Surging ahead with a six-goal third quarter, the University of Denver men’s lacrosse team beat Syracuse, 10-8, at Johnny Unitas Stadium in Towson, Md., to secure a spot in next weekend’s NCAA Tournament Final Four.
The fifth-seeded Pioneers (13-3) will take on top-seeded Notre Dame (14-1) on Saturday, May 25, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. It will mark the Pios’ first Final Four trip since 2017 and sixth overall, with first-year head coach Matt Brown looking to win the program’s second national title.
Michael Lampert, J.J. Sillstrop, Cody Malawsky and Ty Hussey scored two goals apiece, Alec Stathakis picked up six ground balls and Casey Wilson had five, while goaltender Malcolm Kleban made 10 saves.
The Pioneers entered the fourth quarter with a 10-5 lead, then survived a flurry of offense from the fourth-seeded Orange (12-6) to pick up the victory.
It’ll be an NBA Game 7 doubleheader to finish the weekend.
The Denver Nuggets and Minnesota Timberwolves will meet for their winner-take-all series finale Sunday at 6 p.m. MT, the league announced Friday night. The game at Ball Arena in downtown Denver will be broadcast on TNT and available for streaming on Max.
The start time was dependent on the result of Game 6 between the Knicks and Pacers. If the Knicks had finished off the Eastern Conference semifinal series Friday with a 3-2 lead, Denver and Minnesota would have been in the afternoon TV slot Sunday. Instead, Knicks vs. Pacers at Madison Square Garden takes that space, pushing the Western Conference clash to the evening.
This will be the Nuggets’ first elimination game in more than two calendar years and their first Game 7 since the bubble in 2020. Denver took a one-game lead over Minnesota for second place in the West on the last day of the regular season to earn home-court advantage for this series, including its grand conclusion. The winner will advance to the Western Conference Finals to face either Dallas or Oklahoma City.
The visiting team won the first four games of the series, with Denver erasing a 2-0 deficit. Since then, the Nuggets and Timberwolves have traded home wins. Minnesota staved off elimination Thursday at Target Center with a 115-70 blowout that holds the distinction of being the Nuggets’ worst playoff loss in franchise history by point margin.
LAKEWOOD — Lochlan Walker was still winded and hunched over from his 100-meter dash when his mom, Paige, mobbed him with the news of his personal record time of 12.48 seconds.
They smiled simultaneously and shared a moment they won’t soon forget as Walker, a Fairview High School senior, notched the fastest time for a Special Olympic/Paralympic athlete on Thursday afternoon at the 2024 CHSAA state track and field meet at Jeffco Stadium.
About an hour later, Walker also recorded the best Special Olympic/Paralympic time in the 200 meters, at 25.92. Those marks made him the fastest disabled athlete in the state, but more importantly, offered proof that his differences don’t matter out on the track.
Fairview’s Lochlan Walker wins his heat during the Geoffrey Zaragoza Paralympic and Special Olympic 100m dash at the 2024 Track & Field State Championships at Jeffco Stadium in Lakewood, Colorado on May 16, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
“The Fairview team has been so accepting of Lochlan. It’s been a whole lot of ‘you can do this’ since his sophomore year,” an emotional Paige Walker said. “There has been no difference in the way his teammates treat him. It’s not, ‘That’s Lochlan and he runs Unified.’ It’s, ‘That’s Lochlan and he’s on our team.’
“For him, that’s been really good to not feel different. And for me, it’s not just my excitement for what he’s doing, but the excitement of kids who have (historically) been pushed to the side to get on this stage and do this. They get to run. You can talk about inclusivity all you want, but talking about it and seeing it are two different things.”
CHSAA has run a Special Olympic/Paralympic 100-meter dash since 2000, according to CHSAA track commissioner Jenn Roberts-Uhlig. In recent years, the organization added other sprint events as well as field events (long jump, shot put, discus). What began with one heat in the 100-meter dash in 2000 has since expanded to 17 heats across the 100 and 200 meters this year.
The events remain exhibitions, with any Special Olympic/Paralympic athlete eligible to compete, even without a qualifying time/distance.
But on Thursday, that unofficial status made no difference to Walker, an 18-year-old with autism and a receptive speech delay whose ultimate goal is to compete in the Special Olympics World Games.
“People say that I am the fastest (Special Olympian) in the state, and yes, I am,” a grinning Lochlan said after winning the 100. “I’m hoping to get into Special Olympics soon, so I can be great at this sport for many years. My mom and I just need to figure out how to do that. But the past three years, the coolest part is being able to see my friends during track, supporting them, seeing them support me.”
CHSAA’s 100-meter dash for disabled athletes is officially named for Geoffrey Zaragoza, an Alamosa student who dealt with developmental disorders. Geoffrey was the son of renowned local track/cross country coach Larry Zaragoza, who spent 45 years coaching and won 11 state titles across the two sports.
After Geoffrey died from the effects of an enlarged heart in 2003, then-CHSAA track and field commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green renamed the Special Olympic/Paralympic 100-meter dash after him in 2004. Geoffrey was a manager for the Mean Moose, and was known for his infectious energy around the track.
Jenna Taylor said Geoffrey’s legacy lives on through the 100-meter dash and continues to prove that those with disabilities “might be different, but they’re not less.” Taylor was Zaragoza’s classmate at Alamosa. She went on to found a non-profit in Austin, Texas, called Independent Identity, a day program center for adults with autism and intellectual and developmental disabilities that was born out of Geoffrey’s memory.
“Not only do people with disabilities find value in being included and treated like a person, I think everyone else gets a lot of value from being around people with special needs or disabilities,” Taylor said. “They bring a different outlook and positivity, so the community needs to learn how to interact with someone with autism, how to interact with someone with an intellectual disability.
While most of the competitors in the Special Olympic/Paralympic events embedded within the CHSAA state track program are students with intellectual disabilities, there is also a handful of Paralympic athletes. Currently, Special Olympians (also referred to as Unified athletes or adaptive athletes) compete alongside Paralympic athletes, who have physical impairments but not intellectual disabilities.
For the Paralympic athletes, at least one runner on Thursday pined for a para-specific competition at the state meet.
Banning Lewis Academy’s Jason Dunnock runs in the Geoffrey Zaragoza Paralympic and Special Olympic 100m dash during the 2024 Track & Field State Championships at Jeffco Stadium in Lakewood, Colorado on May 16, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
“I wish it was more physical disabilities I was racing against,” said Banning Lewis Academy senior Jason Dunnock, who blew away his heat in the 100 meters alongside Special Olympics athletes and was the fastest Para athlete in the event at 14.53 seconds. “I want to run against other Para athletes and see what I can do.”
Dunnock has fanconi anemia, a rare inherited disease characterized by physical abnormalities, bone marrow failure, and a higher-than-normal risk of sickness. He had to receive a bone marrow transplant as part of his treatment, and has learned to adapt to living with abnormal arms and hands.
For athletes such as Dunnock, John Register also argues the Paralympic races should be standalone, with official times and classifications as determined by the International Paralympic Committee.
Register, who has served as one of the announcers at state track for the past six years, was a three-time All-American at Arkansas who lost his left leg following an accident while training for the hurdles for the 1996 Olympic Games. After that, he became a two-time Paralympian who made the 1996 Games as a swimmer and then won a silver medal in long jump at the 2000 Games.
“I do want people to understand the difference between the two,” Register said. “Somebody might stop a race in the Special Olympics and help someone across the finish line — that ain’t happening in Paralympic sport.”
Roberts-Uhlig called the Special Olympics/Paralympics events “one of the greatest things we do here at state track,” and the rousing reaction from the grandstands during the 100- and 200-meter races backed up that sentiment.
Nick Dixon, the Unified coach for Gateway, said “the smiles at the finish line are always the most rewarding.” Dixon, who is also a paraprofessional at Gateway, wants to see opportunities for his Special Olympics/Paralympics athletes increase in coming years.
“I would like to see this sport sanctioned like Unified bowling is,” Dixon said. “I would like track sanctioned, basketball, everything our Unified athletes do be sanctioned by CHSAA. That’s the next step.”
Roberts-Uhlig says that’s an “ongoing conversation with all Unified sports” at the CHSAA level. Unified bowling was sanctioned in 2019, and several districts have Unified/Special Olympic track meets in some form.
In the meantime, athletes like Walker and Dunnock continue to embody the spirit of inclusion that’s been the case for the last 25 state track meets that have featured Special Olympic/Paralympic events.
“We get into this narrative of the overcoming story, when in actuality, we’re just allowing (disabled athletes) to do what everyone else wants to do,” Register said. “Like all high school students, they’re just trying to find themselves, and this makes it just a little bit easier.”
Fairview’s Lochlan Walker, right, win his heat during the Geoffrey Zaragoza Paralympic and Special Olympic 100m dash at the 2024 CHSAA State Track and Field Championships at Jeffco Stadium in Lakewood, Colorado on May 16, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
A rundown of the CHSAA state track and field meet to be held Thursday through Saturday at Jeffco Stadium in Lakewood:
10 things to watch
The team races: The Niwot girls track and field dynasty is likely in for yet another coronation, with the Cougars returning two state champions (Addison Ritzenhein and Jade West) and insane depth in the 4A meet. But after that? There’s plenty of mystery in Classes 5A and 4A. Cherokee Trail has a real shot at claiming a second straight 5A boys title but is by no means a lock, and the 5A girls meet is wide open. Northfield has the depth to claim its first team title in the 4A boys meet, but the Nighthawks will have to earn it.
Four for LaFore: A year after sweeping the throws in the 5A boys meet, Chatfield’s Charlie LaFore appears primed to repeat the feat. The Chargers senior set a new 5A record with his top throw in the shot put (65 feet, 4.25 inches) earlier this spring, which is also the 13th-longest prep personal best in the country this season, according to MileSplit.com. The Kansas State commit isn’t too shabby in the discus, either. His top mark there (190 feet) is also a top-30 throw nationally.
Hurdling ahead: Another senior looking for an event sweep? Grandview’s Gabriella Cunningham can cement her claim as the state’s top girls hurdler if she can match the effort she’s already put forth this spring. With national top-20 times in both the 100-meter hurdles (13.61 seconds) and 300 hurdles (42.15), Cunningham is an overwhelming favorite to defend her 5A titles in both races. Of course, this is also the hurdles, where absolutely nothing is guaranteed.
Vines family business: The track and field world is already well-acquainted with De Beque senior Scottie Vines. The reigning 1A boys high jump champion broke the state high jump record earlier this season with a 7-4.25 and already has a spot sewn up in next month’s U.S. Olympic Team Trials in Eugene, Ore. But his sister, Ava, has a chance to make her own mark this weekend as one of the state’s best by defending her 1A girls high jump crown. With Scottie Vines also competing in the 1A boys 100 and 200, the family trophy case could be due a new collection of hardware.
Sprint sweep, Part I: Few athletes have burst onto the Colorado prep track scene quite like Windsor senior Mikey Munn this season. Last spring, the South Dakota football commit didn’t compete in a single individual race at the state meet (he was part of Windsor’s 400-meter relay). A year later, he has the state’s top times in the 200 and 400, according to MileSplit.com, and his 100 PR (10.51) is behind only Cherokee Trail’s Peyton Sommers. With Sommers competing in 5A, that makes Munn a strong candidate for a sprint sweep in the 4A boys meet.
Sprint sweep, Part II: Speaking of breakout stars, it’s time to get to know Ellie Londo. The Valor Christian sophomore is staring down a potential sweep of the 5A girls sprints with the top seed times in the 100 (11.94 seconds), 200 (24.46) and 400 (55.74) — the latter of which also happens to be the top time in the state, regardless of classification. Pull that off, and another strong Eagles team just might contend for the program’s fourth team championship in five state meets.
Going the distance: As is often the case, this weekend’s meet is bursting with distance-running talent on both the boys and girls sides. For the boys, there’s Navy commit Dane Eike, the reigning 5A boys 3200 champion and top seed in the 1600, and Battle Mountain teammates Porter Middaugh (Arizona State) and Will Brunner (Harvard) in the 4A meet. For the girls? Well, there are simply too many names to list. Just know that Gatorade national cross country runner of the year Addison Ritzenhein of Niwot, N.C. State commit Bethany Michalak of Air Academy and Notre Dame commit Isabel Allori of Liberty Common, who set a new Colorado prep record in the 3200 (10:04.16), are going to put on a show.
Pole vault face-off: The under-the-radar showdown of the meet? That has to be The Classical Academy’s Anna Willis vs. Peak to Peak’s Kourtney Rathke in the 3A girls pole vault. The two have gone toe-to-toe at the state meet each of the past three years, with Willis winning once and Rathke twice. Willis enters this weekend tied with Broomfield’s Lilly Nichols as the top-ranked vaulter across all girls classes, but there’s little doubt Rathke will push her once again. And even if she doesn’t, Rathke has a chance to be a three-time state champion in the long jump, too.
Chasing double digits: There is dominance, and then there is Dayspring Christian senior Eboselulu Omofoma — an eight-time state champion looking to four-peat in both the 2A girls 100 hurdles and high jump. Entered into three events this spring, including the triple jump, Omofoma has a shot at finishing her prep career with double-digit individual titles. If she wants to get 11, her biggest hurdle — outside of the actual hurdles, of course — just might be the high jump, where Hoehne freshman Braylee Foster will offer stiff competition.
Another face-off: A year after finishing second behind Grand Junction’s Miller Jones in the 4A long jump, Roosevelt junior Jayden Nohr gets another shot at a second state title. The Rough Riders junior enters the state meet with the 18th-best leap (23-9.5) among prep athletes in the nation this spring, but he’s got another top-notch leaper just behind him in Mesa Ridge’s Avant Wright (23-9). This one could be a back-and-forth battle.
Returning state champions
Class 5A boys
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Peyton Sommers
Cherokee Trail, Jr.
200
21.10
Peyton Sommers
Cherokee Trail, Jr.
400
46.77
Dane Eike
Valor Christian, Sr.
3200
9:13.27
Kaleb Kimaita
Horizon, Sr.
High jump
6-6
Tyler Rowan
Monarch, Sr.
Pole vault
15-8
Charlie Lafore
Chatfield, Sr.
Shot put
55-8.75
Charlie Lafore
Chatfield, Sr.
Discus
178-6
Class 5A girls
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Rosie Mucharsky
Denver East, Jr.
800
2:09.57
Gabriella Cunningham
Grandview, Sr.
100H
13.78
Gabriella Cunningham
Grandview, Sr.
300H
42.71
Farrah Eike
Valor Christian, Sr.
High jump
5-5
Mary Ella Brooks
Ralston Valley, Sr.
Shot put
37-3.75
Addison Edwards
Cherry Creek, Sr.
Discus
126-7
Bethany Michalak (’21)
Air Academy, Sr.
4A 1600
4:55.01
**Lilly Nichols (’22, ’21)
Broomfield, Sr.
Pole vault
12-9
Class 4A boys
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Joseph Ciccio
Lutheran, Sr.
100
10.53
Will Brunner
Battle Mountain, Sr.
3200
9:26.76
Wyatt Turner
Canon City, Sr.
High jump
6-5
Jayden Nohr (’22)
Roosevelt, Jr.
3A Long jump
22-9
Class 4A girls
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Ella Hagen
Summit, Jr.
1600
4:54.35
Addison Ritzenhein
Niwot, So.
3200
10:30.05
Eva Bellot
Green Mountain, Sr.
High jump
5-6
Ella Pears
Longmont, Sr.
Triple jump
37-3.50
Jade West
Niwot, Jr.
Shot put
40-8.25
Class 3A boys
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Austin Tice
Estes Park, Sr.
800
1:54.49
Matthew Edwards
The Classical Academy, Sr.
3200
9:20.88
Jordan Wenger
The Classical Academy, Sr.
High jump
6-8
**Jordan Wenger
The Classical Academy, Sr.
Triple jump
45-7
Nicholas Rothe
University, Jr.
Pole vault
14-0
Johnny Whyrick
University, Sr.
Shot put
52-10.5
Johnny Whyrick
University, Sr.
Discus
149-5
Jackson Fagerlin (’22)
Resurrection Chr., Jr.
1600
4:22.79
Justin Bate (’22)
Liberty Common, Sr.
Pole vault
13-6
Class 3A girls
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Andie Rasmussen
Eaton, Sr.
400
56.05
Jaycee Williams
Berthoud, Sr.
800
2:13.20
Sarah DeLaCerda
Alamosa, Sr.
1600
4:55.95
Sarah DeLaCerda
Alamosa, Sr.
3200
11:04.13
**Kourtney Rathke
Peak to Peak, Sr.
Pole vault
13-0
**Kourtney Rathke
Peak to Peak, Sr.
Long jump
18-2
Savanna Amack
Northridge, Sr.
Triple jump
37-3
Brilee Jensen
Coal Ridge, Jr.
Shot put
38-9.5
Jaedyn Kohn
Woodland Park, Sr.
Discus
125-7
Isabel Allori (’22)
Liberty Common, Sr.
1600
4:55.12
Isabel Allori (’22)
Liberty Common, Sr.
3200
10:57.69
Anna Willis (’21)
The Classical Academy, Sr.
Pole vault
12-6
Class 2A boys
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Landon Hadley
Peyton, Sr.
100
11.11
Logan Tullis
Cedaredge, Sr.
110H
15.32
Logan Tullis
Cedaredge, Sr.
300H
40.19
Brady Mollendor
Sedgwick County, So.
Triple jump
44-3.5
Class 2A girls
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Peighton Marrero
Strasburg, Jr.
400
57.11
Natalie Washburn
Tinmath, Jr.
800
2:19.04
Keira King
Lake County, Sr.
1600
5:20.36
Mikaela Kendall
Heritage Christian, So.
3200
11:46.99
***Eboselulu Omofoma
Dayspring Christian, Sr.
100H
14.81
***Eboselulu Omofoma
Dayspring Christian, Sr.
High jump
5-1
Eboselulu Omofoma
Dayspring Christian, Sr.
Triple jump
36-5
Taiya Carl
Buena Vista, Jr.
Pole vault
9-7
Kaitlyn Pearson
Swallows Charter, Sr.
Long jump
17-6
Elizabeth Brooks
Cedaredge, Sr.
Shot put
38-9.25
**Gemma Powell
Lyons, Sr.
Discus
131-4
Class 1A boys
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Josh Snyder
Cheraw, Sr.
1600
4:40.40
Josh Snyder
Cheraw, Sr.
3200
10:28.64
**Scottie Vines
De Beque, Sr.
High jump
6-10
Konner Rowden-Stum
Genoa-Hugo/Karval, Sr.
Long jump
22-0.5
**Konner Rowden-Stum
Genoa-Hugo/Karval, Sr.
Triple jump
42-10
Ryan McCaffrey (’22)
Akron, Sr.
Pole vault
12-9
Class 1A girls
Athlete
School, year
Event
Winning mark
Roxy Unruh
Prairie, So.
100
12.38
Roxy Unruh
Prairie, So.
200
25.86
Erica Miller
Sanford, Jr.
800
2:23.01
Kya Piel
Merino, So.
1600
5:33.05
Kya Piel
Merino, So.
3200
12:18.61
Ava Vines
De Beque, Jr.
High jump
5-5
Jade Kuntz
North Star, So.
Pole vault
9-0
Emily Hume
Walsh, Jr.
Long jump
16-2
Mckenna Notter
Stratton, Sr.
Triple jump
34-0
**Zadie Mackey
Elbert, Sr.
Shot put
39-3.5
**Zadie Mackey
Elbert, Sr.
Discus
136-9
Krista Wieser (’22)
Idalia, Jr.
100
13.47
Paola Vidales (’22)
Kiowa, Sr.
1600
5:38.97
*** Three-time champion | ** Two-time champion | (’21) won in 2021 | (’22) won in 2022
Sleepless in Seattle, Doomed in Denver. Two straight postseasons. Two straight playoff exits for Valeri Nichushkin.
It’s been real, Val. Lord, it’s been glorious. But this is your stop.
The Avalanche title train needs engines it can rely on.
You weep for the man. You rage at the loss. You wonder about the Avs front office, which circled the wagons, protected and enabled their troubled winger. Only to be burned again.
It’s over. It’s time.
The championship window won’t wait.
Nathan MacKinnon turns 29 in September. Mikko Rantanen’s 28th birthday falls a month later. Gabe Landeskog will be 32 a month after that.
The Avs are on the clock.
And the timing couldn’t be worse.
Roughly an hour before Colorado dropped the puck on a pivotal Game 4 at home in their second-round Stanley Cup Playoffs series Monday night with the Dallas Stars, the NHL and NHLPA jointly dropped the bomb on the player nicknamed Nuke.
Nichushkin, the announcement read, had been placed in Stage 3 of the NHL Player Assistance Program but did not disclose why. Which means he’s suspended without pay for six months, and eligible to apply for reinstatement after that.
In other words, not just whatever’s left of this year’s postseason run — but at least a month into the regular season of 2024-25 as well.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
The clock doesn’t just apply to the window, either.
Nichushkin has a whopping six seasons left on an eight-year, $49-million deal inked after he lifted Lord Stanley high. It’s turned into Kris Bryant minus the laugh track, bad money wasted by a good organization.
If he can’t help you reel in another Cup, it’s time to cut bait.
Let someone else take this challenge on.
Nichushkin’s got too much talent to give up, you say. Absolutely true. He’s also too unreliable to lean on anymore as a piece of this championship puzzle, too much of a risk to be a pillar for the core.
After the mysterious departure in Seattle, his absence for treatment this past winter and Monday’s suspension, can the Avs, his brothers, trust him? Can MacKinnon, who tolerates fools about as much as he tolerates defenders? Can Colorado fans?
Because it’s the brilliance that breaks your heart. The Choo Choo Train, who spent much of the winter in the NHL’s Player Assistance Program, was exemplary this postseason. His nine playoffs goals as of Monday afternoon were tied for the most in the league. His six-game streak of lamp-lighting to open a Cup run is an Avalanche record and fell one shy of the league mark.
When Nichushkin is on his game, he’s a force of nature. A 6-foot-4 speedster, a masterful screener, a power play cheat code, a colossus with soft, careful watchmaker’s hands.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Two straight postseasons. Two straight playoff vanishing acts.
The University of Denver women’s lacrosse team ran into a familiar roadblock Sunday afternoon.
The Northwestern Wildcats eliminated the Pioneers from the NCAA Tournament for the second year in a row, rolling to a 17-4 victory on their home turf in Evanston, Ill.
The No. 1 overall seed netted 13 goals in the first half to take a commanding 10-goal lead into the break, then cruised from there to halt the Pios’ tournament run two wins shy of a return trip to the Final Four.
The Wildcats (16-2) scored the game’s first five goals before Julia Gilbert got DU on the board with a goal with 6:54 left in the first period. Northwestern’s Izzy Scane set a new standard for women’s lacrosse goal-scoring as part of the run, topping Boston College and Duke product Charlotte North’s NCAA record 358 career goals.
Gilbert finished with two goals for DU, while Lauren Black and Sloane Kipp added goals of their own, but it wasn’t near enough to match the reigning national champions’ offensive firepower. Northwestern beat DU 15-7 in last year’s Final Four en route to its eighth national title.
The Pioneers (16-4) reached the NCAA Tournament for the sixth consecutive season, excluding the 2020 COVID year. Thanks to a 13-12 victory over Stanford on Friday, they’ve won at least one tournament game in each of those six trips. They also won the Big East tournament for the fourth year in a row.
MINNEAPOLIS — Nuggets coach Michael Malone was involved in a heated interaction with at least one Timberwolves fan near the visiting bench during an NBA playoff game Friday night.
Two fans at Target Center were escorted away from the sideline by security during the fourth quarter of Game 3 between the Nuggets and Timberwolves, but Malone said he didn’t ask for anyone to be removed from the arena.
“He didn’t like my haircut, and I told him that I like my haircut,” Malone joked. “And we just kind of went from there.”
The Nuggets were on their way to a 117-90 blowout when the incident occurred, involving other team support staff members as well as Malone.
The ninth-year Nuggets coach emphasized that the moment wasn’t a reflection of Minnesota’s home crowd in general.
“That happens at times in a hostile environment, and people get a little liquid courage I guess sometimes,” he said. “And they think they can just say whatever they want to anybody. And I’m not allowing that to happen.”
Tensions have been high between both fanbases and the officiating crews so far in the best-of-seven series, which Minnesota leads 2-1. Frustrations during Game 2 at Ball Arena resulted in Jamal Murray throwing multiple objects in the direction of an official. The lack of suspension for Murray resulted in Minnesota’s crowd booing him throughout Game 3.
“Listen man, these fans here are great,” Malone said. “I mean, that was an amazing atmosphere. You live for moments like that and opportunities like that, to go out there and perform when you’ve got 20,000 people screaming at you. But unfortunately there’s always gonna be people that want to get a little bit more involved in the game, and make it personal. And that’s unfortunate.”
Gabe Landeskog has been joining his Colorado Avalanche teammates on the ice with more regularity in a tracksuit as the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs have progressed. But it doesn’t sound like he’ll be out there in full gear in the immediate future.
Friday is the one-year anniversary of Landeskog’s cartilage transplant surgery in his right knee. The Avs have said the recovery timeline for this procedure is 12 to 16 months.
“Yeah, I don’t think he’s there yet,” Avs coach Jared Bednar said. “He is making progress, though. The work he’s doing both on and off the ice, the intensity is gradually getting greater and greater. So that’s a positive sign. More resistance, harder work. You know, as much as it will allow while still being cautious.”
Landeskog has been skating on his own, sometimes just before the Avalanche practice at Family Sports Center. He’s also progressed from watching practices and morning skates from the bench to joining his teammates, but in an outfit more suited for an assistant coach.
Colorado’s captain has undergone four procedures on his knee since being cut by Cale Makar’s skate in a freak accident during the 2020 playoffs. This is the second consecutive regular season where Landeskog has been unable to play, but the timeline did leave open the possibility that he could rejoin the Avalanche if the club advances deep enough into the 2024 tournament.
Given that Landeskog has now been skating for months, the time he needs to get ready for game action if he does start practicing with the team could be brief — in theory. But given how long he’s been away from live action, it would also make sense if he needs a while once he starts practicing to be ready for NHL playoff-level speed.
“I can’t answer that,” Bednar said when asked how long it might take once he’s cleared to practice. “Yeah, I don’t know. It’s too much of an unknown. … Obviously getting more intensity to the reps he’s doing, the length of time he’s on the ice, the work he’s doing on and off the ice is increasing, so that’s the one positive sign that we have.”
Benn launched. He left his feet. Toews’ head snapped like a crash test dummy. Officials declared it a shoulder-on-shoulder crime and suggested we all move on. To paraphrase my best pal Deion Sanders, that’s some bull junk, right there.
For one, even if the Stars winger was aiming for Toews’ shoulder, at least one angle showed him connecting directly with No. 7’s neck. Which, last I checked, is connected to and immediately south of the head.
“I mean, does he catch a piece of his shoulder? Yeah, I guess you could argue that,” Avs coach Jared Bednar, whose team returns to Denver after a road split at American Airlines Center, replied when I asked about the collision. “But the target is high and it’s at his head, and he makes contact with the head. And I’ve seen, many times, guys get called for the head shot and penalty with a lot less than that. But I guess they didn’t think so.”
Two, Benn knew exactly what he was doing. The Stars knew what he was doing. Dallas coach Pete DeBoer, whose Vegas teams delighted in pushing the Avs around in the postseason, knew darn well.
“Benner has been outstanding in this playoff. I thought against Vegas he did and he did (it) smart,” the Stars boss said late Thursday night. “He did it at the right times and he did it clean. But his presence physically is having an impact for us in these playoffs in a real positive way.’’
In the NFL, Benn’s shot is an ejection, a fine, a suspension and a chat with the safety cops.
In the NHL, it’s a “real positive” presence, a strategic wrinkle in a no-holds-barred, merciless bracket.
The refs decided the hit was at Toews’ shoulder blade and not a head shot. Some slo-mo angles showed otherwise, especially as the D-man pinged off another Dallas player like a rag dol. By the letter of the law, it looked (makes air quotes) “clean.”
But barely legal is still barely.
“It is what it is,” Bednar said. “You’ve got to play through it.”
Once a bully knows they can get away with murder in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, there’s only way to stop a killing spree.
Someone’s gotta pick up the Captain’s spine. Someone’s gotta let Benn know that this won’t stand. And neither will he.
Someone’s gotta pick up Landy’s steel. Landy’s soul.
It’s not in Nathan MacKinnon’s game, bless him. It’s not in Cale Makar’s DNA, although a reactive shove after Toews got clocked landed him in an awkward headlock for a few seconds.
“Hopefully there was no intent into the head,” Avs forward Andrew Cogliano said of the Benn ambush.
Then, instead of walking it back, Cogs walked it forward.
“Maybe there was, obviously, a little bit to the head,” Cogliano added. “But, yeah, I don’t know.”
He knew. Everybody did.
“It’s a physical game this time of year,” Bednar said, “but I just can’t understand how that was not a penalty. Even if it isn’t a five (minute major).”
Join the club. Fortunately, Toews returned to the ice, but Benn needs a break. And a lesson. If the league won’t do it, somebody in burgundy and blue needs to apply a little elbow grease.
During the opening seconds of Saturday night’s matchup, the Minnesota star guard was determined to prove his point.
As the shot clock trickled down on Denver’s opening possession, Murray tried to dance around Edwards but couldn’t break loose. Edwards put the clamps on Murray, preventing the Nuggets point guard from moving left before Denver was called for an offensive three second violation.
In Denver’s 106-99 loss to the Timberwolves in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals, Murray went scoreless in the first half. Nuggets head coach Michael Malone revealed after the game that he didn’t practice the entire week while nursing a calf injury — shedding some light on Murray’s rusty start. But that shouldn’t dismiss Minnesota’s defensive effort on Murray that was essential in taking a 1-0 series lead.
Edwards strapping up Murray to start the game was only the beginning. Murray missed three straight shots before getting sent to the bench as Denver faced an 18-4 deficit with 5:12 to go in the first quarter. The Timberwolves did a solid job at switching up coverages on Murray, putting different defenders on him.
Early in the second quarter, it was Minnesota guard Michael Conley Jr.’s turn. As Murray tried to back down the veteran guard, Conley stood firm. Once Murray realized there was no room to get by or take a fadeaway jumper, he passed the ball to forward Aaron Gordon, who air balled a jumper.
On Denver’s next possession, Murray missed a pull-up jumper. Minutes later, his floater was no good. Murray didn’t score a basket on five attempts in the first half, with three missed shots coming from around the free throw line. It was the first time in his career that Murray was held scoreless in a half of a postseason game.
“(The Timberwolves) know what they are doing in the pick-and-roll, and they put a lot of good defenders on Jamal,” Nuggets big man Nikola Jokic said.
In the second half, Murray finally hit his stride. He scored 17 points on 6-for-9 shooting, as he tried to keep up with the Timberwolves’ offensive surge in the third and fourth quarters. His four-point play, coming on stepback 3-pointer against Karl-Anthony Towns, gave the Nuggets an 81-80 advantage in the fourth quarter.
Eventually, Edwards responded by scoring back-to-back baskets to regain the lead. And Murray couldn’t author the same late-game heroics that produced a pair of game-winning shots against the Lakers in the first round.
“(Minnesota) is physical and (makes) you take tough shots,” Jokic said.
Murray, who didn’t speak with reporters after the game, struggled for long stretches of Denver’s first-round series against L.A. He shot 40% from the floor and 29.4% from the 3-point line in five games. But when he dropped 32 points and made the game-winning shot in Game 5 against the Lakers, Murray briefly quelled concerns over his lingering calf injury.
Unfortunately for Denver, that scoring outburst failed to carry over into the first half against Minnesota. And Murray’s 14 shot attempts were the fewest in a postseason game since 2020.
If Denver is to dig itself out of the 1-0 hole it finds itself in after Saturday night, that will likely have to change when Game 2 arrives Monday night.
“I think in Game 1, we didn’t give him a lot of chances to make quality saves,” Avalanche defenseman Josh Manson told me before Colorado and Georgie wiped out the Whiteoot in Winnipeg with a 6-3 victory late Tuesday. “I felt like a lot of (shots) were going in from the backside or (to) his right, which is tough.
“And then that can rattle your confidence a little bit. But he’s stepped up and just playing like how he can.”
He grounded the Jets for four straight games. He won twice in Manitoba. He rose to the moment. He blocked out the jeers. He stiffed the haters.
Forgive me, Georgie.
This is how Lord Stanley comes home.
Down 3-1 in a best-of-seven series Tuesday, Winnipeg threw everything at the crease that wasn’t nailed down. The Jets blistered Georgiev with 19 shots in the second period alone. They came away with one goal to show for it.
Game 1: Seven goals against. Games 2-5: Eight goals. Combined.
Forgive me, Georgie.
This is starting to look familiar.
Remember that opening-round whupping of Nashville two years ago? The one where the Avs outscored the Predators 21-9 in four games? The one that got Colorado’s Stanley Cup party train off the platform and rolling toward Union Station?
As first impressions go, this series victory was the more impressive of the two.
Winnipeg had home ice. Winnipeg had momentum. Winnipeg had mojo. Winnipeg had arguably the top team defense in the NHL. Winnipeg had the best goaltender in the Western Conference. The ’22 Preds were forced to roll out rookie backup Connor Ingram to defend the net, effectively ending that fight before it ever really got started.
The Stanley Cup champs two years ago averaged 5.25 goals in smashing Smashville. Against Connor Hellebuyck, the Vezina Trophy finalist who’d shut them out on April 13 at Ball Arena, they averaged 5.6 goals per game.
Forgive me, Georgie.
This stuff is historic.
The Avs became just the fourth team in NHL history to notch at least five goals in the first five games of a series. The Jets became the first club to ever allow five or more games in each of their opening five playoff tilts.
Cynics will cite the bloody cut last week that knocked Jets defenseman Brenden Dillon out of the series. They’ll point to the nasty shot that Winnipeg center Vladislav Namestnikov took to the head, shelving him for Game 5.
Yet they were both good to go in Game 1. The Avs scored six.
They looked fine in Game 2 and Game 3. The Avs scored five. Then six again.
Forgive me, Georgie.
This is deep.
Every line brought the heat. And a mean streak. Precedent says Colorado’s Stanley Cup run will probably go as far as the bottom-six forwards can carry it. If Tuesday was any harbinger of what’s to come, best find a comfy chair.
About five-and-a-half minutes into the second period, the score tied at 1-all, fourth-line center Yakov Trenin put down a marker and laid down the law. Trenin was one of GM Chris MacFarland’s under-the-radar deadline pickups, a banger from Nashville, a 6-foot-2 grinder who got swept away by the Avs two years ago.
The Russian pretty much single-handedly badgered his way from behind the net to the corner of Hellebuyck’s left eye, out-hustling at least two Jets defenders to a loose puck, staying with the play through contact, and whipping the biscuit past Bucky for a 2-1 Colorado lead.
Forgive me, Georgie.
This is how you flip the script.
Steel between the ears.
Stone between the pipes.
“Have you ever seen a guy flip a switch in just a few days the way Georgiev has?” a reporter asked Manson after Game 4.
He pondered for a second.
“I don’t think so.” Manson replied. “I think that’s a really tough job for goalies to have to do that. And kudos to him.”
Leave it to the Rockies to ruin a couple of storybook endings.
In one of the worst meltdowns in recent memory, the Rockies blew a 5-0 lead in the ninth inning and lost 7-6 to the woeful Marlins in 10 innings Tuesday night at loanDepot park.
In losing again, the Rockies became the first team since 1900 to trail in each of its first 29 games. The Rockies lost to Houston on Sunday, joining the 1910 St. Louis Browns as the only teams to trail in each of their first 28 games.
“That was a tough one … we shot ourselves in the foot,” manager Bud Black said.
The Rockies nearly dodged ignominy. Ryan McMahon hit an RBI double to right to score Sean Bouchard to give the Rockies a 6-5 lead in the top of the ninth, but the Marlins scored twice in the bottom of the frame off left-hander Jalen Beeks.
Bryan De La Cruz hit an RBI double off Beeks to score pinch runner Tim Anderson, tying the game at 6-all. Then Dane Myers punched a single to right fielder Hunter Goodman, who made a perfect throw to the plate, but catcher Elias Diaz couldn’t handle the throw, and Anderson scrambled around Diaz and tagged the plate with his hand for the winning run.
Black told reporters in Miami, ” ‘Goody’ made a good play, but ‘Ellie’ couldn’t handle it.”
All of that carnage on a night when Jordan Beck was impressive in his major league debut, Ryan Feltner nearly pitched a shutout, and Elehuris Montero blasted a rare home run on the road.
But the Rockies suffered an epic and ugly ninth-inning collapse in a game featuring the National League’s two worst teams. Colorado, swept by the Astros in Mexico City last weekend, tumbled to 7-22. The Marlins, losers of seven straight games entering Tuesday, improved to 7-24.
Feltner, who had flashed potential numerous times in his career, gave up only three harmless singles over the first eight innings. But in the ninth, Vidal Brujan led off with a single, Feltner plunked Christian Bethancourt, and Luis Arraez ripped an RBI double to right, scoring Brujan.
That was it for Feltner, who was clearly unhappy when Black lifted him from the game. In came closer Justin Lawrence, who immediately melted down.
In quick succession, Miami’s Bryan De La Cruz drew a walk, Dane Myers hit a two-run single, Josh Bell singled to load the bases, and Lawrence, lacking any semblance of command, hit Jesus Sanches to drive in another run.
The Marlins tied the game, 5-5, on Emmanuel Rivera’s sacrifice fly to right. That was it for Lawrence. Black summoned Beeks to try and stop the avalanche of trouble. He did, at least for two-thirds of an inning, striking out Nick Gordon and getting Christian Bethancourt to fly out.
Beck, the highly touted outfield prospect, made his big league debut and hit 2 for 4. Starting in left field and hitting eighth, Beck singled in the first off right-hander Sixto Sanchez and added another single in the sixth off right-hander Declan Cronin.
“Just take the moment in, take a deep breath, look around and be where my feet are,” Beck told reporters about his first day with the Rockies. “A lot of people say write it down, what it feels like, don’t forget it. There are a lot of things that you want to remember from this day and carry on into the future.”
The first pitch Beck saw in his major league career was a ball, well outside the strike zone. The second pitch was a slider over the inside of the plate, and Beck lined the ball to center field for his first hit.
The Rockies scored all but one of their runs in the first off Sanchez. Ezequiel Tovar led off with a double and advanced to third on Brenton Doyle’s sacrifice bunt. McMahon singled in Tovar and advanced to second on Diaz’s groundout.
Charlie Blackmon, who entered the game in a deep funk, slashing .119/.159/.143 over his last 12 games, drove in McMahon with a single to right. Then Brendan Rodgers singled up the middle, setting the table for Montero’s 409-foot, three-run homer.
Colorado had only three hits after the first inning, but with Feltner on the mound, it didn’t matter until the ninth and 10th innings.
Still, Feltner said he let his team down.
“It will take a while for me to think about my performance,” the right-hander told Rockies.TV. “I just think right now that I let the team down. I’ve got to finish off that ninth inning. I’ve never been in that position before, and now I’m hungry to get back there.”
Wednesday’s pitching matchup
Rockies RHP Dakota Hudson (0-4, 6.57 ERA) at Marlins TBA
4:40 p.m. Wednesday, loanDepot park
TV: Rockies.TV (streaming); Comcast/Xfinity (channel 1262); DirecTV (683); Spectrum (130, 445, 305, 435 or 445, depending on region).
Radio: 850 AM/94.1 FM
Hudson is still searching for his first victory in a Rockies uniform. There’s a good chance it will come on Wednesday because the right-hander has a good track record vs. Miami. In six career appearances against the Marlins (three starts), he is 2-0 with a 3.54 ERA. He’s 1-0 with a 2.19 ERA in four career appearances (one start) in Miami. Hudson, however, had a rough time in his last start this season. Although the Rockies beat the Padres 10-9 at Coors Field, he allowed six runs on six hits with four walks over 3 1/3 innings. He did not factor in the decision.
Pitching probables
Thursday: Rockies RHP Peter Lambert (2-1, 4.67) at Marlins RHP Edward Cabrera (1-1, 5.28), 10:10 a.m.
Friday: Rockies RHP Cal Quantrill (0-3, 5.34) at Pirates LHP Martin Perez (1-1, 2.86), 4:40 p.m.
After eliminating the Los Angeles Lakers from the postseason for the second straight year, the Denver Nuggets will have to do the same to the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round of the Western Conference playoffs.
The Nuggets took down Minnesota in five game in last year’s first round. Now they meet in the second round after the T-Wolves put the finishing touches on a four-game sweep of the Phoenix Suns on Sunday night.
Game 1 of the best-of-seven series between Denver and Minnesota is set for Saturday at a to-be-determined time.
The Timberwolves’ sweep of the Suns marked the first time Minnesota has won a playoff series in 20 years. They will now meet the Nuggets in the playoffs for just the second time in franchise history.
A solid grade for Denver on two fronts and with one caveat. The Broncos hit a position of need at No. 76 overall in Utah edge rusher Jonah Elliss. They also stayed patient. After picking at No. 12 instead of trading back Thursday, the only way to move up from No. 76 in a meaningful way would have been to deal a player or dip into 2025 draft capital. Instead, Denver held on to its assets and picked a player with the skillset to help early — if he stays healthy. Some risk there given Elliss’ shoulder and hamstring issues, but a solid bet to make deep into Day 2.
Ryan McFadden, Broncos beat writer
Grade: B
Elliss plays with a high-motor, a trait that helped him collect 12 sacks in his final season at Utah. He will need to improve as a run defender, and his shoulder injury, which forced him to not work out at the scouting combine, is a bit concerning. But Elliss has the potential to be a solid rotational player as a rookie who could develop into a starter on the edge in the future.
Troy Renck, sports columnist
Grade: B
Utah’s Jonah Elliss brings energy and intensity to the edge. He has good hands, but needs to add more counter moves to his arsenal. He likely will need to bulk up to help him support the run. He profiles as a sub package pass rusher as a rookie for a group that hasn’t had a player reach double-digit sacks since 2018. That is too much to ask for as a rookie, but his ceiling suggests it is possible by Year 3 as he grows into a full-time role.
Sean Keeler, sports columnist
Grade: B
Troy Franklin? No? Anyone? Elliss is fine — lean, mean, great bloodlines. If you love your edge-rushers with a no-quit engine, you’re going to love this guy. His first-down, short-yardage mileage is still TBD, but Luther’s kid won’t be awed by the stage. Or by Patrick Mahomes. Promise you that.
Matt Schubert, sports editor
Grade: C+
The Broncos pass rush needs help. That much is true. Jonah Elliss has the pedigree (dad, Luther, could play) and the production (16.5 sacks at Utah). But it sure would’ve been nice to give first-round pick Bo Nix an extra weapon on offense — especially with so many good ones still on the board.
LOS ANGELES — They showered Darvin Ham with boos as the coach was introduced before opening tip. They bombarded him with more pointed chants before time expired in an otherwise lifeless building.
“Fire Darvin!”
But is this Ham’s fault? D’Angelo Russell’s? The bench’s? All of the above? The Nuggets have infiltrated Los Angeles and sowed instability within an American institution. The Lakers’ superstar foundation is crumbling under the overwhelming pressure of Denver’s starting lineup, which is on the verge of securing a second playoff sweep of Los Angeles in as many seasons.
“To beat a team like that in the first round, who I think if seeded differently, they could make it to the Western Conference Finals or something like that, it’s definitely a challenge,” Peyton Watson said. “But we’re up to it every time, and we love going out there and winning games.”
With every successive win — every identical win — the unthinkable becomes closer to reality. The Nuggets might just own the Lakers.
If they finish the job Saturday in Game 4, they’ll accomplish what not even the Steph Curry-Kevin Durant Warriors could, eliminating LeBron James via sweep two years in a row. Golden State needed five games in 2017.
“They do not have a weakness offensively,” James said. “… Definitely one of the better teams that I’ve played in my career.”
Maybe Denver will need five games in 2024. But if there’s any reason to believe that now, it’s this: The Nuggets are clearly a danger to themselves in this matchup. They are prone to stretches, even entire halves, of complacency against an opponent that can’t hold a lead against them. The ongoing 11-game win streak features six double-digit comebacks.
“I think in this job as a coach, you always have to put on the hat of, ‘We have to fight human nature.’ And how do you do that when you’ve beaten a team 10 times in a row?” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said before Game 3, a 112-105 victory. “… Well, we’ve been down 12, we’ve been down 20. We’ve lost the first quarter of both games. We’ve been down at halftime in both games. That’s cool in your home building when you have that crowd behind you, but now it’s just us.”
Those turned out to be hollow words. Denver spotted Los Angeles an 8-0 lead that grew to 12 before everyone other than Aaron Gordon decided to take Game 3 seriously.
What followed was a 24-point swing between the second and third quarters. Like clockwork.
“To be honest, I think every game is tougher and tougher,” Nikola Jokic said. “You can see, they were up 20 in Denver, in Game 2. They were up 12 today in the first half. But yeah, I think it’s really hard to play against the same team over and over again. You kind of get bored with the style of the play or whatever. So you just need to — especially for us, because we won the last three — just trust what we are doing and don’t get bored with success. Because it can (go) wrong really quick.”
Michael Porter Jr. (1) of the Denver Nuggets knocks down a mid-range jumper over Anthony Davis (3) of the Los Angeles Lakers during the fourth quarter of the Nuggets’ 112-105 win at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Thursday, April 25, 2024. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
The Nuggets are so bored of this matchup that they’ve inadvertently become thrill-seekers, dangling a win in front of the Lakers every night only to pull it out of reach at the last second when Anthony Davis tries to snatch it.
Moments of redemption for the Lakers are short-lived against Denver. Davis’s dominant first half against Jokic in Game 2 was forgotten because he didn’t score in the fourth quarter. Russell’s 23-point bounce-back was superseded by his scoreless Game 3. In the first and third games, he combined to shoot 6 for 27.
The variations of a Los Angeles second unit have failed to take any advantage of Jokic’s rest minutes. Before Game 3, Taurean Prince was the only Lakers bench player who’d scored a point in the series. Nothing from Spencer Dinwiddie. Nothing from Gabe Vincent.
They finally contributed more offense in Game 3 — but the bench was still an inefficient 8 for 19 en route to 19 points.
Davis has been the Lakers’ best player according to the box scores. Los Angeles is plus-25 points with him on the floor in the first halves of these three games — and minus-41 with him on the floor in the second halves.
“This team’s been having the type of run they’ve had against our ball club; I think it’s just a lot of disappointment,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “Have to do a better job of staying focused, staying positive throughout it all, because again, you have those disappointment moments, what we call disappointment lags — that disappointment can spill over two, three, four possessions. And you see that someone makes a mistake, drop our heads, and we start jogging back instead of sprinting. But we have to fight through all of that. This is a hell of a team. … They push you to the limit in order to try and beat them.”
Moreover, the Nuggets push themselves to the limit in order to beat the Lakers. Not because they have to; because they can.
The gut reaction to this pick is going to be almost entirely driven by the strength of trust in Sean Payton to pick a quarterback. The fact that Nix was the sixth of the perceived top six selected Thursday will either prove Payton and the Broncos’ evaluation process to be a terrific one or it will end up looking like desperation. That makes Nix, far from a sure bet to turn into an upper-echelon player at the NFL level, a fascinating case study going forward.
Ryan McFadden, Broncos beat writer
Grade: B-
Going into the draft, it felt like Denver couldn’t walk away without a quarterback. But taking Bo Nix at No. 12 seems like a reach. Unless the Broncos thought the Raiders would take him at No. 13, they could’ve tried to obtain more picks and still taken Nix after trading back. Nix fits Sean Payton’s offense, and his experience (61 college starts) gives him a chance to be a Week 1 starter. But Broncos Country will need to put its full trust in Payton that he knows something that others don’t.
Troy Renck, sports columnist
Grade: B
There was no way the Broncos could rationalize leaving the first round without a quarterback. The AFC demands it. In Nix, Sean Payton landed a quarterback with maturity, intelligence, a quick release and a talent for avoiding sacks. Is he Drew Brees? That’s not fair. But could an athletic game manager be capable of keeping the offense on schedule? Yes. The USC game film provides reason to believe. His Auburn career creates pause. But at some point, you have to trust Payton. And all he’s done is stake his legacy to Nix.
Sean Keeler, sports columnist
Grade: B+
Is the kid a reach at 12? Yup. Is Michael Penix Jr. better? Yup. Not every NFL braintrust loves Bo Nix as much as Sean Payton did, but that’s OK. Even if Nix is more Checkdown Charlie than Drew Brees II, this was a statement of intent. On Day 1, the Broncos didn’t come away from the best QB draft in ages empty-handed. You don’t get big victories in this league without making some small ones first.
Matt Schubert, sports editor
Grade: B
Oh, to be a fly on the wall in Broncos headquarters Thursday night. Was Bo Nix the Broncos’ guy all along? Or did Atlanta turn this thing upside down when it took Michael Penix Jr. at No. 8? It’ll be a long time before we get answers to those questions — if ever. Brock Bowers may very well spend the next eight years shredding the Broncos defense in silver and black. And he was right there for the taking at No. 12. Get ready for that to be one of the many measurements of success with this pick.
Saylor Swanson says it so casually you can almost miss it.
“I’ve always pictured myself playing quarterback,” Swanson, an Arvada West High junior, said Wednesday morning at the Broncos’ training facility.
She has been, really, for the past two years playing flag football in CHSAA’s pilot program.
She will be this fall, too, but in a slightly different capacity. She’ll be the quarterback for her team’s varsity program after Colorado on Tuesday became the 11th state to make girls flag football a sanctioned high school sport.
On Wednesday, Broncos owner Carrie Walton Penner, team executives and CHSSA commissioner Mike Krueger talked about the journey to get to this point, but also about what comes next.
Broadly, it’s a similar set of feelings for Swanson and the players as it is for the people tasked with implementing the sport and growing it around the state. It’ll be similar to the past two years in some ways, bigger in some ways and exciting all the same. And there’s plenty of work and growth ahead.
“I’m so glad it’s actually taken off,” Saylor said. “I played football when I was a little kid with my brothers and I’ve always wanted to play. I never expected it to be an option. I played co-ed when I was younger and I kind of quit because the boys were getting rough and I was the only girl.
“I’ve always wanted to play for an all-girls team and high school, playing with my friends, it’s just so awesome.”
The Broncos made it clear that the organization will be part of the next phase, too. They’ll continue providing funding and the team’s vice president of community impact and Denver Broncos Foundation executive director Allie Engelken also said they’ll provide education on grant opportunities through Nike, USA Football and other resources available to schools.
“We’re excited to continue to support this sport this season and beyond,” Engelken said. “We do that through not only financial commitment for schools as well as high-impact for youth, but also through a lot of programmatic elements.”
As it pertains to girls flag football, Engelken said those include, “officials and referee recruitment and training. Coaches clinics and sanctioning. Ensuring coaches feel prepared to coach an emerging sport. That includes a regional NFL Flag tournament. … that will continue in partnership with the NFL.
“We see our opportunity for support to continue to grow.”
Krueger noted many school districts face tight budgets in the first place — ”I’ve yet to talk to an athletic director who calls me and says, ‘I’m trying to figure out what to do with all the money I have,’” he said – but expressed confidence that girls flag football is well worth the relatively modest investment.
“The neat thing about girls flag football and flag football in general is that the barriers to it are not hard to overcome,” Krueger said. “It doesn’t take a lot of equipment. The jamboree styles that were incorporated, I know in talking to my colleges across the state — the athletic and activities directors — when you can run three games on one full-sized, 120-yard field, that makes the facility availability and equipment cost (more manageable) and you don’t need 30 or 40 people out there to have a team.”
Not only that, but the data collected so far shows more than half of the pilot program participants weren’t playing another fall sport. To Engelken and the others here Wednesday, that suggests the sport is poised to provide not only an alternate avenue but a new path altogether for girls around the state.
“That’s why this moment matters,” Walton Penner said. “It matters for every girl who loves football but has never seen a place for herself. It matters for every student who has watched others find their passion. For every high school kid looking for her team, her community, her people, this matters.”
Rescuing Zach Wilson is smart. Stopping at Zach Wilson is hubris.
As a quarterback, Wilson’s merely appetizer material. If the NFL draft is still serving Bo Nix or Michael Penix Jr. as a main course, and at a reasonable cost, the Broncos would be crazy not to bite.
A QB room consisting of Wilson, Jarrett Stidham, Ben DiNucci and a seventh-round flier to be named late would be the worst in the division (pending Raiderfoonery ). And arguably the worst in an AFC that’s still loaded with franchise signal-callers.
In isolation, though, you get it. Landing Wilson from the Jets with a seventh-round pick for a sixth-rounder is a solid, low-cap, low-risk move. It just better not be the only one, at least where the quarterback is concerned.
After Russell Wilson took the money and ran, the best thing the Broncos could do at QB1 right now is open this competition to the masses. Bring in as many bodies as you can afford until one of them actually sticks.
On one hand, the kid did beat Russell Wilson, head-to-head, at Empower Field as a visiting QB with the Jets twice in two trips since September 2022.
On the other, what the heck does that say?
If you look at Zach Wilson’s 30 career starts against anyone not named the Broncos, he’s sported a 10-20 record, thrown 23 touchdowns and 22 picks, and completed 17 passes per game at a clip of 56.5%.
Wiser football heads, old coaches and scouts texted me Monday to say they still see a spark in Zach Wilson, that nobody could’ve walked away from the dumpster fire that is the J-E-T-S without some second-degree burns. That maybe Broncos QB Whisperer Sean Payton — Russell Wilson notwithstanding — is the sensei who winds up bringing it out of the guy, the way he brought it out of Drew Brees, Teddy Bridgewater and Kerry Collins, another top-5 bust in his early days with Carolina.
Although with the latter, it’s worth noting that Collins went 16-9 as a starter over his first two seasons with the Panthers, pre-Payton. He even made a Pro Bowl during his second season in the league before things went south. Wilson, at a similar stage in his career, hasn’t come anywhere close to that.
As depth, though, he works. As insurance, he fits. If anything, it means Payton and GM George Paton don’t have to feel forced to sell whatever farm is left in order to try to swoop into one of the top 5 picks in the draft. It probably also means that they’re not sure if they’ve got the capital to even pull that off.
Unless the tank for 2025 — a reality show of Shedeur Sanders, Deion Sanders and Peyton would be more theater than these mountains could handle — is truly on, Wilson helps a QB room. He doesn’t complete it. Add Penix or Nix to that mix, though? Now you’re cookin’ with gas.
Wilson is the banana bread French toast at Panzano, the mac & cheese at Nola Jane. A great first bite. But if he’s the last, this off-season is going to leave Broncos Country with a familiar, empty feeling in their guts.
The Winnipeg Jets know it. John Buccigross knows it. The moose wandering around south Manitoba know it. Over his last six appearances, dating back to April 5, Georgiev’s given up 29 goals. Bednar, the Avs’ venerated coach, isn’t just running out of options here. He’s running out of time.
Winnipeg put seven more past No. 40 in Game 1 of their Stanley Cup Playoff series Sunday, roughly a week after peppering him for a touchdown and extra point at Ball Arena.
This time, it took two periods for Georgiev to become Fourgiev. It took three for him to become Sevengiev.
Yes, when the other guys put seven on your tab, it’s a group fail. The hope was that the Burgundy and Blue had a postseason gear they could shift to. That Bednar’s porous, sloppy defense over the last three weeks would flip a switch.
Guess what? No gear. No switch. They are what they were. They need a guy between the pipes who can bail them out.
Georgie ain’t it.
With 5:20 left, down 7-5, the Avs had outshot Winnipeg 36-19, per NaturalStatTrick.com, and produced 10 “high-danger” chances to the Jets’ 8. What does all that mean? In terms of “expected goals,” per the site’s metrics, with a typical netminder, the Avs should’ve been leading 3-1 or 3-2 at the time.
Nothing about this is typical anymore. What doubles the hurt is that the Avs came out firing right from the jump, getting off 11 shots in the first 10 minutes to Winnipeg’s one. They managed a 1-0 lead for their trouble. It lasted all of 112 seconds.
More galling is that Colorado had a pivotal road game — since 2018, the Avs have won six of seven series in which they’ve notched a Game 1 victory — rocking at their pace of choice. Up and down, PlayStation style. “NHL 94” with the “icing” and “fatigue” sliders switched to off.
Alas, this is reality, not your frat bro’s basement. Although Game 1’s first period was so crazy, both goaltenders played as if they were wearing straitjackets. Six goals, seven giveaways, 22 shots and zero sanity.
What happens when a team with playoff scars and playoff skill but leaky goaltending (the Avs) meets a team with postseason nerves but one of the best net-minders on the planet (the Jets)? The opening 16 minutes of Colorado-Winnipeg, a ride with more twists than a David Fincher flick.
Down 1-0, the hosts scored twice in 3:55 to take a 1-goal lead. The Avs scored twice in 18 seconds for a 3-2 cushion. Which lived on for about 48 seconds until Mark Scheifle, camping out in front of Georgiev, slipped behind Josh Manson and slotted past the Colorado goalie to square things at 3-all.
“I don’t know if he’s going to be healthy enough to play or not,” Bednar told reporters Sunday. “He wasn’t healthy enough to play (Game 1). We’ll see what we see (Monday) morning.”
The more you think about it, the more depressing it becomes. The Avs pounded Winnipeg goalie Connor Hellebuyck, your likely Vezina winner, with six goals — on his home ice. It was the first time Bucky’s ever been tagged for more than five in the postseason. And only the third time over his last 130 starts.
Still wasn’t enough.
“GEORRRRRR-GIEV!” the Jets fans jeered.
“GEORRRRRR-GIEV!”
They know it, too. When the game didn’t find Manson, it found Georgie. If he’s in the net Tuesday, the Avs are going to find themselves halfway to Cancun.
Michael Porter Jr. said he received individual texts from Nuggets teammates checking on him after a difficult week in his personal life. His brother Coban, 22, was sentenced to six years in prison Friday for killing a woman in a drunk driving crash last year. And his brother Jontay, 24, was banned for life from the NBA earlier in the week after being investigated in a sports betting scandal.
“Each one of them texted me separately and just told me they’ve got my back. If I need anything, they’ve got me,” Porter said Saturday night after a 114-103 Game 1 win at Ball Arena. “Yeah, a lot of people were reaching out. Friends, family. So to have these guys understand why I missed practice yesterday and just have my back has been big for me.”
Porter’s absence from practice Friday was because he appeared in court that morning for Coban’s sentencing hearing. MPJ addressed the family of the victim, Kathy Limon Rothman, in the courtroom, saying, “I understand your family’s pain and hurt.”
In his return to basketball Saturday, he registered 19 points and eight rebounds against the Lakers.
“We’re human, so we carry our emotions and the things that go on off the court onto the court,” Porter said. “But I’m mentally tough. I’ve been through a lot through my whole career, so it was just another one of those things that I had to try to play through.”
Jontay Porter was on a two-way deal with the Raptors’ organization when he allegedly shared information about his health with an individual he knew to be a sports bettor March 20. After another sports bettor subsequently placed an $80,000 parlay bet that Porter would underperform in Toronto’s game that night, Porter played only three minutes, claiming he felt ill. A league investigation also found Porter placed bets on NBA games, including one wager on the Raptors to lose a game.
When the investigation first came to light, Michael Porter Jr. said he doubted that his brother would jeopardize his career by gambling on games.
“Definitely tried to compartmentalize,” Michael Porter Jr. said Saturday. “Some bad and sad stuff happened to a couple of my brothers. But I’ve got 15, 16 more brothers in here. So I knew I had to be there for them. And come in here and do my job and try to prepare to do it at a high level.”