Colorado
Keeler: Crown her! How Chatfield’s Janessa George pulled off upset of Colorado state wrestling championships
The queen knew. Janessa George entered Ball Enviornment with a tiara in her bag and a trick up her sleeve.
“Simply (how) her arm (saved) staying up,” was how Chatfield’s George defined the upset of the 2023 Colorado state wrestling match Saturday night time. “Over this complete season, I’ve been doing cow catchers, simply catching the arm and throwing them over. And as soon as I noticed the chance to take it like that …”
She pounced. Loveland’s Morgan Johnson, 21-0, a prohibitive favourite, three-time-state-champ, shot for George’s legs. The Chatfield senior grabbed the taller Johnson by the correct shoulder and flipped her utterly.
The group gasped. Some 98 seconds into the match, it was over.
With a possible four-time champ in Johnson rocking Mat 1 for the women’ 110-pound championship, Ball Enviornment had mounted its eyes to the middle of the ground, anticipating candy investiture.
Solely it was George, 42-1, who walked away with the crown.
Effectively, technically, it was a tiara.
“It was from the Douglas County Tiara Problem Event,” Sandra George, Janessa’s mom and Chatfield’s women wrestling coach, defined to me later. “She was like, ‘If I win, I need to put on my crown.’ She wished to put on her crown.’”
Janessa went from Captain America to Miss America in a matter of seconds, donning the tiara and waving to a startled crowd as she left the ground with the shocker of the night time.
The queen knew.
Even when no person else did.
“Did you’ve the tiara in your bag at some other match this weekend?” I puzzled.
A contented head shake.
“Oh, no,” Janessa defined. “This one felt like an enormous second. So I felt like it could be an ideal alternative.”
As a surprised Johnson disappeared into the deepest, darkest bowels of Ball Enviornment, George leapt into one congratulatory hug after one other.
“You introduced the warmth!” any individual shouted.
One other leap.
One other hug.
“You must’ve seen the look on her face!” another person bellowed as they clutched Janessa tight. “She was like, ‘What the (expletive) is occurring proper now?’”
So had been the remainder of us, to be frank. Johnson hadn’t simply dominated opponents heading into Saturday night time. She’d obliterated them.
In her 11 state match matches previous to the 110-pound championship, seven led to victorious pins. Three of these falls got here earlier than the match was even a minute previous. Two extra of these wins had been by 15 factors or extra.
On the 2022 tourney, the Loveland star’s first three opponents had been eradicated inside 95 seconds. This weekend, her first two foes received pinned at 54 and 36 seconds, respectively.
It was anticipated to be extra of the identical Saturday night time, as Johnson rocked and stepped in time to the tunes coming from her headphones, her proper wrist taped.
That’s, till George, all tiara and toughness, went to work.
“Final time I’d wrestled her was my junior yr,” Janessa recalled later, “and she or he pinned me then. However I wasn’t 100%. Nerves took over.”
This time, it was Johnson who appeared nervous. So did her coach, Loveland’s Troy Lussenhop, shouting from the nook on the unfathomable.
“Elbow!”
“Two arms!”
“Two HANNNNDS!”
“Get your hips beneath you!”
“Left hand inside!”
Too late.
“I feel there (had been) a number of nerves beforehand,” Janessa provided. “However as soon as I stepped on the mound, the nerves went away. It was my match.
“I used to be planning to go three durations, put up a combat. However I used to be glad that I discovered a weak level.”
The arm.
The queen knew.
Johnson walked away with a 1,000-yard stare. George, who’s hoping to wrestle at Division II Gannon (Pa.) College or Division III North Central outdoors Chicago, walked away with a crown.
“There was a number of stress,” Janessa mentioned. “I feel many of the stress was on her for being (the favourite), or normally. I simply wished to return in and (spring) an enormous upset.”
What the expletive is occurring proper now?
Not only a get together.
A coronation.
“Oh, it’ll be,” Janessa laughed, “a late night time.”
Lengthy dwell the queen.
Colorado
Benton’s Tedeschi commits to Colorado State
Colorado
Fans roast EA Sports' 'laughable' Colorado ranking in 'College Football 25'
EA Sports has released several rankings for its College Football 25 this week, teasing the July 19 release date for the much-awaited new game. When the company dropped the latest Power Rankings Friday, fans argued on social media about this team or that team’s relative ranking.
Yet fans universally seemed to agree on one ranking: Colorado is not the No. 16 team in the country.
Recall the Buffaloes started 3-0 last season under new coach Deion Sanders, and some fans had illusions of a College Football Playoff spot. But reality set in, and the Buffs dropped eight of nine to finish the season.
That is not what anyone looks for in a potential top 20 program. The popular College Sports Only X account noted, “EA Sports really ranked Colorado the 16th best team in “College Football 25″ after going 4-8 last season & losing 8 of their last 9 games.”
EA Sports really ranked Colorado the 16th best team in “College Football 25” after going 4-8 last season & losing 8 of their last 9 games. 🤦 pic.twitter.com/cmjIgbehz8
— College Sports Only (@CollegeSportsO) June 28, 2024
EA Sports has shared details about how it wants to make the game as realistic as possible, even having CFB 25 announcers such as Chris Fowler call every conceivable scenario that might happen in game play. Fans have pointed out some slight errors in the game thus far. For example, the Texas State stadium was rendered in the game without an upper deck.
But even with Sanders coming in and energizing Colorado’s football program, rating the Buffaloes 16th is a huge stretch. And fans had plenty to say on social media.
EA Sports developers leaving Colorado after guaranteeing Deion Sanders a top 25 ranking pic.twitter.com/Ngm614yZRc
— Pregame Empire (@PregameEmpire) June 28, 2024
HOW IS COLORADO at SIXTEEN LMFAO?!
— Athens Steve (@rainy_steve) June 28, 2024
Again why is Colorado this high? They won 4 games last year 🤦
— Bryan (@BGauvin23) June 28, 2024
EA had to screw something up on this game eventually 🤣🤣🤣 https://t.co/T1I1piPO8d
— Brandon Suarez (@Bdon300) June 28, 2024
where’s the logic here https://t.co/S8jQzHDtfL
— lifetime grizzlies fan (@therealkevinyeh) June 28, 2024
I’m convinced the person in charge of ratings is a 17 year old hype beast https://t.co/YnHC3dk5uN
— mike (@burnacount4mike) June 28, 2024
One of their developers must be Rocky Mountain high if they think Colorado is that good.
— J.P. McDonough (@JPMcDonough74) June 28, 2024
EA sports ranked Colorado at number 16 in college football 25! This is laughable! This makes no sense! Finished the season four and eight! But they’re the 16th best team in the country. OK!
— 5star CFB (@5starcfb) June 28, 2024
[College Sports Only on X/Twitter]
Colorado
Nurses at Rocky Mountain VA rally for more staffing to serve Colorado veterans
For Colorado ICU nurse Jordan LeBlanc, working at the Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center has been a rewarding experience because of his daily interaction with the veteran population.
“What could be greater than our veterans. They’re funny. They’re kind. They’re forgiving. They think that we know best, even when we don’t, but most of all they trust us,” said LeBlanc.
It is that trust that nurses say they are pushing to protect, in the wake of what they say has been an ongoing hiring freeze from nationwide budget cuts to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
“We have 57 open vacancies that are frontline,” said Sharda Fornnarino, who is the director of the local National Nurses United at the Rocky Mountain Regional VA. “That basically entails the ICU, med surge, the OR, some of our surgical areas as far as the outpatient surgeries, SCI and our mental health area.”
On Thursday, nurses from the medical center rallied across the street from the building in Aurora to raise awareness about their existing staffing shortages and the challenges they have faced being able to serve the veteran population because of this shortage.
LeBlanc says often nurses like him now have to take on a greater patient workload and sometimes work more hours to do so.
“Our ICU specifically has been staffed at less than 85% of its functional capacity,” he said. “Right now, we’re at 18 bed ICU that only 12 of the beds are open. They’ve closed six beds because of staffing levels.”
Nurses say the staffing challenges does not just affect their morale, but it can also compromise the relationship they have with each patient.
“Any veteran or any patient within our system will get less than they deserve, less than the total dignity that each individual really deserves to be provided,” he said.
VA Press Secretary Terrence Hayes responded to nurses rallying across the country, saying there is no freeze on hiring nurses and they are continuing to hire nurses needed across the country. Hayes’s complete statement is as follows:
VA’s top priority is providing the world-class care that Veterans deserve, and we are committed to making sure we have nursing staff we need to deliver the soonest and best care to Veterans.
There is no nationwide hiring freeze on VA nurses, and we are continuing to hire nurses, as needed, across the country to ensure that we can deliver world-class care to Veterans. Over the past 3 years, VA has aggressively hired nurses nationwide – increasing our nursing workforce by 14,000 nurses to a total of 122,000 nurses, the largest nursing workforce in the country and in the history of VA. VA is also retaining our great nurses, with turnover rates currently at 3.4% – far outperforming the private sector. There are also locations where we need to continue hiring nurses, and we are doing that – as demonstrated by the below hiring numbers.
Partly as a result of these hiring efforts and our great nurses, VA is currently delivering more care to more Veterans than ever before, outperforming non-VA care, and Veterans trust VA care at all-time record rates.
The VA’s office went on to share statistics on what they say have been all time high rates of veteran trust in VA care and decreasing wait times. However, Fornnarino says any hiring has been to fill strategic positions, where in reality all vacancies need to be filled.
“I haven’t seen more of those hires come to the bed side,” she said.
Nurses also worry the VA will become more privatized if staffing needs are not met.
“When we don’t have the staffing, we have these beds shut down,” said leBlanc. “That means that our veterans go to community care, and they’re not set up to provide veteran served ethical care.”
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