Month: December 2019

  • Photos: No. 4 Rocky Mountain wrestling beats Fossil Ridge in a dual meet

    Fourth-ranked Rocky Mountain wrestling beat Fossil Ridge 58-16 in a dual meet on Thursday.

  • Photos: Rock Canyon boys basketball beats Dakota Ridge

    Rock Canyon boys basketball improved to 4-1 this season with a 68-60 win over Dakota Ridge on Thursday.

  • Photos: No. 5 Monarch hockey shines in win over No. 10 Mountain Vista

    Drew Fehr and Caleb Gold each scored twice as No. 5 Monarch hockey cruised to a 6-1 win over Mountain Vista on Thursday.

  • 2A No. 1 Limon girls basketball ends impressive streak for 1A No. 2 Kit Carson

    (Kevin Shaffer/Colorado Preps)

    Kit Carson was just a game away from tying one of the most impressive streaks in Colorado high school basketball.

    Heading into Thursday night’s game with Class 2A No. 1 Limon, the Wildcats had won 77 consecutive games. The state record for consecutive wins by a program is 78.

    Sadly, it wasn’t meant to be as the Badgers won the game 50-15, putting an end to one of the most impressive runs of any team in any sport in recent memory.

    The 77-game winning streak for Kit Carson (0-1 overall) began on March 11, 2016. They lost the previous day in the first round of the 1A state basketball tournament, but won their two games in the consolation bracket.

    The next three seasons, Kit Carson finished 25-0, claiming three state championships in the process. They entered this season having to replace four starters from last year, which is a tough challenge for any team.

    With Limon firing on all cylinders, tying the state mark just wasn’t meant to be.

    “Losing hurts no matter when it is,” Kit Carson coach Sara Crawford told Kevin Shaffer of Colorado Preps. “This had a little extra sting.”

    One loss does not a season make. Even though the Wildcats are starting 0-1 for the first time in over a decade, they have a chance to get back on track with a game against Wiley on Friday.

  • Soccer committee meeting: 2A expands playoff bracket; new seeding criteria

    Lotus Ridgway boys soccer
    (Aidan Hicks/aidanhicksphotography.com)

    The soccer committee met last month, and made some big changes in Class 2A.

    Each of the changes sought to address some issues within the classification, while also helping to align it more with how 3A, 4A and 5A are setup.

    “When 2A soccer came on board, the intention was to increase program participation in the sport at our smaller member schools, while at the same time, maintaining programs at our smaller member schools currently offering the sport. We have been successful in achieving this goal,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Justin Saylor, who administers the sport. “The next step in ensuring the success of 2A soccer is aligning it with our other classifications, regarding alignment of leagues and playoff qualification — while at the same time, addressing the travel and host site issues unique to the classification.

    “I believe we have achieved this with the changes made by the committee.”

    For starters, the state tournament bracket was expanded from 12 to 16 teams, which bring the classification more in line in terms of percentage of teams qualifying for the postseason. 2A will have 32 teams in the 2020-22 two-year cycle.

    In addition, the dates of the first and second round of the 2A tournament have been moved to a Friday/Saturday format, with four-team pods each traveling to the top four seeds in the tournament and playing the games at one site. This past season, the rounds were played on Wednesday and Saturday.

    “This will help us eliminate travel and missed school times, because of how spread out the classification is,” Saylor said.

    Finally, every 2A team was placed into a league, doing away with a format which allowed some teams to play independently, and certain leagues to have schedules where not every team in a league played one another.

    These committee proposals, like all recommendations, must be approved by the Legislative Council in April 2020.

    Of note, the committee last year passed a game minimum in 2A which is set to begin in the fall of 2020. Teams must play a minimum of 12 games in order to qualify for the postseason, 10 of which must be against schools which belong to state associations that are members of the NFHS.

    All classes of soccer have also adopted a new seeding criteria, one that uses a combined formula from the RPI standings, MaxPreps rankings, and CHSAANow coaches poll to seed the fields after they are determined. Other sports, such as volleyball and field hockey have followed football’s lead in this area in doing the same during their committee meetings this fall.

  • Arvada West girls hoops off to best start in 5 years

    ARVADA — It wasn’t the prettiest of victories, but Arvada West’s home-opener victory Wednesday night marked the best start for the program in five years.

    The Wildcats (3-1 record) held Boulder (1-4) to just eight made field goals in A-West’s 35-30 victory. Still, A-West coach Brady Meeks knows there is plenty of room for improvement as the Wildcats struggled offensively.

    Arvada West sophomore Jasmyn Williams (1) drives on Boulder junior Abbie Gillach (10) in front of the Panthers’ bench Wednesday. Williams scored a team-high 9 points in the Wildcats’ 35-30 win. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “Sometimes winning ugly is a good thing,” said Meeks, who is in his third year at the helm of the program. “We just need to learn from this and get better because when we start playing more talented teams we aren’t going to get away with that.”

    A-West held a 19-12 lead at halftime, but couldn’t extend its lead in the third quarter. Both teams sputtered offensively after halftime. The lone field goal made in the third quarter came by A-West junior Alexis Folks with less than a minute to play in the period.

    “We didn’t shoot the ball well,” Meeks admitted. “Sometimes when you don’t shoot the ball well you have to do the little things.”

    The biggest offensive play for A-West came with just less than 2:30 minutes to play in the fourth quarter. A-West’s leading scorer — sophomore Amanda Neff — on the season had a nifty pass inside to senior Calayia Vickles for an easy layup.

    Arvada West sophomore Amanda Neff (13) dumps a pass down low during the Wildcats’ 35-30 victory over Boulder. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “That was a monster play,” Meeks said of the assist from Neff to Vickles that put the Wildcats up 31-25 with 2:26 to play. “That play from Amanda to Calaiya was monster for us.”

    Sophomore Jasmyn Williams finished with a team-high 9 points for A-West, including going 4-for-5 from the free-throw line in the second half. Freshman Payton Reed had a pair of big free throws with 35 seconds left seal the victory.

    “It was important because I felt after last season a lot of people doubted us,” Vickles said. “To get a home win was really important for us.”

    Boulder senior Tessa Van Bussum hit a 3-pointer just before the buzzer, but it wasn’t enough for the Panthers. Sophomore Ella Bartsch led all scorers with 11 points. Junior Abbie Gillach was held below her 11.5 points per game average.

    Boulder sophomore Karina Ontiveros (23) takes a jumper over Arvada West freshman Payton Reed (5) during the second half Wednesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “We really worked on shutting down (Abbie Gillach) that was our main goal,” Vickles said of holding Gillach to 9 points.

    A-West has three straight road games ahead. The Wildcats begin with a trip to Fort Collins to face Rocky Mountain on Tuesday, Dec. 17. A-West already has a win over the Lobos this season. The Wildcats took a 52-37 win over Rocky Mountain in A-West’s season opener Dec. 4 at the Mountain Vista/Rock Canyon Tournament.

    “It’s a win, but we’ve got to get back to work tomorrow,” Meeks said.

    Vickles said a big focus this season is to improve in conference play. The Wildcats haven’t been above .500 in Class 5A Jeffco League play since going 14-2 back in the 2011-12 season. A-West has just won one league game the past two years.

    “It all starts on how we play during pre-season,” Vickles said preparing for conference play after Winter Break. “Building our team camaraderie for sure is our biggest thing this year.”

    Arvada West senior Calaiya Vickles (23) guards Boulder sophomore Ella Bartsch (22) during the non-league game Wednesday night at Arvada West High School. The Wildcats held the Panthers to eight field goals to give A-West a 35-30. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Football committee meeting: All 5A playoff games to be held at higher seeds

    Columbine Ralston Valley football
    (Kevin McNearny)

    AURORA — All playoff games in Class 5A football will now be hosted by the higher seeded team, a major change in the sport’s postseason format.

    The football committee voted to approve the change during its annual meeting on Thursday.

    “This recognizes the hard work that it takes over the course of a season to obtain a high seed, and the minimal travel involved in 5A enables those who have earned a higher seed the opportunity to host throughout the playoffs,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Adam Bright, who administers football.

    Previously, the classification had used a formula to determine who would host games after the first round, where the team with the fewest home games would host the quarterfinals and semifinals.

    Now 5A playoff games will be hosted by the higher seeds, regardless of a the number of home games a team has. The exception, of course, is the championship game, which is held at Mile High.

    The committee decided that because the travel wasn’t that great in 5A, the rationale behind the original rule — which centered around teams having to travel in back-to-back weeks, and the expense involved — wasn’t as applicable to the classification as it had been.

    “In 5A, you’re talking Fort Collins to Colorado Springs,” said committee chair Chris Noll, the district athletic director of District 11. “You’re talking the I-25 corridor.”

    The vote also sparked a discussion among the other classes where they considered doing the same thing. The other classes are going to bring it to their communities to find out their thoughts, specifically in 2A, 3A and 4A, where the championship games are played at neutral sites.

    All recommendations from the football committee will need to be approved by the Legislative Council during its meeting in April 2020.

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    On drones.

    The committee had a long discussion about equal facilities, and a big chunk of it was spent talking about the use of drones at games.

    Drones are allowed to be used, so long as the host school district approves them. There was a season-long conversation around drones, and that if one team was using it, whether or not they should be forced to give the other team the feed to create “equal facilities.”

    However, the committee decided that drones do not fall under the “equal facilities” requirement listed in the football bulletin.

    “I think there’s a difference between facility and technology,” said committee member John Sullivan, the athletic director and coach at Vista PEAK. “And, to me, drones are a technology.”

    Added committee member Autumn Sereno, the athletic director at Green Mountain: “You can also take that to another stadium. To me, that’s not a facility.”

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    No neutral site for 1A championship.

    The committee discussed having the 1A title game at a neutral site, potentially at CSU-Pueblo where it would become a double-header with the 2A game on that day.

    They heard feedback from the gallery that the 1A crowds would be more inclined to travel to a home site as opposed to a neutral site in Pueblo, and they also felt that the atmosphere of the game would be hurt.

    No one on the committee proposed doing so, and so the game will remain at a home site.

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    Discussion around minimum number of players.

    The committee had a good discussion about requiring programs to have a minimum number of players in order to field a team.

    One thought was to require programs to have 150% of the players that they play with on the field. That would be nine players for 6-man teams, 12 players for 8-man, and 17 players for 11-man.

    The thought was that it would help address forfeits that happen late-season, as well as programs who drop their teams in the middle of the season.

    According to NFHS rules, teams must begin with the minimum number of players at kickoff — six in 6-man, eight in 8-man, and 11 in 11-man — but are allowed to play with less than the minimum after a game has started.

    There have been situations where teams have put a player on the field for kickoff in order to begin play with the minimum number of players, and then don’t play them the rest of the game because they are hurt.

    “We often times had a coach in a difficult position, where he has to make a decision on who is healthy enough to play, and putting them out there just for a kickoff, then pulling him,” Bright said.

    Additionally, there have been a number of programs who have forfeit games late in the season due to a lack of numbers, or outright cancelled programs mid-season for the season reason.

    “We are getting teams that are cancelling in the middle of the season, we are getting forfeits that are causing homecomings to be cancelled, senior nights to be cancelled,” Bright said.

    Ultimately, no one on the committee made a motion to bring the proposal up for a vote, so no minimum will be imposed.

    [divider]

    Notables:

    • The leagues for the 2020 and 2021 seasons were approved by the Board of Directors in June, and were not discussed at the football committee meeting on Thursday.
    • At that same meeting, the Board approved a 24-team playoff for 4A ahead of its 2020 and 2021 seasons. This means they will move to the same schedule as 5A, with no bye week during the regular season.
    • 6-man moved to be in line with 1A-5A in how they seed their state playoffs, using the Coaches Poll, RPI, MaxPreps and Packard Rankings in a combined format. 8-man is going to examine doing the same thing and possibly amend the report at Legislative Council after reaching out to its schools.
    • Rifle coach/AD Damon Wells proposed expanding the 2A bracket to 24 teams from 16. It sparked a conversation about 1A and 3A doing the same in order to have all 11-man classifications aligned. The proposal will be re-examined at next year’s committee meeting for the 2022 and 2023 seasons.
    • The committee will explore further addressing competitive equity over the course of the next year. “We’ve got to find a way to get like schools playing each other more often,” Noll said.
    • There will no longer be an at-large berth in the 5A football playoffs. League champions will automatically qualify, and the remainder of the field will qualify through the RPI standings. There are two exceptions: The Metro 1 and Metro 2 leagues will only be able to qualify their league champions into the playoff field. And, if the 4A team in the 5A Southern League, Pine Creek, wins the league, the highest-rated 5A team in the final RPI standings of the regular season will automatically qualify for the 5A bracket.
    • The committee decided to not require all fields to have a physical play clock.
  • Photos: No. 3 Fort Collins finds the net often in win over Dakota Ridge

    Six different players netted goals as No. 3 Fort Collins hockey grabbed a 7-2 win over Dakota Ridge on Wednesday.

  • Photos: ThunderRidge and Valor Christian boys basketball get wins in the Tip-Off Classic

    HIGHLANDS RANCH — ThunderRidge boys basketball topped Grand Junction while Valor Christian beat Rocky Mountain to open the Tip-Off Classic.

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    ThunderRidge vs. Grand Junction

    Grand Junction ThunderRidge boys basketball
    (PaulDiSalvoPhotography.com)

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    Valor Christian vs. Rocky Mountain

    Valor Christian Rocky Mountain boys basketball
    (PaulDiSalvoPhotography.com)
  • Photos: Chatfield wrestling edges Bear Creek in dual meet

    A hard-fought dual went in favor of Chatfield wrestling, who got the better of Bear Creek 36-33 on Wednesday.