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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Rossville overcame a brief early deficit Friday night to run its winning streak to 16 straight games with a 44-20 victory over St. Marys.
The defending Class 2A state champions trailed the Bears 12-10 at the end of the first quarter and led by just a 23-20 margin at the half before pitching a 21-0 shutout in the second half to take control.
Rossville senior Corey Catron scored the last four touchdowns for Rossville, now 3-0 this fall, with Catron scoring on a pair of 1-yard runs, as well as a 5-yard run and a 32-yard scamper.
Bulldawg senior quarterback Torrey Horak completed a 12-yard touchdown pass to senior Tagen Kippes and also scored on a 6-yard run.
Rossville also got a 23-yard field goal from Pedro Arantes, who also kicked five extra points.
WASHBURN RURAL 19, PITTSBURG 17 -- Washburn Rural made the long trip to Pittsburg pay off, coming from behind to post a 19-17 win over the Purple Dragons.
The game was tied 7-7 at the end of the opening quarter and the Junior Blues trailed 14-10 at the half before rallying for the victory.
With Friday's win Washburn Rural improved to 3-0 on the season.
CAIR PARAVEL 60, MARANATHA ACADEMY 6 -- Cair Paravel Latin ran its record to 3-0 with a 60-6 romp past Maranatha Christian Academy, with the Lions scoring all 60 points in the first half.
Lions senior quarterback Carter Brian completed 5 of 7 passes for 101 yards and three touchdowns while freshman backup Jase Pavlik went 4 of 5 for 45 yards and two TDs.
Senior Noah Hastert caught three passes for 91 yards and two TDs while senior Max Colombo caught two passes for 47 yards, with both catches going for touchdowns.
Sophomore Jesiah Bonura was Cair Paravel's leading rusher with 56 yards and two TDs on three carries while Colombo picked up 58 yards and a TD on two attempts.
Sophomore Ian Brian had six tackles and an interception for the Lions.
RILEY COUNTY 22, SILVER LAKE 14 -- Riley County scored 12 fourth-quarter points to hand Silver Lake its first loss of the season.
Silver Lake (2-1) led 7-0 at the end of the first quarter and 14-3 at the half, but the Falcons outscored the Eagles 19-0 in the second half.
LANSING 17, SHAWNEE HEIGHTS 14 -- Shawnee Heights came up just short against United Kansas Conference foe Lansing, suffering its third straight loss by seven points or less, including the last two games by a total of four points.
Heights quarterback Callan Carver completed 21 of 35 pass attempts for 196 yards while senior Carter Olson had six receptions for 64 yards and senior Jarin Sanders had six grabs for 35 yards.
Sanders led the T-Birds' rushing attack with 52 yards on 16 carries while Carver added 45 yards on 15 attempts.
MANHATTAN 70, HIGHLAND PARK 0 -- Centennial League power Manhattan rolled to a 70-0 home win over Highland Park Friday night, extending the Scots' win streak to 59 straight games dating back to 2014.
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By ISAAC DEER
TopSports.news
Seaman and Junction City's football teams have had 29 total meetings dating back to 1974, with the Blue Jays winning 18 out of the previous 28 contests entering Friday's Centennial League matchup at Seaman.
On Friday, the Blue Jays extended the total to 19 out of 29 as Junction City crashed Seaman’s Homecoming party, winning 23-16 in overtime.
The Blue Jays' defense reigned supreme in the red zone against Seaman all night long. The Vikings would get to the red zone three times in the first half but could not get a touchdown, which ended up costing the hosts in the end.
“Our guys played hard, unfortunately, somebody had to lose in overtime and it was us,'' Seaman coach Jared Swaford said. "I think I could’ve done better. Our guys played hard.”
Junction City’s game plan in the second half was entirely different than the first half.
In the first half, the Blue Jays attempted to air it out quite a bit but didn’t see the results.
In the second half, Junction City ran the ball almost every single offensive play, with senior quarterback David Rowell a huge part of the second-half success.
“In the second half, Seaman was more worried about stopping the pass,'' Rowell said. "I thought our guys did a good job of taking advantage of that.”
The defense played a huge part in the first half for both teams, with Seaman and Junction City holding each other in check without any big-chunk gains in the first two quarters.
Seaman’s first drive was all about the run. Big pushes from the offensive line and 33 yards on the ground were able to get the Vikings within field goal range, with Gavin Wilhelm connecting from 32 yards out with 8:56 to go in the first.
Following the opening drive, Rowell missed a pass to a Blue Jay and Seaman’s Callen Barta was able to sneak by and get the interception.
Barta returned the ball into red zone, but great defense by the Blue Jays kept the Vikings out of the end zone and forced Wilhem to kick it again, connecting on a 25-yard field goal with the clock winding down to zero in the first quarter.
A defensive stalemate kept the score at 6-0 for almost the entire second quarter.
But with 1:46 left in the half, senior quarterback Camden Barta ran away from Keghan McConnell, throwing it on the run 38 yards downfield to a double-covered PJ Vargas.
That got the Vikings down to the 1-yard line. The Bluejays shut down Barta and the Vikings and kept the ball at the 1 for three downs and Wilhem was forced to kick it with 0:08 left in the quarter, nailing the attempt from 18 yards to give the Vikings a 9-0 halftime edge.
Seaman was still in front 9-3 entering the fourth quarter.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Coming off a three-touchdown loss to rival Seaman, Hayden was looking for a bounce-back performance Friday night night against Topeka West.
And although the night didn't necessarily start like the Wildcats wanted, Hayden got what it was looking for, scoring 39 unanswered points to take a 39-6 win at Hummer Sports Park.
Hayden turned the ball over on downs at the West 3-yard-line to end its first offensive possession and the Chargers struck for a 97-yard touchdown on a pass from junior quarterback Malachi Berg to junior Tyrell Reed to take a 6-0 lead at the 6:10 mark of the first quarter (conversion run failed).
But the rest of the night belonged to the 2-1 Wildcats, who tied the game with 2:11 left in the opening quarter, put the Chargers away with 26 second-quarter points before adding a final TD in the third.
"Our coach (Bill Arnold) was kind of disappointed in us last week because he thought we quit,'' said Hayden senior Jack Chisham, who rushed for 182 yards on 14 carries, scoring on runs of 2 and 69 yards. "We wanted to show him that we can come back from a deficit and take control of the game.''
Arnold admitted that he was disappointed with the way the Wildcats finished the Seaman game (a 35-14 loss after the game was tied 7-7), but thought his team made a lot of strides Friday night.
"It was a rough week at practice,'' Arnold said. "I didn't feel like we finished the game off very well last week at all and we had to kind of get back to what Hayden tradition is about. I thought the kids came out tonight and executed.
"We competed. We're a long way away from mistake-free football, but I did like our physicality tonight.''
After Reed gave 1-2 West its early lead, Hayden bounced back on its next drive to tie the game on a 26-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Gavin Arnold to freshman Jensen Schrickel (pass failed).
Chisham put Hayden ahead to stay with a 2-yard scoring run at the 9:21 mark of the second quarter and he broke loose for a 69-yard TD to give the Wildcats an 18-6 advantage with 7:40 left in the half (pass failed).
The Wildcats added a 12-yard scoring run from junior JC Cummings (pass failed) and closed out the half with a 6-yard touchdown run and a 2-point conversion from junior Ethan Florence to take a commanding 32-6 advantage with 39.7 seconds left in the half.
Hayden added its final score on an 18-yard TD pass from Arnold to senior TL Thompson (Schrickel kick) at the 8:34 mark of the third quarter.
Arnold completed 9 of 13 passes on the night for 95 yards and two TDs.
West's Reed caught four passes for 118 yards and the Chargers' lone TD while Berg passed for 170 yards on an 11 of 23 performance.
Reed also led West with 60 rushing yards on 13 attempts.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights and Washburn University product Corey Ballentine is the newest member of the Detroit Lions.
Ballentine, a third-year defensive back and returner, was claimed by the Lions after being waived off injured reserve by the New York Jets.
The 25-year-old Ballentine was drafted in the sixth round of the 2019 NFL draft by the New York Giants and played for the Giants in 2019 and with the Giants and the Jets in 2020.
Ballentine suffered a knee injury after a long kickoff return in a preseason game against the Green Bay Packers, leading to his release by the Jets..
Ballentine played over 400 snaps at cornerback for the Giants in 2019-2020 and started four games before being waived and joining the Jets as their primary return man for the remainder of last season.
Ballentine, who has averaged 24.5 yards per kick in the NFL, fills the Lions' roster spot created with cornerback Jeff Okudah going on injured reserve.A multiple All-MIAA and Division II All-America honoree, Ballentine appeared in 46 games at Washburn, tallying 186 tackles (113 solos) and five interceptions and won the Cliff Harris Award as the small college defensive player of the year as a senior..
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THE PENNANT PLAYER PROFILE
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
After playing running back for most of his career, including his first season at Washburn University, former Washburn Rural standout Hunter Browning made the switch to wide receiver in 2019.
It's a move that has paid off for both Browning, a 5-foot-11, 195-pound redshirt junior, and the 2-0 Ichabods, with Browning ranking second on the team with six receptions for 83 yards entering Saturday's 1 p.m. game at 2-0 Nebraska-Kearney while also carrying the ball once for 22 yards.
Browning rushed for 360 yards and two touchdowns on 85 attempts as a redshirt freshman in 2018, including a 116-yard performance against Northeastern State, but after suffering an injury to his shoulder as well as nerve damage in a subsequent injury, Browning and Washburn coach Craig Schurig made the decision for Browning to move outside for the '19 season.
"After my injury that year I had a meeting with coach and he said, 'You know we could really use you out at wide receiver because with our running backs, a lot of them are just really explosive and if we could have you and all of them on the field at the same time, that would be the most ideal thing for us,' '' Browning recalled.
"He told me I could think about it and get back to him, but I thought it was the right move at the time, and so far it's worked out. I just worked hard at it, on my route-running and watching film and all of that, and it's been really good.''
Browning caught eight passes for 78 yards and a TD in '19 and continues to feel more and more at home as a wideout after having basically two more years to learn the position.
Browning has already established a career-high yardage total in just two games this fall and needs just three catches to establish a career-high for single-season receptions.
"His speed was such that he played early as a tailback, but his body wasn't built to be a tailback in this conference,'' Schurig said. "By moving him we got a little bit more depth at that position and we liked his speed. We knew it was going to be a transition. It's hard to learn receiver, there's a lot going on, but with his body type and speed and quickness we felt like he could do some really good things at receiver and not take the pounding like he did at tailback.
"He's done a great job, he really has. He's so conscientous, works very hard and has really come on. He was making plays in practice and he's making them in games. He had a big touchdown pass against Lincoln and a huge catch in the first drive (against Central Missouri). He gets open.''
Looking back on it, Browning is glad he made the move.
"It was just a decision that was best for the team and for me, too,'' Browning said. "It's really fun being out there at receiver.''