h t 6 1 t to e d e e t a e f e d n u Sw s e o rong g t s m r A y d n A ’s y gle Valle Ea tle i t g n li t s e r w h t 6 win the Devils’ 1 By Chris Freud .com cfreud@vaildaily
gle Valley’s nior athlete is Ea se st be ’s ty un agle Co . Period. e Andy Armstrong me the 16th stat y wrestler beca lle Va e in w y, or The Eagl st hi d e program’s prou champion in th sion. vi di d un po 0ly tough 22 ning the brutal ny. in heady compa m ch you hi ts That pu ey Pat Day, whi ck AILY.COM all of Fame jo H as w R/DTAYLOR@VAILD st r. fir te e Th DOMINIQUE TAYLO e’ll be a quiz la er th in e 0 us 16 ca at be need to know ris Harvey won the first since Ch e champ lds Central’s Jacob Armstrong was undefeated stat st fir e th as w mstrong, above, ho Ar ng dy ro . st An 00 m Eagle y’s 20 Ar lle in d Va e An ng Eagl 2006. Mike Lo ch Saturday at the ce heavyweight ld during their mat so allGypsum. sin ho al in a m as ay in su w rd by e yp tu G H os Sa . Cr t rd om fr tournamen t 40-0 reco ng tli ec rf es d wr pe l an a na e as io siv w at en vit Valley In Armstrong fall. the Devils’ off e match with a pin anchoring both Armstrong won th state in football, e openly celebrat defensive lines. s goal he didn’t really d an . ag ily br m wrestler, but hi fa to s e to salute hi He isn’t on ds an get pinned.” st e to th t ts cost Armto no d st pointe was ju the win on poin e, supporting at er th th as w em on the mat. He th er m ve this rd for pins in a be able to ha The only bum . “It’s great. All the school reco id g “It’s amazing to sa in ty ng ins, an of ro st ce m an 26 pins in 40 w ything,” Ar strong a ch ill finished with me through ever st ng ro st m Ar e . off.” season the sam hard work paid were planted at . e tournament is fifth s senior season as hi w impressive ratio r ng fo s ro st ed m se gs about the stat e in Ar th Th d. st de he envien ug on to as Center and the One of the wrestling se as at the Pepsi ’t sit well. w spot his junior dn utes, ng di in ro m at st th 19 m d of Ar l an junior, the wait. s for a tota id. “I wantsa ur ho he ,” 72 ar t e ye ou in the state as a st ab la fo r fo -hour wait r th otivation after rons of Denver is included a 24 Th “I had a lot of m g. lin st re w e. fifth.” 4 seconds of ampionships, Armstrong’s lif ed to better than stling match of ate wrestling ch st re moot point. w 12 t a es 20 g as e gg w lin th bi st es r re bl te w And so, af l these varia t the spring al t en ou sp e ab H g ance in the in k. ch ry or a s w Wor t to mat and hi never stood e ll th ne ht on Be t Armstrong wen tt en re em ar ler look downrig Canon City’s G helped his mov very good wrest e weight room. a th e freestyle. That in ad s m ur ng ho ro d st e hours an ingfinal. Arm no is not a wax focus. Then cam ctory. k h John Ramun or ac w co ’s ll poor in a 14-3 vi ng ba ro ot st fo m Ar t Devils ou ab s d di d “Andy just di hi y, but wax he poetic kind of gu “It . id sa d . thing,” Bear a row in in weight room n Classic titles in r fu rio ng ar vi W ha o dy tw e it was An repeated as he e, tim Armstrong mad e th d By started to roll. and going out an and the top seed December, and rong was 36-0 st m Ar , on destroying.” pi regional cham n. sio vi di ng (We suppose it d ro un st m po in the 220was first. Ar er r rb Ba on as t M ’s was more fun fo y senior wen Mountain View an The Eagle Valle th s. ng nd ro co st se m Ar 64 pinned him in e. Hunter Benell.) cond day of stat 2-for-2 on the se e. Pueblo South’s ic tw es ut in m ll six t the He went the fu e Armstrong hi n, 7-5. By the tim w oomBr do t t en ou w ok rt to ne e Rei s stride. H hi ng tti hi as w semifinals, he wasn’t close. kes, 3-0, and it Beard said. field’s Connor Ea ling coach Ron st re w ils ev D ,” er at kid’s a good “Never in dang performance. Th 0 3g in at in m “That was a do
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C2 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Juan Baca favorite school moment from any year: Won league in 2012 for basketball,
first time in 14 years, and first time in 4A. give a shout out: My parents for always supporting me and believing in me. summer plans: Work, enjoy last summer with friends. where are you headed this fall: Colorado State University, Fort Collins. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss the most: Seeing familiar faces everywhere if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping:
Staying close to my family. A very succesful man with a family and beautiful home. favorite class you took: Video Production class you wish had been offered: Water Polo in 10 years you’ll be:
Heather Radick school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year: Branson, Missouri with the Music Department give a shout out: Thanks Mom and Dad for putting up with me for 18 years. summer plans: In this order, take a luxurious nap, miss my friends, get a job, nap again where are you headed this fall: College in Pennsylvania if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: My beautiful friends in 10 years you’ll be: Alive, hopefully favorite class you took: AP Literature and Composition class you wish had been offered: Astronomy
Jimmy O’Rourke school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year : homeroom basketball give a shout out : All my homies and of course my mom summer plans : Caddie at CCR where are you headed this fall : University of Wisconsin- Madison
Go Badgers! if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The mountains in 10 years you’ll be : snappin’ necks and cashin’ checks favorite class you took : AP Bio
Kelsey Douget school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Playing powder puff football with
my fellow seniors! give a shout out: Thank you for all your love an support dad, I would be
nothing without you! summer plans: Basic Combat Training in Oklahoma (U.S. Army) where are you headed this fall: After Oklahoma I’ll be headed to San Antonio, Texas for medic training. if you’re leaving, what will you miss most: Having the mountains be my backyard. in 10 years you’ll be: Either a nurse or EMT, and hoping to travel the world. favorite class you took: Airbrush class you wish had been offered: Tarot card reading
The Vail Daily
The Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy Class of 2013.
Anna Tedstrom school
Battle Mountain High School
my favorite school moment was this year when we won League Champs for Girls Soccer. shout out to my parents for supporting me through all my endeavors. If it wasn’t for you I wouldn’t be headed in the direction I’m headed. I love you! i’ll be working at a boys summer camp in Wisconsin and performing in the Min-Aqua Bats Waterski Show. i’m headed to Parsons the New School for Design in Manhattan iwill miss my parents, the amazing friends I’ve made over the years, and the adventure provided by the curvy mountain roads and wide open spaces. in ten years I hope to be working in a big city for a well-known company as a designer, or on the road to starting my own company. my favorite class was AP Art with Ms. Bannon. She weighed heavily into my choice to pursue my love for the arts. Thank you Ms. Bannon for all that you do! i would’ve loved to take woodshop, I love to build things and figure out how things work.
Ryan Barney school: Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy favorite school moment from any year: Graduating give a shout out: Mom and Dad summer plans: Working at a ski shop in Mt. Hood, Oregon where are you headed this fall: Skiing Division 1 for Boston College if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: The mountains in 10 years you’ll be: 28 favorite class you took: AP calculus class you wish had been offered: AP physics
| Saturday, May 25, 2013 | C3
C4 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Fashion-forward
thinking and ideas
T
hea Knobel’s Vail Mountain School senior project was more than a fashion statement. There’s a correlation between education rates for women in developing countries and societal struggles. There’s also a correlation between how women are perceived in those countries, and women’s rights and fashion. As part of her senior project, she designed and created a dress to go with her research into the relationship between fashion and stereotypes of women over the last 300 years. She began with the Victorian era when women were seen as frail, impractical, susceptible to illness and often little more than a means to further a bloodline. Fashion contributes to these very perceptions. Period clothing was impractical. Corsets caused back problems. Crinolines, the frames that
made the dresses take on the shape of a four foot wide bell, were heavy and prevented women from sitting down. Standing for hours with a corset squeezing the life out of you can lead to fainting. Fast forward to World War I, the next stop on Knobel’s fashion journey, where she looked into Flappers. Those young women in the 1920s made their mark by flaunting their disdain for what was then considered acceptable behavior. Rather than fall victim to fashion, they used their appearance to make a point about gender inequity. Their clothing was beautiful, but functional. Long elaborate dresses gave way to shorter simpler garments better suited to a liberated lifestyle defined by a love of jazz music and love of life unrestrained by others’ expectations of propriety. Flappers created discussion, to say the least, which led to the beginnings of change. Fashion could be attractive, but it’s also a tool to affect change, Knobel said. An internship that took her to Los Angeles and New York City, and gave her a first-hand look at fastfashion, the clothing lines distributed to mainstream retailers. Much of the clothing that we attribute to famous makers is little more than a label. The clothing lines often have no involvement in designing the clothes. Instead, she learned that fashion is a market-driven economy. Knobel says she’s fine with that, but insists that trends can and should be leveraged to make a political point, and fill otherwise hollow garments with meaning. With all that swimming around in her head and heart, Knobel chose to make a high-low dress, an emerging trend where the dress is higher in the front than the back. She designed hers so that the front was 77 percent of the length of the back. It wasn’t an accident; 77 percent is the wage gap between men and women. She chose bold colors and patterns to represent the diversity of the contributions women make in business, art and culture. The light, flowing fabric is symbolic that gender inequality is not as insurmountable as it once was, she said. Knobel will attend Chapman University in California this fall. “I was drawn to the smaller community feel of Chapman and the fact that their classes focus on discussion and exchange rather than one-sided lectures. This is a lot like classes at VMS, which have worked well for me and I’ve enjoyed,” says Knobel.
The Vail Daily
| Saturday, May 25, 2013 | C5
Lhakpa Sherpa school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year: Everyday was fun! summer plans: Attend class at CMC where are you headed this fall: CMC in 10 years you’ll be: Physician favorite class you took: DE/AP Biology
Mindy Arlette Alderete school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Meeting people during Cross country Season and they
helped me find out what my favorite sport is. shout out: to all my friends and family. Thank you for helping me succeed
summer plans is to volunteer at a dentals office. this fall I will either go to UNC or CSU in pueblo (still deciding) what i will miss the most about eagle county is that i will not be able to help my siblings with there homework. in 10 years i will be a Physicians Assistant and heading back to college for Audio production favorite class i took was digital design class i wish had been offered is music production
Mack Cooper school: Vail Christian High School favorite school moment from any year: Winning the state track
meet for pole-vaulting this year! give a shout out: To my little sister Mia Cooper, who is on the road to quickly
surpass and outshine me both musically and athletically. Love you sis!! summer plans: Work, write music, mountain bike, write music, camp, write music. where are you headed this fall: University of Southern California, Thornton School of Music if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: The mountains and all they offer. in 10 years you’ll be: Back in Colorado, playing shows at Red Rocks! favorite class you took: Probably AP US History. class you wish had been offered: A legit band class.
April Aragon school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Winning state soccer give a shout out: Seniors! summer plans: if everything works out I’ll be joining the marines where are you headed this fall: same as my summer plans if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: the teachers if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: in 10 years you’ll be: having my life settled favorite class you took: health class you wish had been offered: cosmetology
friendship with the people I met
C6 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Ben Hymes (rms), Cody Brown, Joe Lybarger, Rebecca Colton. 2001 Awards AES
Ms. Bowman’s Kindergarden class, Avon Elementary
Keegan Quagliano, Cody Brown, Wil Nolan, Lucas Brunette. ECCA 8th grade trip.
Ham’in it up. (Front L to R) Sierra Brill (VMS), Holly Williams, Anna Tedstrom, Otis White, Joe Sanchez, Wil Nolan, Cody Brown, Joe Lybarger, Jimmy O’Rourke
The Vail Daily
| Saturday, May 25, 2013 | C7
BMHS Homecoming 2012
group Valley . le g a E ll This y to ro is read
ECCA 8th grade, end of the year trip; ou tside NYSE.
This Eagle Valley crew’s balloons are ready to soar, and so are they.
Charlie Grant, Jena Woods, Amy Grace Sherman, Collin Idzikowski, Joe Lybarger, Sydney Edmondson, Lindsey Halverson, Analiese Neiderhause, Judy and others. They’re graduating Battle Mountain High School this weekend.
C8 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
That was a Devil of a year Or how Eagle Valley got its playoff groove back By Chris Freud cfreud@vaildaily.com
E
agle Valley’s going to the playoffs.
That sort of became the refrain in 2012-13. After a seven-year absence — and a recent slump virtually unheard of in the program — Eagle Valley football returned to the state playoffs. Devils boys basketball didn’t have much of a layoff. The gents made it back-to-back postseason appearances. Eagle Valley boys lacrosse made it a seasonal hat trick with its first postseason appearance in the spring. Technically, Devils track and field doesn’t do the playoffs. It’s really the state meet, but you get the point. And wrestling’s Andy Armstrong had a pretty big winter. And, where else can you’re your athletic director do multiple flips across the football field as a part of the Harlem Shake? Mad props to Tammi Payne, and I’m waiting for it, Ryan McCay (Battle Mountain), Tim Pierson (Vail Christian) and Ted O’Reilly (Vail Mountain). We’ll probably keep waiting, but that’s not important right now. ANDY’S THE CHAMP
The Devils’ Andy Armstrong is Eagle County’s best senior athlete. The undefeated 4A wrestling champ put up a 40-0 season. He was All-State in football while anchoring both the offensive and defensive lines. He’s so good, we’re giving him his own story on the front page of Saturday’s Senior Scrapbook.
2009-2011, the Devils went 1-9, 2-7 and 1-8. Perhaps most galling was a three-game losing streak to Battle Mountain, including a 54-0 pasting in 2011. Eagle Valley opened the season with a 32-6 win at Cedaredge. This was notable for two reasons. First, there was a one-hour lightning delay, something that coach John Ramunno has never seen in his 30-plus years of coaching. And, as it turned out, Cedaredge was pretty good. That was the Bruins’ only loss of the season. They won the 1A state title. Though we didn’t know it as the time, the Devils were turning things around. They had a huge senior class leading the team, and they had finally done the work in the offseason. What really helped was senior on both lines. Cole Nielsen’s a good running back, but he can’t do anything without the big boys blocking. Speaking of Nielsen, he turned into a fun runner to watch. I swear, over and over, that kid was down and you thought the play was over, only to see Nielsen keep going. It wasn’t just me. Ramunno told me he’d think Cole was
down, start to call the next play and then look up and see Nielsen still running. With the o-line showing beef, the Devils offense was back. I know people don’t like the double-wing. They’re wrong. It’s a beautiful offense. Turning point No. 1 came between a 25-21 loss at Delta and a 68-14 thrashing of Arvada. The Devils led Delta, 21-6, and then quarterback Mitch Whiteside picked Eagle Valley apart in the second half. (Yes, a game at Delta is always weird. Speaking of which, the Devils won turnovers, 4-0, and lost the game. How does that happen? Really?) Eagle Valley’s defense finally got after the quarterback. The Devils’ pass rush knocked Arvada’s quarterback out of the game, and, one week later, beat the stuffing out of Bubba Ivers in a 48-14 win over Moffat County. Turning point No. 2 was a 42-28 win at Glenwood Springs, the first over the Demons since 2005. Ramunno, who has a memory like an elephant, knew the exact year when I asked him “When was the last time you beat Glenwood, coach?” He knew as he was standing in the middle of the JUSTIN MCCARTY JMCCARTY@VAILDAILY.COM
Eagle Valley’s, Joseph Felix, center, gets above a Summit High School defender to make a layup during their game Tuesday at Eagle Valley High School in Gypsum. The Devils beat the Tigers, 66 - 55.
WELCOME BACK
And now for an observation. Football is two different things at Eagle Valley and Battle Mountain. In Edwards, Eagle Valley’s archrival calls football soccer, and the Huskies are darn good at it. (Funny moment: As Eagle Valley basketball was sweeping Battle Mountain this winter, Devils fans chanted, “Just like football.” Huskies soccer goalie Christian Espinoza yelled back, “We went 20-0 in football.”) In Gypsum, football is football, the gridiron, a sport meant to be played well and deep into November. Except that it hadn’t happened recently. From
JUSTIN MCCARTY | JMCCARTY@VAILDAILY.COM
Eagle Valley Devil Ayren Hart takes down the Moffat County Bulldogs quarterback Bretten Ivers for a sack during the second quarter of play Friday night in Gypsum.
The Vail Daily
Glenwood Springs City Market as his players were getting postgame food. (True story.) Speaking of that memory, that 54-0 loss to Battle Mountain stuck with the Devils for 365 days. Just like the Huskies did when the game was in Gypsum in 2011, the Eagle Valley bus arrived 25 minutes before the game in Edwards, and the Devils got off in full pads and helmets. The final? Eagle Valley 62, Battle Mountain 0. Turning point No. 3 was what we will call, “The Alex Garbage.” It’s painful, but it was part of the journey. Some crackpot woman contacted Eagle Valley football about a kid supposedlydying of leukemia. Alex apparently was following the Eagle Valley football team, and the Devils adopted him and played for him. For Senior Night, the Devils wore orange socks — orange being the color for leukemia awareness — against Palisade. It turned out the entire thing was a hoax of this mentally-disturbed woman. Having been punched in the gut for its kindness, Eagle Valley football could have packed in the tent after lopsided losses to Palisade and Rifle. Instead, the Devils played their best football of the season in the playoffs, knocking off No. 3 Frederick, 33-8 in a whiteout. Conifer ended the Devils season in Gypsum during the round of eight, but it was a tremendous turnaround for Eagle Valley football.
HOOP DREAMS
So, what to do for an encore after Eagle Valley boys basketball won its first 4A Slope title in 2011-12? First, play Glenwood Springs 47 times. (OK, Eagle Valley only played the Demons four times, but you get my point.) The reality was that despite some losses to graduation, Eagle Valley still had a very good basketball team. The Devils came out of the blocks with a 7-1 start before stumbling before the break at Delta. That loss, in retrospect, wasn’t bad as parity was the order of the year in the league. Seriously, I still don’t know how Summit beat Delta. Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? In less mystifying events, Eagle Valley swept the Huskies. That’s five in a row for the guys. The Devils also beat Steamboat twice, including once on an Aryen Hart bank shot, that he doubtless called. Speaking of Hart, he went down with a kidney issue, whose medical name I was able to spell in February, but can’t anymore. (He can’t either.) And while all were worried about young master Hart at the time, the Devils rallied for one of their best wins of the season, a 63-62 win over Delta. (Did I mention that I have no idea how the Panthers lost to Summit?) Seriously, that was one of my favorite games of the year. (No. 1, Game 4 of the World Series; No. 2, Huskies soccer beats Evergreen. Massive tie at three with Devils-Delta hoops, Vail
| Saturday, May 25, 2013 | C9
Christian hoops over Fleming and Devils football beating Glenwood.) The reason is that Eagle Valley boys basketball was cursed and blessed simultaneously with potential. There were times that Eagle Valley hoops left me scratching my head. And there were times when I left the gym, thinking, “Wow.” This was the latter. Everyone got into the act. Tim Harris started in place of Hart. Travis Edgar went nuts in a good way, as did fellow tower, Ryan Werner. Sam Lounsberry was Sam Lounsberry. Several players like Sam Boyd came off the bench for key moments. Good stuff. Under a seeding system that confused the heck out of everyone, the Devils got a home playoff game and downed Erie, 45-36, before giving top-ranked D’Evelyn all it could handle in a second-round loss. IN OTHER NEWS
Eagle Valley boys lacrosse made the playoffs. And give lax coach Ted Boddy some credit for this. He called it. I thought he was insane when he told me that Eagle Valley’s final game had “playoff implications.” Well, the Devils beat Durango and, indeed, did snag the final spot. Slowly, but surely, the Devils are building a program. … Track and field had a good season, as has been documented in the sports section recently. … And mark it now: Eagle Valley girls basketball will be really good next year if it works during the offseason. Just saying …
s g n i m m u Jake C
Ryan Werner
C10 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Roberto Cortes school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Homecoming Week Senior Year give a shout out: Shout out to Coach John Ramunno ;) summer plans: Working, working, at the Gypsum Creek Golf Course where are you headed this fall: I am headed to Western State College if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I will miss the back trails I go 4-wheeeling on in 10 years you’ll be: In 10 years I will hopefully be an Accountant or Insurance Broker in Eagle County. favorite class you took: Physical Condition because it got me STRONG. And coach Ramunno is the Bomb class you wish had been offered: Football class because you can never get enough football!
Anya Kurronen school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: My freshman year, Mr. Dudley chased me down the street in
his car to get me back to class. summer plans: Hanging with friends. where are you headed this fall: CMC Spring Valley Campus if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. My friends especially Bernie in 10 years you’ll be a fire fighter favorite class you took: Japanese Mythology with Ms. Lammers class you wish had been offered
I think the ones they chose are always good.
Eric C. Gurule school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Graduating! give a shout out: love you Khyree Urijah Gurule, everything I do is for you baby son!! summer plans: Get that great job I want and start to make that dough and a living for myself where are you headed this fall: Everywhere and anywhere if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I’m staying for a while if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: My life, health, family, and my homies in 10 years you’ll be: 30 years old favorite class you took: lunch! class you wish had been offered: what class I wish I wasn’t offered is the question
Allison Bossow Nichole school
Battle Mountain High School
favorite school moment from any year class trips summer plans Mother daughter senior trip to Mexico, family trip to Ozarks and Lake Powell where are you headed this fall Colorado State University, Ft. Collins Animal Science Program if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. How everyone knows each other in 10 years you’ll be a large animal vet traveling the world working on elephants and giraffes
The Vail Daily
| Saturday, May 25, 2013 | C11
It wasn’t all business and books for Vail Mountain School’s Class of 2013.
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CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
C12 | Saturday, May 25, 2013 | The Vail Daily
ke Cody Brown, Jimmy O’Rour
The Vail Daily
Battle Mountain’s
Remy Lovett
among Colorado’s top scholars
I
t really does pay off to stay up until 2 a.m. If you study for tests until the middle of the night and generally do good things, good stuff comes back to you. For Lovett, it’s a Boettcher Foundation scholarship, a four-year, full-ride college scholarship to any college or university in Colorado. “There is a payoff. People kept saying it’ll all pay off, but they weren’t sitting at the counter at 2 a.m. studying, not wanting to believe them,” Lovett said. She’s headed to the University of Denver to study international business and Spanish. “What to be remains the million dollar question,” Lovett said. The Boettcher is Colorado’s oldest scholarship program. Just to apply you have to be in the top 5 percent of your class and have a combined score of 1200 on the SAT’s critical reading and math sections or a score of 27 on the ACT. Once you meet those requirements, your counselor can invite you to apply. They take a long look at activities, community service, extra curricular activities and just about anything else they can think of. “The application is 16 pages. It’s the most rigorous of any application I had to fill out,” Lovett said. The Boettcher folks look at 1,300 applications; 250 make the semi finals. The 72 finalists travel to Denver for an interview and 40 receive scholarships. She said she had no expectations going into this. “I just said ‘Whatever is God’s plan is what’s going to happen,’” Lovett said. Lovett’s full-ride scholarship will cover virtually all college expenses: full tuition, fees, a book allowance and an annual stipend for living expenses. The scholarship is for eight semesters to any Colorado college or university, but only as long as the recipients keep a 3.0 GPA. “This is an extremely competitive process so we’re very proud of Remy’s selection as a finalist,” said Phil Qualman, Battle Mountain principal. “Naturally, we think she is an ideal candidate to represent Battle Mountain and the Boettcher Foundation, so we hope she wins the award.”
LOCAL BOETTCHER WINNERS Lovett is the sixth Battle Mountain student to win the prestigious Boettcher Scholarship, and the second in this century. Battle Mountain graduate Alyssa Evens won her Boettcher scholarship in 2010, the school’s first in 15 years and Eagle County’s 10th in 58 years. Evans took her Boettcher scholarship and headed to the University of Denver. Before that, Battle Mountain reeled off four straight years of Boettcher scholarship winners: Andrew Schmidt (1991), Leilah Backhus (1990), Steven Rohlwing (1989) and Sara Severn (1988). Eagle Valley High School has had four: Sue Price (1970), Susan Chandler (1971), Kathy Chandler (1973), Amy Inkell (1990).
| Friday, May 24, 2013 | C1
C2 | Friday, May 24, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Jonna M. Spigener school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Hosting gallery night with Amanda Hagbery give a shout out: Shout out to Jeff Cuno! For making my first Red Canyon year an amazing one! He taught me a lot about life, and went hand in hand with my education. Hi:Dudley!!! summer plans: Continue teaching music, and move to LA! where are you headed this fall: No clue if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: The small town, family aspect. if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: My students in 10 years you’ll be: 28 yrs. Old favorite class you took: Simpsons with Mr. Dudley class you wish had been offered: Non Smoking… I wasn’t around to get the chance to take it. I’ve heard it does wonders.
Thomas Anthony Reyes school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: When I was told that if I passed all
my classes I would graduate. give a shout out: I would like to give a shout out to everyone that started on
bottom and are now here!!! summer plans: Have Fun and party with my fellow classmates. where are you headed this fall: Colorado Community College if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. My friends and loved ones. in 10 years you’ll be: 29 yrs. Old favorite class you took: Men’s club
Camila Soffia Ramirez Battle Mountain High School Going out to eat with my friends during lunch give a shout out Follow your dreams summer plans Just have fun with friends if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The mountains if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. Everything I like is in here so it would make me happy. in 10 years you’ll be Doing whatever I always wanted to do favorite class you took Foods class class you wish had been offered International foods class school
favorite school moment from any year
yle Renzeldie Arnold, K d A : ft s, le m o fr nie Chamber EVHS seniors n’t know, An o h. d , et ow sp d kn u t rdan H man, don’ e Zehring, Jo ds lli A ki o, ry n te m u ys m Rick Ram entify the if you can id aily.com. Let us know sroom@vaild ew n to l ai em and send an
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VCHS Senior
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Battle Mountain Hig School. Now they’re ry nta me Ele on Av in This crew was
| Friday, May 24, 2013 | C3
C4 | Friday, May 24, 2013 | The Vail Daily
l l a b Base e f i l d n a
n. His publicma’s re-electio ba O ck ra handy Ba t Presiden team came in for him as om the speech g fr s in ill go t sk lo ng a s ki spea ylan Trudeau ha y High om Eagle Valle face,” he said. then. l. al it of ammed in my he graduates fr sl ot s ro or e e do th e at m is so seball “I had doors during th School, and ba e to knock on of the nc rtain n de ai ce nfi a pt g co ca s is tin ke d vo “It ta le about . op St pe The 17-year-ol to to p lk hi ta rs d la s a scho dinner hour an eech teams, ha York and will be baseball and sp ew N in ship in Denver way.” ge lle as Co seball state champion e ba 9 th -1 th in on U w e Thomas Aquin u iv ea tit Trud and placed four tionally compe poetry category tcher for the e pi th a playing on a na in as ar s ye es cc is , th mer. His su his Jesse Meryhew team this sum od at that,” said debate. from his coach, lp he e m so d e – he’s very go gu . ar o, am ‘N to te Devils an y, es er sa lik m ve to “He ot on the sum are times we ha er baseball earned him a sp , Lynn. “There e got away with om H out the summ m .’ ab on s si ou ci rv de ev ne a t s os it’ , m te al g ba in de “I’m a little g, play od at talking us this is not a “I’ll be travelin he was very go y and in e tr us un ca co be e gs th team,” he said. in er ov always been a a few th ayers from all ’s he eryday with pl t .” bu ts it, ou into aches and sc Trudeau is front of pro co describes him, good kid.” ew yh er M ay w tFrom the team. 9 -1 U e “Dylan is an ou th ith ell w ew said. yh er g M un ,” likely to fit in w er yo st ng oo di stan me is the R noticed he e “Dylan’s nickna aching Dylan I man. I think th co d te ar e st W . st ld fie e th ,” m on “When I fir hi nce world of ise and confide well . had a lot of po an was pitching yl D d Meryhew said an e m m ga irping at hi ch s er were in a tight ay pl e m team had so e just struck and the other ’t say a word. H dn di t, an yl D t. one of them ou a little bi time he struck ch to Ea t. nd ou ou l m al them back to est and strutted it is he puffed his ch ter does when os ro a e lik t lo a k, that or w om go back to s down. Fr ter never back os ectro sp A . re l ed al ng e challe er, and w n was the Roost ai he rt , ce on t I’m en ll. om m me of baseba ga e th ed of e ay m pl ed how he e into the ga the same attitud at on your team Dylan will take th e lik the have a player life. When you him involved in ep ke to s ke ta it er ev t you do wha game.” ll ’s loved baseba Trudeau said he his d an r be n remem as long as he ca him a player helped e. development as lif s hi r aspects of ed develop in othe ss re og pr ly I real “Academically, hool,” sc gh hi of s ar ye in my last two field, my role on the m ro “F . id sa he as w l ia nt te t my po I realized wha ant to w I , ge lle co as a student. In what r I can and see learn whateve .” I have opportunities a Eagle Valley’s his way, he’ll be go gs in th If Dylan Trudeau Mountain’s Sh and Battle aster. annon Overcas baseball broadc at or h were state fin aj m t is as ts dc in oa po br et a alry . The two have “I’ll be been going ba and forth all se said. “There’s he ,” as ck om as Th on . . At the state fin St als, Trudeau ce I might play won the title an an outside chan d Overcash was se ” cond. o. to e, er ball th might go Then again, he e went doorinto politics. H igning for to-door campa
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The Vail Daily
| Friday, May 24, 2013 | C5
Cody Brown school Battle Mountain High School
we beat the seniors in macho man volleyball my junior year that was pretty awesome. give a shout out Mom, Dad, Brother, Sister, other family and friends, my grandpa and grandma! Love you all. summer plans Doing a summer experience program at my college for a month. Also going on a trip to California. where are you headed this fall High Point University in North Carolina if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The Mountains, snow, and the people. in 10 years you’ll be Journalist or sports Broadcaster favorite class you took Video Production with Mr. Jones class you wish had been offered Sports Management. favorite school moment from any year
Cody Brown and Anna Tedstrom
d his crew
Cody Brown an
Arriana Farnen
Eagle Valley’s
.
Annika Stough
C6 | Friday, May 24, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Zeke Sandoval:
Speed Devil
injury, so he has experienced the results first-hand. I think le his studying this Eag tes eke Sandoval gradua field is a good fit, 4A the as ool Sch Valley High as he loves being Western Slope League Male k an athlete, loves trac Athlete of the Year for sports, and loves and field. l training.” in physica He plans to pursue a career “I think it in do Colora therapy at the University of ld be cool to ip wou rsh ola sch k Colorado Springs on a trac help people get next fall. better and be part -, 200 His track events are the 100 – ys of a sports comrela the and 400-meter runs, and all munity,” he said. . 4X100, 4X200 and 4X400 Sandoval said his he k meet, At last weekend’s state trac m encouraged es mo tim t bes helped his relay teams set the to try track in ord him rec ool sch a ke of their season and bro school and that’s dle mid He broke in the 4X200 by 5 seconds. discovered his he en .26 wh by 400 his own school record in the talent. the long, seconds and narrowly missed “He was always the ‘fast’ one . 200 the in ord kwor standing school rec the te the first one to comple wanted,” e hav “That was the one he really e “W . said al dov out,” Holly San al. “He was cation edu t said his mom, Holly Sandov tha n ldre chi our told always one-tenth of a second off.” h wit comes first. We encourk stic l wil t tha said al Zeke Sandov aged Zeke to try any all him for a long time. activities in middle school a good “Missing that goal might be to see what he may like back of my thing,” he said. “It’ ll be in the on, to do in high school. Our now from mind during my workouts only requirement from .” giving me extra motivation him was that he mainht from Football was another highlig g tain an A-B average in nin a run his senior year. Sandoval was d school, give 110 percent oye enj t tha back and corner on a team and finish the season.” a winning season. s,” Sandoval said he those guy “I grew up playing with all ns to keep up that er pla eth tog e he said. “For 18 seniors to com kind of momentum. was great.” and bust out a good season “I’m really excited until he He played basketball, too, keep going in on to us foc to gave that up his junior year college,” he said, track. adding a prediction ying with “Every sport I’m in, I was pla that good things l ketbal my friends,” he said. “The bas are coming to the was I and team also had a good season younger track l how the happy for my friends. It’s coo rep mates he’s leaving ether to whole senior class came tog w behind. kne we en, resent our school. As freshm “The team is rk.” ma we wanted to leave our really young and physical Holly Sandoval works in a I’m excited to see dise Zek therapy clinic, and that’s how what they can d. fiel t covered his interest in tha do next year,” he being “Playing football and always said. ry,” t on inju active has of course brough te una fort Holly Sandoval said. “I am egrative enough to work for Vail Int capacity. ce offi an in up Medical Gro sparked My ability to bring him in … has had to e Zek d. his interest in the fiel had an he ver ene wh ab go through reh
Derek Franz .com dfranz@eaglevalleyenterprise
Z
The Vail Daily
| Friday, May 24, 2013 | C7
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CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
C8 | Friday, May 24, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Monika Bri
ndzakova, Je others close ssica Davis, Dillon Z astrov, Jeff Vail Moun Andrews, S tain and a re popping y the Champ dney Pollock, Halie a agne corks nd Lori Ha rd on gradua ting high sc ing among hool.
The Vail Daily
On Call I
f you want information, ask for it, like Alex Girten. Girten did and now he’s headed to University of Rochester as one of 12 medical scholars accepted to the program from a pool of 800 applicants. He’s guaranteed a spot in the University of Rochester medical school if he maintains a B+ average. Girten, a Vail Mountain School graduate, was working a booth with his mother at the Vail Farmers Market when he spotted Dr. Eric Dorf, orthopedic surgeon with Vail Summit Orthopedics. Dorf noticed Girten’s mother was wearing a knee brace, and struck up a conversation about her injury. Girten is interested in sports medicine, so he started peppering Dorf with questions. The lively conversation ended with Dorf inviting Girten into the operating room to observe an operation later that week. “I’m interested in sports medicine because it is a combination of two of my passions: helping people and outdoor sports,” Alec said. Girten just finished a long-term research project with Dorf and Dr. Rick Cunningham, of Vail Summit Orthopedics, and with Dr. Richard Steadman. They’re all pioneering new
Alec Girten
Vail Mountain School student collaborating with local doctor on new shoulder surgery
surgical techniques. With Ross Sappenfield, chair of the upper school science program at VMS, Girten finished an independent study as a part of his science classes to look at a new surgical technique to reconstruct injured AC joints, the joint at the top of the shoulder, that is less invasive than current procedures. Girten now knows more about the AC joint than anyone thought possible. “This type of injury affects people of all ages, from all walks of life. It’s a common injury among football players, cyclists and skiers. Among my peers, this type of injury occurs frequently when someone falls off of a rail in the terrain park, or off a bike,” Girten said. Once in a while, surgeons change their techniques, looking for better patient outcomes, Girten said. If they like it, they stay with it. If they don’t they can go back. “Many of the changes in orthopedics are small. It’s not a lot different from last year, but much different from 10 years ago,” Girten said. There was the doctor who grew up during World War II. He saw femur fractures were a problem and came up with the big nails that go
through femurs. “At first his colleagues called him crazy. Then they discovered the patients were doing well,” Girten said. Sir John Charnley developed hip replacements, amid great skepticism from his colleagues. Now it’s one of the most common major surgeries. “There are lots of examples like that.”
| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C1
C2 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Sandra Gonzalez school: Eagle Valley High School fav school moment: My Senior year!!! give a shout out: To my mom who never give up on me and always believe in me T.K.M Mama!!! summer plans: Have fun, work, and decide what I want to do. where are you headed this fall: Probably starting at CMC for now. if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: Im happy that im still going to be close to my family n friends. in 10 years you’ll be: In 10 years I will be in Miami favorite class you took: My favorite class was Digital Design.
Camila Soffia Ramirez school Battle Mountain High School
Going out to eat with my friends during lunch Follow your dreams summer plans Just have fun with friends if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The mountains if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. Everything I like is in here so it would make me happy. in 10 years you’ll be Doing whatever I always wanted to do favorite class you took Foods class class you wish had been offered International foods class favorite school moment from any year give a shout out
Austin Tafoya school Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry (VSSA) favorite school moment from any year Finding
and destroying all of Lord Voldemort’s
horcruxes give a shout out Hermione Granger, Jack the Cat, Dirty Mike and the boys summer plans Train for college football and track where are you headed this fall University of British Columbia if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. Skiing in Vail in 10 years you’ll be
Captain of the Enterprise Starship
favorite class you took Defense against the dark arts with Professor Severus Snape class you wish had been offered History of the Lightsaber
Marco Beltran New America’s High School
Lena Joy Bajza Red Canyon High School
The Vail Daily
Cody Brown Battle Mountain High School We beat the seniors in macho man volleyball my junior year that was pretty awesome. give a shout out Mom, Dad, Brother, Sister, other family and friends, my grandpa and grandma! Love you all. summer plans Doing a summer experience program at my college for a month. Also going on a trip to California. where are you headed this fall High Point University in North Carolina if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The Mountains, snow, and the people. in 10 years you’ll be Journalist or sports Broadcaster favorite class you took Video Production with Mr. Jones class you wish had been offered Sports Management school
favorite school moment from any year
Maddy McGinty school Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment Working with Abel and Melissa in cog needs! <3 give a shout out I’d like to give a shout out to YA MUTHA summer plans
Travel and work baby!
where are you headed this fall University of Northern Colorado what will you miss most. The close community full of smiles! if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping
I’m outa here baby!
in 10 years, you’ll be the princess of Genovia class you wish had been offered Big Gurls 101
Mindy Arlette Alderete school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Meeting people during Cross country Season and they helped me find out what my
favorite sport is. shout out: to all my friends and family. Thank you for helping me succeed summer plans is to volunteer at a dentals office. this fall I will either go to UNC or CSU in pueblo (still deciding) what i will miss the most about eagle county is that i will not be able to help my siblings with there homework.
In 10 years I will be a Physicians Assistant and heading back to college for Audio production favorite class I took was digital design class i wish had been offered is music production
Stephanie Keys school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Zoo field trip, 2nd grade give a shout out: To Bobby Gates, for all your support summer plans: Internship with the Walking Mountains Science Center where are you headed this fall: Pacific University, Forest Grove, Ore. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: Mountains, elevation, dry air and sunshine in 10 years you’ll be: Happy favorite class you took: Psychology class you wish had been offered: Jedi training
| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C3
C4 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Jack Kamby school:
Battle Mountain High School Golf Regionals with Collin and Chuck shout out to the Choom gang- Jim, Lucas, Deb, Collin, Shmeebs. Oh, and Mom and Dad. summer plans Caddying, gotta get that paper. where are you headed this fall Attending University of Colorado Boulder on a full tuition and housing scholarship, will be living in Evans Scholarship House. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. Camping if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. Not staying. in 10 years you’ll be Hopefully retired. favorite class you took Psych with Phelan. class you wish had been offered Bowling favorite school moment from any year
Molly McGrew school: Vail Ski & Snowboard Academy give a shout out: The McPettergrews and Caldo Krueger summer plans: Move to Colorado Springs and hang out with family where are you headed this fall: Colorado State University if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I will miss being close to a ski mountain in 10 years you’ll be: Working as a PA in Park City favorite class you took: AP composition and creative and expository writing class you wish had been offered
Jimmy O’Rourke school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year : homeroom basketball give a shout out : All my homies and of course my mom summer plans : Caddie at CCR where are you headed this fall: University of Wisconsin- Madison Go Badgers! if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The mountains in 10 years you’ll be: snappin’ necks and cashin’ checks
Best frie nds fore ve Osteen and Ann r Megan ika Stou gh
Rick Ramunno school:
Eagle Valley High School
favorite school moment from any year:
Senior year’s playoff football game against Frederick My family! summer plans: Work where are you headed this fall: Metropolitan State University, Denver, to study Aviation Technology what will you miss most? The mountains class you wish had been offered: Beardo’s Freshmen Seminar give a shout out to:
The Vail Daily
Red C
anyo
n Hig
h Sch
ool’s
Class
| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C5
of 20
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Kelly Guarascio school- Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year- watching Heivan score the winning goal in the PK shoot out at the boys’ state championship soccer game summer plans- A fun week in Lake Powell, multiple visits to Red Rocks,
and a trip to Lake Julia in Wisconsin. where are you headed this fall- Northeastern University in Boston. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most.- Probably the skiing. I don’t think the east coast ice can live up to the glorious Rocky Mountain powder. in 10 years you’ll be- traveling EVERYWHERE! favorite class you took- Spanish. I love languages, and Senor Velasquez is the funniest man alive class you wish had been offered- Anthropology
C6 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Goodwin aiming
to do good N
atalie Goodwin is an only-child with a passion for people. The Eagle Valley High School graduate has an all-merit scholarship to Baylor University in Texas, where she plans to pursue a career in medicine. “I want to be an emergency-room physician or a trauma surgeon,” she said. “I like the emergency aspect.” It’s a very different career path from what her parents do. “My dad is an insurance salesman and my mom is a fourth-generation interior designer, so I’m breaking a big tradition there,” she joked. “Thank goodness!” said her mom, Suzanne Fetzer Goodwin. “I don’t think I’d want her to go into this business with the way things are now.” Goodwin also comes from a background of traveling and athletics. She played on the varsity soccer team since her freshman year as a left wing. “She skis and snowboards, and has been a pretty good piano player since she started in second grade,” said her dad, Randy Goodwin. “She bakes good desserts, too.” Natalie Goodwin said her interest in medicine started in eighth grade. “My friend had cancer and I went to Denver to visit him in the hospital a lot,” she said. “I became fascinated with everything there.” (Her friend ended up making a “phenomenal” recovery and Goodwin is still in touch with him.) Randy Goodwin said his daughter has always been interested in medicine. “Ever since she was 6 years old,” he said. “I don’t know exactly what it was that drew her interest there, but she was always into it.” She’s also interested in language and plans to major in Spanish or linguistics for her pre-med undergraduate degree. “I’m drawn to cultures,” she said. “I don’t think language should be a barrier.” Her mom said they started traveling overseas with Natalie when she was 6 years old, to Portugal. More recently, Goodwin spent two weeks in Spain as part of a student group from EVHS in 2011.
By Derek Franz
“Spanish will always be a part of my life,” she said. “I’ve been to so many places, though, it’s hard to pick a favorite.” Fetzer Goodwin said her daughter is very good at adapting to situations, which helps with traveling. “She’s always been an easy-going kid with a phenomenal work ethic,” she said. “I think she’ll take that go-with-the-flow attitude to college. She fits right into wherever she is.” Natalie Goodwin finished her senior year as president of the EVHS National Honor Society, which is dedicated to scholarship, leadership and service. “We had 33 members this year,” she said. “We are very involved at this school. That’s one reason I chose Baylor – it has a really good leadership and service outreach program. I also wanted to go to school in the South and I wanted a Christian university, so Baylor’s a good fit.” She said her family is from the South but she was born in San Francisco and grew up in Eagle County. “I’m just ready for a change,” she said. Her parents hope she keeps traveling. “Travel is so important – it broadens your horizons,” Fetzer-Goodwin said. “We’re so proud of her. She’s a person who does it all.”
The Vail Daily
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| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C7
e and Hale y Wallace.
C8 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Saints hoops goes to
‘The Big Show’ Team actually plays defense; reporter amazed By Chris Freud cfreud@vaildaily.com
VAIL CHRISTIAN BASKETBALL
I really relate to the Saints. Their basketball program started when I moved here from San Francisco. And, as would be expected from any new varsity program, boy, did Vail Christian take some beatings. Then-girls coach Patrick Beaudine once left me a message reporting results, saying, “Against Plateau Valley, we lead 4-2 early, and that’s all I’ll say about that.” Final score: Plateau Valley 96, Vail Christian 14. Ouch. The Vail Christian boys basketball team started playing in the now-defunct 1A Mountain League and always got pasted by DeBeque, which was the king of the hill in those days. One year, the aforementioned Dragons hosted the Saints for Senior Night, and did a number on Vail Christian. DeBeque won and ran it up, bringing in their seniors again when the game was more than over. Final score? DeBeque 107, Vail Christian 39. Saints boys coach Sheldon Kuhns, who has coached the program since its start, still remembers that score to this day.
THERE ARE TWO ENDS TO A COURT
The reason your friendly neighborhood sports editor wasn’t exactly bubbling with optimism is that Vail Christian boys basketball has always been one or the other. To clarify, in the Saints’ early days, they had big men like Caleb Pearson, Jaryd Francis and Josh Sibley, but no point guard. Once they got a point guard (Will Parker or Fernando Hernandez), there were no big men left in the program. And so, the Saints could score and score and score, but couldn’t play
defense. Of course, every year for the past five or so, the Saints had pledged that this would, indeed, be the year they would bear down, play defense and actually rebound once in a while. And then Hayden would come to town and put up 88 points, showing that there was no there there, to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, when it came to Vail Christian defense. And there was no reason to believe that this year would be different. OK, the Saints got off to a good start. After losing to 4A Battle Mountain in the season opener — no shame there — the Saints won four straight and were 4-1 before the holiday break. But Vail Christian had a habit of looking promising in December, only to shrivel in January and February. (Again, very Giants-like. My baseball team has had a nasty habit of looking unstoppable early and then splatting.) Vail Christian opened 2013 with a 5745 loss at Shining Mountain, which was No. 1-ranked at the state in 1A. Nice to know the Saints could play with a good team, but there was still no reason to believe that Vail Christian would be sharing the same court with the Lions any time soon. Turning point No. 1 came Jan. 25, ironically in a 51-45 win over Soroco. Though the Saints had toppled the Cardinals, Vail Christian wasn’t as focused as Kuhns and assistant coaches Doug Bruce, Todd Ellsworth and Sibley would have liked. (Yes, Sibley was now coaching and that made the reporter feel old.) This would be a nice way of saying the Saints needed to shut their yaps. I like chatty players. I’m a reporter. I need quotes, and guys like Gunnar Wilson, Zach Linder and Nigel Johnsen, and, let’s face it, the whole team, all are
a reporter’s dream. However, it is not a coaching staff ’s dream to have your team opining to the refs, the opponent and the crowd during a game. The game was on Saturday and, two days later, during Monday’s practice, everybody ran. This was the “33 practice,” as it became known. No more talking. You’re just running. And, thus, the chit-chat stopped. A week after the Soroco game, the Saints went to Paonia and lost, 70-66. That led to big moment No. 2. Vail Christian was playing a full-court press on defense against the Eagles. It made sense at the time because the Saints were a quick, smaller team. If you’re not particularly big, you play uptempo, wear down the opponent and then produce offense off the transition, something for which the Saints had a particular talent. But Kuhns and the Bruce/Ellsworth/ Sibleu braintrust realized that they had lost that game because of that style of play. And the answer was right in front of their eyes. The Saints could play a straight-up half-court defense because they had the tools in seniors Kevin Boselli and Linder. These two had played only one game together in 2011-12 because Boselli had knee problems and Linder had a concussion. And together, they could guard the paint and rebound, the Achilles heel of Saints hoops. Vail Christian went to Meeker and won ugly, 46-42, and it was a thing of beauty. First of all, the Saints never win at Meeker, and second, they had solved the puzzle of winning out those grinding games, which they inevitably had lost in past years.
The Vail Daily
FRIDAY
The Saints wrapped the regular season with a 75-38 win over Plateau Valley. The way the winter season worked, I had not seen Vail Christian in a while, so I went in with my healthy Giants skepticism. (When the Giants were up three games to none, and trailing the Tigers by one run in Game 4 of the 2012 World Series, I thought we were going to lose the Series. OK, maybe, it’s not healthy skepticism.) This was a different team. It was also “Beat the Stuffing out of Gunnar Wilson Night.” The senior took a physical beating, but did not yap and get into it with the Cowboys. This is important. Such composure would serve the Saints well. That’s because Friday was coming. (Yes, I know it comes once every seven days.) But say Friday to Vail Christian boys basketball and its players and coaches know. Friday is semifinals at districts, the game a team needs to win to advance to the finals, and, more importantly, the regional tournament. The Saints were 0-for-Friday. Even when the Saints were terrible in the early days, they’d play beyond their ability, only to lose in heart-breaking fashion. When they had better teams, which might have been better-positioned to advance, something went wrong. Vail Christian washed all those bitter memories away by thumping Plateau Valley, again, 60-29. For bonus points, er, seeding, the Saints won their first district title, grinding by Norwood, 42-32. Kuhns had emphasized all season the importance of having a good regular season record to get good seeding in order to advance past this mother of all obstacles — Friday. By all means, he was correct. But, regardless of seed and record, this was finally a different Saints team, and the rest of Colorado was going to discover that fact.
‘ON TO STATE’
Vail Christian travelled to Glenwood Springs High School on March 9. Yes, the basketball team was going, but so too was everyone else involved with the school. Deer Trail, the Saints’ opponent in a one-game playoff for a state berth, thought it was going to play at a neutral
site. Nope. With all Saints fans clad in white district-championship shirts, Glenwood was Edwards East. And the boys did not disappoint. Not only did the Saints play defense, but they were showing the flourishes. It had gone beyond Linder and Boselli being designated defensive guys. Defense had finally become a team concept. Wilson and Johnsen teamed up on Deer Trail’s leading scorer. Linder and Boselli were not only rebounding, but starting the transition the other way. (By the way, Linder thinks he’s a point guard. Sorry, kid.) Robby Bowles, who’s a brilliant shooting guard was in on the rebounding, as was Wilson. Austin Ellsworth was taking charges. The Saints won, 44-33, and it wasn’t that close. Deer Trail hit three 3-pointers on bank shots. Vail Christian fans serenaded the team with their “on to state” chant. Three things happened in that locker room. First, Brady Ellsworth, 5, the youngest of that clan, played his video game, completely oblivious to the celebration all around him. (Funny as heck. Sort of puts things into perspective.) Second, Kuhns nearly broke down while addressing his team. (This had been a long time in coming for him.) And coach Bruce wanted to talk to Boselli about being more aggressive offensively.
THE BIG SHOW
Vail Christian drew No. 3 Fleming at the 1stBank Center in Broomfield, and pretty much everyone on colorado preps.com had the Wildcats advancing. A state-newcomer, Vail Christian was meant to lose two games and go home. The Saints overcame a shaky start, and another element began to emerge. They got contributions from all over. Sophomore Luke Berger had three big buckets in the second quarter. Austin Ellsworth had some big moments. And Boselli had a huge game offensively with 13 points, most of those coming in the second half. The Saints kept surging, and a 14-for-20 performance from the free-throw line in the final 2:48 iced a 67-58 upset of Fleming. Next up was No. 2 McClave and man-child Cody Canfield. After beating Fleming, the Saints stuck around and scouted McClave and wisely determined that everything McClave did went through the 6-foot-5 Canfield. Canfield proved too much the next day. The Saints threw the kitchen sink at him defensively during
| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C9
the first half, but there’s a reason Canfield went on to become The Denver Post’s Player of the Year in Class 1A and his team ended up winning state. Not discouraged, the Saints came back on the final day of the tournament to beat Caliche, the four-time state champion, 87-76, in one of the more wild games I’ve ever seen. Rarely do I go to a game where I don’t hear a parent tell me to write a story about how bad the officiating is. This, however, was truly atrocious. The refs called 59 fouls in a 32-minute game. Vail Christian and Caliche combined for 80 free throws. Caliche was 20-for-28 from the line in the first half alone. I was going over to the scorer’s table to check out the foul situation, while Kuhns was walking toward the locker room. We caught a glance of each other. Nothing was said, but Kuhns had a look on his face that said, “Well, you can’t print that in a newspaper.” Remember the “33 practice?” The Saints kept their cool during a crazy situation and took it to Caliche, scoring 51 points in the second half. Wilson went off for 32 points. He just missed the school record by two free throws. (For the record, that’s Wilson’s dad’s fault. As the Saints were winding down the game, the Rev. Rob Wilson came up to me and said, “Chris, they’re making their free throws,” referring to one of my common causes for scolding basketball teams. Gunnar promptly clanked two shots. That’s on you, Rob.) Bowles put up 22 points. Oh, heck, everyone played beautifully, as the Saints finished in third place in the state with a 20-5 record, both easily school bests. “I’m just proud of them. See, now you’re going to get me emotional,” Kuhns said. “For four years, they showed up to practice everyday. They showed up and played hard everyday. They showed up in the summer time. They gave everything for four years. They showed the younger guys how to play. I am proud to have coached them.”
AND IN OTHER NEWS …
Vail Mountain School volleyball coach Mike Garvey set a record for the most matter-of-fact reporting of a district title win. In almost a drone, Garvey leaves a message, “Hi, Chris, just calling to let you know we’re district champions. Please call me back.” VMS volleyball almost made state but fell short against Paonia in districts, which were held in East Vail. … VMS Nordic, for some reason, did not sweep the state meet again. (The Gore Rangers had won four years running.) The earth continued to spin on its axis. … Saints eight-man football went 5-4, including beating Soroco for the first time on the gridiron. … And, Vail Christian was pretty much amazing in the state track meet.
C10 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Holly Williams school: Battle Mountain High School summer plans: Summer plans include working and Lake Powell. favorite school moment in high school: probably meeting Ms. Jennifer Ortiz, but the most fun school trip we did was 8th grade in New York and Washington DC. We were touring the Empire State Building and I swear I heard my name, I turned to look at who called me and my class was gone. Mr. Mills had to come find me to reunite me with the class. Was quite funny. where are you headed this fall: I am headed to UNLV in the fall things i will miss about eagle county: I will miss the snow, but hear there is a ski area within 45 min. of Las Vegas. and I can wear shorts and flip flops year round! in 10 years you’ll be: In 10 yrs I am sure I will be working somewhere favorite class you took: Favorite Class I took was both Biology and AP Biology thanks to Mr. Caudill, he’s the greatest science teacher out there!.
Carmen Marrufo school: Eagle Valley High School school:
Choir trip to Elitch’s!
give a shout out: To my family for encouraging me. summer plans: Read, spend time with my friends and family, and read some more. where are you headed this fall: Western State College University if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: Everything! in 10 years you’ll be: A hyperactive molecular biologist. favorite class you took: All of my art classes, of course. class you wish had been offered: Video Gaming 101
Daniela Gonzalez school: Eagle Valley High School give a shout out: to my dad Ricardo that was always there for me, my sister, all my friends and teachers! summer plans: Go visit my family in Mexico. Come back and start working. where are you headed this fall: I’m attending CMC and starting my criminal justice career :) if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I don’t plan on leaving Eagle County any time soon. I love it here!!(: if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: being close to my dad and all my friends that will still be in town. in 10 years you’ll be: 27 years old, with a good job and starting a family. favorite class you took: they were all great but favorite it would be math class with Mr.Gabriel class you wish had been offered: psychology would have been fun!
Eagle Valley High School’s
Jake and Will Dutmer, and Megan Osteen
The Vail Daily
| Thursday, May 23, 2013 | C11
Katie Stephens school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: When Bill Gates came to our class. summer plans: Working at Stephens Nursery and raising 4-H livestock animals. where are you headed this fall: Colorado State University if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. Beig in the mountains, but at least I can still see them. in 10 years you’ll be: Practicing veterinary mediine favorite class you took: Airbrush class you wish had been offered: FFA
Alex Leever school: Vail Mountain School favorite school moment from any year: Being unexpectedly recognized for
Student-Athlete of the year. give a shout out: To my teachers for providing the flexibility and support to
be a scholar and a ski racer! summer plans: Training in Zermatt, Switzerland and New Zealand! where are you headed this fall? University of Denver what will you miss most about eagle county? Vail Mountain in 10 years you hope to be: A ski racer on the world cup favorite class you took: Creative Writing class you most look forward to in college: Intro to Business
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C12 | Thursday, May 23, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Mimi Nary school: Vail Christian High School favorite school moment from any year all school retreats summer plans: Counselor at a summer camp where are you headed this fall: Saint Mary’s College at Notre Dame, Ind. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. Friends and the mountains in 10 years you’ll be: Ill be a nurse or Physical therapist with a family favorite class you took: Ms. Cooper’s English classes
Cindy Reyes school: Vail Christian High School favorite school moment from any year: The retreat at Frontier Ranch every year. It was great to spend time
getting to know everyone and give nuggets of wisdom to the underclassmen. give a shout out: Thanks to my parents for giving me all I need and to all the teachers throughout my
entire educational career that truly loved teaching and inspiring their students. summer plans: I’m staying in the valley to enjoy the beautiful Colorado weather and work. where are you headed this fall: University of Colorado Denver! I will pursue my studies to become a PA. if you’re leaving eagle county what will you miss the most: My family and friends. I’ll still be close enough to come visit often though, which is wonderful. in 10 years you’ll be: I will be working in a dermatology clinic as a PA and traveling to the places I have always wanted to see. favorite class you took: It’s hard to pick a favorite but Ms. Cooper’s English classes was always the best! I loved the books we read and her sense of humor. I will miss her and her class. class you wish had been offered: Probably one that had to do with ethics.
Rising Vail Christian’s
star
Angela Downs ready to storm the Great White Way
At the intersection of preparation and opportunity, where greatness lives, you’ll find Angela Downs. Downs is a Vail Christian High School senior headed to American Musical Dramatics Academy in New York City, where she’ll study musical theater. She got to show off a little before she leaves, staging Vail Christian’s first Senior Showcase, a one-woman show. She sings, she dances, she tells jokes and does a monologue. “It’s a good opportunity for my family and friends to see how far I’ve come,” Downs said. It’s been a great ride so far, mostly. Downs grew up riding and showing horses. She bought her first one when she was 8 years old. As sometimes happens with young women, her interests shifted away from the equine and toward entertainment.
On a whim, she auditioned for the school play her freshman year, “The Music Man.” She decided the stage was for her. Director Rayla Kundolf spotted her right away. “Rayla Kundolf put the idea in my head that I could do this,” Downs said. It turns out that Kundolf was right. Downs’ voice is strong in an Old School kind of way, like her ability to get paid for a gig rests with her ability to dazzle people in the back of the room – which it often does. She looks the audience in the eye and has that performer’s knack for convincing everyone in the place that she’s singing straight to you. “Every week, she would come in for her lesson accompanied by her mother whose devotion to Angela is exemplary and so supportive,” said Maxine Graboyes, Downs’ vocal coach for the last four years. “Her mom would ask me, ‘Do you think she can really sing?’ and I would say to her that
it takes time to develop a good singing technique, but if she continues to put in the time and effort, and let nature as well as maturity take it’s course, then I believe she can develop into a fine singer.” Angela loves a challenge, Graboyes said. “Angela became a very determined and committed young lady,” Graboyes said. But it’s not all happilyever-after. Downs was devastated when the family lost her oldest brother Nate in an accident. She stopped performing, and almost everything else. Fast forward a year or so, when the actress playing the Wicked Witch of the West in the “Wizard of Oz” decided she was going to look at colleges and would miss the last few performances. So, Kundolf turned to Downs. The Wicked Witch was never so wonderful. Downs had seven days to learn everything. She hit it out of the park. That summer, Downs landed a gig as a singing waitress at The Marketplace in Vail, a great restau-
rant with a singing wait staff. That’s where she learned to perform for her audience, no matter how small. The singing was great, the job was fun and her colleagues were delightful. But some of the customers could be a little cranky, she said. Still, you play to your audience and if you can get a middle-aged man to sing that he wants his steak medium rare, you’ve got what it takes.
C2 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
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The Vail Daily
| Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | C3
Jameson Davis school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Being told I was going to graduate!! give a shout out: whats gud summer plans: Get out of town find a good job and take care of my baby. where are you headed this fall: philly. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. My fiends in 10 years you’ll be: 28 yrs. Old favorite class you took: Know your Rights and Boy’s club. class you wish had been offered: sign language
Willy Blommer school: Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy favorite school moment from any year: The big dirty give a shout out: Ricky, Julien, Philadelphia (RIP) summer plans: Skiing where are you headed this fall: Ski Club Vai if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: Mountains in 10 years you’ll be: In the Olympics favorite class you took: BC calculus class you wish had been offered: Advanced bird calling
Jammie Dumolt school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Our senior raft trip give a shout out: To Red Canyon, I wouldn’t be the person I am without you. summer plans: Continue to work at both my jobs till I leave for school. where are you headed this fall: They University of Denver if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: Hw small it is, its going to be re-
ally strange to live in a city. in 10 years you’ll be: Working at a law firm favorite class you took: I took so many but, Vietnam class
Jose Enrique Perez Orona school Red Canyon favorite school moment from any year: When I came to red canyon
Summer plans to work and then go to college the fall where are you headed this fall: To college if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I well miss all the friends I made favorite class you took: Math class you wish had been offered: Art
C4 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Stephanie Martinez school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year:My favorite school moment was high school lunch I have so many great
memories that were spent with great friends. give a shout out: I would like to give a shout out to my friends and family. My friends for being their
throughout the tough times in high school. And my family for helping me get through school and all the challenges. summer plans: I plan to work thought out summer and save money so I can put my daughter in pre-school and myself through beauty school. where are you headed this fall: I’m not sure what I will be doing when fall comes, maybe ill be Texas or at home Gypsum if you’re staying,what are you happiest about keeping: I am great full for all my friends and even though they may be leaving I hope we keep in touch. in 10 years you’ll be: I ten I hope to be happily married with a beautiful family and a career that I’m happy with. I want to be happy with my surroundings. favorite class you took: Ceramics. class you wish had been offered: French 3
Emily Massie school: Eagle Valley High School favorite moment: The 2013 EV2DC Trip or
Kindergarten Day in Ms.Thomas’s class! shout out: To my AMAZING mom, family, and friends! summer plans: Work at Stephens Nursery and have a blast in 4-H! where to this fall: CMC in Edwards staying in the valley: I am happy to stay home so my mom can keep cooking for me and I can still participate in 4-H! 10 years from now: I hope to be a Flight Nurse and be living my life to the fullest! favorite class: Ag. Science or Anatomy! class you wished was offered: How to Train Your Dragon 101!
Ella Guzik school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Having the whole school sing happy birthday to me at a pep
fest last year. give a shout out: Thank you to all the football coaches for giving me a life-changing opportu-
nity that has helped me decide what I want to do with my future! Also I love you so much Dad, Bethany, Claire, and Mom, thank you for getting me to this point! summer plans: Working 2 jobs and packing up for college where are you headed this fall: University of Wyoming, GO POKES! if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: Ski Racing in ten years you’ll be: Managing a Pro sports team (football hopefully) or a large business favorite class you took: Economics or Digital Design class you wish had been offered: Trap Shooting class Thanks again! -Ella Guzik
Collin Idzikowski school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment: conducting original full concert band piece on the U.S.S. Missouri during the
Hawaii trip sophomore year. shout out to my bands album just released on iTunes! “Awaken Annie - Roads” check it out! summer plans: work, gig, frisbee, outside!
Headed to Berklee College of Music in Boston this fall. The one thing I will miss the most in eagle county is looking up on the mountain in the fall to see every color while the leafs change. in ten years I hope to be writing and performing my songs; changing the world with my music. my favorite class I took was AP Environmental Science. VONAROO! i wish AP music Theroy was offered.
The Vail Daily
Dakota School: Red Canyon High School favorite School moment from any year: Meeting my best friends. give a Shout out: Shout out to Lynnae, Sam, Dan and Phil. Summer planS: Getting a job! where are you headed thiS fall: Some awesome place in Denver. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miSS moSt? All of my friends and family. in 10 yearS you’ll be: Singing on stage with Danny, Ben, Cam, James and Sam. favorite claSS you took: Religions with Ms. Newman claSS you wiSh had been offered: Choir!
ERICK MEDINA School:
Red Canyon High School
favorite School moment from any year : Gallery Night give a Shout out: All the Red Canyon teachers Summer planS: Work and keep progressing where are you headed thiS fall: College if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miSS moSt: The weather and family if you’re Staying, what are you happieSt about keeping: My family in 10 yearS you’ll be: Happy with my life hopefully favorite claSS you took: Mr. Gladitch and Gov. claSS you wiSh had been offered: Skate Class
Ezequiel cortez School:
Red Canyon High School
give a Shout out: I want to give a shout out to Mr.Hill he’s the best. Summer planS: I want to get two jobs and get a lot of money where are you headed thiS fall: I’m staying in Colorado and making my
own life with my girl if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miSS moSt. I’m not if you’re Staying, what are you happieSt about keeping. I love it here and I’m gonna miss my teachers in 10 yearS you’ll be: Ill be the manager at Costco. favorite claSS you took: Ms. Woods claSS you wiSh had been offered: mechanics
Lyndsey Robinson School: Red Canyon High School favorite School moment from any year: Being told I was going to graduate!! give a Shout out: Hi: 5 Summer planS: get a job, raise my daughter and save money for college where are you headed thiS fall: CMC. if you’re leaving eagle county what will you miSS the moSt? The mountains. if you’re Staying? The mountains and my family. in 10 yearS you’ll be: 29 yrs. Old favorite claSS you took: Mathematics with Ms. Chartier
| Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | C5
C6 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Raechel Herridge school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Finishing school! give a shout out: I couldn’t have done it without my mom, Karla. I love you mom. summer plans: Continue to work two jobs in Grand Junction where are you headed this fall: Not sure yet.
if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. I already moved away when I finished school in December. I mostly miss my friends. in 10 years you’ll be: Working and happy with the life I have. favorite class you took: Mr. Dudley’s class.
Thomas Anthony Reyes school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: When I was told that if I passed all my classes I would
graduate. give a shout out: I would like to give a shout out to everyone that started on bottom and are
now here!!! summer plans: Have Fun and party with my fellow classmates. where are you headed this fall: Colorado Community College if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. My friends and loved ones. in 10 years you’ll be: 29 yrs. Old favorite class you took: Men’s club
Camila Soffia Ramirez school Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year Going out to eat with my friends during lunch give a shout out Follow your dreams summer plans Just have fun with friends if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. The mountains if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. Everything I like is in here so it would make me happy. in 10 years you’ll be: Doing whatever I always wanted to do favorite class you took Foods class class you wish had been offered International foods class
Allison Campbell Red Canyon High School
Jose Martinez Red Canyon High School
The Vail Daily
| Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | C7
Gunnar Wilson school:
Vail Christian
favorite school moment from any year :
State Championships
give a shout out:
Copester summer plans : Work where are you headed this fall:
Baylor University
if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most:
The correct answer is Family
in 10 years you’ll be:...28 favorite class you took:
Economics with Mr. Phelan, History with Mr. Beaudine
Travis Tafoya school: Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy favorite moment:
Going to Ski Academy Mom, Dad, and the Eagle Valley Seniors! summer plans: working in the valley headed in fall: University of Colorado at Colorado Springs what will you miss: Snowboarding at Vail every day. in 10 yrs: 27 years of age? favorite class: AP Composition class you wish was offered: AP Psychology shout out:
Luis Munoz school: Red Canyon High School gavorite school moment from any year’ Crew days give a shout out’ To Mr. hill for helping me graduate summer plans’ Work where are you headed this fall, College if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most. Snowboarding if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. my friends in 10 years you’ll be’ Rich and famous favorite class you took’ Boys Class class you wish had been offered’ Rec center.
Taey Marie school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: Last year’s lunch breaks. give a shout out: My parents and my brother. summer plans: Work and save money (: where are you headed this fall: Wherever my heart leads me.
Alejandra Torres Red Canyon High School
if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: The beautiful weather and my friends. Mostly seeing all the starts at night. if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: My family. in 10 years you’ll be: Living a peaceful life and surrounding my self by people that I love. favorite class you took: Towards No Drugs (TND) BEST class EVER! class you wish had been offered: I was offered everything at my school so I couldn’t pick one.
C8 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Michelle Guida school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year:
Our Footloose production!!
give a shout out: My parents! You’re both so amazing and you’ve shaped me into the
person who I am today. what i’ll be doing this summer: Hostessing at the Maya, going to Powell with the senior class, getting ready for college!! where am i going this fall: Colorado State University If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: My home and my family in 10 years you’ll be: Hopefully, I’ll be making a difference in the world. “ (one person at a time) favorite class you took: DE World History with Mr. Niewoonder class you wish had been offered: A yoga class!!!
Roberto Cortes school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Homecoming Week Senior Year give a shout out: Shout out to Coach John Ramunno ;) summer plans: Working, working, at the Gypsum Creek Golf Course where are you headed this fall: I am headed to Western State College if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I will miss the back trails I go 4-wheeeling on in 10 years you’ll be: In 10 years I will hopefully be an Accountant or Insurance Broker in Eagle County. favorite class you took: Physical Condition because it got me STRONG. And coach Ramunno is the Bomb class you wish had been offered: Football class because you can never get enough football!
Katie Hill school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Going to the state track meet last year
with the 4 x 800 relay team. give a shout out: Bob and Chantal. I’m gonna miss you so much. You should
move to Massachusetts, and you should definitely visit. summer plans: Move to Massachusetts where are you headed this fall: UMass Amherst if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: All the friends I’ve made here, especially my track buddies. in 10 years you’ll be: A nurse favorite class you took: Anatomy and physiology class you wish had been offered: Abnormal psychology
Natalie Goodwin school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: When the bell rang after my last final
senior year give a shout out: My parents for all of their hard work and dedication to
me achieving summer plans: Travel, spend time with family and then go to college! where are you headed this fall: Baylor University if you’re leaving eagle county what will you miss most: The closeness of everyone in town in 10 years you’ll be: a surgeon favorite class you took: Anatomy and Physiology class you wish had been offered: AP Spanish
The Vail Daily
Marlene Chavarria
Nick Perry New America High School
Nora Tellez Soto New Amerca High School
Collin Hanson school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year: It was hysterical rehearsing shakesphere in front of the
entire English Class. Also loved any time I was playing golf for BMHS. summer Plans: Working at Cordillera Summit Golf Course where are you headed this fall: Colorado State University if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I’m going to miss my friends and the wonderful mountains and hiking trails! in 10 years you’ll be: Very successful in my career and driving a sports car. favorite class you took: AP Literature with Mrs. Zilliox Junior year class you wish had been offered: Archaeology.
| Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | C9
C10 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Addie Arnold school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Homecoming Week 2012 give a shout out: Yo Mom. Thanks for always making my lunch. summer plans: Working at the Gypsum Rec Center, backpacking
and taking a road trip to California. where are you headed this fall: CSU! if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: The close, loving community we have. Simply amazing. in 10 years you’ll be: 28 years old favorite class you took: Video production class you wish had been offered: Scuba diving
Kristen Medina school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment from any year: Being a boys basketball man-
ager and being part of an amazing team for three years. give a shout out: I would like to thank my mom and dad. I love
you. summer plans: Hopefully going to Florida or going on a cruise
Where are you headed this fall: Colorado Mountain College in Edwards. if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: Our community. in 10 years you’ll be: I hope to be in Florida. I love it there. favorite class you took: Marketing with Mr. Triece class you wish had been offered: I wish we had more art classes. There are some very talented students in our school.
Nicole Daigle school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment: When Bill Gates came into my English class, and we didn’t really realize who he was until the
end of class when Mrs. Stavney introduced them as Mr. Bill and Melinda Gates. We were all in shock and honored at the same time! give a shout: I’d like to thank everyone who supported me throughout my high school years and helped me grow into a unique individual. Mom, Dad, Jake, and all my buds...I love you! summer plans: hiking at least 3 Fourteeners’, camping with my family, taking a road trip to Moab, and playing my guitar on the side of the road to get some cash for college. where are you headed this fall: I will be going to Colorado Mountain College in Edwards to get my AA, then transfering to either UNC in Greely or Western State in Gunnison. if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most? I will miss this small town, what little traffic we have, and the beautiful sunsets that you can only find in Colorado. in 10 years, you’ll be: Maybe a make-up artist in California, or a Counselor in a hospital, but definitely traveling the world, letting the wind take me wherever it may. favorite class you took: Chemistry, sophmore year with Mr. Carden. He was so sporratic and funny, that everything he taught was always a blast! (no pun intented) class you wish had been offered: Fencing
Megan Osteen school: Eagle Valley High School favorite school moment:
Four awesome years of Track! Mom and Dad! summer plans: Work, work, play, work, repeat. where you are headed: Bethel University, St. Paul, MN what will you miss most: The beautiful mountains, and the “mountain casual” dress attire. in 10 years: I’ll let you know in 10 years favorite class: AP Lit and Comp class you wish had been offered: Real Life 101 shout out:
The Vail Daily
| Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | C11
Lynnae Friedrich school: Red Canyon High School favorite school moment from any year: My Graduation give a shout out: shout out to Dakota, Sam and Mr hill summer plans getting a full time job where are you headed this fall:
College
if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: I’m going to miss
my best friend if you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. I’m not staying in 10 years you’ll be: Still in college I’m guessing favorite class you took: films class class you wish had been offered drama
Haley Anne Wallace school: Battle Mountain High School favorite school moment from any year: When Keegan and I won Prom royalty
and hosted the talent show. give a shout out: To Keegan Quagliano. Thanks for being my best friend.
You’re amazing. summer plans: Lake Powell with friends, Michigan with family, Working COLLEGE ORIENTATION!!! YEAH!! where are you headed this fall: Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles if you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: My friends :( skiing, snow, and not having traffic. in 10 years you’ll be: No Idea...hopefully working and happy. favorite class you took: Show Choir....by far. Teacher was Ms. Sheresa Wilbanks class you wish had been offered: Theatre (not just drama, but the whole running of a theatre).
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CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
C12 | Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Charlie Grant, Jena Woods, Amy Grace Sherman, Collin Idzikowski, Joe Lybarger, Sydney Edmondson, Lindsey Halverson, Analiese Neiderhause, Judy and others. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re graduating from Battle Mountain High School this weekend.
The Vail Daily
Rick Ramunno
flies his date to prom
By Derek Franz
yenterprise.com dfranz@eaglevalle
d pilot and took unno is a license m Ra ck Ri or ni Eagle Valley se prom. ride before the date for a plane
When it comes to his career goal, Eagle Valley High School graduate Rick Ramunno is already airb orne. The 18-year-old earned his private pilot license in February and even took his prom date for a spin – in an airplane – around Castle Peak before attending the dance. “I had to ask her parents if I could take her up in the plane,” Ramunno said. “I saved up my money for it and we flew for about 25 minutes in great weather.” A plane rental at the Eagle County Regional Airport costs $150 an hour. Ramunno isn’t sure exactly how much his prom flight ran him. “I haven’t received the bill yet, but whatever,” he said. He started working on his pilot’s license about two years ago, which is an expensive process. More than 40 hours of flight time are needed to earn a
license and the instruction, airplane rental and fuel all cost a bit of money. “I received a scholarship from the Leroy W. Homer Jr. Foundation a year ago and that sped up the process,” he said. “They only award one scholarship a year and basically give you whatever you need to finish your license.” Homer was a commercial pilot who thwarted terrorists during the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. His widow started the foundation the following year and many of its recipients have made their way into noteworthy careers in aviation. Ramunno plans to study aviation technology at Metropolitan State University in Denver next year. He is also applying to the U.S. Marine Corps’ officer program with a military
his prom
Eagle Valle y senior Ric k Ramunn o. occupational specialty in aviation. “This will make me a commissioned officer with the USMC upon college graduation,” he said. An airplane ride at an Eagle Flight Days event was Ramunno’s first exposure to flying when he was 12. “I knew then that I wanted to be a pilot,” he said. “I’d always had an interest because my grandpa flew bombers in World War II and that got me amped up.” Ramunno balanced the demands of pilot training with school and playing football and lacrosse for the Devils. His dad, John, is the head football coach there. “Besides getting my license, another highlight this year was our great football season,” said Rick Ramunno. “Playing for my dad was a blast. It was great always having
him there to push me. I’m going to miss it.” Rick Ramunno played fullback and linebacker for the Devil gridders and defense on lacrosse. “One of the things I like about flying is that there is a lot of adrenaline, like football,” he said. “My mom was kind of freaked out at first, when I started my pilot training, but now she knows I’m safe.”
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C1
C2 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Andrew Romero School: Battle Mountain High School Favorite School Moment: There were too many great moments to choose one Give a shout out: Shout out to sidewalks for keeping me off the streets Summer Plans: For summer im gonna sleep like ive never slept before and hang out with my friends before we go to college. Coming Fall: University of Texas Where will you be in 10 years: In 10 years, i will be living my life to the fullest Favorite Class: Ceramics
Anneliese Niederhauser School: Battle Mountain High School Favorite school moment from any year: State championship ski race at Winter Park my Senior year. Give a shout out: To my Avengers! Summer plans: Work and spend time with my family and friends. Where are you headed this fall: Texas Christian University! Go Frogs!! If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: My parents’ cooking. In 10 years you’ll be: Working in a hospital as a nurse and starting a family. Favorite class you took: Anatomy and physiology. Class you wish had been offered: Anthropology.
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C3
Addie Arnold School: EVHS Favorite school moment from any year: Homecoming Week 2012 Give a shout out: Yo Mom. Thanks for always making my lunch. Summer plans: Working at the Gypsum Rec Center, backpacking and taking a road trip to California. Where are you headed this fall: CSU! If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: The close, loving community we have. Simply amazing. In 10 years you’ll be: 28 years old Favorite class you took: Video production Class you wish had been offered: Scuba diving
Brett Murbach School: BMHS Favorite school moment from any year: Senior Ditch Day Give a shout out: Mr Caudill Summer plans: Work; 4 wheeling; and Surfing Where are you headed this fall: CSU--Go Rams! If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: Skiing Favorite class you took: Psych w Mr Phelan Class you wish had been offered: Physics
Ally Zehring School: Eagle Valley High School Favorite school moment from any year: school Harlem shake Give a shout out: thank you mom, dad, Bryce, and Cory for all your support in everything I do Summer plans: working and enjoying time with friends before leaving Where are you headed this fall: University of Nebraska-Lincoln If you’re leaving eagle county what will you miss most: friends and family In 10 years you’ll be: Athletic trainer for college or professional sports team Favorite class you took: sports med Class you wish had been offered: nap time
Cynthia Zapata School: Eagle Valley My Favorite school memory is when my soccer team named me captain and i scored my first goal at a Varsity game. SHOUT OUT: To my parents, siblings, an teachers that stood by my side when things were rough and helped me grow as an individual. This summer i want to visit my family in Mexico and spend time with friends that are leaving the state. This fall i will be getting an internship with local Interior Designers and work towards my career. I’m staying in Eagle County and i’m happiest about having my family close and helping my parents raise the little ones. In 10 years i will be an Interior Designer and a Certified Addiction Counselor My favorite class that i have taken is Weight Lifting Class you wish had been offered: Photography
C4 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Kyra Webb School VCHS Favorite school moment from any year - All school retreat at Frontier Ranch Give a shout out - To my class, I love you guys Summer plans - I plan to work and travel. Where are you headed this fall - Colby College, Waterville, ME If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. My friends and family If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be I am not quite sure yet. Favorite class you took AP US History Class you wish had been offered AP Art History
Caleb Krueger Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy Favorite moment: Not taking the AP Calculus Test Shout out: To my homies Molly, Travis and Austin Summer plans: Training for activities Headed in Fall: University of New Mexico Will miss: Colorado Spring time 10 years: The same, only 10 years older Fav Class: Freshman Seminar Class you wish was offered: D.E. underwater basket weaving.
Alexandra Ramonas School: Vail Ski & Snowboard Academy Favorite school moment from any year: Our class hut trips in the mountains and whitewater rafting. Give a shout out Thank you to my loving and supportive family for giving me this fantastic opportunity to attend VSSA. Summer plans: I will be moving back to the Chicago area. My plan is to land a job, train for my upcoming ski racing season, and just enjoy everything that Chicago has to offer. Where are you headed this fall: University of Wisconsin-Madison If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: I will miss the mountains and the opportunity to ski every day! If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be: I will be teaching at an elementary school and enjoying my time off during the summer. Favorite class you took: Drama class – Thanks Mr. Beavers!
April Aragon School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Winning state soccer Give a shout out: Seniors! Summer plans: if everything works out I’ll be joining the marines Where are you headed this fall: same as my summer plans If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: the teachers If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: s friendship with the people I met In 10 years you’ll be: having my life settled Favorite class you took: health Class you wish had been offered: cosmetology
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C5
C6 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Among his other talents, Will Dutmer was a high jumper with the Eagle Valley track team.
Will Dutmer rocks the stage as well as school By Derek Franz dfranz@eaglevalleyenterprise.com
W
ill Dutmer is graduating from Eagle Valley High School but you might recognize him from his gigs at local bars as the bassist for the band Monk Tonic. The rest of the band members are about twice his age (he’ll be 19 in June) but the stage is a natural fit for him. “He’s been playing bar gigs in Eagle for about a year now,” said Dutmer’s dad, Larry. “He is very comfortable on stage. Occasionally [older women] hit on him.” Dutmer has performed in every school theater production since his freshman year. Most recently, he starred as Danny Zuko in the musical, “Grease.” “I loved playing a cocky, full-of-himself character because that’s totally not who I am,” Dutmer said. “Acting is fun because I get to be someone else.” He said his family has a performance background. “My dad is in local theater and my brother is studying musical theater at the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley,” he said. “My brother has been in production since he was in first grade and he got me into it when I was in fifth grade, at the Vail Performing Arts Academy.” Dutmer will be at UNC next year as well – he intends to
be a high school math teacher. “I’ve wanted to do that for the last seven years,” he said. “I love math. I think teaching would be fun, working with the kids and having summers off. I also plan to minor in music.” Though it might not seem like an immediate correlation, Dutmer’s performance background will probably help his teaching career. “I’m definitely comfortable talking in front of people,” he said. As for theater? “I might audition for shows at UNC but it’s really competitive, so I’d be happy just to be a background guy,” he said. Larry Dutmer said interacting with people is probably what his son likes best and enjoys most about performing arts. “He enjoys the social aspect, especially the girls,” his dad said, laughing. Besides theater, Dutmer was a shooting guard on the basketball team – which had a winning season this year – and ran track. “I’m so proud of him,” said Larry Dutmer. “He’s self-motivated, he sets goals. I don’t take credit for all this. It feels strange to say, but if he were anyone else’s kid, I would still be impressed by him.”
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C7
Sarah Bakken School: Eagle Valley High School Favorite school moment: hatching chicks Summer Plans: Work at Strictly Flowers If leaving Eagle County, What will you miss most: Mountains In 10 years you’ll be: 28 years old Favorite class: Auto Shop and Agriculture Technology Class you wish should be offered: Underwater basket weaving
Hayley Clarke School: Battle Mountain High School Favorite School Moment; When boys soccer won states Where are you headed this fall: I am going to High Point University, majoring in Interior Design If you are leaving this fall what will you miss the most: I am going to miss the mountains and the climate. My favorite class I took: DE Phsycologoy with Phalen (check how to spell his name i don’t know for sure if that is right)
Matthew Steggall School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: hanging out with all thee awesome teachers Give a shout out to: my mom Summer plans: fishing and working Where are you headed this fall: I hope to the Marine Corps If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: I will miss the mountains and my awesome, beautiful mom If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. everything In 10 years you’ll be over seas fighting for our country Favorite class you took: government class and habitat with Mr. Gladitsch Class you wish had been offered: Anything Mr. Gladitsch taught
Kate Cooper School: Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy Favorite school moment from any year: Attending school in Russia in elementary school Summer plans: Lake Powell, France and hanging out with my friends Where are you headed this fall: University of Denver If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: Being able to ski Vail Mountain every morning in the winter In 10 years you’ll be: Working in the fashion industry in New York or Paris Favorite class you took: Spanish and French Class you wish had been offered: Art
C8 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Nataly Mendoza School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Playing sports! Give a shout out: To my family and friends! Summer plans: To work and save up! Where are you headed this fall: Hopefully moving out to Denver and going to the Community College of Denver for school! If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. What I will miss the most is my family and friends and this beautiful place that we live in. If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be: Hopefully have my own place and a stable job! Living life. Favorite class you took: Not sure the classes were all interesting. Class you wish had been offered
Molly Childers School: BMHS Favorite school moment from any year Give a shout out Summer plans: Working at the Westin Hotel, going to the lake and spending time with family and friends. Where are you headed this fall: CU Boulder If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: My family and my dogs.
Anya Kurronen School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: My freshman year, Mr. Dudley chased me down the street in his car to get me back to class. Summer plans: Hanging with friends. Where are you headed this fall: CMC Spring Valley Campus If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. My friends especially Bernie If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be a fire fighter Favorite class you took: Japanese Mythology with Ms. Lammers Class you wish had been offered I think the ones they chose are always good.
Tania Molinar School: evhs Favorite school moment from any year: performing Grease for the spring musical! Shout out: shout out to all my homies and my fam bam Summer plans: work work work so I’m not totally poor! Where are you headed this fall: the land of the potatoes (Idaho) If you’re leaving eagle county, what will you miss most: my momma’s food! In 10 years you’ll be: hopefully a happy music teacher during the day, but at night, I’ll be a ninja assassin! Taking out crime one NOTE at a time! Haha..... Favorite class: choir Class you wish had been offered: nap time 101 :)
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C9
Gunnar Hamina School: Vail Christian High School Favorite Moment: Beating Soroco in Football Fall 2012 Shout out Ms.Lichius Summer prepare for College Miss most: Skiing 10 years : On a beach, in a tree Favorite class : PE Freshman year Class I wish they had: Badminton
Valeria Moran School: Eagle Valley High Favorite moment from any year: Having lunch with Bill and Melinda Gates. Give a shout out: Thanks to all my friends and family that push me to higher achievements. Summer plans: I plan on working hard and earning money to pay college expenses next year. Where are you headed this fall: University of Colorado in Denver If your leaving Eagle County what will you miss most: I will miss the small town with familiar faces and familiar places. In 10 years you’ll be: Hopefully done with school, have a nice car and awesome place to enjoy with friends and family. Favorite class you took: Honors Anatomy and Physiology. Class you wish had been offered: French III
Arely Alva School New America High School Favorite school moment from any year: When I meet my teachers. Give a shout out: To the great staff. Summer plans: Work and be a mom. Where are you headed this fall: Colorado Mountain College If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. Not leaving. If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: The great memories I had at New America. In 10 years you’ll be: I hope to be working and accomplish my dream. Favorite class you took: I don’t have a favorite class I loved all my classes and my teachers. They’re amazing people Class you wish had been offered: I think its perfect.
Jack Kamby School: Battle Mountain High School Favorite school moment from any year: Golf Regionals with Collin and Chuck Give a shout out: Shout out to the Choom gang- Jim, Lucas, Deb, Collin, Shmeebs. Oh, and Mom and Dad. Summer plans: Caddying, gotta get that paper. Where are you headed this fall: Attending University of Colorado Boulder on a full tuition and housing scholarship, will be living in Evans Scholarship House. If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: Camping If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: Not staying. In 10 years you’ll be: Hopefully retired. Favorite class you took: Psych with Phelan. Class you wish had been offered: Bowling
C10 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Alfredo Montes School: New American School Favorite school moment from any year: don’t remember Give a shout out: Summer plans: work a full time job\ Where are you headed this fall: nowhere If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most.: nothing If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping.:friends In 10 years you’ll be: I don’t know Favorite class you took: well Mr. Dudley was a cool class and he always kept it interesting Class you wish had been offered: I got all the classes I wanted.
Amber Cereceres School: New America School Favorite school moment from any year Give a shout out to all the teachers that encouraged me to keep going and help me graduate. Also my family for always having faith in me and helping get through everything. Summer plans are to work to save money for college but at the same time enjoy my time with my two beautiful babies. Where are you headed this fall: This fall I am planning on getting into CMC to start and my nursing classes. If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most? If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping? I’m going to enjoy being around all the people I know. In 10 years you’ll be: I will want to be own a house and have a good nursing career. Favorite class you took: My favorite class I took was Astronomy. Class you wish had been offered: I wish I was offered cosmetology class.
Gustavo Garcia School RCHS Favorite school moment from any year Graduating Where are you headed this fall: The Marines If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. Snow Boarding. If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. I am not Staying in Eagle County. In 10 years you’ll be: In the USMC. Favorite class you took: History Class you wish had been offered: I don’t know I think I took everything I wanted at RCHS because EVHS didn’t offer me entertaining classes.
Jazmin M. Torres School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Being told I was going to graduate!! Give a shout out: Hi:3 Summer plans: Get out of town for a while, come back and find a job. Where are you headed this fall: Hope fully not Burger King. If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be: 28 yrs. Old Favorite class you took: Video Production Class you wish had been offered
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C11
Elida Rosales School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Being told I was going to graduate!! Give a shout out: yaii finally Class of 2013!!! <3 Summer plans: maybe go back to Mexico for a while, then come back and go to college!!! Where are you headed this fall: With my parents in Mexico!! If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. The people around, and all the fun stuff ii used to have!! If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. Well everything is really beautiful,, so everything!!! In 10 years you’ll be: 31 Favorite class you took: Day Care ;) Class you wish had been offered: art
Eric C. Gurule School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Graduating! Give a shout out: love you Khyree Urijah Gurule, everything I do is for you baby son!! Summer plans: Get that great job I want and start to make that dough and a living for myself Where are you headed this fall: Everywhere and anywhere If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: I’m staying for a while If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: My life, health, family, and my homies In 10 years you’ll be: 30 years old Favorite class you took: lunch! Class you wish had been offered: what class I wish I wasn’t offered is the question
Abraham Martinez
SAVE THE DATE!
Vail Performing Arts Academy presents
THE LITTLE
, JR.
FRIDAY AUGUST 16 at 6:30PM SATURDAY AUGUST 17 at 2PM & 6:30PM Vilar Performing Arts Center For more info visit www.vpaa.org
C12 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
April Alexa Cano
was raised to make the most of every opportunity By Derek Franz
dfranz@eaglevalleyenterprise.com
As the daugh immigrants, Ater of Mexican learned to app pril Alexa Cano portunities sh reciate the opher parents, we has here from from Mexico ho moved to Vail in 1993. “My dad, George, has been the main person in my life who pushed me to do everything I can,” Cano said. “He came here with nothing and now he has a successful drywall business.” In addition to her diploma from Eagle Valley High School, Cano earned an Associate Arts degree from Colorado Mountain College May 3. That degree requires 60 credit hours and studies in just
about every subject, including math, science and history. “This will be my first summer that I haven’t been in school!” Cano said. “I’ve been taking summer classes at CMC since my sophomore year.” During that time, she also took dual-credit classes at EVHS, participated in student council and ran cross country track. She went to the state cross country meet this year as an alternate. “The Associate Arts degree sets me up to graduate from Colorado State University in three years,” she said. “I plan to double major in hospitality management and psychology. If I didn’t have the credits going in, it would take me five years to graduate with those degrees.”
She hopes to return to the Vail Valley for work when she’s finished with school. “I chose hospitality management, because of the tourism industry we have here,” she said. “Psychology is something I’ve been interested in since the summer of my sophomore year. Hospitality is all about people, so I don’t think it will hurt to have a psychology degree as well.” She said her dad taught her a work ethic and her mom taught her “how to be a good person.” “She taught me not to be jealous of other people’s successes and to just appreciate who I am,” she said. “Like every parent, we just wanted our daughters to be more than we were,” said George Cano. “We taught them to not have any slack time, and April worked and worked. We’re
very proud of her.” April Cano said her older sister has also been a strong source of support. “Andrea graduated early from EVHS and went to beauty school in Fort Collins,” she said. “She knows how hard I’ve worked and has been very encouraging, sending me text messages every day.” Even though she’s finally taking a short break from school, Cano will keep working hard this summer. She has two jobs lined up – one as a secretary, Monday through Friday, and one at Heidi’s Brooklyn Deli, Saturday through Sunday. Then it’s off to the future. “I really want to thank Eagle Valley High School and all the teachers,” she said. “I couldn’t have made it all this way without their love and support.”
The Vail Daily
The Best Advice
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C13
never changes Vail Mountain Schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1st graders offer advice to graduating seniors
Vail Mountain Schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s graduates started out just like this, as first graders with a bunch of senior class reading buddies. As part of this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s program, the first graders put together some advice for their reading buddies as the seniors graduate and head off to college. Like great stuff everywhere, this great advice is timeless.
C14 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C15
Be a Part of the Anti-Bullying Mission. Did You Know ?
an estimated 150,000 Every day in the United States, intimidation. kids miss school due to fear or n
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s in Eagle Anti-Bullying program operate Teaching Self Defense : The and boys. s girl h bot for and high schools County elementary, middle ues and hniq tec e ativ mb ous Gracie Co The program uses world fam rtial Ma ion mp Cha rld Wo se of two trainings as well as the experti tand ers to stand up to a bully and und Artists to teach kids the ability lied bul ly, the perspectives of the bul components of bullying from lly sica phy to gram teaches students how and bystander. While the pro how s ent stud ch cks, the main goal is to tea defend themselves from atta and safely. ations, verbally, nonverbally, situ to best deal with bullying
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C16 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Jonna M. Spigener School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Hosting gallery night with Amanda Hagbery Give a shout out: Shout out to Jeff Cuno! For making my first Red Canyon year an amazing one! He taught me a lot about life, and went hand in hand with my education. Hi:Dudley!!! Summer plans: Continue teaching music, and move to LA! Where are you headed this fall: No clue☺ If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most: The small town, family aspect. If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping: My students In 10 years you’ll be: 28 yrs. Old Favorite class you took: Simpsons with Mr. Dudley Class you wish had been offered: Non Smoking… I wasn’t around to get the chance to take it. I’ve heard it does wonders.
Juliet Amancio School: New American High School Favorite school moment from any year: When I found out I am graduating Give a shout out: I want to give a shout out to the class of 2013, good job everyone! Summer plans: Get ready to be a mom Where are you headed this fall: Stay home If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most.: My family If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping.: My family In 10 years you’ll be: Having my own business Favorite class you took: Cancer with Ms. Crevling Class you wish had been offered: Cosmetology
Dan Reyes School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: Being told I was going to graduate!! Give a shout out: Hey everybody Im Dan Summer plans: find a job. Where are you headed this fall: A good place If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. Not leaving If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. My friends and this beautiful town In 10 years you’ll be: 27 yrs. Old Favorite class you took: ww1 Class you wish had been offered Idk it’s all good
JD Chambers School: Red Canyon High School Favorite school moment from any year: The senior raft trip, it was a good learning experience and I enjoyed the people that went with as well Give a shout out Id like to give a shout out to Mr. Hill for everything he has done for the students and teachers he is the man! Mrs. Cal for being the sweetest, coolest counselor I’ve ever had! I’d also like to shout out to all the teachers who have taught me and allowed me to learn things that I was interested in! Summer plans: attend college Where are you headed this fall: Maybe Mesa State College If you’re leaving Eagle County, what will you miss most. My Friends and family If you’re staying, what are you happiest about keeping. In 10 years you’ll be: Hopefully working and making money Favorite class you took: I liked them all! Class you wish had been offered
The Vail Daily
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C17
HUSKIES SOCCER
GRABS THE CROWN
By Chris Freud cfreud@vaildaily.com
penalty kick against him ylor@vaildaily.com ball, stopping the second Dominique Taylor | dta three penalty kicks to Espinoza dives for the n ing istia sav by Chr e per gam kee the in win Battle Mounta rgreen. Espinoza helped Eve in e gam a ing dur by Evergreen one saved by Evergreen.
So did anything big happen this year at Battle Mountain?
There were plenty of memorable moments in Huskies sports in 2012-13, but, let’s face it, this year was all about Battle Mountain boys soccer. This was the dream season — league title, 15-0 regularseason record, revenge over the bitterest of postseason foes in ridiculous fashion, and victory in the state championship game in a whiteout in Denver. Yeah, all that really happened. At the beginning of the season, were they going to be good? Sure. The Huskies were coming off a 14-2-2 season, only the third appearance in the program’s history in the state quarterfinals, and had lost only two seniors to graduation. Great? I did not have the mortal-lock feeling that I had
before the 2006 Battle Mountain volleyball or 2007 Huskies cross country seasons, which just happen to be the school’s last two state titles. The Huskies still needed to grow, as individuals and as a unit, and that may be the lasting legacy of this crew. The exceptional individual talents of this group — and there was a boatload of skill here — formed into an iron will which said collectively, “We’re doing this.”
The regular season • Battle Mountain beats Montrose, 2-1, in the opener. Huskies David Cope and I do our basic interview and then talk off the record as we normally do. I ask, “Do you think you can go 15-0?,” as the Indians looked like one of the toughest teams one the schedule. Cope replies, “Yes.” You have to remember this is Cope, not say David Joyce (football, 2011) or Ken Bielski (hockey,
C18 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
2001-02), or assistant coach Kyle Mercer, who played the role of bad cop to Cope’s good guy. This is the beginning of the transformation of the team. Winning a league title and winning a home playoff game is just not going to do it in 2012. Throughout the season, Cope issues challenges to the Huskies. Here’s a secret, people: It may be harder to coach a really good team than a poor one, as defender Gunnar Wilson summed up nicely at the end of the season. “He knew that if he said we were not good, we’d know he’d be lying,” Wilson said. “He used it as a positive note, that there have been other good teams at Battle Mountain. He always said, ‘We don’t want to be a good team. We want to be a great team.’ Whenever we thought we were pretty hot, Cope just kept saying that we haven’t done anything yet.” • Sept. 25, Battle Mountain beats Summit County, 3-1. It’s a good win as the Tigers turn out to be the Huskies’ toughest competition in the league. The important moment comes on Battle Mountain’s third goal. Senior captain Joe LyBarger gets decked and draws a foul. LyBarger puts the ball down, sends the ball down the field and the Huskies score.
The metamorphosis continues here. LyBarger is a tremendous athlete, as he proves by being named Player of the Year in the 4A Slope and scoring a ton of goals in the process. But can he stay focused? Apparently, yes. A year or two ago, LyBarger, in this same situation, would have gotten into it with the player who clocked him or with the ref, nullifying the advantage. This is just one of many questions that the Huskies are starting to answer. Can Chris Shea, a powder keg of talent and temper, keep it together? Can Wilson, who is an aggressive player, actually play defense? Is Christian Espinoza a bigtime goalie? Can Heivan Garcia, a epically-talented striker who also looks lost out on the field at times, be a factor? • Battle Mountain thumps archrival Steamboat Springs, 4-0, completing a season sweep of the Sailors by an aggregate of 9-0. The Huskies don’t seem particularly excited, though beating Steamboat normally is the program’s raison d’etre. There are bigger fish to fry. • The Huskies clinch the league title Oct. 8 with a tidy 2-0 win at Summit. There really should be a celebration here. There
JUSTIN MCCARTY |
usually is. Where’s Tyler Cole to rip off his jersey in celebration when you need him? Maybe, it’s the fact that this is the third title in a row and seven in nine years. The Huskies are now firmly focused on 15-0 and perfection. LyBarger goes down with a hip pointer in this one. On the record, Cope says the senior is “day-to-day.” In truth, despite rest, which costs him a shot at the Huskies’ scoring record and then playing his heart out in the postseason, No. 6 is not the same for the rest of the year. The Huskies rise to the occasion with their depth, which becomes staggering and sorely-needed. Offensively, 15 different Huskies score during the season, and six have five goals or more. Defensively, Battle Mountain allows only 11 goals in 20 games. The latter is tested when the Huskies lose their center back for the rest of the year during the final week of the regular season. This is another turning point because the foundation of the program’s success has been based on a 3-5-2 formation. The Huskies can play more people forward and be dynamic offensively because there’s a stout anchor like Evie Gonzalez, Connor Tedstrom or Cody Hervert in that spot. Roberto Diaz gets the call to move back and the transition is elegantly smooth. • Battle Mountain beats Eagle Valley for a 15-0 regular season, the first in the boys program’s history. (The girls did it in 2008, and that, in the author’s opinion, remains one of the most under-appreciated teams in the school’s
JMCCARTY@VAILDA
ILY.COM
the Class 4A state lebrates after winning ce m City tea r cce so ol s Park in Commerce High Scho Dick’s Sporting Good The Battle Mountain at ge Rid . er ut lm t-o Pa oo st sh e again ertim championship game ge Bears, 4-2, in an ov beat the Palmer Rid ies sk Hu e Th ar. ye this
history.) The fellas, as Cope says, pose in front of the scoreboard, which has been changed to read, “15-0” for the occasion. • On Seeding Sunday, the Huskies, the only undefeated team in Class 4A, get the sixth seed in the state tournament. Politely-put, this is a hosing of epic proportions. Cope issues the edict and his players dutifully repeat it interviews that being seeded sixth is actually a stroke of good fortune because it will allow Battle Mountain to play better teams and get more of a challenge. This was putting lipstick on a pig, and the Huskies did it well. Oh, and another thing about being sixth? It set up a possible matchup at No. 3 Evergreen in the quarterfinals.
EVERGREEN, EVERGREEN, EVERGREEN There were five games in the postseason, but, in retrospect, one rises above the rest. Battle Mountain dutifully beat Greeley Central, 3-1, after Espinoza let in a poor goal in the first minute. The Huskies bounced Pueblo Centennial, 3-0, in the second round. And, thus, on Nov. 1, Battle Mountain went to Evergreen to slay the dragon. Evergreen is a good Front Range 4A soccer program in the Jeffco League. The Cougars are always in the playoffs. The problem was that they had ended Battle Mountain’s season three years in a row. In 2009, the Huskies had allowed nine goals in 15 games before losing to Evergreen, 7-2, in Edwards in the first round. (There were extenuating factors, but I blame myself. I was on my couch, recovering from the H1N1 virus that year.) In 2010, the Huskies went down to Evergreen, and lost again. What really rankled, though, was that some of Battle Mountain’s Hispanic players got a
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reception that wasn’t commensurate with life in the 21st Century. Round 3 was in 2011 and that was a 2-0 loss, and the Huskies were simply fed up with Evergreen. I got down to Evergreen early for the fourth meeting in as many years just as a part of my routine. It was mainly to see what Internet connection was available to send what I hoped would be a triumphant story. What became alarming — in a good way — early was that I wasn’t the only one coming from Eagle County. The Evergreen staff was setting up roping to keep the two sets of fans apart, standard procedure for any high school game. What was funny is that they kept having to adjust the roping to accommodate more and more Battle Mountain fans. By the time the game actually started, Huskies fans had turned Evergreen’s pitch into Edwards — it sounded like a Battle Mountain home game. And all saw one for the ages. Evergreen scored first. Diego Rodriguez to Diaz evened it. And then the field started to slant. The Huskies dominated, but simply could not get one in the net. At one point, one of the refs, presumably from the Front Range who had not seen the Huskies play, ran by Cope during the second half and said to the coach, “Boy, you guys are good.” Speaking of Cope, things were getting tense. He knew the only way Evergreen was going to beat the Huskies on that Wednesday night was via kicks or a free kick. The Cougars got the latter when Broby Leeds committed a bad, but seemingly innocuous foul. Cope actually yelled, “Dammit, Broby,” and then muttered to Mercer, “Get him out of there.” I have covered Cope’s Battle Mountain soccer teams for 27 seasons between his boys and girls teams, and for the generally-steady-as-it-goes coach, this was a volcanic eruption. This really was the equivalent of a normal coach dropping 17 F-bombs and throwing a chair onto the playing surface. For the record, no harm came from the whistle, and Cope later
apologized to Leeds. It was funny. (The last time I’d seen Cope yell at game was 2008, and I was standing next to his wife, Kathleen, then, and she was surprised.) It was also another transformational moment. Just as the players had morphed into an “all-in, we’re-winningthis-whole-thing” attitude, so had the coach publicly, albeit in a very unexpected way. Battle Mountain did not score in either regulation or overtime, and it was off to penalty kicks to decide it. P.K.s are scary. It’s not the way to determine the better team, but there’s no alternative. They’re particularly scary when the coach, Cope, is an English soccer fan, who has seen nothing but bad things happen to his national side in international competitions like the World Cup and the Euros. But to answer the question, “Is Christian Espinoza a big-time goalie?” The answer was emphatic, “Yes, sir.” In a shootout, you just hope that the other team misses or that your keeper can make one save. Espinoza stopped 3-of-4 shots, and the Huskies finally vanquished Evergreen. (By the way, Diaz, Erick Briones and Wilson all made their kicks, but no one is going to remember that.) When Espinoza made the final save clinching the win, absolute pandemonium broke out. The Huskies went nuts. Their fans went nuts. I have many a celebration in 16 years of covering sports. This was different. I kept trying to interview Espinoza for the story, and, every time I was about ready to ask my first question, players or fans tackled him in celebration again. I did some other interviews afterwards, but my iPhone recorder malfunctioned, but I remember Briones saying something to the effect of, “That wasn’t just Christian. It was all of us there with him.” Ding, dong, the wicked witch was dead.
OH, YEAH, TWO MORE An interesting question is, “Which was bigger, beating Evergreen or winning the state championship nine days later?” We
stipulate that the Evergreen win was a necessary part of the sequence for the Huskies to advance to the semifinals and the finals. Also, the Huskies didn’t receive a big trophy for beating Evergreen. But … in preparation for this story, I had to look up whom Battle Mountain faced in the finals (Palmer Ridge). I also remember not being too worried about the Huskies playing Broomfield in the semifinals. (I’m usually a nervous wreck before a playoff game for any school in any sport.) I remember thinking at the semifinals, “There is no way this team can lose in the semifinals after that game against Evergreen. Just can’t happen.” And that’s pretty funny because Broomfield, in years past, had beaten the Huskies senseless in previous postseason meetings. Happily, the question was not of the either/or variety. Battle Mountain knocked off Broomfield, 2-1, on scores by Garcia (big game, big player) and Diaz (quickly making a name for himself during the run.) And then it snowed. That had to be a good omen for Battle Mountain soccer on championship Saturday against Palmer Ridge. Surreal is dumb word because it’s overused. But being at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, watching Battle Mountain in the snow in the title game was surreal. You want surreal? How come there were still more Huskies fans there than Palmer Ridge faithful, even though they were driving through a blizzard over two massive mountain passes? A dramatic goal from the run of play would have been nice, but the Bears weren’t scoring that day. Could Wilson play defense? That unit was fantastic all day and all season. I remember seeing Shea out there, playing his heart out, knowing that, healthwise, he was a mess. (He had back surgery within a week of the title game). He didn’t lose his cool. Espinoza shone again with a big save in penalty kicks. The Huskies
| Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | C19
DOMINIQUE TAYLOR DTAYLOR@VAILDAILY.COM
Battle Mountain soccer coach David Cope, center, celebrates Battle Mountain’s semifinal win against Broomfield this year in Parker.
had the answers for all the questions. I remember being cold and soaked, and I remember that moment of silence as all assembled waited to make sure Garcia’s gameclinching penalty kick really did find the back of the net. It was slow-motion as Garcia raced toward the Battle Mountain fans’ section with his teammates running after him. … LyBarger raising the trophy. … Everybody hugging everybody in the locker room. … Everyone taking a turn with the trophy. “We beat No. 3 (Evergreen),” Cope said. “We beat No. 2 (Broomfield), and we beat No. 1 (Palmer Ridge). And we’ll came back Monday if they want us to play anyone else.” (That is as close to smack talk as Cope gets.) Yeah, that really happened.
AND IN OTHER NEWS Huskies cross country sent two teams to state. That was notable after a one-year absence by the guys. … Volleyball snapped a seven-game losing streak to Eagle Valley. That’s key because that means the Class of 2013 had never topped the Devils until that win. … Spring was quite fun. The boys lacrosse team made the playoffs for the first time in school history, and the gents may have some company soon. The biggest turnaround at Battle Mountain was girls lacrosse, which went from 4-10 to 10-4, and only graduate one (Hayley Clarke). And girls soccer not only took its first league title since 2008, but won its first playoff game in six years.
C20 | Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | The Vail Daily
Becky Cuevas’ first grade class, Gypsum Elementary, 2001, last day of school picnic.
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