Month: January 2020

  • Manitou Springs boys basketball ties the Vecchio and Armour families together

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    Anyone with a vague knowledge of Manitou Springs boys basketball could take a good guess at picking the program’s all-time leading scorer.

    The answer would either be Justin Armour or Brian Vecchio.

    Only one of those names is correct and that honor goes to Armour – Manitou’s lone inductee in the CHSAA Hall of Fame.

    Their athletic legacies at Manitou though are linked through more than potential right answers to that question. Armour remembers when he started playing for the Mustangs as a freshman and every day at practice the coach’s young son was running around the floor shooting and keeping his interest locked into what was happening on the floor.

    That coach was Ken Vecchio. It was Brian off on the side.

    “He was a little pipsqueak at our practices,” Armour recalls. “It’s pretty cool now that we’re all grown up and now I have to ask a little Brian’s for permission to change practices.”

    Armour runs the ship of the girls basketball program while Brian now coaches the boys after taking over for Ken after the 2017-18 season. But they’re more than just coaching conterpoints. As Brian watched his dad coach Justin in high school, he now has his own Armour to instruct.

    Joah Armour is Justin’s oldest child and only son. While Justin is known more for his talents on the football field, basketball was always his first love. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree in that regard.

    Joah loves to hoop and the second generation of Vecchio and Armour have the Mustangs playing sound basketball.

    “I remember Justin and Joah living in California and then came back to Manitou and the first day they walked into the gym together, Joah was a pretty little guy at that time,” Brian said. “I thought, man, how cool would it be if he came here at some point and I got to coach him and about 10 years later, here we are. It’s been awesome.”

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    Aside from the great life symmetry, it was an exciting prospect for several reasons. When Justin recalls his development as both a kid and an athlete, he’s aware of the role that Ken played. Those traits in Ken have trickled down to Brian and Justin knew that Joah would come out of Manitou a better player and a better kid because of the teachings he would get from Brian and even Ken, who is still on staff as assistant.

    “The Vecs are the best ones at teaching tough lessons,” Justin said. “You can come in here, they don’t care if your last name is Armour or if you play club basketball or you’re tall, they don’t really care.”

    If a kid wants to play for them they have to earn it.

    From the minute Joah walked into the gym at Manitou, both Vecchios (Brian was the JV and Ken’s main assistant at the time) stressed to him that they wanted Joah to be Joah and not to be Justin’s son. If he was going to succeed, he was going to have to do it on his own merits.

    “I don’t think about it all that much,” Joah said. “I just want to go out and play like me. I’m always ready to go.”

    It helped that he was tall. Even as a freshman, Joah checked in at well over 6-feet tall. But he was a bit thinner than his dad was at that age.

    “Justin looked like he was 19 years old,” Ken said. “When Joah came in as a freshman, he looked like a freshman.”

    But his game has developed over time. Brian doesn’t see Joah as a younger version of his dad. If anything, Joah plays more like Brian did in his high school days.

    Brian was about 6-foot-8 in high school and could work in the post and spot up for 3-pointers. He eclipsed the 1,000-point mark (one of just five players in school history to do so) despite not seeing any varsity time as a freshman.

    And he’ll be the first to say he gave his dad good reason to holler every once in a while. He can’t help but smile when he watches Joah play and realize the similarities that exist between coach and player rather than father and son.

    “I see a lot of myself when I see Joah play,” Brian said. “At times it can be a lot of fun and at times it can be really frustrating.”

    Ken got to experience that same feeling in his final year as Manitou’s coach. Among the four of them, he and Joah share a unique bond in that Ken was able to coach both generations of Armour boys.

    But like Justin points to some things that Joah is doing well, Ken is quick to point out that Brian does a great job at teaching, motivating and managing Joah.

    The younger Armour wouldn’t disagree.

    “I’d say Brian is a lot calmer,” he said with a laugh. “But they’re both great coaches. I’ve been really lucky.”

    And this season, the Vecs have been lucky to have him. He leads the team with 14 points per game and helped the Mustangs (9-2 overall, 5-0 Tri-Peaks) get an impressive 67-50 win over then-No. 9 St. Mary’s.

    If Joah has it his way, he’ll help the Mustangs get back to the state tournament. After all, according to him he’s already a better hooper than his dad was when he was a junior.

    “I’m faster than he was,” Joah said. “And I shoot the 3-ball more.”

    Just more?

    “Better.”

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • No. 1 Pomona wrestling powering toward another state title run

    ARVADA — Believe it or not … Pomona wrestling team might very well be deeper than its 2019 squad that cruised last year to the program’s sixth Class 5A state team title since 2000.

    Despite posting 166.5 points at the state tournament last year — 63 points more than second-place Ponderosa — Pomona coach Sam Federico didn’t hesitate when asked if his 2020 Panthers are deeper.

    Pomona’s Elias Gonzales, right, grabs the leg of Valor’s Sam Hamilton during the 152-pound match Thursday night at Pomona High School. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “By far,” Federico said of Pomona that has been the top-ranked 5A team all season by On the Mat. “We had a wrestle-off today between four guys for who was going to be our 145 pounder. It was hard. They were tough matches. That’s tough for those kids who have put in a lot of time and effort. It’s tough for the kids and the coaches.”

    Pomona has two returning state champions in sophomore Daniel Cardenas and junior Franklin Cruz. Right now, Cardenas (138 pounds), Cruz (195), along with Elijah Olguin (120) and Gage Bernall (160) are all ranked No. 1 in their individual weight classes.

    On top those, there are 10 other Pomona wrestlers that dot the On the Mat top-10 rankings in nearly every weight class in 5A.

    “We have a good brotherhood and we are always there pushing each other,” Pomona’s 182-pounder Jose Rosales said. “We go hard everyday.”

    Pomona sure went hard Thursday night in its 5A Jeffco League dual against Valor Christian. The Panthers took a 73-0 victory. Pomona won all seven matches that were wrestled and took six forfeit victories.

    “It looks pretty good,” Pomona sophomore Daniel Cardenas said after looking at the scoreboard with the final 73-0 win for the Panthers. “This is what we expect. We want to come out here and show dominance. We want to show everyone that we are the best team in the state.”

    Pomona’s Daniel Cardenas (138 pounds), top, along with Franklin Cruz (195 pounds) will look to repeat as individual state champions down at Pepsi Center coming up in mid-February. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    Cardenas took a 20-5 technical fall in his match at 138. The sophomore is coming off a strong freshman campaign where he finished with a 34-7 record that ended with 8-5 win in the 120-pound state championship over Ponderosa’s Jaron Mahler.

    “I feel more confident for sure,” Cardenas said. “Last year I had a lot more jitters before state.”

    The graduation of the likes of four-time state placers Justin Pacheco and Theorius Robison on paper might look to hurt Pomona’s chances of winning a fourth team title over the past five seasons. However, youth is what is spearheading the Panthers this season.

    “Sometimes we have to stop and realize how young our team is,” Federico said. “I think 10 or 11 of our weight classes are sophomores and freshmen. It’s pretty cool to see how they are able to adapt.”

    With so many of his young wrestlers already with experience at the national level while wrestling before high school, Federico isn’t concerned with how is young wrestlers will handle the pressure of regionals and state coming up in less than a month.

    “I don’t think they’ll be shell shocked by it,” Federico said of the atmosphere down at Pepsi Center. “I think they’ll just go out and compete.”

    Pomona’s Jeremiah Steele puts the finishing touches on his first-period pin Thursday night against Valor Christian. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • Ticket information for the 2020 state basketball tournaments

    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    The 2020 state basketball tournaments run in March at four different sites across the state.

    Below is information for purchasing tickets.

    [divider]

    Class 1A

    Great 8, Final 4, Championship

    • Dates: March 12-14
    • Site: Northern Colorado – Butler Hancock Gymnasium (Greeley)
    • Link to purchase tickets
    • Thursday and Friday ticket prices: $10 & $8
    • Saturday ticket prices: $11 & $8
    • All-session passes: $50 & 45 (Purchase online only)
    • Parking: Free
    • Championship games at Budweiser Events Center (Loveland)

    [divider]

    Class 2A

    Great 8, Final 4, Championship

    • Dates: March 12-14
    • Site: Budweiser Events Center (Loveland)
    • Tickets only sold on-site
    • Thursday and Friday ticket prices: $10 & $8
    • Saturday ticket prices: $11 & $8
    • All-session passes: $50 & 45 (Only available first day of the tournament)
    • Parking: Free
    • Consolation games at Northern Colorado.

    [divider]

    Class 3A

    Great 8, Final 4, Championship

    • Dates: March 12-14
    • Site: University of Denver’s Hamilton Gym
    • Link to purchase tickets
    • Thursday and Friday ticket prices: $10 & $8
    • Saturday ticket prices: $11 & $8
    • Parking: Varies per lot

    [divider]

    Class 4A

    Final 4, Championship

    • Dates: March 12-14
    • Site: Denver Coliseum
    • Link to purchase tickets
    • Ticket prices: $15/$13 for reserved; $14/$12/$10 for general admission.
    • Saturday ticket prices: $11 & $8
    • Parking: $10
    • Tickets to Saturday’s championship sessions are sold separately. The arena will be cleared between sessions.

    [divider]

    Class 5A

    Great 8

    • Dates: March 6 (girls); March 7 (boys)
    • Site: Denver Coliseum
    • Link to purchase tickets
    • Ticket prices: $9/$7
    • Parking: $10

    Final 4, Championship

    • Dates: March 12-14
    • Site: Denver Coliseum
    • Link to purchase tickets
    • Ticket prices: $15/$13 for reserved; $14/$12/$10 for general admission.
    • Saturday ticket prices: $11 & $8
    • Parking: $10
    • Tickets to Saturday’s championship sessions are sold separately. The arena will be cleared between sessions.
  • Photos: Strong second half lifts ThunderRidge boys basketball over Douglas County

    Nolan Marold scored a team-high 18 points as ThunderRidge boys basketball rode a strong second half to a 64-50 win over Douglas County.

  • Photos: Paul leads Regis Jesuit boys basketball over Rock Canyon

    Alonzo Paul scored 23 points to lead Regis Jesuit boys basketball to a 61-44 win over Rock Canyon on Thursday.

  • Wrestling rankings: Loveland and Poudre join this week

    Below are this week’s wrestling rankings from On The Mat.

    [divider]

    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.

    [divider]

    Class 2A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Wray 1
    2 Rocky Ford 2
    3 Cedaredge 3
    4 Paonia 4
    5 Highland 5
    6 John Mall 7
    7 Lyons 6
    8 Buena Vista 8
    9 Hotchkiss 9
    10 Centauri 10
    Dropped out
    None.
    Class 3A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Jefferson 1
    2 Alamosa 2
    3 Valley 3
    4 Lamar 5
    5 Pagosa Springs 4
    6 Eagle Valley 6
    7 Weld Central 7
    8 Sterling 8
    9 Fort Morgan 9
    10 Bennett 10
    Dropped out
    None.
    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Windsor 1
    2 Pueblo East 2
    3 Pueblo County 3
    4 Broomfield 4
    5 Mesa Ridge 6
    6 Cheyenne Mountain 7
    7 Roosevelt 5
    8 Pueblo West 8
    9 Loveland
    10 Longmont 10
    Dropped out
    Grand Junction Central (9).
    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PVS
    1 Pomona 1
    2 Rocky Mountain 3
    3 Monarch 7
    4 Ponderosa 2
    5 Cherokee Trail 5
    6 Grand Junction 4
    7 Brighton 6
    8 Poudre
    9 Pine Creek 9
    10 Legacy 10
    Dropped out
    Grandview (8).
  • No. 7 Golden boys basketball cools off rival Wheat Ridge

    WHEAT RIDGE — Golden picked a good night to make a season-high 11 3-pointers.

    “We kind of figured they would play us in a zone,” Golden coach Lou Vullo said after the Demons shot 11-for-22 from long range on their way to a huge Class 4A Jeffco League boys basketball win Wednesday night. “We worked on (3-pointers) the last few days.”

    Golden — No. 7 in the CHSAANow.com Class 4A rankings this week — ended a six-game winning streak rival Wheat Ridge had going coming into the conference showdown. The Demons (10-5, 4-1) pulled away in the final minute to take a 68-61 victory on the Farmers’ home court.

    Golden senior Carter Thompson (44) goes up with his left hand over Wheat Ridge junior Greyson Van Tuyl in the first half Wednesday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “They haven’t shot like that the whole year,” Wheat Ridge coach Tommy Dowd said. “In a game like this guys step up and make shots. You have to give credit to them. They made the shots tonight.”

    Golden had seven 3-pointers at halftime that helped the Demons to a 35-29 lead at the break. The shots from long range didn’t come as easy in the second half as the Farmers (7-5, 3-1) went on a 9-0 run and actually took a 55-53 lead after a 3-pointer by Wheat Ridge senior Alex Morales with 5:17 left in the fourth quarter.

    However, the lead was short-lived. Golden senior Ben McLaughlin — who finished with four 3-pointers on the night and a team-high 15 points — buried back-to-back 3-pointers to regain the lead for good.

    “I trust our guys and we can light it up in practice,” McLaughlin said. “Shots got to fall in a game like this. They played off of us a little bit and we just had to connect.”

    The final field goal by the Demons featured a nifty inside move by Golden senior guard Jack Anderson in the final minute. Anderson was able to drive by Morales, but was picked up by Wheat Ridge senior Dominic Bronk down low on the defensive switch.

    “I kind of got too deep for a second,” said Anderson, who flipped up a left-handed shot past Bronk to put the Demons up 64-61 with less than a minute left. “I turned around and I just knew I had to make the shot.”

    Wheat Ridge failed to score after junior Dominic Cross put in the Farmers’ final points with 1:18 left in the game.

    Golden senior Noah Johnson (1) takes a charge as Wheat Ridge senior Alex Morales drives into Johnson during the second half Wednesday. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)

    “Some of that is experience,” Dowd said of the Farmers getting outscored 6-0 in the final minute after cutting Golden’s lead to 62-61. “We haven’t been in a game like this where it feels different. It wasn’t a lack of effort. It was a lack of execution. That is something to fix.”

    After a rough 1-4 start to the season, Wheat Ridge came into Wednesday’s game as the hottest team in 4A Jeffco. Now, the defending conference champion doesn’t have much room for error.

    D’Evelyn, Golden, Green Mountain and Wheat Ridge are all within a game of each other in the conference standings with either seven or eight league games remaining for everyone in 4A Jeffco.

    “This league is totally wild,” Vullo said. “I think it’s going to come down to the end. Every night in this league you have to come to play. If you don’t you are going to be in trouble for sure.”

    Golden had another game of balanced scoring. Anderson and senior Carter Thompson both had 11 points each. Junior Nathan Wiggins had a trio of 3-pointers to finish with nine points and freshman Alan Acevedo also had nine points.

    Morales had a game-high 17 points to lead the Farmers. Bronk (11 points) and junior Greyson Van Tuyl (15 points) dominated inside at times for Wheat Ridge, but both didn’t have a field goal in the final quarter.

    “You throw out the rankings out the window when you have a rivalry like this,” said Vullo, who lost twice to the Farmers last season in his first year coaching the Demons. “I didn’t know until last year what this rivalry meant until I saw how bad it hurt our kids.”

    The Farmers are back on the road against D’Evelyn on Friday night to continue conference play. The Demons have a non-league game at home against DSST: Byers on Friday before getting back into conference play next week.

    Wheat Ridge junior Dominic Cross, left, attempts to beat Golden junior Jake Liedtke (4) to the basket during the second half Wednesday night at Wheat Ridge High School. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
  • No. 10 Doherty hockey’s tie with Pine Creek felt like a win

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Doherty hockey coach Will English exited the locker room with a look of extreme relief. His Spartans left the Mark “Pa” Sertich Ice Center with a zero still registered in the loss column, but after just two periods of play, he would’ve thought he had a better chance of winning the lottery.

    Doherty overcame a three-goal deficit and battled back to escape Sertich with a 3-3 tie against Pine Creek thanks in big part to Richie Flores and Nick Hernandez scoring two goals inside of the final two and a half minutes.

    The result says tie, but English will be quick to acknowledge that in this case, a tie was a win for his team.

    “It really was,” English said. “I talked to the team and it brings us back to humble footing. You need a little bit of adversity, guys have to fight through this.”

    Doherty got on the attack early, gaining an early 4-1 edge in shots on goal. But it was just Pine Creek’s second shot – on its first power play of the game – that put them on the board.

    Austin Gipson fired the puck from the right side and it got just over goalie Ashton Goble’s left shoulder. With neither team surrendering a lot of goals through the course of the season, the early was key in Pine Creek settling in and taking control of the game.

    The tenth-ranked Spartans (10-0-1 overall) hoped to return the favor on their first power play, but Austin Sawyer was able to attack the Doherty goal and the puck was misplayed by Goble. Sawyer converted on the wide-open look for his 13th goal of the year, making it a 2-0 game with just under three minutes left in the second period.

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    “We felt pretty good after the second goal and then we got the third one where we were feeling really good coming in (to the locker room),” Sawyer said. “In the third we just got complacent and we didn’t go hard the entire time.”

    In the latter half of the second period, the Spartans got their second power play opportunity. An attempt by the Eagles (8-0-2) to clear gave Doherty a rare friendly bounce and a four-on-one look at the net.

    The shot sailed wide, essentially playing into Doherty’s fortunes up to that point of the night.

    Right as the power play ended, Luke Doyle found Roderick Glassford streaking down the ice for Pine Creek. Glassford pulled Goble just far enough away from the net before flicking the puck to Alex Bergquist who made it a 3-0 game and giving fans on both sides of the Sertich the feeling that Pine Creek was heading home with the win.

    “We knew the next goal would be a big goal,” Pine Creek coach Ed Saxer said. “We talked about that next goal because obviously 3-1 or 4-0 is a huge difference.”

    How right he was.

    Stratton Miller had been a wall the entire night and ended the game with 23 saves, but the Spartans finally got one by him on their fourth power play opportunity of the game.

    A rush of the net resulted in Garrett Bogan scoring with an assist from Chase Chapman and pulling the Spartans to within two.

    Once that first goal got in, the Spartans settled into their style of play, just maybe a little later than they would have liked.

    “I think the excitement set at that time,” English said. “You get that momentum shift at that point, we knew we had get the next one. We just wanted them to go sooner than what had happened.”

    Eventually, though, it happened. With two minutes, 16 seconds left on the clock, Flores pulled the Spartans to within a goal. Seventy-four seconds later, Hernandez got one by Miller to tie the game.

    “I was really hyped,” Hernandez said. “I was playing really good though in that period because I knew we were going to be able to come back.”

    Neither team scored in the five-minute overtime and both came off the ice with very different feelings. The Eagles felt like they had let a big-time win slip away. The Spartans felt fortunate that they left the building still without a loss to their name.

    “The two teams battled out there,” Saxer said. “They didn’t give up, we didn’t give up. And then when it came down to the end, in the last seven minutes they fought a little more than we did.”

    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Photos: Hardwrict’s 21 powers Green Mountain boys basketball over Evergreen

    Jaylin Hardwrict scored a team-high 21 points to lead Green Mountain boys basketball to a 60-50 win over Evergreen.

  • Photos: Rocky Mountain wrestling strong in win over Loveland

    With the regular season heading into the final stretch, Rocky Mountain wrestling got a big 63-6 dual win over Loveland.