As the cooler Colorado evenings set in, it’s evident football season is in full swing. For Denver singer-songwriter and entrepreneur Dre Lane, this means he gets to watch his favorite football player — his son Mario Lane.
“We call him deuce deuce,” said Dre.
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Since Mario was 4 years old, his dad Dre made sure he was on the field. Entering his junior year at Cherokee Trail High School, this season is special for them for more reasons than one.
“It really just transcends through my soul. You know, being able to be out here and watch him compete with his brothers,” said Dre.
This is the season the 5-foot-5 fullback has been waiting for his whole life, hoping to show off all the training his father put him through.
“It’s my first year, actually starting on varsity, and I just want to prove that I could play at the top level,” said Mario.
However, news over the summer has now made this a bittersweet season for the Lane family.
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At the same time of locking in a starter position, Dre was told he will only have just 18 months to live after finding out his prostate and bladder cancer has spread.
“I’m just taking it one step at a time, I try not to think about it,” said Dre.
Dre remains positive despite the odds, and watching Mario advance in the sport has provided a boost.
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“He started off young as a kid, I’m saying, with the long hair, little flag football, and he couldn’t grab a flag to save his life,” laughed Mario. “He’s really put a lot of work into his craft, to really be able to have the ability to be able to do what he does out there.”
And playing for a team like the Cherokee Trail Cougars during trying times has been a true honor for Lane and his family.
“The team support has been monumental. These guys have been backing me since day one. It’s like a brotherhood,” said Dre.
Despite the grim prognosis, Dre still hopes to see his son finish out his senior year next season.
“I’m the director of my life, so I quickly changed the channel and changed the mindset of that situation. I’m going on God’s timetable,” said Dre.
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The family is accepting donations to help them through this journey. You can find ways to help on Instagram.
The Cherokee Trail Cougars face the Mountain Vista Golden Eagles for their homecoming football game on Friday at 7 p.m. Watch a live stream of the game on CBS News Colorado.
This morning, a spot in Colorado was the coldest place in the continental United States.
The temperature hit a frigid -31° Fahrenheit in the area of Stub Creek, according to NOAA and reported on the morning of January 8. This creek is located in mountains found about 15 miles west of Red Feather Lakes in northern Colorado. The notorious Peter Sinks area of Utah tied this overnight temperature, as well.
The temperature in the area of Stub Creek was separated from the country’s warmest city by 109 degrees – Camp Pendleton (Oceanside), California and its temp of 78.
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Cold temperatures hit much of the state overnight, with temperatures as low as -28° hitting Fraser Flats of Grand County. Meanwhile, much of the I-25 corridor experienced temperatures in the single-digits to low-teens.
See a National Weather Service map of recorded temperatures below, but note that Stub Creek is not included on this map.
Cold weather is expected to continue in Colorado throughout much of the week.
Find additional weather information on the National Weather Service website.
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Mother of boy killed on Colorado road says justice wasn’t served at sentencing for driver – CBS Colorado
A Colorado man who pleaded guilty to careless driving resulting in the death of a 13-year-old boy has been sentenced to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine — the maximum sentence allowed by law.
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Wildlife officials have rescued a bull elk by lowering it down a cliff after the animal became entangled in a rope at a popular ice climbing area in southwestern Colorado.
LAKE CITY, Colo. (AP) — Wildlife officials and several climbers rescued a bull elk by lowering it down a cliff after the animal became entangled in a rope at a popular ice climbing area in southwestern Colorado.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials said a group of ice climbers in Lake City encountered the distressed elk Friday morning, and a CPW biologist darted the ungulate with a tranquilizer and covered part of its head with a ski mask to protect its eyes during the rescue.
The team cut the rope away from the elk’s antlers but needed a way to get the 700-pound (318-kilogram) animal down from the climbing wall.
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That’s when the ice climbers who reported the stranded elk came to the rescue by helping state wildlife officers rig a system that used two ropes — one under its chest and another along its antlers — to lower it to the base of the route. Once the elk was on more level ground, the CPW team reversed the effects of the tranquilizer, and about 12 minutes later the elk awoke and ran off down the snowy canyon.
“When we reverse that tranquilizer drug, it can take several minutes for the animal to regain full use of its body. Sometimes they will stand quickly but still be woozy on their feet, or sometimes it will take them a few attempts to get fully standing,” said John Livingston, a spokesman for Colorado Parks and Wildlife.
He said the 2 1/2-year-old elk became stuck the previous night and was discovered at dawn, fatigued and with a few minor scrapes from trying to break free. It took more than two hours to free the hapless animal.
Elk sometimes get their unwieldy antlers entangled in man-made hazards such as clothes lines, fencing and hammocks.