An interception on the first play of the game sparked a big night for Discovery Canyon football. The Thunder beat Riverdale Ridge 44-7.
Month: October 2020
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Photos: No. 7 Platte Valley football cruises to win over Fort Lupton
A fast start for Class 2A No. Platte Valley football led to a big 49-6 win over Fort Lupton on Thursday.
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Friday night football hub: Week 4 streams, scores and more
It’s Week 4 of the football season around the state.
Links
- Live scoreboard
- Top-10 scoreboard | Full rankings
- Full schedule & scoreboard | @ColoHSFootball
- RPI standings
- Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show (9:30 p.m.)
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Coaching football in the age of COVID brings an extra emphasis to the life lessons the sport can teach
Ask virtually any high school football coach across the state of Colorado why they coach, and they’ll tell you football is about more than the wins and the losses, the accolades, or even the championships.
Football, as a game, is about teaching life lessons: Teamwork, hard work, resilience.
It’s been true since the early 1900s.
Now, in the midst of a global pandemic that’s affecting counties and communities across Colorado, it rings more true than ever.
This sentiment has echoed across the airwaves each Friday night since the season started in early October, when Kevin Shaffer’s Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show beams into homes, cars and team buses in all corners of the state. Shaffer’s show, the cornerstone of prep football coverage in the state, interviews dozens of coaches each year after major matchups on Friday nights.
In a typical year, the interviews are focused on Xs and Os, standout performances, key plays, and context in terms of what the games mean in the larger picture of the season. This season, that context has taken a new meaning. Shaffer has ventured more into process, asking coaches how they feel to be playing, what practice is like, and what football means to them and their players.
“It’s such an unusual year — coaches, players, and fans have been through such a rollercoaster of emotions,” Shaffer said this week. “I think the positive thing about this COVID pandemic is that all involved appreciate the chance to play much more than in the past.
“I also want our listeners to understand just how much work it takes just to get a game in this year. And that coaches are not just concerned about winning games — they have the future of their players in mind and teaching them how to deal with adversity on and off the field.”
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(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) [dropcap size=big]S[/dropcap]haffer’s varied approach has helped to draw out some thoughtful answers from coaches.
“It’s so fun to be back,” Montrose coach Brett Mertens told Shaffer after a Week 1 win over Chatfield. “When you’re not sure, and you get football taken away from you — the ups and downs, and the emotions of it — it was so awesome to see kids be able to be themselves and kind of be back to normal for a night.”
Said Doug Johnson to the show, after Week 2: “We’re all just so grateful to be out there.”
Following a Week 3 win, Windsor’s Chris Jones said, “Like anybody else in this state and across the world, we’ve got kids where their family members are struggling with the illness, and they’re able to get a release at practice, and we get to have these games.”
In an interview for this story, Pine Creek’s Todd Miller said: “We have been turned on and off so many times that when we did start my gut feeling was this is not going to happen. But here we are at Week 4 and I am very grateful for that opportunity for our athletes to participate, our coaches to coach, and our parents to enjoy watching their sons play a great team game.”
Douglas County coach Eric Rice and his team sat on the sidelines for the first two weeks: The first because of a quarantine within their team, and the second because of a quarantining opponent.
“Playing the game itself is more important than wins and losses right now,” he told CHSAANow. “Just getting that opportunity that we’re lucky to have at this point in time.”
Coach Ryan Goddard and his Pueblo South Colts also missed the first two weeks of the season due to a quarantine. When they finally got to step on the field in Week 3, things felt different.
“Once we got to playing the game, it was about the most normal two hours I think all of us have had in the past eight months,” Goddard said on Tuesday. “The kids have really had a lot of things just eliminated during this whole thing. So anytime that we can get those opportunities to do things safely and let them be kids, it’s just so important for their social and emotional health.”
Mead coach Jason Klatt is a usual fixture on the Scoreboard Show, given that his team is often highly ranked, involved in big games, and on the winning side of many of those games. Last night Friday, he offered a wonderful synopsis of what it’s like to coach high school football in the age of COVID-19.
“It’s one of the most difficult and challenging things that I’ve ever dealt with,” Klatt said. “You literally, hour-to-hour, do not know what’s going to happen. You don’t know what kids are going to come through the door, you don’t know what kids are going to be sick.
“We stopped practice plans,” Klatt added. “We just have kind of a shell of what we think we’re going to do, and then based on the kids we have out there, then we will go ahead and run it.
“It’s just being flexible and being able to understand that the reason why we’re out there is to help kids with their lives and to give them an outlet right now, and to teach them some things that are going to help them with the next five years,” the coach continued. “That’s the reason why we’re out there. It’s not to win football games.”
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[dropcap size=big]A[/dropcap]round the state teams, coaches and players are grateful to be playing, period.

(Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com) “With our guys, it’s kind of set in — especially dealing with the first two weeks — just how special the opportunity is to be a part of something, and especially a football team,” Goddard said, reflecting on his team’s quarantine. “What I saw with our guys during that time, is that in the face of adversity, we don’t want to run away from each other, we run toward each other.
“That’s a life lesson,” he continued. “How to be resilient, and how to be with your teammates. Maybe if you can’t do it physically, you’re still with your teammates. We’re all going through the same thing. We’re all still trying to find ways to get better, and maybe not necessarily be around each other, but have those meaningful relationships that are so meaningful to a team.”
Of being a high school football coach right now, Douglas County’s Rice said, “In a word? Challenging. Is it more stressful? Yeah. Because what you’re worried about is: Am I following all the right protocols and procedures, am I giving my kids the best chance to be safe on the field, but yet still being able to play the game the right way?
“But it’s still very rewarding, because I love coaching football,” Rice continued. “I love being around our kids, because they’re an extension of our family. Every day we get to it, we count it as a blessing right now.”
Things as routine as planning a practice have become complex.
“Some days it feels normal and other days it feels like what in the wide, wide, world of sports are we doing?” Pine Creek’s Miller said. “When we started the season, we had 127 players; we now have 90. Eligibility and going to school two days a week have crushed our numbers. Teams meetings are OK, but it does not help me tackle or block. When life gets real in the A gap, virtual meetings go out the window.
“On the flip side of that, it has made us be more efficient regarding time management, and attention to detail,” added Miller. “When we got hit with a positive test, we were taught a lesson in control and humility.”
Practice itself not only involves teaching football, but things like keeping players in smaller groups, limiting contact, and ensuring all safety protocols are followed.
Teams didn’t have much of an opportunity for summer camps, and no scrimmages were allowed this season. So fundamentals have been an on-going process for some.
“We’ve obviously eased on the contact part of it, but we really still try to find ways to teach — the techniques, especially the tackling techniques where it’s the safety of the player,” Goddard said.
“We’re still learning how to line up, we’re still learning how to run routes,” he added. “From that perspective we’re still a little bit behind — but so is everyone else.”
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(Barry Smith) [dropcap size=big]W[/dropcap]hile it may not be their purpose, or why they coach, make no mistake: Coaches do want to win games.
Teams are only scheduled to play six games during the shortened regular season. Combined with a condensed playoff field — only eight teams per class will advance to the postseason — it does seem to have added an emphasis to the regular season for some teams.
“What we’re preaching to our team is we have a nine-game playoff. That’s what it is,” Wray coach Levi Kramer said on the Scoreboard Show after Week 1. “Hey you know, every game is a playoff game for us. … I think that’s how you have to look at it. These are all playoff games.”
Added Longmont’s Johnson: “It feels like a lot of pressure. You don’t have that feeling out period that a team usually has. We’ve had 1-3 teams get into the Final 4 and state championship. It’s nice to have that when you have young kids, but that’s not available this year.”
“I like it, to be honest,” Montrose’s Mertens told the Scoreboard Show. “We only get six games guaranteed, so I’d just as soon play all good teams. Every game on our schedule is a big game, whether it be a big rivalry game out west, or a top-10 matchup. Every single one is a big matchup for us. In a year where you don’t have very many opportunities, it’s awesome to be able to play big-time games each and every week.”
Said Pine Creek’s Miller: “Every game is so important, not only for the chance to move on, but to look in the mirror and be honest with oneself as a player and coach that I did my best. If you are like me, the answer is always no. I can always do better: during practice, more focus, more passion, more love, more empathy. I am doing the things to make my father proud. That has not changed. What has is the now, enjoying this team, this practice, this game, and giving thanks for that opportunity.”
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(Lance Wendt/Wendt5280.com) [dropcap size=big]B[/dropcap]y and large, games across the state are being played as scheduled. But some game matchups are changing weekly, even daily, due to quarantines affecting schools. At various point in time, Evergreen had three different opponents in Week 4.
Though his team didn’t have to quarantine, Klatt and Mead had a week like that leading up to their Week 3 game, with individuals who were forced to stay away from practice for various reasons.
“So I literally looked at a coach, and I said: ‘I’m going to throw my phone in the trash, because I don’t want to look at it anymore because something’s changing,’” Klatt said. “But it’s just kind of day and age in which we live right now.
“We’re going to make it out of this, we’re going to make it through this,” Klatt added. “We’re just trying to be the sounding voices to help kids with their life right now, and help them see that there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.”
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Football roundup: Liberty downs Widefield for first win of the year

(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com) Third time’s a charm for the Liberty Lancers. The Lancers scored a pair of touchdowns to rally to a 17-7 win over Widefield in a rare Tuesday afternoon showdown.
Stalled offensive drives were the norm early as neither Liberty (1-2 overall) or the Gladiators (0-1) could put up points in the first quarter.
It was the Lancers finally breaking the scoreless tie with a field goal to go up 3-0 with about three minutes left in the first half. But the lead didn’t last long. DJ Allen returned the ensuing kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown, giving Widefield a 7-3 lead.
With urgency at play, the Lancers finally found mojo on offense. Aidan Swanson found Luiz Alamo for a long touchdown pass giving them a 10-7 lead at halftime.
The defense clamped down for the remainder of the game and didn’t allow Widefield to score another point the rest of the game. The Lancers put the game away with a touchdown run with 1:06 left in the game and got to enjoy their brief ride of I-25 with their first win of the season.
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Berthoud 22, Brush 21 (2OT)
Regulation wasn’t enough to settle a tight battle between Berthoud and Brush in the other Tuesday afternoon game.
The Beetdiggers took an early 7-0 thanks to a blocked punt. The Spartans answered right back with a touchdown run and added a 2-point conversion to take an 8-7 lead.
Brush regained momentum before the end of the first quarter, punching in a touchdown run. The 14-8 lead held to halftime and it was the Berthoud defense that would make an impact play later on.
A fumble recovery in the third quarter led to Berthoud’s second offensive touchdown of the game. The 2-point conversion failed and the game went into the fourth quarter locked in a 14-14 tie.
Neither team found paydirt in the fourth quarter forcing the game into overtime.
Brush came up big defensively with an interception setting up a chance to walk away with a big win. The field goal attempt was blocked and the game was extended much to the delight of the home team.
Getting the ball to start the second overtime, Brush found the end zone and kicked the extra point to go up 21-14.
Berthoud answered right back and like it had all day, opted for a 2-point conversion attempt rather than the extra point. The two-yard rushing attempt was successful and Berthoud improved to 2-0 on the season.
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Top-10 football schedule and scoreboard for 2020’s Week 4 games
A complete schedule and scoreboard for football’s top-10 teams during Week 4 of the 2020 season.
- Live scoreboard
- Complete CHSAANow.com rankings
- Full schedule and scoreboard of this week’s games
- RPI standings
- Individual statistical leaders
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Class 5A 1 Cherry Creek 4-0 Friday: W 45-0 at Overland 2 Valor Christian 4-0 Friday: W 63-21 vs. Castle View 3 Columbine 4-0 Thursday: W 32-3 vs. Mullen 4 Pomona 4-0 Saturday: W 33-14 at Arvada West 5 Eaglecrest 4-0 Friday: W 23-13 at Arapahoe 6 Fairview 4-0 Friday: W 43-32 vs. Legacy 7 Legend 4-0 Friday: W 49-0 vs. Chaparral 8 Ralston Valley 3-1 Thursday: W 28-13 vs. Lakewood 9 Grandview 2-2 Friday: W 49-21 vs. Smoky Hill 10 Regis Jesuit 3-1 Friday: W 42-0 at Douglas County Class 4A 1 Dakota Ridge 4-0 Friday: W 57-3 at Wheat Ridge 2 Palmer Ridge 4-0 Friday: W 42-20 vs. (7) Montrose 3 Pine Creek 2-0 Friday: W 59-14 vs. Doherty 4 Ponderosa 4-0 Saturday: W 45-14 at Grand Junction 5 Loveland 4-0 Friday: W 14-3 vs. Monarch 6 Broomfield 4-0 Friday: W 26-13 vs. Heritage 7 Montrose 3-1 Friday: L 20-42 at (2) Palmer Ridge 8 Pueblo West 3-1 Friday: L 21-35 vs. (9) Fountain-Fort Carson 9 Fountain-Fort Carson 4-0 Friday: W 35-21 at (8) Pueblo West 10 Skyline 4-0 Friday: W 41-12 at Greeley Central Class 3A 1 Roosevelt 4-0 Friday: W 48-0 vs. Battle Mountain 2 Lutheran 4-0 Friday: W 50-18 vs. Pueblo County 3 Durango 3-0 Saturday: W 17-8 vs. Evergreen 4 Pueblo South 2-0 Saturday: W 28-7 vs. Pueblo East 5 Mead 3-1 Friday: W 42-0 at Northridge 6 Holy Family 4-0 Friday: W 63-14 vs. Mitchell 7 Green Mountain 3-1 Friday: L 24-31 at (8) Palisade 8 Palisade 3-1 Friday: W 31-24 vs. (7) Green Mountain 9 Fort Morgan 3-1 Friday: W 60-14 vs. Thompson Valley 10 Canon City 3-0 Monday: W 42-7 at Pueblo Central Class 2A 1 Resurrection Christian 4-0 Saturday: W 47-0 vs. (8) University 2 Delta 4-0 Friday: W 28-10 vs. Englewood 3 Sterling 4-0 Friday: W 46-26 vs. Valley 4 Lamar 3-1 Saturday: L 8-22 at (5) Pagosa Springs 5 Pagosa Springs 4-0 Saturday: W 22-8 vs. (4) Lamar 6 Eaton 3-1 Saturday: W 28-0 vs. (10) Brush 7 Platte Valley 3-1 Thursday: W 49-6 at Fort Lupton 8 University 2-2 Saturday: L 0-47 at (1) Resurrection Christian 9 Woodland Park 2-2 Friday: L 23-27 at Moffat County 10 Brush 1-3 Saturday: L 0-28 at (6) Eaton Class 1A 1 Limon 4-0 Friday: W 42-12 at Wiggins 2 Strasburg 4-0 Friday: W 42-0 vs. Bennett 3 Florence 4-0 Friday: W 49-7 vs. Bayfield 4 Centauri 4-0 Friday: W 73-0 vs. Ignacio 5 Wray 4-0 Saturday: W 27-7 vs. (7) Holyoke 6 Hotchkiss 4-0 Friday: W 42-0 at Olathe 7 Holyoke 2-1 Saturday: L 7-27 at (5) Wray 8 Meeker 3-1 Friday: W 44-0 vs. Cedaredge 9 Colorado Springs Christian 3-1 Friday: W 42-0 vs. Rocky Ford 10 Highland 2-2 Friday: W 48-7 vs. Prospect Ridge Academy 8-man 1 Sedgwick County 3-0 Monday: W 56-8 vs. (10) Holly 2 Fowler 4-0 Friday: W 66-0 vs. McClave 3 Sanford 4-0 Friday: W 36-12 vs. (6) Dove Creek 4 Mancos 4-0 Friday: W -0 at Sangre de Cristo 5 Merino 4-0 Saturday: W 44-12 at Haxtun 6 Dove Creek 3-1 Friday: L 12-36 at (3) Sanford 7 Crowley County 2-0 Off this week. 8 Rangely 4-0 Friday: W 44-6 vs. Hayden 9 Pikes Peak Christian 3-1 Saturday: L 6-12 vs. Dolores Huerta Prep 10 Holly 2-0 Monday: L 8-56 at (1) Sedgwick County 6-man 1 Fleming 4-0 Thursday: W 68-19 vs. Peetz 2 Stratton/Liberty 3-0 Off this week. 3 Cheyenne Wells 4-0 Friday: W 45-6 at Genoa-Hugo 4 Granada 4-0 Friday: W 67-60 vs. (7) Cheraw 5 Eads 3-1 Friday: W 64-20 at Cotopaxi 6 Prairie 3-1 Saturday: W 63-22 at North Park 7 Cheraw 3-1 Friday: L 60-67 at (4) Granada 8 Briggsdale 2-1 Off this week. 9 Kit Carson 2-1 Off this week. 10 Hi-Plains 1-1 Off this week. -
Statewide solo and ensemble music festivals will be offered virtually this year

(Kevin Keyser/KeyserImages.com) In conjunction with the celebration of the National High School Activities Month, the Colorado High School Activities Association is excited to announce that we are creating a statewide virtual solo and ensemble festival this year.
The CHSAA recognizes that nothing is the same during these challenging times, but we want to support and offer encouragement to our directors across the state. This virtual festival is easy, simple to use, available for all schools — elementary, middle school, and high school! Even those in a virtual or hybrid model, and this would be a great evaluation tool for both the student(s) and the director.
“We are really excited to be able to offer this music opportunity for everyone in the state,” said CHSAA assistant commissioner Bethany Brookens. “We strongly encourage everyone to sign up as soon as possible to ensure they get a spot.”
We will be using HeartOut as our digital platform of choice. This is a free app that students, directors and judges will be using. This is an asynchronous opportunity to participate. Students and directors will have an entire week (Monday-Friday) in January to upload their best performance, and then the judges will login soon after the deadline to provide a quality overall rating and give comprehensive written feedback on the recorded performance.
The inaugural virtual CHSAA Solo & Ensemble Festival will be January 18-22, 2021. If you would like to take part, and these dates absolutely don’t work, please let us know and we will be happy to schedule more opportunities. Registration is now open: CHSAA Solo & Ensemble Registration Form.
This festival is available to all students in elementary, middle school, and high school. Solos and ensembles (up to 16 students) are allowed. The events are Vocal, High Brass (trumpet/French horn), Low Brass (trombone, baritone, tuba), High String (violin, viola), Low String (cello, bass), Piano, Percussion, Flute, Saxophone, Woodwind (clarinet, oboe, bassoon), Mixed Ensembles, Guitar, and Ukulele.
Entry costs for solos and small ensembles (less than 10 students) are $10/each, and ensembles 11-16 students are $15/each.
Worried about memorization? Not required. Is your school still virtual, or in a hybrid model? No problem — students can easily upload their performances on their own, or you can help them their day at school. Is there a required music list? Nope, music just must be festival appropriate. More questions? Please visit our FAQ page HERE.
CHSAA contacts for this festival are Bethany Brookens and Sandra Williamson. We look forward to hearing from you!
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Q&A – CHSAA Solo & Ensemble Festival #1 January 18-22, 2021
Our goal is to provide an educationally based opportunity for all music students and directors across the state. Directors are encouraged to use these ratings as an evaluation tool for their administration, and students will be motivated to work towards improvement during these untraditional times.
This list will be updated as questions are asked. Please reach out to Bethany or Sandra at CHSAA with specific questions or comments. We look forward to having you and your students participate!
- All ages are welcome (elementary through high school). Sign-ups must be made through the school’s music director, and not individual students/parents/private teachers.
- In order to be eligible, students must be an active member of their local school’s music program (as determined by the school).
- Memorization is recommended, but not required for any events.
- Due to COVID-19 difficulties, canned accompanist is allowed, if necessary.
- At the time of performance (audition is the word that HeartOut uses) (January 18-22), students will be required to announce the title and composer of the piece(s) they will be playing. They will then be required to hold up their music in front of their faces for three (3) seconds to verify they are performing from non-photocopied sheet music.
- At the time of registration, directors will be required to verify that they are obeying all copyright laws.
- A director may conduct their ensemble, if necessary.
- Solos and ensembles (up to 16 students) allowed. Events are Vocal, High Brass (trumpet/French horn), Low Brass (trombone, baritone, tuba), High String (violin, viola), Low String (cello, bass), Piano, Percussion, Flute, Saxophone, Woodwind (clarinet, oboe, bassoon), Mixed Ensembles, Guitar, and Ukulele.
- There is no required music list. Music must be festival appropriate.
- At the time of registration you do not need to select the music or indicate what you will be playing! Just sign up to reserve your spot. You don’t have to select music until January.
- Solos and ensembles with 10 people or less will be $10/entry. Ensembles with 11-16 students will be $15/entry.
- After the deadline, there will be no refunds of money.
- Students will have a week (Monday, January 18-Friday, January 22, 2021) to upload their performance(s). Performances can be up to 10 minutes.
- If schools or districts don’t feel comfortable with students uploading the performance/audition themselves, directors can submit the performance on the student or ensembles behalf!
- All uploads will be made using the free HeartOut app from the GooglePlay or App Store. When students are ready to record their final performance, they will have 3 opportunities. They will then be able to upload their best performance to be judged.
- Judges will provide ratings and comments within the app during the weekend of January 23-24, 2021, and feedback should be ready for the students on Monday, January 25th.
- Ratings will be based upon 5 categories, worth 10 points each.
- Students and schools will be able to order medals through CMEA based upon the ratings they receive during our festival. All award orders can be placed by going to the CMEA web site at cmeaonline.org, clicking on the General Information Tab and Clicking on the Order CMEA Awards Tab. All transactions can be completed on-line, including credit card payment. Do you have questions regarding CMEA awards? You can direct those questions to CMEA Awards Manager- Ken Anderson at awardscmeaonline@gmail.com
- HeartOut’s Privacy Policy is excellent and has been reviewed by the CHSAA Legal Team to ensure compliance and safety. It may be found HERE.
- Judges will be used from across the state, and even country. A CHSAA adjudicator training will occur in December to review expectations, new rating sheets, and ensure that all students will have a positive experience at our festivals.
- These dates don’t work for me, will there be another festival opportunity? Yes! If the demand is there, we hope to offer at least 1-2 more statewide solo and ensemble festivals this school year.
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Denver Broncos high school football coach of the week: Pomona’s Jay Madden

(Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com) Jay Madden is a no nonsense guy. And that’s exactly why he’s good at what he does. In any given year, Madden’s Pomona Panthers are likely to contend for a Class 5A state championship. They hit paydirt with a big win over Eaglecrest in 2017, but have had a shot at a state title in several other seasons.
Madden has his team off to a solid start this season at 3-0 and that includes a close win over then No. 6 Ralston Valley last week. A tough game with Columbine is still ahead but being 3-0 against tough 5A competition is no fluke. As a result, Madden has been named the Denver Broncos high school football coach of the week.
The Broncos coach of the week is selected in partnership with the Broncos. Find a complete list of winners on this page.
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Jay Madden bio

(Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics) Years as head coach: 26 (214-85)
Years at Pomona: 18 (3-0 this season)
Previous stops: Golden defensive coordinator 1992; Alameda assistant coach (1993-94); Alameda head coach (1995); Dakota Ridge head coach (1996-2000); Mullen head coach (2001-02); Pomona head coach (2003-present).
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Question: Why do you coach?
Madden: Because I love helping kids accomplish things they didn’t think they could do.
Q: Whether it’s winning state title or seeing a kid maybe breakthrough at a certain level, what’s the most satisfying part of coaching for you?
Madden: Just watching kids grow and much they mature and how much they get out of this experience. It’s not about state championships and that stuff. To me, it’s about watching kids become better people and better football players.
Q: Who had an influence on you that made you want to become a coach?
Madden: My dad was a head coach was my dad was coaching high school for 35 years. So my dad would be number one. And then Ed Kintz, my high school coach, and Gary Klatt, my high school coach, would be the other two.
Q: Through all the time that you’ve been doing this, what’s your measurement of success, especially if it’s not about state titles; what makes a team successful in your eyes in each individual year?
Madden: Maximize your potential. Try to win one more game than you should. And as our goal every year with this team is a nine-win team, we want to try to win 10 games. If we’re six-win team. We want to try to win seven. We want to maximize our potential, no matter what that might be.
Q: With this year being obviously the most unusual of years you’ve probably coached, would it be safe to say that these kids will get a learning experience playing high school football that is unique to any other class that you’ve taught?
Madden: Absolutely. This has been the craziest time of our lives, obviously, but these kids have had to be so resilient and as coaches we’ve had to be resilient because the roller coaster ride we’ve been on is hard to handle. Certainly you have to step up, you can’t just roll over, so you’ve got to step up and make it happen.
Q: What do you think it’s like from your kids, from your kid’s perspective, what do you think it’s like to be coached by you?
Madden: Demanding. Fun. We want to build relationships that last forever. I want them to know how extremely proud I am of them.

(Steve Oathout) Q: Who comes to your mind when I ask you who who’s the most memorable kid that you’ve ever coached and not necessarily from what they were able to do on the field. But if someone were to ask you about kids that you’ve coached previously, who always jumps in your mind and why?
Madden: Wow. Clint Parker. Just an incredible, incredible human being. And we lost him way too young. So that’s why he pops into my mind the most.
Q: When you have a situation like that, how do you use it to make sure the kids are truly appreciative of the chances that they’re given when doing something they love like playing high school football?
Madden: We have an award named the Clint Parker Dog Soldier Award, so that’s the kids we talk about being unselfish and being there for each other. And I think they’ve had to do that a lot this year. So that’s why having Clint as our backdrop is pretty good.
Q: What’s the toughest thing for you to do from a coaching? What’s the most difficult aspect of the job, which then also would probably make it the most rewarding?
Madden: I love it all. The only thing that bothers me is the paperwork and the all that kind of junk that we have to deal with eligibility and all that stuff. As far as coaching goes, I love it all.
Q: What’s your favorite thing to do on a daily basis when it comes to coaching your kids?
Madden: Just the interaction in the weight room that we haven’t had this year, you know, get to know people and, I love film. I just love to sit down and watch film and try to figure out how to stop people and how to score points. I also just love implementing it every Monday and Tuesday.
Q: What was the most memorable part of that state championship win a couple years ago? It was quite a thriller with you guys and Eaglecrest.
Madden: Yeah, I think we were up by 14 and then next thing you knew we were down by 14. Watching Ryan Marquez get that last first down was something I’ll definitely never forget.
Q: What are you hoping your former student-athletes, whether it’s today, whether it’s 20 years down the line, if you’re no longer coaching by then, what do you want them to remember the most about you?
Madden: Just how passionate I was about them and the game of football and trying to help them become better people.

(Lance Wendt) -
Video: Jeffco Preps With Pleuss (October)
Jeffco Preps With Pleuss is a monthly roundup of Jeffco prep highlights hosted by Dennis Pleuss, Jeffco Public Schools’ sports information director. Prep football action started up in early October. We’ve got highlights from four games — Columbine vs Arvada West, Pomona vs Lakewood, Central of Grand Junction vs Dakota Ridge and Wheat Ridge vs Chatfield — from the first few weeks of the 6-game regular season. Boys tennis season wrapped up with Lakewood and Ralston Valley having good showings at the Class 5A state tournament at Gates Tennis Center in Denver. Cross country season also concluded with the Jeffco League Championships that led into the state meet held in Colorado Springs.