Latest news, sports, weather from Denver and Colorado | The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com Colorado breaking news, sports, business, weather, entertainment. Wed, 16 Apr 2025 02:19:02 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8 https://www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/cropped-DP_bug_denverpost.jpg?w=32 Latest news, sports, weather from Denver and Colorado | The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com 32 32 111738712 Keeler: CU Buffs retiring Shedeur Sanders’ number? Darian Hagan, Kordell Stewart better be next https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/shedeur-sanders-cu-buffs-football-retired-numbers/ Wed, 16 Apr 2025 02:19:02 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071291 BOULDER — 2 Soon.

You want to talk records? Fine. Darian Hagan put up a 28-5-2 mark as CU’s starting quarterback. Kordell Stewart went 27-5-1 as the Buffs’ QB1.

If Shedeur Sanders’ No. 2 jersey is retired for eternity at Folsom Field, then Hagan’s No. 3 and Stewart’s No. 10 better be next.

“It’s just so disrespectful,” former CU great J.J. Flannigan told me by phone Tuesday, “in so many ways.”

For Hunter, CU’s second Heisman Trophy winner, Folsom immortality was fait accompli. Sanders, son of CU coach Deion Sanders and the best pure passer in Buffs QB history, probably would’ve joined him. Eventually.

Welcome to 2025, where “eventually” means “in a few days.” The Buffs are retiring Shedeur’s No. 2 and Travis Hunter’s No. 12 at Saturday’s spring game.

The premise is fine. The timing is bonkers.

For one thing, the younger Sanders and Hunter officially hung up their CU helmets only four-and-a-half months ago at the Alamo Bowl. While the Buffs capped off a 9-4 season, it was, on the whole, a night to forget.

If that seems like a mighty quick turnaround for a jersey retirement, you’re right — the late, great Rashaan Salaam’s No. 19 was honored 23 years after he won the Heisman Trophy. Byron White and Bobby Anderson had to wait a year to see their numbers retired. Joe Romig had to wait two years.

And while we’re on the subject of waiting, the Buffs traditionally retire jerseys about as often as the Army hands out Astronaut badges. Before this week, CU had only honored four such players, and only one Buff — Salaam — has been recognized for their efforts between 1973-2023.

One in five decades. Now, two in one weekend?

Factor in the rush, and no wonder several CU football alums are ticked off right now.

“Even if they had come to Coach (Bill McCartney), even if he had NIL, he wouldn’t have done anything like that,” said Flannigan, one of Coach Mac’s best recruits. “I don’t believe Coach Mac would’ve done that.

“I don’t have a problem with Travis (seeing his number retired). He did something that nobody’s ever done. But even then, let him be gone for a few years. You do it before he leaves?”

2 Soon.

Flannigan wore No. 2 for McCartney’s Buffs, and proudly. The Los Angeles native ran for 1,187 pre-bowl yards and 18 pre-bowl touchdowns for CU’s 1989 national runner-up, a team that many swear was better, pound-for-pound, than the ’90 crew that beat Notre Dame for the natty a year later.

CU’s featured a bunch of stellar “2s” over the years. Richard Johnson. Flannigan. Brian Calhoun. James Kidd. Laviska Shenault. But J.J. thinks the man who succeeded him with the number, ex-Buffs cornerback Deon Figures, is still No. 1 when it comes to CU’s all-time No. 2s.

“Put Deon Figures on that list above me,” Flannigan said. “I’d put anybody on that list above me. (CU’s decision) is disrespectful to the accomplishments of Eric Bieniemy, Alfred Williams, guys who haven’t gotten their (jerseys retired), haven’t gotten their due.”

The icons from the Buffs’ greatest era — 1984-2005 — are long past due. And justifiably frustrated. Flannigan was talking to Bieniemy on Monday night after CU announced the double-jersey ceremony.

“And he was like, ‘Come on, now, reel us back in,'” Flannigan said. “He was not pleased. At all.”

Flannigan was so disappointed that he went on Facebook to post that he’d “never show up on that campus again until the athletes that built that program get some semblance of respect from the current coach. We have officially been bought and sold for popularity.

“I don’t know how many people texted me (Tuesday) and said, ‘Man, I’ve been wanting to say that. I’m glad you said it,'” Flannigan recalled.

2 Soon.

Ex-Buffs QB Joel Klatt, who’s had Coach Prime’s back from Day 1, told Fox Sports’ “First Things First”  he’d warned AD Rick George that early jersey retirement wasn’t going to land well with his peers.

Klatt said George told him,  “Listen, (these guys) changed the trajectory of our program. They saved our program, in a lot of ways.”

He’s not wrong. College football is on the cusp of another seismic shift. The game is run by television networks now. Nobody loves Deion the way TV loves Deion. Win or lose.

Flannigan has known George for almost 40 years now. George helped recruit the kids under McCartney, who put CU on the front page again in the late ’80s. Which only leaves him more confused.

“This is not about me being mad at Rick,” Flannigan stressed. “I’m disappointed in the decision.

“Everything I say is said out of love, not hate. Not anger. None of that. It’s said out of love. It means I love my university.”

He’s got nothing against Shedeur or Travis, either. Heck, he’s even planning on taking the 24th off from work to go watch the CU duo get taken in the first round of the NFL Draft.

“I want to see those guys go high (in the draft), and I want to see them go to a team they deserve and where they can thrive and build their brands and their athletic abilities,” Flannigan said. “I’m rooting for those guys. This is not about me not rooting for them.”

It’s about fairness. It’s about where you set the bar and why.

Hagan shined on the biggest stages imaginable, steering the Buffs to two national title games and winning one of them. Stewart threw arguably the single greatest pass in Buffs history, won a lot, and helped define what the position could be for a generation.

Nobody in black and gold has ever slung the rock around like Shedeur. But CU’s had QBs who left just as rich a legacy. If there’s room for 2, there’s room for 3 and 10.

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7071291 2025-04-15T20:19:02+00:00 2025-04-15T20:19:02+00:00
Backcountry skier injured in avalanche near Breckenridge https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/breckenridge-avalanche-backcountry-skiing-colorado/ Wed, 16 Apr 2025 01:32:25 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7072438 A backcountry skier was caught and injured in an avalanche near Breckenridge Ski Resort on Saturday, the sixth slide reported by Colorado recreationists this month.

The man was in a group of four skiers who left the resort at the Peak 6 backcountry access point just before noon, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center.

The group was planning to ski the K Chute of the Sky Chutes, which are steep avalanche paths on the west side of the Tenmile Range.

After the man triggered the avalanche, he was swept down the path for about 1,100 feet and lost his skis, according to an accident report from the CAIC.

He was able to escape the still-moving debris field as the avalanche slowed down and was helped off the mountain by the other skiers, one of whom skied down the mountain, found an extra pair of skis and hiked back up so the injured man could ski down.

He was treated for unspecified injuries at St. Anthony Summit Hospital in Frisco.

Two other groups came across the avalanche later that day and called 911 after finding the man’s skis as they descended.

Six other people have been caught in Colorado avalanches so far this month, including two climbers at St. Mary’s Glacier, but none reported injuries, according to the avalanche center.

A skier was caught and injured in an avalanche on Peak 6 of the Tenmile Range, near Breckenridge Ski Resort, on April 12, 2025. (Courtesy of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center)
A skier was caught and injured in an avalanche on Peak 6 of the Tenmile Range, near Breckenridge Ski Resort, on April 12, 2025. (Courtesy of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center)

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7072438 2025-04-15T19:32:25+00:00 2025-04-15T19:32:25+00:00
Review of decision not to award Space Command to Alabama inconclusive, with Trump reversal expected https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/space-command-location/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 23:58:42 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7072100&preview=true&preview_id=7072100 By TARA COPP

WASHINGTON (AP) — With the Trump administration expected to reverse a controversial 2023 decision on the permanent location of U.S. Space Command, a review by the Defense Department inspector general could not determine why Colorado was chosen over Alabama.

The inspector general’s report, issued Friday, said this was in part due to a lack of access to senior defense officials during the Biden administration, when the review began.

The location of U.S. Space Command has significant implications for the local economy, given the fast growth in national defense spending in space-based communications and defenses.

In 2021, the Air Force identified Army Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, as the preferred location for the new U.S. Space Command due to cost and other factors. But a temporary headquarters had already been established in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and after multiple delays President Joe Biden announced it as the permanent headquarters.

Alabama’s Republican congressional delegation accused the Biden administration of politicizing the decision. But Colorado, which has Republican and Democratic lawmakers, is home to many other Air Force and U.S. Space Force facilities.

As recently as last week, Rep. Mike Rogers House, an Alabama Republican who chairs the House Armed Services Committee, told a panel at Auburn University he expects the decision to be reversed by the White House before the end of April.

The location of Space Command would be one of many decisions that have swung back and forth between Biden and President Donald Trump. For instance, Biden stopped the construction of the border wall that began during Trump’s first term, only to have Trump now vow to complete it. And Trump is again seeking to ban transgender troops from serving in the military, after Biden removed Trump’s first-term limitations.

The controversy over the basing decision began seven days before Trump’s first term expired, when his Air Force secretary announced Alabama would be home to Space Command, pending an environmental review.

That review was completed about six months into Biden’s term and found no significant impact with hosting the command in Alabama. But the new administration did not act on the decision.

Instead, a year later, the Biden White House said it was keeping the headquarters in Colorado Springs, citing the time that would be lost relocating staff and the headquarters to Huntsville.

The report said interviews has been requested with Biden’s Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to understand why Huntsville was not named, but the Biden White House would only allow the interviews if administration lawyers were present. The inspector general rejected that condition, saying it could affect its unfettered access to information.

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7072100 2025-04-15T17:58:42+00:00 2025-04-15T18:36:27+00:00
Broncos doing heavy diligence on NFL draft wide receivers, from first round to PFAs https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/broncos-wide-receivers-nfl-draft-diligence/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 23:42:47 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071073 In an unfortunate stroke of irony, the Broncos’ climb to the summit in Denver has them sitting in a chasm in Green Bay.

For months, NFL evaluators have lamented the lack of top-end talent in this 2025 draft class. The pro: There’s an overwhelming amount of depth at tight end and running back, the playmaking spots head coach Sean Payton has targeted since taking a podium back at February’s NFL combine. The con: There’s a clear top tier at both positions that could be gone by the time Denver’s No. 20 first-round pick rolls around April 24.

Boise State RB Ashton Jeanty is a fever dream at this point, a candidate to be snapped up by the Las Vegas Raiders at pick No. 6. Denver’s gone mostly quiet on Penn State TE Tyler Warren, who the New York Jets are high on at No. 7, a source told The Denver Post. Even North Carolina back Omarion Hampton, widely connected to Denver, is seeing his public stock rise well into the first round.

The Broncos are stuck looking for a fit somewhere between their No. 20 and No. 51 slots. Their first-round pick is likely too low to land a top-graded RB or TE. Their second-round pick is likely too low to wait for the next tier to roll around.

The crop of receivers available in the first round, though, could be just right.

Arizona’s 6-foot-4 gamebreaker Tetairoa McMillan is the type of big-bodied receiver Payton loves. Ohio State’s Emeka Egbuka possesses toughness over the middle and as a blocker, that would be perfect for Payton’s system. The Broncos have done due diligence on Texas’ projected first-round pick Matthew Golden, a burner who the Broncos hosted on a top-30 visit recently, according to a source.

“Those are guys that I’m thinking, okay, right there at 20, would be in the conversation, ‘Are we going to take them or not?'” said CBS draft analyst Charles Davis.

Even after gambling significant resources to trade up and nab Troy Franklin in the fourth round last year, there’s ample reason for the Broncos to reach high on a wideout next week in Green Bay. They poked around at the available free-agent crop last month but didn’t sign anyone and also lost Payton favorite Lil’Jordan Humphrey to the New York Giants. There’s little WR1 production or potential in the room besides veteran Courtland Sutton, whose contract situation dangles in the balance.

On the flip side, though, Sutton told The Post Saturday he believed extension talks were “working in the right direction,” and he hoped to be in Denver the rest of his career. The organization, too, is high on the development of youngsters Franklin and Marvin Mims Jr. And the Broncos are looking extensively, well beyond prioritizing the first round, at a slew of potential mid-to-late-round fits at receiver.

The Post has reported Denver’s held post-combine conversations with Maryland’s Tai Felton, Georgia’s Arian Smith and Arkansas’ Isaac TeSlaa. Here are a few other sleeper names that the Broncos have checked in on.

Traeshon Holden, Oregon: Another former teammate of quarterback Bo Nix, the Broncos met with Holden at Oregon’s pro day in mid-March, a source told The Post. The 6-foot-2 Holden doesn’t have blazing speed, but he’s a solid red-zone threat.

Kobe Hudson, UCF: Hudson would bring proven production, with three straight years of 600-plus yards at UCF. He was excellent, too, at intermediate routes over the middle in 2024, a solid fit for Payton. Hudson did a Zoom with the Broncos on March 31, a source said.

Brennan Presley, Oklahoma State: A ready-made slot receiver who could fall undrafted because of his stature (5-foot-8), the sure-handed Presley caught 190 passes across the past two years at Oklahoma State. A source told The Post that a Broncos scout contacted Presley on Monday and told him the organization sees him as a late-round or priority free agent (PFA) talent.

Giles Jackson, Washington: A six-year veteran in collegiate football, Jackson’s another potential PFA option in the slot and is an extremely sure-handed target. He’s dropped exactly three passes in 205 collegiate targets, according to Pro Football Focus. The Broncos have had a video conference with Jackson.

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7071073 2025-04-15T17:42:47+00:00 2025-04-15T17:59:12+00:00
Gabe Landeskog returns to Avalanche practice as optimism for Game 1 abounds https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/gabe-landeskog-avalanche-practice-mackinnon-game-1/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 23:05:06 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071467 For so long, the idea of Gabe Landeskog playing hockey again seemed so far away.

Even just a few weeks ago, the odds that he might play at some point in this postseason were still long. Now, the entire situation has flipped and the progress is happening at warp speed.

Landeskog returned to the Colorado Avalanche for practice Tuesday, ending a successful conditioning assignment with the Colorado Eagles where he played back-to-back games and collected two points as well. Now, the countdown to the captain playing for the Avalanche again could be days — not weeks or months.

“Suddenly, over the last month, the progression has been quick,” Avs forward Logan O’Connor said. “It’s been awesome. The locker room has sensed it. It has happened really quickly recently, but then you think about the whole journey and it’s really been a long time coming.

“It’s definitely been a wild journey. We’ve played a lot of games without him. A lot of guys have come and gone that never got to play with him. As bad as it is to say, you almost got used to him being out at some point and stopped asking questions about how he was feeling or what things were looking like because you didn’t want to harass him about it.”

Landeskog went 1,020 days without playing because of issues with his right knee. He had several procedures, the most recent major one being knee cartilage replacement surgery in May 2023.

No player has returned to NHL action after having this procedure. Lonzo Ball had it done in March 2023 and returned this season for the Chicago Bulls in the NBA.

Landeskog participated in the club’s optional practice Tuesday. The Avs have a full practice Wednesday, then are taking Thursday off. Game 1 against the Dallas Stars is likely to be either Saturday or Sunday.

“No. 1, it is exciting that he is back and playing,” Avs coach Jared Bednar said. “I’m really happy for him. I know it’s been a long road. No. 2, it is exciting for us because it may give us another option here when we get to the weekend. We’ll see how it responds this week and see how it goes.”

Avs defenseman Erik Johnson said, “it looks like we are going to have him around for Game 1” when he appeared on a Spittin’ Chiclets podcast episode that published late Monday night. When Devon Toews was asked if Landeskog will play in Game 1 on Altitude radio Tuesday afternoon, he replied, “tune in and find out.”

Toews was among several Avs players who went up to Loveland to see Landeskog play in the first AHL game of his career Friday night. He played nearly 15 minutes the first night, then looked even better on Saturday, collecting a goal and an assist.

Colorado Eagles forward Gabriel Landeskog (92) greets goalie Trent Minor (50) after the Eagles defeated the Henderson Silver Knights in the third period at Blue Arena in Loveland, Colorado on Friday, April 11, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Colorado Eagles forward Gabe Landeskog (92) greets goalie Trent Minor (50) after the Eagles defeated the Henderson Silver Knights in the third period at Blue Arena in Loveland on Friday, April 11, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

“It was awesome. I didn’t know what to expect, but I thought every shift out there he looked better,” Avs center Nathan MacKinnon said. “In game two, he looked better as well. He almost played 20 minutes or something like that. He’s in a good spot. Hopefully he can keep progressing and we’ll have back here this weekend.”

For so long, there were vague timelines for Landeskog on his road to recovery. Then, as the process dragged on there were no timelines at all.

Now? All signs point to him playing this weekend, assuming his knee has no issues through the next few days.

“He’s Gabe Landeskog at the end of the day,” MacKinnon said. “Obviously there’s going to be some rust. Three years is a crazy amount of time off, and he hasn’t been practicing that much either. … I think he looks great. In game situations, you can still see those instincts are there. He’s still got it for sure.”

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7071467 2025-04-15T17:05:06+00:00 2025-04-15T17:59:52+00:00
Broncos Mailbag: Trade up? Move down? Working through several NFL draft scenarios. https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/broncos-mailbag-nfl-draft-scenarios/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 22:29:51 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071020 Denver Post Broncos writer Parker Gabriel posts his Broncos Mailbag weekly during the season and periodically during the offseason. Click here to submit a question.

How likely do you think the Broncos will trade out of the No. 20 spot? I’m in the best-player-available camp after the pickups this offseason. If someone wants to give us several picks to move down, I think we have to jump on it. I’d love to have another third-rounder if that means we drop down to the bottom of the first or into the second round. What do you think?

— Mike, Denver

Hey Mike, thanks for writing in and for getting us going this week. The draft is, at long last, almost here. Next week, we settle in for three days that promise to be fascinating. The Broncos are set at quarterback, but this is a critical draft nonetheless — really, they all are.

Denver’s got its first four picks still in hand, the first time that’s been the case since 2021, George Paton’s first draft as the general manager. You’ll remember that class started out with Pat Surtain II, Javonte Williams, Quinn Meinerz and Baron Browning and finished with Jonathon Cooper in the seventh round. Two All-Pros, a cornerstone edge rusher and two now-departed regular starters beset by injury. Not too shabby.

Put simply: Denver’s got capital to move around the board with.

Do I think they’ll move out of the No. 20 spot? Impossible to say from here — there are so many moving pieces ahead of the Broncos on draft night — but there’s an interesting set of conditions brewing.

First, this is a good time for the caveat that teams have substantially more information than we do and, of course, they’ve got an entire staff of scouts, coaches and executives tasked with putting together a plan independent of whatever consensus is out there. We talk to as many people as we can, think through scenarios and possibilities, rely on people we trust, etc., but we still, at the end of the day, are looking in from the outside.

All that being said, let’s look in.

The Broncos could just stick and pick at No. 20. That’s probably the most likely scenario.

There’s plenty of reason to go your direction, Mike, and trade down. Several talented draft analysts think this is a year light on elite, top-end guys but filled with quality players. So at 20, if you’re past the top of the bell curve and into a pool of players that are graded similarly, it makes sense to want to move back a few spots, get a player of similar caliber and also pick up picks.

But if other teams have the draft pegged along a similar track, then why would they want to move up? That’s the practical inhibitor to moving back. It takes two to tango. The best bets from here seem like a team that is either quarterback or tackle needy and gets itchy to move up (or back into the first round) to get their guy.

Denver’s situated just ahead of Pittsburgh in the draft order and the Steelers could be in the QB market. So perhaps if a team wants to jump ahead of them, they’d at least call the Broncos and see what it would take.

Here’s the other inhibitor to moving back: Sean Payton. He’s never traded back in the first round. Not in Denver. Not in all of those years in New Orleans. Nada. Zilch.

The Broncos also haven’t traded back, period, since he’s been here. They moved up for Marvin Mims Jr., Riley Moss and Troy Franklin, but they haven’t moved back.

Heck, general manager George Paton last year said he would have had a cake ready to celebrate the occasion if Denver had traded out of No. 76, a move they were considering if Jonah Elliss hadn’t been available.

Paton likes the darts. Payton prefers to focus almost solely on the target.

So, long story short, the conditions ahead of the draft look ripe for teams around Denver’s position to want to try to trade down. History tells us a Sean Payton-led organization is much more likely to trade up.

I’ve seen several mock drafts that have Quinshon Judkins going to Denver in the second round. If we go that route, who would you like to see us pick in the first round?

— Marvin R., Fort Collins

Hey Marvin, that’s an interesting way to look at it. Let’s assume no trades and Judkins is the pick at No. 51. Cool, he’s a good back. There are a ton of them in this class.

In that scenario, conventional wisdom would be that you’re talking about having drafted a tight end or a defensive lineman in the first round. Maybe a surprise like safety Nick Emmanwori out of South Carolina.

But if you’re asking for ideal scenarios, let’s say Michigan TE Colston Loveland or Oregon DT Derrick Harmon.

With Judkins going at No. 51, the Broncos won’t be able to bank on getting a TE like LSU’s Mason Taylor or even Littleton native and former Oregon standout Terrance Ferguson in the third round. Maybe, but no guarantee. Loveland’s more of a pass-catcher than a blocker and he dealt with a shoulder injury last fall. All the same, he’s widely considered one of the best players in the class. Putting him in the same room as 31-year-old Evan Engram gives you security long term, and in the short term, it turns a weakness last year into a potentially serious strength this fall.

Harmon’s just a high-quality, disruptive defensive lineman. Denver’s stacked there this year but will almost certainly have significant reps to replace after the 2025 season. There are other defensive linemen who could go in a similar range if the Broncos prefer a slightly different flavor.

Is there any shot we land Ashton Jeanty or Omarion Hampton without having to trade up? Their stocks have been rising like crazy!

— Ryan, Lakewood

It’s possible, though almost assuredly not with Jeanty. He’s likely to be long gone by the time the Broncos pick No. 20.

You’ll find consensus that Hampton is a really good prospect and less agreement on exactly whether he’s a bonafide first-round grade or whether he’s more in line with the second wave of backs. Remember, there might only be 15 players in a draft class who any given team grades as a true first-round talent. This year, there could be even slightly fewer than that.

All the same, Hampton could well be gone by 20. Or he could be there and then you’re weighing him against a defensive tackle, tight end or traditionally premium position that’s more of a current strength on the Broncos’ roster like edge or corner.

Predictably, there’s been a lot of buzz about quarterbacks as the draft gets closer. If Miami’s Cam Ward goes No. 1 and Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders goes somewhere in the top 10, it will be interesting to see if teams decide they don’t want to risk waiting until Day 2 for Ole Miss’ Jaxon Dart, Alabama’s Jalen Milroe or even Louisville’s Tyler Shough.

Quarterbacks always go early. The fifth year of control is important. And the value is so outsized if you find your guy. The higher and higher second and third contracts go, the more incentivized teams are to keep swinging in the draft, even with an elevated rate of misses.

The ideal situation for the Broncos is a mini run on quarterbacks either early or in the middle of the round. If the Giants go position player at No. 3 and want to get back into the first round? Great. The Los Angeles Rams want to move up from No. 24? Terrific. New Orleans wants to go that route at No. 9? The more the merrier. Any of that would push talent down toward Denver at No. 20.

Jeff Schmedding was announced as the new Broncos inside linebackers coach by The Denver Post and others on May 21, 2025. As of this writing, they have yet to officially acknowledge him on the Broncos’ own website. Why is that, and do we actually have him as a coach?

— Areferee, Greeley

Hey, Ref, you’re right that the Broncos haven’t officially acknowledged Schmedding’s hire online as of Tuesday afternoon, but I’m told he’s on staff and working as expected.

Payton didn’t directly talk about Schmedding at the NFL owners meetings because he wasn’t asked about him, but he did in a way point to the hire when he said, “I think we’re full” on the staff.

There were a lot of moving pieces this offseason for Payton, who said last month, “I felt like every time I left town, when I came back there was another coach gone.” Now the group’s in place and working with the front office and scouting departments to finalize the draft board.


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7071020 2025-04-15T16:29:51+00:00 2025-04-15T16:35:44+00:00
Oregon man dies while hiking the Manitou Incline https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/manitou-incline-hiker-death/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 22:22:06 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071509 A 64-year-old Oregon man died on the notoriously difficult Manitou Incline trail west of Colorado Springs on Tuesday morning.

Bystanders called 911 about 10:23 a.m. after finding the man “in medical distress,” Manitou Springs officials said in a news release. He was approximately 150-200 steps up the Incline, spokesperson Cassandra Hessel said.

People on scene started CPR, but the man was unresponsive when emergency crews arrived. He was later pronounced dead.

The man’s cause of death is under investigation, city officials said.

The Incline is a famously challenging hike with more than 2,000 feet of elevation gain in less than a mile. It draws an estimated 250,000 hikers every year, according to the city.

“City officials remind all climbers, especially those traveling from out of state, to thoroughly assess their physical condition, understand the difficulty of the climb and come properly prepared,” Manitou Springs officials said in a statement.

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7071509 2025-04-15T16:22:06+00:00 2025-04-15T16:28:40+00:00
Shea pays $12M for DTC office slated for residential conversion https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/shea-properties-dtc-building-purchase/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 21:57:07 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7071516 Peter Culshaw is cleared for takeoff.

Culshaw’s company, Shea Properties, purchased the four-story, 124,000-square-foot building at 4340 S. Monaco St. in the Denver Tech Center for $12 million on Thursday, according to public records.

The deal, for about $97 a square foot, paves the way for the region’s first post-pandemic conversion of a large office building into residences.

“Call me crazy,” Culshaw quipped.

The deal is the culmination of a year and a half of securing financing, finalizing plans and even warding off some opposition from neighbors. But with the building under his firm’s ownership, Culshaw now expects to fashion it into 143 income-restricted apartments in about a year.

The deal is financed through a combination of private equity, $29 million in Denver-issued private activity bonds and an additional $4 million in federal and state tax credits. Culshaw said he sold the bonds at the start of April, right before markets were jolted by President Donald Trump’s April 2 tariff announcement.

“I think it’s a mixture of luck, and we thought it was a good time to do it,” Culshaw said.

The building lends itself well for a conversion, he added. It has few columns and wide-open spaces with huge glass windows that host what he called great views.

“You’re starting with kind of a blank slate, which I think makes it a whole lot easier,” Culshaw said.

It’s not the first time the developer has worked with a blank slate at this site, though. Culshaw said he sold the land for development in June 2000 for $7.2 million. The property traded hands a couple of times thereafter. It last sold for $69.3 million in March 2006, though that deal included another office building next door. By the time Culshaw got around to buying the 4340 building, it was entirely vacant.

“I knew that building was empty, and I knew the broker that was trying to lease it really well, and so I called him up and said, would they sell it and give me a year to convert it or to plan a conversion? And we made a deal,” Culshaw said.

That arrangement includes a first right of refusal for Shea Properties to buy the office building to the south at 4350 S. Monaco St., public records show, which was rezoned along with Culshaw’s 4340 building last summer.

The Monaco project is the furthest along of the 10 proposed office-to-residential conversions BusinessDen has reported on since the pandemic. Proposals have been submitted for a slew of downtown office towers, including most recently for the two at 621 and 633 17th St.

Denver’s most recent residential conversion, which was initiated before the pandemic, was Nichols Partnership’s transformation of the former Art Institute of Colorado building in Cap Hill.

This story was originally published by BusinessDen.

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7071516 2025-04-15T15:57:07+00:00 2025-04-15T15:57:07+00:00
Quarterback competition continues as CU Buffs near end of spring practices https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/quarterback-competition-continues-as-cu-buffs-near-end-of-spring-practices/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 21:33:21 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7072501&preview=true&preview_id=7072501 Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Kaidon Salter during the first day of spring football practices on March 11, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (CU Athletics)
Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Kaidon Salter during the first day of spring football practices on March 11, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (CU Athletics)

Through 13 spring practices, the Colorado football team doesn’t have much clarity on its quarterback competition, but that’s just fine with offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur.

“I’d like to see them both be doing things where, at the end of it, it would be a flip of the coin who plays,” Shurmur, who also coaches quarterbacks, said Tuesday. “That’s what I’m looking for.”

CU will wrap up spring practices with its annual Black & Gold scrimmage at Folsom Field on Saturday (2:30 p.m., ESPN2). It’ll be the first opportunity for fans to get a live look at the players battling to replace star Shedeur Sanders, who is a little more than a week away from getting his named called during the NFL Draft.

Senior Kaidon Salter, who transferred to CU from Liberty, and true freshman Julian “JuJu” Lewis are the frontrunners for the job, although third-year sophomore Ryan Staub is battling also.

“I see them challenging each other,” Shurmur said. “It’s a super healthy quarterback room, too. They’re just all trying to do the best with the plays that I give them. I’m getting a feel for the ones that Kaidon can do that fit his skill set, and I certainly know the ones that JuJu can execute.

“That’s part of coaching, too. I mean, you got to play to the strengths of the guy that you have, so that allows our offense to kind of grow wide and deep.”

CU was one of the most prolific passing offenses in the country last year with Sanders, who shattered single-season school records for completion percentage (74.0), passing yards (4,134) and passing touchdowns (37).

How the Buffs look in 2025 will be different, but Shurmur said the basic goal remains the same.

“My only concern for our offense is when the ball goes down, we’ve got to go score touchdowns,” he said. “So we can run it across the goal line, we can throw it across, we can send it via text; I don’t care. We need to get the ball across the goal line. That’s the challenge. Last year we did it a certain way, and this year we may do it the same way, but my sense is it’s going to be a little bit different.”

Salter is the most experienced of the group, as he was a 29-game starter at Liberty, going 21-4 in his last two years with the Flames. He has thrown for 5,887 yards, 56 touchdowns and only 17 interceptions during his career, while adding 2,063 yards and 21 touchdowns as a runner. He was the Conference USA Most Valuable Player in 2023.

Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Julian Lewis during the first day of spring football practices on March 11, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (CU Athletics)
Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Julian Lewis during the first day of spring football practices on March 11, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (CU Athletics)

Lewis, meanwhile, is a five-star recruit who enrolled at CU a year-and-a-half early and is just getting his feet wet with college football. Staub is going into his third year with the Buffs.

“The three quarterbacks that are performing are doing a good job,” Shurmur said. “I see improvement every day. They’re all kind of on a different stage of their journey. Obviously, Kaidon’s got one year left, and he’s learning what we’re doing very well.

“JuJu is a young man with an amazing amount of talent that’s got a bright future, and he’s doing extremely well. And then Ryan Staub … we grade everything they do and Ryan is grading out very well each day. He’s making plays. And so we feel good about his progress, along with the other guys in the room, (walk-ons) Colton (Allen) and obviously (Dominiq Ponder), they do a good job as well.”

Shurmur added that he is “more and more impressed every day” with Lewis, adding he’s seen a lot of physical development, as well.

“He’s bigger and stronger, and every day he does something that shows you why he’s here and why we’re glad he is here,” Shurmur said. “Very, very, very talented young man. Really all the things you need to do as a quarterback, he can do. Now it’s just a matter of him growing in what we do and getting himself ready to play.”

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7072501 2025-04-15T15:33:21+00:00 2025-04-15T19:19:31+00:00
Tivoli Brewing ends 10-year run in historic Auraria student union https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/15/tivoli-brewing-closing-auraria-student-union-after-10-years/ Tue, 15 Apr 2025 21:03:04 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7020049 For the second time in 56 years, Denver’s Tivoli Brewing is closing its doors in the stately, historic building with which it shares a name and a past.

The modern version of the brewery, which has occupied a high-profile space in the Auraria campus’ student union for a decade, and the organization that runs the facilities shared by three onsite colleges weren’t able to come to a lease agreement after months of negotiations, according to Devra Ashby, Auraria’s marketing and communications director.

“Since 2015, [Tivoli] has been an integral part of the Auraria Campus, contributing to the campus community and collaborating on educational initiatives until 2021,” Ashby said in a statement. “While brewing operations on campus ceased in fall 2023, the Tivoli Tap House served as a gathering space for students, faculty, staff, and the broader Denver community. We appreciate Tivoli’s contributions over the years and extend our best wishes for their future endeavors.”

Auraria is currently “in discussions” with a potential replacement, she added.

Although the taproom is closed, the brewery will continue to operate a production facility in the southeastern Colorado town of La Junta, where it primarily makes a lager called Outlaw Light. The Tivoli name is also still attached to the taproom at Denver International Airport, but the company is no longer connected to the space, which is run by an airport concessionaire called SSP America.

The original Tivoli brewery was founded in 1900 in the same building as the new one, at 1900 Auraria Parkway. The company and its owners had brewing roots on that site dating back to 1859, however, a year after Denver’s founding. Tivoli was one of just a handful of Colorado breweries to survive prohibition and later became one of the largest beer makers in the West. It went out of business, though, in 1969, for several reasons, including a strike and a flood.

In 2012, Corey Marshall, a former Coors executive who had been a bouncer at a bar that was located in the student union building in the 1990s, began researching and collecting old Denver beer trademarks and brands from the 1800s and early 1900s. His goal — as the craft beer industry began to boom — was to update some of the beers and sell them to thirsty Denver residents.

In 2015, Marshall struck a deal with AHEC to reopen in the Tivoli building, adding modern brewing equipment, but keeping some of the historic kettles that remained as decoration. But by 2018, Marshall had left and been replaced by a new ownership group. During the COVID-19 pandemic, conditions got even worse as the campus was shut down.

In recent years, CEO Ari Opsahl has steered the company away from its historic beers and toward Outlaw Light, which has been selling well, according to the company.

Last year, Opsahl told The Denver Post that he hoped to find “a mutually amicable path forward.

“The taphouse is a cornerstone for the campus,” Opsahl said then, pointing out that the brewery and the building share a name. “We love it, but operating there is a challenge, as it is pretty dead all summer (when classes aren’t in session). We can’t even break even.

“We want to be there,” he added. “But have to find a way to make it work for both parties.”

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7020049 2025-04-15T15:03:04+00:00 2025-04-15T15:03:04+00:00