In the sprints Denver East made it a clean sweep of the 100 and 200 on the boy's side.
Running off and away with the W in the 100 was Korey Hairston, who cleared the field with a 11.32 into a solid headwind.
Likewise, Zion Wagoner took a tight victory over Cole Caskey in the 200. Wagoner nearly cracked 23 seconds, running 23.01, while Caskey was barely a stride behind in 23.22.
In the 400 there was no holding back Ladiye Abdi. The Denver South senior made the most of the final 30 meters to claim the event in the lone sub 51-second clocking, running 50.97.
1:58 half miler Ian Kelly was pushed the limit in the 800. The Heritage senior had to hold off Cole Trautman through the final strides. Kelly won the event in 2:01.37 to Trautman's 2:02.00.
The 1,600 was a battle of the underclassmen, as Erik Le Roux and Will Daley battled through the race's final meters. Le Roux set a hot early pace, but Daley stalked from nearly 10 meters back before striking hard in the final 200 meters.
Daley's late kick was too much for the freshmen phenom on this day, as the Denver East junior won the event in 4:30.55 to Le Roux's 4:30.95.
Yasin Sado stepped "up" in distance to run away with the W in the 3,200. The Denver West junior took three under 10 minutes, running 9:42 for the win. Behind him Glenwood's Gavin Harden was just four seconds back in second, crossing in 9:46, while teammate Henry Barth was the third to break 10, running 9:55.
In the 110 hurdles Nate Hanson made it a sweep of the event. The Lutheran senior went 15.23 FTW. The 300 was a much closer race, with Bryce Risner out-leaning Nate Hanson for the win.
Heading in to the field events, the high jump was perhaps one of the more competitive events of the day, as three went over six feet. Grant Redmond, Bryce Risner, and Donte Marsh all went 6-0 in the event.
While the high jump was a hotly contested affair, Noah Kelly made sure the pole vault wasn't. The Lutheran sophomore cleared the field by nearly a foot, winning with a 13-6 vault.
Brooks Jackson won the long jump in similar fashion, as the lone jumper over 20 feet. The Arapahoe senior went 20-8 to win the event by nearly a foot.
The phrase "Go big or go home" seemed to apply well to the triple jump, minus the "go home" part. Fischer James Argosino went big to win the event. And by big, I mean 44-4.50. That's currently the No. 3 mark in Colorado.
In the shot put Ben Stoyer joined the 50-foot club. The Cheyenne Mountain senior added quite a few feet to his personal best, tossing 50-11 to win the event by over three feet.
Welcome to the club Ben!
And Stoyer wasn't the only thrower having a big, big day. Avery Shunneson added nearly nine feet to his best in the discus to win the event by over 20 feet. Shunneson tossed 155-9.5 FTW.