DENVER — The four finalists in the Class 4A and 5A football championships attended media day at Sports Authority Field on Mile High. Included was a tour of facilities.
Austin Conway and Overland are the preseason No. 1 team in 5A boys basketball. (Pam Wagner).
Overland, a final four team a season ago, is the preseason No. 1 pick in Class 5A boys basketball.
The Trailblazers return a talented roster, as well as three of their four leading scorers from 2013-14. Included are senior Division I commits Austin Conway (Wyoming) and Ryan Swan (Air Force), as well as top 2016 national recruit De’Ron Davis.
Overland got 10 first-place votes, and had 151 total points.
Regis Jesuit is No. 2 in CHSAANow.com’s 5A poll, while defending champion Denver East begins at No. 3. Eaglecrest is fourth, and ThunderRidge rounds out the top 5.
Also ranked in the preseason is No. 6 Chaparral, No. 7 Abraham Lincoln, No. 8 Arvada West, No. 9 Rangeview and No. 10 Mountain Vista.
Elsewhere, Sanford is the lone defending champion to open up as a preseason No. 1 team. It heads the 2A poll.
Reflecing the uncertainty of the 4A this year, eight different teams received first-place votes in that classification’s preseason ranking.
Longmont got five of those votes, and leads the 4A poll as preseason No. 1. Pueblo South also got five first-place votes, and is No. 2.
Lewis-Palmer is third, Thomas Jefferson is fourth and Valor Christian rounds out the top five. Defending champion Pueblo East is No. 9 in the preseason. Holy Family, last season’s 3A champion which moved up to 4A this year, is No. 8.
In 3A, Colorado Academy leads the way. The Mustangs, runner-up last season, received seven of the 11 first-place votes.
1A’s preseason poll is led by McClave. Defending champion Hi-Plains is No. 3.
The rankings, voted upon by coaches and select media members, are the official polls of the Association. Polls are released each Monday.
Legend 25, Fossil Ridge 11, Cherry Creek 10, Rock Canyon 9, Dakota Ridge 6, Highlands Ranch 6, Chatfield 4, Smoky Hill 4, Aurora Central 3, Cherokee Trail 3, Montbello 3, Boulder 1.
Class 4A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
1
Longmont (5)
0-0
132
2
Pueblo South (5)
0-0
102
3
Lewis-Palmer (2)
0-0
90
4
Thomas Jefferson (1)
0-0
89
5
Valor Christian (1)
0-0
84
6
D’Evelyn (1)
0-0
69
7
Sand Creek
0-0
55
8
Holy Family
0-0
44
9
Pueblo East (1)
0-0
43
10
Denver South (1)
0-0
36
Others receiving votes:
Golden 33, Cheyenne Mountain 30, Pueblo Central 18, Air Academy 14, Denver West 13, Mead 13, Steamboat Springs 11, Mesa Ridge 10, Thompson Valley 10, Pueblo West 8.
Class 3A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
1
Colorado Academy (7)
0-0
103
2
Colorado Springs Christian (2)
0-0
89
3
Faith Christian (2)
0-0
80
4
Moffat County
0-0
66
5
Jefferson Academy
0-0
44
6
Lutheran
0-0
39
7
St. Mary’s
0-0
25
8
Kent Denver
0-0
21
9
DSST-Stapleton
0-0
19
10
The Pinnacle
0-0
17
Others receiving votes:
Brush 16, Manitou Springs 14, Grand Valley 12, Machebeuf 9, Platte Valley 8, Aspen 7, Centauri 6, Eaton 6, Sterling 6, Monte Vista 5, Buena Vista 4, Bennett 2, Frontier Academy 2, St. Mary’s Academy 2, University 2, Strasburg 1.
Class 2A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
1
Sanford (10)
0-0
100
2
Ignacio
0-0
89
3
Simla
0-0
57
4
Resurrection Christian
0-0
56
5
Akron
0-0
46
6
Meeker
0-0
41
7
Rye
0-0
35
8
Sedgwick County
0-0
28
9
Holyoke
0-0
24
10
Yuma
0-0
16
Others receiving votes:
Center 13, Crowley County 13, Denver Christian 11, Caliche 9, Peyton 6, Ellicott 4, Mancos 1, Swink 1.
Class 1A
RK
TEAM
W-L
PTS
1
McClave (8)
0-0
95
2
Norwood
0-0
75
3
Hi-Plains (1)
0-0
68
4
Fleming
0-0
62
5
Holly
0-0
54
6
Cheyenne Wells
0-0
45
7
South Baca
0-0
34
8
Sangre De Cristo (1)
0-0
29
9
Jim Elliot
0-0
22
10
Granada
0-0
15
Others receiving votes:
Peetz 6, Arickaree/Woodlin 5, Denver Jewish 5, Shining Mountain 5, Cheraw 4, Otis 4, Primero 4, Kit Carson 3, Community Christian 2, Sierra Grande 1.
Longmont’s Clint Sigg (16) high-steps into the endzone during the CHSAA 4A semifinals. More photos. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
LONGMONT — A little health, and a big dose of defense. Those were the ingredients that powered the Longmont Trojans to a 21-14 win over the Broomfield Eagles in the Class 4A football semifinals Saturday.
One week after allowing 35 points to Fort Collins high school in the quarterfinals, Longmont head coach Doug Johnson knew his defense was getting healthy just in the nick of time.
“We kind of gutted it out last week, and I was really pleased with our defensive performance,” said Johnson postgame. “We got a little health this week. That made a big difference.”
Longmont’s David Speidel (7). More photos. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
Surprisingly, the matchup looked like it could be a shootout to start. Broomfield received the opening kickoff and marched down the field, with quarterback Logan McCormick finding the end-zone on a six-yard scramble for the first points of the game. It was the last time Broomfield would sniff the red zone.
Longmont came right back on their first possession, with McCartney Coyle eventually finding the end-zone on a short dive. Following a missed extra point, it was 7-6 Broomfield, and it looked like a high-scoring affair was in order.
But Longmont held strong in the face of a tough Broomfield rushing attack, stopping the Eagles on fourth down as the first quarter wound to a close. The Trojans made that a theme all game, stuffing Broomfield four different times on fourth down.
“They were awesome. They picked up the pace, picked up the slack,” said Longmont quarterback Clint Sigg of his team’s defensive effort. “We turned the ball over, but they had our back.”
But the Trojans were making mistakes of their own. A strong drive by Longmont ended on an errant pass that was intercepted by Broomfield’s Shane Wetzel on the one-yard line. Still, Broomfield couldn’t get anything going against the stout Trojan’s defense, and Longmont was able to take the lead for good just before halftime on a 17-yard touchdown pass from Sigg to wide receiver Eli Sullivan. After Sigg’s scramble led to a successful two-point conversion, the Trojans carried a 14-7 lead into halftime.
The second half started much as the first ended — with Longmont’s defense holding the Eagles to three-and-outs or forcing turnovers, but with the Trojan’s offense unable to capitalize. As it became increasingly clear that Broomfield wasn’t going to break through Longmont’s stout front four, the Eagles took to the air.
The change didn’t faze Longmont’s defense one bit. The Eagles Barrett Ingvaldsen (who also had a fumble recovery) picked off a pass deep in opposing territory, and Siggs was able to use the good field position to his advantage with a ten-yard touchdown run to make the score 21-7 Longmont after the extra point.
Then the fourth quarter got wacky. Broomfield’s hail-mary with three minutes left was intercepted by Longmont’s Ryan Rulon in the end-zone, and it looked like the game was over. Only Broomfield forced a fumble on the next play to take over on Longmont’s 20. A few plays later Dante Panicucci caught a 21-yard touchdown pass to make it a one-score game.
Longmont’s Cooper Rothe (1) blocks a pass intended for Broomfield’s Dante Panicucci (4). More photos. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
But Broomfield’s comeback came to a sudden end when an onside kick try failed to travel ten yards. All Sigg’s had to do was take a knee, and suddenly Longmont was headed to the championship game.
“It’s an awesome feeling,” added Sullivan. “None of us have ever been there before, but it’s what we’ve dreamed about since we were little.”
And even after struggling to start the season, Sigg’s said he always knew his team was capable of making a playoff run.
“We didn’t crumble after a 1-3 start. We just kept our heads up,” said Sigg. “I think we knew it. We knew we had some special players, we just had to keep our heads about us.”
Longmont hasn’t won a 4A football title since 1991. It will get a chance against Pine Creek at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on Saturday. Kickoff is set for 11 a.m.
LONGMONT — Longmont football scraped by Broomfield, 21-14, thanks to great defense to advance to the 4A state championship on Saturday.
Longmont’s Clint Sigg threw for 174 yards and 1 touchdown, and ran for another score. Longmont’s McCartney Coyle ran one in from a yard out. Broomfield’s Logan McCormick ran in the first score of the game, and threw a touchdown in the final minutes.
The championship kicks off at 11 a.m. at Sports Authority Field next Saturday.
Longmont won a rematch with Fort Collins at French Field on Friday. (Brock Laue/CHSAANow.com)
FORT COLLINS — On Sept. 18, the Longmont football team dropped a road game to Fort Collins, 13-7. A flag-filled, five-turnover performance that evening gave the Trojans a 1-3 record.
They were in serious danger of missing the playoffs.
Two months later, Longmont (9-3) hasn’t lost since. An aerial assault on Fort Collins led to a 42-35 win at French Field on Friday, giving the Trojans a Class 4A semifinals berth for the first time since a loss in the state championship game to Heritage in 2009.
On the same field that saw Longmont struggle with numerous miscues back in September, the Trojans displayed their revamped team. A powerful offensive line paved the way for an explosive passing attack Friday as senior quarterback Clint Sigg showed off his arm strength and accuracy. Throughout the evening, the Trojans were the aggressors.
From the get-go, No. 7-seeded Longmont (9-3) set the tone against the number two seeded and previously undefeated Lambkins (11-1).
On the Trojans’ first play, Sigg hit his favorite target, wide receiver Eli Sullivan in the flat. Sullivan ran through nearly the entire Fort Collins defense on a 58-yard gain. Sigg bulldozed in from six yards out to give Longmont a 7-0 lead.
A back-and-forth first half saw both teams march up and down the field. Sigg threw for 259 yards by halftime as Fort Collins quarterback Kyler Sigsbee, a talented signal-caller in his own right, rushed for 106 yards. Both offenses were rolling but the difference at halftime was turnovers. Fort Collins had two, Longmont had zero as the Trojans took a 28-14 lead into the break.
But Fort Collins, showing why they were 11-0 headed into the quarterfinals, continued to punish Longmont on the ground and marched up and down the field throughout.
Mason Schroyer, a hard-nosed runner who missed six games with injury this season, returned for the playoffs. Coming off a 188-yard, two-touchdown game on the ground last week in a 49-6 handling of Rampart, Schroyer was equally impressive Friday finishing with 178 rushing yards and a score. Sigsbee ran for 119 and a touchdown and passed for 270 yards and two touchdowns.
In a wild fourth quarter, Fort Collins threatened time and again as a Schroyer touchdown cut the lead to 35-28 with 8:03 to play. The Trojans answered back as a Sullivan 18 yard touchdown catch on third and long gave Longmont a 42-28 lead with 2:31 on the clock. But, Sigsbee wasn’t finished as he found Bradley Pelkey for a 38-yard touchdown pass with 1:43 to play to trim the deficit to seven again.
Fort Collins failed to recover the onside kick, but forced Longmont to punt. 98 yards, 37 seconds left with no timeouts left and all Longmont needed to do was prevent a big pass play. Instead the Trojans, as they had been all game, were the aggressors forcing a fumble to seal a semifinals bid.
The Lambkins rolled for more than 300 rushing yards and 500 yards of total offense and yet Longmont’s defense was stellar in one department, turnovers. The Trojans forced six of them, four fumbles and two interceptions.
“They’ve been money for us all year and I’m really proud of them,” Longmont coach Doug Johnson said of his defense. “They fly to the ball. We did enough to win.”
Offensively, Sigg finished 14-22 passing for 320 yards and three touchdowns. Sullivan (7 receptions for 132 yards and a touchdown) and Conlan Berger (130 receiving yards and a touchdown), a pair of elusive and fast junior playmakers, were too much for the Lambkins defense, as well.
“It takes 11 to make the passing game work,” Johnson said. “You have to have protection, you have to have a snap, you have to have good routes. We’ve been starting to execute well and I was pleased with that.”
“We knew they were a heavy blitz team,” Sigg added of the passing game. “We had a great week of practice. Even in the snow we were throwing and catching the ball well. Me just hitting the flats route and just making the open read and staying within myself helped our team a lot.”
“We’ve got skill positions through the roof,” Sullivan added.
Longmont, a team that returned a great core of talent from a 2013 playoff squad, was expected to be a force in 4A this season. A 1-3 start mostly attributed to turnovers and penalties would’ve put doubt into most teams. The Trojans proved they aren’t most teams with a semifinals berth.
“We talk about faith and belief and they refused to give up,” Johnson said of his team’s turnaround. “Our coaches, we stayed together. We didn’t implode and fall apart. We’ve been talking about doing this since 1-3.”
“With this team, I knew it was possible,” Sigg said of the magical playoff run. “We love each other so much and it’s a really tight knit group.”
A final four showdown with the winner of Saturday’s Broomfield vs. Montrose quarterfinals matchup awaits Longmont next week.
“It’s great to be a final four team,” Sigg said. “It hasn’t happened yet in my career. To come back and beat a really good team that beat us once shows a lot about our team.”
Asked if Sullivan and his team thought a semifinals run was possible this year, the wide receiver gave a resounding answer, one his coach would be proud of.
“Heck yeah, we did,” Sullivan said. “Our motto is believe or leave and that’s what we do.”
Then senior Collin Root drilled a 56-yard field goal on the final play of the Mustangs’ second-round game against Eaglecrest. It made for an unbelievable, miraculous 44-43 win.
“56-yarder, with that kind of pressure, by Collin Root, it’s just an unbelievable kick,” Ralston Valley coach Matt Loyd told Colorado Preps’ Scoreboard Show on Friday night.
Ralston Valley’s Collin Root reacts to kicking the game-winning field goal against Eaglecrest. (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)
The two teams slugged it out the entire night, with Eaglecrest methodically marching down and kicking what looked to be a game-winning field goal with 38 seconds left following a fumble recovery.
But Ralston Valley got one last crack. With Eaglecrest in a prevent defense, and despite having just one timeout, the Mustangs dialed up three straight run plays — two by Kyle Rush, another by Andrew Wingard — to drive down to Eaglecrest’s 39-yard-line with 3.3 seconds remaining.
With the famous Legacy Stadium wind at his back, Root stepped up and drilled the kick. Eaglecrest coach Mike Schmitt later told the Aurora Sentinel that he thought the odds of it going through the uprights was “1 percent.”
“He’s such a heck of a kicker, and he’s hit 55 in practice multiple times,” Loyd said. “The key word being ‘practice.’ Different story with the game on the line in order to keep moving on.”
Root entered the game having hit 2-of-4 field goals this season, with a long of 43.
“It was unbelievable,” Loyd said. “It was pretty exciting for our guys. We’ve actually been out there three times before, and lost heartbreakers, so we were able to win that one.”
The Mustangs, a No. 1 seed, move on to host No. 2 Fairview in the quarterfinals.
[divider]
4A: (13) Falcon 28, (4) Denver South 13
Matt Bastian, Josiah Hall, Jeff Vela and Wyatt Aaberg each had rushing touchdowns for the Falcons, who pulled the biggest upset of 4A’s first round.
“We knew we had to go on the road and battle against a really tough team, and our kids really came together and found a way to get it done tonight,” Brian Green, Falcon’s co-head coach, told the Scoreboard Show.
It was Vela’s score in the third quarter which made it 21-7 as Falcon announced the upset potential to the state. The Rebels did cut it to 21-13 later in the third quarter, but Aaberg’s touchdown put the game away.
Falcon did a great job of containing South’s ground game, as well, and actually didn’t allow a rushing touchdown.
Denver South entered the game averaging 323.7 rushing yards per game. Falcon held the Rebels to 35 yards on 29 carries.
“It’s just an incredible job by our kids,” Green said. “It was a great gameplan, and just attacking. We weren’t sitting back waiting for them — but just attacking and running downhill on defense.”
Falcon jumped out to a 14-0 lead in the game. It advances to play Pueblo South in the quarterfinals, a team that beat the Falcons 24-21 on Sept. 19. Falcon will host.
[divider]
4A: (5) Pueblo South 20, (12) Greeley West 7
Ray Mitchell had two rushing touchdowns to spot Pueblo South a 14-0 lead in the first half and the Colts never looked back en route to the win. The defense had an outstanding night, as well.
“I can’t give enough praise to our defense and what they did, and getting off the field in key situations, and making plays,” Pueblo South coach Ryan Goddard told the Scoreboard Show. “Our kids just stepped up.”
Nate Spinuzzi also kicked a pair of 23-yard field goals in the win. The final came on a long, time-consuming drive which put the game out of reach.
“It’s a tribute to our offensive line, and credit to those guys up front, and our backs,” Goddard said. They did a fantastic job of just grinding it out and getting first downs.”
[divider]
5A: (2) Fairview 45, (3) Overland 27
Quarterback Johnny Feauto threw four first-half touchdown passes, three to Tim Ryan, as Fairview opened a 28-0 halftime lead and never looked back.
“To be able to get that halftime lead was a great start,” Fairview coach Tom McCartney told the Scoreboard Show.
Feauto finished with five touchdown passes, and Ryan also added a 65-yard rushing touchdown.
[divider]
Short stuff
Arickaree/Woodlin carved out a spot in 6-man’s championship game with a 72-22 win over Fleming in the semifinals.
No. 2 Fort Collins beat No. 15 Rampart 49-6 in 4A. The Lambkins get a rematch with Longmont next. “We had to battle the elements,” coach Eric Rice told the Scoreboard Show. “The skies opened up and it pretty much poured the whole second half, and we didn’t see that in the forecast. I’m proud of our kids for being able to adjust.”
Two No. 1 seeds in 5A just rolled in running clock wins: Cherry Creek beat No. 4 Bear Creek 56-21, and Grandview beat No. 5 Lakewood 40-0.
Another big win for a top seed in 5A: No. 2 Valor Christian beat No. 3 Mountain Vista 44-0. Quarterback Dylan McCaffrey threw for 318 yards and two touchdowns.
One more: No. 2 Regis Jesuit 44, Heritage 0. Alec Barnes rushed for three touchdowns.
In 4A, No. 7 Longmont beat No. 10 Pueblo Centennial 26-7. Longmont has won seven straight games after a 1-3 start. “It’s super-exciting to be able to do that,” coach Doug Johnson told the Scoreboard Show. “It’s just a tough-minded group of kids.”
Discovery Canyon, 3A’s top seed, easily handled No. 16 Berthoud, 41-0. It’s actually the first playoff win in school history. “We talked a little bit about it, and just about the disappointing exit of the previous two seasons,” coach Shawn Mitchell told the Scoreboard Show. “I feel like this group just has a different mentality. I don’t think they had too much anxiety about that. I think that they were just focused on being 1-0 at the end of this week. But for the program itself, it was a big hurdle to get over.”