Arvada West coach Troy Gette has guided the Wildcats to a 53-7 record in Class 5A Jeffco League play over the past eight seasons. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
ARVADA — Arvada West senior Judah Johnston is going to be a marked player on the soccer pitch this season.
Johnston returns as one of the top goal scorers in Class 5A. He found of the back of the net 17 times last season on the way to being named the MVP of the 5A Jeffco League.
“I think he (Johnston) is even better,” A-West coach Troy Gette said of the Wildcats’ leading scorer from the previous two seasons. “He also has a better supporting cast around him this year. I think he set the expectation bar high after what he and the team achieved last year.”
Arvada West senior Judah Johnston, left, was the Class 5A Jeffco League boys soccer MVP last season. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Johnston has racked up 37 goals and 16 assists in his first three seasons at A-West. His goal is to play college soccer and has had talks with the University of Portland, University of Denver, Regis University and Colorado School of Mines.
A-West — ranked No. 7 in the CHSAANow.com 5A boys soccer preseason poll — went on a season-long eight-game winning streak toward the end of the season to reclaim the conference title from rival Ralston Valley. That included a five-goal game by Johnston in a 6-1 victory over Dakota Ridge in October.
The Wildcats and rival Mustangs have dominated 5A Jeffco over the past decade.
“I thought we took big steps forward last year,” Gette said reflecting on the Wildcats finishing with a 13-4 record and being the lone 5A Jeffco team to advance to the second round of the state tournament.
The Wildcats’ season ended with a close 1-0 loss in the second round to eventual 5A state champion Arapahoe.
A-West has plenty of returning talent on its roster that is senior and junior dominated heading into its 2019 campaign.
“The heart and soul of this team is returning,” Gette said. “We lost some keep pieces, but hopefully some young kids can step up and help fill some pretty important roles.”
The biggest loss on paper is the graduation of starting goalie Latham Kleckner, who allowed just 15 goals last season in 16 games. Kleckner also record 10 shutout victories in net.
Arvada West junior Kyler Tate, left, is one of several key juniors for the Wildcats’ boys soccer program. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
“Of course it’s a concern. Last year, Latham Kleckner was just phenomenal,” Gette said. “I do think the defense will be even better up front.”
Junior Jacoby Landskov will take over in net. Landskov is making the step up from starting JV goalie last season.
“Jacoby stepping up from JV, after a couple of games and practicing he’ll get into the swing of things,” Johnston said.
A-West begins its season at 5 p.m. Monday at the North Area Athletic Complex. The Wildcats face Standley Lake (1-0 record). The Gators took a 3-0 shutout victory against Jefferson Academy last week to open of their season.
“The opener is definitely important. It gets the season rolling,” Standley Lake junior Kyler Tate said of the Wildcats opening up the season at the NAAC against area-rival Standley Lake. “We have to go hard every game and play our best.”
Tate, a first-team all-conference selection as a sophomore, will be one of the keys to A-West making another strong run in the conference to get the highest seed possible for the state tournament.
“We are just trying to get Jeffco recognized. We aren’t going to take it for granted,” Tate said. “We are still going to try hard to win the league and make it further in the playoffs this year.”
The difference between a 4-6 season for the Windsor High School football team in 2018 and a 11th-straight state playoff appearance boiled down to nine points.
Loveland’s Laurin Krings looks every bit of the reigning player of the year she is in softball.
The senior tossed a seven-inning perfect game to help her fourth-ranked team open the season with a 4-0 win over No. 8 Cherry Creek on Friday morning, striking out 19 of the 21 batters she faced. She also homered and had two RBIs.
Then, in an afternoon contest against Regis Jesuit, which Loveland won 12-0, Krings hit two homers and drove in four runs. She also allowed just four hits in four innings, striking out nine against one walk.
In all, here was Krings’ first day of the 2019 season: 28 strikeouts, one perfect game, three home runs and six RBIs.
She is now the state leader in slugging percentage (2.400) and her three home runs are tied for the state lead. In addition, Krings has struck out 76% of the batters she has faced so far this season.
Prior to the season, at Fall Sports Media Day, Krings — a University of Missouri recruit — talked about her final year of playing high school softball.
“The feeling is, this is your last year playing high school, put it all out there,” she said. “It’s going to be hard leaving high school. I’m going to be leaving all my friends. I’ve played with my catcher for eight years, now, we’ve been together. It’s going to be really emotional, but it’s going to be really fun at the same time.”
Last season, she led the state with 392 strikeouts — more than 135 more than the next closest player — as well as a 0.65 ERA, allowing just 18 earned runs in 193 innings pitched. Her 22 wins were also the most of any pitcher.
Oh yeah, she also threw three no-hitters, including two perfect games, and had seven one-hit games.
Krings was also second in the state in home runs (15) and had 48 RBIs last season.