- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights capped its three-game week with a 65-3 United Kansas Conference romp at Turner Friday night.
Both teams were missing multiple players due to COVID protocols, but Shawnee Heights, 2-1 on the week with an overtime loss to Class 6A Blue Valley Northwest, still had plenty of firepower to improve to 5-3 overall and 2-1 in the UKC.
Junior Hayden Hill scored a game-high 14 points for the T-Birds, with four 3-pointers.
Junior Emari Doby joined Hill in double figures for Shawnee Heights with 10 points while Taylor Rottinghaus scored nine points and Riley Showalter seven points.
ST. MARYS GIRLS 53, ROSSVILLE 43 -- St. Marys used a 22-7 second quarter to take control and held off Rossville the rest of the way for a 53-43 win.
Rossville, which fell to 4-6, led 11-9 at the end of the opening quarter but the Bears rallied for a 31-18 halftime advantage.
The Bulldawgs outscored the Bears 8-3 in the third quarter to get within eight but couldn't mount a serious run over the final eight minutes.
Sophomores Kinsey Perine and Emma Mitchell scored 14 points apiece for Rossville while St. Marys (4-5) had three players with between 12 and 14 points.
Sophomore Brenna Smith paced the Bears with 14 points, followed by sophomore Catherine Moylan with 13 points and freshman Hayden Heim with 12.
OLATHE HERITAGE CHRISTIAN GIRLS 42, CAIR PARAVEL LATIN 34 -- Cair Paravel Latin saw its two-game win streak come to an end in Friday's 42-34 loss to Olathe Heritage Christian Academy.
Heritage Christian improved to 4-3 while Cair Paravel fell to 2-5.
- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights improved to 7-1 on the season with its fourth straight victory, rolling to an 82-58 United Kansas Conference road victory at Turner.
The T-Birds put the Bears away (0-8, 0-3) with a 26-11 first-quarter onslaught and led 41-25 at halftime and 56-37 at the start of the fourth quarter.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
It may have been low key, but Topeka West had reason to celebrate after Friday night's 41-38 Centennial League girls basketball win over Highland Park at Topeka West.
After a couple of close calls in earlier losses, Jeff Skar's Chargers got the job done Friday night, with Jazmyn Ford leading the way as West picked up its first win of the 2021-2022 season.
Ford, a 5-foot-9 junior, scored all 10 of Topeka West's first-quarter points to get the Chargers off to a good start and finished with 17 points and 10 rebounds as West improved to 1-8 overall and 1-7 in the league.
"They practice hard, they're confident and they believe,'' Skar said of his team. "I think they're starting to believe more, but they just hadn't had the results with our brutal schedule we play.''
Skar said there wasn't a lot of hooping and hollering in the West locker room after the win.
"They were pretty subdued,'' Skar said. "They really don't get too high or too low, which is a good quality.''
But Ford guaranteed that her and her teammates were fired up over the win.
"It really is exciting,'' Ford said. "We just really worked well together and kept our energy up.''
Ford outscored short-handed Highland Park by herself en route to a 10-6 first-quarter advantage.
"I just felt the energy,'' Ford said. "I was hyped, I was up and I wanted to do good for my team, not only me.''
Highland Park (1-8, 0-8) rallied for a 21-19 haltime edge, but sophomore Siani Sanchez put the Chargers ahead 22-21 with a 3-pointer to open the second half and West never trailed again.
Topeka West led 29-23 late in the third, took a 29-25 advantage into the fourth and went up 35-25 with 5:02 remaining after back-to-back hoops from Ford.
Highland Park cut its deficit to 38-35 with 1:10 left on a basket from senior Aisya Taylor, but Topeka West got three free throws from sophomore Zoe Clark over the final 12.9 seconds to keep the Chargers in front.
- Details
By ISAAC DEER
TopSports.news
Hayden's boys basketball team had some close calls this season and had another nail-biter Friday night, falling to Emporia in overtime, 52-51, at Hayden.
Hayden fell to 1-6 overall and 1-6 in the Centennial League with its second overtime defeat of the season while Emporia picked up its first victory, improving to 1-8, 1-7.
“I thought we played hard,'' Hayden coach Dwayne Paul said. "Emporia is a hard team to play and they were more disciplined than us.''
In the first quarter, the shooting was cold as ice, and the defense was strong from both teams.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Friday night's game against Highland Park may not have been a must-win situation for Topeka West's boys basketball team, but if the Chargers want to remain in the hunt for a second straight Centennial League title, it was pretty darn close
And Rick Bloomquist's No. 5-ranked Chargers certainly played with the sense of urgency that the situation called for in front of a packed house at Topeka West, with all five West starters cracking double figures on the way to a 79-67 league victory over the No. 2-ranked and previously-unbeaten Scots.
Topeka West only trailed once on the night, at 2-0, and answered every Highland Park run with a run of its own, lead by as many as 13 points in the first half, 12 in the third quarter and by as many as 19 down the stretch while improving to 7-1 overall and 6-1 in the league. With Friday's win the Chargers pulled even in the league race in the loss column with both Highland Park and Junction City.
"The key is the Centennial League championship,'' Bloomquist said. "We want it. We want the last one (before West joins the United Kansas Conference) and (the players) know there's a little pride in that.
"They know they can do it and to get that we have to win these games, without a doubt.''
Elijah Brooks led Topeka West with 26 points and 14 rebounds, but the Charger senior star had plenty of help from his teammates, with senior Zander Putthoff adding 17 points with three 3-pointers while juniors Sincere Austin and Xavier Alexander had 13 points apiece and junior Malachi Berg 10.
"If we're going to be the team that we want to be, that's the way we've got to play,'' Bloomquist said. "I've got kids that can play. I've got kids that can pass, catch and make baskets.''
Topeka West also withstood a career night from Highland Park senior standout Juan'Tario Roberts, who kept the Scots (8-1, 7-1) in the game with 19 first-half points and finished with a career-high 35 points and seven 3-pointers.