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Survive and advance for Eagle Ridge

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BY STEVE SMITH SSMITH@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

DENVER – Some words came to the mind of Eagle Ridge Academy players and coaches on the oor of the Denver Coliseum March 3.

Words like “ragged,” “rugged” and “ugly.” e other words that came to mind were the most important .. a win, regardless of what it looked like.

Eagle Ridge moved into the seminals of the state 4A boys basketball tournament by beating Pueblo Central 63-57. e win sets up a contest against 17th-seeed Holy Family at 12:45 p.m. ursday, March 9, at the Coliseum.

“ e rst half, we had 14 turnovers. e second half, we had ve,” ERA coach Jay Powell said. “We knew at the beginning they were going to play at a pace that was going to speed us up. We needed to calm down.”

“It was a fast-paced game,” said Peyton Torres, who scored nine points. “We needed to slow down a little bit. We got them out of their zone. We were able to throw good passes across the court, not lob passes. We had to throw hard. ey were extremely fast. We broke the press the correct way.”

“We shot like 35 percent in the rst quarter. It was ugly, yeah,” said Christian Seifert, who nished with 13 points. “We have to keep shooting. We have to defend. We have to do the

Last publication: March 09, 2023

Publisher: Commerce City Sentinel little things. e shots never started to fall, but we kept ourselves in it.” e Wildcats made the semi nal round of the state tournament last year. eir top scorer was Xavier Davis, who poured in 26 points. Ozzy Vigil was next with eight.

Eagle Ridge advanced to the elite 8 of the state 3A tournament last year. is is the Warriors’ rst year in class 4A. eir top scorer was Hunter Hill. He scored 26 points despite missing some time in the fourth quarter because of a tailbone injury.

“I’m ne,” Hill said after the game. “ e win makes it feel amazing. We got to the basket. We knocked down our free throws at the end of the game. We just played as a team, and that’s always going to help us win.”

Another thing that helped the Warriors’ cause was converting those free throws. As Pueblo Central committed foul after foul to extend the game, the Wildcats were making 3-pointers – one from Ozzy Vigi and two from Xavier Davis. e rally cut a 10-point Warriors’ lead to four points in the span of a minute. ERA made ve of eight from the free-throw line in the last minutes, and Peyton Torres sealed the outcome with a layup o a turnover.

“We knocked down free throws in crucial minutes,” Powell said. “We had high IQ plays at the end. Isaiah (sophomore Isaiah Garcia, who scored a key basket early in the fourth quarter) came in and helped us out. All the boys played strong, especially in the second half. We just had to settle down.”

Even though the win wasn’t aesthetically pleasing, Powell said it will help for the match against Holy Family.

“It helps show the boys they have to dig deep,” Powell said. “ ey have to ght. ey have to go out there and take it.”

“As long as we got the win, that’s all that matters,” Hill said.

“Our defense was really good,” Seifert said. “We’ve got some long guys, some athletic guys. If we lock in on defense, there’s no team that should be able to beat us.”

Andrew Ciszek

Personal Representative c/o Law Office of Byron K. Hammond, LLC

4500 Cherry Creek Drive South, Suite 960 Denver, CO 80246

Legal Notice No. CCX908

First Publication: March 2, 2023

Last Publication: March 16, 2023

Publisher: Commerce City Sentinel

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