- Details
By KYLE MANTHE
Special to TopSports.news
When the Washburn Rural boys (11-4, 4-1) and coach Alex Hutchins were down 24-10 to Emporia (10-5, 3-2) in the middle of the second quarter, they did not necessarily expect to be leaving the night with a 50-42 win and sole possession of first place in the Centennial League.
“Down the stretch we were, but I probably don’t want to say that we were tough in the first quarter, but I thought we were very tough in the way that we responded,” Hutchins said. “It’s one game at a time, I’ve got to give the coach cliches ,but that’s true and I’m really proud of our guys for holding serve at home in the league … we’ve got to get every one we can so it was great to get this one.”
The game’s slow tempo was not ripe for comebacks but the uber-efficient Junior Blues, shooting over 50 percent from the floor, were able to swing the game by 22 points in their favor.
Rural got a combined 38 points from seniors Jack Bachelor and Wyatt Conklin along with junior JC Heim.
Bachelor led all scorers with 17 while Conklin and Heim combined to shoot nine of 10 from the floor.
- Details
By KYLE MANTHE
Special to TopSports.news
For the second straight game, the No. 4-ranked (Class 6A) Washburn Rural girls (10-4, 5-0) played more than the usual 32-minute game.
But unlike their Tuesday night overtime loss to Blue Valley Northwest, the Junior Blues were able to come out on the winning end Friday night, knocking off 5A No. 4 Emporia (12-3, 3-2) by a 45-39 margin in the extra session.
“I thought tonight we were a little tougher, we had ebbs and flows but we fought through the ebbs more and a little better than what we did on Tuesday,” said Washburn Rural coach Kevin Bordewick.
The win gave the Lady Blues a leg up in Centennial League play, as they remain undefeated and create two games of separation from the rest of the league.
“It’s big for the league standings, they are well coached, quick, they can shoot it and they’ve got a great post player, Bordewick said. “I just thought it was a solid effort all around.”
- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
After having five of its previous six games decided by four or fewer points, including a tough four-point loss at Basehor-Linwood Tuesday night, ninth-ranked (Class 5A) Shawnee Heights enjoyed a rare blowout Friday night, rolling to a 62-43 home United Kansas Conference win over Leavenworth.
"I think we set the tone in practice this week after coming home from the Basehor game and understanding that it's one game, it's not life or death,'' Shawnee Heights coach Bob Wells said. "Lets just play this season out and play the best that we can play.
"We changed some things up in practice and played with a lot more freedom tonight.''
All five of Shawnee Heights' five losses have come by four or less points and Wells said it was important for the T-Birds to get a statement win Friday.
"I think that was eating on them that we were losing by three and that we were losing by four and all those games it was like a layup here, some free throws there, and that was leading to missing free throws and that was leading to missing some of those layups,'' Wells said. "Hopefully they're understanding that that's in the past and we can't change it now, so let's do our best to not let it happen in the future.''
- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
While fans, players and even some coaches may get more fired up by slam dunks, acrobatic scoring plays and long-distance 3-pointers, it's defense that excites hall of fame high school basketball coach Ken Darting more than any other facet of the game.
And Darting had plenty to get excited about Friday night in Shawnee Heights' 69-32 United Kansas Conference romp past Leavenworth at Heights.
Leavenworth jumped out to a 7-2 lead in the first three and a half minutes of the game, but the Pioneers were held scoreless over the next 10 and a half minutes as the T-Birds went on a 26-2 run to take charge.
"Defense just sets up everything, it just does,'' Darting said. "We walk in and see some of those athletes and you think, 'Oh my God, what are we going to do with them?' But we just help each other so much.
"What's making the difference this year over the last four years, and certainly the last two, is the kids believe the same thing I do. They believe that defense wins, that they can't go out and get in a shootout and win.''
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Getting the opportunity to come home to Hayden as a school counselor wasa dream come true for Corrinne (Stringer) McGreevy.
And now the 2008 Hayden graduate will get the chance to guide the Wildcat volleyball program she starred in, which is icing on the cake.
"I love being a school counselor,'' McGreevy said. "I love this job so much, I can't say that enough, but now that I get to coach on top of that, too, and be a part of the game I love is just so exciting for me.''
McGreevy led Hayden to its first Class 4A state championship as a senior in 2007 after a pair of third-place state finishes and went on to play college volleyball at Kansas, Pittsburg State and Washburn.
McGreevy was coached her final three seasons in high school by Jesica Farmer-Walter and Carrie Schmidt and said the two coaches strongly encouraged to take on the coaching role.
"One hundred percent,'' McGreevy said. "They've been so positive and uplifting with it and they really encouraged me to take it. They just kept telling me all these positive things, how I could really make an impact on these girls, and they talked about how I know what it takes to win a state title and because I went here they said, 'It would be a great fit for you.' ''