Lewis-Palmer made up significant ground in the 4A polls as well, jumping from No. 9 to No. 2 and even receiving two first-place votes.
No new teams were added to this week’s 4A poll.
Grandview remains the No. 1 team in 5A. The Wolves went 1-0 last week and remain undefeated on the year.
Cherokee Trail and Fairview make up the two new faces to the 5A poll, coming in at No. 7 and No. 9 respectively.
Colorado Academy kept a grip on its position as the No. 1 team in 3A. In fact, the top five teams this week all held on to their places from the previous set of rankings.
Denver Science and Tech – Stapleton (No. 9) and St. Mary’s (No. 10) are the two new teams in the 3A poll.
Vail Mountain received every first-palce vote in the 2A rankings to hold on to the No. 1 spot. The 2A poll overall was unchanged from the previous set of rankings.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, they are released each Monday.
The Classical Academy made a significant jump this week in the CHSAANow.com Class 4A girls soccer rankings.
The Titans, who sat at No. 6 last week, jumped five spots to assume the the top spot of the 4A poll.
Another Colorado Springs area team in Air Academy also jumped several spots, going from No. 10 in the preseason to No. 6 this week.
Mullen breaks into the rankings for the first time this season, landing at No. 10.
Grandview remains No. 1 in 5A girls soccer. (Tim Visser/TimVisserPhotography.com)
Grandview maintains the top spot in the 5A, as they barely fend off Broomfield, which firmly holds on to the No. 2 spot in the poll.
A 3-0-0 start for Monarch has gotten the attention of the voters as the Coyotes come in at No. 4 this week, up from No. 10 in the preseason rankings.
Fossil Ridge and Arapahoe are the newcomers in 5A this week, coming in at No. 9 and No. 10 respectively.
Colorado Academy took six of 11 first place votes to hang on to the top spot in 3A this week.
Liberty Common made the biggest jump in 3A, surging four spots up from their No. 10 preseason ranking to land at No. 6 this week.
Salida is the only new team to the 3A rankings as the Spartans come in at No. 10 thanks a 4-0-0 start to the season.
Vail Mountain maintained their spot atop the 1A rankings. There were no newcomers to the 1A poll.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. During the regular season, they are released each Monday.
The 2015 football players of the year. From left: Dylan Dixon of Eads; Keegan Wentz of Buena Vista; JoJo Domann of Pine Creek; Dylan McCaffrey of Valor Christian; Daniel Martin of Pueblo East; Kelton McCoy of Bayfield; Trey Walter of Sedgwick County. (Photos: Jack Eberhard/JacksActoinShots.com; Bill Cronin; Matt Daniels/MattDanPhoto.com; Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com; Jeff Tucker; and Sedgwick County HS)
The 2015 all-state football teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.
These teams were created following a lengthy process which included nominations from leagues and then a vote of coaches.
The 2015 boys soccer players of the year. From left, Max Gottesfeld of Kent Denver, Porter Milner of Broomfield, and Titus Grant of The Classical Academy. (Photos: Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com; Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com)
The 2015 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.
Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.
Broomfield’s Porter Milner. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com) Player of the year: Porter Milner, Broomfield
Coach of the year: Jim Davidson, Broomfield
First Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Davis Auth
Mountain Vista
Junior
MF
Brian Castruita
Boulder
Senior
MF
Cray Cordero
Mountain Vista
Sophomore
D
Tyler Duggan
Broomfield
Senior
–
Kyler Fowkes
Arvada West
Senior
F/MF
Michael Genge
Broomfield
Senior
GK
Dylan Keeney
Heritage
Senior
MF
Andre Miller
Fairview
Senior
–
Porter Milner
Broomfield
Senior
–
Jake Rudel
Fort Collins
Senior
F/D
Alex Weseman
Fairview
Senior
–
Second Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Evan Bunch
Arapahoe
Junior
D
Mattia Cominelli
Heritage
Senior
F
James Conley
Arapahoe
Senior
GK
Wyatt Dessell
Fairview
Senior
–
Kyle Henry
Thunderridge
Senior
MF
Sam Kirk
Boulder
Senior
F
Ryan Lee
Douglas County
Junior
F/MF
Connor Lowdermilk
Fort Collins
Senior
MF
Erik Lundeen
Grandview
Junior
D
Angelo Salazar
Coronado
Senior
–
Jack Schulze
Heritage
Junior
GK
Andrew Turk
Pine Creek
Junior
F/MF
Peter Williams
Cherry Creek
Senior
D
Honorable mention: Alen Acosta, Doherty, senior; Andrew Beers, Liberty, senior, F; Dan Bricker, Monarch, senior, D; Zack Fleishhacker, Rampart, senior, F; Chris Hood, Thunderridge, sophomore, D; Michael Johnson, Rangeview, senior, F; Owen Merritt, Poudre, sophomore, MF; Eliot Peinado, Far Northeast Warriors, senior, MF/F; Josh Rendle, George Washington, senior; Jorge Rosales, Smoky Hill, senior, MF; Kyle Shetler, Pine Creek, senior, GK; Alex Silva, Fossil Ridge, senior, MF; David Tovar, Far Northeast Warriors, senior, D/F/MF; David Zink, Pine Creek, senior, D
[divider]
Class 4A
The Classical Academy’s Titus Grant. (Josh Watt/CHSAANow.com) Player of the year: Titus Grant, The Classical Academy
Coach of the year: Ross Fowler, Evergreen
First Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Justin Barkow
Niwot
Senior
F
Jaden Borja
The Classical Academy
Junior
F
Adriano Borsa
Evergreen
Senior
MF
Sean Derby
Cheyenne Mountain
Senior
MF
Frank Gonzalez
Denver North
Senior
MF
Titus Grant
The Classical Academy
Junior
F
Casey Grieve
Evergreen
Junior
HB/D
Patrick O’Neil
Evergreen
Junior
D/MF
Nick Rosser
Standley Lake
Senior
MF
Jack Skidmore
Battle Mountain
Senior
GK
Mason Stetler
Durango
Senior
MF
Second Team
Name
School
Year
Pos.
Mark Beatty
Air Academy
Senior
MF
Anders Carlson
The Classical Academy
Junior
MF
Joe Director
Littleton
Senior
MF
Jack Draeb
D’Evelyn
Senior
–
Luke Eigsti
Green Mountain
Senior
–
Keith Higginbotham
Cheyenne Mountain
Senior
GK
Noah Klaus
The Classical Academy
Senior
MF
Robert Lanz
Valor Christian
Junior
F/MF
Donnie Leavitt
Battle Mountain
Senior
F
Joshua Michels
Erie
Senior
F
Henry Yocum
Air Academy
Senior
F
Honorable mention: Alejandro Alainz, Kennedy, senior; Victor Avalos, Frederick, senior, GK/MF; Vance Bulen, Durango, senior; Jonathan Flores, Skyline, senior, D/MF/F; Thomas Green, Ponderosa, senior, F; Garrett Obermeyer, Palmer Ridge, senior; Mark Ramirez, Niwot, senior, F; Terin Tadewald, Niwot, senior, FB; Ian Thomas, Valor Christian, senior, MF/D; Spencer Wegner, Cheyenne Mountain, senior, D; Luke White, Cheyenne Mountain, junior, F; Robbie Wyton, Holy Family, senior, GK.
[divider]
Class 3A
Kent Denver’s Max Gottesfeld. (Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com) Player of the year: Max Gottesfeld, Kent Denver
COLORADO SPRINGS — In a tradition-rich state for distance running, becoming a legend takes plenty of state titles and, just as important to a legacy of that magnitude, plenty of dominance.
The all-time great girls, the Melody Fairchild’s, the Megan Kaltenbach’s, the Rebekah McDowell’s, the Elise Cranny’s, they’ve all had one thing in common. Not only have they won and won a lot, but they’ve had an aura of invincibility about them. When the greats toe the starting line, they command respect.
Well, Katie Rainsberger, a senior dynamo on any type of cross country course and in a number of disciplines on the track, has that aura to her.
Sure, winning back-to-back individual Class 4A state championships, which she did Saturday at the Norris Penrose Event Center in Colorado Springs, helps. Claiming the distance triple crown—state titles in the 800 meters, the 1,600, and the 3,200, not to mention anchoring the winning 3,200 relay for Air Academy last spring—also helps.
(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
Still, despite accomplishing just about everything there is to be accomplished state-wide, Rainsberger was missing one award for her trophy case. That is, until Saturday morning when the future Oregon Duck, with the help of four teammates in Paige Embaugh (freshman, 5th), Maria Mettler (junior, 10th), MacKenzie Moss (freshman, 14th), and Kayla Wiitala (senior, 30th), won their first girls cross country state championship in school history.
“I am so excited. It’s my senior year and that’s all I could have asked for,” Rainsberger said of the team title. “I don’t even have words right now.”
For all the senior has achieved in her high school career—she is one of the very best in Colorado history—she said winning with her teammates was something extra special.
“I think that is the highlight of my high school career. Individual titles are great, but when you are working with a team and for a team, it means all the more.”
Individually, she ran 17:38, the top time of the day by 35 seconds over 4A runner-up Kayla Young of Denver North (18:13) and, as one of the favorites to win the Nike national championship coming up, has plenty of individual pursuits ahead in high school and beyond. But for Rainsberger, nothing was sweeter than a team title.
[divider]
Class 5A:
(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
Another all-time great, Lauren Gregory of Fort Collins, entered Saturday with two state championships under her belt. And she’s only a junior. With that, she did feel an added amount of pressure to keep her run as the 5A queen alive.
“There was a lot more hype this year and the self-imposed pressure of not losing the streak,” Gregory said. “Our coach says, ‘clear mind, clear mind,’ and I had to remember that.”
The Lambkin, another of the country’s finest runners, was going against a crazy talented 5A field that included Grandview’s Brie Oakley, Legend’s Catherine Liggett and Mountain Vista’s Allie Chipman. After winning by huge margins each of the previous two state meets, Gregory gapped the others by a few seconds and then held on for the win over Oakley, 18:15 to 18:17.
“That was the hardest I’ve had to work,” she said. “This was such a harder race, because everyone was on their A-game.”
Gregory will have a chance at becoming one of the only four-time cross country champions in state history next year.
As for the team race, the Broomfield Eagles claimed their first-ever girls state title with 112 points, a narrow eight point margin of victory over Cherry Creek. Fairview was third with 124.
Emily Mitchem (8th place), Ivy Gonzales (18th), Katelyn Mitchem (19th), McKenzie Gaines (23rd), and Alena Valdez (44th) was the scoring five for the Eagles, a program with plenty of distance running success over the years, but now a team title on top of it.
[divider]
Class 3A:
(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
This race ended with some fascinating finishes, both individually and team-wise.
Peak to Peak had two freshmen, Quinn McConnell and Anna Shults, place first and second. On a side note, McConnell, already a high school state champion, also won the middle school state meet last year. Her time Saturday was 18:41, nine seconds clear of Shults.
Obviously with the top-two finishers in the race, the Pumas seemed bound to fare well in the team standings. They ended up with 56 points and were second.
Salida, after a uniform incident a season ago, non-identical singlets, led to the Spartans only being allowed five competitors instead of the usual seven, Salida had a measure of redemption Saturday as they won the team crown with 50 points. It was their second state title in the past three years after finishing as runner-up to Alamosa by a mere four points in 2014.
Sydney Fesenmeyer (6th place), Taryn Ceglowski (7th), Phoebe Powell (8th), Cecilia Kastner (10th), and Bari Beasley (19th) led the way for the Spartans.
[divider]
Class 2A:
(Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
Much like the 3A race, except this time it was twin sisters, the same team had the individual state champion and runner-up.
Heritage Christian seniors Rachel (19:55) and Rebekah Rairdon (20:05) fended off Telluride’s Soleil Gaylord (20:09) in a tight top-three battle.
In a bit of a surprise though, Telluride, with Maya Ordonez coming in sixth and Larkin Brodie coming in seventh, tallied 16 points, good enough for a three point margin of victory over Heritage Christian. Carrying on with the theme of the day, the Miners also won their first-ever state championship in girls cross country.
And, Telluride will return all three scorers from their winning effort as Gaylord is only a sophomore, Ordonez a freshman, and Brodie a junior.
Tee times for the first state of the state golf championships.
The tournaments for all classifications run Oct. 5-6. Class 5A is held in Fort Collins, 4A in Longmont and 3A in Vail.
Find a sortable list of state qualifiers, including their regional scores, in our database. The yardage setup for each course is available here.
[divider] Tee times:5A | 4A | 3A
Kent Denver has returned to the No. 1 spot in Class 3A boys soccer. (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Kent Denver has regained the top spot of the Class 3A CHSAANow.com boys soccer rankings after relinquishing the spot last week.
The Sun Devils regained their position thanks to a 10-0 win over Bishop Mechebeuf on Friday.
Boulder remained in the top spot in 5A after playing their way into that ranking last week. Two new teams joined the 5A poll as Rampart made an impressive jump up to No. 6 and Arapahoe earned enough points to take over the No. 10 spot.
Evergreen hangs on to the No. 1 spot in 4A thanks to outscoring opponents 5-0 last week. Like 5A, two new teams joined the 4A poll as Skyline comes in at No. 6 with Skyview landing at No. 10.
Along with Kent Denver regaining the No. 1 spot in 3A, Jefferson Academy and Colorado Academy each jumped four spots with the Jaguars coming in at No. 4 and the Mustangs climbing to No. 5.
Vail Mountain is the lone newcomer to the 3A rankings at No. 9 this week.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. Polls are released each Monday during the regular season.
Voted upon by coaches and select media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.
Cherry Creek 16, Coronado 16, Mountain Range 15, Lincoln 13, Northglenn 7, Monarch 6, Heritage 4, Regis Jesuit 1.
Dropped out
Cherry Creek (7), Far Northeast (10).
Class 4A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Evergreen (10)
6-0-0
134
1
2-0-0
2
The Classical Academy
6-1-0
114
4
2-0-0
3
Niwot (2)
6-0-0
105
5
1-0-0
4
Littleton
7-1-0
81
6
2-0-0
5
Cheyenne Mountain (1)
5-2-0
66
3
0-1-0
6
Skyline (2)
7-0-0
60
–
2-0-0
7
Denver West
6-0-1
46
7
3-0-0
8
Air Academy
4-2-1
30
9
1-1-0
9
Valor Christian
6-2-0
28
2
0-2-0
10
Skyview
5-0-1
25
–
0-0-0
Others receiving votes:
Greeley West 24, Ponderosa 22, Longmont 21, Steamboat Springs 13, Denver North 10, John F. Kennedy 10, Battle Mountain 6, Pueblo Centennial 6, Silver Creek 6, Alameda 4, Eagle Valley 4, Erie 3, Lewis-Palmer 3, Golden 1, Green Mountain 1, Northridge 1, Standley Lake 1.
Dropped out
Ponderosa (8), Greeley West (10).
Class 3A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Kent Denver (3)
6-0-1
62
2
1-0-0
2
KIPP (2)
7-1-0
58
1
1-1-0
3
Pagosa Springs (1)
9-0-0
39
4
2-0-0
4
Jefferson Academy (1)
6-1-0
37
8
2-0-0
5
Colorado Academy
5-2-1
28
9
3-0-0
6
Faith Christian
6-2-0
27
3
1-1-0
7
Aurora West
8-1-1
26
7
2-0-1
8
DSST-Stapleton
6-1-1
24
5
1-0-1
9
Vail Mountain
6-1-0
20
–
1-0-0
10
Salida
6-2-0
18
6
1-1-0
Others receiving votes:
Fountain Valley 14, Liberty Common 13, Colorado Springs Christian 8, Peak to Peak 6, The Academy 5.