Denver, CO
Nuggets coach’s deal among area’s five priciest home sales in June
The five priciest Denver-area home sales in June included a Highlands Ranch mansion purchased by the coach of the Denver Nuggets, a Cherry Hills Village mansion and three homes in Denver’s Cherry Creek, including two on the same block.
The top spot went to a home in the 400 block of Saint Paul St. in Denver. 460 Saint Paul LLC, a Colorado corporation formed on May 17, purchased the property from retired car dealer Jerry Glauser and his wife, Barbara, for $8.3 million.
The five-bedroom, eight-bathroom home designed by architect Michael Knorr sits on one-third acre in Cherry Creek. It features 12-foot ceilings, heated floors, a spiral staircase, an elevator, a domed skylight and a two-story gym.
The Glausers purchased the home in 2004 for $4.2 million, then bought the one next door for $850,000. They scraped the latter and turned to Paul Kobey, the original builder, to expand the house.
They decided to sell it and buy something smaller in Denver because they own homes in Aspen, Arizona, and Florence, Italy.
“We love Denver, but we only spend about a month here a year, and it doesn’t make sense to have a 12,000-square-foot house,” Glauser said in 2023. “We wish we could take it with us.”
The Glausers initially listed the property with Kentwood Real Estate DTC for $14 million in 2019 before removing the listing. Kentwood relisted it for $11 million in June 2020 before again removing the listing. Douglas Kerbs with LIV Sotheby’s International Realty then listed the home for $11 million in March 2022 before lowering the price to $10 million in March.
Glauser owned several Glauser Mercedes-Benz dealerships, including one in Westminster, before selling them and retiring.
Kerbs represented both the buyer and sellers.
According to MLS data, here are June’s next four most expensive home sales:

Home in the 10900 block of Skydance Drive, Highlands Ranch: $6.8 million
Denver Nuggets coach Michael Malone, who led the team to an NBA championship in 2023, and his wife, Jocelyn, purchased the 8,875-square-foot mansion from Christian and Amy Stevens.
The six-bedroom, nine-bath home, with a five-car garage and an elevator, was built in 2022.
It features a gourmet kitchen, laundry room with a dog wash station, and a finished basement with a wet bar, temperature-controlled wine room and a home gym.
Outside, the home includes a private swimming pool, a pickleball court and an outdoor kitchen.
It listed for $7 million on May 27.
Malone joined the Nuggets as head coach in 2015 and was previously the head coach of the Sacramento Kings. He also served as an assistant coach of the New York Knicks, Cleveland Cavaliers, New Orleans Hornets and the Golden State Warriors.
- Listing agent: Tina Christensen with The Agency-Denver
- Buyer’s agent: Denver Trio with Realty One Group Premier

Home in 400 block of Cook St., Denver: $6 million
The Jim and Dianne Bosler 1993 Family Trust purchased the 7,686-square-foot mansion from Charles and Karen Farver.
The Farvers, who bought the home in 2019 for $3.7 million, listed it for $6.3 million on April 4. Charles Farver is the former chair of Pella Corp’s board of directors and a descendant of window company founder Pete Kuyper.
The home, constructed in 2007, includes four bedrooms, seven baths and a three-car garage. The Farvers recently completed an extensive interior renovation using award-winning design firm Mountain Luxury Interiors.
Bosler is chairman emeritus of JLB Partners, a national developer, builder, and manager of multifamily properties.
- Listing agent: Colin Dart with Milehimodern
- Buyer’s agent: Courtney Ranson with Milehimodern

Home in 60 block of Charlou Circle, Cherry Hills Village: $5.8 million
William and Janet Gooden bought the 8,101-square-foot house from the Elizabeth A. Rollins Revocable Trust and Fifth Edition Holdings LLC.
The four-bedroom, seven-bath mansion with a four-car garage was built in 2001. The house listed for $6.3 million on April 23.
61 Charlou is a single-level home that sits at the end of a cul-de-sac. After purchasing it in 2019, the trust extensively renovated the home by teaming with a local contractor and interior designer Andrea Schumacher.
The main level features a dining area that comfortably seats 12, a primary suite and another large bedroom suite, laundry, and exercise room with outdoor access. The lower level features a large recreation area, and two additional bedroom suites.
- Listing agent: Jeff Hendley with Compass-Denver
- Buyer’s agent: Karen Arras with Brokers Guild Homes

Home in the 400 block of Saint Paul St., Denver: $5.1 million
The Sarah D. Shore Inheritance Trust purchased the 7,029-square-foot home from 407 Saint Paul LLC. The trust purchased the house in 2016 for $4.5 million. It listed for $5.3 million on May 6.
The four-bedroom, five-bath stucco home with a three-car garage was designed by Semple Brown Design and constructed in 2005 for developer Paul Kobey as his home.
It features Kolbe windows, Rocky Mountain Hardware fixtures, walnut and lagos blue limestone floors, front and back patios, and a heated front walkway.
- Listing agents: Trish Bragg and Maggie Armstrong with LIV Sotheby’s International Realty
- Buyer’s agent: Trish Bragg and Maggie Armstrong with LIV Sotheby’s International Realty
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Denver, CO
Denver area events for Nov. 30
Denver, CO
Renck: Von Miller will always be a Bronco, even if playing for Denver again unlikely
ASHBURN, VA. – Von Miller knew the answer. But he could not resist asking the question.
A free agent last summer, training camp approaching, Miller had not decided on a new team. Garett Bolles, in attendance at a Von’s Vision event in Colorado, urged his good friend to call the Broncos.
Von had not played in Denver since 2021. Russell Wilson had him on a group text with Chandler Jones in 2022, asking for him to return. Von wisely sidestepped that “disaster of a season,” signing with the Buffalo Bills as Denver added Randy Gregory.
Three years later, there was a new coach and new quarterback. Maybe the remodeling needed an old antique to complete the project.
Von picked up his iPhone and dialed general manager George Paton.
“When Garett brought it up, I was like, ‘Come on, man.’ You have Nik Bonitto and Jonathon Cooper. But I started thinking, ‘You have all these people on the team and there’s not a spot for me? I know there probably won’t be, but let me check and see.’ I talked with George and I already had an idea how it was going to go. And that is exactly what he said.”
There was no room for the 36-year-old Miller, not with backups Jonah Elliss and Dondrea Tillman capable of playing special teams. The conversation with Paton, the man who traded him to the Rams in 2021, was productive, but not for the reason he expected.
“It was more about me taking the steps to get into a front office. He knows I want to be a GM someday (a goal inspired and encouraged by Bills GM Brandon Beane),” Miller told The Post on Friday. “I am still happy I did it. That was this season. What about next year?”
Sitting below the No. 24 name plate — an ode to Champ Bailey and Kobe Bryant — in the Washington Commanders locker room, Von flashed that devilish grin, the one that appeared so often after his franchise-record 110.5 sacks with the Broncos.
Truth be told, he would “love to return” to the Commanders. Would like a “rain check” after a lost season because of a battery of injuries to stars, including quarterback Jayden Daniels. Daniels is why Von chose Washington over the Seahawks.
“Nothing against Sam Darnold, but it was Jayden Daniels. In my opinion, it was the best situation,” Miller said. “They were coming off the NFC Championship Game. And (coach) Dan Quinn had a plan for me as a veteran player. He gets it.”
Of course, nothing has worked out, save for Von delivering as an effective situational rusher. He has five sacks in 11 games. He wants a third Super Bowl ring. But he is also motivated to collect eight more sacks, and have his sons, Valor and Victory, gain a better understanding of what their dad does for a living.
That is why he fully intends to play next season. Get that number, and he will reach 142.5 for his career, ranking sixth all-time.
“Myles Garrett is like 14 sacks behind me, and he came into the league six years after me. I don’t want to make the top 10 and get knocked out,” Miller said. “I want to stay there for 10 or 20 years. So, yeah, I definitely want to play another year, and who knows after that?”
With Washington hosting the Broncos on Sunday night, Miller cannot avoid becoming nostalgic. He never wanted to leave, but knew his time was up after he called a captains meeting with coach Vic Fangio and Paton to discuss turning the season around and aiming for a division title.
“It fell on deaf ears. What I realized later is that we were were so far removed from that. That’s all I knew from playing with Peyton Manning. But we had guys who couldn’t relate. It’s hard to get somebody to miss something they never had,” Miller said. “I was talking about winning a Super Bowl, and they were like, ‘What? We are try to win a single game.’ ”
A few weeks later, Von was shipped out. He was surprised, the news bringing him to tears. He still wonders if he would have played his entire career in Denver if the Broncos had drafted someone like Bo Nix.
“We never had a quarterback for a lot of years. No one special or elite,” Miller said. “And Bo fell in their lap. And you’ve got him with one of the greatest minds in NFL history, Sean Payton. And they have Courtland Sutton, Troy Franklin, and Marvin Mims, and that offensive line is way better than what we had in 2015. This year’s team is special. And if Bo Nix continues to take those leaps.”
Miller catches himself. There he goes again. He cannot help it. When it comes to the Broncos, Von is a fan.
He spent a decade in Denver, morphing into a future Hall of Famer. He made mistakes, grew up before our eyes, became a father — his third child, a daughter named Virtue, is due in January — a leader and a champion.
“I constantly reflect back on those times. The orange and blue, that’s my squad, that’s my city. Broncos Country, those are my fans. I think they are the main reason I miss it,” Miller said. “Anytime I post something on Instagram, they comment, ‘Come back to Denver, we love.’ They are 90 percent of why I still love the Denver Broncos and why I will always root for them.”
Von will always be a Bronco whether he plays for the team or not. He can always sign a one-day contract and retire in Denver before heading to Canton.
Honestly, it is amazing Von is still playing. His legacy is secure.
But this season explains it. There is a fountain pen. Von sits in the front of meetings — “I am that guy now” — taking down every word. He wants to be challenged, even though the easiest thing would be to tip his helmet and walk off into a Broncos orange-colored sunset.
“I take more notes now than I ever did. I date it, put a timestamp on it. Man, I love everything about the sport, the locker room, the training room, the weight room, the film room,” Miller said. “I have been playing football for 26 years. This is my life. If I don’t have to leave, I am not going to.”
Denver, CO
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