Mason Hoehn scored two goals to lead No. 8 Valor Christian hockey to a 7-0 win over Mountain Vista on Friday.
Month: December 2019
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Photos: No. 2 Smoky Hill boys basketball pulls away from Regis Jesuit
Tied heading into the fourth quarter, No. 2 Smoky Hill boys basketball created some space and got a 70-60 win over Regis Jesuit.
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Photos: Bear Creek girls basketball loses to Garden City, Kan.
Bear Creek girls basketball fell to Garden City, Kan., on Friday, 63-19.
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Photos: Bear Creek boys basketball loses to Garden City, Kan.
Bear Creek boys basketball lost to Garden City, Kan., 47-46 on Friday.
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Photos: Poudre wrestling pulls out narrow dual win over Fossil Ridge
Five of Poudre wrestlings seven wins came via pin as the Impalas edged out Fossil Ridge 39-34 in a dual meet on Thursday.
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Photos: Grandview wrestling wins dual meet over Cherry Creek
Grandview wrestling had a strong showing as it took down league rival Cherry Creek 48-21 in a dual meet on Thursday.
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This week’s wrestling team rankings from On The Mat
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 Rocky Ford 2 3 Cedaredge 4 4 Buena Vista 3 5 Lyons 5 6 John Mall 6 7 Highland 7 8 Centauri 9 9 Hotchkiss 10 10 Hayden – Dropped out Paonia (8). Class 3A RK TEAM PVS 1 Jefferson 1 2 Valley 2 3 Lamar 3 4 Pagosa Springs 4 5 Alamosa – 6 Berthoud 5 7 Weld Central – 8 Eagle Valley 7 9 Fort Morgan 9 10 Platte Valley 10 Dropped out Alamosa (6), Weld Central (8). Class 4A RK TEAM PVS 1 Windsor 1 2 Pueblo East 2 3 Pueblo County 3 4 Broomfield 4 5 Cheyenne Mountain 5 6 Roosevelt 6 7 Mesa Ridge 7 8 Thompson Valley 9 9 Loveland 8 10 Pueblo West 10 Dropped out None. Class 5A RK TEAM PVS 1 Pomona 1 2 Ponderosa 2 3 Grand Junction 3 4 Rocky Mountain 4 5 Grandview 5 6 Brighton 6 7 Monarch 7 8 Cherokee Trail 10 9 Pine Creek 8 10 Legacy 9 Dropped out None. -
Last-second shot lifts Pueblo West boys basketball over No. 2 Harrison
A 14-point lead in the fourth quarter had vanished. It looked like Class 4A No. 2 Harrison boys basketball was on the verge of completing a comeback at home to remain unbeaten.
But Jimmy Wardle had other plans.
His shot was in the air with about two seconds left and fell through the hoop to give Pueblo West one of the biggest boys basketball upsets in this young 2019-20 season.
As the final ticks ran out and the Cyclones bench leaping in celebration, the comeback was held off. Pueblo West left Colorado Springs with a 65-62 win, potentially giving the team enough clout to break into the first CHSAANow.com basketball rankings of the new year.
BBB Final @cyclonespwhs 65@hhspanthers1 62
Jimmy Wardle with the buzzer beater fir the Cyclones@Bball_CO pic.twitter.com/FJNIfLA9I7
— Jon Miller (@J_Mills78) December 20, 2019
With just under six minutes left in the game, it looked like the Cyclones (5-2 overall) were in clear control and could almost cruise to the win.
But Harrison didn’t come into the season as a top-10 team by accident. The Panthers (5-1) went on a 15-1 run to tie the game. But it was the Cyclones who had the ball in the waning seconds.
Taylor Harris brought the ball up the court and found an open Wardle on the wing. The Panthers couldn’t close out in time and the uncontested shots fell, shaking the landscape of 4A boys basketball heading into the meat of the season.
Donta Dawson led the Panthers scoring effort with 25 points.
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Sterling’s Rob Busmente named Denver Broncos high school football coach of the year

(Paul Shepardson) Rob Busmente knows the Sterling football program inside and out.
A 1992 graduate of the school, Busmenete just finished his 25th year on the football staff, and his seventh as the program’s head coach. He’s also a social studies teacher at the school.
“At heart,” he said, “I think I’m just kind of a small town guy.”
At the helm of the program, Busmente has turned the Tigers into perennial contenders. Sterling has been to the playoffs in five of the past six seasons, including a trip to at least the quarterfinals in 2015, 2016 and 2019.
And, earlier this month, he led Sterling to the first state championship in the history of the program — which dates to at least 1908 — when the Tigers claimed the Class 2A title.
Busmente was voted the 2A coach of the year by his peers as part of the All-State teams. Now, he has been selected as the 2019 Denver Broncos high school football coach of the year.
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(Joe Skerjanec/OTSPORTSCHEK) Rob Busmente bio
Years as head coach: Seven (47-25)
Years at Sterling: 25
Previous stops: Sterling volunteer assistant (1994-96); Sterling assistant secondaries and wide receivers coach (1997-2000); Sterling defensive coordinator (2001-12); Sterling head coach (2013-present).
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(Joe Skerjanec/OTSPORTSCHEK) Question: What does Sterling mean to you? It’s pretty rare that someone graduates from a school and spends their entire career there. So how important is Sterling in your life?
Rob Busmente: Well, I think some of it was the desire to come back. When I was finishing up my degree at Western State, there was going to be job availability because I knew some of the teachers in the school, in my department, that I was going into were going to be retiring. So I knew there would be an in there. Plus I was already familiar — the coaches that were on the staff, minus the head coach, were my high school coaches.
So there was that familiarity and just something about the school and even just the community as far as just kind of what fits a little bit of my personality. I’ve done some traveling around the world and things like that. But at heart, I think I’m just kind of a small town guy. You know, I kinda like the secluded part of being in a small town and just minus some of the hustle and bustle of some of the big cities. I like going and visiting the big cities and things like that. And I have lots of friends there and they’re fun to visit. But it’s just something about small town with me that that was a draw I think.
I had the opportunities that were available plus the relationships that had already had with people in the building. I knew it would be a pretty smooth transition.
Q: Do you ever draw on your experience as a player at Sterling and link that to your current players at all?
Busmente: We mostly try to draw on experiences. We kind of focus on the failures that we had as players, as far as trying to let our kids know that as coaches we’ve been in your position. We haven’t always done everything right and done everything perfect, and have had to learn through the trials and tribulations of areas where we failed: how to be smarter players, how to work harder.
So those are some of the things that we usually try to drum on as far as our experiences as former players. It also helps that I have other guys on my staff that also played here, so they know that some of the support that you can get from the community and how much they can kind of glue to sports. It’s always kind of nice to share that wisdom with those kids and let them know the things that they represent.
Q: What made you want to get into coaching?
Busmente: It was my, I guess my junior high school. There was a class that we took and we had to do like a career path thing as an assignment that they gave us to where we had to do some researching. I knew that I enjoyed social sciences, like history and government and those things as a student. I loved playing and I knew that somehow I probably wanted to be involved in the game in some way. And I knew that being able to go and play at the next level was a long shot. That’s a low percentage kind of thing. And knew that playing professionally probably wasn’t in the cards, but coaching was the avenue that I could go in.
So it allowed me to pursue a couple of things that I liked. And I was inspired by honestly my coaches I had in high school. My head coach, Pat Busteed, was a social science teacher and he was the head football coach and he was able to be good at doing both, so it was just something that I knew where my interests lay. And the idea of trying to give back to the game and give back to the community as far as the school was just a draw for me back then.
I just kind of stuck with it as I went through college and pursued that degree. And now I’m here.

(Joe Skerjanec/OTSPORTSCHEK) Q: What kind of coach would you say you are? What do you think your players would say?
Busmente: The thing that we’ve always tried to instill is that when we push you to be your best and to pursue your best it is not just because we’re coaching who we think you can be, but also because we’re trying to instill the life lesson from this through the game of football.
Most importantly, I would hope that they would say at the end that us as coaches cared more about them, the individual, you know, we loved the player and not the jersey number and their personal relationships with us was our main motivator for what we are doing here and what we’re trying to accomplish.
And, looking at a big picture thing, winning championships and winning titles and everything, it’s important and it’s a goal that you set out. But in the overall big picture of things, we want people walking out of here to be better men and be better equipped to be husbands and fathers in their own right when their time comes. And hopefully we pointed them in the right direction so that when they look back, I hope that they look at us as coaches as those positive influences and inspirations to them.
Q: What kind of impact has football had on your life? Why do you think it’s important for young men to be involved in football?
Busmente: Well, I think it’s the ultimate team sport as opposed to other things. I mean, there’s other sports out there that require teamwork, but I just feel that football is that ultimate team perspective to where they have to learn that reliance on others and develop the trust and sacrifice, as far as everybody combining for the greater good. And I just think it helps teach and reinforce those lessons: There’s going to be lots of things that we are going to be expected to do on our own through our own work ethic and through our own focus and drive. But support systems are huge in anybody’s life. When you have those things in place, your chances of success increase.
We kinda try to use that as the team perspective. We try to make sure that we all understand that everybody in the room is important and everybody in the room has a part in what we’re doing because without each other, we’re not going to be able to accomplish the things that we have. We have to have the trust in the people in the room to be able to accomplish our goals and understand that everybody’s going to sacrifice a little part of themselves for the greater good.
And that’s what it takes to be a good family man, to be a good husband and things like that. Some of those lessons that you can teach through the game and hope that they carry into their life.
Q: So kind of switching gears into your season this year, what did you expect at fall camp? I mean, did you see a championship coming, or the potential for one?
Busmente: We felt coming out of our summer team camp and then kind of progressing into the fall that we had some tools, some pieces in place to where if we could get everything going in the right direction and take care of things that we could go and make some noise, as a conference team and as a playoff team. You set goals at the beginning with the team and one of the things they do write down, you know, “Let’s, let’s win the state championship.” And then we have to go back through our lessons through the week and ask ourselves a question: Are we doing those things that are helping us accomplish our goal, if that is indeed what it was.
As the season started to progress the kids just started to get more comfortable with schemes and more confident in their abilities. And we had some things just kind of go our way and things were looking positive and just started trending that way.
We just kinda rode that that wave there towards the end and fortunately we’re able to make plays and take advantage of opportunities that were given to us. We were fortunate to put the things together and have everything fall into place. We got everybody focused in on that one goal and everybody never really wavered from that and then focused in on the success of the team. And it just carried us to the end.
I guess in the beginning, I don’t want to say we were 100% sure that this was where we were going to be at the end, but that was the direction we were trying to point, and we were trying to do everything we could to just make sure that we could look ourselves in the mirror at the end regardless of what happened and say that we did what we had to do to try to accomplish that goal.

(Joe Skerjanec/OTSPORTSCHEK) Q: So a lot of coaches always say you learn a lot more from a loss than from a win. If that’s the case, what did you guys take away from the Scottsbluff game? [Sterling trailed 28-0 at halftime, and lost 36-13 in Nebraska.]
Busmente: We knew that they were a tough opponent and they had lots of skill, size, speed, and we knew that it was going to be a tough task.
As the game was going through the first half, things weren’t going the way we wanted them to. We had given up some tough plays and we were having trouble being consistent on offense. But as we went into the second quarter and halftime, we just tried to make the deal with our players about, “We can’t go out there with an attitude that we’ve quit, that we’ve given up,” and “We got to continue to battle.”
That was one of the signs from our team — in that first half, it was early enough in the season that they were kind of teetering on that line of letting mistakes and unfortunate things that happened in the game get the better of them attitude-wise, to where they would kind of get down and lose focus. But they never really did, even in that game. They thought about it in the first half. You could kind of sense it and you could kind of feel it.
But then from that point on in a lot of the games when things would go bad, there wasn’t a lot of head-hanging and finger-pointing and woe-is-me type attitudes. They just kinda continued on and just kept playing the game and kept trying to make plays. I think that was one of the games that really taught us that resiliency matters and perseverance matters.
Q: Ultimately, you guys do end up putting together a string of wins winning that state title and it’s the first for the program. What was that like? What was the feeling like, and what did that mean?
Busmente: It still feels a little bit surreal and I’m not even a hundred percent sure that it’s totally sunk in with everybody. We had to stay an extra night in Pueblo because they closed the roads, and then we got back Sunday and had a celebration in the gym. And then the next day the guys went to basketball practice and they have a basketball game Thursday, they have a wrestling match Thursday and they jumped right into their next sport. We haven’t really kind of sat and reflected on it.
But it was an amazing feeling on the sideline, mostly just watching the enthusiasm of the kids and their faces. When that the final buzzer went off, just the elation on their faces and the joy that they were feeling on the field with each other. And then when they let the crowd out and the families out, just seeing the joy that people felt, it was an unreal scene being out there among the people.
It meant a lot for those guys to go out and win that for everybody. Like we said, “You’re always going to be the ones that they reference, no matter how many more titles Sterling wins between now and then, they’re going to reference you because you were the first ones to accomplish that feat through the history. So it’s something that you guys can definitely be proud of and take pride in the fact that you were able to do that.”

(Joe Skerjanec/OTSPORTSCHEK) -
Freshman leads No. 6 Green Mountain girls hoops in win over Broomfield
LAKEWOOD — Green Mountain freshman Jayda Maves has officially arrived.
Maves scored a season-high 26 points, including scoring 14 straight points for the Rams in the second half down the stretch in a close game against Class 5A Broomfield.
“Her shot is beautiful and the thing I love about Jayda is she is selfless, very humble and wants to be in the right place at the right time,” Green Mountain coach Darren Pitzner said after his freshman came off the bench to make six 3-pointers. “She takes what comes to here. She doesn’t force. She has a great future.”

Green Mountain sophomore Shea Murphy, right, drives past Broomfield senior Jessica Hoffman during the non-league game Wednesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) Green Mountain — No. 6 in the CHSAANow.com Class 4A girls basketball rankings this week — grabbed a 54-46 victory in a non-league game against the history rich Broomfield program led by coach Mike Croell, who guided the Eagles to six state titles during his 20-plus years at Broomfield.
The scoring barrage by Maves started with back-to-back 3-pointers to give the Rams a 40-35 lead late in the third quarter, along with a third straight field goal to close out quarter.
“I just felt really confident,” Maves said of her 14-point run in the second half. “All my teammates were really hyping me up and I just felt confident with my shot. All the practice has paid off.”
After a 7-0 run by Broomfield (5-4), Maves got hot again. She hit back-to-back 3-pointers again with under 3 minutes to play to regain the lead again for the Rams.
Free throws by Maves, junior Courtney Hank, along with seniors Kasey Klocek and Riley Shoemaker in the final minute sealed the victory.
“Definitely a signature win for the program,” Pitzner said after the Rams’ record improved to 6-1 on the season. “The girls know when you play together anyone on this team any given night anybody can step up. Tonight it was Jayda that was on fire.”

Broomfield junior Emma Rich had 10 points for the Eagles on Wednesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) The Rams came into the game with no player averaging double-digit points, but five — Maves, Hank, senior Maddie Phillips, along with sophomores Shea Murphy and Avery Oaster — all averaging between 7 and 9 points per game.
“It’s not really about that top scorer,” Pitzner said. “It’s about the energy. It’s about our Level 3 and JV cheering us on. That’s what I love to see the program moving in the right direction and kids having fun along the way.”
Pitzner is pleased with the chemistry so far this season. The mix of seniors to freshmen contributing on the court this early in the season has expectations high for Green Mountain.
“I love of our seniors. They were really steady under pressure tonight. Then to mix in our youth,” Pitzner said. “If the girls keep up this kind of energy and keep being selfless like they have been … it could be a memorable season.”
The Rams finished second in the Class 4A Jeffco League to Evergreen last season. It’s been awhile since Green Mountain has captured a conference title. The last girls basketball league title for the Rams was back in the 1993-94 season, but that could all change this year.
“I definitely think we are the team to beat,” Maves said when asked about 4A Jeffco League play that starts up after Winter Break.

Green Mountain junior Courtney Hank (33) tries to find an open teammate while being double-teamed by Broomfield junior Courtney Wristen (10) and senior Lauren Felknor (14) during the Rams’ 54-46 home victory over the Eagles on Wednesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
