Tag: Denver East

  • Thompson Valley joins 4A boys tennis poll

    There wasn’t much change in the CHSAANow.com boys tennis rankings this week, though Thompson Valley did sneak into the Class 4A poll.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

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    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    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.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (11) 110 1
    2 Fairview 99 2
    3 Regis Jesuit 76 3
    4 Mountain Vista 67 4
    5 Fossil Ridge 59 5
    6 Arapahoe 58 7
    7 Grand Junction 50 6
    8 Denver East 43 8
    9 Boulder 21 9
    10 Chatfield 9 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Heritage 5, Chaparral 4, Fort Collins 2, Fruita Monument 2.
    Dropped out
    None.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (4) 40 1
    2 Niwot 35 2
    3 Colorado Academy 31 4
    4 Cheyenne Mountain 30 3
    5 Air Academy 22 6
    6 Mullen 22 5
    7 Greeley Central 14 8
    8 Valor Christian 12 7
    9 Discovery Canyon 9 10
    10 Thompson Valley 3
    Others receiving votes:
    Steamboat Springs 2.
    Dropped out
    Steamboat Springs (9).
  • Regis Jesuit moves up on latest boys tennis rankings

    Regis Jesuit moved from No. 7 to No. 3 in this week’s CHSAANow.com boys tennis poll.

    Both No. 1 teams — Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) — remained the same this week.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    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.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (13) 130 1
    2 Fairview 117 2
    3 Regis Jesuit 85 7
    4 Mountain Vista 78 4
    5 Fossil Ridge 67 5
    6 Grand Junction 66 3
    7 Arapahoe 65 6
    8 Denver East 50 8
    9 Boulder 29 9
    10 Chatfield 16 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Chaparral 4, Fort Collins 4, Fruita Monument 2, Heritage 2.
    Dropped out
    None.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (3) 39 1
    2 Niwot (1) 37 2
    3 Cheyenne Mountain 30 4
    4 Colorado Academy 29 3
    5 Mullen 20 8
    6 Air Academy 18 5
    7 Valor Christian 11 7
    8 Greeley Central 8 10
    9 Steamboat Springs 7 6
    10 Discovery Canyon 5 9
    Others receiving votes:
    Thompson Valley 1.
    Dropped out
    None.
  • Grand Junction gains ground in 5A boys tennis poll

    Grand Junction went from fifth to third in the latest CHSAANow.com boys tennis poll.

    Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) each remained on top of their respective polls.

    Greeley Central joined the 4A ranking.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (10) 107 1
    2 Fairview (1) 98 2
    3 Grand Junction 68 5
    4 Mountain Vista 63 7
    5 Fossil Ridge 62 4
    6 Arapahoe 61 3
    7 Regis Jesuit 60 6
    8 Denver East 38 8
    9 Boulder 25 9
    10 Chatfield 10 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Heritage 5, Chaparral 4, Fort Collins 2, Fruita Monument 2, Abraham Lincoln 0, Arvada West 0, Aurora Central 0, Bear Creek 0, Brighton 0, Castle View 0.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (3) 39 1
    2 Niwot (1) 36 2
    3 Colorado Academy 31 3
    4 Cheyenne Mountain 28 4
    5 Air Academy 24 5
    6 Steamboat Springs 17 7
    7 Valor Christian 16 8
    8 Mullen 12 9
    9 Discovery Canyon 10 6
    10 Greeley Central 6
    Others receiving votes:
    Vail Mountain 1, Alameda 0, Alexander Dawson 0, Arvada 0, Aspen 0, Broomfield 0, C.S. Christian 0, C.S. School 0, Canon City 0, Cedaredge 0.
  • Photo gallery: Colorado Academy over Denver East in field hockey

    Colorado Academy beat Denver East 1-0 in field hockey on Tuesday.

  • Heritage, Arapahoe join latest 5A boys soccer poll

    Though the top four teams remained the same, the Class 5A boys soccer rankings added two new squads this week.

    Heritage (No. 8) and Arapahoe (No. 9) joined the CHSAANow.com boys soccer polls after being unranked in the preaseason.

    All three No. 1 teams stayed put this week: Smoky Hill (5A), Battle Mountain (4A) and Colorado Academy (3A).

    Complete polls for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Soccer Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW
    1 Smoky Hill (7) 2-0-0 114 1 2-0-0
    2 Boulder (5) 1-0-0 111 2 1-0-0
    3 Fairview 1-0-0 85 3 1-0-0
    4 Cherry Creek 0-0-0 64 4 0-0-0
    5 Denver East 1-0-0 56 6 1-0-0
    6 Rock Canyon 1-0-0 55 7 1-0-0
    7 Fossil Ridge 0-0-0 49 5 0-0-0
    8 Heritage 0-1-0 27 0-1-0
    9 Arapahoe 1-0-0 21 1-0-0
    10 Eaglecrest 0-0-0 19 8 0-0-0
    Others receiving votes:
    Grandview 14, Pine Creek 10, Arvada West 6, Legend 6, Abraham Lincoln 5, Highlands Ranch 5, Mountain Vista 4, Adams City 3, Chatfield 2, Cherokee Trail 2, Liberty 1, Rangeview 1.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW
    1 Battle Mountain (7) 1-0-0 88 1 1-0-0
    2 Broomfield (2) 0-0-1 80 3 0-0-1
    3 Niwot 1-0-0 55 7 1-0-0
    4 Cheyenne Mountain 0-0-0 49 8 0-0-0
    5 Air Academy 1-0-0 43 1-0-0
    6 Denver South 1-0-0 42 5 1-0-0
    7 Evergreen 0-1-0 32 6 0-1-0
    8 Ponderosa 1-0-0 29 9 1-0-0
    9 Sand Creek 1-0-0 20 10 1-0-0
    10 Valor Christian 2-0-0 19 2-0-0
    Others receiving votes:
    Pueblo West 12, Palmer Ridge 6, Silver Creek 4, Windsor 4, Denver North 3, Wheat Ridge 3, Longmont 2, Mullen 2, Golden 1, Lewis-Palmer 1.

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS LW
    1 Colorado Academy (6) 1-0-0 73 1 1-0-0
    2 The Classical Academy (2) 3-0-0 72 3 3-0-0
    3 Basalt 2-0-0 55 9 2-0-0
    4 Holy Family 1-0-0 45 6 1-0-0
    5 Kent Denver 1-1-0 39 2 1-1-0
    6 Coal Ridge 0-0-0 38 5 0-0-0
    7 Faith Christian 1-1-0 34 4 1-1-0
    8 Jefferson 1-0-0 20 8 1-0-0
    9 Salida 2-0-0 14 2-0-0
    10 Peak to Peak 2-1-0 13 2-1-0
    Others receiving votes:
    Manitou Springs 9, Lake County 8, Frontier Academy 7, St. Mary’s 6, Denver Christian 2, Heritage Christian 2, Roaring Fork 2, Machebeuf 1.
  • Niwot closes gap in 4A boys tennis poll

    Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) continued to lead the CHSAANow.com boys tennis polls this week, though Niwot is closing in the 4A ranking.

    Vail Mountain was the lone new team to either ranking.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (9) 99 1
    2 Fairview (1) 91 2
    3 Arapahoe 67 3
    4 Fossil Ridge 61 5
    5 Grand Junction 59 4
    6 Regis Jesuit 48 6
    7 Mountain Vista 44 7
    8 Denver East 31 9
    9 Boulder 30 8
    10 Chatfield 7 10
    Others receiving votes:
    Chaparral 5, Rocky Mountain 4, Fort Collins 2, Highlands Ranch 1, Poudre 1.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (3) 48 1
    2 Niwot (2) 45 2
    3 Colorado Academy 38 4
    4 Cheyenne Mountain 36 3
    5 Air Academy 29 5
    6 Discovery Canyon 26 6
    7 Steamboat Springs 19 9
    8 Valor Christian 16 8
    9 Mullen 13 7
    10 Vail Mountain 7
    Others receiving votes:
    Aspen 2, Broomfield 1.
  • Smoky Hill heads 5A boys soccer’s preseason ranking

    Smoky Hill, coming off a runner-up appearance in the Class 5A final last season, is the No. 1 team in the CHSAANow.com boys soccer preseason poll.

    Boulder, the defending 5A champion, is second to begin the season. The Panthers’ cross-town rival, Fairview, is third.

    Battle Mountain (4A) and Colorado Academy (3A) lead their classifications’ respective preseason rankings.

    Complete polls for all classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Soccer Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A | 3A | 2A | 1A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Smoky Hill (5) 0-0-0 68
    2 Boulder (2) 0-0-0 59
    3 Fairview 0-0-0 52
    4 Cherry Creek 0-0-0 42
    5 Fossil Ridge 0-0-0 29
    6 Denver East 0-0-0 27
    7 Rock Canyon 0-0-0 23
    8 Eaglecrest 0-0-0 20
    9 Pine Creek 0-0-0 19
    10 Adams City 0-0-0 15
    Others receiving votes:
    Heritage 13, Arapahoe 12, Highlands Ranch 4, Arvada West 2.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Battle Mountain (5) 0-0-0 56
    2 Palmer Ridge (1) 0-0-0 55
    3 Broomfield 0-0-0 45
    4 Mullen 0-0-0 44
    5 Denver South 0-0-0 29
    6 Evergreen 0-0-0 25
    7 Niwot 0-0-0 21
    8 Cheyenne Mountain 0-0-0 20
    9 Ponderosa 0-0-0 13
    10 Sand Creek 0-0-0 9
    Others receiving votes:
    Denver North 4, Air Academy 3, Widefield 2, Windsor 2, Golden 1, Montrose 1.

    Class 3A
    RK TEAM W-L PTS PVS
    1 Colorado Academy (5) 0-0-0 59
    2 Kent Denver 0-0-0 49
    3 The Classical Academy (1) 0-0-0 45
    4 Faith Christian 0-0-0 41
    5 Coal Ridge 0-0-0 35
    6 Holy Family 0-0-0 29
    7 Frontier Academy 0-0-0 19
    8 Jefferson 0-0-0 14
    9 Basalt 0-0-0 11
    10 St. Mary’s 0-0-0 9
    Others receiving votes:
    Roaring Fork 6, Denver Christian 4, Lamar 4, Aurora West 2, Peak to Peak 2, C.S. Christian 1.
  • Cherry Creek, Kent Denver on top of first boys tennis rankings

    Cherry Creek (5A) and Kent Denver (4A) lead the first CHSAANow.com boys tennis polls of the season.

    Complete rankings for both classes are below.

    [divider]

    CHSAANow.com Boys Tennis Polls

    Voted upon by coaches and media members around the state. New voters can sign up by emailing rcasey@chsaa.org.

    Go to: 5A | 4A

    Class 5A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Cherry Creek (7) 70
    2 Fairview 63
    3 Arapahoe 46
    4 Grand Junction 39
    5 Fossil Ridge 35
    6 Regis Jesuit 31
    7 Mountain Vista 30
    8 Boulder 24
    9 Denver East 17
    10 Chatfield 12
    Others receiving votes:
    Highlands Ranch 7, Chaparral 5, Fort Collins 2, Heritage 2, Loveland 2, Poudre 1.

    Class 4A
    RK TEAM PTS PVS
    1 Kent Denver (2) 45
    2 Niwot (1) 44
    3 Cheyenne Mountain (2) 42
    4 Colorado Academy 39
    5 Air Academy 30
    6 Discovery Canyon 25
    7 Mullen 17
    8 Valor Christian 12
    9 Steamboat Springs 10
    10 Aspen 6
    Others receiving votes:
    Broomfield 3, Alexander Dawson 2.
  • Photo gallery: Denver East’s campus, facilities and history

    A look inside Denver East High School — its facilities as well as its history.

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    Related: Loaded with history, Denver East among state’s most intriguing high schools

  • Loaded with history, Denver East among state’s most intriguing high schools

    [dropcap]T[/dropcap]he room sits quiet and dark under the iconic clock tower. A switch in the corner is flipped, and the lights flicker. They shine on history.

    There are photos noting the ’00 and ’01 athletic teams. That’s 1900 and 1901. Follow the wall and watch the decades pass. There’s a picture of the girls basketball squad from 1914. They’re wearing dresses. Further down, a band uniform from the 1940s.

    It’s only a room—small, somewhat cramped, with a low ceiling—tucked above the fourth floor at Denver East High School. Yet, in moments, this museum tells a story that nearly everyone else has trouble putting into words: History is palpable here, perhaps like no other high school in Colorado. And it pulls you in.

    The History Room, filled with old memorabilia from past East sports teams, underneath the clock tower. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    The History Room, filled with old memorabilia from past East sports teams, underneath the clock tower at Denver East. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com).

    Denver East—known as Arapahoe School, Denver Eastside or East Denver through the years—has won 96 state championships in 16 sports. Yes, Cherry Creek has won more than 200 titles, but these Angels have athletic success dating to 1895. For perspective, the Colorado High School Activities Association wasn’t formed until 1921.

    The school itself was founded in 1876, and has known three homes: 19th and Arapahoe (hence, Arapahoe School) until 1889; 20th and Stout (known as “Old East” to alumni) until the spring of 1925; and the current campus just off of Colfax Avenue near York Street.

    The current building was part of Mayor Robert Speer’s City Beautiful program in the early-to-mid 1900s. It opened, along with the current campuses for Denver South and Denver West high schools, in the fall of 1925. South was placed at Washington Park, West at Sunken Gardens Park. East was built adjacent to City Park.

    East’s clock tower, 162-feet high, can be seen for blocks around and is the lasting image visitors carry with them.

    “A lot of people have fond memories of high school. Not too many people say, ‘Oh, boy, I love my building,’ ” Dick Nelson, a longtime English teacher at East and historian of Denver Public Schools, said recently. “It’s usually some program or some kids or some teachers that you remember. You don’t remember the building. But I think East kids remember the building.

    “It kind of rises out of the ground,” Nelson said. “It’s amazing architecture, and made possible the fact that it was built before the depression.”

    • • •

    Denver East High School's Panek Gym. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    Denver East High School’s Panek Gym. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    The school’s old gym was state-of-the-art when it was built in 1925, and hosted the state wrestling tournament three times in the 1930s. East won its only wrestling championship one of those years, in 1937. But that old gym, which features seating above the floor, isn’t quite suited for today’s basketball games and so another one was built in 1982.

    The baseball field butts up against 17th Avenue, and across the street the tennis teams have a grandfathered permit to use City Park’s courts. There’s a field turf facility across City Park Esplanade for soccer, lacrosse, field hockey, and football, as well as a track outlining the field.

    East’s location—smack in the middle of a major American city—makes it unique. An open campus policy during lunch sends many of its nearly 2,500 students flooding out to Colfax each weekday afternoon.

    “There’s a real sense of pride, and (the students) feel pride of going on Colfax for lunch,” said Michelle Topf, an English teacher and girls tennis coach. “Even though they make fun of it, they’re very proud of being in the inner-city, they’re very proud of their neighborhood.”

    Said Aspen Miles, East’s dean of students and a graduate of the school, “It’s so diverse. Our campus is a good picture of what the world’s going to be like when you get out there. You meet a little bit of everyone doing everything.”

    • • •

    A staggering number of notable alumni have passed under the clock tower through windowed doors to attend class. Widely known Olympians, actors, professional athletes, governors, musicians, writers and professors are Angels. There’s even a First Lady (Mamie Eisenhower, Dwight’s wife), and an astronaut (Jack Swigert, of Apollo 13 fame).

    Nearly every one of them participated in some form of school activity—athletic or otherwise. T.J. Miller, the comedian, co-star of Cloverfield, and lead in Fox’s new series The Goodwin Games, played lacrosse. Swigert, a 1949 grad, played football.

    These alums, and their feats, are never far from the minds of today’s students.

    “Our halls are filled with it,” said Miles, one of those notable alumni, herself an Olympic-level runner whose state record in the 200-meter dash stood until Regis Jesuit’s Ana Holland broke it in April.

    A team photo of the 1901 East High track team. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    A team photo of the 1901 East High track team. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    Heritage Hall, on the third floor, spotlights the best of East’s alumni. East’s clock tower room, home to the museum, sits above classrooms, up a short stairway. There’s also an athletic Hall of Fame outside of the school’s gym. It’s dedicated to Nelson for his tireless work in preserving the history of the school.

    It all leads to an expectation of excellence at East—a tradition that, as Miles put it, rests on a “history of excellence that we’ve had for a hundred years.”

    “It’s self-perpetuating,” said Susan McHugh, a coach with the school’s debate team. “So, kids that come to East, and families, they feel pride and they want to uphold the standards and they want to be a part of the history that’s always been a positive history.”

    Said Miles, “It was a challenge: What am I going to do to make East proud, to add another chapter in East’s book?”

    Yes, a lot of that tradition is athletic success. The boys soccer team owns the most recent title, capturing Class 5A in 2011, and the boys basketball squad was upset in the 5A final last spring. From 1931 to 1968, the school won 73 state championships.

    But there’s also the Constitutional Scholars team which routinely wins, or at least earns a place at, the national competition in Washington D.C. Its speech and debate program is widely known. The woodshop course designed and built new shelves in the school library.

    “When I was there,” Miles said, “it was about me being the best runner I could be and still understanding that the academic foundation they were giving me is what was going to take me in life. It wasn’t just, ‘You’re an athlete.’ I was one whole student that they were putting together to go out and make an impact in this world.”

    • • •

    A 5A boys basketball championship trophy from 1996 at Denver East High School, Tuesday, July 30, 2013, in Denver. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    A 5A boys basketball championship trophy from 1996. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    What makes East so special? Once it touches you, the history and tradition never seem to let you leave.

    “There’s kind of the rich sense of, ‘Once you’re an Angel, you’re always an Angel,’ ” said Lisa Porter, the school’s athletic director who played soccer, basketball, volleyball and softball at East before graduating in 1993. “Once you get a job at East, whether it’s teaching or coaching, you don’t leave.”

    Seven coaches or heads of activities have been at East for at least 10 years. There are stalwarts like boys basketball coach Rudy Carey, who graduated from the school in 1970. Or Andy Mendelsberg, who has been at the school for more than 20 years. He was a softball coach, dean and athletic director before becoming principal last year.

    One major reason coaches stay put is because East has outstanding participation numbers. More than 100 girls came out for field hockey last year—105 for tennis. The East Theatre Company routinely has between 275 and 300 members. Everyone, it seems, is involved in something.

    And through the years, many of those students have found their way to big things. It makes for a legendary alumni base.

    A portrait of John "Jack" Swigert, Jr., one of the three astronauts aboard Apollo 13, hangs in the Alumni Heritage Hall. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)
    A portrait of John “Jack” Swigert, Jr., one of the three astronauts aboard Apollo 13, hangs in the Alumni Heritage Hall. (Kai Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    “I was talking to a group of freshman last year: ‘Anybody know anyone famous from East High School?’ Not a hand went up,” said Nelson, the historian. “So I said, ‘Well, I’ll give you a hint on one. This was an African American actor, he had a tremendous movie called Hotel Rwanda.’ I said, ‘Anybody know who that kid is?’ ”

    Nelson was speaking of Don Cheadle, who graduated from East in 1982.

    “Not one hand went up,” Nelson said. “And then I realized, they don’t know Hotel Rwanda. So I go to another one: ‘This guy was an Apollo 13 astronaut.’ A kid’s hand shot up, and he goes, ‘Oh, I know that one!’ I said, ‘What’s his name?’ He said, ‘Kevin Bacon.’ I said, ‘Well, that’s the guy that played him in the movie.’ ”

    It’s something you won’t find at many other schools, these stories of astronauts who roamed the halls, of actors, or athletes. All Angels.

    “Other high schools that I’ve worked in, they’ve worked to get that (tradition), but East has it naturally,” Porter said. “It’s just part of the culture, part of the fabric of East High School. It’s the rich community of pride and tradition in things we’ve all done. It happens as a school and as a community.”

    “And then,” Porter said, after graduating, “we all come back.”

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    Related: Photo gallery: Denver East’s campus, facilities and history