A week after dropping three-straight games, Ralston Valley hockey rebounded by winning three tough games. As a result, the Mustangs shot back up the CHSAANow.com rankings, and now sit at No. 3.
Ralston Valley was No. 7 last week following close losses to Dakota Ridge, Regis Jesuit and Mountain Vista. But the Mustangs got wins over Denver East, then-No. 9 Dakota Ridge and then-No. 2 Cherry Creek last week. They are now 9-5-0.
Elsewhere, Regis Jesuit maintained its stranglehold atop the poll. The Raiders, 12-0-0, received all 11 first-place votes following a 3-0-0 week that included a furious rally to beat Cherry Creek.
Monarch moved up one spot to No. 2, Cherry Creek dropped to No. 4, and Fort Collins rounds out the top-5.
There were no newcomers to this week’s ranking.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, the poll will release each Monday.
Don’t look now, but here come the Monarch Coyotes.
With a 6-0 win over No. 6 Valor Christian on Friday and a 5-1 win over No. 2 Cherry Creek on Saturday, last year’s state runner-up has jumped to No. 3 in the CHSAANow.com hockey rankings this week.
The Coyotes are 2-1 since returning from winter break with their only loss coming to Regis Jesuit, who remains at No. 1.
Fort Collins jumps one spot to No. 4 and Mountain Vista, despite a 3-0 loss to Cherry Creek on Friday, jumps two spots to No. 5. The Golden Eagles beat No. 7 Ralston Valley on Saturday, giving the Mustangs a third-straight loss.
Resurrection Christian jumps one spot to No. 8, trading places with No. 9 Dakota Ridge.
Steamboat Springs stayed put at No. 10 meaning that no new teams broke into the rankings this week.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, the poll will release each Monday.
After wins over Air Academy and Liberty, Steamboat Springs has broken into the CHSAANow.com hockey rankings this week.
The Sailors won the two games by a combined score of 16-6, improving to 6-2-1 on the season. They are ranked No. 10.
Regis Jesuit keeps its familiar spot as the No. 1 team in state, the spot they have occupied all season long.
Cherry Creek (No. 2) Ralston Valley (No. 3) and Valor Christian (No. 4) all climbed one spot from where they sat a week ago.
After suffering its first lost of the season, Fort Collins dropped to No. 5. They lost 5-2 to No. 7 Mountain Vista on Tuesday.
Monarch and Resurrection Christian hold their spots at No. 6 and No. 9 respectively and Dakota Ridge drops one spot, landing at No. 8.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, the poll will release each Monday.
The 2016 all-state boys soccer teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.
These team were created following a lengthy process which included nominations from leagues, and then a vote of coaches.
[divider]
Class 5A
(Derek Regensburger/MaxPreps)
Player of the year: Tajon Buchanan, Legacy
Coach of the year: Hardy Kalisher, Boulder
First Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Tajon Buchanan
Legacy
Senior
FORW
Evan Bunch
Arapahoe
Senior
D
Sam Carson
Denver East
Junior
FORW
Omar Castruita
Boulder
Sophomore
FORW
Djibril Doumbia
Boulder
Sophomore
GK
Max Gottesfeld
Denver East
Senior
FORW
Ryan Houseman
Fairview
Senior
MF
Grant Martinez
Fossil Ridge
Senior
–
Armando Ocampo
Broomfield
Senior
–
Riley Shea
Broomfield
Senior
–
Blaise Werner
Boulder
Senior
FORW
Second Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Josh Alpert
Cherry Creek
Senior
MF
Mitchell Graesser
Boulder
Senior
D
Simon Julian
Boulder
Senior
D
Daulton Logan
Broomfield
Senior
–
Abraham Lopez
Boulder
Senior
MF
Chase Pacheco
Mountain Vista
Senior
MF
Mathew Rhoads
Fort Collins
Junior
D
Alex Ruiz
Grandview
Senior
MF
Jack Schulze
Heritage
Senior
GK
Jamie Soto
Fossil Ridge
Senior
–
Eric Thompson
Fort Collins
Junior
MF
Andrew Turk
Pine Creek
Senior
FORW
Honorable mention: Matt Behnke, Rock Canyon, Senior, FORW; Braden Bloom, Castle View, Senior, D; Cameron Broadhurst, Broomfield, Junior; Luke Drumright, Arvada West, Senior, MF/FORW; Miguel Garcia, Far Northeast Warriors, Senior, GK; Andrew Hansen, Grand Junction, Senior, D/MF/FORW; Joey Hussey, Rangeview, Senior, D; Jackson Myers, ThunderRidge, Senior, D; Phillip Pedler, Lakewood, Junior, STRK/D; Erik Plascencia, Bear Creek, Junior, MF; Jacob Roldan, Smoky Hill, Senior, MF; Abram Sanchez, Grand Junction, Junior, STRK; Edgar Sepulveda, Westminster, Senior, MF; Stone Streeter, Fairview, Senior, MF; Raghav Thapa, Cherokee Trail, Senior; Brandon Valladares, Greeley West, Senior, GK; Roberto Vasquez, Denver East, Senior, MF; Miguel Veloz, Bear Creek, Junior, FORW; Joel Walker, Vista Ridge, Senior, MF/FORW; Kevin Yevak, Ralston Valley, Senior, D; Miguel Zambrano, Gateway, Senior, MF.
[divider]
Class 4A
(Michael Hankins/TGWstudios.com)
Player of the year: Titus Grant, The Classical Academy
Coach of the year: Blake Galvin, The Classical Academy
First Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Jeremy Baldes
The Classical Academy
Senior
–
Jaden Borja
The Classical Academy
Senior
–
Cody Brazelton
Mullen
Senior
FORW
Titus Grant
The Classical Academy
Senior
FORW
Andrew Hiester
Air Academy
Senior
D/MF/STRK
Juan Macias
Battle Mountain
Junior
FORW
Jackson Neal
Lewis-Palmer
Senior
MF
Michael Peters
Pueblo West
Senior
MF/FORW
Wesley Tedstrom
D’Evelyn
Senior
–
Karlo Terrazas
Greeley Central
Senior
GK
Luke White
Cheyenne Mountain
Senior
FORW
Second Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Sam Alvares
Cheyenne Mountain
Senior
D
Cristian Catalan
Denver West
Senior
MF/FORW
Chris Chasteen
The Classical Academy
Senior
D
Nico Denton
D’Evelyn
Senior
–
Eli Fenton
Durango
Junior
FORW/MF
Miles Joersz
Battle Mountain
Senior
D
Seth Legan
Pueblo Centennial
Senior
MF
Patrick O’Neil
Evergreen
Senior
D/MF
Ryan Pierce
Valor Christian
Sophomore
GK
Dylan Stanley
Pueblo West
Junior
MF
Brandon Staple
Longmont
Junior
STRK
Honorable mention: Brandon Archuleta, Pueblo West, Senior, MF; Alex Arnold, Niwot, Senior, FORW; Carlos Bahena, Denver West, Senior, MF/HB/FORW; Jorge Baranda, Wheat Ridge, Sophomore, MF/FORW; Richard Benson, Evergreen, Senior, FB/D; Will Beurskens, Steamboat Springs, Junior, MF; Nick Boldvich, Palmer Ridge, Junior; Chris Chasteen, The Classical Academy, Senior, D; Spencer Condon, Mountain View, Senior, STRK/MF; Ture Elamo, Skyview, Senior, GK; Danny Gallardo, Mitchell, Senior, MF; Camden Garland, Durango, Senior, D/MF; Josh Griffin, Standley Lake, Senior; Connor Henry, Durango, Senior, MF; Christopher Himel, Centaurus, Junior, D/FORW; Kristian Hooker, Air Academy, Junior, FORW/MF; Michael Jimenez, Mullen, Junior, FORW/MF; Creek Kamby, Battle Mountain, Senior; Parker Klein, Ponderosa, Senior, MF; Hayden MacPherson, Lewis-Palmer, Senior, GK; Dawson McCawley, Skyline, Senior, MF/FORW/D; Sergio Mendoza, Pueblo South, Senior, GK; Landen Nau, Pueblo West, Senior, D; Brandon Rodriguez, Battle Mountain, Senior, MF; Nikylas Roitsch, The Classical Academy, Senior, D/MF; Jonny Stephens, The Classical Academy, Junior, D/MF; Miguel Toledo, Silver Creek, Senior, STRK.
[divider]
Class 3A
(Michael Hankins/TGWstudios.com)
Player of the year: Max Mehlman, Kent Denver
Coach of the year: Matt Cassell, Jefferson Academy
First Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Mohamud Ahmed
Bruce Randolph
Senior
STRK/MF
Lucas Almeida
Jefferson Academy
Senior
–
AJ Arroyo
Jefferson Academy
Junior
–
Larson Baker
Colorado Academy
Junior
–
Evan Coit
Salida
Senior
–
David Felman
Kent Denver
Senior
FORW
Roger Hernandez
KIPP Denver
Senior
–
Brendan Lefkowicz
Peak to Peak
Junior
FORW/D
Max Mehlman
Kent Denver
Senior
HB
Ross Rainaldi
Kent Denver
Senior
GK
Gabe Sherwood
Colorado Springs Christian
Senior
MF/FORW
Ian Strine
Fountain Valley
Senior
–
Second Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Rory Buck
Kent Denver
Senior
HB
Jonathan Espinoza
Coal Ridge
Senior
–
Jorge Gurrola
KIPP Denver
Junior
–
Kile Kelley
Jefferson Academy
Senior
–
Galen Kelly
Fountain Valley
Junior
–
Brandon Leeper
Jefferson Academy
Senior
–
Ross Norwood
Colorado Springs Christian
Senior
GK
Victor Ponce de Leon
Arrupe Jesuit
Junior
FB
Lookens Smith
Colorado Springs Christian
Sophomore
FORW/MF
Miguel Vargas
Jefferson
Senior
–
Kolin Whisler
Bennett
Senior
–
Honorable mention: Paul Boehner, Liberty Common, Senior, MF/D; Javier De La Cruz, Basalt, Senior; Conor Findley, DSST-Stapleton, Junior, GK; Josh Fulk, Coal Ridge, Junior; Kevin Garcia, Vail Mountain, Senior; Jacob Gonzalez, St. Mary’s, Senior, MF; Sebastian Grigore, Dawson School, Senior; Irvin Guaderrama, Lake County, Senior, FORW; Brandon Harper, Delta, Junior; Hajrudin Karasalihovic, William Smith, Junior, MF; Braedan Krier, Sterling, Senior; Zion Lander, DSST-Green Valley Ranch, Senior, STRK; Michael Longtine, The Academy, Senior, MF/D; Tanner MacKay, Colorado Springs Christian, Junior, MF/STRK; Nestor Perez, Valley, Senior, FORW; Mike Rutledge, Frontier Academy, Senior, MF; Kyle Shaffer, Rye, Senior, STRK/MF; Elliot Shaw, Middle Park, Senior, MF/D/FORW; Eric Strauss, Jefferson Academy, Junior; Edgar Torres, Aurora West College Prep, Senior, MF/D; Juan Torres, The Pinnacle, Senior; Alec Vega, DSST-Green Valley Ranch, Senior, MF; Ted Weiss, Manitou Springs, Senior, MF; Amos Westley, Estes Park, Junior, GK/D.
CARBONDALE — If someone had told Discovery Canyon’s Luke Trujillo that he was going to end his day shooting a 5-under par 67 to take the lead at the Class 4A boys state golf tournament, he would’ve called them a liar.
But they would’ve been telling the truth.
Trujillo was four strokes better than last year’s defending champion, Jackson Solem of Silver Creek. And the Thunder stormed into the overall team, shooting 4-under as a unit.
It was a nice little Monday at River Valley Ranch.
“I’m extremely happy,” Trujillo said. “It’s just tough the way that I finished.”
A double-bogey on 17 and a bogey on 18 took three strokes off his score and putting Windsor’s Cole Krantz within three strokes and four others, including Solem and Discovery Canyon teammate Owen Pasvogel within four.
Krantz found himself at 3-under at sinking a birdie on the seventh, but he gave the stroke right back on the par 3 eight. He started on hole 10 and finished his round on the front nine.
“You can’t worry about what everyone else is doing,” Krantz said. “I just have to play my game tomorrow and hopefully the putts go my way and everything falls my way tomorrow.”
Trujillo’s grew frustrated with the way he finished his round, but coach Mark Liggett knows that he can remain focused come Tuesday and make the shot he’ll need to in order to get the win.
“He needs to know that he’s the guy to beat,” Liggett said. “He just needs to go out and play calm.”
If anything will help him play calm it will be the 13-stroke lead that the Thunder hold after day one. With a supporting cast of Pasvogel who finished 1-under and Caleb Blackburn who finished 2-over, the Thunder are in a prime position to bring home a team championship.
And that cushion will help Trujillo play a little more aggressive while learning from the mistakes he made on Monday.
“Maybe I got greedy,” he said. “Hitting that drive in the hazard on 17, I wanted to still give myself a chance to make a five and get a part. I hit a wedge too long and I three-putted.”
And he still put up a final score that he had only shot once in his life.
The shot of the day at River Valley Ranch came on the par 3 third when Steamboat’s Jack Rotermund sank a hole-in-one. It was the first ace of his life and left him with a big smile for the rest of his round.
The players will return to the course early on Tuesday to finish out the tournament and play for championship gold.
If the trend is anything like what it was on Monday and for a lot of the golf season, then the Thunder will be difficult to beat. They just have to overcome any nerves that they might have while holding the lead.
“It hit me at an unfortunate time that I’d be leading state by a lot,” Trujillo said. “Our team didn’t have any expectations to be leading state by 13 and we did that. Tomorrow we just have to make sure we don’t get nervous.”
Below is an interactive database of boys golf’s state qualifiers in classes 5A, 4A and 3A during the 2016 season. These golfers qualified out of their respective regionals.
LITTLETON — Brie Oakley couldn’t quite believe it.
“I saw my time and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I broke 17.’”
The Grandview senior, the Class 5A state runner-up to Lauren Gregory in cross country last fall, claimed the win in round one of a showdown between the big schools’ distance goliaths on Friday at the Liberty Bell Invitational.
The two pushed each other to monumental heights in the Division 1 race at Heritage High School, eclipsing Jordyn Colter’s 17:00 course record from 2012 easily as Oakley crossed the line in 16:44 and Gregory in 16:52.
Oakley, donning the blue and black of the Grandview Wolves for the first time last school year, added another record-setting performance to her resume. She shattered Boulder High legend Melody Fairchild’s 5A state track meet record in the 3,200 with a 10:33, while also claiming the 1,600.
In attempting to unseat Gregory, a Fort Collins harrier trying to become one of the only four-time state champions in the sport, Oakley slipped away from Gregory’s grasp after two miles of the 3.1.
Brie Oakley. (Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
“The second mile we broke away,” Oakley said. “Before the third mile, I knew I just needed to go now. I could feel myself breaking away.”
Even at altitude, the tandem ended up with new high-water marks nationally for 2016, passing Ashton Endsley’s (Abilene, TX) 16:56.
“It feels really surreal,” said Oakley, who ran 47 seconds quicker than her previous lifetime best.
Grandview was also the highest Colorado team finisher in Division 1 with 138 points, good for third place behind Jackson Hole’s (Wyo.) 75 and Albuquerque Academy’s (N.M.) 133.
In Division 2, the defending state champion Broomfield Eagles buried the girls field with 39 points. Madison Mooney, a new Eagle who transferred from Horizon, spread her wings and took off from everyone to a winning time of 17:49. She was over 20 seconds ahead of ThunderRidge’s Shae Henley (18:12) and teammate Ivy Gonzales (18:17).
“I’m trying to place a lot higher at state this year,” said Mooney, whose sister, Megan, competes for Florida State University. “I’m going for top five. The course is definitely really difficult. I’m more of a flat-course runner, but after today I know that I can push myself to go to that limit.”
The Silver Creek boys also doubled up on Division 2 titles as Brock Dykema (15:58) won individually, while teammates James Lee (2nd, 16:04) and John Moroney (4th, 16:07) had his back during a comfortable 39-91 victory over Broomfield.
“During the homestretch I was just trying to kick as hard as I could, because I didn’t know where my teammates were behind me,” Dykema said. “I always have to be scared of that, because they’re good too.”
Thomas Chaston (15:57) claimed first in the Division 3 race as his team, Cheyenne Mountain, got past Evergreen 64-85 for the win. Valor Christian’s Keely Jones (18:51) was victorious in Division 3, but Roosevelt (82) got the better of Steamboat Springs (85) and Valor (89) in the team race.
Custer County’s Jerald Taylor, from Class 2A, was wildly impressive in winning Division 4 in a blistering 15:40, the fifth quickest time of the day behind only four top-flight competitors in Division 1. Cole Sprout of Faith Christian, perhaps one of the nation’s better freshmen, was second in 16:00.
Kent Denver’s Sam Schaffer (18:53) scurried away from Buena Vista’s Annie Hughes (18:58) to win the Division 4 girls race, while Holy Family swept the team titles with ease.
RENO, Nev. — Tom Southall was born with one arm, and as he grew up, his parents impressed upon him that he was no different than anyone else.
His induction to the National High School Hall of Fame says otherwise.
Southall, the 1981 graduate of Steamboat Springs, joined the very exclusive group along with 11 other members on Saturday night in Reno. He is the 22nd person from Colorado to join the NFHS Hall of Fame, and eighth athlete. Only Ohio (29) and Illinois (26) have more.
The National Hall of Fame, Southall said, “is one of those things where you just say, ‘Wow, the people that are up there, they’re some pretty significant names in Colorado high school sports and activities.’ But you don’t really put yourself into that picture or that perspective.”
A star in football, track, basketball and music at Steamboat Springs, Southall was born without an arm below his right elbow. He grew up as the seventh of eight kids in an athletic family — a “big, supportive family, a loving family,” Southall said.
“We were always doing something,” he added. “There was always somebody to play with, whether it was sports or games or anything. … I just grew up not knowing I wasn’t supposed to play.”
Southall remembers going to Children’s Hospital when he was five or six to get physical therapy and learn how to use his prosthetic arm. While there, he would see children who were born with minimal appendages due to a nausea medication, Thalidomide, their mothers took during pregnancy.
“I’m seeing these kids with little or no arms or legs out there rolling around, having fun, playing kick ball,” Southall said. “But they’re out there just enjoying the freedom of being active. I learned really early that granted, there are some things that are more difficult for me to do, but I really didn’t have it that bad.”
Southall played all kinds of sports when he was young, and specifically got interested in football because his older brother played.
“I idolized him,” Southall said. “I just assumed that when I was old enough, it would be my turn. My parents never discouraged me from doing anything.”
But when Southall’s freshman year at Steamboat came around, a doctor wouldn’t sign off on his physical because of his right arm. They eventually found another doctor to sign the slip, and his high school career took off.
He would set a state record in the 2A long jump (23 feet, 4.5 inches), and helped Steamboat’s track team win three championships from 1979-81.
Southall was twice named the football player of the year, and in 1979, Steamboat won the 2A football title.
He was an outstanding basketball player who set school records for steals and assists. He was all-state in music while playing the trumpet, and participated in jazz, band and the concert band.
Southall graduated among the top-10 of his class.
In 1981, Southall won the prestigious Freddie Steinmark Award, given annually to the top student-athlete.
Tom Southall. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
“Everybody kind of took a particular interest with this little skinny kid with one arm,” Southall said. “You know, ‘How was he going to do it?’ I can remember going back and fielding punts or kicks. Half the time everybody would get up in their seat and go, ‘Oh, shoot, he’s going to drop this one.’ Rarely did.
“High school sports gave me an opportunity to find my niche in my school.”
One of Southall’s best moments came in the 2A state football semifinals during the 1979 season. He rushed for 412 yards on a cold day against Sheridan, setting the state record.
“It was Thanksgiving weekend, and it had snowed for four or five days — the good Steamboat powder,” Southall said. “They had to plow the field with a road grader; they painted the lines with yellow parking lot paint. And it looked like Arena Football because there was so much snow on the sides.
“Thinking back on it,” Southall continued, “we didn’t have a track, so we were always out in March and April when there’s still a foot of snow on the ground. So we would always be out on the snow running, and I was used to running on snow and ice and being able to make cuts and change directions. We really had the home field advantage that day.”
Southall’s brother was an assistant coach and noticed he was approaching the record, which had been set earlier in the season by Broomfield’s Guy Egging.
“So he called down to the head coach and said, ‘Why don’t you put Tom back in for a couple plays.’ And he’s going, ‘Why? Why?’” Southall said. “So he says, ‘He’s at 300-some yards.’ So I didn’t know about it, but the coaches were aware of it. I had my brother watching my back, so to speak, to put me back in the game.”
A year later, Flagler’s Bob Trahern eclipsed Southall’s mark.
“I had gotten to know him during summer basketball,” Southall said. “So it was fun to at least have it for a little while.”
Southall moved on to Colorado College, where he led the nation in punt return yardage and set a Division III record for kickoff return yards.
“Nothing — there’s nothing he can’t do,” said former Colorado College coach Jerry Carle in an 1983 video produced by NFL Films about Southall. “That’s why he’s back there. You think I’m playing favorites? Hell, I want to win. He’s back there because he deserves to be back there.”
Upon graduating from CC, Southall attended to University of Denver to get his master’s in accounting, and then spent five years working for a CPA firm. During that time, he got his feet wet in coaching and teaching.
This coming fall will be Southall’s 25th year of teaching. Over the years, he has coached football, track and basketball, and is currently a track assistant at Cherokee Trail.
He is heavily involved in the Special Olympic and Paralympic races at Colorado’s state track meet, and over the past decade or so has embraced a role as an advocate for those athletes.
“Special Olympics or Paralympics are great programs to give kids an opportunity to experience being on a team,” Southall said. “A lot of times, they’re with a case manager with class or things, so they really don’t get that interaction, whether it’s social or team-building, which is such a great aspect of high school sports and activities.”
Southall, who was inducted into the CHSAA Hall of Fame in 1999, said he draws on his experiences as an athlete learning how to compete with his disability — things like coming up with a way he could lift weights — in his role as an coach.
“Now as a teacher and a coach, the exciting part is being in a position where you are experimenting — you’re faced with a new challenge,” Southall said. “In athletics, you may have a situation like mine where you’re dealing with someone who has a physical impairment. How are you going to make it work? How are you going to train that person as an athlete? You need to have an idea of what they can’t do, and try and make adjustments to it, but focus on what they can do.”