Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.
Class 5A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Valor Christian (10)
8-0
100
1
W
2
Eaglecrest
8-0
84
2
W
3
Pomona
6-2
69
3
W
4
Columbine
7-1
67
5
W
5
Regis Jesuit
7-1
62
4
W
6
Cherry Creek
6-2
49
6
W
7
Grandview
6-2
44
7
W
8
Fairview
7-1
34
9
W
9
Highlands Ranch
6-2
24
8
L
10
Chaparral
6-2
7
–
W
Others receiving votes:
Mullen 4, Ralston Valley 4, Lakewood 2.
Dropped out
Mullen (10).
Class 4A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Ponderosa (12)
8-0
166
1
W
2
Pine Creek (4)
7-1
157
2
W
3
Chatfield (3)
7-1
151
3
W
4
Fruita Monument
8-0
119
6
W
5
Windsor
7-1
110
4
W
6
Loveland
8-0
104
5
W
7
Pueblo West
7-1
82
7
W
8
Monarch
7-1
61
8
W
9
Pueblo South
7-1
55
9
W
10
Skyline
7-1
16
10
W
Others receiving votes:
Pueblo Centennial 7, Rampart 7, Vista Ridge 3, Widefield 3, Montrose 2, Brighton 1, Broomfield 1.
Dropped out
None.
Class 3A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Mead (12)
8-0
129
1
W
2
Palmer Ridge (1)
8-0
115
2
W
3
Roosevelt
6-2
86
5
W
4
Erie
7-1
67
3
L
5
Harrison
8-0
62
4
W
6
Evergreen
7-1
48
6
W
7
Canon City
7-1
47
9
W
8
Skyview
7-1
46
10
W
9
Longmont
5-3
35
7
W
10
Rifle
7-1
27
–
W
Others receiving votes:
Palisade 16, Frederick 12, Silver Creek 8, Berthoud 7, Fort Morgan 7, Glenwood Springs 2, Discovery Canyon 1.
A week after beating sixth-ranked Silver Creek, Erie football has another top-10 feather in its cap.
On Friday night, the Tigers, now ranked No. 3 in Class 3A, beat No. 4 Berthoud 33-7.
“Playing in the Tri-Valley (League), it doesn’t get any easier,” coach Chad Cooper told the Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show after the game. “I told our kids to enjoy this one tonight, but tomorrow morning we’re back to work and getting ready for Holy Family.
“It’s kind of similar to a playoff run where you can’t let down,” Cooper continued. “It’ll be good to kind of prepare us for the playoffs. You can’t have any let downs in the playoffs. It’ll be a great test for us.”
Erie’s Jacob Mansdorfer hit Alex Mathis with a touchdown pass just before the end of the first half to push the Tigers’ lead to 20-7.
Noah Roper rushed for two second-half touchdowns, and also recovered two fumbles on defense. He returned one of those for a touchdown. Roper had 165 yards rushing.
“Noah, obviously, is a talented kid. He kind of does it all for us,” Cooper said. “He runs extremely hard and is able to grind on people, too, with the style that we have on offense.”
[divider]
6-man: (5) Prairie 44, (1) Peetz 41
Prairie got the go-ahead score with 11.8 seconds remaining to secure the upset of previously unbeaten Peetz.
“It was just a dive to the right to Trenton Holzworth, one of our seniors, and he was able to power through a couple of kids and was able to get the ball in,” coach Justin Kerns told the Scoreboard Show of the winning score.
Prairie is now 6-0 this season.
“The players here are excited, the kids are excited,” Kerns said.
[divider]
2A: (3) Platte Valley 42, (6) Sterling 21
Tied at 21 at halftime, Platte Valley reeled of 21 unanswered points in the second half to secure a big win and move to 6-0 this season.
“It was one heck of a game up here for homecoming week, that’s for sure,” coach Troy Hoffman told the Scoreboard Show.
Hoffman praised his team’s effort on defense, which forced four turnovers.
“The kids created some opportunities and some turnovers,” Hoffman said. “We just needed to do that, play a little more aggressive in the second half, and when you get four turnovers, a lot of times good things happen for you, and it sure did for us tonight.
Senior Zach Waite had four touchdowns, including runs of 55 and 50 yards, and Ernseto Rios and Trevon Wehrman also score the the Mustangs.
Platte Valley had more than 400 yards of total offense.
[divider]
2A: (5) The Classical Academy 27, (8) Salida 19
TCA rallied from down 13-7 late in the second quarter to get an important top-10 win.
Jenson Hall had two rushing touchdowns for the Titans, and Cade Bethany accounted for two total touchdowns.
Brayden Luft added a receiving touchdowns.
[divider]
Notables
(Sedgwick County/NFHS Network)
8-man No. 1 Sedgwick County cruised to an easy win over No. 3 Haxtun, 44-0.
Centauri is 6-0 in 1A after beating Monte Vista 27-2. The Falcons, No. 4, got another big night out of their defense. “That’s been our strength this year,” coach Kyle Forster told the Scoreboard Show. “Our defense has done a great job when we needed them to.”
In 2A, Basalt got a big rivalry win over No. 10 Aspen, 48-22. Noah Williams had six touchdowns for the Longhorns. “Just a big, strong, very, very gifted athlete,” coach Carl Frerichs told the Scoreboard Show of Williams.
5A No. 4 Regis Jesuit beat Legacy 32-7. “I think this puts us in the driver’s seat” for the conference title, Raiders coach Danny Filleman told the Scoreboard Show.
Caliche snapped a two-game losing streak and knocked off No. 8 Dayspring Christian in 8-man, 18-13.
8-man No. 10 Gilpin County is 5-1 following a 48-0 win over Soroco.
6-man No. 8 La Veta cruised to a 52-19 win over Sierra Grande in an afternoon contest.
Platte Canyon moved to 5-0 this season following a forfeit by Front Range Christian. The Huskies are ranked No. 7 in 1A.
No. 6 Merino got a narrow win over Akron in 8-man, 28-26.
Paonia, No. 6 in 1A, is 5-1 after beating Hotchkiss 28-21.
Deer Trail picked up its first win of the season when Cheraw forfeit Friday’s 6-man game due to lack of players. It snaps a 13-game losing streak for Deer Trail.
Denver North beat Vista PEAK 15-13 in 3A, and is now 6-0 this season.
Wray is now 3-3 following a 40-8 win over Wiggins in 1A. Cade Hillman had 227 yards and two touchdowns, while Manny Heurta added three scores.
3A No. 9 Harrison is 6-0 after a 46-0 win over Sierra.
Springfield upset No. 2 Holly in overtime, 32-26, in 8-man.
An impressive win for Northglenn over ThunderRidge in 5A. Northglenn is now 5-1.
LAFAYETTE — Davis Long’s round of three-under gave him the individual title at the Class 3A boys golf state tournament at Indian Peaks Golf Course. As for the team title, well, that took a little longer.
“It’s super surreal,” Long said after his round. “I wasn’t really expecting it, I was thinking more about the team today. That was a fun time, but I don’t think it’s really set in yet.”
Peak to Peak won the team title after a two-team playoff.
“It feels wonderful. I’m very proud of the guys,” Peak to Peak coach John Thornbury said. “They played extremely well under pressure and really came through in the clutch. It was a full team effort. Everybody contributed at the end and throughout the tournament. I’m thrilled they could do it on their home course.”
Both Peak to Peak’s Davis Long and Prospect Ridge’s Walker Franklin had to make crucial putts in their rounds.
Long dropped his birdie putt in on 18 to move to three-under and a share of the lead.
“After yesterday, it turned into a whole different ballgame being just 18 holes,” Long said. “Just because it was 18, I was playing a little bit more aggressive. I know this course pretty well, so I played it how I’ve always played it.”
At the same time, Franklin had his ball on the green staring down a par putt that would have finished him at three-under.
Jack played to a steady one-under heading to a par-four seventh hole. Jack drove the green, then made a 15-foot eagle putt to move to three-under and into the lead.
A birdie to start the back nine had Jack (-4) two strokes ahead of the field.
“It was great playing with (Jack) because it kept me on my toes,” Long said. “He’s a great player, so he’s great to play with and keep up neck and neck with him.”
Jack would have to rally after a double-bogey on 12 that put him into a tie with Franklin and Long. He grabbed a birdie on 17, but it wasn’t enough to keep up with Long.
Long jumped in the lead at two-under after birdies on three and four, but fell off towards the end of the front nine with two straight bogies.
But, he hung tough and stayed close.
“Just knowing that you can’t really make a big mistake that would kill you,” Long said. “At the end of the day, you have to go out and play golf and see what happens.”
With birdies on 16 and 18, Long jumped to the top of the leaderboard.
Teammates Ian Thorpe (+1), Nishant Datta (+3) and Ethan Tartaglia (+8) turned in solid efforts to boost Peak to Peak to a tie with Kent Denver for the team championship.
(Cannon Casey/CHSAANow.com)
“A team championship would be so amazing,” Long said just after his round finished. “It was really cool to make that putt on 18 with some of the guys from school standing around.”
Aspen (+8), Eaton (+18) and Colorado Academy (+20) rounded out the top five.
Peak to Peak and Kent Denver played a two team playoff with one foursome for each team. The best three scores from each team were chosen for scoring.
After the playoff, it was Peak to Peak that took the team title. Tartaglia’s playoff par was ultimately the decider.
“I told them that they’ve played this hole hundreds of times,” Thornbury said. “They know what their shots are on this whole. Play it as you’re most comfortable.”
Estes Park’s Ivan Richmond, the 2016 Class 3A runner-up, started the front nine with a birdie, and made a string of pars, then ran into trouble on the eighth hole.
Richmond shot a bogey on eight, then a double bogey on nine to make the turn at two-over.
Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org. These rankings have no bearing on postseason seeding.
Class 5A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Valor Christian (12)
5-0
120
1
W
2
Eaglecrest
5-0
104
2
W
3
Pomona
3-2
83
3
L
4
Regis Jesuit
4-1
79
4
W
5
Fairview
5-0
55
7
W
6
Cherry Creek
3-2
51
5
L
7
Mullen
2-3
43
6
Bye
8
Grandview
3-2
41
9
W
9
Columbine
4-1
35
8
W
10
Highlands Ranch
4-1
20
–
W
Others receiving votes:
Lakewood 17, Arvada West 8, Doherty 3, ThunderRidge 1.
Dropped out
Lakewood (10).
Class 4A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Ponderosa (11)
5-0
166
2
W
2
Chatfield (4)
4-1
142
3
W
3
Pine Creek (3)
4-1
139
1
L
4
Windsor
4-1
106
4
W
5
Loveland
5-0
104
5
W
6
Pueblo West
5-0
89
6
W
7
Monarch
5-0
81
8
W
8
Fruita Monument
5-0
76
7
Bye
9
Pueblo South
4-1
45
9
W
10
Skyline
5-0
18
10
W
Others receiving votes:
Fort Collins 6, Vista Ridge 5, Widefield 4, Broomfield 2, Greeley West 2, Montrose 2, Rampart 2, Standley Lake 1.
Dropped out
None.
Class 3A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
PVS
LW
1
Mead (10)
5-0
120
2
W
2
Palmer Ridge (2)
5-0
111
3
W
3
Erie
5-0
87
5
W
4
Berthoud
5-0
77
4
W
5
Roosevelt
4-1
69
7
W
6
Skyview
5-0
55
8
W
7
Holy Family
4-1
45
1
L
8
Harrison
5-0
44
9
W
9
Silver Creek
3-2
32
6
L
10
Longmont
2-3
27
–
W
Others receiving votes:
Evergreen 14, Thomas Jefferson 10, Denver North 6, Canon City 5, Frederick 5, Rifle 5, Palisade 3.
Ralston Valley football picked up a huge win on Friday night, knocking off top-ranked Pine Creek and ending the Eagles’ state-best 15-game winning streak.
The Mustangs grabbed a 17-7 lead at halftime thanks to a field goal as time expired. They then held on in the second half, including one last stop with a minute left to seal the win.
Ralston Valley, a Class 5A program, is now 2-3 this season following an 0-3 start. Pine Creek, which plays in 4A, drops to 4-1.
Blake Stenstrom threw two touchdown passes, Joshia Davis rushed for 118 and a score and caught a TD pass, and the Eagles got yet another big win in their non-conference slate.
Valor Christian is now 5-0.
“We feel like playing great teams helps us refine what we need to do,” Valor Christian coach Rod Sherman told the Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show. “We’re not scared to lose. This is the first time in five, six, seven years that we’ve actually been undefeated out of our non-conference. If you’re not scared to lose, then these games are really good, because it helps you grow.”
Sherman pointed to his team’s ability to run the football, and stop Cherry Creek from doing the same, as one of the differences in the game.
“With a team like Creek, they’re so talented and they do such a great job coaching, if you let them be balanced, you’re in trouble,” he said. “And ultimately we ran the ball really well and we stopped the run.”
[divider]
1A: Aspen 34, Coal Ridge 28
Aspen entered 4-0, and Coal Ridge was 3-1, so their matchup on Friday was a good one. Ultimately, the Skiers won 34-28 to improved to 5-0.
Aspen won just two games last season, and hadn’t won five games in a season since 2013. It’s Aspen’s best start since opening 7-0 in 2010.
“We challenged (the kids) to understand what it takes to be successful,” Aspen coach Karson Pike told the Scoreboard Show about the team’s turnaround. “They did a good job this summer and this spring. … That’s really where we grew up.”
[divider]
2A: (5) La Junta 21, (3) The Classical Academy 11
The Tigers picked up a big top-five win a week after dropping another top-five matchup.
“It was a big win for us to get back on the winning track,” La Junta coach Clint Buderus told the Scoreboard Show. “The kids played good. It was huge for us.”
La Junta, the defending 2A champion, had its 16-game winning streak snapped last Saturday in a loss to now No. 1 Kent Denver. So this win was a big bounce-back following that game.
“We played better tonight,” Buderus said.
[divider]
1A: (1) Bennett 76, (10) Clear Creek 36
The top-ranked Tigers handed Clear Creek its first loss this season.
Bennett rushed for more than 600 yards in the game, including 515 in the first half.
Bennett, which reached the semifinals last season, is now 5-0 this season. Clear Creek is 4-1.
[divider]
8-man (3) Haxtun 29, (8) Dayspring Christian 21
A fourth-quarter touchdown lifted Haxtun to the win and a 5-0 start this season.
The team teams were knotted at 21 going into the final frame, and at 6-6 at halftime, before Haxtun pulled away.
Dayspring Christian is now 3-2.
[divider]
Notables:
More photos. (Jeff Tucker/jefferywtucker.zenfolio.com)
With Pine Creek losing, the longest winning streak in the state now belongs to Valor and Sedgwick County. Both have won 15 games in a row.
Sedgwick County, ranked No. 1 in 8-man, beat Akron 48-24 in a matchup of the past two state title games in that classification. “I thought our offensive line did a great job digging in in the second half and getting us some big yards,” coach Chris Michel told the Scoreboard Show.
4A No. 9 Pueblo South beat 3A Pueblo East 34-19 in the annual Cannon game. East, the three-time defending 3A champs, has opened the year 0-5. “There is just so much that goes into this, I don’t think people truly understand how things are in Pueblo, especially the rivalries, but I’m just proud of our kids tonight,” South coach Ryan Goddard told the Scoreboard Show. South is 4-1.
In 3A, No. 3 Palmer Ridge cruised to a 43-0 win over No. 10 Canon City. Quarterback Ty Evans threw four touchdown passes and rushed for another. “When we give Ty time, he does a really good job going through his progression, and he’s a competitor,” coach Tom Pulford told the Scoreboard Show.
2A No. 1 Kent Denver shut out Elizabeth 35-0, giving coach Scott Yates his 320th career win. 8-man No. 4 West Grand shut out Hayden 50-0, giving coach Chris Brown his 320th win. Both men lead the state in career wins.
Brighton came back from down 21 to beat Fort Collins 28-21.
Skyview is 5-0 for the first time in program history following its 48-21 win over Lincoln.
La Veta upset 6-man No. 8 Cotopaxi 71-38.
Mountain Valley got three touchdowns each from Salvador Vigil and Drew Martinez in a 60-13 win over Aguilar.
Ta’yon Burton returned a kickoff for a score as Manual beat Front Range Christian 27-0.
Pretty big win for Fountain-Fort Carson in 5A: 35-26 over Doherty.
Mead looks ready for the No. 1 spot in 3A. The Longhorns, currently No. 2 handled Fort Morgan 51-14. Current No. 1 Holy Family lost on Thursday.
Ikaika Gonzalez-Bentosino rushed for 266 yards and two scores as Englewood beat Sheridan 58-0 in 2A.
Vista Ridge beat Discovery Canyon 35-21 in a 4A/3A matchup behind big rushing days from Jeffrey Crittendon (218 yards, two TDs) and Jaylen Thomas (183, 1). Thomas also had two passing TDs.
Travis Cunningham rushed for two scores and Austin Coalson passed for two as Eaton beat University 33-6 in a 2A game.
Keys threw a passing touchdown and rushed for another for the Mavericks. Evan Hansen, Jake Wachter and Nathan Mackey also had rushing touchdowns. Dom Esters caught the touchdown from Keys.
Longmont quarterback Oakley Dehning rushed for a touchdown.
This was just the second-ever meeting between the two schools which are just 15 minutes apart. Mead won last season, 49-35, during its march to the semifinals.
Bayfield senior Hunter Killough had a game-sealing interception in the game’s final moments, according to the Durango Herald.
“I wanted it bad,” he told the paper after the game. “Since last year, I had been stewing on this game. It’s good to get that victory.”
[divider]
Notables:
5A No. 8 Mullen went out-of-state to play Bothell (Wash.), and had a big rally and a chance to win late, but fell 31-28. Bothell reached Washington’s 4A quarterfinals last season.
In 1A, No. 2 Meeker got a top-10 win over No. 8 Monte Vista, 30-7. “Our defense did a good job of flying around the football tonight,” coach Shane Phelan told the Scoreboard Show. The Cowboys are 4-0.
Skyview knocked off No. 10 Thomas Jefferson 27-16 in 3A. The Wolverines have started 4-0, their best start since 2011.
Harrison beat Glenwood Springs 36-22, and is now 4-0 in 3A. “This is just another step forward for us,” coach Al Melo told the Scoreboard Show. “It was a good win for our kids tonight, and I’m really proud of them.
Check out Widefield, which is 4-0 in 4A following a 42-0 win over Palmer. The Gladiators haven’t started 4-0 since 2010. TJ Davis rushed for 168 yards and two touchdowns on Friday. He also threw two touchdown passes.
5A No. 3 Eaglecrest is now 4-0 after beating Cherokee Trail 28-14.
Berthoud upset 3A No. 5 Fort Morgan, 22-10.
Grand Valley and Aspen had lightning delay their game, which the Skiers ultimately won 30-26. Aspen, which won a combined four games the past two seasons, is 4-0 for the first time since 2010.
Sierra Grande beat Cheraw 61-6 in 6-man action, including this touchdown. The Panthers are now 4-0, something they haven’t done since 2005.
6-man No. 1 Stratton/Liberty cruised to a 68-8 win over Idalia. Tyson Lichty completed four passes — all four went for touchdowns. Jacob McCormick rushed for 131 yards and two touchdowns.
Levi Mair had four total touchdowns in Arvada’s 30-6 win over The Pinnacle.
Jaion Colbert rushed for 185 yards and two touchdowns as Overland beat Rangeview 42-20.
Zac Hanenberg had two rushing touchdowns as Canon City beat Pueblo East 29-16. The Tigers are now 4-0, matching their win total from each of the past two seasons.
Peyton beat Ellicott 41-0 in 1A. Gunner Saarela rushed for 95 yards and two touchdowns.
Trevor Reuss threw for 241 yards in 2A Basalt’s 41-33 win over 3A Battle Mountain.
Garrett Anderson rushed for 157 yards and a score as Lewis-Palmer topped Pueblo County 20-10 in a 3A matchup.
5A Ralston Valley also went out-of-state, and beat East Bakersfield (Calif.) 35-14.
David Sommers still remembers the moment when Holy Family’s no-huddle offense took root and a high-octane passing attack was born.
The Tigers had qualified for the Class 3A state playoffs for the first time back in 2011 after moving up from 2A the year before. Playing against eventual state champion Windsor in the first round, Holy Family found it couldn’t match up with the Wizards’ size. But when the Tigers went no-huddle in a two-minute offense, the team was much more competitive.
Holy Family made the change in scheme permanent heading into the 2012 season and has never looked back. For his part, Sommers, who quarterbacked the Tigers from 2011-13, helped establish an offense that was scoring nearly 20 points more a game just four years later.
“I think it made the game a lot more exciting. We started putting up more points and had drives where we scored fast,” said Sommers, now a redshirt junior wide receiver at Colorado School of Mines in Golden. “It also helped with controlling the tempo, too. We had the ability to go fast, and we could also slow it down if we needed too.”
(Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com)
Holy Family has made the passing game its bread-and-butter, but the Tigers are far from alone in that area. Programs like Bear Creek, Arvada West and Mullen in the 1990s used an aerial attack to break records and play for state titles, helping to pave the way for future pass-heavy offenses like Fairview, Valor Christian and D’Evelyn, among others.
A glance at the CHSAA records book would back that up. While a handful of those former Bear Creek quarterbacks own the top career passing marks, single-season records from the past decade have climbed into the top-10 in nearly every category.
“You look at those Bear Creek teams holding a lot of those (passing records), and all of a sudden you look at the last five to seven years and it’s been incredible how many of those records may have been added to,” said Fairview coach Tom McCartney, who is in his 25th season of coaching the Knights.
“I think with the college game, and CU being in the Pac-12 and how many teams can really light up the scoreboard … the last seven to 10 years has been an incredible offensive output,” McCartney continued. “It’s coming down to the high school level as well.”
[divider]
“It takes a special quarterback.”
Johnny Feauto. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Under McCartney’s guidance, Fairview quarterbacks have put on quite the show in recent years. The Knights own the top three spots in the state records book for single-season completions and have three of the top six spots in single-season passing yards.
On the way to the 2013 state championship game, quarterback Anders Hill threw for nearly 3,900 yards and 36 touchdowns, and wide receiver Sam Martin set a state record with 1,860 yards. His 112 receptions was a record that stood for two years before D’Evelyn’s Charlie Davis beat it by one catch in 2015. (The Jaguars also have three players in the top 10 for career receptions.)
One year later, Johnny Feauto took his turn, throwing for 3,953 yards and 40 touchdowns (tied for sixth in the state’s history). That’s to say nothing of Taylor Tharp, who in 2002 set state records for attempts (484) and completions (293).
“Sometimes I feel like those are obviously just stats, but you still want to win,” McCartney said. “Tharp took our team to two state championship appearances, and Johnny had an undefeated regular season. Anders took us to the title game.
“I definitely take pride in the achievements of those teams.”
Fairview opened the 2017 season with three consecutive victories behind sophomore quarterback Aiden Atkinson. The 6-foot-3 Atkinson is averaging 306 yards a game to go along with eight touchdowns.
“I’ve been extremely impressed with Aidan. He’s also a 4.0 (student) and he’s really smart. He knows how to apply it to the football field as well,” McCartney said. “He’s very, very hungry to learn.”
RJ Peshek. (Lance Wendt/LanceWendt.com)
Second-year Aspen coach Karson Pike feels the same way about his senior quarterback, RJ Peshek. After winning only two games each of the past two years, the 2A Skiers jumped out to a 3-0 start that included an 80-point showing the first week of the season against Middle Park.
Operating out of a no-huddle offense designed to wear down opposing defenses, Peshek has passed for 748 yards and 10 touchdowns and rushed for 268 yards and six scores.
“RJ is a special kid. His dad coaches on the staff as defensive coordinator, so he’s been going home with a coach ever since little league,” Pike said. “What it boils down to is he wants to flat-out win, and he’s willing to do whatever it takes.”
Pike came to Aspen after several years of working as an assistant with a handful of smaller colleges. He brought the no-huddle offense with him after seeing the success of an up-tempo offense at his previous stops.
Aspen took some time to acclimate to the offense, but Pike said the biggest key was his players sacrificed their time in the offseason to get better. With only one senior graduating from last year, the experience factor has also helped the Skiers get off to a strong start.
But it still takes a quarterback who can grab the reins and run that type of offense.
“You can get a lot of work done in the passing game if you want to dedicate yourself to that,” Pike said of the offseason work. “I think you can be successful, but it takes a special quarterback, no question.”
After Sommers graduated and headed to Mines, Holy Family coach Mike Gabriel found a new signal-caller in Chris Helbig. In his two years of leading Holy Family, the Tigers averaged 46.0 and 48.1 points per game, and in 2015 Helbig passed for 3,517 yards and 39 touchdowns – both of which are good for eighth-best in state history.
Helbig also owns the state record with 43 completions in a single game. So current Tigers quarterback Stone Samaras recognized the task ahead of him when he took over in 2016.
“I got thrown in freshman year and I was oblivious to the whole thing,” Samaras said. “Sophomore year, coming out the very first game and starting, it really hit me: ‘Holy cow, I’m taking Chris Helbig’s spot and I’ve got to fill his shoes.’”
Samaras did just that though, passing for nearly 2,800 yards and 33 touchdowns as a sophomore, with three players catching at least 46 passes. Samaras has eight touchdown passes in three games this fall for the top-ranked Tigers, seven of which have gone to junior Kyle Helbig.
“Stone had big shoes to fill, as did Chris. But he grew up this offseason and he’s taking control of the offense,” Gabriel said. “A lot of the stuff you see on field, he’s adjusting to. He’s leading that side of the ball for sure.”
[divider]
There’s good and bad to an up-tempo offense.
Stone Samaras. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Every coach will tell you though that balance needs to be added to the equation for any offense to be successful. Even with the impressive passing numbers teams have put up, there will be times where running the ball is necessary.
Fairview senior Mariano Kemp is averaging 7.2 yards per carry for the Knights through three games and has seven touchdowns. Last fall, Holy Family’s Michael Zeman rushed for 2,185 yards and 23 touchdowns.
“You are going to see some tough weather from time to time, and you are going to see some interesting defenses. You’ve got to be ready for those kinds of things,” McCartney said. “There are certain situations where you’ve got to run the ball.”
Another key factor from a fast-paced offense is the wear-and-tear it creates for its defense. As Holy Family’s offense struggled to find a rhythm last Friday night against No. 2 Fort Morgan – enduring a number of three-and-out possessions – the Tigers’ defense had to rise to the challenge and keep the Mustangs in check.
“It’s a big challenge if you’re not in rhythm and you don’t get at least one first down,” Gabriel said. “A three-and-out can kill your defense, but we’ve got the defense to back it up this year. I think we’re better suited to do both.”
But it still comes back to executing through the air in order for that style of offense to work. As McCartney pointed out, as more and more teams find success with spread offenses, the trickle-down effect to the high school game may also increase.
Sommers had the opportunity to catch passes from Harlon Hill trophy winner Justin Dvorak at Mines last fall. Dvorak threw for more than 4,500 yards and 53 touchdowns in a spread offense that produced another Harlon Hill winner, Chad Friehauf, back in 2004.
“I think the numbers kind of speak for itself. The spread creates matchups and 1-on-1 situations,” Sommers said. “It’s not just assignment football for the defense. You can mix and match and basically pick the perfect play, while in certain other offenses you don’t have that exact ability.”
There are other factors that work in the favor of up-tempo offenses. The popularity of 7-on-7 camps allows athletes to get the work in over the summer and nail down timing headed into fall.
“First, I think it’s safer because now instead of what’s called ‘phone-booth football’ – where everybody lines up inside the hash and runs at each other for 48 minutes – now you’re looking at players in 1-on-1 space,” Pike said. “The other factor is you can’t do a lot in the summer, but you can always throw.”
A lot of that success boils down to personnel and ability. As the constant edits to the state’s record books in recent years show, with the game continuing to evolve, Colorado continues to produce some impressive talent.
“As a coach it’s great when you have great players. I think just having an identity and staying true to it and believing in it is probably one of the biggest factors,” McCartney said. “But when you get great players and have an identity you believe in, that’s a good mix.”