Jason Leavitt was one of three players to score in the second half as Bear Creek boys soccer beat Dakota Ridge 3-0.
Month: September 2019
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Photos: Big first inning powers Elizabeth softball past Harrison
Elizabeth softball scored 10 runs in the first inning and cruised to an eventual 15-0 win over Harrison on Tuesday.
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Boys golf regionals: Sterling and Kent Denver capture team titles

(@sterling_tigers/Twitter) Two boys golf regionals were on Tuesday, with Sterling and Kent Denver walking away as team champions. Those regionals followed the six that were held on Monday.
There are three more regionals on Wednesday, one in each classification, and a final one on Thursday.
Recaps of each regional are below.
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3A Region 1
Kent Denver led the field with an 11-over at Hollydot, with Jeffrey Zhou leading the team, and capturing the individual title, at 5-under. The Sun Devils had two of the top three golfers in the region.
The Classical Academy (+23) placed second, and Pagosa Springs (+32) finishing third.
Individually, after Zhou, Pagosa Springs’ Nathan Smith was second at 3-under, and Zhou’s Kent Denver teammate Jacobo Arango was third at 2-over. The Classical Academy’s Liam O’Halloran (+5) was fourth, and Trinidad’s Lance Peters and Alamosa’s Brenden Crowther tied for fifth at 7-over.
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3A Region 3

Luke Wright. (Courtesy of SkyView Academy) Sterling won the team title with a 17-over performance. The Tigers were led by Tayleb Schaefer, who tied for third at 3-over, Trey Kuntz (+6) and Chase Hume (+8).
Resurrection Christian (+32) was second, and Frontier Academy (+36) placed third as a team.
Individually, Luke Wright of SkyView Academy won the region at 2-under. Braxton Shelton of Brush was second at 1-over, and Max Noffsinger of Frontier Academy tied with Schaefer for third at 3-over. Strasburg’s Jacob Gilbert and Resurrection Christian’s Grant Rose tied in fifth at 5-over.
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Photos: Top-ranked Holy Family softball holds off rally from No. 5 Erie
Class 4A No. 1 Holy Family jumped out to a 7-0 lead and held off a comeback to beat No. 5 Erie 10-7 on Tuesday.
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Palmer Ridge vs Ponderosa on 9/24
Event type: Dual
Host: PonderosaTeam scores Rank School Score 1 Ponderosa 170.65 2 Palmer Ridge 161.25 Vault Rank Name School Score 1 Briana Reynolds Palmer Ridge 8.9 2 Ashlyn Williams Ponderosa 8.6 3 Maddie Gotlieb Ponderosa 8.6 4 Ellie Steward Ponderosa 8.5 Bars Rank Name School Score 1 Kaitlyn Coleman Ponderosa 8.65 2 Maddie Gotlieb Ponderosa 8.55 3 Tiana Estrella Ponderosa 8 4 Ellie Steward Ponderosa 7.9 Beam Rank Name School Score 1 Maddie Gotlieb Ponderosa 9.2 2 Peyton Carlson Ponderosa 8.8 3 Tiana Estrella Ponderosa 8.75 4 Abigail Drennan Palmer Ridge 8.55 Floor Rank Name School Score 1 Maddie Gotlieb Ponderosa 9.35 2 Briana Reynolds Palmer Ridge 9.15 3 Ashlyn Williams Ponderosa 9 4 Tiana Estrella Ponderosa 8.9 All-Around Rank Name School Score 1 Maddie Gotlieb Ponderosa 35.7 2 Tiana Estrella Ponderosa 34.05 3 Abigail Drennan Palmer Ridge 33.45 4 Briana Reynolds Palmer Ridge 32.15 -
Chase Moore of Mancos amasses 572 all-purpose yards in a game, the second-most in state history

(Courtesy of Mancos HS) Mancos sophomore Chase Moore went off in a win over Sargent on Friday night.
Moore had six total touchdowns, including four rushing, one receiving and another on a kickoff return, and also amassed 572 all-purpose yards — which are the second-most in state history — as his fourth-ranked Bluejays beat Sargent 58-31 in an 8-man contest.
Moore’s 572 all-purpose yards are second only to the 578 amassed by Thornton’s Keynan Huguley against Northglenn in 2012.
His yardage breakdown:
- 391 rushing, on just 17 carries (23.0 yards per carry).
- 75 receiving, including a 62-yard score.
- 106 on kickoff returns, including a 78-yard touchdown.
He also converted on a two-point attempt, meaning he personally scored 38 points in the game.
Moore had rushing touchdowns of 27, 40, 59 and 86 yards.
Mancos actually trailed Sargent 12-0 in the first quarter, and 15-14 at halftime, before erupting for 44 second-half points.
Moore is no stranger to big games. As a freshman, he rushed for 223 yards in one contest, and his two games from earlier this season were a 255-yard performance against Plateau Valley, and 139 yards against Merino.
Moore has 13 total touchdowns through three games for Mancos, which is 3-0.
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Boys golf regionals: Arapahoe’s Wilkinson among Monday’s medalists

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com) COLORADO SPRINGS — Arapahoe’s Matthew Wilkinson likes golfing in Colorado Springs. The sophomore had himself a day on Monday at the Colorado Springs Country Club where he shot a 4-under-par 67 to win the Class 5A Southern Regional golf tournament.
He didn’t get a fast start as he bogeyed the third hole of the day, but got on track with a birdie on No. 4, a 199-yard par 3.
He went out in 34 and turned it on once he got on the back nine. He made birdies on 11, 15 and 16 to claim the win over Regis Jesuit’s Bo Wardynski by three strokes at a course that Wilkinson saw as good prep for the 5A tournament which will be at Pinehurst.
“It’s a similar to the state course,” he said. “It’s tree-lined, tough greens, fast greens and firm fairways.”
The Warriors also got top-five finishes from Will Kates and Max Zadvorny to take home the team title. Arapahoe and Regis Jesuit were the top two teams in the tournament, earning automatic bids to state.
As for Wilkinson, he’s hoping that he he can take what he did at regionals to state in two weeks.
“I was in a groove,” he said.
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Class 5A, Northern Region
Fossil Ridge’s Gavin Hagstrom got the win shooting a 5-under-par 67 at Broadlands. Three players finished the day in red numbers, the most of any 5A regional on the day.
The Sabercats also won the team championship. Broomfield claimed the other team qualifying bid, eding Castle View by just a single stroke.
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Class 5A, Central Region
Lakewood’s Ryan Liao led the field with a 2-under-par 70 at South Suburban. Cherry Creek’s Charlie Flaxbeard was the only other kid to shoot under par and it was the Bruins who came away with the team win by placing three kids in the top 16 spots.
Highlands Ranch finished second to secure a trip to Pinehurst in two weeks.
[divider]Class 4A, Region 2

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com) Golden’s Chankrit Sundurapura kept himself under par for most of the day but struggled on the par 4 16th hole at the Country Club of Colorado. The 16th was his final hole of the day and the tricky pin placement led to a three-putt, ending his day with a 1-over-par 72 to take medalist honors.
Site host Cheyenne Mountain had three players in the top-seven to take the team title. Ponderosa shot 28-over as a team to also qualify for the 4A tournament at The Bridges Country Club in Montrose.
[divider]Class 4A, Region 1
Discovery Canyon’s Kaden Ford shot a 1-over-par 73 to get the win at Desert Hawk. He doubled up with wins as the Thunder shot 21-over to edge Pueblo West by three strokes.
Individual qualifiers from Coronado, Canon City and Durango also came out of Region 2.
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Class 3A, Region 2
Prospect Ridge Academy’s Walker Franklin made par on the first playoff hole to secure medalist honors at 3A’s Region 2 tournament. Holy Family claimed the team title with Colorado Academy securing the other team berth at the 3A state tournament.
The qualifiers will be back on the course in two weeks at the Eisenhower Blue Course at the United States Air Force Academy.
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Photos: No. 1 Colorado Academy field hockey beats Arapahoe
Top-ranked Colorado Academy field hockey beat Arapahoe 4-1 on Monday. A photo gallery from the game is available here.
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Denver Broncos high school football coach of the week: Silver Creek’s Brian McGee

(Matthew Jonas/BoCoPreps.com) Brian McGee only had about a month to prepare for his first season as a head football coach last year.
The time crunch as he finalized a staff and installed a new offensive system led to some struggles, and Silver Creek went 2-8 in 2018.
This year, they had an entire offseason to prepare for the season, and McGee’s players have bought in to what the second-year coach wants to do.
Already, Silver Creek, sitting a 3-0, has eclipsed last year’s win total. Included are wins over Thomas Jefferson in Week 1 and a 17-14 upset of then-No. 9 Windsor last week. It was a win that was sealed by senior Caleb Sedegan’s goal-line interception late in the fourth quarter.
“That was definitely one of the best moments I’ve had as a head coach, without a doubt,” McGee said.
McGee is this week’s Denver Broncos High School Football Coach of the Week.
The Broncos coach of the week is selected in partnership with the Broncos and CHSCA. Find a complete list of winners on this page.
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Brian McGee bio
Years as head coach: 2 (5-8)
Years at Silver Creek: 2 (5-8, 3-0 this season)
Previous stops: Silver Creek defensive line coach (2002-03); Silver Creek defensive coordinator (2004-17); Silver Creek head coach (2018-present).
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Ryan Casey: What made you want to get into coaching?
Brian McGee: Well I grew up in Longmont and went to Longmont High School and played for coach Gordon Cramer and coach VanderMolen were my coaches at Longmont High School. After I got out of high school, I went to CSU for a couple of years and then went into the military. Spent six years in the military and then came out and basically went to work in industry, and worked in industry for about 18 years and kind of started coaching before I started teaching.
And I love it. I love the game of football. I love what playing the game gave to me when I was in high school. And I love the fact that I can give back to these kids at the high school level and, and hopefully give them some of the stuff that football gave to me when I was playing.
Matter of fact, when the company I worked for told me they wanted me to stop coaching football, my wife basically told me, “You don’t want to stop coaching football. You love it too much. Just get your teaching license.” And so that’s what I did. I teach business education.
Casey: What kind of coach do you think you are? How do you think it feels to be coached by you?
McGee: I think my players understand that I’m going to hold them accountable. I’m going to push them to achieve what I see their potential is, which sometimes they don’t necessarily agree with me, but I hope they know that I love them.
When I push them it’s because I know that they can give me more than what they’re giving me. And when we get to that point and when that happens, I think they learn that they’ve got more in them than they thought they had. It makes me feel proud that they’re living up to what I knew they could do.
Casey: What has the transition to 4A for the program been like?
McGee: I was here when Silver Creek was in its glory days — three state championship appearances in a row, winning one of them. Really the difference between those days and even last year and this year are really the kids. Do we get the buy-in from the kids?
I think the biggest difference between 3A and 4A is just the depth of your team. We’ve never had great depth just because of the size of our school. I mean we’re a smaller 4A school, but even with that, when we’ve had those teams where the seniors really buy into what we’re trying to do or they’re committed to doing what we ask them to do and they bring everybody along with them. Those are the years we’ve been successful. And you just don’t get that every year.
You know, we can’t go out and recruit. And so we get the kids that we get, and hopefully if we start them off as freshmen and by the time they get to being seniors, they know what it is. But that doesn’t always happen. Your class numbers vary all the time. It’s a process and every high school in the state of Colorado has the same issue.
It’s just, do I have that core group of kids that I can lean on and depend on that are going to bring everybody up around them? And when you have those kids, good things happen. And when you don’t have those kids, you struggle.
Casey: So what’s been the biggest difference from last year to this year? You guys have played some tough teams are are sitting 3-0.
McGee: Last year was tough because I wasn’t named head coach until right before school started. And so we had to finalize the staff and bring in a new offensive coordinator and do all that kind of stuff right before the beginning of school.
So we were learning a new system, a little bit of that. We had a fairly good number of seniors, but I don’t think they bought into what we were going to try to do with our new offense with some of the coaching changes that took place, some of that kind of stuff. This year, we had all summer to work with them. We got them all coming into our offseason stuff and being committed to what we were trying to do, not only in the weight room but with our summer conditioning and our 7-on-7s.
We won our bracket in the Broncos’ 7-on-7, which I think gave us a tremendous boost. We didn’t get to go to Dove Valley because I had too many kids also playing baseball. So we gave that spot up. But we got to do all those kinds of things together as a unit and finalized our coaching staff well before the season started. I think being in that better place was a big part of it. And then also the fact that we’ve got kids that they’ve committed to what we want to do early on over the summer and have put the time in.
Casey: Take me through last week’s game. Obviously, Windsor is a very prominent program. I think the second quarter seemed to be pretty important for you guys, going up 10 right before half. What was that game like?
McGee: After going back and forth on the two opening drives and neither one of us really doing anything, being able to go out and get the first score, I think was really important for us. That kind of proved to us, “Hey, we’re in this, we’re here, we’re here to win. We’re not backing down just because they’re Windsor.”
Being able to go in (at halftime) up 10 points was huge for us. Windsor’s a tough team and they’re going to get their yards and our kids, the resilience we had on the defensive side of the ball, and the fact that we got three takeaways. We went into that game telling our guys, “Look, you know, whoever wins the takeaway battle in this game is probably gonna win the game.” And we won it. And I think that played a key role.
They made their plays, we got some takeaways and some key moments in their drives that kind of put us in great positions and we took advantage of that.
If you’re gonna make the playoffs, if you’re going to have that caliber of team, you’ve got to learn how to take advantage when you get those opportunities. And I think we did.
Casey: You’ve got to be pretty proud as a coach, up three in the fourth quarter, that you guys were able to hold off a late rally.
McGee: Yeah, I can guarantee you that was a nail-biter there at the end. Them marching down the field and us trying everything we can to stop them.
When Caleb Sedegan, made that interception down on the goal line to stop their drive, that was definitely one of the best moments I’ve had as a head coach, without a doubt. Because we’d practiced and we’d practiced and we’d put a lot on our defense all year long and they performed when we needed them to. And that was great to see.
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Football rankings: Seven newcomers crack the polls

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com) This week’s football rankings feature seven new teams: Legend (5A), Vista Peak (4A), Silver Creek (4A), Frederick (3A), Eaton (2A), Vail Christian (8-man), and Briggsdale (6-man).
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. Polls are released each Monday.
Complete rankings for all classes are below.
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CHSAANow.com Football Polls
Voted upon by coaches around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. In Class 1A-5A, these rankings will factor into postseason seeding. More information is available here.
Class 5A RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Columbine (16) 4-0 247 1 W 2 Cherry Creek (6) 4-0 225 2 W 3 Valor Christian (3) 3-1 192 3 W 4 Grandview 4-0 182 4 W 5 Ralston Valley (1) 4-0 144 6 W 6 Regis Jesuit 4-0 140 5 W 7 Eaglecrest 4-0 93 7 W 8 Fairview 3-1 54 10 W 9 Pomona 1-3 53 8 L 10 Legend 4-0 28 – W Others receiving votes: Castle View 20, Lakewood 20, Cherokee Trail 10, Smoky Hill 10, Arapahoe 4, Mullen 3, Mountain Vista 2, Overland 2, ThunderRidge 1. Dropped out Cherokee Trail (9). Class 4A RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Pine Creek (20) 2-1 249 1 L 2 Broomfield (3) 3-0 204 2 Bye 3 Pueblo West (2) 4-0 196 4 W 4 Dakota Ridge 3-0 160 5 W 5 Montrose (1) 3-0 158 3 Bye 6 Chatfield 3-1 126 6 W 7 Ponderosa 1-2 76 7 Bye 8 Heritage 2-1 44 10 W 9 Vista Peak Prep 3-0 36 – W 10 Silver Creek 3-0 35 – W Others receiving votes: Loveland 32, Greeley West 25, Skyline 15, Fruita Monument 14, Windsor 13, Grand Junction 11, Golden 6, Monarch 6, Rampart 6, Hinkley 5, Longmont 5, Wheat Ridge 4, Brighton 3, Air Academy 1. Dropped out Loveland (8), Windsor (9). Class 3A RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Palmer Ridge (18) 3-0 200 1 W 2 Mead (2) 4-0 187 2 W 3 Pueblo South 3-0 162 4 Bye 4 Discovery Canyon 3-1 107 6 W 5 Green Mountain 2-1 91 3 L 6 Palisade 2-1 89 5 W 7 Frederick 3-0 85 7 W 8 Lutheran 2-1 35 – W 9 Durango 2-2 31 10 W 10 Erie 1-2 30 9 Bye Others receiving votes: Roosevelt 27, Pueblo Central 18, Fort Morgan 16, Thomas Jefferson 16, Conifer 13, Holy Family 11, Northridge 10, Pueblo East 8, Battle Mountain 6, Skyview 4, Denver North 3, Harrison 3, Lewis-Palmer 3. Dropped out Roosevelt (8). Class 2A RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Rifle (15) 3-0 205 1 W 2 Delta (4) 3-0 172 3 W 3 Platte Valley (1) 3-1 146 4 W 4 Sterling 3-1 140 2 L 5 Resurrection Christian (1) 2-1 121 6 W 6 Faith Christian (1) 2-1 112 5 W 7 Alamosa 3-0 105 8 W 8 La Junta 2-1 71 7 W 9 Basalt 3-0 67 9 W 10 Eaton 1-2 17 – L Others receiving votes: Bayfield 8, Bennett 8, Moffat County 8, The Classical Academy 6, Lamar 5, D’Evelyn 4, University 4, Bishop Machebeuf 3, Elizabeth 3, Englewood 2, Kent Denver 2, Aspen 1. Dropped out Bayfield (10). Class 1A RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Limon (15) 3-0 193 1 W 2 Strasburg (4) 3-0 169 2 Bye 3 Holyoke (1) 3-0 167 3 Bye 4 Florence 3-0 125 5 W 5 Meeker 3-1 101 4 L 6 Colorado Springs Christian 2-1 92 6 W 7 Centauri 3-1 83 7 W 8 Buena Vista 3-0 57 9 W 9 Rye 4-0 37 10 W 10 Burlington 1-2 21 8 L Others receiving votes: Highland 19, Hotchkiss 11, Wray 9, Paonia 6, Peyton 4, Wiggins 4, Monte Vista 2. Dropped out None. 8-man RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Sedgwick County (12) 4-0 129 1 W 2 Fowler (1) 3-0 97 2 Bye 3 Mancos 3-0 95 4 W 4 Caliche 3-0 93 3 Bye 5 Dayspring Christian Academy 3-0 75 5 W 6 Merino 2-1 48 6 Bye 7 Sanford 3-0 44 8 W 8 Vail Christian 3-0 33 – W 9 West Grand 3-1 26 9 W 10 Rangely 3-1 19 7 L Others receiving votes: Hoehne 18, Pikes Peak Christian 16, Soroco 8, Holly 6, Sargent 5, Dove Creek 3. Dropped out Hoehne (10). 6-man RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW 1 Kit Carson (8) 4-0 89 1 W 2 Fleming (1) 4-0 79 2 W 3 Stratton/Liberty 3-1 74 3 W 4 Cheyenne Wells 4-0 58 4 W 5 Flagler/Hi-Plains 4-0 49 5 W 6 Prairie 3-1 47 6 W 7 Granada 4-0 30 8 W 8 Branson/Kim 4-0 26 10 W 9 North Park 3-1 23 7 L 10 Briggsdale 2-2 9 – W Others receiving votes: Cotopaxi 7, Cheraw 1, Eads 1, Peetz 1, Walsh 1. Dropped out Peetz (9).