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Tag: preps

  • Colorado youth wrestling is growing, and it’s showing at 2026 state tournament

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    Deanna Betterman chuckled at the simple notion of her kids spending extended time away from a wrestling mat.

    “What’s the offseason schedule like?” the Sand Creek High wrestling coach was asked Friday morning, as the mats at Ball Arena began to bustle again.

    “There is no offseason,” Betterman said.

    This weekend, three wrestlers from Sand Creek High, a public school in Colorado Springs, advanced to or beyond the girls’ 4A semifinals of the Colorado state wrestling championships at Ball. All three wrestle for a girls’ program in its very first season of existence. All three, improbably, are freshmen: Peggy Dean (100 pounds), Stella Isensee (105 pounds), and Karris Carter (130 pounds). All three came by way of the Betterman Elite Wrestling Club, a youth academy in Colorado Springs run by Betterman’s husband Joe, a former Team USA wrestler.

    Sand Creek wrestlers only actually attend classes in person on Monday and Wednesday during the school year, Betterman said. On Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, they arrive at the Betterman Elite gym at 8 a.m., practice from 9-11, shower, eat lunch, do online classes, and then have a second training session at 4:30 p.m. They take roughly one month off from this schedule in August. Last spring, the academy sent Dean and others — then in eighth grade — to Tallin, Estonia, for the largest wrestling tournament in Europe.

    Dean won a gold medal.

    “When we’re looking at the big goals, we’re looking at the Olympics for Peggy Dean, Karris Carter, all those girls,” Betterman said. “So these are just little stepping stones we’re hitting. We don’t put a lot of pressure on winning state titles and these little things.

    “Those little things just happen, when you have those high expectations, and those high goals.”

    Peggy Dean of Sand Creek works a takedown on Lilly Lundy of Lewis-Palmer during their Colorado State Wrestling Championships semifinal match at Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026. Dean won by way of a 15-0 technical fall. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Youth movement

    Sand Creek’s triumvirate of prodigies is just a microcosm, truly, of a wide array of younger contenders at the 2026 state wrestling championships this weekend. Eleven different freshmen wrestlers advanced to the semifinals at Ball Arena in the 5A boys’ and girls’ brackets alone.

    It’s indicative of a larger trend in Colorado and beyond. To be a powerhouse wrestling program, schools “have to have a feeder program,” as Betterman said — a youth club in the area that can pipe in young talent ready to reach a state stage from Day 1.

    “Back in my day, it was the local tournaments,” said 37-year-old Pueblo East head coach Tyler Lundquist. “Now the guys are in bigger buildings than this from 5 years old, until they’re in high school. So the show’s not too big for them, most of these guys.”

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    Luca Evans

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  • Brihanna Crittendon breaks CHSAA’s all-time basketball scoring record, passing Tracy Hill’s 43-year-old mark of 2,934 points

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    THORNTON — Brihanna Crittendon has rewritten Colorado hoops history.

    The Riverdale Ridge senior broke CHSAA’s all-time scoring mark on Saturday, passing Tracy Hill’s tally of 2,934 points that stood for 43 years. Crittendon scored a fast-break lay-up in the third quarter against Monarch to move beyond Hill, an ex-Ridgway star.

    When Crittendon banked in the decisive shot, Hill — who drove about six hours from the Western Slope to see the consequential game — sat courtside cheering her on. Then the two embraced at midcourt during the Riverdale Ridge timeout that followed, the scoring torch passing from one great to another amid a standing ovation.

    Riverdale Ridge senior Brihanna Crittendon (3) scores on a layup to become the all-time leading scorer in Colorado high school basketball history during a game against Monarch on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, at Riverdale Ridge High School in Thornton, Colo. Tracy Hill held the previous record of 2,934 points for 43 years. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    “It’s exciting, it’s amazing, and the record is not necessarily something I’ve worked for, but it’s something that has been a result of all the work I’ve put in the last four years,” Crittendon said. “It’s really meaningful to add my name to the top of the list, because I never thought this would be a possibility when I first started my high school career.”

    Crittendon’s scoring feat marked the pinnacle of a prep career that’s lived up to the hype from the very start. In her high school debut on Dec. 6, 2022, the do-everything guard/forward scorched Severance for 32 points on 16 of 18 from the field.

    Deric Yaussi, the Severance coach at the time who is now at Loveland, recalled pulling out all the stops to limit the phenom freshman.

    None of it worked, a common theme for those who have coached against the University of Texas-bound superstar.

    “Coming into the game, I heard a lot about how good she was,” Yaussi recalled. “So I put my best defender on her the entire game. We double-teamed her, we had a third defender shadow her. But she didn’t flinch. She passed out of the double-teams. She looked like a senior out there, poised and controlled.

    “… To drop 32 in her first game, I knew she was going to be very special. And when we played her when she was a sophomore (and she scored 28), I laughed with my players afterwards like, ‘Hey girls, we held her under 30 points! We did it!’

    Crittendon lit up Class 4A in her first two seasons, a run that culminated with the program’s first state championship in 2024. Crittendon set the state scoring record for a freshman with 811 points, then set the state scoring record for a sophomore with 809 points.

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    Kyle Newman

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs transfers wonder what 2025 under Deion Sanders would’ve looked like if they stayed: ‘They missed out’

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    Noah Fenske had his luggage with him Saturday. It wasn’t Louis.

    “Just Under Armour,” the former CU Buffs offensive lineman texted me from his vacation in Nashville.

    While on the road with his fiancée, Fenske’s also been keeping an eye on an old CU teammate, Alex Harkey. Oregon’s starting right tackle? Yeah, he used to be a Buff.

    Harkey, a 6-foot-6, 327-pound redshirt senior, is prepping for a Friday night showdown with Indiana — and another former CU player, the Hoosiers’ Kahlil Benson — in one College Football Playoff semifinal. The Ducks’ bruiser helped Oregon put up 245 passing yards and convert four fourth-down conversions on The Best Defense Money Can Buy, blanking Texas Tech 23-0 in the Orange Bowl.

    He’d transferred into CU as a 305-pounder out of Tyler (Texas) Junior College, a 3-star who was weighing offers from Middle Tennessee and Old Dominion. After appearing in 12 games, largely as a reserve guard, Harkey was one of the kids from CU’s 2022 recruiting class swept out in the great Deion Sanders roster purge during the spring of 2023.

    Fenske, who played in seven games with the Buffs in ’22, was Harkey’s roommate at CU. He got swept away, too. Under Armour was out, Louis Vuitton luggage was in.

    “(Harkey has) done incredible, man,” Fenske gushed. “Because when he first came in (to CU), he wasn’t what he is now. And just seeing his transformation from being a (backup) guard on a 1-11 team to being a first-round or second-round (NFL) draft pick …”

    Big Alex could play. So could wideout Jordyn Tyson (Arizona State). And cornerback Simeon Harris (Fresno State). And quarterback Owen McCown, once he’d had some more brisket. McCown, who played as a wafer-thin true freshman at CU in ’22, threw for 30 touchdowns at UTSA this past fall — including three in a 57-20 win over Florida International in the First Responder Bowl.

    “We just stay connected, support each other’s success,” Harris, who still belongs to a group chat of former Buffs, told me over the weekend. “You’ve got to expect the unexpected. That (purge) hit us all in the mouth.”

    CU fans talk a lot — a lot — about 1-11 in 2022. About rock bottom. About Coach Prime lighting the candle for the climb out of obscurity.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Fossil Ridge aims to topple Valor Christian’s volleyball dynasty in Denver Coliseum

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    The “what could have been” still stings.

    Two years ago, the Fossil Ridge SaberCats had dynastic Valor Christian in deep trouble. In the fifth and deciding set, Fossil Ridge led Valor 11-8 and was on the brink of a major upset. But the Eagles won seven of the last eight points to capture their second consecutive Class 5A state volleyball championship.

    Now, the SaberCats, stocked with college-bound talent, have a chance to avenge that loss when it matters most.

    The ‘Cats entered this year’s tournament with a 23-2 record and the No. 1 seed, having secured it with a four-set win over Valor on Oct. 14. The ‘Cats ended Valor’s run of 72 consecutive victories that dated all the way back to the 2021 state tournament.

    But Fossil Ridge’s streak-stopper won’t mean much if it doesn’t hoist the championship trophy on Saturday night at the Denver Coliseum.

    “We still look back on that loss (in 2023) and it sucks, it still hurts,” said Fossil Ridge senior and Wyoming commit Emery Johnson. “So this is a huge chance for us.”

    The SaberCats’ only two losses this fall came in an out-of-state tournament, and they had dropped only eight sets all season going into this weekend’s tournament. That number was still at eight after their second-round sweep of ninth-seed Pine Creek (25-9, 25-9, 25-18) on the first day of competition Thursday.

    But to win a championship, Fossil Ridge will likely have to topple mighty Valor in the finals. The second-seeded Eagles (22-2) are playing for history. Last year, they won their third consecutive state championship, becoming the first team to win three titles in a row in Colorado’s largest classification since Evergreen won eight straight titles from 1978 to 1985.

    “It’s a challenge for us,” first-year Fossil Ridge coach Kayla Afoa said. “Valor is a very well-coached team. They’re very gritty and they know they’re legit.”

    However, Afoa’s SaberCats feature a talented team that grew up playing together for the NORCO Volleyball Club, based in Loveland. Bringing some recognition to northern Colorado’s volleyball scene gives the players some extra incentive.

    “We want to show that northern Colorado volleyball is just as elite as Denver,” said 6-foot-5 senior middle blocker Olivia Ewing, who’s headed to Colorado State on a volleyball scholarship.

    Her older sister, Delaney, is a Fossil Ridge graduate who lost to Valor in that classic 2023 championship match. Delaney now plays for Florida State.

    This season’s Fossil Ridge team has five players who played in that excruciating loss to Valor in ’23: Senior libero Trinity Burchett, who’s headed to Colorado Mesa; senior outside hitter Alyssa Cottingham, who’s debating her college options; junior middle blocker Ella Wilson, who’s committed to Idaho State; and Johnson and Ewing.

    “It would just mean everything to win it this year,” Ewing said.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • CHSAA state football playoffs: How the first round played out in Class 5A and 4A

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    Class 5A

    No. 17 Fountain-Fort Carson won at No. 16 Cherokee Trail, 14-7: The Trojans (8-3) advanced in the state playoffs for the fifth time in six years, thanks in part to a critical fourth-and-short stop deep in their own territory in the second half. The Cougars (4-7) tied the game in the second quarter on a fourth-down touchdown from junior Nico Mavromat, but FFC opened the second half with a TD drive on its first possession and held CT at bay after that. Next week: at No. 1 Cherry Creek (10-0), TBA

    No. 24 Westminster (8-2) at No. 9 Arapahoe (6-4), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 8 Fairview (9-1), TBA

    No. 20 ThunderRidge (4-6) at No. 13 Fort Collins (8-2), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 4 Legend (9-1), TBA

    No. 21 Regis Jesuit (4-6) at No. 12 Erie (6-4), 6:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 5 Valor Christian (9-1), TBA

    No. 18 Fruita Monument (5-5) at No. 15 Columbine (5-5), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 2 Ralston Valley (10-0), TBA

    No. 23 Rocky Mountain (5-5) at No. 10 Mullen (6-4), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 7 Pine Creek (7-3), TBA

    No. 19 Legacy (6-4) at No. 14 Eaglecrest (6-4), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 3 Mountain Vista (10-0), TBA

    No. 22 Chatfield (4-6) at No. 11 Grandview (5-5), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 6 Arvada West (9-1), TBA

    Class 4A

    No. 17 Air Academy (5-5) at No. 16 Golden (7-3), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 1 Dakota Ridge (10-0), TBA

    No. 24 Skyline (4-6) at No. 9 Northfield (8-2), 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 8 Pueblo West (7-3), TBA

    No. 20 Silver Creek (5-5) at No. 13 Ponderosa (6-4), 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 4 Durango (8-2), TBA

    No. 21 Highlands Ranch (4-6) at No. 12 Grand Junction (8-2), 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 5 Heritage (7-3), TBA

    No. 18 Bear Creek (6-4) at No. 15 Frederick (7-3), 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 2 Montrose (10-0), TBA

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Why Sand Creek was left out of Class 4A football playoffs despite 9-1 record, No. 12 ranking in seeding index

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    Sand Creek’s best season in decades is ending with the Scorpions following the Class 4A state playoffs from home.

    The Scorpions went 9-1 and finished 12th in the 4A seeding and selection index, which under normal circumstances would’ve been plenty good enough to make the 24-team playoff bracket. But because of a unique CHSAA rule, Sand Creek — as well as two other teams in its league in Cheyenne Mountain (16th in the index) and Centaurus (20th) — is not eligible for the postseason.

    In Sand Creek’s 4A I-25 League, only the conference champion can make the playoffs, regardless of RPI seeding. It’s one of two CHSAA leagues set up that way, along with the 5A Metro North. The reason for that is because those leagues were formed as rebuilding leagues, filled with programs that were struggling with both numbers and competitiveness.

    CHSAA football commissioner John Sullivan said he feels “awful for those (three) schools.”

    “When you look at the 5A Metro North and how that worked out, that was kind of the intent with these leagues, where a school like Westminster goes 8-2, wins the league, and they get in the playoffs with the 24th seed,” Sullivan said. “And then none of the other schools from that league qualify. That was the thought process… that if you’re playing all schools in your league that may be struggling, it could potentially inflate your RPI values.”

    But as Cheyenne Mountain football coach Jay Saravis points out, “I don’t think CHSAA (or the football committee) was expecting was the fact that four of us in the I-25 league got pretty darn good.”

    Sand Creek, headlined by star junior running back Ethan Mangrum, has gone 16-4 over the past two years under coach Eric Mitchell after not having a winning season (minus the 2021 spring season) since 2013.

    Fellow Colorado Springs school Cheyenne Mountain has also turned it around, with a 15-5 mark over the past two falls. Centaurus’ arrow is also trending up, while back-to-back league champion Grand Junction is headed to the playoffs for a second straight season after winning just five total games across the four previous seasons. The Tigers’ rise has been helped by about a 50% increase in football participation since 2021, an influx that can be partly attributed to increased enrollment after Mesa County Valley School District 51 re-drew its high school boundary lines.

    Mitchell doesn’t blame CHSAA for his Scorpions coming up short of the playoffs after Sand Creek lost to Grand Junction in the regular season finale, the de facto league title game, 56-13 last week. The Tigers ended up finishing 13th in the index and host Highlands Ranch in a first-round playoff game on Friday.

    Prior to this current two-year CHSAA cycle, each participating school in the 5A Metro North and 4A I-25 agreed to join the rebuilding league with the stipulation that only the league champion would make the playoffs. That rule is part of the football bulletin that’s created by the football committee; that bulletin is then approved annually at CHSAA’s Legislative Council, where any member can object to it.

    “We knew coming in we had to be the league champs and we didn’t get the job done,” Mitchell said. “It’s just one of those deals where we plan on building off this season.

    “So there’s truly no disappointment on my end. We just want to see continued growth in our program, and we saw it this year. We will expect more next year with a lot of key players returning, including Mangrum, who was the classification’s leading rusher (with 2,001 yards).”

    Football leagues designed to group similar programs trying to re-find their footing have been happening in CHSAA since 2018, when the Class 5A Metro 10 debuted.

    That 10-team league was allowed one automatic qualifier, the league champion, with the possibility of a second at-large bid deemed by the seeding committee. In 2021, two six-team rebuilding leagues in 4A and 5A debuted, with just the league champion eligible to earn a playoff bid.

    Mitchell, Saravis and Grand Junction coach Landon McKee all said that joining the rebuilding league and accepting the playoff limitations that came with it was the right call for their programs. Saravis noted that his approach at Cheyenne Mountain was that “when we got to Week 6, I tell my players, ‘Welcome to the playoffs,’ because it’s basically a survive-and-advance mentality from there.”

    “This league was a good opportunity for Sand Creek to get back on track,” Mitchell added.

    Going into the next two-year CHSAA cycle that begins in 2026, Sullivan noted there won’t be any more one-bid playoff leagues.

    The football committee meets on Wednesday to start working on putting together leagues for that cycle, with an aim at creating leagues that are more competitively balanced, considering Colorado high school football has seen what Sullivan describes as “an inordinate number of blowouts and running clocks” in league play this year.

    “For those leagues (without top teams in them), we’re not going to put stipulations on how many teams can make the playoffs,” Sullivan said. “So, that was planned on going away prior to this situation with Sand Creek in 4A this year.”

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    Kyle Newman

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  • PHOTOS: Colorado State Cross Country Championships 2025

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    COLORADO SPRINGS, CO – Mountain View High School’s Madeline Clark hugs her father Kevin Clark, the head of the CHSAA Cross Country Committee, after finishing the Class 4A girls State Cross Country Championship race on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, at the Norris Penrose Event Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

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    Timothy Hurst

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  • Colorado high school football: How Post Preps Top 10 teams fared in Week 10

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    Class 5A

    1. Cherry Creek (9-0) at Grandview, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    2. Ralston Valley (9-0) vs. No. 4 Arvada West, 7:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    3. Mountain Vista (10-0) won vs. Castle View, 56-7: Junior QB Marquise Reese had more touchdown passes (5) than incompletions (2) as the Golden Eagles put the finishing touches on a second straight unbeaten regular season in style. Reese finished with 317 yards on 19-of-21 passing, with junior Brooklyn Bailey (6 catches, 134 yards, 3 TDs) and senior Ja’Pree Jennings (9 catches, 106 yards, 1 TD) both topping the century mark. Reese also added a rushing score as part of a 49-7 first half. Next week: TBD.

    4. Arvada West (9-0) at No. 2 Ralston Valley, 7:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    5. Legend (8-1) vs. Regis Jesuit, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    6. Valor Christian (8-2) won vs. Rock Canyon, 42-7: Senior Chase Hanosh gobbled up 159 yards and two touchdowns on three carries, junior Jackson Coleman ripped off 103 yards and two TDs on three catches, and the Valor offensive machine fired on all cylinders in the Eagles’ fourth straight blowout win to close out the regular season. Sophomore QB Titus Huard had 136 yards and two TDs on 6-of-7 passing, and senior Dakota Rich added a pick-6. Next week: TBD.

    7. Fairview (8-1) vs. Rocky Mountain, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    8. Pine Creek (6-3) vs. No. 9 Fountain-Fort Carson, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    9. Fountain-Fort Carson (7-2) at No. 8 Pine Creek, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    10. Mullen (5-4) vs. Rangeview, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    Class 4A

    1. Dakota Ridge (10-0) won at Bear Creek, 49-14: The Eagles locked up the top seed in the 4A playoffs for the second straight season behind an explosive night from Nathan Rodriguez. The senior nabbed a pair of touchdown passes from senior QB Kellen Behrendsen, and tacked on a punt return TD after that to give Dakota Ridge a 21-0 lead after one quarter. Behrendsen tossed two more TD passes to Jaxson Arnold and Coby Stewart as the Eagles took a 42-7 edge into halftime and cruised from there. Next week: TBD.

    2. Montrose (9-0) at No. 9 Pueblo West, 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    3. Palmer Ridge (10-0) won at Liberty, 58-7: Senior Cole Harris threw touchdown passes to three different receivers and also ran in two scores as seven different Bears got in the end zone to complete Palmer Ridge’s third 10-0 regular season in four years. A No. 2 seed is likely for the Bears in the 4A playoffs. Next week: TBD.

    4. Riverdale Ridge (10-0) won at Grand Junction Central, 42-13: Senior backup QB Landon Banks kept the Ravens train rolling with 196 yards and two TDs on 17-of-23 passing and a pair of rushing TDs to secure the first unbeaten regular season in program history. Senior Jeter McArthur hauled in four passes for 83 yards and a score, while senior Diego Galvan carried the ball 16 times for 73 yards and a TD, and junior Dean Presswood returned a kickoff for a TD. The Ravens entered Friday night 10th in the CHSAA seeding index, meaning they needed help to get a first-round bye in the 4A playoffs. Next week: TBD.

    5. Durango (7-2) at Vista Ridge, 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

    6. Broomfield (7-2) vs. Skyline, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: TBD.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • University walks-off Eaton for Class 3A softball title in another epic showdown between Patriot League rivals

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    AURORA — With the state championship up for grabs, Emma Zacheis made the grab of her life.

    Then the University junior outfielder scored the winning run.

    Zacheis’ sprawling catch in foul territory in the seventh inning of a 4-4 game ended the top half of the frame at Aurora Sports Park in the Class 3A title game on Saturday, stranding two Eaton runners in the process. Then Zacheis led off the bottom of the inning with an infield single, and, two batters later, scored on Jasi Cole’s walk-off single.

    The sequence gave University a 5-4 victory over rival Eaton, avenging the Bulldogs’ championship losses to the Reds two of the last three seasons for their second title and first since 2019.

    “I knew that if I didn’t catch that one, (Eaton slugger Johanna Galvan) was going to get another opportunity to get some runs in,” Zacheis said. “(My whole career) led up to that catch. Everything I’ve worked towards for years, everything this whole team has worked for, it paid off with that catch.”

    It was Galvan, the junior first baseman, who initially gave Eaton the lead in the first inning with her towering two-run homer down the left field line. So to not give Galvan any more chances to mash — and potentially push the Reds back into the lead in a see-saw game — proved critical.

    Eaton beat University 8-6 in last year’s title game, and 9-1 for the crown in ’22. But the Reds were denied a four-peat on Saturday by the Bulldogs, who beat Eaton for a second time this season following an 8-7, extra-inning victory on Oct. 2 that decided the Patriot League crown.

    “We knew it was going to take everything it took to beat them again,” Zacheis said. “There was a lot of talk (externally) that we couldn’t beat them twice, but we all believed 100% that we had what it takes to win this title.”

    Both teams switched back and forth between pitchers, with the Reds using Galvan and fellow junior Bria Foster, and the Bulldogs alternating Cole and fellow senior Sydney Goetzel.

    University head coach Chris Hutton said it was a strategy she used in the tournament when coaching at Valley 15 years ago, and it produced a similar result as Valley won back-to-back Class 3A titles in 2010 and ’11.

    “It’s unconventional, but I thought it would work today against Eaton’s lineup,” Hutton said. “I was surprised to see Eaton do the same thing.”

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    Kyle Newman

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  • Colorado high school football: How Post Preps Top 10 teams fared in Week 9

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    Class 5A

    1. Cherry Creek (8-0) at Smoky Hill, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Grandview, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    2. Ralston Valley (9-0) won at Denver East, 48-7: Junoir QB Logan Gabler tossed five touchdown passes, including three to senior receiver Nico Benallo, while compiling 238 yards on 20-of-26 passing in place of injured starter Zeke Andrews. Benallo hauled in 10 balls for 134 yards, while Gabler ripped off 88 yards on nine carries to move the Mustangs a win away from a second straight league championship. Next week: vs. No. 4 Arvada West, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31.

    3. Mountain Vista (8-0) at Rock Canyon, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Castle View, 7 p.m. Oct. 30.

    4. Arvada West (9-0) won vs. Chatfield, 28-27: Jaiden Nichols broke up a two-point conversion attempt with less than a minute left, and the Wildcats survived an upset scare a week before their Halloween showdown at Ralston Valley. Senior QB Logan Duhachek’s 1-yard plunge in the fourth quarter proved to be the difference amid Chatfield’s frantic second-half rally. A-West took a 21-0 lead into halftime, but Chatfield’s Brigham Jones returned an INT for a score, Cash Williams found Roni Rohlman for a pair of TDs, and Devon Fleming ran in a TD to pull the Chargers within a point. Chatfield went for the win after that, but Nichols broke on a pass near the boundary to preserve the win. Next week: at No. 2 Ralston Valley, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31.

    5. Legend (8-1) won at Douglas County, 51-9: Ryken Banks found the end zone four times in the first half, Quinn Williams and Freddie Burke both returned interceptions for TDs, and the Titans scored 44 points in the first quarter to trigger a running clock en route to their fifth straight win. Next week: vs. Regis Jesuit, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    6. Valor Christian (7-2) won at Fruita Monument, 49-6: QB Titus Huard continued a torrid stretch of play with 109 yards and four touchdowns on 10-of-14 passing in the Eagles’ third straight blowout win. The sophomore has seven TD passes on 78.9% passing over that span, with just one interception. Senior Cash Spence grabbed two of Huard’s scoring throws on Thursday, Chase Hanosh carried the ball 12 times for 112 yards and a score, and sophomore Roger Garey added a pick-6. Next week: vs. Rock Canyon, 7 p.m. Oct. 30.

    7. Fairview (8-1) won at Fossil Ridge, 45-20: Junior QB Ki Ellison ran in four TDs and senior UCLA commit Toray Davis tacked on two TDs of his own as the Knights raced out to a 45-0 halftime lead and cruised from there. Fairview is a win away from its fourth straight unbeaten run through league play. Next week: vs. Rocky Mountain, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    8. Pine Creek (5-3) at Regis Jesuit, 6:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. No. 9 Fountain-Fort Carson, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    9. Fountain-Fort Carson (6-2) vs. Chaparral, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 8 Pine Creek, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    10. Mullen (4-4) at Horizon, 1 p.m. Saturday. Next week: vs. Rangeview, Oct. 31.

    Class 4A

    1. Dakota Ridge (8-0) at Golden, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Bear Creek, 4 p.m. Oct. 31.

    2. Montrose (8-0) vs. Widefield, 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 10 Pueblo West, 6 p.m. Oct. 31.

    3. Palmer Ridge (8-0) vs. Rampart, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Liberty, 6 p.m. Oct. 30.

    4. Broomfield (7-1) at No. 6 Riverdale Ridge, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Skyline, 7 p.m. Oct. 31.

    5. Durango (6-2) vs. Liberty, 6 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 9 Vista Ridge, 6 p.m. Oct. 31.

    6. Riverdale Ridge (8-0) vs. No. 4 Broomfield, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Grand Junction Central, 7 p.m. Oct. 30.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • 8 Colorado high school football games to watch in Week 8

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    CLASS 5A

    No. 9 Fountain-Fort Carson (6-1) vs. No. 5 Legend (6-1)

    When/where: 7 p.m. Thursday at EchoPark Stadium

    Last meeting: Legend 42, at Fountain-Fort Carson 7, Oct. 18, 2024

    Streaming: NFHS Network

    Fountain-Fort Carson is pounding the rock again, and looking dangerous doing it. The Trojans took down Regis Jesuit a week ago, with Da’kari Releford Jr. going off for 170 yards and two TDs to top 1,000 yards for the season. The Trojans will need more of that from the junior tailback if they want to keep pace with Boston College QB commit DJ Bordeaux and a Legend offense averaging 47.1 points per game.

    Columbine (3-4) vs. No. 2 Ralston Valley (7-0)

    When/where: 7 p.m. Thursday at NAAC Stadium

    Last meeting: Ralston Valley 35, at Columbine 34 (OT), Oct. 18, 2024

    Streaming: NFHS Network

    Always a circle-the-date game on the Jeffco prep football calendar, this year’s edition appeared to lose a little luster when Columbine started the season 0-3. The Rebels have rebounded since, however, and were a last-minute touchdown away from upsetting unbeaten Arvada West last week for their fourth straight win. As it is, Andy Lowry’s Rebels stand as a gritty test for a Ralston Valley program that has won three of four against Columbine since 2022.

    Eaglecrest (6-1) vs. No. 1 Cherry Creek (7-0)

    When/where: 7 p.m. Thursday at Stutler Bowl

    Last meeting: Cherry Creek 44, at Eaglecrest 0, Oct. 18, 2024

    Streaming: NFHS Network

    Can someone, anyone, challenge Cherry Creek in the 5A Centennial League? Eaglecrest is the next team up with the unenviable task of trying to slow down the Creek juggernaut. The Raptors have won five straight since a Week 2 loss at Fort Collins, but now they face a significant step up in class. All but one of Eaglecrest’s six wins have been against teams that currently sport a losing record. Hang with Creek on Thursday, though, and the Raptors are for real.

    Mullen (3-4) vs. No. 8 Erie (5-2)

    When/where: 6:30 p.m. Friday at Tiger Stadium

    Last meeting: Erie 48, at Mullen 13, Oct. 18, 2024

    Streaming: Erie Tiger Network

    Mullen spent its nonleague schedule hanging with 5A giants. Sooner or later, the Mustangs gotta take one down. They get another chance Friday with a trip north. The matchup features a pair of D-I tight ends in Erie’s Gabe Sema (Northern Arizona) and Mullen’s Mason Bonner (Michigan), as well as Oregon State commit Braylon Toliver (670 rush yards) going up against a salty Mullen defense headlined by future FBS edge rusher Troy Mailo. This should be fun.

    Westminster (5-2) vs. Mountain Range (5-2)

    When/where: 7 p.m. Friday at North Stadium

    Last meeting: Westminster 28, vs. Mountain Range 15, Oct. 18, 2024

    It’s been 10 years since Westminster won a league title, but former pro QB Chris Helbig has the Wolves atop the 5A Metro North in his first year leading the program. Cross-town rival Mountain Range has already won more games this season than any Mustangs squad in the last 11 years and has allowed just 23 total points over the last three weeks. Can they limit Westminster’s freshman wunderkind Santana Soriano (1,378 yards, 15 TDs passing) and a talented group of senior pass catchers?

    CLASS 4A

    Bear Creek (6-1) vs. Heritage (4-3)

    When/where: 6 p.m. Thursday at LPS Stadium

    Last meeting: Heritage 61, at Bear Creek 23, Oct. 17, 2024

    Streaming: NFHS Network

    Two teams coming off losses in the hyper-competitive 4A South Metro League meet looking to get back on track. Bear Creek saw its unbeaten season slip away in a disastrous second half against Golden, while Heritage was the latest victim of the Dakota Ridge powerhouse. Both teams can put up points in a hurry. Expect fireworks.

    Mesa Ridge (3-4) vs. No. 2 Montrose (7-0)

    When/where: 6 p.m. Friday at Montrose HS

    Last meeting: Montrose 53, vs. Mesa Ridge 21, Nov. 23, 2024

    Streaming: NFHS Network

    Mesa Ridge took a big step forward with an upset of Pueblo West last week. The Grizzlies can take an even larger one this Friday with a trip to the Western Slope. The Red Hawks have beaten Mesa Ridge four times over the last three seasons, including a season-ender last fall in Montrose. Just staying within reach of the Red Hawks, who’ve taken double-digit leads into the third quarter in six of seven wins, is hard enough. Beating them? No team has done that in the regular season in the last 24 tries.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Colorado high school football scoreboard: Week 7

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    Thursday night’s Colorado high school football scores

    Arvada West 20, Columbine 17

    Aurora Central 17, George Washington 8

    Basalt 37, Coal Ridge 25

    Canon City 42, Pueblo Central 2

    Cherry Creek 56, Arapahoe 0

    Erie 61, Vista PEAK Prep 34

    Fountain-Fort Carson 24, Regis Jesuit 17

    Frederick 28, Silver Creek 14

    Grand Junction 55, Thornton 6

    Grandview 40, Smoky Hill 6

    Holy Family 67, Littleton 0

    Idalia 60, Genoa-Hugo 6

    McClave 44, Swink 7

    Mead 21, Timnath 10

    Mesa Ridge 22, Pueblo West 15

    Palisade 41, Rifle 0

    Poudre 45, Greeley West 6

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Colorado high school football: How Post Preps Top 10 teams fared in Week 6

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    Class 5A

    1. Cherry Creek (6-0) won vs. Cherokee Trail, 49-12: The Bruins scored five touchdowns in the second quarter to break open their Centennial League opener and post their 19th straight win. Senior quarterback Brady Vodicka tossed three of his four touchdown passes during that fateful quarter, and Jayden Fox answered Cherokee Trail’s lone first-half score with a kickoff return TD. Creek has now topped 40 points in five of six games this season. Next week: at Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Oct. 9.

    2. Ralston Valley (6-0) won vs. Chatfield, 55-22: Senior quarterback Zeke Andrews threw three TD passes to three different receivers and ran in another two scores to keep the Mustangs offensive machine rolling. Ethan Shirazi scored a pair of TDs, first with a pick-6 in the first quarter, then on a pass from Andrews that gave Ralston Valley a 49-14 lead in the third quarter. It was all academic after that. Next week: at Denver South, 4 p.m. Oct. 9.

    3. Arvada West (6-0) won at Denver South, 45-7: The Wildcats are 6-0 for the first time in the MaxPreps era (since 2004) after topping 40 points for the third time this season. Tucker Rhoades had a pick-6 and quarterback Logan Duhachek three five touchdown passes (and five INTs) to lead the rout. Now A-West sets its sights on Columbine, a program A-West has beaten just once in its last eight meetings. Next week: vs. Columbine, 7 p.m. Oct. 9.

    4. Valor Christian (4-2) lost vs. No. 5 Mountain Vista, 38-36: The Eagles fell for the second week in a row, this time in heartbreaking fashion. Chase Hanosh took a screen pass from Dawson Olk for a 57-yard touchdown to pull Valor within two points with 5:05 to go, but Halden Robinson’s diving one-handed interception on the two-point conversion kept the Eagles from tying the game. The Valor defense came up with a fourth-down stop at its 14-yard line to get the ball back with 1:47 left, but Olk’s desperation bomb was intercepted by Robinson again. Channing Fox had three rushing TDs in the loss, while Hanosh had a pair of scores. Next week: at Castle View, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 10.

    5. Mountain Vista (6-0) won at No. 4 Valor Christian, 38-36: Junior defensive back Halden Robinson came up with two massive interceptions, including a diving one-handed snag on a potential game-tying two-point conversion, to hand the Golden Eagles their second win over Valor in as many years. Junior QB Marquise Reese tossed four touchdown passes and set up another with a bomb to junior Brooklyn Bailey that put Vista on the Valor 1-yard line. Hudson Modrzewski powered it in from there to give Vista a 38-21 lead with 3:21 left in the third quarter, then the Golden Eagles held on from there to stay unbeaten thanks in part to Braelynn Looney’s 30-yard field goal to close out the first half. Next week: at ThunderRidge, 7 p.m. Oct. 10.

    6. Legend (5-1) won vs. No. 8 Pine Creek, 57-30: Senior QB DJ Bordeaux threw five touchdown passes, including two to senior Ryan Iglesias, to propel the Titans to a 50-14 lead going into the fourth quarter that was way too much for Pine Creek to overcome. Legend topped 50 points for the second straight game and third time this season. Next week: at Chaparral, 7 p.m. Oct. 10.

    7. Fairview (5-1) won at Prairie View, 56-0: The Knights defense shut out an opponent for the second week in a row and third time in four games, and Fairview came away a winner in its 5A Front Range League opener. Fairview has barely been touched since losing to Arvada West by a point in Week 2, outscoring its last four opponents 228-41. Next week: at Fort Collins, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 10.

    8. Pine Creek (3-3) lost at No. 6 Legend, 57-30: The Ealges offense didn’t come alive until much too late, with all but one of the team’s four touchdowns coming in the second half. Pine Creek has played a brutal schedule and paid the price, with all three of its losses coming against top 10 opponents (Cherry Creek, Valor Christian and Legend). Next week: vs. Douglas County, 7 p.m. Oct. 9.

    9. Grandview (3-2) at Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Smoky Hill, 7 p.m. Oct. 9.

    10. Erie (4-2) won at Rangeview, 35-23: A week after knocking off 4A power Broomfield, the Tigers opened league play with a resounding win over the Raiders (4-2). After the two teams traded TDs in the second quarter, Erie scored four straight touchdowns between the third quarter and start of the fourth to take a commanding 35-15 lead that held up the rest of the way. Next week: vs. Vista PEAK Prep, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 9.

    Class 4A

    1. Dakota Ridge (6-0) won vs. Ponderosa, 40-7: Senior quarterback Kellen Behrendsen continued a torrid stretch of play, completing 25 of 28 passes for 325 yards and two touchdowns in a 4A South Metro League rout that saw the Eagles take a 34-0 lead into the fourth quarter. Senior Landon Kalsbeck scored three TDs (two rushing, one receiving), while Coby Stewart caught seven passes for 104 yards, Jaxson Arnold hauled in five balls for 96 yards and Jack Offerdahl piled up 168 all-purpose yards. Next week: at Heritage, 7 p.m. Oct. 10.

    2. Montrose (6-0) won vs. Falcon, 57-6: Senior running back Elijah Womack ran in four of the Red Hawks’ first six touchdowns to lead Montrose to a 50-6 halftime lead that triggered a running clock. The Red Hawks have now won 23 straight regular-season games dating back to the 2023 season. Next week: at Doherty, 1 p.m. Oct. 11.

    3. Palmer Ridge (6-0) won at Air Academy, 42-0: Six weeks into the season, and the Bears have yet to sweat it out in a second half. Palmer Ridge put 35 points on the Kadets in the first two quarters and cruised from there for their sixth straight win by 28 points or more. Next week: vs. No. 5 Durango, 6 p.m. Oct. 10.

    4. Broomfield (4-1) vs. Longmont, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Adams City, 7 p.m. Oct. 10.

    5. Durango (5-1) won vs. Rampart, 47-7: Junior QB Grady Feeney popped for 303 total yards (149 passing, 154 rushing) and five TDs (2 passing, 3 rushing) to power the Demons to a blowout win in their league opener. Gus Halls needed only six carries to gain 113 yards and score a TD, while senior Oliie Peterson caught a pair of touchdown passes. The Durango defense has allowed just 19 total points during the team’s current five-game win streak, which started after a season-opening loss to No. 2 Montrose. Next week: at No. 3 Palmer Ridge, 6 p.m. Oct. 10.

    6. Pueblo West (4-1) vs. Doherty, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Mesa Ridge, 7 p.m. Oct. 9.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Colorado high school football scoreboard: Week 6

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    Thursday night’s Colorado high school football scores

    Castle View 20, Fruita Monument 13

    Dakota Ridge 40, Ponderosa 7

    Forge Christian 49, Prospect Ridge Academy 21

    Lincoln , The Classical Academy 2

    McClave 51, Rocky Ford 0

    Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Broncos host Evergreen High football and flag football teams for practice

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    Nothing has been normal recently for Matt Van Praag’s Evergreen High School football team.

    The group and Evergreen’s flag football team have been displaced since the Sept. 10 shooting at the school that left two classmates critically wounded.

    The football team’s game last week against George Washington was called off and will not be made up.

    On Tuesday, though, Van Praag said he saw his team find a bit of that normalcy they’ve been looking for.

    It just so happened to be at the Broncos’ practice facility.

    The Evergreen High football and flag football teams traveled down to Dove Valley to practice at Denver’s indoor practice facility and then afterward heard from general manager George Paton and other members of the organization.

    “We practiced two days last week at Chatfield, and so on that Tuesday, when we went to the Broncos facility, it was the first time we really had a real practice where the kids were really engaged and it felt like they were having fun,” Van Praag told The Post on Sunday. “It changed the entire perspective. The other two days were a little slower; the kids weren’t really focused, it was hard for them to focus and kind of get back into the swing of things.

    “Being in the facility really just got the kids really excited. From the first warmup and getting dressed in the locker room all the way through the end of practice, it was really the first normal feeling — except for the location — for our team since the incident.”

    Evergreen’s offensive line coach is longtime Tampa Bay center Ryan Jensen. In the aftermath of the shooting, Jensen reached out to the Broncos about a potential visit. Turns out, the team also needed a place to practice.

    Soon, a plan came together.

    Evergreen High remains closed, though a phased reopening begins this week with staff back in the building Monday and, eventually, students beginning a partial return to school Thursday and Friday.

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    Parker Gabriel

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  • Colorado high school football: How Post Preps Top 10 teams fared in Week 4

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    Class 5A

    1. Cherry Creek (4-0) does not play. Next week: at No. 7 Pine Creek, 7 p.m. Sept. 25.

    2. Valor Christian (3-0) vs. Mullen, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 4 Ralston Valley, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    3. Arvada West (5-0) won at Overland, 70-0. After nail-biting victories the past two weeks over Fairview (34-33) and Legend (35-34 in overtime), the Wildcats utterly annihilated the Trailblazers in a game that quickly got to a running clock. Next week: Bye.

    4. Ralston Valley (4-0) won at ThunderRidge, 41-21. Grizzlies head coach Jay Madden was once the king of Jeffco football during his tenure at Pomona, when much of Arvada’s football talent walked his halls. Ralston Valley got a little payback on Madden on Friday, when first-quarter rushing TDs by Levi Rillos and Colby Kurtz put the Mustangs up 14-0 early. Ethan Shirazi then had multiple TDs in the second half to help the Mustangs pull away. Next week: vs. No. 2 Valor Christian, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    5. Mountain Vista (4-0) does not play. Next week: vs. Overland, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    6. Legend (3-1) does not play. Next week: at Castle View, 6:30 p.m. Sept. 26.

    7. Pine Creek (2-1) at Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. No. 1 Cherry Creek, 7 p.m. Sept. 25.

    8. Fairview (2-1) vs. Monarch, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Smoky Hill, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    9. Grandview (2-2) vs. No. 10 Rock Canyon, 6 p.m. Saturday. Next week: Bye.

    10. Rock Canyon (3-0) at No. 9 Grandview, 6 p.m. Saturday. Next week: vs. Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Sept. 25.

    Class 4A

    1. Dakota Ridge (4-0) won vs. 3A No. 1 Pomona, 45-14. The Eagles passed another test with flying colors against the top team in Class 3A. A rushing TD and passing TD by Kellen Behrendsen got Dakota Ridge going, and Landon Kalsbeck added another score by ground to make it 21-0 before the end of the first quarter. Next week: at Cherokee Trail, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    2. Broomfield (4-0) won 28-27 at Legacy: In this city rivalry, the Lightning went up 10-0 after the first quarter, but Broomfield outscored Legacy 22-3 in the second half to rally for the win. Donovan Brooks’ fourth-quarter TD pass to Gavin Montoya was the difference, then Rylee Sondrup’s interception with two minutes to go put the game on ice. Next week: at Erie, 6:30 p.m. Sept. 26.

    3. Montrose (4-0) won 41-0 at Grand Junction Central: The Red Hawks dominated from start to finish, and took a 34-0 lead into halftime. Cade Saunders and Elijah Womack both had rushing TDs in the first quarter to accelerate the blowout, and Saunders also had a pick to set up another first-half score. Next week: vs. Fruita Monument, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    4. Palmer Ridge (4-0) won vs. Longmont, 48-7. Through four games, the Bears defense hasn’t allowed more than two scores in a single contest while senior running back Jackson Mabe continues to run wild behind a potent offensive line. Next week: at Mesa Ridge, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    5. Vista Ridge (4-0) does not play. Next week: at No. 10 Pueblo West, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    6. Durango (3-1) won at 3A No. 9 Palisade, 17-6: Ollie Peterson’s receiving TD gave the Demons a 14-0 lead in the second quarter, and the Durango defense turned in a dominating performance, allowing only a pair of field goals. Next week: at Grand Junction, 7 p.m. Sept. 25.

    7. Golden (3-0) vs. Poudre, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Lakewood, 7:30 p.m. Sept. 26.

    8. Heritage (3-1) won vs. Mesa Ridge, 35-18: In the Eagles’ homecoming game, Mo Thenell’s short TD run gave Heritage the early lead. After Mesa Ridge scored 12 straight points, Camden Jensen’s TD reception followed by his rushing TD on a direct snap swung the momentum of the game in favor of the Eagles. Next week: at Columbine, 4 p.m. Sept. 25.

    9. Riverdale Ridge (4-0) won at Thornton, 49-0. The Thornton rivalry wasn’t much of a contest as the newer school in town thumped the old. Next week: vs. Silver Creek, 7 p.m. Sept. 25.

    10. Pueblo West (3-1) does not play. Next week: vs. No. 5 Vista Ridge, 7 p.m. Sept. 26.

    Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.

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    Matt Schubert, Kyle Newman

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  • Cherry Creek smokes nationally ranked Skyridge to start 4-0. Does any Colorado team stand a chance against Bruins?

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    GREENWOOD VILLAGE — The Massey Ratings require a recalibration.

    Utah’s Skyridge entered Friday’s game against Cherry Creek as the No. 20 team in the nation, while the Bruins were ranked No. 93.

    But the Bruins made those computerized rankings look buggy. They used a fast start and a furious finish to smoke Skyridge 51-28 at the Stutler Bowl, avenging their lone loss last season in the process.

    It was Cherry Creek’s third victory over an out-of-state team in as many weeks, after hanging on to beat Cardinal Mooney (Florida) on the road two weeks ago and dominating Millard North (Nebraska) last week.

    The performance against Skyridge suggests that Cherry Creek, owners of five of the last six Class 5A titles, is more than just a juggernaut in a flyover football state. This year’s Bruins — whose highest national ranking entering Friday among the three major services in Massey, MaxPreps and Rivals was No. 58 — have the size, speed and talent to play with just about anyone.

    “This was a game for everyone who underestimates Colorado ball,” said Cherry Creek star running back Jayden Fox, who had three TDs and over 200 yards rushing. “They say we’re not a football state, we don’t have good enough athletes — but this game showed this program has those athletes, those star players.”

    No, the Bruins aren’t a national heavyweight like Mater Dei, St. John Bosco, Bishop Gorman or Southlake Carroll.

    But they possess a blue-chip frontman in defensive lineman Tufanua Ionatana Umu-Cais, a Washington commit who is a Navy All-American. They have one of the most dynamic running backs in Colorado in Fox, a UConn pledge who went scorched earth on Skyridge. And they have a slew of other Division I recruits around those headliners.

    No wonder Cherry Creek’s had a tough time finding in-state opponents to fill out its non-conference schedule.

    Fox was nearly untackleable in open space on Friday. When he got even the slimmest margin of daylight, he took off. While senior quarterback Brady Vodicka tossed three TDs and sophomore Elijah Cromwell was a complementary ground threat, Fox was the unstoppable star.

    The Cherry Creek defense also set the tone early with interceptions by Michigan State commit Braylon Hodge on the game’s opening drive and then a pick-six by fellow senior linebacker Tate Matthews on the Falcons’ second drive. That gave Cherry Creek cushion for when Skyridge’s QB, Division I prospect Kaneal Sweetwyne, caught fire in the third quarter.

    “The game started for them a little bit like the game started for us last year in Salt Lake,” Cherry Creek head coach Dave Logan said. “Their quarterback is about as good as we’ve seen in a long time, and so we tried to change up fronts, coverages, disguises. We made some plays early and we needed them, because that’s an excellent team.”

    Cherry Creek coach David Logan, congratulates the team after the game against Skyridge at the Stutler Bowl Friday, Sept. 12, 2025, in Greenwood Village, CO. Cherry Creek won 51-28. (Rebecca Slezak/Special to The Denver Post)

    With those two interceptions and Fox’s first carry in between leading to a 32-yard score, Cherry Creek went up 14-0 just 65 seconds into the game. The Bruins never looked back, despite Sweetwyne settling into the game and engineering four scoring drives to keep the Falcons from getting boat-raced.

    Alijah Landrum-Hamilton’s slick moves on a screen pass led to a 40-yard TD, and Fox added on a 75-yard TD burst as Cherry Creek took a 27-14 lead into half. On the opening drive of the third quarter, the Bruins marched the field, capped by Louisiana Tech pledge Vodicka’s 16-yard TD pass to senior tight end Ty Goettsche (BYU).

    After Skyridge made a third-quarter push and cut the score to 34-28, the Bruins used a field goal, a clutch defensive stop, and a 65-yard TD run from Fox to put the game on ice. On an outside zone play, Fox shed several tacklers and outran the Falcons’ secondary to quiet the Skyridge sideline and fan section, which had been energized up to that point.

    “We started to feel like we won, but we had to remember, we have to play for 48 minutes,” Fox said. “… We went out in the fourth quarter and did what we did at the beginning of the game.”

    By the time another Matthews pick set up Vodicka’s TD pass to senior tight end Anthony Betti, making it a 50-burger with 4:29 left, the game had turned into a homecoming celebration for Cherry Creek.

    Can any Colorado team beat the Bruins this year? Odds seem slim.

    After a bye, Pine Creek is the Bruins’ final non-conference challenger, a team the Bruins beat 21-14 last year. After that, Cherry Creek’s Centennial League slate should offer a challenge or two, but also more than a few running clocks.

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    Kyle Newman

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  • Colorado high school football: How Post Preps Top 10 teams fared in Week 3

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    Class 5A

    1. Cherry Creek (3-0) vs. Skyridge (Utah), 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: Bye.

    2. Valor Christian (3-0) did not play: After posting three straight double-digit wins, the Eagles got a break to prepare for a challenging three-week run of vs. Mullen, at Ralston Valley and vs. Mountain Vista. Next week: vs. Mullen, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    3. Ralston Valley (2-0) at Mullen, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at ThunderRidge, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    4. Legend (3-0) at No. 6 Arvada West, 7:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: Bye.

    5. Mountain Vista (4-0) won vs. Cherokee Trail, 49-8: The Golden Eagles continued their red-hot start with a 42-point first half capped by Lucas Conklin’s blocked punt return and QB Marquise Reese’s touchdown scamper. Mountain Vista has now scored 40-plus in three of four games and appears as explosive as ever on offense. Next week: Bye.

    6. Arvada West (3-0) vs. No. 4 Legend, 7:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Overland, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    7. Pine Creek (1-1) vs. Loveland, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at No. 10 Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    8. Fairview (1-1) at Boulder, 5:30 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Monarch, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    9. Grandview (1-2) vs. Legacy, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: Bye.

    10. Arapahoe (1-1) at ThunderRidge, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. No. 7 Pine Creek, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    Class 4A

    1. Dakota Ridge (2-0) at Mesa Ridge, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. 3A No. 2 Pomona, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    2. Broomfield (2-0) vs. Rocky Mountain, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: at Legacy, 6 p.m. Sept. 18.

    3. Montrose (3-0) did not play: The Red Hawks are chasing their second consecutive unbeaten regular season and are off to a good start, outscoring opponents 120-34. Next week: at Grand Junction Central, 8 p.m. Sept. 18.

    4. Palmer Ridge (2-0) vs. Lewis-Palmer, 7 p.m. Friday. Next week: vs. Longmont, 7 p.m. Sept. 19.

    5. Vista Ridge (4-0) won at Denver South, 29-20: Senior QB Colton Camba threw a pair of touchdown passes, the last to Deshaun Drain to put the game away in the fourth quarter, and Antonio Taylor returned a punt for a touchdown as the Wolves moved to 4-0 for the first time in 10 years. Next week: Bye.

    6. Heritage (2-1) won at Northfield, 32-31: Senior Mo Thennell ran in his second touchdown of the night in overtime, and Brody Guetz’s point-after ended up being the difference after the Eagles stopped Northfield’s two-point conversion attempt on the game’s last play. Guetz also kicked the field goal that sent the game to overtime and completed an Eagles’ rally from down 15 in the third quarter. Nighthawks QB Cash Lacy connected with Devaughn Daniels for two TDs, but Northfield’s bid to beat 4A Top 10 teams in two consecutive weeks fell just short. Next week: vs. Mesa Ridge, 6 p.m. Sept. 18.

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    Matt Schubert

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  • Colorado high school football rankings, Week 2: Mea culpa, Mountain Vista. How’d we dare doubt you?

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    A look at the Post Preps Top 10 for Classes 5A, 4A and 3A going into Week 2.

    If you’re on mobile, tap here to see the rankings.

    Class 5A

    Team Record Previous Last week
    1. Cherry Creek 2-0 1 W (24-21 at Cardinal Mooney, Fla.)
    Comment: Bruins now have wins in Texas and Florida in last two seasons. Not too shabby. Next week: vs. Millard North (Neb.), 7 p.m. Friday
    2. Valor Christian 2-0 2 W (42-15 at Regis Jesuit)
    Comment: Eagles piled up 277 rushing yards at Regis last week. Is there a more physical o-line in the state? Next week: at Las Vegas-Faith Lutheran, 7 p.m. Saturday
    3. Legend 2-0 3 W (28-16 vs. No. 8 Grandview)
    Comment: Titans needed big game from RB Ryken Banks vs. Grandview, and senior delivered (19 carries, 125 yards). Next week: at Columbine, 7:30 p.m. Friday
    4. Ralston Valley 1-0 4 W (34-21 at Erie)
    Comment: Decent chance that win over Erie ages well over next two months. Next week: vs. No. 8 Grandview, 7 p.m. Thursday
    5. Mountain Vista 2-0 NR W (20-0 at Arapahoe)
    Comment: Unranked to top five? Please accept our apologies. Golden Eagles have reached point where they don’t rebuild, they reload. Next week: vs. Erie, 7 p.m. Thursday
    6. Fairview 1-0 7 W (41-7 at Legacy)
    Comment: Combination of UCLA commit Toray Davis and senior Sabi Ruttgers looks frightening. Next week: vs. No. 7 Arvada West, 7 p.m. Friday
    7. Arvada West 2-0 10 W (56-0 vs. Mountain Range)
    Comment: Wildcats defense has allowed 13 points through two games. First major test of season awaits. Next week: at No. 6 Fairview, 7 p.m. Friday
    8. Grandview 1-1 9 L (28-16 at No. Legend)
    Comment: Wolves had Legend on the ropes in fourth quarter of last week’s loss. Solid showing. Next week: at No. 4 Ralston Valley, 7 p.m. Thursday
    9. Pine Creek 1-1 8 W (35-21 vs. Cherokee Trail)
    Comment: Junior quarterback Brady Walden more than looks the part for Eagles. Next week: Bye
    10. ThunderRidge 1-0 NR W (26-6 at Columbine)
    Comment: An auspicious start for Jay Madden, whose Grizzlies took down Columbine in his T-Ridge debut. Next week: at Cherokee Trail, 7 p.m. Friday

    Class 4A

    Team Record Previous Last week
    1. Dakota Ridge 1-0 1 W (23-12 vs. Chatfield)
    Comment: One week in, and Eagles already have avenged one of last year’s losses. Next week: at Winter Springs, Fla., 5 p.m. MT Friday
    2. Broomfield 1-0 2 W (31-13 vs. Frederick)
    Comment: Get to know Kashus Clarvoe. Freshman needed only eight carries to top 100 yards in his varsity debut. Next week: at Monarch, 7 p.m. Friday
    3. Montrose 2-0 3 W (48-0 vs. Greeley West)
    Comment: Red Hawks have allowed zero first-half points through two games this season. Next week: at 3A No. 10 Palisade, 7 p.m. Sept. 4
    4. Palmer Ridge 1-0 4 W (42-14 vs. Ponderosa)
    Comment: Ponderosa defenders will be seeing Jackson Mabe (189 yards, 4 TDs rushing) in their nightmares. Next week: at Doherty, 6:30 p.m. Thursday
    5. Vista Ridge 2-0 NR W (50-20 vs. Montbello)
    Comment: Wolves made statement with win over Columbine, then rolled for 390 yards, 4 TDs rushing vs. Montbello. Next week: vs. Evanston, Wyo., 7 p.m. Friday
    6. Heritage 1-0 5 W (46-13 vs. Severance)
    Comment: Nobody had better Week 1 than senior RB Mo Thenell (287 total yards, 3 TDs). Next week: at Arapahoe, 7 p.m. Friday
    7. Mesa Ridge 1-0 6 W (28-0 vs. Air Academy)
    Comment: That score vs. Air Academy is slightly deceiving. Game was called early due to lightning. Next week: at Northfield, 6 p.m. Thursday
    8. Pueblo West 2-0 9 W (39-34 vs. Pueblo County)
    Comment: Next four weeks will say a lot about Cyclones: at Pomona, at Lutheran, bye, vs. Vista Ridge. Next week: at 3A No. 2 Pomona, 7 p.m. Friday
    9. Golden 1-0 8 Bye
    Comment: After rare Week 1 bye, Demons get back at it with road trip this week. Next week: at Brighton, 7 p.m. Friday
    10. Riverdale Ridge 1-0 10 W (48-7 vs. Prairie View)
    Comment: Going back to last season, Ravens have allowed single digits or less in eight of their last 11 regular-season games. Next week: at Poudre, 6:30 p.m. Friday

    Class 3A

    Team Record Previous Last week
    1. Thompson Valley 1-0 1 W (17-7 vs. Berthoud)
    Comment: Eagles have won 15 straight dating back to 3A semifinal loss to Holy Family in 2023. Next week: at Greeley Central, 6:30 p.m. Thursday
    2. Pomona 1-0 2 W (49-0 vs. Kennedy)
    Comment: Emmitt Munson threw one TD pass, ran two in, and returned a punt for a score. No word on whether he also drove team bus. Next week: 4A No. 8 Pueblo West, 7 p.m. Friday
    3. Windsor 1-0 3 W (55-0 at Green Mountain)
    Comment: Nobody played better Friday night than Wizards, who dominated Green Mountain from start to finish. Next week: vs. Longmont, 7 p.m. Friday
    4. Mead 1-0 4 W (42-0 at Pueblo South)
    Comment: Nobody played better Thursday night than Mavericks, who’ve now allowed seven total points in last two games vs. Pueblo South. Next week: at Frederick, 7 p.m. Friday
    5. Roosevelt 1-0 5 W (35-0 vs. Northfield)
    Comment: A few numbers from the Riders’ shutout of Northfield: 10 tackles for loss, 3 sacks, 2 interceptions and one fumble recovery. Next week: at No. 8 Holy Family, 7 p.m. Friday
    6. Pueblo East 1-0 8 Bye
    Comment: Eagles got week to recover from road win at Fort Morgan. Discovery Canyon should be another tough test. Next week: vs. Discovery Canyon, 7 p.m. Thursday
    7. Lutheran 0-1 7 L (55-13 vs. Cooper, Texas)
    Comment: Lions might’ve just played toughest game on their whole schedule. Next week: at Fort Morgan, 7 p.m. Thursday
    8. Holy Family 1-0 9 W (49-6 at Northridge)
    Comment: Tigers defense, which allowed 103 yards and forced four turnovers at Northridge, appears quite salty. Next week: No. 5 Roosevelt, 7 p.m. Friday
    9. Green Mountain 0-1 6 L (55-0 at No. 3 Windsor)
    Comment: Rams lost several core players from last year’s 3A semifinal team, and it showed in opener. Next week: at Newport Beach-Corona del Mar, 7 p.m. MT Friday
    10. Palisade 1-0 NR W (40-7 at Delta)
    Comment: Does Western Slope have another contender? This week’s game against 4A power Montrose will reveal a lot. Next week: vs. 4A No. 3 Montrose, 7 p.m. Thursday

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    Matt Schubert

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