Keeler: Colorado state wrestling’s newest 4-time state champ, Traven Sharon, wore his heart on his sole, dedicating title to late cousin

"It'd be really cool to visit with him about it," the Fowler senior and future Wyoming Cowboy said. "He's been my biggest fan, all the way through."

Keeler: Colorado state wrestling’s newest 4-time state champ, Traven Sharon, wore his heart on his sole, dedicating title to late cousin

The champ wore his heart on his sole. Traven Sharon walked to the center mat at Ball Arena on Saturday night with two letters and a number, faded by sweat and toil — BB1 — scribbled on the outside of his left shoe. The same three were written on the outside of his right.

BB, for Blevyns Brown. “1,” for BB’s old number in football, basketball and baseball.

“He’d be climbing over the fence right now,” Sharon, the senior at Fowler, told me after becoming the 35th four-time CHSAA state wrestling champion by fall in the Class 2A final at 126 pounds. “He’d be on top of everything.

“It’d be really cool to visit with him about it. He’s been my biggest fan all the way through.”

BB passed away in a single-car crash on Oct. 15, 2023. After church on a Sunday morning, he’d gone to check on the family cattle and had fallen asleep at the wheel.

They were thicker than thieves, born just weeks apart — Blevyns in January 2007, Traven in February. The cousins grew up a few miles down the road from each other. BB was a do-it-all athlete at Crowley County. Sharon wrestled. Their common bond, other than faith, was rodeo.

“And (that) can be a grind, just like anything,” Traven recalled. “And he always found a way to make it fun. When we were done practicing hard, I called Blevyns up, and we would rope steers and ride them until they were done. And then we’d go inside and have some ice cream or something.”

Work hard. Pray hard. Play hard.

“We would always wrestle at Christmas and everything,” Traven recalled. “He would give me a good scrap. If he would’ve wrestled, he would’ve been pretty good. … I always tried to get him to wrestle. He was way more of an athlete than I was.”

He was never a four-time champ, though. Sharon joined Colorado’s four-timers club with a second-period pin of Meeker’s Koy Weber.

Fowler's Traven Sharon, top, attempts to pin Meeker's Koy Weber during the 2A boys 126-lb final match on Feb. 15, 2025 at the CHSAA State Wrestling Tournament at Ball Arena in Denver. (Photo by Mark Reis/Special to the Denver Post)
Fowler’s Traven Sharon, top, attempts to pin Meeker’s Koy Weber during the 2A boys 126-lb final match on Feb. 15, 2025, at the CHSAA State Wrestling Tournament at Ball Arena in Denver. (Photo by Mark Reis/Special to the Denver Post)

Sometimes, when you wink at history, it winks right back. Traven’s grandma, Loretta Sharon, used to babysit Brent Van Hee, the only other four-time state champ at Fowler, four decades ago.

Small town. Small world.

“They just had that bond, besides the Good Lord above,” Loretta said of Traven and BB. “It was tough. It really was. Knowing where Blevyns is, it doesn’t make it easier. But it does.”

BB was watching from above as his cousin took a 3-0 lead after the opening period.

With half a minute to go in a rough-and-tumble second stanza, Traven, up 5-0 on points, rolled one of Weber’s shoulder blades to the mat, then started wringing the Meeker sophomore like a wet towel.

“Don’t let him off the hook,” Sharon told himself.

He wouldn’t. With nine seconds left in the period, Traven rolled the second shoulder hard and squeezed, a pin that cast his name into Colorado history.

“Wrestling, rodeo and ranching,” Traven’s father, Trent, explained. “That’s all. That’s what we do.”

Sharon’s heading to Wyoming to wrestle and compete on the rodeo team in the summer, a born cowboy riding to Laramie for the next chapter.

“He grew up on the back of a horse, basically,” Dad laughed. “He absolutely loves wrestling. But his way of life has been cowboying, so that’s the everyday stuff.”

BB’s first love, meanwhile, was baseball. He hit .373 with a 1.054 OPS with 31 steals in 42 varsity games with Crowley County, combined, over his freshman and sophomore seasons. As a quarterback with the Chargers, Blevyns threw for 11 scores with two picks in the fall of ’22. The day before the crash that took his life, BB tossed three touchdowns in a 64-6 rout of Custer County.

“They were always each other’s biggest fan,” Lindy said. “They were just cheering each other on, wanting the best for each other all the time.

“And it’s changed Traven’s outlook to, ‘Life is a privilege.’ This is just icing on the cake. Success is just a cherry on top. But life is a privilege and eternal life is the most important thing. It’s really made that perspective for the kids.”

BB left a scar.

More than that, he left a lesson.

“We’re not guaranteed anything in this life,” Traven continued. “It brings perspective of what we’re supposed to do on this Earth. When your time gets cut short, it’s important to live. And for your first priorities (to be) first. And that’s why Jesus is my First Priority.”

As the Ball Arena crowd saluted him with a standing ovation, Sharon saluted right back, pointing with both fingers to the sky, glancing up for a second to smile at the Heavens. BB saw that, too.

Before Sharon had Weber’s number, he had Blevyns’. Either way, the champ was a shoe-in.

Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.