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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Topeka West's boys basketball team is coming off the program's biggest win in more than a decade.
Now the goal for the Chargers is to finish off their amazing 2020-21 ride with the school's first boys state title.
"The whole thing right now is to do what we did to get here, but work a little harder today in practice,'' West coach Rick Bloomquist said before Thursday's practice. "We want to stay focused, keep our nose down, don't get our heads inflated. It's not a party, it's still a basketball game and we just have to control our emotions right now.
"Like I've been telling them all year, their biggest weakness was their emotional IQ. Now our IQ's getting tested, so that's big key for us right now.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
This time it really will be the last game of the season between No. 17-ranked Washburn and Missouri Western, who will meet for fourth time in Saturday night's NCAA Division II Central Regional men's tournament in Aberdeen, S.D.
The 19-6 Ichabods, who are making their 15th NCAA postseason appearance, are the No. 3 seed and will face No. 6 seed Missouri Western (14-10) in an 8:45 game Saturday, with the winner advancing to a tournament semifinal to face No. 2 Northwest Missouri.
Washburn is 1-2 against the Griffons this season, but is coming off a 101-72 semifinal romp past Western last Friday in the MIAA Tournament semifinals in Maryville, Mo.
"They're a good team,'' Washburn coach Brett Ballard said of the Griffons. "They played us really, really well the first two times. They were a little beat up this past week and they didn't play as well.
"We played pretty good against them the last game, but they're a very good team and they've played really well against us the last two years, so it will be a big-time battle.''
After the win over Western the Ichabods went on to claim their sixth MIAA Postseason Tournament title and first since 2012 with a 69-68 win over Northwest.
"We played really well against them, which I hope will give our guys confidence that if you can play well against those guys it should give you some confidence that you can play well against anybody in the country,'' Ballard said.
The three MIAA rivals are on the same side of the six-school regional bracket while three Northern Sun Conference members are on the other side.
The host Northern State Wolves are the No. 1 seed and will take on the winner between No. 4 Wayne State and No. 5 Minnesota State Moorhead.
Missouri Western swept the two regular-season meetings with the Ichabods, winning 74-67 in St. Joseph on Jan. 9 and 81-77 in Topeka on Feb. 18 before the Ichabods bounced back with last week's 29-point rout.
The Ichabods have never faced Missouri Western in the NCAA Tournament and are 14-14 overall in tournament appearances.
Senior Tyler Geiman, who hit the game-winning 3-pointer against Northwest in the MIAA final, leads Washburn in scoring (21.2 points per game), assists (6.4 average) and rebounds (6.6 average).
Geiman recorded the first triple double in Washburn history with 17 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists against Northeastern State on Feb. 23.
Junior Jalen Lewis, the MIAA Tournament MVP, averages 13.8 points and has hit 68 of 134 3-point attempts.
He scored a career-high 29 points against Missouri Western in the MIAA Tournament semifinals and enters Saturday's game with 999 career points.
Sophomore Tyler Nelson averages 11.1 points while junior Jonny Clausing averages 9.8 points and 4.2 rebounds.
Tyrell Carroll leads Missouri Wester with a 17-point average and he also dishes out 4.2 assist per game. Will Eames averages 12.3 points and 8.6 rebounds while Caleb Bennett (11.7), Reese Glover (11.2) and Q Mays (11.3) also average in double figures.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
This time, close won't be enough.
After finishing second to Washburn Rural in the Class 6A girls state championship game two seasons ago, Hannah Alexander's Topeka High team rolled to a 25-0 record and a semifinal berth last March before having title shot No. 2 wiped out by COVID-19.
And while the Trojans received a lot of condolences and well-wishes after last year's sudden end to the year, it didn't really help much, so Topeka High is determined to end its "Third Year Is The Charm'' tour with the coveted state championship, which would be High's first girls crown since 1982.
"We're tired of the getting so close and the 'Oh, almost, and you should have and oh, you guys won it virtually,' '' Alexander said. "That doesn't mean anything to these kids, so we definitely want to make sure we come home with the hardware.
"We owe it to this town and to the Trojan family.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn Rural product Kendall Michalski and her Bethel College women's basketball teammates will make history Friday night when they step on the court at Wichita's Garvey Center for the Threshers' opening-round game against Vanguard in the NAIA National Championships.
Friday's 8 p.m. contest will mark the first time in the 48-year history of the program that Bethel has advanced to the national tournament, a big milestone in a season of big milestones for Michalski and the Bethel program.
Bethel, which will take a 16-9 record into the Vanguard game, was upset in the quarterfinals of the KCAC tournament, but ended up garnering the conference's second national bid behind conference champ and 29-0 Sterling.
"We were told we had a pretty good chance,'' Michalski told TopSports.news in a phone interview. "If Sterling won we were going, so we turned into some pretty big Warrior fans, cheering for Sterling.''
Bethel's trip to nationals is another sign of the dramatic progress the program has made under the fourth-year husband/wife Threshers coaching tandem of head coach Drew Johnson and assistant Nicole (Ohlde) Johnson, the former Kansas State star and WNBA player.
"(Bethel) actually only won four games the season before Drew and Nicole got here and they won a few more (12) Drew and Nicole's first year here and then when I got here my freshman year we went 20-10, which went down as the winningest team in school history,'' Michalski said. "And then just two years later here we are being the first team going to nationals, which is really cool.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Two seasons ago, Topeka High's girls basketball team had its shot at the Trojans' first Class 6A title since 1982 ended by city rival Washburn Rural in the championship game.
A year ago it was COVID-19 that ended High's title hopes, with state tournaments across the state canceled after first-round games due to COVID-19.
On Friday night, a year to the day since the 2020 tournament was canceled, Topeka High will be back at Wichita's Koch Arena to continue its quest for the most cherished prize in high school athletics -- a state title.
Down the road at Emporia's White Auditorium, Topeka West's boys will be aiming for only their third championship-game appearance and first state title in school history.
No. 2 seed Topeka High, 22-1 on the season, faces No. 3 Dodge City (21-1) in Friday's 7 p.m. semifinal, with the winner advancing to Saturday's 6 o'clock championship game at Koch to face the winner of the 3 p.m. semifinal between top seed Shawnee Mission Northwest (21-0) and No. 4 Olathe West (15-5).
Topeka West, meanwhile, has to deal with a key injury to junior Elijah Brooks as the second-seeded Chargers, 20-2 on the season, prepare to face No. 3 seed De Soto (19-3) in Friday's 7 o'clock semifinal in Emporia, with the West-De Soto winner advancing to Saturday's 6 o'clock title game to take on the winner of Friday's 3 o'clock semi between No. 1 seed Maize (21-2) and No. 4 Kansas City-Washington (10-4).
And although it won't be easy -- state championships never are -- I see title celebrations for both the Trojans and Chargers in their future.