The 2018-19 all-state wrestling teams are presented by CHSAANow.com, ColoradoPreps.com and MaxPreps.
These teams were created based upon results at the state meet. Coaches and wrestlers of the year were selected by the Colorado High School Coaches Association at the state meet.
Scroll down to see the teams, or use the menu below to navigate to the class of your choosing.
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Class 5A
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Wrestler of the year: Cohlton Schultz, Ponderosa
Coach of the year: Sam Federico, Pomona
First team
Name
Year
School
Weight
Daniel Cardenas
Freshman
Pomona
120
Vince Cornella
Sophomore
Monarch
113
Franklin Cruz
Sophomore
Pomona
182
Alec Hargreaves
Junior
Rocky Mountain
195
Austin McFadden
Senior
Prairie View
152
Justin Pacheco
Senior
Pomona
132
Kenny Sailas
Sophomore
Brighton
106
Marquez Salazar
Senior
Adams City
160
Fabian Santillan
Senior
Grandview
138
Cohlton Schultz
Senior
Ponderosa
285
Mosha Schwartz
Senior
Ponderosa
126
Antonio Segura
Sophomore
Regis Jesuit
145
Jay Skalecki
Senior
Grand Junction
170
Hunter Tobiasson
Senior
Grand Junction
220
Second team
Name
Year
School
Weight
Joey Airola
Freshman
Boulder
106
Keegan Bailey
Senior
Fruita Monument
195
Tyson Beauperthuy
Junior
Doherty
152
Kai Blake
Senior
Cherry Creek
170
Joshua Deaguero
Junior
Adams City
138
Armando Garcia
Sophomore
Denver East
113
Sam Hart
Sophomore
Cherokee Trail
220
Joey Joiner
Junior
Legacy
145
Austin Kelchen
Senior
Douglas County
160
Colin Lavell
Senior
Legend
285
Jaron Mahler
Sophomore
Ponderosa
120
Randy Myers
Sophomore
Castle View
132
Jake Welch
Senior
Valor Christian
182
Wyatt Yapoujian
Junior
Pomona
126
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Class 4A
(Ray Chen/ArrayPhoto.com)
Wrestler of the year: Andrew Alirez, Greeley Central
The 2018-19 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.
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All-State
Player of the year: Kale Lone, Regis Jesuit
Coach of the year: George Gwozdecky, Valor Christian
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Drew Eickelman
Dakota Ridge
F
Mason Hoehn
Valor Christian
F
Kale Lone
Regis Jesuit
D
Jake Eickelman
Dakota Ridge
D
Justin Lico
Regis Jesuit
G
Eric Buchholz
Doherty
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Greg Bilek
Fort Collins
F
Ben Zimmerman
Kent Denver
F
Dylan Florit
Chaparral
D
Cole Cavey
Valor Christian
D
Jake Given
Monarch
G
Marco Sandoval
Regis Jesuit
Honorable mention: Drew Baver, F, Columbine; Lucas Labrash, F, Heritage; Josh Cox, F, Mountain Vista; Michael Lewis, F, Resurrection Christian; Joey Beveridge, F, Battle Mountain; Scott Sulivan, F, Cheyenne Mountain; Alex Brooks, F, Pine Creek; Javin Billings, F, Pueblo County; Harry Green, F, Battle Mountain; Max Gault, F, Doherty; Zach Swain, F, Palmer; Cameron Sykes, F, Rampart; Parker Nash, F, Battle Mountain; Sam Miller, D, Denver East; Christian Backes, D, Denver East; Austin Gipson, D, Pine Creek; Josh Pierce, D, Lewis-Palmer; Tanner Chapman, D, Doherty; Trevor Gordon, D, Coronado; Shaughn Rourke, D, Crested Butte; Dominic Lanese, D, Aspen; Riley Allen, G, Dakota Ridge; Connor Mahon, G, Mullen; Sean Valdez, G, Pueblo County; Patrick Saveda, G, Steamboat Springs.
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All-Conference
Pinnacle Conference
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Drew Eickelman
Dakota Ridge
F
Greg Bilek
Fort Collins
F
Michael Lewis
Resurrection Christian
D
Jake Eickelman
Dakota Ridge
D
Jake Given
Monarch
G
Riley Allen
Dakota Ridge
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Zach Savarise
Ralston Valley
F
Eli Wilson
Standley Lake
F
Elliot Gitt
Resurrection Christian
D
Tyce Labahn
Resurrection Christian
D
Matt Noe
Resurrection Christian
G
Sam Simon
Fort Collins
Honorable mention: Parker Spaan, Dakota Ridge; Graham Mansfield, Dakota Ridge; Andrew Matthias, Standley Lake; Martin Ronan, Standley Lake; Kurtis Gorsuch, Resurrection Christian; Aiden Jones, Ralston Valley; Jason Ruszka, Ralston Valley; Treycen Eckman, Resurrection Christian; Jon Votaw, Dakota Ridge.
[divider]
Foothills Conference
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Kale Lone
Regis Jesuit
F
Josh Cox
Mountain Vista
F
Dylan Florit
Chaparral
F
Mason Hoehn
Valor Christian
D
Justin Lico
Regis Jesuit
D
Cole Cavey
Valor Christian
G
Marco Sandoval
Regis Jesuit
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Colton Carlson
Valor Christian
F
Blake Benson
Cherry Creek
F
Luke Dosen
Regis Jesuit
D
Luke Flay
Cherry Creek
D
Nolan Sargent
Regis Jesuit
G
Trey Hirschfield
Valor Christian
Honorable mention: Alex Harlan, Chaparral; Mike Gaudio, Chaparral; Xander Sakadinsky, Chaparral; Evan Pahos, Valor Christian; Colby Browne, Valor Christian; Zach Anderson, Mountain Vista; Jacob Tudan, Cherry Creek; Christian Brown, Cherry Creek; Colin Walsh, Regis Jesuit; Mac Padilla, Regis Jesuit; Nick Schultz, Regis Jesuit; Max Malinski, Valor Christian; Jesse Kittay, Mountain Vista; Shane Gautsche, Regis Jesuit; Lucas Banks, Cherry Creek; Jack Kuzia, Valor Christian; T.J. Ranone, Cherry Creek.
[divider]
Highlands Conference
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Ben Zimmerman
Kent Denver
F
Drew Baver
Columbine
F
Lucas Labrash
Heritage
D
Sam Miller
Denver East
D
Christian Backes
Denver East
G
Connor Mahon
Mullen
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Cy Welles
Denver East
F
Quinten Powers
Kent Denver
F
Hunter Beckett
Chatfield
D
Luke Johnson
Heritage
D
Alex Bentz
Kent Denver
G
Will Strong
Denver East
Honorable mention: AJ DiChiara, Kent Denver; Charlie Wilkinson, Kent Denver; Hudson Warren, Kent Denver; Garrison Shepard, Columbine; Jakob Boos, Heritage; Joe Carpinello, Heritage; Ty Doan, Heritge; James Purse, Heritage; Patrick Burke, Heritage.
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Summit Conference
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Scott Sulivan
Cheyenne Mountain
F
Alex Brooks
Pine Creek
F
Javin Billings
Pueblo County
D
Austin Gipson
Pine Creek
D
Josh Pierce
Lewis-Palmer
G
Sean Valdez
Pueblo County
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Sam Kleinsmith
Lewis-Palmer
F
Austin Sawyer
Pine Creek
F
Chayse Heffler
Cheyenne Mountain
D
Luke Doyle
Pine Creek
D
Cade VanRiper
Pueblo County
G
Reece Colson
Lewis-Palmer
Honorable mention: Peyton Garner, Lewis-Palmer; Garret Jansky, Lewis-Palmer; Simon Lamnes, Colorado Academy; Katy Cooley, Air Academy; TJ Farrell, Cheyenne Mountain; Max Schultz, Cheyenne Mountain; Trevor Porter, Pine Creek; Cam Gillis, Pine Creek; KC Brooks, Pine Creek; Connor Wittingham, Pueblo County; Zechariah Wills-Galindo, Pueblo County.
[divider]
Apex Conference
First Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Max Gault
Doherty
F
Zach Swain
Palmer
F
Cameron Sykes
Rampart
D
Tanner Chapman
Doherty
D
Trevor Gordon
Coronado
G
Eric Bochhotz
Doherty
Second Team
Pos
Name
School
F
Connor McWhany
Liberty
F
Cole Brooker Coronado
F
Trace Torento
Woodland Park
D
Brandon Herd
Palmer
D
Colton Hudson
Woodland Park
G
Mark Godec
Coronado
Honorable mention: Lou Levy, Woodland Park; Sean Bolduc, Palmer; Joe Van Dyk, Palmer; Jaysen Komrofske, Rampart; Ethan Meyer, Rampart; Braden Overholt, Rampart; Johnathan Musser, Rampart; Jordan Jeffords, Rampart; Michael Romero, Woodland Park; Greg Schendzielos, Liberty; Ryan Wooten, Liberty; Jordan Cornelison, Doherty; Jack Cintron, Coronado.
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DENVER — Pueblo East won its first wrestling title in school history at the Class 4A state wrestling championships. After losing the team race last year, this one was about redemption.
“We were in the same situation as last year: it was on me, Zion (Freeman) and Andy (Garcia),” Pueblo East’s Dominic Robles said after his match. “[Last year] two of us had to win, and me and Zion lost. I told them before our matches, before we won the team title, I told them, ‘We have to get redemption from last year.’”
After the Eagles ripped off three straight first place finishes off of two pins, they could breathe out.
“We have the best heavyweight room in the state,” Andy Garcia said. “Obviously, three back-to-back-to-back. Everyday it’s like that, it’s a battle, it’s a grind with all three of us.”
First, with the 195-pound match locked at two and under 30 seconds remaining in the last round, Zion Freeman pinned Cheyenne Mountain’s Nico Gagliardi.
Then came Robles. Robles narrowly lost last year in a 3-2 decision, but this year, he pinned Canon City’s Gage Pruitt in the 220-pound bout in 1:36.
“Right before my match, we clinched the team title, so that was going through my head,” Robles said. “I finally got the individual [title]. I came close last year, losing 3-2. I finally was able to accomplish my goal. Getting a pin in the first period of the state finals, that’s huge.”
Garcia capped the redemption run off in his heavyweight bout to claim his third straight title — a 4-3 decision over Broomfield’s Tyler Carpenter.
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
“I felt like I was going to dominate,” Garcia said. “We went out there, and in our first interaction [Carpenter] did a weird foot trip that caught my heel. I felt my knee give out, and that’s when I knew it was gonna be a long match.”
To Windsor and Pueblo County, first place finishes have been commonplace in recent years as five of the last eight 4A titles have come from the two schools.
This year, Pueblo County (181.5 team points) and Windsor (170) were in the thick of it, and rounded out the top three behind Pueblo East (200). Pueblo County made a push on the final day as three wrestlers took first place finishes.
“I always focus on myself and what I can do in my match, so I wasn’t really too worried about the team score,” Pueblo County’s Jax Garoutte said as the gap in the team race thinned. “It’s a great feeling to finally get it done and my teammates are getting it done, too. We’re all working hard, everything is paying off for us.”
With Windsor gunning for a repeat team championship and Pueblo County looking for its third title in four years, Pueblo East took the team title.
[divider]
Three wrestlers three-peat
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Three wrestlers will be looking to become four-time champions next year. Dominick Serrano (Windsor), Isaiah Salazar (Windsor) and the previously mentioned Garcia (Pueblo East) all took first and held three fingers in the air in celebration.
Windsor’s Dominick Serrano continued his quest to become a four-time champion with a major decision over Canon City’s James Ruona in the 132-pound division.
“It would mean the world,” Serrano said on capturing the fourth title next year. “I’m just going to focus on winning another title. I just won one today — next year, it’s a new year and mindset. I’m after one state title, one state title next year.”
Serrano was fired up to get on the mat and keep Windsor climbing in the team scores.
“I was ready to get in there after seeing my two teammates win it,” Serrano said. “I was pumped it was my turn. I was ready to go.”
Windsor’s Isaiah Salazar joined his teammate Serrano as a three-time champion after a 10-0 major decision against Pueblo County’s Jayson Davis in the 182-pound division.
“We weren’t in the team race by any means, but just winning it for myself even as an individual— helping my brothers out — it was nice,” Salazar said.
The Wizards could have two four-time champions this time next year.
“Me and Dom next year, we have to take it one match at a time,” Salazar said. “We can’t look to get four right away. We have to grind the season out and see what happens at state.”
106-pound division
Windsor’s Brady Parker defeated Pueblo Central’s Dominick Castro with a 10-2 major decision in his first year wrestling at the state championships.
113-pound division
Pueblo County’s Brendon Garcia capped off his high school campaign as a four-time champion. He was the first of three four-time champions this year. Garcia came away with a 7-3 decision over Pueblo East’s Xavier Espinoza.
120-pound division
Will Vombaur gave Windsor its second individual champion with his pin of Mountain View’s Malachi Contreras.
126-pound division
Patrick Allis of Discovery Canyon placed first for the second year in a row with an 11-5 decision vs. Ryan Roth of Pueblo East. Allis was the 120-pound division champion in 2018.
138-pound division
Broomfield’s Darren Green grinded out a 3-2 decision vs. Pueblo East’s Aaden Valdez. Green, a junior, placed third in 2018.
145-pound division
After losing in a tiebreaker of last year’s championship, Pueblo County’s Jax Garoutte made his way back to the title bout. The result: A 10-2 major decision over Pueblo Central’s Cole Hernandez.
“I had a heartbreaker in the finals last year,” Garoutte said. “I’ve worked my butt off this season, so it’s just a reward for all my hard work. I wouldn’t sacrifice it for anything, I wouldn’t work any less hard. Man, it’s just a great feeling.”
Garoutte waited 371 days for a second chance.
“It weighed on me like, ‘Man I have this deep, dark place I don’t ever wanna go again,’” Garoutte continued. “That motivated me to keep wrestling in that match and put some points up.”
152-pound division
Greeley Central’s Andrew Alirez etched his name into the list of four-time champions with a pin vs. Pueblo County’s Trevor Singleton. Alirez, a perfect 36-0 this season, secured the pin in just over three minutes.
160-pound division
Christopher Fasano kept the wins flowing for Pueblo County with a 2-0 decision in his match against Coronado’s KJ Kearns. Fasano ended 2018 with a second place finish, losing to Mesa Ridge’s Elijah Valdez.
170-pound division
Longmont’s Drake Engelking held off Windsor’s Cody Eaton in a hard-fought 3-2 decision.
DENVER – It was an historic night at Pepsi Center, something that wasn’t lost on those who were there to witness greatness first-hand.
From the spectators, to the coaches and to the wrestlers themselves, everyone could feel something special taking place Saturday night. For the first time in state history, three individuals accomplished the “four-peat” of four consecutive state titles at the state wrestling tournament.
A club that was 21 strong added Pueblo County’s Brendon Garcia, Greeley Central’s Andrew Alirez and Ponderosa’s Cohlton Schultz to the elite mix. It had been 14 years since more than one wrestler won a fourth title on the same night, and never before had three done it.
“That’s amazing. I’ve said it before – my class in general has been really outstanding,” Alirez said. “They always find a way to get it done.”
Garcia was the first to make it happen, winning the Class 4A 113-pound title early Saturday night with a 7-3 decision over Pueblo East’s Xavier Espinoza. Garcia became the second Hornet to win four championships, joining Hunter Willits, who did it two years ago.
“I’ve been dreaming of that moment ever since I saw Hunter Willits get his fourth,” Garcia said. “I just wanted to be in a similar spot.”
Alirez closed out a dominating prep career by pinning Pueblo County’s Trevor Singleton in three minutes, six seconds. He finished his four-year run with a 153-1 record, the only loss coming his sophomore year at the Doc Buchanan Invitational in California.
Alirez said he’s always been able to learn more from his losses than his victories, and he took the lessons from that tournament to heart.
“It’s bittersweet, but I’m glad it happened,” Alirez said. “I think God had a plan for me, and that plan was not winning the Doc Buchanan my sophomore year.
“It’s all a process – I’m enjoying it.”
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
Then there was Schultz, whose high school career has been the stuff of legend. Schultz closed out the tournament in style, pinning Legend’s Colin Lavell in 52 seconds.
Schultz spent less than three minutes combined on the mat in his four matches during the tournament, and is the state’s all-time winningest wrestler with a career record of 188-2.
“It’s crazy. It’s something I’ve dreamed of ever since I was a little kid,” Schultz said. “To make it come true, it’s incredible. It’s something I’ve worked for 15, 16 years now.”
Garcia and Alirez admitted that this weekend wasn’t their strongest showing, but they still found a way to battle through it. Garcia was fighting off an illness, and spent much of Saturday sleeping. He scored three takedowns during the match, and Espinoza was never able to get a good shot on him.
While the two Pueblo wrestlers didn’t face each other this year, Garcia said he had matched up with Espinoza when the two were younger.
Asked which was tougher, winning as a freshman or a senior, Garcia didn’t hesitate with his response.
(Dan Mohrmann/CHSAANow.com)
“Definitely the last one,” Garcia said. “There was no pressure on the first ones. You’re just out there to make a name for yourself on the first ones.”
The opposite held true for Alirez, who won his first title by decision as a freshman. He said the difference this year was the experience and comfort level.
That doesn’t mean he didn’t feel the weight of the expectations that come with pursuing a fourth title.
“I actually did feel some pressure coming into this tournament. Nothing like on the mat, really,” Alirez said. “Just the feeling was a little different because I had so much riding on it. I’m usually good with just kind of letting it go, because I don’t like to dwell on wins and losses.”
Schultz joined Jake Snider as four-time champions from Ponderosa. He took Lavell down quickly, and after the Legend senior briefly got to his stomach, Schultz was able to turn him back and finish off his career with one final pin.
Schultz was calm and collected while waiting to finally take his turn on the mat. He said the pressure was there, but the key is knowing how to handle it.
“The biggest thing is to make sure I realize what I’m doing, I’m doing because I love wrestling,” he said. “It’s a lot of fun being out there. That’s the biggest thing for me, is making sure I’m having fun the whole time. When you’re having fun, you don’t really feel the pressure.”
All three wrestlers will compete at the next level. Schultz, the nation’s top recruit, will attend Arizona State. Garcia is headed to Wyoming, and Alirez chose to stay close to home with the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley.
The trio expressed gratitude toward the teammates, coaches, family and fans that helped them along the way.
“I have so much appreciation for everybody,” Alirez said. “I don’t get to show it very much because I’m not kind of a sentimental guy, so they don’t get to know that. But for everybody out there supporting me, I’ve got mad love for you, and thank for everything you do.”
Four juniors – John Mall’s Wesley VanMatre, Windsor’s Dominick Serrano and Isaiah Salazar and Pueblo East’s Andy Garcia – won a third state title Saturday night and will make their own bid for a fourth championship next season.
DENVER — From the moment Bob Thompson became the very first four-time state champion back in 1959, the bar was set in the world of Colorado prep wrestling.
Since that day, 20 more individuals have joined an ever-expanding club. While a four-time champion has been crowned at Pepsi Center in each of the five previous years, only twice — in 2004 and 2005 — have multiple wrestlers accomplished that feat in the same year.
On Saturday night, all of that could change.
A trio of three-time state champions will step onto the mat at Pepsi Center for the final time, looking to make history.
“Honestly, it’s just a mental game. Those kids have evolved so much to where it’s just a different world for them, man,” former Nucla four-time state champion Mikael Smith told CHSAANow.com earlier this month. “It’s bigger, faster, stronger. They have more advanced coaches. The techniques are different. I think they have to evolve on a different level than we did so many years ago.”
Smith won his fourth title in 2005, the same year as Crowley County’s Torben Walters. Two years later it was Limon’s Kevin LeValley accomplishing the feat, starting a run of eight four-time champions over 12 years.
When the finals get underway Saturday night, it will be Pueblo County’s Brendon Garcia (113 pounds in Class 4A), Greeley Central’s Andrew Alirez (152 pounds in 4A) and Ponderosa’s Cohlton Schultz (285 pounds in 5A) looking for their own four-peat.
“It’s a lot tougher to win now,” said Alamosa coach Gary Ramstetter, who has coached the Mean Moose for more than four decades and had his own four-time champion in Jon Archuleta back in 1995. “There’s some really good wrestlers out there.”
That was reinforced just moments before as Ramstetter and a packed house watched as Pomona’s Theorius Robison had his four-time bid denied in the 5A 145-pound semifinals. Robison was pinned by Regis Jesuit’s Antonio Segura in overtime with three seconds remaining on the clock.
Both wrestlers earned an escape during the match, and neither picked up a point during the first minute of overtime. Segura was able to put Robison on his back in the first 30-second period and the crowd erupted after the referee slapped his hand on the mat.
“I wanted it there (in overtime). I either wanted to win by points and not let him score, or at the end of overtime,” Segura said. “I wasn’t expecting to get the pin, but I felt it and knew I had to get it. I heard the time and I had to get the pin now or he could come back. He’s done it before.”
The match served as a reminder that anything can happen at state, and countered the argument that has arisen at times in recent years that it isn’t as difficult to win four titles in the current day and age.
Colorado prep wrestling icon Bob Smith – who will be inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in April – can speak to that.
Smith coached at Wray for 33 years and has attended every state tournament since 1952, when he was a wrestler himself. Smith’s teams won 10 championships, and he had 139 individuals place at state, but only one wrestler – Dusty Fix in 1988 – was a four-time champion.
Derek Fix, Dusty’s brother, was a three-time champion and only had one loss in his career – and it came at state.
“There’s a lot of pressure each time,” Smith said. “But as you start building to get three and then four … the pressure is there, but they have to come through it.”
Ramstetter had six three-time champions, but only Archuleta captured a fourth.
“You have to get it when you’re a freshman,” Ramstetter said. “That’s the difficult part.”
Smith said the trend of repeat champions has become more prevalent as wrestlers focus on the sport during the summer and compete in elite national tournaments.
“I think because of the activity of the sport and the exposure of the sport, kids can go anywhere anymore and wrestle,” he said. “They’re hunting tough tournaments to go to.”
Three juniors – Windsor’s Dominick Serrano and Isaiah Salazar, along with Pueblo East’s Andy Garcia – reached Saturday’s championship round and will be searching for a third title. With a victory, they could look to join the four-time club in 2020.
“The big thing for me was that it was just mind over matter. It’s individualized,” Mikael Smith said. “If you get yourself all wound up, then of course you’re going to exhaust yourself mentally and you’re just not going to get there.”
LAKEWOOD — Green Mountain’s girls basketball team is headed to the Sweet 16 of the Class 4A state tournament.
It was a bit of a struggle at times in the final quarter Friday night against Pueblo County, but in the end the Rams extended their winning streak to 11 games while taking a 48-46 victory.
Green Mountain sophomore Courtney Hank (33) had a huge game Friday night in the Class 4A second-round playoff game. Hank finished with a game-high 22 points in the Rams’ 48-46 home win over Pueblo County. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
“Our girls are on a mission right now,” Green Mountain coach Darren Pitzner said. “It’s a really good family right now. The coaches are really working hard. I’m proud of all the girls.”
The second-round playoff win sets up No. 10-seeded Green Mountain (18-6 record) on the road against No. 7 Greeley Central (23-1). The Wildcats took a 19-point win over Roosevelt on Friday night to increase their winning streak to 18 games.
The Rams will need to find a way to contain Greeley Central senior Naomi Hidalgo who is nearly averaging a double-double in points and rebounds this season.
Green Mountain looked to be in good shape against Pueblo County with under seven minutes to play on the snowy Friday night when junior Kasey Klocek scored back-to-back buckets to push the Rams’ lead to 40-27.
“She (Klocek) gave us a nice spark that we needed,” Pitzner said of the junior’s two buckets early in the fourth quarter that extended the Rams to their biggest lead — 13 points — of the night. “We know how hard Pueblo kids work and they are really well-coached. They never give up and got hot in the end.”
Green Mountain senior Shelby Ransom, left, elevates for a shot over Pueblo County junior Lauren Avila on Friday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Pueblo County (14-11) drained five 3-pointers in the final seven minutes to cut the Rams’ lead down to a single point in the final seconds. Junior Sloan Garcia and senior Hayle Herrera both hit a pair of 3-pointers to get the Hornets in position to grab a lead after trailing for most of the game. Herrera finished with a team-high 13 points.
However, Green Mountain never gave up the lead by making just enough free throws — 6 of 15 — in the final quarter to hang on.
It was the second meeting of the season between the Hornets and Rams. Green Mountain hung on for a 43-39 victory over Pueblo County during a holiday tournament Dec. 15.
“Even thou it got close I think we were smart in the last five minutes,” Pitzner said. “We took the right shots and made just enough free throws.”
Junior Riley Shoemaker had a key breakaway layup with just under two minutes to play and senior Savannah Hapke made a pair of free throws with 1:25 left to help secure the win.
Pueblo County junior Erin Mauro (20) looses control of the ball while being guarded by Green Mountain junior Maddie Phillips on Friday night. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
Sophomore Courtney Hank nearly scored half of the Rams’ points. Hank was unstoppable in the first half pouring in 15 of her game-high 22 points.
“It was a hard game inside,” Hank said. “(Pueblo County junior Lauren Avila) is a really good post player. Our main goal was to D up on her and get out on their shooters.”
Avila was tagged with a pair of early fouls in the opening quarter that allowed Hank to really establish herself as a force in the paint. Avila was held to five points before fouling out in the final minutes.
“She (Hank) is a really tough player and has been doing a lot of extra work,” Pitzner said. “She has been working on her footwork and it’s paying off. The more teams key on her we’ll have other kids step up.”
Green Mountain in riding a nice wave of momentum that includes a victory last week against two-time defending 4A state champion Evergreen.
Green Mountain junior Riley Shoemaker squares up for a 3-pointer in front of the Rams’ student section Friday night. Green Mountain defeated Pueblo County 48-46 to earn a Sweet 16 game next week at Greeley Central. (Dennis Pleuss/Jeffco Athletics)
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