A day after fatal I-70 crash, girls’ hockey team wins emotional Colorado tournament game
A California girls’ hockey team has stolen the hearts of Colorado’s Front Range.
Barely 24 hours after a fatal crash on Interstate 70 killed the father of one player and sent passengers to the hospital Thursday, the players decided to play on Friday morning.
They won their first game. And, later on Friday, they won their second game as well — in an overtime shootout.
The Clear Creek County Coroner’s office identified the deceased as 38-year-old Manuel Alejandro Lorenzana-Villegas of Chatsworth, California. Lorenzana-Villegas’ wife was one of the passengers who was treated at Denver Health, according to the coroner.
Their daughter, a team member, was notified of the death of her father on Thursday.
Colorado State Patrol had received the call to respond on Thursday at 8:53 a.m. and the Santa Clarita Lady Flyers 12U first match faced-off at 8:45 a.m. Friday.
Following a moment of silence on the ice, the Lady Flyers skated as if they were on a mission, and beat the Utah Lady Grizzlies, 3-2, in an emotional match-up. The girls have three more games left in Littleton, as they continue in the Western Girls Hockey League playoffs. If they win Saturday’s two games, they will be in Sunday’s championship.

Because of the missing players, the Lady Flyers were short-benched, meaning that they were playing with fewer athletes off of the bench, but a Facebook post noted that “every single stride they take out on the ice, every goal they make and every puck they save will have a special meaning.”
The resilience of the traumatized girls, barely in middle school, was a welcome surprise to head coach Todd Stelnick.
“I let the girls talk it over Thursday night. It was up to them if they wanted to continue to play and they decided they wanted to play for their teammates and their families,” said Stelnick, who added that one of the injured players “showed up in her uniform” Friday morning ready to play, bruises and all.
“She almost scored the first goal!” he said. “We were playing with half of a team and we managed to win.”
Jeff Walker, VP of girls’ hockey for the Colorado Amateur Hockey Association, said that the group of 12-year-olds “walked into the area in a fog” but won the game even though they were down several players. Three team members were traveling in the van.
Besides the packed ice arena, the Lady Flyers’ game was followed by tens of thousands of viewers on a YouTube livestream.
A fundraiser created to “help bring the families home” had raised far more than its $30,000 goal by Friday afternoon.
WHAT HAPPENED
Thursday morning’s crash sent the Ford Transit Van spiraling down an embankment.
It happened when a Colorado Department of Transportation snowplow driver lost control while westbound on Interstate 70 just east of Loveland Pass. The truck plowed through divider cables that can stop cars, but not multi-ton trucks, jumped the median and caused a chain reaction of crashes on the eastbound lanes, according to the Colorado State Patrol.
CSP Sgt. Ivan Alvarado said that the accident is still under investigation.
Eight passengers in the family vehicle, including four children and three adults, were taken to Denver Health by ambulance after the crash.
An additional adult was taken by helicopter to Denver Health’s trauma center with critical injuries and another adult man declined medical attention, according to the releases. There were a total of 10 people in the van.
The plow also hit a Toyota Tacoma, sending it through the median and into a BMW driving westbound, according to the releases. The occupants of those vehicles did not report any injuries.

Photos provided by Colorado State Patrol show the CDOT truck lost its plow during the crash. They also show the van lying on its side several feet off the right side of the roadway.
The interstate was closed in the eastbound direction at Silverthorne for much of Thursday, as crews responded to the crash.
The Lady Flyers later won their second game against Mountain Select, girls from the Western Slope, late Friday afternoon.
Stelnick is grateful to the Colorado community, which has embraced the team as its own. State troopers brought teddy bears to the crash scene and fed the team a pizza dinner Thursday night.

Outside of the team locker room Friday, a sole hockey stick leaned against the door, illuminated by a candle in remembrance of Lorenzana-Villegas and the family members who were injured.
Denver Gazette reporter Michael Braithwaite contributed to this story.




