Daily Camera (Boulder)

Monarch dominates Lewis-palmer to open playoffs

Mohi scores six times in first period

- By Brent W. New bwnew@ prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

Monarch junior Reid Taylor doesn’t want to harp on the tough stretch the Coyotes went through in the final weeks of the regular season.

Though it could feel like the bounce of the puck was as kind as a forecheck, now was time to reset with the hopes of a deep postseason run.

The fifth-seeded Coyotes turned the page on a 2-4-1 close to the regular season almost immediatel­y in Thursday’s opening round to the Class 5A playoffs at the Sports Stable. Just moments after the house lights turned back on and the pregame music was lowered, Taylor scored 14 seconds into a six-goal first period in an eventual 12-0 win over No. 12 Lewis-palmer.

“Honestly, we put (the end of the regular season) behind us and just focused on the playoffs,” said Taylor, noting how the Coyotes’ ho-hum record in the CPHL regular season from the fall didn’t stop them from reaching those finals. “We just came in here with the same mindset. We want to win, and it starts now. It’s a whole new season.”

Off the opening faceoff, Taylor put away a rebound chance off

Vance Joseph’s second act in Denver is at hand.

The former Broncos head coach, fired following the 2018 season after an unsuccessf­ul twoyear run, is returning to the franchise to serve as Sean Payton’s defensive coordinato­r, multiple league sources confirmed to The Post on Thursday morning.

He is the centerpiec­e of several staff hires in the process of being finalized by Payton, who is expected to retain defensive backs coach Christian Parker and defensive line coach Marcus Dixon. Others, sources told The Post, include the following:

• Offensive assistant Joe Lombardi

• Quarterbac­ks coach Davis Webb

• Inside linebacker­s coach Greg Manusky

• Outside linebacker­s coach Michael Wilhoite

• Wide receivers coach Keary Colbert

None have a more unique connection to Denver than Joseph, 50, who has spent the past four seasons serving as Arizona’s defensive coordinato­r after going 1121 in two seasons as the Broncos’ head coach.

In Denver, he should have full authority over the defense given Payton’s offensive expertise and his experience running a defense.

Joseph succeeded Gary Kubiak after the 2016 season but lasted only two seasons as the Broncos’ head coaching carousel tilted into high gear. He was succeeded by Vic Fangio for three seasons and then Nathaniel Hackett for just 15 games before Denver hired Payton in recent weeks.

Denver had stout defenses at times under Joseph but struggled mightily on offense.

Joseph and the Cardinals came to Denver in December and the Broncos prevailed, 24-15. That week, Joseph was asked about his time as the head coach.

“I’m over it. It was never a sore spot,” Joseph said then. “That’s a great opportunit­y to be a head coach in the NFL. It didn’t work out, but I wasn’t the first guy and I won’t be the last. There were never any ill feelings. It was just a job, it didn’t get done and you move on.”

When Joseph was hired in 2017, he had spent just one year as a defensive coordinato­r in Miami. Before that, he coached defensive backs for several teams, including Cincinnati, Houston and San Francisco. Perhaps his best defenses were the talented Broncos groups he oversaw in 2017 and ’18, but Denver — as it has since Kubiak retired — failed to score points consistent­ly on offense.

Now, he’s only got one unit to worry about and it’s a talented one headlined by cornerback Pat Surtain II, safety Justin Simmons, defensive lineman D.J. Jones and outside linebacker Randy Gregory. Among the franchise’s top free agent decisions to make in the next three weeks are defensive lineman Dre’mont Jones — who could be franchise tagged while the sides attempt to work out a

 ?? BRENT W. NEW — BOCOPREPS.COM ?? Monarch’s Ben Wiener, left, holds off a Lewis-palmer defender as he brings the puck to the net in the first round of the Class 5A ice hockey playoffs on Thursday in Superior.
BRENT W. NEW — BOCOPREPS.COM Monarch’s Ben Wiener, left, holds off a Lewis-palmer defender as he brings the puck to the net in the first round of the Class 5A ice hockey playoffs on Thursday in Superior.

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