Sports
Legacy’s Rafa Urbina named BoCoPreps player of the year – Boulder Daily Camera
When Rafa Urbina first watched UCLA volleyball in its 2018 national championship loss to Long Beach State, it set him on a path toward dominance in the sport, not just in Colorado, but on the national scale. He decided then and there that wanted to be just like those players. This week, the recent Legacy […]

When Rafa Urbina first watched UCLA volleyball in its 2018 national championship loss to Long Beach State, it set him on a path toward dominance in the sport, not just in Colorado, but on the national scale.
He decided then and there that wanted to be just like those players.
This week, the recent Legacy graduate trained with USA Volleyball in preparation for the U19 World Championships in Uzbekistan, which are slated to begin on July 24. Once he wraps that up, he’ll join UCLA, which won national titles in 2023 and 2024. The Bruins house the winningest men’s volleyball program ever, having raked in 21 championships since 1970.
Naturally, that talent at the setting position earned him the BoCoPreps boys volleyball player of the year, and he nabbed a similar honor from CHSAA in the 5A division. He wrapped up his one and only season at Legacy — after the Adams 12 district team moved there from Thornton — with 731 assists, and ended his entire high school career with 2,033.
His road to an already illustrious volleyball career first began when his older sister, Alexandra, started playing. He was 7 at the time, and picked up the sport himself four years later. She now plays beach volleyball at Santa Clara University.
“We’re a competitive family,” Urbina said. “I just wanted to be better than her, and so that’s how that started. I guess that’s kind of what sparked my love for the game. It’s just in our nature. I guess we want to win. I mean, we would always play Mario Kart or video games at home on the Wii. We’d always just want to beat each other. We always make everything like a little competition.”
His father, Jorge, was right there alongside him and Alexandra from the very beginning. Jorge served as the head coach for the Lightning this year, and they won two matches at the Class 5A state tournament before bowing out in the third round of the consolation bracket.

Jorge pushed Rafa to focus on playing setter early on, noting that “he had good hands.” He knew he had a better chance of succeeding at the position, given the low volume of kids that choose it from the get-go.
“What I helped him with was with the fundamentals of the game of how to play, how to hit, how to pass, how to set,” Jorge explained. “That was the start, basic fundamentals, same thing I did with my daughter. Once you learn the fundamentals, then the rest of the game comes to you naturally.”
Over the past couple of years, Rafa has taken his skills all the way out to Campbell, Calif., to compete with the Bay to Bay traveling volleyball club, with the hopes of elevating his game even more. Once he wraps up at Worlds, he’ll join a college program that is already teeming with talent.
He hopes he can leave his mark early on, whatever that may look like.
“The current starter, he’s a senior and he’s elite,” Rafa explained. “He’s on the senior national team. He’s won two national championships (in) his three years, so it’s going to be hard to knock him off his role. I just want to be the best at my role, whatever my role is, and be the best man I can be in order to make us successful.”
Best of the rest
While Urbina headlined the small contingent of volleyball players from Broomfield and Boulder counties, he wasn’t the only one to make waves on CHSAA’s all-state teams. His teammate, senior Elisha Thao, joined him on 5A’s honorable mention list thanks to his 249 digs and 23 aces.
Niwot, also in 5A, earned a second-team nod for junior libero Charlie Kirtland, who ended his season with 124 digs. Junior middle blocker/outside hitter Diego Kheng secured a spot on honorable mention thanks to his 112 kills and 64 digs.
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