Denver, CO
Jake Cave’s clutch hits, red-hot Brenton Doyle lift Rockies to comeback win over Giants in first game out of All-Star break
Jake Cave’s juice launched the Rockies to a comeback win over the Giants on Friday at Coors Field.
The veteran outfielder, a stop-gap on a one-year contract for a team in transition, was a difference maker again to lead Colorado to a victory in the first game out of the All-Star break. Cave scored the tying run in the seventh after roping a leadoff pinch-hit double, then the next inning, he gave Chatfield alum Tyler Rogers a rude welcome home via the deciding three-run homer.
Cave’s clutch hits, along with another homer from the red-hot Brenton Doyle, made up for a slow offensive start in the 7-3 triumph over San Francisco in the series opener in front of 40,115.
“The way Cave plays baseball is what we want the whole team to do,” right-hander Cal Quantrill said. “He has great energy, and his approach and ability to stay in the game mentally and come into the game late and make that kind of impact is special.”
The Giants scored first in the second inning on a two-out, sinking line drive to left by Thairo Estrada. Sean Bouchard charged in and dove at the ball, but it went under his glove and rolled to the wall. That resulted in a two-RBI triple for a 2-0 visitors lead.
San Francisco added on the next inning, with Patrick Bailey’s RBI groundout to push the score to 3-0.
Meanwhile, the Rockies had just one hit through the first five innings as they struggled to get anything going against rookie Kyle Harrison. The southpaw struck out six, and Colorado also couldn’t capitalize on four walks.
After Quantrill polished off his quality start by working around Mike Yastrzemski’s single in the sixth, the Rockies offense finally came to life against right-hander Randy Rodriguez.
Elias Diaz was grazed by a pitch — and initially wanted to stay in the box before jogging down to first with some prodding by manager Bud Black from the dugout. Doyle picked up where he left off before the All-Star break to help out Quantrill, who rebounded from his shortest outing of the year in a two-inning dud in Cincinnati.
“It’s hard to be angry when I start and the team wins,” Quantrill said. “It won’t go down as my favorite start this year, but I battled through those last three innings, and I thought I gave us a chance. We were able to get it done late.”
Doyle blasted Rodriguez’s elevated fastball 434 feet into the left-field seats, his fifth homer over his last seven games. The no-doubter from Doyle, who has nine homers in July while slashing .429/.509/1.082 and continuing to emerge as a franchise pillar, got Colorado within shouting distance at 3-2.
“Doyle, doing what he’s doing right now, is one of the best players in baseball,” Jake Cave proclaimed.
In the seventh, right-hander Tyler Kinley ran into trouble when the Giants loaded the bases off him with two hits and a walk. But southpaw Jalen Beeks bailed Kinley out by striking out Michael Conforto on a full-count, top-of-the-zone cutter.
Colorado then tied the game in the bottom of the inning against right-hander Ryan Walker, taking advantage of Cave’s double down the right-field line. With two outs, Ezequiel Tovar rolled over on an infield single in the hole between third and shortstop, and Matt Champan proceeded to make an errant throw to first.
After an intentional walk to Ryan McMahon and a walk to Diaz, Doyle came up again, but grounded to third into a fielder’s choice in end the threat and keep the game tied 3-3.
But the Rockies finally took the lead in the eighth, after Brendan Rodgers’ leadoff infield single and Michael Toglia’s double off the submariner Rogers set up Cave’s 410-foot blast to right center on a hanging slider. Cave pimped the shot out of the box off, pointing and yelling to the dugout as he took his time trotting down the first base line.
After Rogers was lifted, Tovar added on to the big inning with a homer down the left field line off Luke Jackson. It was Tovar’s 15th dinger of the year and third homer in his last two games as he continues to climb out of a recent slump.
“It was a rough patch there for Tovar for a while,” Bud Black said. “He was hitting .290, .295, and slipped all the way down to near .260, so a pretty big drop. But he stayed the course and he didn’t waiver from his routine and his process, and he didn’t panic.”
With another big night of slugging, the Rockies have scored 24 of their last 25 runs via the homer, including 20 straight runs spanning from Toglia’s fifth-inning home run on July 11 at Cincinnati through Doyle’s home run on Friday in the sixth. That’s the longest streak of consecutive runs scored on homer in franchise history.
Colorado also tied a franchise record with 21 homers through its last seven games, a feat the club also achieved in 2018 and 1995. With the way the Rockies are hitting, both Quantrill and Cave believe Colorado (35-63) can play spoiler in the second half. Cave said the club has “a good chance to make some people mad.”
“We need to do everything we can to be a very competitive baseball team the rest of the way,” Quantrill added. “We want to be a team that other teams don’t want to play. We want to be a team that some of the teams in the playoff hunt don’t want to see on the schedule. If we can do that, we’re in a good spot.”
Saturday’s pitching matchup
Giants RHP Logan Webb (7-7, 3.47) at Rockies LHP Kyle Freeland (1-3, 6.00)
6:10 p.m. Saturday, Coors Field
TV: Rockies.TV (streaming); Comcast/Xfinity (channel 1262); DirecTV (683); Spectrum (130, 445, 305, 435 or 445, depending on region).
Radio: 850 AM/94.1 FM
Freeland’s been money since returning June 23 from a left elbow strain. In his four quality starts since, the Thomas Jefferson product has a 1.71 ERA and the Rockies are 3-1. He’s also pitched into the seventh inning in each of his last three outings. And he’s been excellent at home this year overall, with a 1.50 ERA in three starts and no homers allowed. Freeland has a solid track record against the Giants, going 7-6 with a 3.93 ERA in 22 career starts. Webb’s recent momentum, however, is the opposite of Freeland’s. He allowed seven runs in five innings against Toronto in his final start before the All-Star break, and in the All-Star Game he surrendered three runs in an ugly third inning that swung the momentum back toward the American League. In eight starts at Coors Field, he has a 4.24 ERA.
Pitching probables
Sunday: Giants RHP Jordan Hicks (4-6, 3.79) at Rockies RHP Ryan Feltner (1-9, 5.36), 1:10 p.m.
Monday: Red Sox TBA at Rockies LHP Austin Gomber (2-6, 4.61), 6:40 p.m.
Tuesday: Red Sox TBA at Rockies RHP German Marquez (0-0, 6.75), 6:40 p.m.
Want more Rockies news? Sign up for the Rockies Insider to get all our MLB analysis.
Originally Published:
Denver, CO
Golden Triangle apartment complex raises bar for incentives to attract tenants
With so many new apartments hitting the market in recent years, landlords across metro Denver are in an incentives arms race to attract new tenants. A month or two of free rent is almost a given, with more buildings offering three to four months. Fees are being discounted or eliminated, and gift cards for new tenants moving in are a common perk.
But the akin Golden Triangle, a newer 98-unit luxury apartment development at 955 Bannock St. in Denver, has pushed concessions to another level. In a sweepstakes, it recently awarded one tenant a $50,000 cash grand prize and the runner-up a year of free rent.
“We wanted to try something new. What we found, more than we thought we would, is that the sweepstakes brought the residents in these buildings together as a community. Management and staff got to know them,” said Rhys Duggan, president and CEO of Revesco Properties, which developed the building in partnership with Alpine Investments.
Duggan said the Revesco team initially considered providing a $100,000 grand prize, but talked themselves down. The sweepstakes, which started in late October, attracted 364 entries. Compared to heading up to Black Hawk or buying a lotto ticket, the odds of winning were much higher, with no money out of pocket required to enter.
Resident Claire Scobee, winner of the $50,000 grand prize, said she planned to save most of the money — after splurging on a shopping spree with her niece, according to a news release by Revesco.
“Winning was a complete surprise and feels like a once-in-a-lifetime blessing,” Scobee said. “I’m most excited to treat my family, especially my niece, and spend a fun day together making memories.”
The second prize winner, Lisa Cordova, said winning a year’s worth of free rent would allow her to focus on a project she has long wanted to do but couldn’t while working full-time.
“It gives me the momentum to finally follow through on a creative endeavor I’ve been wanting to do for a long time,” Cordova said.
Duggan said the Golden Triangle and River North submarkets have seen a lot of supply come online in a short amount of time, which has made it hard to fill up new apartment buildings.
Revesco Properties and Alpine Investments opened the doors on the akin Tennyson at 4560 N. Tennyson a few months before the akin Golden Triangle in early 2025. The akin Tennyson is nearly 90% full, while the akin Golden Triangle building is closer to 60% full, a reflection of how many new units went up in that neighborhood.
The Apartment Association of Metro Denver, which holds a quarterly media briefing to share the latest statistics, reports that concessions in the fourth quarter averaged 9.5% of total rent, which works out to four to five weeks of free rent. For new developments, free rent offers can average closer to three months.
“This is a great opportunity for a new renter to jump in. It is a renter favorable situation,” Mark Williams, executive vice president of the AAMD, said in January.
Rental concessions are the highest they have been in 19 years of the AAMD survey, but they aren’t expected to stay that way for long as developers pull back and the pipeline of new projects rapidly shrinks.
Revesco has the akin Bonnie Brae under construction at 740 S. University Blvd. on the former site of the Bonnie Brae Tavern near Washington Park. The 46-unit boutique apartment is set to open early next year with up to 9,000 square feet of ground-floor retail. But the company has become much more selective about what it will build in Denver going forward.
Duggan said he can see evidence of the multifamily construction slowdown from Revesco’s office in the LoHi neighborhood. When the apartment boom was at its peak, he could count 16 cranes from his office. Now he can only count two that are active.
“That tells you what is going on right now in the Denver market,” he said.
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Denver, CO
Game Thread: Denver Nuggets vs Oklahoma City Thunder. March 9th, 2026. – Denver Stiffs
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Denver, CO
Sprint to the Summit: Inside the ‘whirlwind 14 months’ to launch Denver’s NWSL team
Rob Cohen’s bid to bring the 16th NWSL franchise to Denver was everything the league had imagined. The chairman and CEO of IMA Financial, who in 2001 founded the Metro Denver Sports Commission, not only offered a record $110 million expansion fee, but also pledged an infrastructure investment with little precedent in women’s professional sports.
Cohen proposed a 14,500-seat stadium within Denver’s city limits that would set the standard for purpose-built NWSL venues and anchor a mixed-use district designed to serve as a model across the league.
The club wouldn’t even need to be a tenant while that venue was built. Cohen committed to building a temporary stadium for the team’s first two seasons, adjacent to a new performance center and four training pitches developed from scratch.
Between the expansion fee and facility projects, excluding mixed use, Cohen is set to pour roughly $450 million into the club’s launch. The plan exemplifies NWSL Commissioner Jessica Berman’s vision of deep-pocketed owners controlling their own facilities.
Cohen expects the club to reach operating break-even within roughly five years, with infrastructure costs and financing recouped within a decade through a combination of franchise appreciation and returns from the mixed-use development. The model relies heavily on venue control and the sponsorship inventory created by the club’s stadiums and training complex.
But ambitious plans take time to execute, and Denver hasn’t had much. The NWSL’s protracted process to choose an ownership group to launch alongside Boston Legacy FC for the 2026 season dragged into 2025. By the time the league finally awarded the franchise to Denver on Jan. 30, Cohen had less than 14 months before this Saturday’s inaugural match.
“It was ‘ready, set, go,’ and we basically had nothing in place,” Cohen said. “We didn’t have a bank account, we didn’t have a single staff member, we didn’t have any of that. So, to go from that to actually being on the field of play with a full roster … it’s been a whirlwind 14 months like none I’ve ever had in my life.”
After a full sprint by Cohen and his team, Summit FC’s inaugural season is poised to reflect both strong demand for women’s soccer in the market and the constraints of an accelerated launch.
Experienced hand
To help launch an NWSL team in a matter of months, Cohen looked to someone who had done it before. In July 2023, Jen Millet joined incoming expansion team Bay FC, which had an even shorter 11-month runway, as COO. That club launched in 2024 and has ranked in the top five in NWSL attendance in its first two seasons.
After a search process led by CAA, Cohen hired Millet, who attended high school in the Denver area, as president and the first employee of his then-unnamed franchise in April 2025. Millet was an SBJ Game Changers honoree in 2020, when she was senior vice president of marketing for the Golden State Warriors and Chase Center.
Since beginning in her role, Millet has identified three key differences between her experience at Bay FC and the task ahead in Denver.
First, Bay FC’s ownership group, led by Sixth Street, had ambitions to secure a purpose-built training facility and stadium, but didn’t attempt to do so prior to launch. The club signed a five-year lease to play as a tenant at PayPal Park and secured a short-term practice facility at San Jose State, taking facilities off the table as an immediate concern.
Making facilities a top priority from the jump made the Denver project a far heavier lift.
“We’re managing four facility projects right now, which adds a degree of difficulty,” Millet said. “At Bay, we had to navigate some of that, but we weren’t in build mode on multiple projects on multiple sites at the same time we were standing up the club. That piece has been really challenging.”
Second, Millet and the executive team at Bay FC had the luxury of tapping into the resources of a private equity firm with more than $125 billion under management and more than 700 employees. While the business side at Summit FC is now up to around 55 employees, Cohen and Millet have done much of the heavy lifting themselves.
“At Sixth Street, there were seven or eight people that could navigate certain things around real estate, or capital calls, or whatever was happening — there was an army you could tap into,” Millet explained. “Rob and I had a conversation last week where we said, ‘Wow, it’s just us trying to do all of this.’ So, I think it is a lot.”
The third difference, however, has made launching Summit FC considerably easier.
“Fans in the Bay area were really excited about Bay coming, and I would never diminish that,” Millet said. “But in Denver, from Day 1, the response to the club has been 10X that. It’s probably a factor of the market being a little bit smaller and easier to impact, but everybody has been locked in on this club in the market since announced. It has really helped us move through this expedited timeline with more ease.”
That excitement was reflected in season-ticket deposits, which quickly converted into sales. The team secured 8,500 season-ticket holders before capping sales to leave room for groups and single-game buyers at the 12,500-seat temporary stadium. Summit FC granted even more deposit holders who remain on the waitlist access to their membership program, Club 5280, which comes with merchandise discounts, special ticket offers and exclusive events.
The true scale of the enthusiasm will be on display at the team’s home opener at Empower Field at Mile High Stadium, home of the Denver Broncos. As of late February, the team had sold more than 45,000 tickets for the March 28 match, positioning it to break the NWSL attendance record of 40,091 set by Bay FC at Oracle Park last year.
Denver’s sporting build also differed from past NWSL expansions. Summit FC and Boston Legacy FC are the first teams in league history to launch without the benefit of an expansion draft or a college draft, leaving the club to construct its roster entirely through free agency and international signings.
Time crunch
Warm temperatures and minimal snowfall made for terrible skiing this past winter in Colorado, but provided Denver Summit FC with ideal construction conditions for key infrastructure ahead of its inaugural season.
The team broke ground last June on a 20,000-square-foot training center, temporary stadium and four shared-use fields on a 43-acre site owned by the city of Centennial. The project stems from a partnership with the Cherry Creek School District and the city that Cohen began developing with CAA Icon before securing the franchise.
Once Summit FC moves to its permanent stadium in Denver as early as 2028, the school district will become the primary tenant of the Centennial venue, while the club retains the right to use the facility for its academy and a potential second team.
“Once we learned that Cherry Creek School District was planning on building their own stadium anyway, we started having discussions with them and saying, ‘Hey, if we do this together, you can spend half the money you were going to spend, we can spend half the money we were going to spend, and we can create something that’s a legacy for the community down the road,’” Cohen said.
The club expects to move into the performance center in June, roughly a year after breaking ground. With a more generous launch runway, that pace might have positioned Summit FC to open its inaugural season fully settled into its new facility. Instead, the team will train at a local rugby stadium for the first few months of the season.
It also will play just three of its first 12 matches at home and won’t open its own stadium until July, after the league’s midseason World Cup break. Following the opener at Mile High, the club will stage two additional early-season home matches at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, home of MLS’s Colorado Rapids. Its first game at the 12,500-seat Centennial Stadium is scheduled for July 3.
“I don’t think any expansion team would say that’s a great way to start, and it is heavily loaded with some of the best teams in the NWSL,” Cohen said. “But it is what it is. You can’t complain about it. You just have to deal with it.”
While the team has yet to break ground on its permanent stadium, which will ultimately anchor a mixed-use development in Denver called Santa Fe Yards, Cohen is hopeful it will be ready for the start of the 2028 NWSL season. The political process was bumpier than anticipated, but the city council agreed to contribute $70 million to the project.

Beyond facilities, one aspect of the business in which Summit FC could have used more time is sponsorship sales. The club retained Legends to lead its commercial efforts and scored a major win with its sale of performance center naming rights to Chicago-based CommonSpirit Health.
Financial terms were not disclosed, but Cohen said the deal is the richest naming-rights agreement for a women’s sports practice facility and exceeds comparable deals in MLS, as well as the average value of similar agreements in the NBA and NFL.
While the club also has announced deals with Canvas Credit Union, Xcel Energy and LaCroix, it has yet to sell some of its most valuable inventory, including front-of-kit placement and naming rights to Centennial Stadium. Sponsorship will be key to making the economics of the temporary stadium pencil out.
“A lot of those conversations on the sponsorship front, especially bigger assets, just take more time to develop,” Millet said. “You’ve got to be within a brand’s budgeting cycle. You’ve got to allow time for C-level approvals on those things. So, the turn on those doesn’t move as quickly through the business as it is to stand up something like ticketing.”
Millet expects the team to begin the season with six or seven corporate partners, and to add more throughout the season. Having a schedule backloaded with home matches at Centennial Stadium, where the team controls signage, will ensure late-joining sponsors don’t miss out on as much value early in the season.
With the NWSL expanding at a rapid clip and franchise valuations continuing to soar, the league under Berman’s leadership has prioritized ownership groups willing to invest in purpose-built infrastructure for its clubs. Summit FC is a prime example of that vision and evidence that big ideas require time to execute.
“My recommendation to the league is if you’re going to have a new expansion team and they have to build infrastructure as a part of their standing up of the team, it’s almost impossible to do what we’ve done in 14 months,” Cohen said. “We got it done, but I would encourage the league to allow the runway to be longer.”
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