Archive for July, 2020

Colorado Springs School girls basketball players launch nonprofit organization

Calhan Colorado Springs School girls basketball

(Lisa Hayes/StillOfTheMomentPhotography.com)

Basketball has a way of connecting people on a global scale. The uniform rules and poetic simplicity of the game has a way of eliciting the same emotional reactions in kids all over, whether it’s from the United States or a country such as Uganda.

Recently, a group of of girls basketball players from Colorado decided that they could use basketball as a means of connecting with those in countries less fortunate than America.

Spearheaded by Colorado Springs School assistant girls basketball coach Caleb Strickland, the Crossover for Change Foundation was established.

The mission is straightforward: “Fostering confidence, empowerment and leadership for young women in Uganda through the sport of basketball.”

“Eric Richter – the father of Cameron Richter, one of the girls involved – has been going over and volunteering in hospitals and doing workshops in western Uganda for about seven years now,” Strickland said. “Somebody gave him Dennis Katungye’s number, the coach we partnered with over there.”

Katungye told Richter there was a need for basketball work to be done through camps if he knew of any coaches that wanted to be involved. Richter did one better and went after players. Girls from the Colorado Springs School and a couple of other schools in the area jumped at the chance to provide online clinics to women’s players in Uganda. His two daughters Paige and Cameron were among those to join and then other students quickly got involved.

(Photo courtesy of Lisa Voight/Colorado Springs School)

“I was excited to jump at the chance,” CSS junior Mia Chavez said. “We have a chance to have such a big impact on such a small group. I knew it was going to be great to be a part of the process.”

The workload to develop the foundation increased in March and already the players have film and sent a collection of instructional videos to two schools that are participating in the program.

They’re aiming to travel to Uganda next summer to run on-site camps.

“I thought it was a cool idea and a great cause to head to Africa and help young girls,” CSS senior Sasha Malone said. “It’s awesome to have young girls teach younger students.”

The foundation is going well above and beyond teaching skills. It is working to fundraise in order to get participating schools outfitted with new equipment and uniforms as well as building some facilities.

There has already been $11,000 raised which has allowed excavation to begin on a basketball court for the Immaculate Heart Girls School.

When the court is completed, basketball will become an official sport at the school and the efforts here in Colorado will have had a heavy hand in that. As much as the game has helped Chavez, Malone, and other standout players such as recent Kodiak graduate Kate Griffin and her sister Anna (Coronado ’20) as well as St. Mary’s standout Josephine Howery, the Class 3A girls player of the year, they’re all appreciative that they can use the game they love to enrich others’ lives.

“Basketball, like any sport, isn’t just a game where you get to play and have fun,” Chavez said. “You can help someone build character and I think there are so many different ways that you can use basketball to improve different parts of your life.”

These girls have learned that lesson first-hand while competing for their high school teams and they have no interest in slowing down when it comes to helping others in less fortunate situations feel the same benefits.

Coach Dennis Katungye and his teams from Maryhill High School in Uganda. (Photo courtesy of Sasha Malone/Crossover for Change)

Enrollment numbers and classification info for the 2020-22 two-year cycle

Niwot Silver Creek girls soccer generic

(Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

School enrollment figures and the enrollment number cutoffs were used to help place teams into different classifications for the 2020-22 two-year cycle.

Note that this information is only part of the criteria for classifying programs. Full criteria is available in bylaw 1500.21. Find the CHSAA bylaws here.

Find each database here:

These databases are always available on our Enrollment page, which also includes historical information.

D’Evelyn boys tennis’ Carter Smith gave a lesson in choosing sportsmanship over winning

D'Evelyn boys tennis Carter Smith

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

D’Evelyn’s Carter Smith didn’t win a Class 4A boys tennis title last fall, but his name and actions became the talk of Pueblo City Park.

Smith advanced to the second day of the tournament, playing the in No. 3 Singles semifinal against Cheyenne Mountain’s Oliver Muhl. The first set went into a tiebreaker and during a volley, Smith tired to beat Muhl with a forearm shot down the line. He and Muhl both watched as the shot landed out.

But the umpire observing on the court initially ruled it in, giving the point to Smith in a very pivotal point in the match.

“I knew it out, Oliver knew it was out,” Smith said. “I conceded the point.”

Tennis is a sport where more often than not, the players are forced to govern themselves. It’s like golf. The results are based on the integrity of the game and Smith grew up believing in that very integrity.

He went on to lose the set and eventually the match to Muhl. He eventually finished third in the bracket, but held his head high knowing that played his hardest and also played honestly.

“That was all him,” coach Woody Oliver said. “We obviously promote good sportsmanship and integrity and I’ve been frustrated myself as a player when there are situations where people take advantage of the fact that tennis is a self-regulated sport and they can take advantage of certain things a lot easier than you can in other sports.”

When the tournament was all said and done, the Jaguars finished fifth in the team standings, a high mark for the team. And despite Smith not advancing to the championship match in his No. 3 Singles bracket, his points for third place were crucial to the team’s final result.

Neither he or the team went home empty-handed either. His actions during his semifinal match was the catalyst for the Jags winning the Vicky Matarrazo Sportsmanship Award. Perhaps there was no bigger proponent for them than Cheyenne Mountain athletic director Kris Roberts who was front and center to watch Smith play the justly and honestly.

“I thought that was an incredible display,” Roberts said. “I feel like in the dynamic of that situation 95 percent of the time, that call doesn’t get made. The kid overruled the adult official and I thought that was incredible.”

Knowing the team hadn’t won state, but they were getting medalists, the Jags naturally stuck around for the awards ceremony. As Ed Francis, the man who runs the 4A tournament at Pueblo City Park, told Smith’s story he made sure to emphasize the importance of honesty in tennis. Yet, even when he announced D’Evelyn as the winner of the Matarrazo award, Smith’s reaction was that of genuine surprise.

“I don’t know many of the teams there and I don’t know the coaches,” Smith said. “It was cool that they noticed that moment. It was great, especially since it was the whole team that got recognized. It meant a lot.”

He hopes that in the coming years his results and the team’s result will improve. But in that moment, his values and his belief on how to play the game took forefront and even if it resulted in a loss, he held his head high.

“I hope people realize that sportsmanship should always come before winning,” Smith said.

Every once in a while it turns out the kids can teach a lesson in high school athletics.

Update regarding sports and activities in 2020-2021

(CHSAANow.com)

CHSAA commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green provided the following update on Thursday regarding sports and activities in 2020-21:

“Our office supports and respects the time taken at the state level to evaluate our proposed options for resuming athletics and activities for the 2020-2021 school year. Their timeline is our timeline, and we will be ready to play, with planned modifications, once approved.

“We are appreciative of the guidance and leadership from the CHSAA Board of Directors and the Sports Medicine Advisory Committee as we look to the 2020-2021 school year.

“The CHSAA staff will continue to advocate within our submitted proposals to conduct all programs within the Governor’s safety guidelines, phases and requirements.

“We will keep our school communities informed and we will provide definitive answers and timelines once they are approved by the Governor’s office.

“State, educational and athletic leaders are all working together in these fluid times to get our students, coaches, officials and support staff safely back to the courts, fields, stages, pools, and classrooms.”

Video: Our commissioner answers questions from the student leadership community

Commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green took questions from CHSAA’s student leadership community as part of their virtual student leadership conference, held on Wednesday.

Questions ranged from her heroes growing up to the impact of COVID-19 to the movement for social and racial justice.

Pueblo West baseball alum bet on himself on path to signing MLB contract

(Anthony Sandstrom)

If there’s one thing that former Pueblo West pitcher RJ Dabovich learned the last couple months, it’s that there is no one way to achieve an ultimate goal.

His ultimate goal was to get to the professional baseball level. His path involved betting on himself and taking the right steps to make it happen, not necessarily the biggest steps.

Dabovich had Division I plans after high school. He had initially committed to Wichita State to continue his baseball career. A coaching change halted those plans as he didn’t feel the same connection with the new staff as he did the one that recruited him.

A change had to be made and a guy that had proven he could generate the interest of D-1 level schools made a decision that on the surface looked like a step backwards.

The reality is it was anything but.

“I didn’t really have any big-time offers or any schools that I was comfortable going to,” Dabovich said. “One because I wasn’t good enough and two, it was so late (in the process). So I sat down with my parents and coaches and people I really trusted and talked about going the (junior college) route and what it meant for me.”

He knew one thing that it was going to mean. He was going to have to put his head down and work. His path was only just the beginning. For a lot of high school recruits, the post-high school aim is to head at a Division I school.

For Dabovich, he was going to use the benefits that the JuCo route offered to improve his game and get the next step in the process.

“There are no restrictions on how many practices you can get in baseball,” West coach Dan Sanchez said. “For any kid that has a ton of potential, it’s a great route. Knowing that he was going to figure that out and grow into that body, I think it was a great decision.”

Dabovich made his way to Central Arizona College and finished his freshman year with a 9-3 record and a 1.81 ERA. The Division I calls came quick and the very next year Dabovich was suiting up for the Arizona State Sun Devils.

But he had the option to skip that step all together. He was taken by the Kansas City Royals in the 18th round of the MLB Draft, but opted to go to Tempe instead.

“My goal, my dream was right there in front of me,” Dabovich said. “It was a hard decision to make and it actually took me a while. I talked with my family and advisors and we decided that I should bet on myself again so I went to Arizona State.”

The decision paid off.

Last month he was taken by the San Francisco Giants in the fourth round of the MLB Draft. He was taken just four picks after Douglas County senior Case Williams.

Dabovich signed his contract with the Giants organization and is now officially a Major League Baseball prospect. But his journey is far from over. And if he’s learned anything in the last three years, it’s that there is no one way to get to his desired location.

The important part is knowing how to navigate the trail and he’s done fine with it so far.

Makenna Meyer is healthy as Riverdale Ridge softball prepares for new challenge

(Photo courtesy of Makenna Meyer)

In just the second season for the Riverdale Ridge softball team, the Ravens looked like a team that was ready for the big stage.

Makenna Meyer was certainly one of the big reasons for that as she provided a spark both at the plate and in the pitching circle. There was a bit of a catch to her statline, however. She wasn’t entirely healthy.

She suffered a foot injury the year before and during the 2019 season, she continued to have lingering issues.

“She had surgery and re-injured the foot again,” coach Ray Garza said. “She actually played on a broken foot the entire year that hadn’t quite healed correctly.”

If no one knew about the injury, there wouldn’t have been anything to indicate there was a problem. Meyer led the Ravens with a .535 batting average. She totaled 12 extra-base hits, two of which were home runs.

The numbers were pretty close to freshman Aubree Davis, who batted .526 with 15 extra-base hits and fellow senior-to-be Destiny Hackney who hit .520 with 15 extra-base hits. All three tied for the team lead with two long balls.

(Photo courtesy of Makenna Meyer)

Where Meyer was even more crucial for the team was with her work as a pitcher. She finished the year with a 12-3 record, 2.40 ERA and totaled 141 strikeouts to just 20 walks.

“I struggled a bit after my surgeries,” Meyer said. “But I’m the kind of person where softball for me is a therapy. Being on the field is like my second home and all that adrenaline in my body and the desire to get out and show everyone what our team could do gave me that extra push.”

The Ravens entered the Class 3A softball tournament as the No. 5 seed, but Garza and his players believed that they had a chance to contend for a state title.

Being a young team on such a big stage played a hand in a 6-5 loss to Strasburg in the quarterfinals.

“That atmosphere as a whole didn’t allow us to be who we were,” Garza said. “It’s that experience part. I don’t know if we needed to learn anything but if we had a year under our belt (of playing in the state tournament). Not to discredit Strasburg, but I thought we were the better team, we just didn’t play well that day.”

The Ravens must take the experience they gained a year ago and prepare for a new challenge. Riverdale Ridge will being playing in 4A, which means there are new opponents on the horizon.

With Meyer fully healthy and the team having gained the experience of getting to the state tournament and winning a game, they’re excited for what lays ahead.

“I’m very excited,” Meyer said. “I want to see what new opponents bring to the table and see how we as a team can compete. I’m ready to see what we can bring to the table and who knows, we may get farther than what we did last year.”

Only time will tell, but with Meyer recovered from an injury that nagged her all of last season, the Ravens have to like their chances.

Q&A: Doherty girls golf coach Colin Prater on choosing teaching over a playing career

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

Teaching and coaching is in Colin Prater’s blood. The Palmer High School alum spent years following his grandfather Carl Fetters on the sidelines.

Fetters was a longtime football coach at Cheyenne Mountain High School before jumping on as an assistant in the area and later at Colorado State University-Pueblo, where he was on staff when the ThunderWolves claimed a national championship.

Fetters’ son, Monte, is the girls golf coach at Mesa Ridge and even served as the head girls basketball coach for a year.

It feels like Prater was destined to teach and coach, but one look at him on the golf course and it’s hard to figure out why he didn’t dedicate himself to trying to make it as a pro.

Prater is a rare winner of both the Colorado Amateur and the Colorado Match Play championship. He won the match play in June thanks in part to swiping a putter out of his grandfather’s garage.

He’s played in the U.S. Amateur twice (2016 and 2019) and won the Pikes Peak Amateur at Patty Jewett Golf Course four of the last five years. Last year, he shot a PJ course record 62 during Pikes Peak Am qualifying.

Sitting in front of the course’s trophy case where his scorecard proudly occupies the center, he chatted about what made him forgo a potential professional career in favor of teaching and coaching at the high school level.

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Question: What sticks out the most when you think about playing high school golf?

Prater: Definitely in high school, it’s all about development. It’s all about just trying to get better. You’re honing those skills in. Too many kids are so focused on trying to hit it farther. I definitely was, especially when I was a freshman, sophomore who was so tiny. It was all about trying to hit further. And what I think made me really good when I was super tiny was the fact that I was just always working on my short game. I knew I was only going to get to half the par fours in two, so I knew if I want to make par, then my short game had to be the best short game there was in the city.

I think that’s what kind of gave me some success early. Gramps always preached that for sure. But it’s just all development. It’s all work. It’s the same thing in any sport, it’s having really solid fundamentals. It’s so much easier to get back to doing something right if you have good fundamentals. It’s a lot more difficult if you don’t and it’s all timing based. It’s all about foundational stuff, fundamentals. Too many kids think they’re really good at an early age and so they don’t really have that work ethic that they need in order to be solid or be competitive if they’re going onto the next level.

Q: After you were after you’d wrapped up playing in college, you’ve played in a lot of statewide competitive tournaments, city competitive tournaments. I know you flirted with the idea of moving to Arizona to go pro, but why ultimately did the idea of teaching and getting into coaching win out?

Prater: I fell in love with teaching. I didn’t think I was going to love teaching as much. Once I graduated, once I was done in May of 2018, I was dead set (on going pro). I got started planning and got started lining up where I’m going to live, what I’m going to do when I’m down there. When I’m not playing, I’m trying to start talking to sponsors to see if I can get some money, this, that, and the other to kind of promote myself and kind of had all those lined up. I was dead set on it. I had four months of student teaching to do and have that in my back pocket if I needed it 10 years from now kind of thing. And I just fell in love with it.

And then talking with my girlfriend, she had a little, maybe a touch of uneasiness with her about wanting to move down there with me. That meant changing up her plans because she was about to start her master’s. We just decided collectively as one that we didn’t need to move. And I was just going to stay competitive and continue to work on my game, but stay amateur and maybe down the road, another door to open and I’d be able to go play. Lastly, probably just the fact that Gramps taught and coached for 34 years at Cheyenne Mountain. My uncle’s been in it now, I want to say this was this past year was this 26th or 27th year and I’m super close with them. So I talked to them. They say, they love it. It’s cliche, but it’s an in my blood kind of thing. I’m just super fortunate. I fell into a career that I love, I got into coaching super early, which is what I wanted to do and get that kind of start to try and get that experience. Life’s great for me.

Q: What have you learned throughout the competitive golf tournaments you’re playing in that that you’re hoping to apply to the girls golfers at Doherty?

Prater: I preach consistency. Try to become as consistent as possible. Even if it’s just kind of creating that standard. I’m very goal driven. I learned that in college. I’ve always needed to have a goal in mind and have a long term goal, but have great short term goals that motivate my girls. That’s kinda what I really preach to them. And I preached that to them for, I don’t know, like three weeks. I mean eight practices and maybe I like getting together with them a couple days before we started practicing. A lot of it is stuff I’m going to learn. I’m going work my butt off. I think I read a lot of golf books now that I’m done playing college golf, which makes absolutely zero sense.

You think you’d be reading them while you’re competing. But I’m just reading them just to try and get a new philosophy. It’s just like teaching. You have to say something four or five different ways in order for it to connect with all of your students. You can say at one way and great, 10 kids will get it, but you have to teach and you have to modify and you have to change how you teach it and what you say and to fit every kid. And so I think that’s what I’m truly trying to do now that I’ve got into coaching is just trying to make it applicable to all of the girls that I’m coaching.

Q: How much of, what you’re trying to do comes from watching your grandpa for however many years, whether it was high school football, college football, whatever? How much of him is in you as a coach and even as a teacher?

Prater: I don’t think I’m as mean as he is. He’s a hard (case). But definitely his rapport with kids. He connects with them even now that he’s like almost 80. The guy’s 79, but just has a great rapport with kids and how he interacts with people in public. He’s has always done a really good job of being able to connect with kids and just like my uncle has as well. He’s a grinder and he works his tail off.

I would like to think that I have a little bit of that in me as well and I think a lot of what I’ve learned and a lot of what I preach is stuff that came straight out of his mouth that he taught me when I was seven or eight and when I was 12 and I was tired and I had blisters on my hands because I hit 455 golf balls today. He’d say, “there are still 40 balls left.” No matter what you do, you can always do something better. I’m trying to mold that into my philosophy of use. Every single day is a day to get better, no matter what, no matter how much success you’ve had. You can always be better. You can, you can always be a better golfer. You can always be a better person. You can always say please and thank you, those kinds of things. That’s what he’s really good at. He’s about those fine details and that’s one thing that I have to work on for sure.

Q: He’s been around long enough that surely you have something you carry around with you or use from time to time whether you’re playing or teaching. Anything stick out in your head?

Prater: I hear his voice in my head sometimes. It comes out way more when he’s there. I’ll hit a bad shot and I know exactly what he said in his head. I’ve been so lucky. My grandparents, my parents, they’ve always been there, no matter what. I was telling (Colorado Springs Gazette sports columnist Paul) Klee that it was goofy (at the Colorado Match Play) Monday and Tuesday, because there were no spectators allowed. And that was the first time in a long time that I’ve played a round of competitive golf and not had at least one of the four of them there. I grew up and it might’ve been my grandma or it might’ve been Gramps or it might’ve been my parents. There was a rare occasion where it was just one of them, but more often than not, it was all four of them. So just to be able to have that support and have those people behind you is great. I didn’t learn this until I was probably 13 or 14, but they’re riding my butt or yelling at me. They’re critiquing me because they know I can be better. They know that’s the only way to get better, you need some tough love. That’s exactly what you need. And that’s how I was raised.

When I was young, like 11 and 12, I never understood. I went 2-for-4 at a baseball game and didn’t make an error in the field and encouraged my teammates really well and stole three bases. But I struck out once and after the game, my Gramps asked, “why did you strike out?” And I get in the car and mom takes me home. Same freaking thing. “Why’d you strike out.” And riding me for that and not congratulating me for doing the other things. But they knew that if I can put in enough time and effort and motivate myself enough that in that next game, I go 3-for-4 with a ground out and not strike out. And at the same time, they’re still critiquing. Why’d you fumble that ball when you were playing shortstop? You’re playing golf and you shoot 74 and that’s great at 15, but you had two three-putts. Why is Gramps riding me about these two three-putts kind of thing. Fortunately I really realized at 16 that it pays dividends even to this day. I’m my own harshest critic and I think that’s the best way to continue to either maintain or ideally improve your game.

Q: What’s the story behind the putter that your grandpa gave you, that you used to win the Match Play?

Prater: It’s a TaylorMade Daddy Long Legs. It’s (CSU-Pueblo football coach) John Wristen’s putter. I think he didn’t like it. My Gramps asked to try it and then I’m in his garage probably first week of June, mowing his grass. So I take it with me one day and start playing with it. I love the way it feels. I’m able to control my speed really well. It has this real long grip on it, so I can let my arms hang a little bit better, and for me that’s better. I just fell in love with it, even though my speed the first four days of the match play was absolutely terrible. I think I had five or six three-putts but it paid dividends in the final because I chipped and putted like a stud the last day. It’s a great putter so then I bought another one on eBay as a backup, even though I think I like Wristen’s putter more.

Q: I know you’re jumping the boys basketball staff this winter. That and with everything that’s gone on, do you have some renewed energy to get back to work?

Prater: Yeah, absolutely. We’re going on around four months that I haven’t seen kid. We started basketball camp a couple of weeks ago, so I’ve seen some of them, but yeah, absolutely. I’m super excited for August, no matter how things look. I’m super anxious. I’m super excited. And at the same time too, I have tons to learn. I mean I’m 25, I’m going into my second year of teaching. I’d love to be able to coach girls golf next spring and I’m super stoked. We’re five weeks away from us teachers reporting back to school. I have to play a lot of golf in that time before then. I want to try and teach my kids something every day, whether I’m teaching them, whether I’m coaching them, It doesn’t matter if it’s Doherty girls golf, whether it’s Doherty boys golf or boys basketball. I’m going to be teaching chemistry this next year which is a new class for me, so I still got a lot to learn in that regard, but hopefully I’ll learn something every single day. And then my kids will learn something every single day.

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

Twitter Q&A: Rhonda Blanford-Green responds to questions about returning to play

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

We understand the desire for more info as our office continues to plan for the safe return of athletics and activities in the 2020-21 school year.

So our commissioner, Rhonda Blanford-Green, took to Twitter on Tuesday to answer questions on that topic.

Know that we are advocating for a safe return to play.

Follow Rhonda on Twitter here:

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We posted some of her answers to questions below.

On fall sports timeline:

More about the timeline for announcing plans:

On switching seasons:

On quarantining:

On venues:

On collaboration with other states:

On a potential resurgence:

NFHS Network offers schools two free Pixellot units to stream events

Field hockey boys soccer girls soccer football boys lacrosse girls lacrosse generic

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

INDIANAPOLIS — As high schools nationwide continue to deal with the fallout from COVID-19 and make plans for the restarting of activities this fall, the NFHS Network – the leader in streaming live and on-demand high school sports – has announced an unprecedented offer for schools that are facing possible attendance restrictions at events during the 2020-21 school year.

Through its High School Support Program, the NFHS Network is offering up to two free Pixellot automated-production units for schools that lack production capabilities to stream events on the NFHS Network.

The offer of two Pixellot units – one for indoor events and the other for outdoor contests – has been extended to all 19,500 high schools in the 51 NFHS member state associations. The NFHS Network is a joint venture of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS), its member state associations and PlayOn! Sports.

In addition to receiving two free Pixellot production units, schools will receive a larger percentage of subscription revenue generated from their events, effective August 1, in an effort to offset revenue losses from reduced attendance.

“We recognize that the next several years will be challenging for our high schools and state associations,” said Mark Koski, CEO of the NFHS Network. “Many are facing budget cuts and reduced resources, and attendance at athletic and other school events may be restricted. From the NFHS Network’s inception seven years ago, we have been driven by the goal to create a platform that showcases every high school event across every sport and every level of competition. Consistent with this goal, we want the High School Support Program to demonstrate our continued commitment to help our partner schools manage through the inevitable complications created by COVID-19.”

The Pixellot automated production solution was introduced to high schools three years ago and has quickly become an integral component of the NFHS Network’s offerings. The Pixellot solution allows every event to be streamed live without requiring personnel to produce the games. There are currently more than 5,000 Pixellot units in high schools across the country which will produce in excess of 250,000 live games this upcoming school year with no human involvement.

In addition to livestreaming 27 different sports, the NFHS Network also covers performing arts, graduations, award ceremonies and other school events. To date, the NFHS Network has distributed more than $25 million back to participating high schools and state associations.

For more information about the High School Support Program, please visit www.nfhsnetwork.com/supportprogram.

Schools wishing to sign up for free Pixellot units should visit www.nfhsnetwork.com/pixellot.