Columbine beats Chatfield, reaches 7th championship game under Andy Lowry

LAKEWOOD — Moments after Columbine defeated rival Chatfield 35-16 on Friday at Jeffco Stadium to clinch the program’s seventh state championship game appearance under Andy Lowry, a single tear streamed down the coach’s cheek.

Lowry, in his 30th season leading Columbine, has steered the Rebels through it all. Five Class 5A state titles, including the program’s first about six months after the 1999 shooting at the school. Over 300 wins. And a program built off brotherhood that’s long been a Colorado force.

But the battle he’s reluctant to talk about had Lowry in an emotional knot after the emphatic win over Chatfield. His wife, Janet, has been fighting cancer for the past six-plus years. She is the warrior behind the coach; the person who keeps him humble no matter his success between the lines.

“I love her and she’s the toughest person I know,” a choked-up Lowry said. “I’m just there to support her. To hug her. She’s my rock.”

Janet Lowry was at the game on Friday, just hours after undergoing a chemotherapy infusion. The treatment’s become the norm for her since he was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2017.

With a pair of double mastectomies, she beat breast cancer, but in 2019 she found out the cancer had spread to her bones. That news came a week before Columbine’s last title game appearance, a 35-10 defeat to Cherry Creek in 2019 that started the Bruins’ historic four-peat.

Together, the husband-and-wife of three decades have leaned on each other through the adversity. It’s not something they talk much about with others, because that’s just how they are. They’re tough. They’re the personification of the hard-nosed, pound-the-rock “Rebel Ball” that’s become the head coach’s calling card.

“We learned during ’99 how to come together as a community, and that our friends and family are so important,” said Janet Lowry, who teaches at Chatfield. “If you have something you’re going through, no matter what it is, you can persevere… So (cancer) is not a worry for me, it’s just a journey that I’m going through.”

That journey will likely be lifelong, according to doctors. There is no end in sight to the chemotherapy for Janet, who remains optimistic nonetheless — and she’s always at the Columbine games, cheering on her Rebels.

“The chemotherapy does (take it out of me),” Janet, 53, admits. “But sometimes, you don’t have a choice but to fight. He supports me, so I support him at these games.

“He’s my biggest fan. He cheers me on when things are better, he listens. He knows when I’m hurt, and he lets me hurt, which is good. But he’s always trying to keep me going.”

Even with that battle on the home front, Andy Lowry never shows it with his players. That was the case again on Friday, when Columbine found itself with a narrow 7-3 lead at halftime, but broke the game open in the final two quarters.

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