The Denver Post

Denver East notches first fall playoff win in 15 years

- By Kyle Newman

On Friday at All- City Stadium, Denver East delivered the type of win that can change the fortunes of a city program, beating Mullen 23-7 for the Angels’ first fall playoff victory in 15 years.

The Angels’ defense owned the night, with two intercepti­ons that led to 10 points, a pair of fourthdown stops in the redzone and the decisive secondhalf scoop- and- score that changed the complexion of the game for good.

Denver East junior edge rusher DJ Crowe was an unblockabl­e one - man wrecking crew. His dominance, which included five sacks, a bunch of tackles for loss and a safety, set the tone for Denver East’s victory. The Angels won a playoff game during the spring 2020 COVID season, but before that, their last playoff win came in 2008.

“People have got to stop sleeping on the inner- city and Denver East football,” DJ Crowe said. “We got a lot of dawgs here, a lot of kids who stayed home and went to Denver East to make this rebuild happen. We went to work, and came out here and it showed in the second half.”

Crowe and his defensive teammates put a stop to the program’s fall playoff drought as No. 13 Denver East outscored No. 20 Mullen 20- 0 in the second half, leaving no doubt and sending the Mustangs packing.

“We’ve been going through adversity as a school, as a community over the past couple years (with shootings at the school),” Denver East head coach Stephen Ruempolham­er said. “We played for the name on the front of the jersey tonight. And we aim to eliminate a lot of pain for our community, because they’re bigger than us.”

Ruempolham­er, in his fourth season as East’s coach, was previously an assistant at Mullen. The Amsterdam native moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, for high school football in 2006, then played at Iowa State and had a brief stint in the NFL. He said his Angels are “buying in,” hence their 9- 3 record this season.

“These guys now know that they are worth competing in the city, with their talent, for the city,” Ruempolham­er said. “This sort of win changes the dynamic for the boys.”

In conjunctio­n with clutch performanc­es from senior defensive linemen MJ Dailey and Elias Goss, Denver East’s dominance in the defensive trenches was more than enough to offset a vanilla performanc­e by the Angels’ offense, whose lone standout on Friday was sophomore kicker Will Beauregard.

Crowe single- handedly wrecked Mullen’s f irst drive. He sacked Mullen freshman QB Koa Dietrich on the opening play, batted down a pass on second down and then his pressure on third down forced an intercepti­on into the arms of Angels senior linebacker Vincent Yarber to set Denver East up at the Mullen 11-yard line.

The Angels cashed in with sophomore Will Beauregard’s 25-yard field goal, and from there, neither offense could find its footing.

Mullen’s long second drive ended on a failed 4th- and- 5 conversion at the Denver East 11- yard line, then the Angels’ offense sputtered out due to multiple drops by their wideouts.

The Mustangs kept their third drive alive with a converted fake punt pass, only to eventually miss a 32-yard field goal.

But Denver East fumbled the very next play, forcing its gassed defense back on the field. Mullen took advantage, with Dietrich’s eight-yard TD pass to Dartmouth commit Jordan Leslie to give the Mustangs a 7- 3 halftime lead.

Mullen tried an onside kick to begin the second half, but the Angels recovered near midfield. Denver East’s offense finally found a rhythm, but ground to a halt inside the five-yard line, when Mullen stuffed them three straight times. The Angels settled for Beauregard’s 24- yard field goal that made it 7- 6 with 7:46 left in the third.

Then came the momentum shift.

Dietrich fumbled a shotgun snap and Goss recovered it and rumbled 12 yards to the end zone. After the Angels took a timeout to talk about their two-point play call, senior running back Landen Holloway’s jump pass found — who else? — Crowe for the conversion to put the home team up 14- 7 and send the red- clad crowd into a frenzy with 6:40 left in the third quarter.

Crowe then knocked Dietrich out of the game early in the fourth quarter with a crushing blow that was flagged for roughing the passer. Sophomore Blitz Mccarty took over the reins at QB and drove the Mustangs into the redzone, but Mullen failed to convert another fourth- down conversion with 8:27 left.

Mullen got the ball, and Dietrich, back with 5:05 to play. But junior safety Elijah West-duah picked Dietrich off on an ill-advised heave downfield, running it back to the Mustangs’ 26-yard line.

Junior running back Sean Campbell then iced the game with a 25-yard TD run.

Crowe, continuing his man- among- boys performanc­e in the final minutes, then tacked on a safety via a sack with 2:31 to play, pushing the score to 23-7 and deflating the Mullen sideline.

“He’s just… special,” Ruempolham­er said of Crowe. “He’s our captain, and with the talent that he has, the sky is the limit for this guy.”

Crowe, who was second in Class 5A with 14.5 sacks as a sophomore last year, led the classifica­tion with a dozen sacks and 24.5 tackles for loss entering Friday. The undersized Mullen offensive line was outmatched against Denver East’s duo of Crowe and Dailey, as they drew a handful of holding flags as well.

After Friday’s dogfight, Denver East can’t celebrate for too long. The Angels now have the tall task of heading to District 20 Stadium next week for a bout with No. 4 Pine Creek. Denver East fell to Pine Creek 23- 0 in Colorado Springs on Sept. 15, but the Angels believe next week can be a different story.

“We’re a whole different team now from then,” MJ Dailey said. “I see (next Friday) as getting our getback.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KATHRYN SCOTT — SPECIAL TO THE DENVER POST ?? Denver East’s Damien Crowe Jr. (3) pulls down Mullen’s Jordan Leslie (2) in the second half in a first round Class 5A playoff game at All-city Stadium in Denver on Friday night.
Omari Bursey scored one touchdown running, another on a pass from Devan Kirchhevel and a third on a fumble return to lead the Lightning ( 7-4) into the Round of 16 for the second straight season. The Raptors ( 7-4) put pressure on Legacy with two straight TDS in the third quarter, the last on a pass from Joe Steiner to Cam Chapa to pull within 21-14, but Bursey answered with a 6-yard run to put the game away. Next week: at No. 1 Cherry Creek (10-0), 7 p.m.
Castle View (8-3) took control with a pair of takeaways late in the second quarter to earn its first playoff win since 2018. Derek Gordon cashed in the first — an intercepti­on — by finding Jackson Blanchard for a TD pass a few snaps later. Darrell Ishman then returned an intercepti­on for a touchdown on Fossil Ridge’s next possession to give Castle View a 19-0 lead going into halftime that was never challenged. Fossil Ridge’s (5-6) lone TDS came late in the fourth quarter. Next week: at No. 8 Mountain Vista (8-2), TBA
Will Beauregard kicked two field goals, Sean Campbell ran in a 25-yard touchdown and the Denver East (9-2) defense scored on a fumble return (Elias Goss) and safety (D.J. Crowe) to eliminate Mullen. Koa Dietrich found Jordan Leslie for an 8-yard TD pass to give the Mustangs (6-5) a 7-3 lead in the first half, but the Angels defense took over after that. Next week: at No. 4 Pine Creek (9-1), TBA
PHOTOS BY KATHRYN SCOTT — SPECIAL TO THE DENVER POST Denver East’s Damien Crowe Jr. (3) pulls down Mullen’s Jordan Leslie (2) in the second half in a first round Class 5A playoff game at All-city Stadium in Denver on Friday night. Omari Bursey scored one touchdown running, another on a pass from Devan Kirchhevel and a third on a fumble return to lead the Lightning ( 7-4) into the Round of 16 for the second straight season. The Raptors ( 7-4) put pressure on Legacy with two straight TDS in the third quarter, the last on a pass from Joe Steiner to Cam Chapa to pull within 21-14, but Bursey answered with a 6-yard run to put the game away. Next week: at No. 1 Cherry Creek (10-0), 7 p.m. Castle View (8-3) took control with a pair of takeaways late in the second quarter to earn its first playoff win since 2018. Derek Gordon cashed in the first — an intercepti­on — by finding Jackson Blanchard for a TD pass a few snaps later. Darrell Ishman then returned an intercepti­on for a touchdown on Fossil Ridge’s next possession to give Castle View a 19-0 lead going into halftime that was never challenged. Fossil Ridge’s (5-6) lone TDS came late in the fourth quarter. Next week: at No. 8 Mountain Vista (8-2), TBA Will Beauregard kicked two field goals, Sean Campbell ran in a 25-yard touchdown and the Denver East (9-2) defense scored on a fumble return (Elias Goss) and safety (D.J. Crowe) to eliminate Mullen. Koa Dietrich found Jordan Leslie for an 8-yard TD pass to give the Mustangs (6-5) a 7-3 lead in the first half, but the Angels defense took over after that. Next week: at No. 4 Pine Creek (9-1), TBA
 ?? ?? Denver East’s Sean Campbell runs in for a touchdown in the second half against Mullen at All-city Stadium on Friday night.
Denver East’s Sean Campbell runs in for a touchdown in the second half against Mullen at All-city Stadium on Friday night.

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