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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
The Washburn University Athletic Department has announced its six-member 2021 Hall of Fame class, which will be enshrined on Oct. 9 in a morning ceremony prior to the Ichabods' MIAA football game against Fort Hays State.
The Hall of Fame class of six accumulated nine All-America awards earned during their combined 29 years competing for Washburn teams.
The induction class Kate Hampson, Matt Cahill, Joe Hastings, Zach Watkins, Sam Sissom and Logan Stutz will join the 149 former student-athletes, coaches and administrators who have been honored for their contributions to Washburn Athletics.
The six former Washburn greats will also be recognized at halftime of the Oct. 9 football game against the Tigers.
Washburn Hall of Fame capsules:
Matt Cahill – Football – 1979-82
Matt Cahill finished his career as WU's all-time leader in total tackles and assisted tackles on the Ichabod charts. In 1982 his 120 total tackles were the highest single-season tally in school history and his 69 assisted tackles were second that same season. He had a career-high 16 tackles against Nebraska-Kearney on Nov. 13, 1982. As a sophomore in 1980, he was fifth on the team in tackles with 65 total stops adding a fumble recovery. His junior season he recorded 64 tackles which was the second-highest total on the team, leading to his outstanding senior campaign.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Justin Ashley's most recent race in the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series was a good news/scary news scenario for the second-year Top Fuel driver.
The 2020 NHRA Rookie of the Year advanced to his second career final in the NHRA Winternationals nearly two weeks ago, but an extremely hot day in Pomona, Calif. took a toll on the 26-year-old Ashley, who had to be pulled from his SmartSanitizer Top Fuel dragster powered by Strutmasters.com before the final run after suffering symptoms of severe heat exhaustion.
Ashley is back in tip-top condition as he prepares to compete in this weekend's Menards NHRA Nationals at Heartland Motorsports Park and looks back at the scary situation in Pomona as a learning experience.
"I was feeling fine the next morning,'' Ashley told TopSports.news. "I definitely had to sleep on it and it and obviously it was kind of a crazy situation, one that I'll definitely be able to learn from. But by the time it was all said and done I just had to sleep on it and wake up the next morning and at that point I just felt so much better. And then the following day, almost two days later, I felt like I was finally back to full strength.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
With a list of candidates that includes 11 Shawnee County football players that made it to the National Football League, three that played in the Super Bowl and numerous other college standouts as well as two of the most prolific high school stars in Kansas history, picking a No. 1 for TopSports.news' Best of the Best Top 25 was a arduous task.
In the end, the guy that helped put local football on the map back in the 1970s, former Shawnee Heights/Kansas star and longtime Cincinnati Bengal linebacker Tom Dinkel, gets the nod.
Dinkel, who helped the Bengals reach the Super Bowl after the 1981 season, played seven seasons in the NFL and also played in the USFL for the Jacksonville Bulls after being drafted in the fifth round by Cincinnate in the fifth round of the '78 draft.
Taking the next two spots on the Top 25 were Super Bowl alums Troy Wilson (Shawnee Heights) and Michael Wilhoite (Highland Park), who both put together extended pro careers, while former NFL players Kyle McNorton (Seaman) and Trey Lewis (Washburn Rural) round out the top five, just ahead of Chicago Bears rookie Teven Jenkins (Topeka High), New York Jets third-year play Corey Ballentine (Shawnee Heights) and Cincinnati Bengals rookie Wyatt Hubert (Shawnee Heights).
Topeka High product Ky Thomas and Rossville's Tucker Horak, who carved out history-making high school careers, went one-two in the Readers Choice Awards, combining for more than 500 reader votes. Horak is currently a senior running back at Pittsburg State while Thomas is a redshirt freshman back at Minnesota.
Former Rossville and Kansas standout lineman Duane Zlatnik, currently an assistant coach for Washburn Rural, also received considerable reader support, finishing No. 3 in Readers Choice balloting.
Here's a look at the Top 25 and Readers Choice Awards:
TSN TOP 25 BEST OF THE BEST FOOTBALL PLAYERS
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Jacob Morgan proved himself over and over again as one of the all-time great distance runners in Shawnee County history, establishing himself as a superstar at Washburn Rural before going on to excel at the NCAA Division I level for both Colorado State and Kansas.
A two-time Class 6A state champion and four-time top-10 finisher for the Junior Blues, including an undefeated senior season, Morgan went on to compete in the NCAA Championships for both Colorado State and KU, twice earning All-Big 12 and All-Region honors for the Jayhawks.
And while the TopSports.news Shawnee County Best of the Best Top 25 list is crowded with outstanding runners dating back to the 1960s, Morgan's impressive resume earned him the No. 1 spot.
Former Topeka West great Rob Hays, a two-time state champion for the Chargers and a standout at Kansas State, takes the No. 2 spot on the Best of the Best list while two-time state champion Grant Cain of Seaman, current Hayden star and state champ Tanner Newkirk and former Silver Lake state champ Chad Brake round out the top five.
Topeka West two-time state placer Tegan Michael, No. 17 in the No. 25, was a runaway winner in the Readers Choice Awards, garnering more than 750 votes, while Morgan and Newkirk finished two-three in reader votes.
Here's a look at the Top 25 and Readers Choice Awards:
TSN TOP 25 BEST OF THE BEST MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY RUNNERS
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Chris Payne is the first to admit that it's a gradual, sometimes slow process, but Heartland Motorsports Park is starting to look like what he envisioned when he took over the financially troubled multi-faceted facility prior to the 2016 racing season.
Heartland Motorsports Park, which opened in 1989, will host Topeka's biggest sports event, the Menards NHRA Nationals, Friday through Sunday at its nationally-renowned dragstrip, but HMP is well on its way to be known for more than just a race track, which has always been Payne's goal.
"My intention for the facility was always to take it out of its box that it's been in for decades,'' Payne told TopSports.news "Obviously, that box didn't work financially for the facility.''
While the national NHRA drag racing event, which Topeka has hosted since HMP opened in '89, continues to be a staple event for the city, but Heartland Motorsports Park got a huge boost when Payne brought the wildly-popular Country Stampede country music festival to Topeka in 2019 and HMP has also continued to boost the number of smaller, community-style events it hosts.
"Over the past six years there's been a lot of events that were non-racing that the general public just didn't notice, but they paid the bills -- different community events out there that were small, but they all add up. There's 100s of small events out there,'' Payne said. "I think having the Country Stampede there, with 100,000 people in four days, made people really realize, "Hey, this facility might actually be beyond something on the race track.'
"I've known it since Day 1, but I think some of the public -- not all of the public, but some of them -- are just now catching on to it. I see people looking at Heartland differently and not just as a race track, but they see it as a festival ground. Some of them don't even know it's a race track. Of the 100,000 people came over the four days (one or more days) to the Stampede I'd bet 99 percent of them had never been there before (attending the Stampede), which is telling. That's what we want.''
And Payne sees the potential for the facility to reach higher heights.
"It is gradual, and as unfortunate or frustrating as that can be, it is gradual and it doesn't happen overnight,'' Payne said. "Different events bring in different sponsorships and other different events.
"We've been approached by other organizations, other promoters other than racing more often now. We've already had a circus out there this year. We've had a carnival out there on the grounds. The property itself is more like an event space and that's how I look at it. Yes, it's a premier dragstrip and there's different tracks there, but we also want it to be a premier outdoor event space.''