Mile High Sports Magazine February 2010 : Page 61

TOP 50 PLACES they are venues where all that is great about sports – competition, sportsmanship, camaraderie, pride, teamwork and discipline – is on full display. They are the homes of high school sports. A baseball diamond in Pueblo. A gridiron in Alamosa. A basketball court in Grand Junction. And an ice rink in Loveland. These are but a few of the stages where some of the best sports moments in Colorado transpire. They are facilities that seat a few hundred fans, aren’t particularly well lit and don’t have LED messages telling the fans when to cheer. Instead, performance enhancers and other sordid affairs, these places are like an oasis. There, it truly is about the game. In an era of contract holdouts, labor disputes, TV timeouts, academic scandals, overall performance. By taking into consideration state tournament appearances, performances at state competitions and All-State competitors, we rank every school – big and small – in the Centennial State. who play, as well as those who coach, applaud and support them. We take every high school sporting event and athlete from the last calendar year and evaluate their That’s why Mile High Sports Magazine makes it a point to celebrate the preps enrollments are judged no differently than those with enormous student bodies. Whether a school is big, small, inner-city or outer-country, anything is possible. No favoritism is shown toward any single sport, and the schools with smaller Turn the page, find out for yourself, and celebrate the preps. It’s High School Rankings VII. f THE SEVENTH-ANNUAL LIST OF THE IN COLORADO FOR PREP SPORTS (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE QUALIFIERS / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 25 T(NUMBER OF TEAM STATE CHAMPIONS / TOTAL SCORE OTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 200 ((NUMBER OF ALL-STATE SELECTIONS + INDIVIDUAL CHAMPS) / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 20 + (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE RUNNER-UP FINISHES / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 75 + = year-round p toward h h s more a action photography is second to none, and w child, t, team or s d high school al athlle e about P e grateful fl forr h s p t Pete A m or school, lo, log o e Anderson f r y etics. To le his passion . To le n for your log onto earn www.peterandersonphotography.com. A SPECIAL …to P THsANKSwith photography. A. Anderson’s s d we’re g A S o Pete A Mile H hS le e Anderson, w o p leHigh Sports M , who provides Magazine d professiona pnall prep s p sports s sports LACES they are venues where all that is great about sports – competition, sportsmanship, camaraderie, pride, teamwork and discipline – is on full display. They are the homes of high school sports. A baseball diamond in Pueblo. A gridiron in Alamosa. A basketball court in Grand Junction. And an ice rink in Loveland. These are but a few of the stages where some of the best sports moments in Colorado transpire. They are facilities that seat a few hundred fans, aren’t particularly well lit and don’t have LED messages telling the fans when to cheer. Instead, performance enhancers and other sordid affairs, these places are like an oasis. There, it truly is about the game. In an era of contract holdouts, labor disputes, TV timeouts, academic scandals, overall performance. By taking into consideration state tournament appearances, performances at state competitions and All-State competitors, we rank every school – big and small – in the Centennial State. who play, as well as those who coach, applaud and support them. We take every high school sporting event and athlete from the last calendar year and evaluate their That’s why Mile High Sports Magazine makes it a point to celebrate the preps enrollments are judged no differently than those with enormous student bodies. Whether a school is big, small, inner-city or outer-country, anything is possible. No favoritism is shown toward any single sport, and the schools with smaller Turn the page, find out for yourself, and celebrate the preps. It’s High School Rankings VII. f THE SEVENTH-ANNUAL LIST OF THE IN COLORADO FOR PREP SPORTS (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE QUALIFIERS / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 25 T(NUMBER OF TEAM STATE CHAMPIONS / TOTAL SCORE OTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 200 ((NUMBER OF ALL-STATE SELECTIONS + INDIVIDUAL CHAMPS) / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 20 + (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE RUNNER-UP FINISHES / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 75 + = year-round p toward h h s more a action photography is second to none, and w child, t, team or s d high school al athlle e about P e grateful fl forr h s p t Pete A m or school, lo, log o e Anderson f r y etics. To le his passion . To le n for your log onto earn www.peterandersonphotography.com. A SPECIAL …to P THsANKSwith photography. A. Anderson’s s d we’re g A S o Pete A Mile H hS le e Anderson, w o p leHigh Sports M , who provides Magazine d professiona pnall prep s p sports s sports hsports. hsports. Y 20 OP 50 PLACES the OP 50 PLACES they are venues where all that is great about sports – competition, sportsmanship, camaraderie, pride, teamwork and discipline – is on full display. They are the homes of high school sports. A baseball diamond in Pueblo. A gridiron in Alamosa. A basketball court in Grand Junction. And an ice rink in Loveland. These are but a few of the stages where some of the best sports moments in Colorado transpire. They are facilities that seat a few hundred fans, aren’t particularly well lit and don’t have LED messages telling the fans when to cheer. Instead, performance enhancers and other sordid affairs, these places are like an oasis. There, it truly is about the game. In an era of contract holdouts, labor disputes, TV timeouts, academic scandals, overall performance. By taking into consideration state tournament appearances, performances at state competitions and All-State competitors, we rank every school – big and small – in the Centennial State. who play, as well as those who coach, applaud and support them. We take every high school sporting event and athlete from the last calendar year and evaluate their That’s why Mile High Sports Magazine makes it a point to celebrate the preps enrollments are judged no differently than those with enormous student bodies. Whether a school is big, small, inner-city or outer-country, anything is possible. No favoritism is shown toward any single sport, and the schools with smaller Turn the page, find out for yourself, and celebrate the preps. It’s High School Rankings VII. f THE SEVENTH-ANNUAL LIST OF THE IN COLORADO FOR PREP SPORTS (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE QUALIFIERS / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 25 T(NUMBER OF TEAM STATE CHAMPIONS / TOTAL SCORE OTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 200 ((NUMBER OF ALL-STATE SELECTIONS + INDIVIDUAL CHAMPS) / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 20 + (NUMBER OF TEAM STATE RUNNER-UP FINISHES / TOTAL SPORTS PARTICIPATED IN) X 75 + = year-round p toward h h s more a action photography is second to none, and w child, t, team or s d high school al athlle e about P e grateful fl forr h s p t Pete A m or school, lo, log o e Anderson f r y etics. To le his passion . To le n for your log onto earn www.peterandersonphotography.com. A SPECIAL …to P THsANKSwith photography. A. Anderson’s s d we’re g A S o Pete A Mile H hS le e Anderson, w o p leHigh Sports M , who provides Magazine d professiona pnall prep s p sports s sports hsports. Y 20 6 6 THE F E FORMULA + ( ( ( ) ( ( ( )

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