Tag: Palmer

  • Photos: Steamboat Springs hockey edges Palmer

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Steamboat Springs hockey broke a 1-1 tie in the third period, then went on to beat Palmer 3-2 on Saturday.

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  • The story of Colorado’s first sanctioned high school football season, and championship game, in 1921

     

    Nearly 97 years ago, the formation of a group of schools into an athletic conference gave rise to what became the first-ever sanctioned high school football championship in the state of Colorado.

    But the high school football landscape back then was quite unorganized. As a result, three teams claimed to be champions in 1921. Only one is actually recognized as the first-ever champion.

    This is the story of that season.

    • • •

    Colorado High School Athletic Conference

    (Colorado Springs Gazette/Pikes Peak Library District Special Collections)

    On April 2, 1921, representatives of 35 schools at the annual teachers’ conference met to organize into “one athletic unit” across the state, according to the Fort Collins Courier. That group formally organized what became the Colorado High School Athletic Conference — later changed to the Colorado High School Activities Association in 1943 — a month later.

    At the first meeting of Conference’s Board of Control, the group set June 1, 1921, as the “final date for filing application” for league membership.

    The initial membership was expected to be 60 schools.

    The new athletic conference organized into small geographic leagues. Many of these leagues were actually formed in March 1921, before the official creation of the state league.

    Scheduling was left up to the individual schools. There was one condition to that, however, according to the Colorado Springs Gazette: Schedules should “not conflict with semifinals and finals in the championship eliminations.”

    It is worth noting that the Colorado High School Athletic Conference did not officially set pairings for the state football playoffs until 1923.

    • • •

    Setting the stage

    Most teams around the state played six or seven regular season games, and some had separated themselves as contenders by winning a league championship.

    As the teams had organized themselves into leagues, those leagues were matched up against one another into what amounted to semifinals. Longmont and Wray matched up in one; Colorado Springs and Lamar played in the other.

    But were these semifinals? The day of the games, the Rocky Mountain News reported that the winner of Longmont/Wray would play the Colorado Springs/Lamar winner “for the title of the northern, eastern and southern sections of the state.” Not for the state championship.

    • • •

    Longmont

     

    Heading into the 1921 season, not much was expected out Longmont, which had started practice in mid-September.

    But led by coach “Hop” Dotson, Longmont opened the season with a 27-0 win over Denver North on Sept. 24, and then beat area rival Fort Collins 37-0 a week later. That game soon proved to be incredibly significant.

    They then picked up a forfeit win over Windsor, due to illness, beat Eaton 34-0 the following week, and followed it with a 7-3 win over Boulder. Longmont then tied Loveland 7-7, setting up what amounted to a league championship game with Greeley on Nov. 5.

    (Longmont Ledger/Colorado Historic Newspapers)

    That day, Longmont defeated a Greeley team which hadn’t lost in two years prior to the 1921 season. Before the season, the Colorado Springs Gazette had referred to them as a “wonder team.”

    Longmont won 7-0 in front of 4,100 paying fans. Their lone touchdown came when Greeley fumbled a punt and they returned it for a score. The win was front-page news in the Longmont Ledger.

    The town seemed swept up in the football team’s success. In mid-November, two men collected money to purchase “sheep-lined overcoats” for the team to wear on the sidelines, according to the Longmont Ledger. Another local group donated sweaters.

    They built a “huge bonfire,” according to the Loveland Reporter, and made speeches celebrating the team after the Greeley win.

    Heading into the semifinals, Longmont was 6-0-1, and had outscored opponents 119-10.

    In the lead up to the game, set for Nov. 19, 1921, it had been billed as “the greatest game ever played in eastern Colorado.” The Rocky Mountain News expected “a record crowd” because “the business houses in Wray will close at noon.”

    That Wray team, champions of the Northeastern Conference following a 21-0 win over Sterling the week prior, was known for its passing attack, something that had been legalized 15 years earlier. In the semifinal, that included eight completions in the second quarter, as well as two “sensational forward passes” which allowed Wray to gain fifty yards in the fourth quarter.

    But Longmont — referred to at various times as the Leopards, the Battlers and the Beetdiggers — won at Wray 3-0 “on a heavy dirt field,” according to the Fort Collins Courier. It was a “line-smashing game,” according to the Rocky Mountain News.

    The lone score came on a drop kick from Wray’s 15-yard-line in the fourth quarter, though Longmont did have a touchdown disallowed for only having six players on the line of scrimmage.

    Wray did have one last shot when it drove down to Longmont’s 25-yard-line “in a succession of brilliant forward passes,” per the Rocky Mountain News, but time ran out. The game was actually called early, so that Longmont could get back to Denver on a train, which was set to leave a 4:08 p.m.

    And, indeed, a record crowd did attend, per the Rocky, as the game was played “in some of the finest football weather ever experienced here.”

    Longmont was set to move on to play the following week.

    • • •

    Colorado Springs

     

    The Colorado Springs team (now Palmer High School) was a known power at that time, and their 1921 team returned seven letter winners from an 18-player team that finished as state runner-up to Greeley in 1920. They were led by second-year coach Dan Kline.

    Sporting new brown and white striped jerseys that season, their stars were expected to be Al Brown, the captain who played on the line, as well as Dan Warner, the team’s fullback.

    Colorado Springs had been without a league: The Denver schools were grouped together, and the southern schools created a league, as did the northern schools. “The Terrors stand alone,” the Colorado Springs Gazette reported on Sept. 11.

    Ultimately, they scheduled many of the Denver schools, but were in a league by themselves. Their schedule was set: Springs would open with games against Pueblo Centennial in consecutive weeks, then play West Denver, Pueblo Central, East Denver, and Manual. They also scheduled Cheyenne, Wyo., for a game on Nov. 11 — Armistice Day, which had marked the end of World War I three years earlier.

    Colorado Springs’ schedule was to be wrapped up with a contest against Cañon City on Nov. 26, two days after Thanksgiving.

    The Terrors — a nickname earned by the football team after a newspaper dubbed them “holy terrors” in 1894 — opened their season with a 31-0 win over Pueblo Centennial, and then followed it with an 18-6 win over Centennial a week later. They returned home to for a stunning 0-0 tie against Denver West (which they later attributed to injuries and ineligibility), then beat Pueblo Central 31-0.

    Colorado Springs, nagged by injuries in the early part of its season, spent its bye week in Manitou Springs to heal up, taking “mineral baths” and “vapor baths,” according to the Colorado Springs Gazette. They were preparing for their biggest game of the regular season, a road trip to East Denver, where Roscoe C. Hill, the city’s former superintendent, was now principal.

    That game was so big that 125 Colorado Springs students took a special train to go watch the game in Denver. More than 3,000 total fans were in attendance. It would “make or break the local team as a state championship contender,” according to the Gazette.

    The Terrors won that game, 21-0. They followed it with a 72-0 thrashing of Manual, prompting the Gazette to declare that Colorado Springs looked like “the strongest team in Colorado in the scholastic class.”

    (Colorado Springs Gazette/Pikes Peak Library District Special Collections)

    The string of shutouts continued with a 45-0 Armistice Day-victory over Cheyenne, a team expected to win the Wyoming state championship, and one who beat an opponent 127-7 in the weeks before they played Colorado Springs.

    That set the Terrors up to play at Lamar for the southern championship, with the winner playing the winner of the other semifinal “for the championship of Colorado,” according to the Colorado Springs Gazette on Nov. 15.

    But this caused a conflict: The semifinal was set to be played on Nov. 19, with the winner advancing to play again the following week. Colorado Springs was scheduled to play Cañon City that week.

    The Gazette reported that if Colorado Springs beat Lamar, “the state interscholastic league will order [Colorado Springs] to meet Longmont or Wray … on November 26, the victor gaining the state title.”

    The population of Cañon City was not happy. The Colorado Springs Gazette reported that it has received a number of telegrams from Cañon City stating that “if the Terrors call off the Thanksgiving game, the business men of that city, the chamber of commerce, and all school officials will claim the state title and blacklist the local institution.”

    Colorado Springs ultimately decided to cancel the game with Cañon City before they even played in the semifinal, citing the fact that Cañon City was “not in the state league,” according to the Gazette. Colorado Springs claimed it did not know that fact when it scheduled the game, and genuinely seemed to regret having to cancel the game. They also offered to play Cañon City on Dec. 3 or Dec. 10.

    “Coach Dan Kline believes Cañon City has the strongest team in southern Colorado, barring the Terrors,” the Gazette reported. But a telegram from Colorado Springs to Cañon City sent on Nov. 18 points to why they made the decision to cancel: “We want to do our part to make the state league successful.”

    And so Colorado Springs moved ahead to play Lamar.

    The Rocky Mountain News referred to the Terrors as a “wonder team” before their semifinal against Lamar, champions of the Arkansas Valley League after going 4-0-1 in league play. (La Junta was second at 3-0-2.)

    Lamar, regarded as “experienced and exceptionally fast,” per the Gazette, had outscored opponents 143-7 en route to the semis.

    The day of the game, Colorado Springs’ home field, Washburn field, was “snow-covered” and “soggy,” according to the Gazette. And still, missing four starters, Colorado Springs beat Lamar 10-0 to advance to the championship game thanks to a touchdown and a drop kick.

    Wynan Cool, who was deaf, played a key role in the win, the Rocky Mountain News reported, having been thrust into action due to a number of injuries, including captain Al Brown.

    The Rocky called the Colorado Springs/Lamar game “the decisive battle for the southeastern scholastic football title.” Other newspapers reported that Colorado Springs had won the Southern championship.

    At this point, Colorado Springs was 7-0-1, and had outscored opponents 220-6. The Terrors were set to play the following week.

    • • •

    “STATE OF MUDDLE”

     

    Longmont won the Northern title, and Colorado Springs was the Southern champion. As members of what was then the Colorado High School Athletic Conference, they were set to play for the state championship.

    Or were they?

    On Nov. 21, the Monday following the semifinals, headlines in the Rocky Mountain News declared: “SCHOLASTIC GRID SITUATION OF STATE IN MUDDLE” and “LITTLE HOPE FOR DECIDING COLORADO CHAMPIONSHIP.”

    There was contention as to whether or not the best teams were even playing for the championship.

    • • •

    Cañon City and Fort Collins

     

    Cañon City, which was 5-1 at that point, laid claim to the Arkansas Valley championship. (As a note, Trinidad also laid claim to it, saying their only loss, to Pueblo Central, “was a lost on a fluke.”) Cañon City had avenged their only loss, in the season-opener against Florence, later in the season.

    In their final regular season game, Cañon City beat Denver North 96-0 on a muddy field, only allowing North to cross midfield once. They also beat Manual, Englewood and one of the Pueblo teams, and had outscored opponents 181-0 in their wins.

    Fort Collins claimed “to be the strongest team in northern Colorado, despite Longmont’s championship,” according to the Loveland Reporter. This was partially based on the fact that Fort Collins and Longmont had won the same amount of league games (five), though Longmont hadn’t lost, and Fort Collins had. This technicality could have forced the two teams to play another game to decide the league championship.

    The Fort Collins team, according to the Fort Collins Courier, were known nationally: “The fame of the Lambkins has spread all over the country and they are recognized as a top-notch team.”

    Fort Collins also beat the vaunted Greeley team in October, and broke their winning streak. The win prompted the Loveland Reporter to note that “there is now hope of [Fort Collins] getting into the state championship game. The improvement in playing by the Lambkins since they were beaten by Longmont was a matter of much comment.”

    But Fort Collins’ initial claim seemed to disregard the fact that Longmont beat Fort Collins 37-0 on Oct. 1 of that season. Ultimately, the Fort Collins coach conceded that Longmont should be the northern champion, having already beat his team. As a result, the Loveland Reporter wrote that “Longmont will be given the undisputed claim to the northern Colorado football championship.”

    Cañon City, meanwhile, was not a member of the state conference. In the Nov. 21 edition of the Rocky Mountain News, the paper reported that “Cañon City High School has not joined the state high school football association, owning, it declares, to the fact that the location of Cañon City makes it difficult for the team to meet other high schools in the state without great expense.”

    The Colorado Springs Gazette reported that Cañon City did not pay its dues to the state league, “and therefore is not considered a member by the board in control of the interscholastic association.”

    The Cañon City Daily Record came to the defense of their local team. On Nov. 17, the paper wrote an editorial stating that “Cañon City is a the logical contender for the southern Colorado championship, conference or no conference.”

    Their strongest argument was that Cañon City had beat Pueblo Central, which had beat Lamar. Lamar, of course, had been Colorado Springs’ opponent in the semifinal.

    But on Nov. 16, 1921, the Gazette concluded the following: “Reports that Cañon City is a contender for the state championship are inaccurate. Cañon City is out of the conference and therefore cannot be considered as even entrant for a championship.”

    • • •

    Gunnison

     

    Then there was Gunnison, champion of the Western Slope, which many regarded as the best team in the state.

    Gunnison had only started a program three years earlier when coach A.C. Krause arrived. But they also hadn’t lost since, and in 1921, had been blowing opponents out all season long, outscoring them a combined 330-0. Included were the following: 69-0 over Cedaredge, 76-0 over Montrose, and 56-0 over Grand Junction.

    They were so dominant, and their wins were so one-sided, that rumors of ineligibility swirled around three Gunnison players. A month before Delta was even due to play Gunnison, the school claimed that two Gunnison players had graduated years earlier, and another “is practically 21 years of age,” according to the Montrose Daily Press.

    (Montrose Daily Press/Colorado Historic Newspapers)

    Around that same time, the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel wrote that “so many questions of ineligibility have arisen in regard to the Gunnison football teams over the past two or three years, and so much dissatisfaction exists among the other school people of western Colorado … that any victories Gunnison seems to win are without the usual credit and honor that is accorded under more favorable circumstances.”

    The Daily Sentinel also reported that Grand Junction High School was hoping for Gunnison to be “ruled out of” the Western Slope Conference entirely.

    This all promoted the Telluride Daily Journal to come to Gunnison’s defense in late October, writing that the team was bidding “to make history not only for itself, but for the entire slope.” They argued that if Gunnison had been playing ineligible players for two-to-three years, and no one had said anything, “the supposed sponsors of good sportsmanship who are voicing protests today stand condemned by their own statements.”

    The Daily Journal concluded that “it is an easy matter” to prove ineligibility, and those accusing Gunnison of playing ineligible players should prove it: “It is their duty.”

    On November 7, the Daily Journal wrote the protests of ineligible Gunnison players “have been about 0.9 percent founded, and 99.1 percent poor sportsmanship,” reporting that Grand Junction J.F. Beattie coach said only one player “can be suspected” of ineligibility, and that even “without him Gunnison would still be by the far the strongest team on the slope.”

    The Montrose Daily press ran a similar story the same day, noting that Beattie hoped that Gunnison “would be privileged to represent the western slope in the inter-sectional contests to determine the state championship.”

    The Rocky Mountain News reported that the Gunnison team “lays claim to being the strongest football aggregation in Colorado.”

    In early November, efforts were already underway to “schedule a postseason eastern slope game, which will serve to demonstrate the superiority of the brand of football played in this section,” according to the Daily Journal. By November 12, Gunnison had an opponent: Fort Collins. The game was due to be played on Thanksgiving Day.

    The Fort Collins/Gunnison matchup was billed as the “biggest scholastic contest ever witnessed here” by the Fort Collins Courier. A “record crowd” was expected. The Rocky Mountain News called it a “momentous” game which would either “mean the elimination from the state race of the west slope team or strengthen their claim for a game to decide the scholastic grid title of the entire state.”

    • • •

    Championship matchup set

    Gunnison had been late in joining the state league, according to various news reports, including the Rocky Mountain News and the Colorado Springs Gazette. They were not eligible to play for a state title. And Fort Collins, which had lost to Longmont, had not won the northern championship.

    The president of the Colorado Interscholastic Football association was John Corey of Denver South High School. He announced that “the league had no jurisdiction over the Cañon City team,” the Rocky reported, and that the Longmont/Wray and Colorado Springs/Lamar games had indeed been semifinals, with the winners set to play “for the championship of the two sections of the state.”

    The Colorado Springs Gazette published a telegram signed by Corey, and R.W. Truscott, a member of the board of control of the state conference: “The league has ruled that the Terrors shall play Longmont for the state championship on November 26, and Colorado Springs is expected to abide by this order.”

    (Pikes Peak Library District Special Collections)

    So it was Longmont and Colorado Springs in the title game of what was colloquially called the “state league.” A one-paragraph note about that matchup appeared in the Fort Collins Courier on Nov. 22, noting that the two teams would play for the “state title.” The Rocky Mountain News, which was quite inconsistent on the issue, wrote that the contest would “decide the interscholastic championship of Colorado.”

    But, on Nov. 21, 1921, the Rocky Mountain News also wrote the following: “The last hopes for inter-league clashes which would definitely decide the championship high school eleven of the state have gone glimmering, with the official announcement that the Colorado Springs Terrors will play Longmont next Saturday in a game for the title of the northern and southern sections of Colorado.”

    The newspaper continued that that Cañon City was “left out in the cold under the new arrangement,” and that “Gunnison, champions of the entire west slope, will have no chance to test their mettle against the winners of other scholastic leagues this season.”

    It was a sentiment echoed by the Cañon City Daily Record: “By her record, Gunnison is certainly the best team in western Colorado, and shows worthy ability as a formidable contender for the state title. Cañon City also has the right by her record to battle for greater honors, but because of a so-called conference, both teams are left out in the cold.”

    The Daily Record proclaimed that “any so-called championship honors are a misnomer.”

    The Rocky concluded the following: “The Colorado eleven will have no clear title to state honors.”

    • • •

    The championship game

     

    After some initial confusion about a date, the Colorado Springs/Longmont matchup was scheduled for Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, at 2:30 p.m. “in front of the new grandstand at Boulder County fair grounds.” The fair grounds at that time were located at Roosevelt Park in Longmont, which had undergone major flooding in early June of that year.

    They were to play within the race track at Roosevelt Park. The Loveland Reporter promised “the largest crowd ever at a game in northern Colorado” with “all of Longmont [turning] out to see the game.”

    The Colorado Springs football team, a group of 22, arrived via a five-hour train in Boulder before the game. It was a Wednesday, at 7:15 p.m.

    A “large number of our citizens” from Longmont went to meet the team at the station in Longmont on Wednesday morning, but Colorado Springs never arrived. They had decided to stay overnight in Boulder, at the Boulderado hotel, and arrived instead in Longmont on Thursday, the day of the game, because coach Kline thought if they arrived earlier “the excitement would be too much for them.”

    Longmont decorated its town in blue and white (their colors) and Brown and white (Colorado Springs’ colors) in advance of the game. They hung signs that read “Welcome, Terrors!” in their windows.

    (Pikes Peak Library District Special Collections)

    Stores closed throughout Longmont in anticipation of the game. The Longmont Ledger reported that “the city has been turned upside down for the great football game.” They had sold $2,140.17 worth of tickets for the matchup — more than 5,000 people would attend.

    Among the three officials for the game was R.W. Truscott. Truscott was the temporary president of the Colorado High School Athletic Conference from May-October 1921, a member of the initial board of control, and later CHSAA commissioner from 1926-1948.

    Colorado Springs had been missing their captain, Al Brown, for three weeks — he was out “with an infected leg,” the Rocky Mountain News reported, but was expected to play. The Terrors “possess a triple threat in the plunging, kicking and passing departments, and show pretty interference,” the Rocky reported ahead of the game, referencing their strong defense.

    Thursday arrived. It was time for the championship matchup. Kickoff was 2:42 p.m.

    Colorado Springs opened the scoring with a field goal in the first quarter. Longmont nearly answered, driving to Colorado Springs’ 3-yard-line, where the Terrors forced a turnover on downs.

    The Terrors added a second field goal in the second quarter, this one from 20 yards, to make it 6-0 just before halftime.

    Neither team scored in the third quarter, and then Colorado Springs added yet another field goal in the fourth quarter to push their lead to 9-0.

    (Courtesy Longmont Museum)

    In that frame, Longmont’s offense finally got going, using “the aerial route.” The team “made some exceptionally fine passes” the Longmont Ledger reported, “but to no purpose.” All Longmont could do “was to get the ball in the middle of the field and lose it.”

    The Rocky Mountain News wrote that Longmont “fumbled whenever the Springs goal line was in danger.”

    In the fourth quarter, Colorado Springs added a touchdown on a six-yard rush from Al Bevan. That made the score 16-0.

    “The game ended 45 seconds later with the ball in Longmont’s possession in the middle of the field. Terrors state champions,” the Colorado Springs Gazette wrote.

    The star of the game was Colorado Springs’ Dan Warner, who kicked all three field goals and had an interception.

    The Longmont Ledger summed up the contest in this way: “We have nothing to say, the best team won. … No hard feelings should be indulged in and no alibis should be made.”

    The Colorado Springs Gazette declared Colorado Springs to be “the interscholastic champions of Colorado.”

    The Fort Collins Courier reported that Colorado Springs owned “the high school championship as far as members of the state association are concerned.”

    Even the Rocky Mountain News, arguably the strongest voice supporting Gunnison and Cañon City’s claims, declared that Colorado Springs “won the right to claim the state football championship” by beating Longmont.

    But even then, the Courier wrote, “Cañon City and Gunnison challenge Terror supremacy.” And the Rocky declared, “Three High School Elevens Claim State Title After Turkey-Day Victories.”

     

    • • •

    “A three-cornered tie”

     

    Cañon City shutout Trinidad 34-0 in a game also played on Thanksgiving, and still wanted a shot at a championship, according to multiple reports at that time. It was Cañon City’s sixth-straight shutout; they finished the season 6-1 after losing their first game.

    Cañon City expected to have a shot at Colorado Springs, given that their scheduled contest had been cancelled. And Cañon City still wanted that game, especially after the win over Trinidad. But they didn’t want to play on Dec. 10; they wanted to play on Nov. 29, a Tuesday.

    They sent the following telegram to Colorado Springs:

    By its win over Trinidad, and its season record, Cañon City feels it has all rights to play Colorado Springs for the general high school championship of Colorado, both conference and nonconference. Cañon City still feels that Colorado Springs should be bound to pull off the cancelled Thanksgiving Day game, and hereby challenges Colorado Springs to play in Cañon City, Tuesday, Nov. 29.

    Colorado Springs coach Dan Kline and the superintendent of Colorado Springs schools discussed the offer on the train back from Longmont. Colorado Springs was due to travel to Utah for a regional championship game on Dec. 1.

    They declined the offer, citing Cañon City’s refusal to play on Dec. 10. Weeks later, Cañon City organized a southern Colorado basketball conference. They did not invite Colorado Springs to join, according to the Colorado Springs Gazette.

    The Gazette accused Cañon City of pushing a “malicious advertising campaign … in Denver newspapers” — something that might explain the Rocky Mountain News’ relatively aggressive stance against Colorado Springs as the state champion.

    “Every year,” the Gazette wrote, “there is a squawk by some four or five teams from unknown sections of the state.”

    Gunnison had topped Fort Collins 18-0 in their big game that was also on Thanksgiving, and played “football of a college caliber,” according to the Fort Collins Courier. The Rocky Mountain News wrote that “Gunnison outplayed Fort Collins in every department of the game.”

    Gunnison finished the season 8-0.

    Later that week, after recapping the game, the Gunnison News-Champion wrote the following: “The result of the Thanksgiving games leaves a three-cornered tie in the state high school field: Gunnison, Cañon City and Colorado Springs.”

    Indeed, A.C. Krause, the Gunnison coach “announced after the game that he wished to arrange a game for Saturday with the Colorado Springs team,” according to the Rocky Mountain News. If they wouldn’t play, Gunnison “would claim the title of the state high school football,” Krause said, but he “preferred to meet the Springs team in order to have a clear title.”

    In fact, the News-Champion also reported that Gunnison tried to schedule a game with both Cañon City and Colorado Springs, but wasn’t able to, “so the tie will have to remain undecided.” (In an odd twist, Cañon City had wanted to schedule Gunnison in September 1921, but no game ever materialized.)

    The Gunnison Republican wrote a recap of the Fort Collins/Gunnison game under the headline “Refusal of Springs To Play Makes Cowboys Colorado Champions.” The article is framed at Gunnison High School, and sits in the Cowboys’ trophy case today.

    The Gunnison Republican wrote that “when they tried for games with Colorado Springs and Cañon City, claimants for State honors, and were refused, they made their claim for championship honors by far the strongest, as their past record is incomparably better than either of the other two.”

    Indeed, neither Colorado Springs (8-0-1) nor Cañon City (6-1) had unblemished records. Gunnison (8-0) did.

    Shortly thereafter, according to the News-Champion, a telegram had arrived from the Cañon City Chamber of Commerce. It stated that “Gunnison and Cañon City had equal right to claim the state championship with Colorado Springs.”

    The Gunnison Empire was even more forceful, scolding Colorado Springs for not accepting the proposal to play a game: “Fort Collins has this to its credit — they played and tried to win. To that extent they have several other eastern slope teams faded for nerve. The others jockeyed our boys out of a game, evidently knowing that playing meant defeat. There is not a single doubt that Gunnison on the Western Slope has the champion football team of the state.”

    And yet, there was not only a doubt, but this fact:

    The Colorado Springs Gazette, Rocky Mountain News and Fort Collins Courier had each reported multiple times that neither Cañon City nor Gunnison were members of the state league. They were not eligible to even play for the championship, let alone win it.

    Colorado Springs won the Colorado High School Athletic Conference championship, and still owns the first-ever sanctioned championship in the history of Colorado high school football. That school is now Palmer High School.

    Two weeks later, the championship team from Colorado Springs — by this time referred to as the “interscholastic champion” by the Rocky Mountain News — fell to the Utah state champion, East Salt Lake High School, 28-0, in a regional championship matchup which had been prearranged. It was the first regional championship game since 1909.

    The next year, in 1922, Fort Collins beat Colorado Springs 16-7 to claim the state title.

    Colorado Springs and Fort Collins also tied for the championship in 1923, with Colorado Springs moving on to win a national championship by beating a team from Boston.

    Cañon City didn’t reach a championship game until 1926, losing to Fort Collins, but ultimately claimed its first championship when it tied Greeley in 1929. That game, too, had some controversy, according to All Hail the Tigers, the definitive book on Cañon City High School’s history:

    Cañon City appeared to have taken a lead with a touchdown pass with one minute left, but the play was ruled illegal because the quarterback was within five yards of the line of scrimmage, which was a rule at that time. The game ended in a scoreless tie. Greeley had initially agreed to play again if they tied, according to All Hail the Tigers, but “refused to follow this plan” after the game. And so it was ruled a tie.

    The earliest trophy and banner in Cañon City’s gym is from 1926 — the school doesn’t claim a championship in 1921.

    • • •

    Colorado Springs championship roster

    (1921 Colorado Springs HS yearbook)
    • Coach: Dan Kline (second year)
    • Orville Elgin, halfback
    • Al Brown (captain), lineman
    • Al Bevan, halfback
    • Dan Warner, left half
    • Forest Phelps, fullback
    • Glen Ryan, quarterback
    • Field Phelps, end
    • Otha Strain, end
    • Hugh Honnen, tackle
    • Dick Legget, center
    • John Murray, guard
    • Wyan Cool, guard
    • Eddie Allen, sub halfback
    • Ray Ryan, guard
    • Clarence Ryan, sub end
    • Don Long, sub end
    • Zeke Long, sub halfback
    • Louis Dick, sub center
    • Ed Auld, sub guard
    • Melvin Hymas, sub guard

    • • •

    This story was sourced using newspaper clips — primarily the Fort Collins Courier, Rocky Mountain News, Loveland Reporter, Longmont Ledger, Montrose Daily Press and Telluride Daily Journal — via the Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection, microfilm archives at the Denver Public Library and the Pikes Peak Library District Special Collections in Colorado Springs, and as well as internal CHSAA records, and the 1922 Colorado Springs High School yearbook.

    • • •

     
  • All-state boys cross country teams for the 2018 season

    The 2018 all-state boys cross country teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.

    These teams were created based upon results at the state meet.

    The athletes who won championships at their classification were named runner of the year.

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    Class 2A

    State cross country Seth Bruxvoort Heritage Christian
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Runner of the year: Seth Bruxvoort, Heritage Christian Academy
    Coach of the year: Joe Packard, Heritage Christian Academy

    First Team
    Name Year School
    Ethan Bartlett Senior Paonia
    Seth Bruxvoort Senior Heritage Christian Academy
    Levi Kilian Senior Heritage Christian Academy
    Noel Lopez   Rocky Ford
    Isaac Roberts Junior Lyons
    Micah Zeller Sophomore Custer County
    Second Team
    Name Year School
    Jaden Evans Senior Telluride
    Phillip Hufman Senior Dolores
    Jodzuel Juarez Freshman Ellicott
    Cooper Rondinelli Senior Ouray
    Max Saliman Senior Shining Mountain Waldorf
    Andre Stablein Junior Front Range Christian

    Honorable mention: Josiah Bowsher, Senior, Heritage Christian Academy; Keaton Case, Senior, Heritage Christian Academy; Joe Coburn, Senior, Crested Butte; Bo Cormier, Junior, Centauri; Brennan Hite, Senior, Dolores; Issac Hutchings, Sophomore, Buena Vista; Colton Jonjak-Plahn, Senior, Lyons; Spencer Keating, Senior, Telluride; Riley Kenison, Sophomore, Sargent; Adam Maal, Senior, St. Mary’s; Paul McDonald, Senior, Golden View Classical Academy; Kelsey Montague, Junior, Peyton; Alex Pederson, Senior, Clear Creek; Joel Schluessler, Sophomore, Peyton; Sammy Schuemann, Senior, Peyton; Rosston Sherlock, Sophomore, Buena Vista; Xander Stanton, Sophomore, Heritage Christian Academy; Oliver Vaughn, Sophomore, Colorado Rocky Mountain.

    [divider]

    Class 3A

    State cross country Mason Norman The Classical Academy
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Runner of the year: Mason Norman, The Classical Academy
    Coach of the year: Kim McConnell, Peak to Peak

    First Team
    Name Year School
    Jaden Davis Junior Frontier Academy
    Elijah DeLaCerda Senior Alamosa
    Camden Gillis Senior Salida
    William Ledden Junior Peak to Peak Charter
    Owen Nolan Freshman SkyView Academy
    Mason Norman Junior The Classical Academy
    Tyler Scholl Senior SkyView Academy
    Second Team
    Name Year School
    Alex Baca Sophomore Gunnison
    Nathan Bone Senior The Classical Academy
    Jesse Hayward Senior Frontier Academy
    Bean Minor Junior Salida
    Christian Montoya Senior Holy Family
    Wyatt Mortenson Sophomore Moffat County
    Yasin Sado Junior KIPP Denver Collegiate

    Honorable mention: John Ames, Delta; Cole Beasley, Senior, Peak to Peak Charter; Josiah Cole, Sophomore, The Classical Academy; Branden Davis, Freshman, Lamar; Burke Ewing, Junior, University; Justin Hager, Senior, Peak to Peak Charter; Jason Joslin, Junior, Salida; Sam Kearley, Senior, Salida; Ryan Kuykendall, Sophomore, Peak to Peak Charter; Josh Lopez, Junior, Alamosa; Hudson Majeski, Junior, Liberty Common; Ethan Monarski, Senior, Peak to Peak Charter; Ahmed Sado, Senior, KIPP Denver Collegiate; Wyatt Shomion, Senior, Salida; Colton Stice, Senior, Gunnison; Nathan Zurfluh, Senior, Estes Park.

    [divider]

    Class 4A

    Niwot cross country Cruz Culpepper
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    Runner of the year: Cruz Culpepper, Niwot
    Coach of the year: Devin Rourke, Centaurus

    First Team
    Name Year School
    Henry Barth Senior Glenwood Springs
    Cooper Brown Senior Centaurus
    Cruz Culpepper Junior Niwot
    Brandon Hippe Senior Palmer Ridge
    Dillon Powell Senior Air Academy
    Ares Reading Senior Niwot
    Dylan Schubert Junior Thompson Valley
    Second Team
    Name Year School
    Logan Bocovich Senior Palmer Ridge
    Noah Bodewes Senior Durango
    Simon Kelati Senior Greeley Central
    Erik LeRoux Freshman Cheyenne Mountain
    Kyle Piper Senior Centaurus
    Torey Puckett Senior Centaurus
    Matthew Roberds   Mesa Ridge

    Honorable mention: Cal Banta, Senior, Air Academy; Henry Bowman, Senior, Centaurus; David Cardenas, Senior, Central (Grand Junction); Jamison Cartwright, Senior, Erie; Marcus Flint, Senior, Durango; Gavin Harden, Senior, Glenwood Springs; Hans Larson, Junior, Palmer Ridge; Matthew Mettler, Junior, Air Academy; Chris Montross, Senior, Cheyenne Mountain; Logan Moore, Junior, Durango; John Moroney, Senior, Silver Creek; Ryan Outler, Senior, Widefield; James Overberg, Sophomore, Centaurus; Rory Seidel, Senior, Wheat Ridge; Tyman Smart, Senior, Central (Grand Junction); Henry Terhaar, Junior, Silver Creek.

    [divider]

    Class 5A

    State cross country Cole Sprout Valor Christian
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Runner of the year: Cole Sprout, Valor Christian
    Coach of the year: Mark Stenbeck, Dakota Ridge

    First Team
    Name Year School
    McIntyre Gus   Palmer
    Ian Kelly Senior Heritage
    Yonas Mogos   Gateway
    Connor Ohlson Junior Dakota Ridge
    Cole Sprout Junior Valor Christian
    Austin Vancil Senior Dakota Ridge
    Parker Wolfe Freshman Cherry Creek
    Second Team
    Name Year School
    Wes Beckham Junior Rock Canyon
    Ben Conlin Sophomore Rampart
    Will Daley Junior Denver East
    Cory Kennedy Junior Heritage
    Cole Nash Junior Chatfield
    Ryan S Johnson Senior Legend
    Jacob White Sophomore Dakota Ridge

    Honorable mention: Owen Buehler, Junior, Regis Jesuit; Brody Dempsey, Senior, Mountain Vista; Derek Fearon, Junior, Rock Canyon; Nolan Getchell, Senior, Legend; Oscar Goll, Sophomore, Liberty; James Gregory, Junior, Fort Collins; Lukas Haug, Sophomore, Boulder; James Hibbard, Senior, Pine Creek; Parker Lee, Junior, Legacy; George Maldonado, Sophomore, Chaparral; Santiago Montano, Senior, Mountain Vista; Jack O’Sullivan, Junior, Mountain Vista; Ben Piegat, Junior, Dakota Ridge; Seth Rouse, Junior, Mountain Vista; Lucas Westbrook, Senior, Loveland; Jared Wright, Junior, Castle View.

  • Football roundup: No. 2 West Grand takes down No. 5 Caliche

    (Gabriel Christus/Denver Broncos)

    Almost 250 mile separate West Grand High School and Caliche. For the West Grand Mustangs, it was 250 miles well traveled.

    The No. 2 team in the 8-man polls hit the road Friday and came away with a 38-20 win over No. 5 Caliche in a game that could prove to be West Grand’s best win of the year.

    “We had great senior leadership and a great week of practice,” coach Chris Brown told the Colorado Preps Scoreboard Show. “We played well and were without one of our better linebackers and receivers, but they rose to the occasion.”

    Brown noted that the Mustangs (2-0 overall) had been bit by the injury bug, but had overcome some depleted players to come away with a win over a very tough Caliche team.

    The offense was powered by quarterback Luis Dominguez. The senior did enough for his coach to sing his praises to anyone within earshot.

    “He played fantastic,” Brown said. “They did everything they could to take him out of the game and it didn’t work.”

    The Mustangs return home next week for a showdown against South Park. The Burros will come into the game at 1-1 after grabbing a 30-15 win over Del Norte.

    Radio highlights from the game:

    [divider]

    1A: (4) Centauri 38, (6) Paonia 0

    (Paul Angelico/CHSAANow.com)

    No. 4 Centauri took to the road and pitched a shutout over Paonia.

    Chris Quintana got the scoring effort started with a rushing touchdown in the first quarter. But the strength behind the Falcons’ win was the swarming defense.

    “They did a great job,” coach Kyle Forster told the Scoreboard Show. “A few weeks ago I said the defense was going to be our key this year.”

    Centauri is in for a battle next week when it heads to Pagosa Springs.

    [divider]

    3A: (1) Erie 35, (10) Pueblo South 14

    Noah Roper Erie football
    (Gabriel Christus/Denver Broncos)

    Noah Roper was briefly knocked out of the game from an injury, but responded by coming back and running for over 100 yards in the first half.

    It turns out that Roper broke his nose on the second play of the game while playing defense.

    The newly-crowned top team in 3A cruised in the second half to knock off last year’s 4A champs at Dutch Clark Field.

    Here’s a full story from the Pueblo Chieftain.

    [divider]

    4A: Palmer 21, Mitchell 12

    A stretch of losses dating back to Oct. 13, 2016 came to an end for the Palmer Terrors. And in turn, it was the first win in 12 tries for coach Tom Reber.

    The Terrors were down 12-0 at the half and rallied in the final two quarters to come away with an emotional win at Gerry Barry Stadium.

    [divider]

    5A: (10) Mullen 35, Doherty 28 (3 OT)

    It took three overtimes, but No. 10 Mullen defended its home field in a thrilling win over Doherty.

    The Spartans had a chance to tie the game in the second overtime, but a fumble at the goal line ended any chance for Doherty to walk away with its first win of the year.

    [divider]

    6-man: (8) Arickaree/Woodlin 26, (7) Fleming 20

    In a low-scoring matchup between two top-10 6-man teams, it was Arickaree/Woodlin who started the season off with a win.

    The Broncos host Kit Carson next week.

    [divider]

    Notables

    • 2A No. 2 La Junta battled from behind to beat Pagosa Springs 24-14.
    • 5A No. 6 Grandview edged Highlands Ranch 28-21 to improve to 2-0 on the year.
    • Clint Buderus got his first win as the coach at Pueblo West as the Cyclones beat Pueblo County in the Pigskin Classic 20-0.
    • Pine Creek endured eight lightning delays and came away with a 45-23 win over Rio Rancho (N.M.).
    • In 4A, No. 4 Windsor beat No. 8 Vista Ridge 21-0.
    • 4A No. 10 Skyline handled 3A No. 5 Mead 41-21.
    • In 1A, No. 6 Resurrection Christian beat No. 5 Faith Christian 28-7.
    • Sedgwick County pushed its winning streak to a state-best 24-games by beating No. 4 Hoehne in 8-man.
    • Another top-10 matchup in 8-man: No. 8 Akron beat No. 3 Holly 8-6.
    • And another one in 8-man: No. 9 Sargent beat No. 6 Fowler 46-28.
    • 6-man No. 1 Stratton/Liberty beat No. 4 Prairie 66-23.
    • No. 3 Kit Carson handled No. 10 La Veta 73-6 in 6-man.

    [divider]

    Other coverage

    [divider]

    Radio Highlights

    This week’s radio lineup included coverage of Loveland’s win over Broomfield, Rifle getting a big win over Eagle Valley and Eaton’s 37-25 win over Sterling. Audio courtesy of The Team 1340 and KFKA 1310.

  • Q&A: New CSSD 11 athletic director Chris Noll on challenges that come with his new job

    Doherty Chris Noll
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    For years, Chris Noll has preached we before me. It has been a big part in his construction of the athletic culture that stands today at Doherty High School.

    Expectations are high for the athletes, both on the field and in the classroom.

    Now Noll is taking on a greater challenge. Two weeks ago, he was named the Colorado Springs School District 11 athletic and activities director. Now he’s tasked with giving four high schools the devotion that he gave to Sparta.

    His new role will be filled with learning curves and challenges, but after a conversation with Noll about expectations for himself and the schools, he seems more than up to the task.

    [divider]

    Question: What’s the biggest challenge that you see when it comes to taking on an entire district rather than being in charge of a single athletic department?

    Noll: Truly, finding the culture and how things work at every single school. That’s going to be the biggest challenge and once you figure that out, then you can start making some suggestions and start helping shape and mold and form (each athletic department).

    Mitchell is going to be a complete rebuild with a brand new athletic director; the whole nine yards. It’s going to be getting in there and helping somebody. It’s assisting Coronado and Palmer with what they already have going and then helping (new Doherty AD) Stephanie (Leasure) get her feet under and figuring out what she wants to keep at Doherty and what she wants to change.

    Ultimately though, figuring out the culture for all the buildings.

    Music Mitchell
    (Jenn Roberts-Uhlig/CHSAANow.com)

    Q: Do you find that with a situation with Mitchell where it’s going to be a complete rebuild that your attention will be there more than the other schools because they have a foundation in place?

    Noll: I do think that (at first) I’m going to spend more time at Mitchell and Doherty than I will at Coronado and Palmer.

    At Doherty, it’s going to be mentoring and assisting Stephanie as she gets her feet underneath herself and learning the role of athletic director. The culture at Doherty is pretty much set. Everybody knows it’s a “we before me” thing and she is going to keep that. The coaches want to keep that and it’s just going to be taking it and running with it.

    At Mitchell, there’s a brand new athletic director and at the end of the day, I think they’re looking to make some major changes and do some things, so I’m going to spend a lot of time there, not only helping a new athletic director that hasn’t been in that building, but helping a guy figure out how to be an AD. How to follow CHSAA rules, how to do all this stuff for CHSAA and those things.

    I think I’ll be spending more time in those two schools, but I think I’m going to spend a lot of time in the schools in general. I’m committed to the schools as a part of this new job. I’m not a paper pusher, it’s just not who I am and not how I’m built. I’m a people-person so I need to get where the people are which is in the schools.

    Q: I always hear people talk about getting into education to impact kids, but it always feels like the deeper they get into administration, the further away they get from the kids. You’re a very student-oriented guy so what are you going to do to make sure that doesn’t happen?

    Noll: That’s part of what I have to figure out. I’m a big student recognition person. I’m all about student recognition. Part of it is just getting with the kids and getting in the buildings.

    Mountain Vista Coronado baseball
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    We’re going to start a program where we recognize a male and female athlete of the month. One of the schools has already asked me to help with a leadership council and come in and work with the male population of that school in terms of their captains and student leaders.

    Part of it is working with each athletic director and figuring out how I can be more involved and more active with their kids and how can I assist building what they’re trying to build with their kids.

    Q: As a D11 alum, a former teacher, coach and athletic director and now the district athletic director, do you have a strong sense of what this district is about and what needs to happen for each school to be successful?

    Noll: I do have a strong sense of it. You don’t truly understand exactly what’s going on until you get into the building and get your feet on the ground.

    We played Coronado and Palmer in almost every sport and we play them twice in most sports so I have an idea of what’s going on in those schools, but part of our deal is that we have a brand new superintendent. I got a chance to sit down today with our new superintendent, Michael Thomas. I’m super excited to work for Michael Thomas.

    He’s coming to us from Minnesota and he wants to hear our vision and he’s all about students and recognizing students and doing what’s best for students. I’m looking forward to that as well.

    I am challenging myself and I have sold it to my district that I will be in buildings and not in Garry Barry Stadium.

    Q: When you look at what you’ve done with the CHSAA Legislative Council, as a district AD you’re just as tied in to the Class 4A Colorado Springs Metro League as well as the 5A CSML. How will you make sure you’re acting in the interests of everyone and not one side over the other?

    Noll: I think there’s an opportunity for your voice to be heard in different ways. It’s obvious that I have a different voice now. I just don’t speak on behalf of Sparta, but I speak on behalf of Colorado Springs School District 11.

    I am no longer on the Legislative Council representing the 5A Colorado Springs Metro League. I think there’s a different way for my voice to be heard for our district. I’m the football (committee) chairperson.

    When you serve as the chair of a committee like football you, in essence, are serving all of Colorado football and not just 5A.

    I’m still on the basketball committee and recently, (commissioner) Rhonda Blanford-Green has asked me to serve on the handbook committee. That handbook committee is starting to get a bit of traction and it’s going to make it’s going make some policy and do some things that will help all schools.

    My voice is different and I do represent four schools now, but I do think there’s an opportunity for your voice to be heard and you just have to go about it different.

    Q: What are some of the great things going on at D11 that you’re going to be able to promote and put out there that maybe haven’t been as much in the spotlight in recent years?

    Noll: I think that’s part of me going in and finding culture. When you look at the academic success that the Palmer teams have had, they won three or four academic team championships this year.

    That’s a big deal.

    I’m anxious to see what Coronado does now that they’re going from 5A to 4A because I think their success is going to go through the roof.

    And when you look at Mitchell you have to look at what they’re doing. There’s an excitement that I’ve already felt from Mitchell. I sat in on an open community night where they selected their new athletic director. There’s an excitement there. The parents are excited. The coaches are excited. I attended a 7-on-7 (football) practice with Mitchell and met with their soccer coach. There’s an excitement there and you have to publicize that excitement.

    Yesterday we established three social media accounts: Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. I don’t know if it’s one big thing that I know of yet, but I know of a bunch of small, exciting things and positivity and being positive is contagious.

    If you can bring energy and positive energy to things, that’s contagious and people get excited about that.

    And then you have to push that out and there and let people know about that. Our first step is getting that social media up and running, you see what we’ve done with the DHS Athletics accounts.

    It’s doing the small things that ultimately lead to big things.

    Q: I know that by the time your career is over, you want to leave D11 in a better place than you found it. What is your vision for district athletics over the next five to 10 years?

    Noll: My vision is to make sure all kids in District 11 have access and availability to compete. We have some things going right now that are going to help some of our lower socio-economic schools with their activity fees and transportation and things like that.

    One of of my big visions is how do we get some of our lower socio-economic areas the ability to compete with club sports. How do we give those kids the access and ability to go compete at that and really just compete.

    I want there to be a big push in terms of facilities. Our facilities are lacking. When you look at the number of 4A and 5A high schools throughout the state of Colorado, most of them have turf fields, synthetic tracks and good facilities. We’re behind the times in terms of some of our athletic facilities.

    People understanding their “why.” I’m a firm believer in that if you do business the right way, meaning having high-energy and being unbelievably positive and knowing your “why.” Coaches need to know their “why” and if their “why” is to win games and championships, then they’ve lost out on the meaning of high school athletics.

    Getting coaches in there to really focus on the why will have a significant impact in league standing and what we’re doing. The winning and all that will take care of itself.

    I want to make sure that we have a systematic approach in recognizing our student-athletes. How do we recognize what has been there before us at District 11 and get it back into our schools and back into our communities and get some excitement built around that?

    That’s something I want to do. District 11 athletics has always been something special. I’ve been a part of it since I was in kindergarten. I’m 46-years-old. I’ve been a part of District 11 for 41 years.

    We have to get some of that old guard back in to connect with some of our new folks and reboot what we do and how we do it and why we do it.

    Doherty Palmer boys basketball
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Photos: Lakewood tops Palmer in boys lacrosse

    LAKEWOOD — Lakewood boys lacrosse got a 15-7 win over Palmer on Monday to end its regular season at 11-4.

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  • Photos: Palmer boys lacrosse beats Bear Creek in low-scoring affair

    LAKEWOOD — Palmer boys lacrosse hit the road and grabbed its second win of the year on Wednesday, beating Bear Creek 5-3.

    [divider]

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  • All-state and all-conference hockey teams for the 2017-18 season

    Regis Jesuit Valor Christian hockey
    Shane Ott of Regis Jesuit. (Renee Bourcier/bourcierphoto.com)

    The 2017-18 all-state and all-conference hockey teams are a joint project between the Colorado High School Ice Hockey Coaches Association and CHSAANow.com.

    These teams were created following a meeting of coaches. The player and coach of the year was a separate vote.

    [divider]

    All-State

    Player of the year: Shane Ott, Regis Jesuit

    Coach of the year: Marty Wittmer, Kent Denver

    First Team
    Pos Name School
    F Shane Ott Regis Jesuit
    F George Kandel Kent Denver
    F Luke Wheeler Valor Christian
    D Nathaniel Benton Standley Lake
    D Rowan Barnes Regis Jesuit
    G Gage Redman Aspen
    Second Team
    Pos Name School
    F Tyler Montoya Rampart
    F Kolby Donovan Resurrection Christian
    F Leo Felt Monarch
    D Jake Eickelman Dakota Ridge
    D Cole Cavey Valor Christian
    G Trey Hirschfield Valor Christian

    Honorable mention: Connor Akerson, Monarch; Chase Allen, Rampart; Drew Bauer, Columbine; Hunter Beckett, Chatfield; Nathanial Benton, Standley Lake; Greg Bileck, Fort Collins; Zach Booth, Battle Mountain; Cole Cavey, Valor Christian; Anthony Chambers, Valor Christian; Corbin Divita, Heritage; Tim Debord, Valor Christian; Kolby Donovan, Resurrection Christian; Jake Eickelman, Dakota Ridge; Leo Felt, Monarch; Dalton Giesbrecht, Air Academy; Jared Goodmen, Mountain Vista; Gavin Gray, Air Academy; Max Harlan, Regis Jesuit; Theodore Havner, Resurrection Christian; Trey Hirschfield, Valor Christian; George Kandel, Kent Denver; Reese Kelly, Monarch; Connor Kilkenny, Regis Jesuit; Trey Konsella, Dakota Ridge; Dominic Lanese, Aspen; Breyton Laskey, Standley Lake; Luke Lonneman, Valor Christian; Max Malinski, Valor Christian; Brennan McFarland, Resurrection Christian; Tyler Montoya, Rampart; Matt More, Heritage; Zach Noyes, Columbine; Jake Pacheco, Pueblo County; Henry Raabe, Cherry Creek; Gage Redman, Aspen; Dale Richards, Dakota Ridge; Dixson Root, Pueblo County; Broc Schindler, Pueblo County; Ryan Smith, Cheyenne Mountain; Peyton Tritz, Steamboat Springs; Alex Walsh, Chaparral; Luke Wheeler, Valor Christian; Mikey Wilson, Liberty; Brian Wittmer, Kent Denver; Ty Yocum, Aspen; Ben Zimmerman, Kent Denver.

    [divider]

    All-Conference

    Foothills Conference

    First Team
    Pos Name School
    F Leo Felt Monarch
    F Shane Ott Regis Jesuit
    F Connor Akerson Monarch
    D Jake Eickleman Dakota Ridge
    D Rowan Barnes Regis Jesuit
    G Max Harlan Regis Jesuit
    Second Team
    Pos Name School
    F Jared Goodmen Mountain Vista
    F Dale Richards Dakota Ridge
    F Connor Kilkenny Regis Jesuit
    D Henry Raabe Cherry Creek
    D Trey Konsella Dakota Ridge
    G Reese Kelly Monarch

    Honorable mention: Yuta Young, Monarch; Jonathan Tanji, Dakota Ridge; Amir Kalani, Dakota Ridge; Drew Eickelman, Dakota Ridge; Neal Sklar, Cherry Creek; Colton Holub, Cherry Creek; Blake Benson, Cherry Creek; Andreas Fuentes, Ralston Valley; Armando Fowler, Ralston Valley; Tanner Colson, Lewis-Palmer; Addison Zeich, Lewis-Palmer; Justin Lico, Regis Jesuit; Anders Erickson, Regis Jesuit; Paxton Erickson, Regis Jesuit; Kale Lone, Regis Jesuit; Nolan Sargent, Regis Jesuit; Wyatt Verity, Regis Jesuit; Sam Miller, Denver East; Christian Backes, Denver East; Matt Pence, Denver East; Chad Kashiwa, Denver East.

    [divider]

    Peak Conference

    First Team
    Pos Name School
    F Kolby Donovan  Resurrection Christian
    F Zach Booth  Battle Mountain
    F Brennan McFarland  Resurrection Christian
    D Corbin Divita  Heritage
    D Ryan Smith  Cheyenne Mountain
    G Gage Redman Aspen
    Second Team
    Pos Name School
    F Drew Bauer  Columbine
    F Dominic Lanese Aspen
    F Matt More Heritage
    D Ty Yocum Aspen
    D Theodore Havner Resurrection Christian
    G Zach Noyes Columbine

    Honorable mention: Nick DiPonio, Heritage; James Purse, Heritage; Trevor Taylor, Cheyenne Mountain; Chayse Heffler, Cheyenne Mountain; Dominic Lanese, Aspen.

    [divider]

    Pinnacle Conference

    First Team
    Pos Name School
    F Greg Bileck Fort Collins
    F Dalton Giesbrecht Air Academy
    F George Kandel Kent Denver
    D Alex Walsh Chaparral
    D Nathanial Benton Standley Lake
    G Breyton Laskey Standley Lake
    Second Team
    Pos Name School
    F Ben Zimmerman Kent Denver
    F Gavin Gray Air Academy
    F Hunter Beckett Chatfield
    D Mikey Wilson Liberty
    D Brian Wittmer Kent Denver
    G Peyton Tritz Steamboat Springs

    Honorable mention: Paden Clark, Fort Collins; Connor McIlhany, Liberty; Cameron Lattemore, Liberty; Ryan Eichsteadt; Sean Gurlea, Summit; Ben Carlson, Summit; Luke Gosnell, Summit; Max Bonenberger, Summit; Isaac Eland, Summit; Will Caulkins, Kent Denver; Colby Moore, Kent Denver; Dalton Giesbrecht, Air Academy; Luke Borgerding, Steamboat Springs; Quinn Morton, Steamboat Springs; Jeremy Grove, Standley Lake; Ryan Iwanski, Standley Lake; Justus Aragon, Standley Lake; Dylan Riddley, Standley Lake; Phil Crespin, Standley Lake; Breyton Laskey, Standley Lake; Kayden Dormer, Chatfield; Calvin Knight, Chatfield.

    [divider]

    Highland Conference

    First Team
    Pos Name School
    F Luke Wheeler Valor Christian
    F Tyler Montoya Rampart
    F Tim Debord Valor Christian
    D Jake Pacheco Pueblo County
    D Cole Cavey Valor Christian
    G Trey Hirschfield Valor Christian
    Second Team
    Pos Name School
    F Dixson Root Pueblo County
    F Broc Schindler Pueblo County
    F Luke Lonneman Valor Christian
    D Anthony Chambers Valor Christian
    D Max Malinski Valor Christian
    G Chase Allen Rampart

    Honorable mention: James Adams, Rampart; Trevor Jesse, Rampart; Garrett Cunfer, Rampart; Colten Criettendon, Pueblo County; Kaden Hardesty, Pueblo County; Andrew Burton, Coronado; Ian Wark, Coronado; Trevor Gordon, Coronado; Cole Brooker, Coronado; Nate Bradley, Woodland Park; Lou Levy, Woodland Park; Zack Swain, Palmer; Kyle Moore, Palmer; Andrew Rush, Palmer; Brandon Herd, Palmer; Dane Smith, Palmer; Blake Buchanan, Valor Christian; Mason Hoehn, Valor Christian; Colton Carslon, Valor Christian; Colten Crittendon, Crested Butte; Kaden Hardesty, Crested Butte; Michael Hensley, Crested Butte; Connor Mahon, Mullen; Matt Byerly, Mullen.

  • Passion, intensity match respect in the boys basketball rivalry between Doherty and Palmer

    Doherty Palmer boys basketball
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    COLORADO SPRINGS — Palmer basketball coach Jimmy Grantz is a graduate of Doherty High School. More than a lot of people, he sees the crossover of students and athletes from both schools and understand that has truly evolved into one of the most intense rivalries throughout the state of Colorado.

    But it wasn’t always this way. Back in his day, Doherty’s big rival was Mitchell, a different District 11 school.

    “This rivalry didn’t really start to pick up until the early 90’s,” Grantz said.

    And picked up it has. Saturday marked the first meeting of the D-11 foes this season. The bleachers at Doherty were so packed that athletic director Chris Noll had to rope off a few rows so game workers had room to navigate.

    The administrations of the two schools promote the game as a “rivalry with respect.” Grantz points out that the has coached several Doherty players in various phases of their life.

    Before Alijah Bates dropped 18 points in the Spartans 66-53 win, he played middle school football for Grantz. Kyrele Benfrod, who knocked down a big 3-pointer to put the Spartans (11-2 overall, 2-0 Class 5A Colorado Springs Metro League) up 12 in the first, has knows the Terrors coach since he was in seventh grade.

    They’re all buddies. They all cross paths. There is certainly respect there.

    Doherty Palmer boys basketball
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)

    But at the end of the day, there is also an intensity level that always comes when competing against a rival.

    “The intensity is always up,” Doherty senior Joe Golden said. “Palmer always gives us their best game and it’s always a great, fun atmosphere to be in.”

    Golden matched Bates for a game-high 18 points in the win, 10 of them coming in the first quarter. Gone are the days of Brevin Brimble and the threat of 3-point shots falling en mass.

    The offensive plan was cut and dry early and that was to work the ball into the post where Bates and Golden were able to thrive and help Doherty grab the lead after the first quarter.

    “I just try to do whatever I can to help my team,” Golden said. “Sometimes shots aren’t falling and someone has to pick it up so I try to be that guy.”

    The Terrors (6-8, 0-3) had to get points from everyone if they wanted to a chance to down the defending CSML champs. Isaiah Robinson scored 15 and Darrien Meyers scored 14.

    Palmer connected on eight total 3-pointers, but it just wasn’t enough to keep pace.

    “We played a lot better tonight than we did against Liberty last Tuesday,” Grantz said. “That’s encouraging because we don’t match up and at all. Not many teams do.”

    On the other bench, Doherty coach Eric Steinert got his first taste of this rivalry. With just two losses on the season, Steinert has done a good job keeping the 5A No. 7 Spartans focused on the task at hand. But it was unexpected for him when he felt like his guys got a little too caught up in the atmosphere of this specific game.

    “We talk about culture, we talk about mindset, we talk about being in the moment,” Steinert said. “I thought we lacked a little bit in that tonight.”

    He’ll have just under a month to get his boys ready for the same game, but in a hostile environment. Doherty will travel to Palmer on Feb. 10.

    Coming off a loss in the rivalry on Saturday, when kids fill the halls at the corner of Nevada and Platte in downtown Colorado Springs, they’ll be looking ahead for their chance at redemption.

    “I don’t know what it’s like (at Doherty), but three weeks before the game kids will ask me when do we play Doherty,” Grantz said. “We have six games before we play Doherty, but (the intensity) is always there.”

    And judging from the handshakes and hugs at the conclusion of Saturday’s game, so is the respect.

    Doherty Palmer boys basketball
    (Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
  • Photos: Griffin helps Denver South football beat Palmer

    DENVER — Da’Shawn Griffin rushed for two scores to help Denver South football beat Palmer 56-12 on Friday night.

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