- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
EMERIE CATLIN, Washburn Rural
A senior, Catlin teamed with Izzy Haggard to advance to the Class 6A state tournament last fall with a second-place regional finish. Catlin and Haggard won the city championship in No. 2 doubles and finished second in doubles in the Centennial League meet. Catlin and Haggard went 22-9 on the season, helping the Junior Blues sweep city, Centennial League and regional team titles and tie for fifth as a team at state.
CAROLINA CHEDZOY, Washburn Rural
Chedzoy, a senior, capped her first season at Washburn Rural with an eighth-place singles finish in the Class 6A state tournament. Chedzoy, who went 23-11 on the season, won a regional championship after finishing second in the city and Centennial League tournaments. Chedzoy helped lead the Junior Blues to city, Centennial League and regional team championships before Rural tied for fifth in 6A.
SIDNEY CHINN, Seaman
A senior, Chinn helped Seaman capture United Kansas Conference and Class 5A regional team championships last fall and was a state qualifier in singles. Chinn posted third-place finishes in regional and city competition and finished fifth in the UKC championships.
MADELINE DETERS, Topeka High
Deters, a junior, will be counted on to be a leader for Duane Pomeroy's Trojans this season. Deters qualified for the Class 6A state tournament in singles as a freshman in 2022 and is likely to play No. 1 singles for Topeka High in 2024.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
ALEX BAXTER, Topeka West
Baxter, a senior, was a Class 5A individual state qualifier last fall, tying for 29th with a 36-hole score of 184 (88-96). Baxter was the United Kansas Conference runnerup with an 18-hole score of 81 after finshing third in the UKC meet as a sophomore. She tied for 20th in the regional tournament.
LAUREN BORJON, Hayden
Borjon, a junior, helped Hayden win the Class 4A state title by a 37-stroke margin, finishing 15th individually with a 165 36-hole score (85-80). Borjon tied for first for the team-champion Wildcats in the city tournament with a 76, finishing second in a playoff, tied for seventh in regional competition (88) and shot an 89 in the Centennial League tournament.
IZZY GLOTZBACH, Hayden
A junior, Glotzbach shot a team-low 161 at state (79-82) to tie for ninth in Class 4A, helping Hayden post a runaway 37-stroke win in the team standings. Glotzbach finished third in the city tournament (81) to help Hayden win the city team title and tied for ninth at regionals (88). Glotzbach was a first-team All-Shawnee County pick after earning second-team recognition as a freshman.
NATALIE PETERSON, Washburn Rural
A senior, Peterson has received second-team All-Shawnee County recognition the past two seasons. Peterson posted a 27th-place finish in the Class 6A state tournament last fall, finishing with a 36-hole score of 171 (89-82) to help Rural place fourth as a team. Peterson was eighth in the city meet (84), tied for sixth in the Centennial League (82) and tied for 10th at regionals (86).
REECE RANDALL, Washburn Rural
A senior, Randall earned second-team All-Shawnee County recognition in 2022 and 2023. Randall tied for 25th in the Class 6A state tournament with a 36-hole total of 170 (87-83) for fourth-place Rural. Randall tied for fourth in the Centennial League tournament with an 81, took ninth in the city tournament (85) and tied for 14th place at regionals (88).
MAKENNA STUKE, Seaman
Stuke, a junior, helped Seaman win a Class 5A regional team title with a fifth-place finish (89) and tied for 29th in the 5A state tournament with a 36-hole score of 184 (91-93). Stuke finished third in the United Kansas Conference tournament with an 83 as the Vikings won the championship by 48 strokes. She carded an 87 in the city meet.
JAYCEE ZIMMERMAN, Seaman
Zimmerman, a senior, is a two-time All-Shawnee County second-team pick and shot a 79 to win the United Kansas Conference individual title last fall after finishing second as a sophomore. Zimmerman helped the Vikings post a 48-stroke win in the UKC meet and placed eighth in Class 5A regional competition as Seaman captured the team title.
TAYLOR ZORDEL, Silver Lake
Zordel, a senior, earned her third straight Class 3A-1A state medal while helping Silver Lake win its first state girls golf championship in school history by a 22-stroke margin. Zordel placed fourth at state with a 36-hole score of 163 (83-80) after posting a third-place regional finish (80) for the regional-champion Eagles. Zordel was a first-team All-Shawnee County repeat selection.
Related Stories and Videos
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
After rarely leaving the field as a two-way starter for Topeka High as a senior in the 2021 football season, Tylan Alejos has done a lot of watching the past two years.
The 5-foot-9, 200-pound sophomore running back is hoping to change that this fall in his second season for Washburn University.
"I would say that this is the most prepared I came into a football season and I should be seeing the field a lot this year,'' Alejos said.
Alejos earned All-Shawnee County Top 22 and All-Centennial League first-team honors as a senior at High after rushing for 1,327 yards on 202 carries with 18 total touchdowns, including a 400-yard, eight-touchdown game in a Centennial League victory over Highland Park, and recording 40 tackles (16 solo) with a pass interception.
Alejos opted to walk on at the University of Kansas as a freshman and redshirted the '22 season before transerring to Washburn last fall.
But even though he never got on the field at KU, he believes his time with the Jayhawks was a valuable experience.
"I'd say it was the best situation for me because I got to play against some of the best players in the country at the Power 5 level and saw every day what it takes to get to that next level,'' Alejos said.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Former Shawnee Heights three-sport standout Tyce Brown once had his heart set on being a college baseball player, committing to Division I Xavier before his junior season in high school.
But after one college season Brown made the decision to come home to Washburn, first as a dual sport athlete in baseball and football before deciding to concentrate on football.
It's a decision the 6-foot, 185-pound senior wide receiver will never regret.
"It's definitely been a journey,'' Brown said. "I've learned so many things along the way and just thankful to be in the place I am today and to meet the people I've met and just want to keep striving to be better.
"They welcomed me in with open arms -- Coach (Craig) Schurig and Coach (Jeff) Schwinn and Coach Wat (Zach Watkins) -- and I just fell in love with the bond here and the chemistry. I started to struggle a little bit in baseball and I was just happy every time I came out here for practice and just wanted more and more and that's kind of just how I ended up here today.''
Schurig knew of Brown's athletic abilities from his high school days at Shawnee Heights and said he was a perfect fit for the Ichabods.
"I was thinking he'd be a safety, to be honest, but we had depth there and moved him to receiver and he stepped right in and made plays right off the bat,'' Schurig said. "He's got a great feel, great ball awareness, all of those things, is a very good athlete and he's had a really good career.''
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Tre Richardson is extremely grateful for all the people in his life who have helped him become the athlete and person he is today.
And now the former multi-sport Highland Park star, who is beginning his first season with the Washburn University football team, is determined to do whatever he can to help others in the Hi Park and Topeka community.
Richardson announced last week on X (formerly Twitter) that he plans to launch a scholarship program to benefit a pair of seniors (one male and one female) from his alma mater.
"I just wanted to give back to the community after they have given so much to me,'' Richardson said. "Me and my mom (Kawanda) talked about it and thought about making it for Highland Park kids and just helping a little bit.''
Richardson's plans are to begin accepting applications through his LockedIn Mentality Foundation Oct. 1 through Jan. 1, 2025, with the scholarship winners to be announced next April 1.
"It's a start and that's why we're going to start with HP and then we want to expand it to other schools and make it bigger and for everybody to to get a chance to win it,'' Richardson said.