Month: March 2019

  • No. 1 Mountain Vista baseball holds off Arvada West

    Mountain Vista senior Grant Magill fouls off a pitch during Tuesday’s non-league game at Arvada West. Magill reached base five times and drove in four runs in a 10-7 victory for the defending Class 5A state champs. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    ARVADA — Mountain Vista coach Ron Quintana wouldn’t mind getting in a few more practices sometime in the near future.

    “We haven’t really practiced,” Quintana said after the Golden Eagles took a 10-7 road victory over Arvada West on Tuesday afternoon. “Can we get better? Yes. We just need practice.”

    Top-ranked and defending Class 5A baseball state champion Mountain Vista already has seven games under their belts. The Golden Eagles squeezed in a pair of wins over Chatfield and Arapahoe during the opening week of the spring season.

    Arvada West junior Noah McCandless fires to the plate against top-ranked Mountain Vista on Tuesday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    Last week while the “Bomb Cyclone” pretty much postponed every high school baseball game in the state from Wednesday through the weekend, Mountain Vista (5-2 record) was able to get in four games at the Scott Borus Classic Tournament in Arizona.

    “Getting out there and just playing really helps the team,” Mountain Vista senior Grant Magill said. “Our Arizona trip is really where I think we find out what kind of team we actually are.”

    Against A-West (1-1) the Golden Eagles actually trailed 6-5 after three innings. However, a 3-run top of the fifth inning allowed Mountain Vista to regain the lead. Magill was a hitting machine reaching base on all five plate appearances and drove in four runs.

    “He (Magill) is seeing the ball good,” said Quintana of his starting catcher that is hitting well over .700 on the season with double-digit hits and RBIs already this season. “I don’t want to talk too much because I don’t want to jinx it.”

    Mountain Vista hit the ball through most of the line-up against the Wildcats. Senior John Zakhem had a trio of hits which included a pair of doubles. The Golden Eagles cranked out a season-high dozen hits in Tuesday win.

    “In the past games we haven’t been as aggressive,” Magill said. “In this game we came out ready to swing. I think that was the difference.”

    Mountain Vista junior Aidan Smith tosses the ball over to first base for an out Tuesday at Arvada West High School. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    Junior Carter Johnson picked up the victory on the mound pitching a pair of scoreless inning in the fourth and fifth. Sophomore Evan Magill picked up the save getting the final three outs for Mountain Vista.

    “That is what we expect from him,” Quintana said of the younger Magill. “He has the mentality to be a closer and he has good stuff.”

    A-West was coming off a shutout victory last week against Green Mountain and showed signs of what is possible this season. Junior Braden Thomson reached base on all four plate appearances while driving in a pair of runs.

    The Wildcats took advantage of a trio of Mountain Vista errors in the bottom of the third inning to plate four runs while batting around, but A-West ended with four errors itself.

    “We had only played one (previous) game and we are trying to figure out where we are at. We didn’t play perfect,” A-West coach Matt McDougal said. “When you play a team like that you can’t make mistakes.”

    McDougal used a handful of pitchers — Kyle Tolly, Jay Lambert, Cole Doebele and Noah McCandless — in the loss. McCandless took the loss after pitching three and 2/3 innings.

    “We are working on some stuff,” McDougal said of using four different pitchers in the first four innings. “We’ve got to be in the zone more. Too many walks. Walks hurt us.”

    A-West will be right back on the field against another 5A powerhouse in No. 6 Rocky Mountain on Wednesday afternoon back on the Wildcats’ home field.

    “We can’t hang our heads because we have Rocky tomorrow,” McDougal said. “If we are down we are going to get rolled. We have to come back and compete tomorrow. We can feel good going down to Arizona and hopefully that will jumpstart us a little bit.”

    A-West heads down to Arizona for spring break in the middle of next week to get in some non-league games before returning to acton in Colorado to start the month of April.

    Arvada West junior Braden Thomson leads off first base during Tuesday’s game against the defending Class 5A state champion Mountain Vista. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: Sisneros helps No. 2 Heritage baseball beat Columbine

    LITTLETON — Heritage baseball improved to 2-0 this season with a 12-2 win over Columbine on Tuesday. Cam Sisneros went 2-for-2 with a home run and three RBIs.

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  • Photos: Bear Creek girls soccer beats Coronado

    LAKEWOOD — Bear Creek girls soccer is now 3-0 following its 2-0 win over Coronado on Tuesday.

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  • Boys volleyball’s second pilot season is underway

    (Colorado Boys Volleyball/Facebook)

    The second pilot season for boys volleyball kicked off last week, just about a month before the sport hopes to gain official sanctioning from CHSAA’s Legislative Council.

    This season, there are more than 80 teams participating, representing nearly 50 individual schools. (During the pilot season, schools are allowed to have multiple teams.) They are split into two classifications, 5A and 3A.

    In 5A, teams off to hot starts include Cheyenne Mountain Maroon (7-0), Thornton Blue (4-0) and Grandview Black (2-0).

    In 3A, unbeaten teams include The Academy Blue (6-0), James Irwin Blue (4-0), Thornton Gray (4-0) and The Vanguard Gold (3-0).

    The sport has a big single-day event, the Paul Hastings Tournament, on April 6. Regionals are May 3-4, and the state championship is May 11.

    Already, five boys volleyball seniors have signed to play college volleyball: The Vanguard’s Hayden Frear (McKendree College), Grandview’s Brady Mullens (Endicott College), Monarch’s Zig Licis (Queen’s University), Chaparral’s Ryan Smith (Cambellsville University) and Horizon’s Rowdy Martin (Cardinal Stritch University).

    Like the other pilot sports — girls wrestling and unified bowling — boys volleyball has cleared a number of steps along the sanctioning process, including the Equity Committee and Classification and League Organizing Committee.

    The final steps are a vote from the Board of Directors on April 23, and, if approved there, a vote by the Legislative Council on April 24.

  • Baseball season ushered in with early no-hitters

    Rampart baseball Taylor Zaiger
    (Photo courtesy of Jake Huard)

    Forget easing into things. Some pitchers were itching to get the baseball season started and came out throwing like it was late April rather than early March.

    In the early stages of the 2019 baseball season, six pitchers had made it through their first starts without giving up a hit.

    Ralston Valley’s Joey Steiskal seven innings, striking out eight and walking two hitters. The Mustangs came away with a 3-0 over Lincoln on March 9.

    That same day, Colorado Academy’s Emmett Ela and Graham Osman combined to no-hit Steamboat Springs over five innings. The duo repeated the feat three days later in a win over Ellicott.

    Last week, on Friday, Montrose junior Aaron Dietrich tossed a five-inning no-hitter in a 13-0 win over Pagosa Springs. He struck out 11, and walked four.

    The no-hitters started as soon as the baseball season opened.

    On March 7, the first day of competition, Lewis-Palmer’s Jason Shuger went seven innings, striking out 13 hitters and walking three in a 5-0 win over Ponderosa. Shuger, an Air Force Academy commit, barely got settled into the game before realizing that he was much better than how he typically starts the season.

    “The last couple of seasons, I’ve had some stinky first appearances so I was really excited to go out there and have a great game like that,” he said. “I started thinking about it in the third inning and was hoping that nobody jinxed it. We weren’t putting up runs so I figured we’d be going seven and I was pitching pretty well. I just wanted to go out and keep doing my thing.”

    He did just that. He followed that game up with three solid innings against Coronado. He once again proved to be tough to hit. The Cougars were able to register a base hit off a bunt, but even by the time Shuger left the game — due to coach Brett Lester wanting to staff the game on the mound — his opponents’ batting average was a stingy .032 on the year.

    “I’m still a little angry about (the bunt),” said Shuger, who currently leads the state with 36 strikeouts.

    He’ll get over it. The fact that he’s thrown so well in his first two outings is an encouraging sign for the Rangers. He’s been developing as a pitcher for the last several seasons and his work didn’t have to wait a few starts to start paying off.

    His offseason work leading into the season is a big reason that he started the season on such a high note.

    “Jason’s been working hard since he came into our program as a freshman,” Lester said. “Going into his senior year committed to Air Force, he took on a brand new work ethic. Most pitchers aren’t 100 percent mid-season form at the beginning of the year. Jason has been throwing bullpens since early January and we were prepared to let him go 100 pitches.”

    The same thing can be said for another pitcher a few miles south of Lewis-Palmer. Rampart’s Taylor Zaiger threw a gem of a game against Fruita Monument on March 7, the same day that Shuger threw his no-hitter.

    Like Steiskal and Shuger, Zaigler went all seven innings. He struck out eight and walked one, but control was a bit of a factor as he he four batters.

    “He was actually saving his pitch count by hitting them,” Rampart coach Jake Huard said with a laugh.

    If there was one thing that Huard was monitoring with his staff ace, it was the number of pitches he was throwing. He knows he has a horse in Zaigler but wanted to make sure that he was easing him into the schedule rather than loading him up early.

    Zaigler killed that theory as he got through inning after inning without surrendering a hit.

    “My main concern of the day was that it was early in the season and I didn’t want him to throw too many pitches,” Huard said. “We want them to progress through the year into the year with pitch counts. When we saw him dominating and not giving up a hit we had to let him do his thing. He was getting stronger as the day went on.”

    Unlike Shuger, Zaigler said he didn’t know he threw a no-hitter until the game was over. He was too focused on just doing what he needed to do to get through the game and get the Rams a win.

    But just as Huard saw him getting stronger as the game went on, Zaigler said that he started feeling his groove as he got deeper into his pitch count.

    “Later in the game I felt more comfortable,” Zaigler said. “You start learning the mound, learning the strike zone, get a feel for your arm and know where you’re going to throw it. It’s a big comfort zone later in the game.”

    The early success for these pitchers can be a bit of a double-edged sword. It sends a message to teams on the schedule that there are indeed aces that can do some damage. But with the way the winter storms pounded the front range early in the season, it also gives opponents a chance to shuffle the schedule around so that they don’t have to face those top-line hurlers.

    “It’s something other coaches are aware of,” Lester said. “Once this storm hit and we started rescheduling games, people are trying to put games together for us when we have two or three games in a week hoping that we won’t be able to throw Jason against them.”

    That’s a task easier said than done. With the toughest stretch of the season starting in the weeks after spring break, pitchers like Steiskal, Ela, Osman, Dietrich, Shuger and Zaigler will see their share of important innings.

    No-hitters are tough to come by. There’s no telling if any of these three can register another one this year. But they’ve certainly given onlookers a reason to check them out.

  • Dillon named MVP in Jeffco senior girls hoops all-star game

    LAKEWOOD — The 2019 Jeffco High School Senior Girls Basketball Game didn’t disappoint for the second straight year.

    Bear Creek’s Melody Soto, left, goes up for a shot against Ralston Valley’s Shelby Nichols on Monday night at the Gold Crown Field House. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    In the 2nd annual hoops all-star game featuring seniors from across Jeffco was decided in the closing minutes Monday night at the Gold Crown Field House in Lakewood. A 3-pointer from Lakewood’s Caira Salas and 3-point play the hard way by Chatfield’s Tedy Reed in the fourth quarter sealed a 68-62 victory for the White team.

    The inaugural girls game last year finished with Evergreen’s Baylee Galan-Browne making a game-winning shot with seven seconds left to give the White team an eventual 78-75 victory.

    “It was so much fun,” Reed said. “I grew up playing with a lot of these girls. They are the best competition we see all season and now we are like a family.”

    Evergreen senior and two-time Class 4A state champion — Claudia Dillon — was named the game’s MVP. Dillon was on the court for the final nine minutes when the game was on the line.

    Dillon was all smiles and joked with teammates after picking up her fourth foul in the final seconds.

    Arvada West’s Madi Pixler,right, drives on Alameda International’s Rosie Holguin during Monday’s 2nd annual Jeffco High School Senior Basketball Game. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “Having this experience is the best thing about it,” said Dillon, who will play volleyball at the University of Missouri next fall. “I’m used to that double- and triple-team, but seeing some bigger girls who had size and could guard me was kind of cool.”

    Ralston Valley’s Shelby Nichols and D’Evelyn’s Tori Szathmary shared the task most of the night guarding Dillon. Nichols, along with Dakota Ridge’s duo of Sydney Daniels and Maggie Hawley were key in the Blue team fighting back from a 20-point deficit in the first half to make a game of it.

    “At the end we wanted to win so bad,” said Reed, who will continue her basketball career at Colorado College. “For a lot of girls this was their last game. I wanted to go out with a bang.”

    Dillon will play in The Show all-star game Saturday at Metro State University in what might very well be the final competitive basketball game for the two-time state champion.

    “Claudia is literally the nicest person ever,” Reed said. “I can’t believe how well she sees the court and passes the ball so well. It was an honor playing with her.”

    Green Mountain coach Darren Pitzner guided the White team to the victory. The former Lakewood girls basketball assistant coach just finished up his second year coaching the Rams.

    “That was a totally fun and meaningful experience,” Pitzner said. “I got to coach the two Lakewood kids that I coached for two years and my two Green Mountain kids one last time.”

    Pitzner said coaching Dillon for the first time instead of against her was a ‘breath of fresh air’.

    The 23 Jeffco seniors pose together for a photo after the White team took a 68-62 victory Monday at the Gold Crown Field House. The 2nd annual event was put on by the Gold Crown Foundation, Jeffco Public School and sponsored by FirstBank. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Rivals become teammates in Jeffco senior boys hoops all-star game

    LAKEWOOD — For at least one night, Columbine boys basketball coach Clay Thielking could fist pump when Dakota Ridge guard Alex Overlie buried a pair of 3-pointers in the fourth quarter.

    Green Mountain’s Miles Dempsey, right, gets off a shot over Arvada West’s Joey Call on Monday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “That was a little uncomfortable for me,” Thielking said with a laugh when asked about relying on a rival player in the fourth quarter Monday night at the 2019 Jeffco High School Senior Basketball Game. “If he (Overlie) is going to score for us that is fine. He can be from anywhere.”

    Overlie’s 3-pointers in the final quarter helped secure a 113-102 victory for Thielking’s Blue team at Gold Crown Field House.

    “It was fun to see these guys play with each other instead of against each other,” Thielking said. “Just let the kids loose and let them show off their skills and abilities.”

    One of Thielking’s own players from Columbine that won the 5A Jeffco League title this winter was named the MVP. Sharp-shooting guard Cameron Dean was given the MVP honor, but still it was a little weird for him to be cheering on some of his old rivals and suddenly becoming teammates.

    Columbine senior Cameron Dean, right, plays defense on Pomona senior David Ross. Dean was named MVP of the 2019 Jeffco HS Senior Basketball Game. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “I don’t think I ever thought that would be a possibility, but here we are,” Dean said with a smile about rooting for a rival to knock down a couple of 3-pointers in the final quarter.

    While the game will likely be the last big stage for most of the seniors, Dean is focused on playing at the next level. Since Columbine was bounced out of the playoffs by Cherry Creek nearly a month ago, the guard has been focused on staying sharp.

    “I’m looking for a college,” Dean said. “I honestly don’t want my basketball career to be over. Wherever I need to go I’ll go.”

    Chatfield senior Connor Vernon has unfortunately had a high school career plagued by injuries. Vernon suffered broken bones in his left hand just before the start of 5A Jeffco League play this season. He missed nearly two months of action before returning for the Chargers’ final three games of the season.

    Vernon was selected by Chatfield coach Stephen Schimpeler to participate in the senior all-star game.

    Arvada West’s Joey Call, left, faces some tight defense by Jefferson’s Kurvonte Rice on Monday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “It get back on the court with these guys who I’ve played with and against for four years was amazing,” said Vernon, who added that he felt very privileged to play in the game. “It’s fun to see how far we’ve come and grown.”

    Vernon had the highlight play of the night with a coast-to-coast dunk in the third quarter.

    “Coming into this game all I really wanted to do was dunk,” Vernon said with a smile. “It felt amazing.”

    Wheat Ridge coach Tommy Dowd, who guided the Farmers to the 4A Jeffco League title this winter, coached the White team. Wheat Ridge’s Julian Claussen had a nice game for his coach. Chatfield’s Luke Carlson and Arvada West’s Oliver Lindblad — both replacements for players who couldn’t play — had nice games also.

    Mark Rusch, Sports Program Director/Outreach for Gold Crown, said that 44 of the 47 boys and girls that played in the 2019 High School Senior Basketball Games on Monday also participated in Gold Crown’s basketball program growing up.

    The 2nd annual Jeffco High School Senior Basketball Games hosted by the Gold Crown Foundation, Jeffco Public Schools and sponsored by FirstBank were played Monday night at the Gold Crown Field House in Lakewood. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Photos: No. 4 Arapahoe girls soccer beats No. 8 Columbine in OT

    LITTLETON — Fourth-ranked Arapahoe girls soccer got goals from Emma Purcell and Kylie Smith as the Warriors beat No. 8 Columbine in overtime on Monday.

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  • Winter’s Les Schwab Academic Award winners

    The 2018-19 winter Les Schwab Academic Academic Award winners have been announced.

  • Faith Christian’s Andrew Hasz steps down as boys basketball coach

    Faith Christian Sterling boys basketball
    (Katie Pickrell/CHSAANow.com)

    Andrew Hasz, an icon at Faith Christian, has stepped down as the school’s boys basketball coach.

    Hasz, who was the program’s coach since 1999, won 421 games over the course of his career. He led the school to six state championships in his tenure, all in Class 3A: 2002, and then five consecutive from 2008-2012. That five-year run is tied with former Merino coach Ron Vlasin for the most in state history. Hasz’s six titles are the fourth-most of any boys coach.

    Hasz is also Faith Christian Academy’s superintendent, and is stepping away because of the time commitment required of that job.

    Abram Ziemer, an assistant with the boys basketball team who played for Hasz from 2003-07, will take over as head coach for Faith Christian. Hasz will serve as an assistant to aid in the transition.

    Among the accomplishments in his career for Hasz:

    • Six state titles
    • Seven state championship game apperances
    • 13 trips to the Final 4
    • 18 Great 8 appreances
    • 11 Metro District league titles

    His 421 wins at one school are the ninth-most in state history.