss him on the floor. His time and effort within the sport gave him a level of respect among the high school basketball coaches. As a veteran official, he’d be the first to say he didn’t get every call right, but it was his willingness to have a discussion with coaches that made him an ideal official to have for any game.

    “When Nick walked into a gym, I knew that was one thing off my plate to worry about,” Coronado coach David Thomas said. “He was so approachable and so willing to have a conversation with you. From a coach’s perspective you don’t always get that.”

    Even the conversations weren’t always calm, Lave was prepared to have them. Since 1978, he has listened to plenty of criticisms of his work, both from the sidelines and the bench. Some he ignored, some he dealt with and there were certainly times where he even had a little fun with it.

    “There are a lot of things that would make me laugh,” Lave said. “Years ago, Dan McKiernan would have one-liners that would just grab your attention and make you chuckle. He would say something to grab my attention away from what I was trying to focus on and turn to him.”

    Those interactions are part of what Lave will miss about his time on the court. But he feels it’s his time to move on.

    Perhaps the biggest personal victory for him is that when he laced up his shoes for the final time on Thursday night, he was doing it for the same reason as he did when he laced up for his first game 41 years ago.

    “It’s not to give a team a hometown advantage or a screw job,” Lave said. “I’ve never been involved with stuff like that. When I first got into officiating it was for the love of the sport and the love of the game and to have that feeling that I can make it a fair situation.”

    Basketball official Nick Lave
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Video: January’s Jeffco Preps With Pleuss

    A roundup of Jeffco prep highlights from December with Dennis Pleuss, Jeffco Public Schools’ Communication Specialist. This month’s edition features boys basketball action with Green Mountain, Lakewood, D’Evelyn, Pomona and Wheat Ridge. Defending Class 5A Jeffco League girls swimming champion Ralston Valley tested the water at Meyers Pool with Golden and Conifer. Also, girls basketball highlights with Dakota Ridge upsetting two-time defending 4A state champion Evergreen. We wrap up with Standley Lake’s pom squad winning the 4A state title.

  • Video: The top plays of the 2018 fall season

    The 2018 fall season was filled with impressive performances and amazing plays.

  • Vista PEAK girls basketball formulating plans for season’s end

    While their coach plays the Grinch, the Vista PEAK girls basketball team entered winter break with visions of the Denver Coliseum dancing in their heads.

  • Winter season set to resume as break comes to an end; January brings meetings

    Denver East Dakota Ridge hockey
    (Marlee Smith/CHSAANow.com)

    AURORA — The winter sports season kicks back into gear this week with the annual break coming to a close.

    All sports can resume on Wednesday, meaning boys and girls basketball, hockey, girls swimming and wrestling return to action — though the overwhelming majority of contests aren’t until Thursday as teams like to have a formal practice before resuming.

    It also means the start of the ski season is drawing closer — the first races are Jan. 11 (alpine) and Jan. 12 (nordic).

    January will also bring a number of different meetings, from committees to subcommittees and even outreaches hosted by the Colorado Athletic Directors Association. The CADA meetings are Jan. 8-10 at eight different locations around the state.

    For the first time, there will be no Legislative Council meeting in January, as the association has moved to one annual meeting, held now in April.

    The CLOC meeting announcing classification and enrollment numbers will be Jan. 28.