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Centennial League play kicked off Wednesday as Class 5A No. 7 Arapahoe boys basketball continued its hot start to the season with a 78-56 win over Mullen.
Paul and Beth Reichart find their place behind the Doherty boys basketball bench about the time that warmups for the varsity game get going.
They settle in, they smile and they greet the fellow fans and parents who make sure to say hello. A local real estate broker, the Doherty basketball games are events that Paul looks forward to. Considering his two sons are announced as starters for the Spartans, the anticipation hardly comes as a surprise.
“I get worked up over two things,” he says as game time approaches. “I don’t like it when my kids get clobbered and no foul is called and I hate it when they’re playing great defense and a foul gets called on them.”
He says it like most parents would make the same point 10 times over in a regular high school basketball game.
But Paul isn’t like the rest of the parents. He has come to really appreciate watching his boys play basketball. About a year ago, he wasn’t sure one of them was going to be alive let alone getting high-volume varsity minutes.
His older son, Schafer, is a junior for Doherty and having a good season. Through nine games, he’s averaging 14.6 points per game which leads the team.
“We run everything through him,” Doherty coach Eric Steinert said.
It’s a wonder that Reichart is even on the floor. On Jan. 23 a series of events kicked off that put his basketball future — and overall life — in extreme jeopardy. Through his battle back, he brought a major sense of perspective back to the Spartans and the Colorado Springs community as a whole.
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(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Toxic shock syndrome.
The phrase alone sounds like a made up condition that someone would hear about from watching reruns of House M.D.
A quick Google search affirms that the condition is real and it’s what Schafer had to battle. He had played in a rivalry game against Palmer on Jan. 18 last year. He scored eight points and was 2-for-17 on shot attempts. It wasn’t his best game but that was in part to his feeling under the weather.
A combination of Influenza A and strep throat had attacked his body. In the coming days his heart, kidneys and lungs become punching bags for the bacteria. Something was very wrong and a trip to the hospital revealed that some tough decisions had to be made.
Schafer was choppered to Children’s Hospital in Aurora. The doctors told Paul and Beth that in order for Schafer to live, they had to put him on ECMO. That decision, however, was going to come with its own risks. He could be susceptible to a stroke and he was in danger of losing extremities.
The call for the Reicharts was easy.
“We would’ve taken him in any condition,” Paul said.
ECMO it was, but at such an early stage there was no guarantee that it was going to save Schafer’s life.
“I drove up to Denver to see him the day he got sick, I mean I drove for an hour and a half thinking I have no idea what’s about to happen,” Steinert said. “That’s a real feeling that you don’t experience very often. We may lose a kid that’s such an integral part of who we are and a great kid.”
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Paul Reichart watches his son Schafer during a Jan. 8 game against ThunderRidge. (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Schafer was in the hospital for 45 days. Paul and Beth were constantly at his side but the family dynamic had to remain intact. Drew, a freshman at Colorado Springs Christian School at the time, was in the middle of his own basketball season.
With his parents in Aurora at Schafer’s side, it was Paul’s brother and sister-in-law that held the household structure together.
At this time, support from across the city was pouring into to help the Reichart family. Three days after Schafer’s hospitalization, Rampart and Doherty met in a Class 5A Colorado Springs Metro League game. The day served multiple purposes as Rampart put on a fundraising effort for Schafer.
Several players on the Rams roster know Schafer and were both shaken by the news of his illness and eager to do their part to help.
On Friday, the Rams and Spartans will meet for the first of two CSML showdowns this season. It was mark the first time they’ve played each other since Schafer’s fundraiser and it will also serve as the official re-opening of Doherty’s refurbished gym. During the Spartans’ 49-37 win over ThunderRidge earlier this week, the Reicharts were greeted by a couple of members of Rampart’s team.
They kept up to date with Schafer’s progress each and every day as did countless people throughout the area.
“About 1,000 people visited him in the hospital in the 45 days he was there,” Paul said.
Back home, Drew had to maintain his own life, even with the weight of his hospitalized brother hanging over him.
A basketball family at heart, the younger Reichart dove into the tasks in front of him in an effort to keep his mind on the possible outcomes.
“I used basketball and school to take my mind off him,” Drew said. “It’s hard and it’s something I didn’t really want to acknowledge and so I was able to use basketball and school as kind of a distraction.”
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(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Schafer started battling enough that he had gotten past the danger of dying. As far as basketball goes, he was far from out of the woods. The risks that came with the ECMO treatment started presenting themselves.
“His fingers were all black,” Paul said.
Slowly, his circulation started returning and a complete recovery was suddenly in the cards. In fact, the doctors started giving timelines that his organs would start getting back to their normal functions. But those timelines were off and it became obvious that Schafer was a fighter.
“They said it’d be like five weeks on ECMO and it was like three days,” Schafer said. “They said it’d be nine months for my kidneys and it was like two months.”
That became the case with his heart as well. His lungs also recovered, but at this point Paul guesses they’re at about 80 percent capacity.
“See that? He’s getting tired,” Paul says pointing to Schafer on the floor.
ThunderRidge knows that Schafer can shoot so their man-to-man defense is designed to keep the ball out of his hands. He’s working harder than he’s used to get open and get off a quality shot.
He’s held scoreless for the first half of the first quarter against the Grizzlies and finally scores on a reverse layup with 4:02 left.
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(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
His level of play didn’t just return over night. It was something he had to get back to and it started with the very basics.
“I had to learn how to walk again,” Schafer said. “I couldn’t eat anything and I couldn’t drink for like two weeks. I was getting everything through a feeding tube.”
As summer basketball approached, his doctors gave him the okay to play, but the feeding tube was still in.
That meant there had to be some care taken when he was on the floor, a condition that Steinert was happy to account for considering the nightmare Schafer had already been through.
“The doctor said ‘I will allow you to play but don’t take a charge, don’t get in traffic, just go out there and run,’” Steinert said. “And he had a literal feeding tube in.”
The entire scenario sounded like something that could give a parent fits. A child who had been near death just five months early getting back on the floor a potentially getting knocked around by opposing players.
Paul waves at the idea like he’s swatting a fly out of the air.
“After recovering from he went through, basketball was easy,” he said.
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(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Normalcy has returned to the Reichart family. Drew – now at Doherty and getting announced in the Spartans’ starting lineup with Schafer – is relishing the opportunity to share the floor with his brother.
“It’s been awesome,” Drew said. “Our chemistry’s great and that helps the team. It’s also a good relationship builder too.”
The brothers now help each other out when watching film and they get to develop their abilities and mindsets together.
Those benefits are seen when they’re on the floor.
It’s been a rough start to the season, but the Spartans are on a three-game winning streak and feel like they’ll contend in the CSML.
Schafer is a big part of that of that confidence. Steinert has no problem acknowledging just how much he means to the team both on the floor and as an emotional lift.
“He’s everything you want your kid to be as a parent, he’s everything you want your student to be as a teacher,” Steinert said. “He’s everything you want your players to be. If you want me to show you a Doherty Spartan I’m going to pick Schafer.”
The fact that Steinert can say that is every bit as remarkable as it is for Paul and Beth to be able to stroll into the Doherty gym on a Wednesday night and watch both of their sons compete.
At the end of January last year, it would’ve been considered a miracle.
With Schafer as proof, every once in a while it turns out that miracles do happen.
DENVER — D’Evelyn girls basketball will begin Class 4A Jeffco League play tomorrow coming off a winning note.
The Jaguars (7-4 record) defeated visiting Summit 60-32 on Tuesday night, on the eve of the start of conference play for D’Evelyn.
“We said that our league started tonight,” D’Evelyn coach Chris Olson said after the Jaguars ended their 2-game losing streak. “All of our (league) game are going to be pretty good games. It should be competitive every night.”
D’Evelyn sophomore Chloe Klataske, middle, drives on Summit’s Sarah Pappas (5) and Nicole Kimball (2) during the first quarter Tuesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
The non-league game Tuesday was actually the conclusion of the Jeffco Jungle Jam Tournament that started back on Dec. 11. A snowstorm prevented Summit to get down to the Metro Area for a scheduled game during the tournament, so the game was rescheduled right before the Jaguars start conference play.
“We are all excited,” D’Evelyn senior Rylee Waggoner said of getting into league play. “A lot of players haven’t experienced this league varsity level.”
D’Evelyn travels to Evergreen High School on Wednesday night to face the defending 4A Jeffco League champs — Evergreen Cougars (4-2).
It was a three-team race last season for the conference title. Evergreen, Green Mountain and D’Evelyn combined for a 30-6 mark in league play, leaving the rest of the field in their wake. The Cougars eventually finished a game ahead of the Rams to capture the league title.
“It’s definitely nice to start league with one of our tougher games,” Waggoner said of facing Evergreen to start the 12-game conference schedule that features home-and-away meeting for all seven teams in the league. “There are no easy teams in the league at all. We are all going to compete.”
Green Mountain — ranked No. 7 in the latest CHSAANow.com Class 4A girls basketball poll — looks to be the front-runner this season after getting out to a 8-1 non-league record. The Rams open their conference schedule tomorrow night at home against an improved Wheat Ridge (5-2) squad.
Olson believes that Green Mountain and Evergreen will be the teams to beat in the historically tough 4A Jeffco League.
D’Evelyn junior Megan Stein, left, goes up for a shot over Summit senior Anna Tomlinson (32) on Tuesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
D’Evelyn was tough in the opening minutes against Summit. A 3-pointer by sophomore Maddie Topping midway through the first quarter gave the Jaguars a 13-0 lead.
“She (Topping) is one of those kids that last year we wanted to play a little bit more, but development wise we just let her play JV,” Olson said. “We knew this year that she would start right from the beginning. She can shoot the 3. She can drive. She is a pretty good defender. She is just going to keep getting better.”
The Jaguars’ pressure defense early was key. Senior Peyton Balbin scored seven points in the first three minutes all off of turnovers created by D’Evelyn’s full-court pressure.
“We don’t have that height anymore, so we are going to have to depend on our defense to make our offense,” Waggoner said. “That full-court press we do a lot of a time it kills teams. We just have to all work together.”
D’Evelyn offense really got going in the second half. The Jaguars poured in 38 points after halftime to nearly double-up Summit. Ten different players scored for D’Evelyn, including junior Lexi Szathmary.
Szathmary had missed a few games due to an ankle injury, but got some spot time against Summit. She is the Jaguars’ leading scorer, but will get a chance to get back to near 100 percent hopefully with D’Evelyn having a week off after its league opener against Evergreen.
The Jaguars finished with nine 3-pointers on the night, but Olson knows success will come with defense this season.
“One of the things we’ve learned from the preseason is everything for us is going to be defense driven,” Olson said. “That is how we create good shots. When we’ve struggle to score we aren’t turning teams over and not forcing tempo.”
D’Evelyn senior Peyton Balbin, left, takes it strong to the basket during the Jaguars’ opening 13-0 run to start the game Tuesday night against Summit. The Jaguars never trailed in the 60-32 victory. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)