Upsets riddled the Class 4A state tournament bracket Saturday.

Durango High School made sure it wouldn’t be one of the victims.

The seventh-seeded Durango Demons (13-8) beat No. 26 Eagle Valley 3-1 and No. 10 Ponderosa 11-2 on Saturday to win Class 4A District 6 and reach the elite eight of the Colorado High School Activities Association Baseball State Championships.

“The guys played relaxed, and it was good to see,” DHS head coach Rob Coddington said. “We have hosted district tournaments a couple of other times, and we had some good teams here (Saturday). But our guys battled all year to get here, and if there is anything they are prepared for, it is going back up to Denver for the elite eight.”

On a day in which No. 1 Montrose, No. 2 Windsor, No. 4 Delta and No. 5 Pueblo East all lost, the Demons emerged as the third-best seed still alive in the tournament behind No. 3 Valor Christian and No. 6 Wheat Ridge.

“The tournament definitely is wide open. We still are going to have to play solid to have success because good teams are still in it, but we will see what we can do to keep this going,” DHS senior Blake Dunlap said.

Blake Dunlap earned the win on the mound in the district championship game against Ponderosa (10-11), who beat the No. 23-seeded Rifle 2-1 in eight innings in the semifinal game.

Blake Dunlap pitched six innings and allowed only two runs on six hits. He struck out five and walked two while hitting one batter with a pitch.

“I didn’t pitch my team to the win; it was the guys behind me on defense doing their job,” said Blake Dunlap, son of Aaron and Julie Dunlap. “We just played a solid game. With a nine-run lead, it was nice and relaxing out there.”

Blake Dunlap’s brother, Casey Dunlap, closed out the seventh inning for the Demons, limiting Ponderosa to one hit and nothing more.

The Demons torched the Ponderosa Mustangs early and often. DHS chased Ponderosa ace pitcher Bryan King after just two-plus innings of work.

It started in the bottom of the first inning when Casey Dunlap delivered a two-out double that scored Lawrence Mayberry and Jeremy Szura, and it continued when the Demons put up four runs in each of the second and third innings.

Isiah Mayberry hit a big three-run double in the second inning, and Lawrence Mayberry drove in a run of his own with a double down the left-field line.

“My teammates put me in position to do what I do best and help out my team,” said Isiah Mayberry, son of George and Tonya Mayberry. “To score those guys was big for us.”

Casey Dunlap led off the third inning with a walk and advanced to second on a balk call. He scored on a single by designated hitter Hayden Sill, who was 2-for-4 in the game. Tyler Worley followed with a walk, and Ponderosa pulled King at that point, relieving him with Eric Tokuyama.

Chris Jaworsky was the first batter Tokuyama faced. Jaworsky laid down a sacrifice bunt and reached on a throwing error, allowing Sill and Worley to score.

That seemed to be the breaking point for Ponderosa.

The Demons drew 12 free passes in the game, whether via walk or hit-by-pitch.

“Durango swings it very well. They are a talented team, and I know (King) is better than what he showed. We put ourselves in too many jams,” Ponderosa head coach Jarod Nicholson said. “To Durango’s credit, they capitalized on us not throwing strikes.”

DHS tacked on one more run in the fourth inning when Szura was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded.

The lone loss on the day for Durango came in the bottom of the sixth inning when senior left fielder Riley Jaye went down with a knee injury. He hit a groundball to shortstop but instantly went down in the batter’s box clutching his knee. He left the game putting no weight on the leg and was on crutches after the game.

The Demons will face No. 15 Longmont at 12:30 p.m. Friday at Cherokee Trail in Aurora. The tournament now will move to a double-elimination format for the elite eight.

“We are going to need three or four pitchers for that first weekend, so some guys are going to have to step up,” Coddington said. “We have been there before and know how to prepare for it. We hope that experience will guide us.”

Isiah Mayberry said the key to success will be continuing to have fun on the diamond.

“We have been there before, so we aren’t too ecstatic with just getting there,” he said. “We need to keep playing hard and keep having fun together. We will love every moment.”

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