Mike Schmidt, among the state’s most respected and successful coaches, is stepping down as the football coach at Platte Canyon, he said on Friday.
The school has named defensive coordinator Lance Gunkel its new coach.
Schmidt, who has been the coach at Platte Canyon for 19 seasons, is also the superintendent of Platte Canyon School District.
Schmidt built Platte Canyon into one of 1A’s most consistent programs. The Huskies have won at least six games in each season since 2012, and since 2005, the program is 113-38.
He was twice named a Denver Broncos coach of the week, in 2005 and in 2016. He started his career as an assistant in California, moved to Ohio, and then settled at Platte Canyon.
Schmidt also served on CHSAA’s Board of Directors from 2012-16.
Gunkel has been a longtime member of Schmidt’s staff.
THORNTON — Saturday night is going to be fun. After a grueling round of preliminary races at the Class 5A state swim meet, the stage is set for the Fossil Ridge and Fairview girls swimming teams to give fans a battle for the ages. Simply put, whichever team performs better will claim state championship gold.
After the swimming prelims the Sabercats and Knights will enter six events with at least one swimmer in a top-three position.
Fairview started claiming territory right away, taking the 200-yard medley relay and grabbing the coveted starting spot in lane No. 5 for the finals. The goal there will be simple: take a gold medal and hopefully set the tone for the day.
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
But the defending champions won’t be that easy to fend off. Senior Coleen Gillilan cleared the field in the 200 freestyle by more than three seconds. Mikayla Seigal will start in the No. 3 position for the Knights, but she’ll have quite the ask ahead of her if she wants to edge Gillilan, the 2018 champion in the event.
The 100 butterfly might be the single event that most represents what the meet as a whole will look like. The top two seeds in the event are Fossil Ridge freshmen Renee Gillilan and Lucy Bell. The next two seeds are Fairview seniors Seigal and Riley Tapley. While one event does not make a champion, the results of the 100 fly could provide a wave of momentum for either team.
In the 200 individual medley and the 500 freestyle a Sabercat sits in the top spot and Knight sits just outside the top-three. Each team has three swimmers in the individual medley. Fairview has three swimmers in the 500 freestyle, but Fossil Ridge’s Coleen Gillilan leads the field.
The diving prelims for 5A will be held Saturday morning then finals for all events will get rolling at 3:30 p.m.
The Sabercats are looking to claim their third-straight 5A title. Fairview last won a team title in 2016 despite winning just two individual events that year.
Jeremy Hayden has been hired as the next football coach at Northridge, making a move from nearby Northern Colorado.
Grizzlies athletic director Chris Cline announced the news on Friday.
“We are very excited to have someone with Jeremy’s passion, knowledge, and commitment to student-athletes,” Cline said.
Hayden has spent the past seven seasons on the staff at the University of Northern Colorado, his alma mater, most recently serving as the program’s tight ends and assistant offensive line coach. Hayden started at UNC as a graduate assistant in 2012, and has also previously been UNC’s running backs coach.
The move to Northridge marks a return to the high school level for Hayden. From 2002-12, he was a positions coach at the prep level, including time at Daypsring Christian (2002-06), Windsor (2006-07), and Greeley West (2007-11).
Follow all of this offseason’s coaching movement in our tracker.
JEFFERSON COUNTY — It was another banner day for student-athletes in Jeffco Public Schools on Wednesday, Feb. 6.
More than 100 signed their National Letter of Intent to a wide range of colleges and universities across the country. Arvada West, Chatfield, Columbine, Dakota Ridge, Golden, Pomona and Ralston Valley all held celebrations Wednesday to honor their students who will continue their academic and athletic careers at the next level.
To date, more than 150 student-athletes from Jeffco have signed National Letter of Intents this school year. That number will surely grow with three more final signing days coming up April 1, May 15 and August 1.
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Jeffco’s signers on National Letter of Intent — Feb. 6
Arvada West High School
Christaana Angelopulos, softball, University of Wisconsin
Chase Biel, football, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Ashleigh Burr, women’s soccer, Colorado Mesa University
Cory Carignan, football, Minot State University
Anthony Cass, football, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Timothy English, football, Presentation College
Dominic Folks, baseball, Barstow College
Christopher Gist, football, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Makenna Fowler, women’s soccer, University of Colorado-Colorado Springs
Gianna Haley, softball, Black Hills State University
Mark Hunter, baseball, Blue Mountain College
Madison Johnson, women’s soccer, Wayne State College
Latham Kleckner, men’s soccer, Gustavus Adolphus College
Johnny Krutsch, football, Bethel University
Brady Legault, football, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Chris McEahern, football, Colorado State University
Ella McShane, women’s swimming & diving, Chapman University
AJ Ortez, football, Fort Lewis College
Theresa Price, women’s tennis, Hastings College
Devin Smith, cross country & track, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Dori Sterne, women’s soccer, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Michael Vandenberg, football, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Bear Creek High School
Megan McGriff, women’s lacrosse, Marietta College
Chatfield Senior High School
Sam Low, baseball, Mesa Community College
Luke Lachance, baseball, Doane University
Ben Kornegay, baseball, Northeastern Junior College
Jack Kornegay, baseball, Northeastern Junior College
Dalton Dillard, baseball, Barstow Community College
Julia Geiger, volleyball, University of Colorado-Colorado Springs
Kayleigh Conner, volleyball, Doane University
Alexa Alameddin, volleyball, Fort Lewis College
Tedy Reed, women’s basketball, Colorado College
Bailey Truex, women’s lacrosse, Fresno State University
Kevin Peterson, men’s soccer, Colorado College
Noah Haddad, men’s soccer, Radford University
Christian Holmes, men’s tennis, Utah State University
Anthony Johnston, football, Western Colorado University
Broc Doughty, football, Bethany College
Cameron Austin, football, Bethany College
Sydney Williams, cross country/track, Colorado School of Mines
Columbine High School
Jake Gimbel, baseball, Lamar College
Chance Goodson, baseball, Southeast Community College
Braiden Fritz, baseball, Hastings College
Logan DeArment, football, Colorado School of Mines
Cole Parrott, football, University of Northern Colorado
Evan Durbin, football, Drake University
Ben Earnest, football, Kearney University
Jaden Armbrust, football, Concordia University
Cody Ramming, football, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Corbin Curry, football, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Grant Keim, football, Luther College
Maddie Hadden, women’s rugby, Central Washington
Taryn Elsner, women’s soccer, Knox College
Kelsey Akins, volleyball, Lake Forrest College
Grayson Mix, men’s water polo, University of California-San Diego
Teagan Simons, men’s lacrosse, Monmouth College
Dakota Ridge High School
Joseph Ashley, men’s golf, Buena Vista University
Andrew Eickelman, men’s lacrosse, Colorado Mesa University
Jacob Eickelman, men’s lacrosse, Colorado Mesa University
Riley Fisher, men’s lacrosse, Colorado Mesa University
Ryan Kissinger, men’s lacrosse, Colorado Mesa University
Jackson Lamb, men’s basketball, Case Western Reserve
Elliot Pigati, baseball, Alvin Community College
Ryan Stohr, baseball, Air Force Academy
Austin Vancil, cross country, University of Colorado
D’Evelyn Junior/Senior High School
Isabella Porreco, softball, Yavapai College
Golden High School
Elizabeth Henshaw, women’s soccer, Culver-Stockton (MO)
Katie Dunson, softball, Lamar Community College
Jonah Wimbish, boys soccer, Augustana (IL)
Jack Walters, football, Colorado School of Mines
Lakewood High School
Pierce Holley, football, Georgetown University
Jacob Brunner, men’s lacrosse, Johns Hopkins University
Elyse Hatch Rivera, women’s soccer, Macalester College
Isaac Garcia, men’s swimming, St. Ambrose University
Pomona High School
Justin Pacheco, wrestling, Air Force Academy
Theorius Robison, wrestling, University of Northern Colorado
Colten Yapoujian, wrestling, Cornell University
Brooke Weins, gymnastics, University of Oklahoma
David Ross, football, University of Northern Colorado
Colten Muller, football, Colorado Mesa University
Luke Rohweder, football, Colorado Mesa University
Jack Thiele, football, University of Wyoming (preferred walk-on)
Billy Pospisil, football, Washington State University (early graduate)
Michael Marquez, football, Dakota College at Bottinuea
Jaime Wolf, softball, Garden City Community College
Peyton Westphal, women’s soccer, Hastings College
Jim Gassman, baseball, Tabor College
Trevor Abernathy, baseball, Marshalltown Community College
Cameron Berthold, men’s golf, Southern Virginia University
Ralston Valley High School
Peyton Anderson, women’s ice hockey, Northeastern University
Savannah Brown, women’s soccer, Johnson and Wales University
Mackenzie Friedman, women’s rowing, University of Wisconsin
Levi Johnson, football, Colorado School of Mines
Jessica Lemmon, women’s soccer, Laramie County Community College
Keaton Maring, men’s swimming, SUNY Oswego
Lexi Mueldener, women’s golf, Grinnell College
Maya Provencal, women’s track, Duke University
Brad Roberts, football, Air Force Academy
Ben Schneider, football, University of Northern Colorado
Tanner Spirek, men’s lacrosse, Colorado Mesa University
Isaac Townsend, football, University of Oregon
THORNTON and FORT COLLINS — Final results from the 2019 girls swimming and diving state championships are below. Navigate to the classification of your choosing below.
Alexander Brooks is not an easy guy to miss on the ice. Even from a distance as he is dressed like his teammates and his helmet conceals his face, he can always be spotted.
Just look for the big guy who is seemingly involved in every scoring play for the Pine Creek Eagles hockey team.
He’s always around the net, he’s always trying to find his way around the opposing goalie or see where the puck might squirt off for a rebound.
He’s been near the top of the state in points all year and because of it, No. 9 Pine Creek has enjoyed a high level of success this year.
“I think that if I can do my part and contribute as much as I can, we can score a lot more goals,” Brooks said. “The same thing for my other teammates. I think my line helps me contribute as well.”
When looking for the Pine Creek captain, just listen for the modest guy.
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Not once is he willing to accept full credit for the 14-1-1 record the Eagles currently hold. The lone loss came at the hands of Lewis-Palmer who sit directly behind the Eagles in the Summit League standings.
Brooks scored the first goal for Pine Creek and then assisted on the second. Then Pine Creek gave up five-straight power play goals. The Rangers went on to win the game 6-2. That game came immediately following a 3-3 tie with Battle Mountain.
Since then, the Eagles have rattled off seven straight wins and won each game by at least four goals. Brooks has scored 11 goals on his own and assisted on 11 others. Looking at that stretch, it can make someone wonder if a team like Pine Creek needs a guy like Brooks to play that well for the team to succeed.
“I don’t think so,” Brooks said. “In general, we just have a bunch of good guys. We have a solid group of players and we work really well together. That’s why we’re doing so well in the league.”
The Eagles certainly have other scorers on the team. Austin Sawyer has 34 points on the year, Trevor Porter has 28 and Austin Gipson has 27.
Those four players account for 46 of the Eagles’ 109 goals this year. With that kind of efficiency on offense and the goalie combination of Jacob Benton and Garrett Newlin surrendering just 19 total goals between the two of them, Pine Creek is looking to do something special in the next month.
“I think that we can go top-four at least,” Brooks said. “We’ve been practicing three to four times a week now and we’ve been focusing on the playoffs and doing the best we can so we can make it as far as possible.”
And he hopes that this can be the start of a long, successful run for the Eagles. Pine Creek made the 2018 playoffs, but lost 8-1 to Kent Denver in the first round. They didn’t make the bracket in 2017.
With this being his final run, Brooks intends on enjoying a playoff run and setting the tone for future Eagles teams.
“I just want try and do as much as I can for my team,” he said. “I want to leave an impact when I leave this year and I want to give this team some confidence for next year so they can keep carrying on the hockey legacy of Pine Creek.”
When trying to find one of the top scorers in the state, just look for the guy getting his teammates involved and setting a tone on the ice that he hopes will stick around for years to come.
Editor’s note: This story originally appeared in the I-70 Scout.
STRASBURG — Strasburg’s five-time Class 3A softball championship coach and her longtime assistant are going out on top.
The Strasburg School Board Jan. 9 accepted the resignation of Michelle Woodard, the Lady Indians coach for the past 11 years. Woodard has guided her team to the past seven 3A softball championship games, winning five, including the 2018 crown last October.
In a recent interview, Woodard stated that she is not burned out; instead, the decision relates more to personal matters, including her mother’s battle with breast cancer.
“It affected me tremendously, and so I just need to step back and take care of other things right now,” Woodard said.
The softball program will concurrently lose Lonnie Losh, a former head coach of the team who has served as Woodard’s assistant coach for the last eight years.
Family also calls in his case. The last of his grandchildren will be a junior in Loveland next fall, and he wants to see her play volleyball during her last two years of high school.
“I haven’t been able to watch her play volleyball at all,” Losh said, noting that he didn’t see this granddaughter’s older sister play either.
In the meantime, his granddaughters Logan and Rylan Losh were on the Strasburg softball team, thus dividing the attention of he and his wife, Susan, who often attended the games in Loveland without him.
Woodard, who also received the 2018 Coach of the Year award, is not leaving Strasburg High School, where she has worked for 13 years overall.
As athletic director, she looks forward to seeing the school’s other fall contests.
“It gives me an opportunity now to mentor coaches in the fall,” she said. “I haven’t been able to do that for our volleyball coach.”
She will also mentor the new softball coach, Nicole Osentoski, who was recommended for the post by Woodard and hired at the January school board meeting. Osentoski has been an assistant coach with the program for the past three years.
“I’ll be on those sidelines watching quite a bit,” Woodard said.
Although Osentoski has big shoes to fill, the team loses just two seniors — albeit one is the 2018 3A Player of the Year Alexis Rayburn — but returns a group of eight players who will be seniors next year, eight starters and two pitchers.
“There are girls in our JV program that could be starting at other schools in our league. That’s a big part,” Woodard said. “There’s going to be a lot of success for the program.”
Woodard credits her success to talented athletes who bought into the program; a good coaching staff; and the luxury of having two solid pitchers each year.
“A lot of schools don’t, and that makes a big difference,” she said.
Communication and discipline are also key.
“At first they didn’t know how to communicate with me because I’m a pretty tough coach. I have high expectations,” Woodard said. “As the years went on, I didn’t even have to talk about team rules anymore. It just started taking care of itself.
“I think high expectations, (and) helping girls rise to those expectations, are a big part of the program’s success. If you don’t expect a lot out of yourself, how can you expect a lot out of the girls?”
Despite the personal sacrifices, Losh said, he stayed because of Woodard’s leadership.
“The granddaughters are one thing, but the fact is that she was an excellent head coach, she would listen, and we didn’t (always) agree. But out of respect for one another we could talk it out,” he said. “That’s why we were successful. We worked as a unit. Everybody knew she was the head coach. It was really a great experience.
“I’ve seen coaches that have assistant coaches that don’t pay a bit of attention to them, especially at game time. That leads to failure.”
Losh said he hopes to return to coaching youth softball, which occurs in the spring and summer, with girls ages 10-12. “The nice thing is that they think you’re just the smartest thing in the world.”
That Woodard, who grew up in a high-level athletic family from Saskatchewan, Canada, ever became the head softball coach at Strasburg is a bit of a fluke. Softball and volleyball weren’t offered at her high school in Williston, N.D., where her family had migrated with the oil business, so she participated in basketball and track.
Williston State College and the University of South Dakota, where she got her bachelor’s degree, had more offerings, so she played softball and volleyball. She started coaching at age 21 at North Dakota State University. She also has a master’s degree in sports administration from the Univesity of Wisconsin at Lacrosse.
After spending most of her career coaching at the college level, she moved to Colorado to be near her sister, where Woodard took a job managing a health club. When that company asked her to move to Florida, she declined. Again in need of a job, she learned of an opening at Strasburg from a friend who then taught at the elementary school.
Although initially hired to teach only, the school community soon learned of her coaching history and, when the softball position opened, persistent parents persuaded her to take the job — but she did so with specific conditions.
Chief among those terms was the freedom to play her best players, regardless of grade level.
“Playing anyone on the field that I feel will help us win. If that means playing a freshman over a senior, they would need to support that,” Woodard said. “And I did my first year — I played a freshman over a senior.
“I should have asked for a million dollars at that time, too.”
Among her accomplishments, Woodard concludes her 11 years with three Coach of the Year awards; four Lady Indians with Player of the Year awards; undefeated seasons in 2013 and 2015; 11 playoff appearances; and a career record of 214-55.
“She knows the game incredibly well, she’s incredibly organized, she’s a good communicator. All those things rolled up make her one of the best coaches I’ve ever
known,” said high school principal Jeff Rasp. “In all those respects she’ll be greatly missed. I know she’ll miss it too.”
Reflecting on her career, Woodard noted that in her early years she thought she had to be a loud, tough disciplinarian to succeed. But as she matured, she learned to guide her players by setting standards and creating a positive culture.
“It’s also about who they are as people,” Woodard said. “A lot of them have grown to be really successful women in the world.”
Rasp concurs, adding Woodard always emphasized that the girls were students first and athletes second.
“Her record speaks for itself, but it really doesn’t tell the whole story of what she did behind the scenes to help these students go from young adults to adults,” he concluded.