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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
A player scoring three goals in a game is normally a rare accomplishment in high school soccer.
For Washburn Rural standout Porter Schafersman, hat tricks are starting to become just another night at the office.
Schafersman, a senior captain, recorded his third straight three-goal game Thursday night at McElroy Field, leading the way as the Junior Blues improved to a perfect 6-0 on the season with a 5-0 Centennial League victory over Hayden.
Schafersman scored off corner kicks from senior Ashton Rake and sophomore Devon Rutschmann and also converted a penalty kick, all in the second half, as the Junior Blues broke open a tight game with four goals after halftime.
"I feel like we all know each other very well and we're comfortable with each other and we trust each other on the ball,'' Schafersman said.
And while Schafersman doesn't want to make a big deal of his goal-scoring flurry, he's definitely enjoying himself.
"It puts me in a good mood,'' Schafersman said. "I'm just happy we came out with the win.''
Hayden, which fell to 2-3, was still very much in the hunt at halftime, trailing 1-0 on a Rural goal from sophomore Benett Hallauer at the 22:04 mark of the opening half (Rutschmann assist), but the Junior Blues put the game away with three goals over the first 6:38 of the second half.
Schafersman scored back-to-back goals to put Rural in front 3-0 with 34:01 remaining and then senior Joe Morse scored at the 33:22 mark off an assist from junior Easton Bradstreet before Schafersman added his third goal on a penalty kick with 7:30 left.
"We were doing lots of nice things (in the first half), but it felt like we were doing it at about an 80-percent pace,'' Rural coach Brian Hensyel said. "We have very athletic guys, we're fast, so don't play at a slower pace. Let's really put pressure on people. We were doing a lot of the same things (in the second half), we just really had the energy, an A-plus kind of energy.
"Hayden always does a great job. They have a great keeper (senior Gabe Rankey) and they're always very organized. No. 3 on top (junior Jake Muller) is a good player.''
Senior Wyatt Arnold picked up his fourth shutout of the season in goal for the Junior Blues.
WASHBURN RURAL 5, HAYDEN 0
Hayden (2-3) 0 0 -- 0
Washburn Rural (6-0) 1 4 -- 5
Washburn Rural -- Goals: Porter Schafersman 3, Benett Hallauer, Joe Morse. Assists: Devon Rutschmann 2, Ashton Rake, Easton Bradstreet. Shutout: Wyatt Arnold.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
The NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series is scheduled to return to Topeka on Aug. 12-14, 2022 for the Menards NHRA Nationals presented by PetArmor.
Heartland Motorsports Park has hosted at least one national event since the facility opened in 1989, with the exception of 2020 when the Topeka event was canceled due to COVID-19.
HMP hosted its 2021 national event last month, with Brittany Force (Top Fuel), John Force (Funny Car) and Dallas Glenn (Pro Stock) capturing titles in the Camping World Series.
NHRA officials released the 2022 NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series 22-race schedule on Thursday, with details on Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock and Pro Stock Motorcycle schedules to be announced in the upcoming weeks.
The 22-race schedule will include the return of fan favorite events such as the NHRA Arizona Nationals in Phoenix, the Virginia NHRA Nationals in Richmond and the Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals in Seattle, which will serve as the traditional conclusion of the annual Western Swing.
The 2022 season kicks off in Pomona for the Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals Presented By ProtectTheHarvest.com.
For the first time in four seasons, the NHRA will host a specialty race amongst the stars of the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series nitro categories.
Fans will be treated to not one but two NHRA Allstar Shootout events in 2022, at the AMALIE Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals and the prestigious Dodge//SRT NHRA U.S. Nationals over Labor Day weekend.
Then, teams will focus in on the NHRA Countdown to the Championship playoffs and set their sights on an NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series world title.
For more information about the 2022 schedule and to purchase tickets, please visit NHRA.com.
2022 NHRA CAMPING WORLD DRAG RACING SERIES SCHEDULE
NHRA Camping World Series Regular Season
Feb. 17-20 - Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals presented by ProtectTheHarvest.com, Pomona, Calif.
Feb. 25-27 - NHRA Arizona Nationals, Phoenix
March 10-13 - *AMALIE Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals, Gainesville, Fla.
April 1-3 - NHRA Four-Wide Nationals, Las Vegas
April 22-24 - Mopar Express Lane NHRA SpringNationals presented by Pennzoil, Houston
April 29-May 1 - NGK NTK NHRA Four-Wide Nationals, Charlotte, N.C.
May 13-15 - Virginia NHRA Nationals, Richmond, Va.
June 3-5 - NHRA New England Nationals, Epping, N.H.
June 17-19 - NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals, Bristol, Tenn.
June 23-26 - Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals, Norwalk, Ohio
July 15-17 - Dodge//SRT Mile-High NHRA Nationals presented by Pennzoil, Denver
July 22-24 - NHRA Sonoma Nationals, Sonoma, Calif.
July 29-31 - Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals, Seattle
Aug. 12-14- Menards NHRA Nationals presented by PetArmor, Topeka, Kan.
Aug. 18-21 - Lucas Oil NHRA Nationals, Brainerd, Minn.
Aug. 31-Sept. 5 - *Dodge//SRT NHRA U.S. Nationals, Indianapolis
NHRA Camping World Countdown to the Championship
Sept. 15-18 - Mopar Express Lane NHRA Nationals presented by Pennzoil, Reading, Pa.
Sept. 23-25 - NHRA Carolina Nationals, Charlotte, N.C.
Sept. 30-Oct. 2 - NHRA Midwest Nationals, St. Louis
Oct. 13-16 - Texas NHRA FallNationals, Dallas
Oct. 27-30 - Dodge//SRT NHRA Nationals presented by Pennzoil, Las Vegas
Nov. 10-13 - Auto Club NHRA Finals, Pomona, Calif.
*NHRA Allstar Shootout
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn Rural is ranked No. 1 in Class 6A in this week's Kansas Volleyball Association state rankings, pacing three Shawnee County schools in the rankings.
Rural, 10-0 after wins over Centennial League foes Hayden and Topeka West on Tuesday, is followed in the 6A rankings by Blue Valley North, defending state champ Blue Valley West, Shawnee Mission Northwest and Free State in the top five.
Shawnee Heights and Seaman earned the No. 6 and No. 7 spots in the 5A rankings.
St. Thomas Aquinas is top-ranked in 5A, followed by St. James Academy, Lansing, Mill Valley and Maize South.
Louisburg is No. 1-ranked in 4A, while other top-ranked teams are Smoky Valley (3A), Heritage Christian (2A), Pretty Prairie (1A Division I) and Hanover (1A Division II).
KANSAS VOLLEYBALL ASSOCIATION STATE RANKINGS
Class 6A
1. Washburn Rural; 2. Blue Valley North; 3. Blue Valley West; 4. Shawnee Mission Northwest; 5. Free State; 6. Wichita Northwest; 7. Hutchinson; 8 Blue Valley; 9. Blue Valley Northwest; 10. Olathe North.
Class 5A
1. St. Thomas Aquinas; 2. St. James Academy; 3. Lansing; 4. Mill Valley; 5. Maize South; 6. Shawnee Heights; 7. Seaman; 8. Basehor-Linwood; 9. Spring Hill; 10. Newton.
Class 4A
1. Louisburg; 2. Andale; 3. Bishop Miege; 4. Circle; 5. McPherson; 6. Clay Center; 7. Baldwin; 8. Nickerson; 9. Rose Hill; 10. Paola.
Class 3A
1. Smoky Valley; 2. Cheney; 3. Nemaha Central; 4. Beloit; 5. TMP-Marian; 6. Riverton; 7. Hiawatha; 8. Scott City; 9. Eureka; 10. Goodland.
Class 2A
1. Heritage Christian; 2. Garden Plain; 3. Smith Center; 4. Wabaunsee; 5. Jefferson County North; 6. Hillsboro; 7. Sedgwick; 8. Meade-Fowler; 9. Ellinwood; 10. Sterling.
Class 1A Division I
1. Pretty Prairie; 2. Central Plains; 3. Kiowa County; 4. Little River; 5. Lebo; 6. Victoria; 7. Centralia; 8. South Gray; 9. Sylvan Lucas; 10. Pratt-Skyline.
Class 1A Division II
1. Hanover; 2. Attica; 3. St. Francis-Cheylin; 4. Golden Plains; 5. Linn; 6. Dighton; 7. Wheatland-Grinnell; 8. St. Paul; 9. Beloit-St. Johns-Tipton; 10. Logan-Palco.
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By KEVIN HASKIN
TopSports.news
Musings at the mid-month:
-- Talk to anyone outside Kansas City about a downtown ballpark and parking gets mentioned first.
-- Talk to those inside Kansas City – I did so this week during a reunion of former Kansas City Kansan sports writers – and parking got mentioned first.
-- As much as anyone wants to dismiss that angle, parking is a concern.
-- The Royals once marketed heavily outside of KC. Now, not so much it seems.
-- Kansas City is a different, and more vibrant place, meaning people in Topeka, or any other place nearby enjoy it even more and still attend games.
-- I don’t go enough to really care, and I won’t feel any tax pinch.
-- Building downtown could make sense and it could be cool.
-- But given when both Kauffman Stadium and Arrowhead were built, designers really did it right. Each have, with modifications, withstood the test of time.
-- Oh, whenever someone advocates shuttles, keep in mind how long shuttles can get bogged down in postgame traffic.
-- Drove with my daughter to the old Kansan building recently and took a picture. Paper went belly up years ago, but the façade remains.
-- A lot of great athletes and great teams in KCK back then.
-- Wyandotte High School graduate Rick Peterson would agree.
-- The Big 12 did what it had to do adding members and I should probably feign excitement about the new grouping, but how long will it last?
-- Especially when Kansas bats a wandering eye toward other leagues and openly acknowledges concerns about dwindling revenue streams.
-- No, I do not know whether the Jayhawks will gain admission elsewhere. Flunked tea reading, which really can’t be streamlined into a pass-fail option.
-- If KU can get into the Big Ten, then it’s proof basketball matters.
-- If it happens, send past and current coaches and ADs a thank you note. Except Jeff Long. He deserves nothing.
-- Rock Chalk could just as easily be a slogan that reflects KU’s steady positioning as a basketball favorite or, ahem, chalk.
-- Yet we tend to take the Jayhawks’ basketball preeminence for granted. Don’t.
-- Comments out of Kansas State, meanwhile, tend to ballyhoo the new Big 12 alignment.
-- This is K-State’s best option and the option is best if the dozen moving forward stick together.
-- Think about these three straight weekends the Wildcats will be on ESPN-plus.
-- Their matchups with Nevada and Oklahoma State absolutely should be cable network options.
-- But you can’t help but think a message is being sent here.
-- By the way, what exactly defines the plus in ESPN’s streaming option?
-- I’ll let you buffer on that answer.
-- Personal memories when I think about the four new Big 12 additions:
-- UCF. Nothing much, except that Wichita State celebrated a move to the AAC, only to watch now as members with strong football programs leave.
-- BYU: Steve Sarkisian as a player, quarterbacking the Cougars against K-State in the Cotton Bowl.
-- Cincinnati: Visiting ancient Nippert Stadium for both K-State and KU games, and now marveling that Cincy somehow gave the place a shiny makeover. That, and young Huggs.
-- Houston: Phi Slama Jama and before that, the Big E winning a big game in a big place, the Astrodome. Game of the Century it got dubbed in 1968 as Houston ended UCLA’s 47-game winning streak.
-- Reminds me that 50 years ago I sat in the den of my sister’s Topeka home, glued to football’s Game of the Century pitting Nebraska and Oklahoma.
-- The anniversary of the 1971 showdown will be celebrated Saturday when the two programs reunite.
-- Reading recollections this week, I can’t help but recall that K-State beat Oklahoma in 1969 and ’70, while the 1968 Kansas team shared the Big Eight title with OU and advanced to the Orange Bowl.
-- Also in ’68, both KU and K-State beat Nebraska. ABC then telecast the Sunflower showdown, a big deal in the age of limited TV for college football.
-- Shortly after Vince Gibson’s death, Pepper Rodgers told me he lamented the rules violations each turned in attempting to gain in-state superiority.
-- Eventually, those blows proved costly for both of the rebuilds.
-- I’ll think of Pepper and Vince on Saturday when watching Boomer and Big Red. And, I’ll be mindful that I miss the Big Eight.
-- FWIW, my sister’s old den now features a collection of golf treasures since the house is now owned by the crafty left-hander, Mark Elliott.
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THE PENNANT PLAYER PROFILE
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
When he graduated from Shawnee Heights in 2019 after being a three-sport standout for the T-Birds, Tyce Brown temporarily gave up football to head to Cincinnati and concentrate on a Division I baseball career at Xavier University.
But the lure to return to the football field and the chance to be a two-sport athlete in his hometown was too good for Brown to pass up.
"I liked (Cincinnati),'' Brown said. "It was a great town and I liked all my teammates and it was a great atmosphere. I kind of just missed football and wanted to come back and get a chance to do that again.
"I talked to my parents about it and I kept watching some high school games and I was like, 'Yeah, I miss that.' I also talked to my high school coach (Jason Swift). We had multiple conversations and he was very helpful to the process, just thinking things through and making sure this was the right decision and making sure this was what I really wanted and not just an impulse decision. I'm glad he was there to do that for me.''
The fact that Washburn football coach Craig Schurig and Ichabod baseball coach Harley Douglas would allow him to play both sports was also a key factor in his decision to transfer.
"That was huge, the fact that both coaches are willing to work with me and willing to let me miss some time and still play,'' Brown said. "I think I can help both teams and I'm glad I get the opportunity to do that. That was a big factor and I'm glad they let me do that.''
The 6-foot, 185-pound Brown, who has four years of eligibility remaining in both sports, joined the Ichabod football team for fall practice in the COVID-canceled '20 season, initially playing defensive back before switching to wide receiver this season.
"I made the switch this summer and I put in the work with Mitch (Schurig, senior quarterback) and Jace (Williams, senior receiver) and they helped me a lot,'' Brown said. "We worked on the playbook and that helped me learn and get a grasp on everything, so when camp rolled around I was ready and wasn't behind. I was up to speed.''
The position switch has paid early dividends for both Brown and the Ichabods, with Brown seeing action in both games for 2-0 WU, catching four passes for 28 yards.
Brown received his first career start in last Thursday's 29-10 home MIAA victory over Central Missouri, with senior quarterback Mitch Schurig finding him for Washburn's first two pass completions of the night.
"I definitely didn't expect to be thrown in the fire but I'm ready when my number is called,'' Brown said. "I didn't even know I was going to get the start, actually. Jace was hurting right before the game and was he was out so they called my number.''
Brown comes from a big sports family, with older brown Trey a senior basketball player for MidAmerica Nazarene and younger sister Tatum a freshman softball player at South Dakota, and said that being back in Topeka suits him.
"I'm a big family guy,'' he said. "Me and my brother and sister and my parents are all close and I enjoy being back here at home with my family and friends.
"This just feels like home. The coaches here brought me in and made me welcome, and all my teammates have made me feel welcome. I'm thankful for them welcoming me like that. It's going great and I'm definitely enjoying my time here.''