
After losing five times in a six-game stretch, Matt Eades somehow got Pueblo County players to believe they were a championship favorite.
That was the message Eades delivered to his team on April 1, following a 9-6 road loss to then-No. 2 and undefeated Falcon. The Hornets bought it: From then on, Pueblo County went 17-1, including a flawless 4-0 in the state tournament to capture the Class 4A title, the first in the program’s history.
That feat earned Eades the honor of The Denver Post’s 2026 All-Colorado baseball Coach of the Year.
“When that game (on April 1) ended, I laid it out there to my team that if this was perhaps the best team in the state (in Falcon), we’re right there, too,” Eades recalled. “We talked about if there was a handicapper for the rest of the season, we’d be the favorite the rest of the way in every game we played. The boys took that to heart, and we really got rolling.”
The Hornets (23-6, 4A South Central League champions) became the first Home of Heroes baseball team to win a title since Pueblo West did so in 4A in 2019. And it was redemption for Pueblo County after losing to Holy Family in the championship two years ago. In that game, Hornets ace Blake Swift made his varsity debut in mop-up work in the 13-6 loss.
Swift was the centerpiece to Pueblo County’s title run this season, Eades’ ninth as head coach and 14th overall in the program. The senior right-hander bound for Otero College was 8-2 with a 1.51 ERA in 15 games, with 78 strikeouts as opponents hit just .184 against him.
An All-Colorado selection and the Swift dominated the state tournament. He pitched a complete-game shutout in a 2-0 win over Grand Junction in the tournament opener, then with still room left in his daily pitch count, started the second game that followed with two more shutout innings in a 6-1 win over top-seeded Palisade.
In the title game, Swift notched a quality start with three earned runs across six-plus innings as the Hornets beat Falcon 9-4. While Swift did the heavy lifting on the mound, the Pueblo County offense — headlined by All-Colorado senior second baseman Nick Hernandez, who was 2-for-4 with 3 RBIs in the title and led the team with a .435 average on the season — couldn’t be stopped.

“When Blake’s on the mound, we were a different team confidence-wise,” Eades said. “And we were deep on offense. We had a lineup that overwhelmed pitching staffs with nine guys that can really swing it.”
The championship marked a pinnacle for Eades, who was overcome with emotion after hoisting the trophy at the Air Force Academy. Eades, a 2005 Pueblo County graduate, didn’t play high school baseball.
But he has long been infatuated with the game and spent his high school days umpiring. From there, his first coaching gig was at the youth level for a 12U team while in college at CSU Pueblo. He coached that team until those players reached high school, then joined the Pueblo County staff as a volunteer assistant in 2013.
“Coaching that youth team gave me that fire like, ‘Man, I would really like to see how I do at the high school level,'” Eades said. “When I finally got the chance, I just ran with it.”
The Hornets haven’t had a losing season with Eades at the helm, as they’ve made the playoffs every year and made five state tournament appearances. The 39-year-old is 148-55 in his tenure, including 18-11 in the playoffs.
Swift says Eades’ combination of leadership, humor and passion helped propel the Hornets to the title. It’s only for a school that’s been open since 1953, joining titles in wrestling (2016 and ’17), softball (1995) and girls basketball (1981).
“We knew this was possible,” Blake Swift said. “We just had to just break through and show the state what we had. (Eades) kept us together and on track all season to reach our ultimate goal.”
All-Colorado Coach of the Year Finalists

Matt Darr, Regis Jesuit — The Raiders’ boss earned his third state title, and second in Class 5A, as loaded Regis Jesuit avenged two straight runner-up finishes with a masterful state tournament performance by beating Arvada West in the winner-take-all championship, 5-3.
Casey Miller, University — The Bulldogs felt short in the Class 3A title four years in a row, but University didn’t leave a doubt this year, rampaging through the state tournament by a combined score of 36-4. That included smashing rival Eaton 19-2 in the semifinals.
Danny Vais, Arvada West — The Wildcats reached their first title since 1995 and came up a few runs short in the championship defeat to Regis Jesuit. Vais coached the core of A-West’s senior impact players, as well as his son, junior superstar Cooper Vais, since elementary school.



