
Easton Bruere's amazing football season leads our list of the Top 10 New Mexico prep sports stories of the year.
File photo by Lou Novick
MaxPreps takes a look at our Top 10 stories from the 2014-15 high school campaign in New Mexico.
1. Easton Bruere Despite having no Division I college football scholarship offers,
Easton Bruere led
Rio Rancho to a 14-0 record and its first state title with a terrific 33-31 win over Mayfield by throwing for 373 yards and three touchdowns. The 6-foot-3, 200-pound senior led the state with 4,567 passing yards while connecting for 49 touchdowns and throwing only six interceptions. He will take his 4.0 GPA to Butler Community College.
2. Dave BarneyThe legendary swim coach was named to the National High School Hall of Fame this year after notching his 19th boys state title at age 83 for
Albuquerque Academy. Overall, he has won 35 state swim titles and coached over 300 All-Americans. He now belongs to six halls of fame.
3. Natasha BernalA distance runner in cross country and track,
Natasha Bernal ran 28 races this season and won every one. The
La Cueva (Albuquerque, N.M.) senior had never run cross country until this year, but went undefeated and notched the state title. In track, where she already was established, the University of New Mexico signee won state titles in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200 meters - all on the same day.
4. Curtis FlakesAfter escaping death in a serious motorcycle accident and surviving stage 2 cancer, he should have had a breeze coaching high school football. However, he inherited a horrendous 39-game losing streak as head coach at
Albuquerque High and lost his first four games in the fall. But he finally snapped the streak at 43 games and completed a respectable 4-6 season.
5. Deming girls golfDespite being moved to the state's largest class (6A) this year,
Deming still won its seventh-consecutive state championship. Even though Cleveland (Rio Rancho) earned the No. 1 and 2 medalist positions, the Deming girls used outstanding depth to win the 36-hole crown by a commanding 56 strokes. Senior
Darian Zachek led the way with a third-place finish after winning the previous two Class 4A titles.
6. Anthony Juckes & Rico Montoya Both wrestlers tied the state record by winning their fifth state championships. Four others previously had matched that feat, which meant they had to win as eighth-graders.
Anthony Juckes (145 pounds) posted a career record of 169-17 for
Piedra Vista (Farmington) and is the only one among the five-time champs to also wrestle for five team state champions.
Richard (Rico) Montoya (138) had a spectacular career record of 200-4 - including 48-0 this year - for
Robertson (Las Vegas).
7. Austin TreadwellThe hard-hitting
Eldorado (Albuquerque) senior came on strong this spring to hit .430, lead the state in runs batted in (39) and throw out nine baserunners during an errorless season in the outfield. But
Austin Treadwell may have saved his best for last because even though he barely had been used on the mound, he pitched a spectacular two-hit shutout in the Class 6A state championship game.
8. Dominique & Jacque GallowayDominique Galloway, a junior, earned her third-consecutive large-school state golf crown for
Cleveland (Rio Rancho) with a 36-hole score of 140. The biggest challenge came from her sister,
Jacque Galloway, just an eighth grader, who shot a distant 155.
9. Red-hot tennis rivalry Two underclassmen already have formed one of the nation's hottest tennis rivalries. They split four matches this spring, but
Eldorado (Albuquerque) freshman
Ivana Corley won the Class 6A state title by a surprising 6-2, 6-1 margin over
La Cueva (Albuquerque) sophomore
Sarianna Kuuttila. Look for many more - and much closer - meetings in the future.
10. Jessie HixJessie Hix was arguably the state's No. 1 girls soccer player last fall, but gave up the sport during her junior year to run cross country with some senior friends. The
Eldorado (Albuquerque) star had doubled in both sports (same season) as a sophomore. However, look for her to reclaim her soccer expertise next fall as a senior, playing only the sport that will provide her a scholarship at the University of Colorado.