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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
PARK CITY -- Shawnee Heights senior wrestling standout Rykan Carver earned his first Class 5A state medal Saturday night at Hartman Arena.
And that one medal was THE medal, with Carver winning the 5A 285-pound state championship with a 4-3 overtime win over St. Thomas Aquinas sophomore Stephen Carroll.
"It just feel great,'' Carver said. "It feels like hard work's paying off. I'm very grateful for all my coaches and teammates and family that believed in me and helped me along the way when I didn't really always believe in myself. It feels good.''
Carver said he started thinking he might be able to challenge at state after winning a regional championship a week earlier.
"I was hoping to medal,'' Carver said. "That was really my main goal, just to medal, and then see how far I could take it and I ended up getting all the way, so I'm grateful for that.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
PARK CITY -- Washburn Rural junior wrestling star Easton Broxterman admits that he used to be a bundle of nerves before he took the mat for a big match.
These days it's Broxterman's opponents that should be nervous.
"This year's been different,'' Broxterman said. "I've been pretty confident and I've been wanting to wrestle, but before that I think if you ask any of my coaches, I was always the most nervous.
"I always felt like throwing up. I threw up a lot before all my matches, but this year I've just been anxious, not even been nervous anymore, just ready to go out there.''
On Saturday night at Hartman Arena Broxterman appeared to be as cool as a cucumber as he methodically posted a 15-0 second-period technical fall over Maize freshman Vincent Rosas to earn his second straight Class 6A state championship in his third straight final-round appearance.
From un-ranked to un-equaled: Washburn Rural girls wrestling rolls to repeat Class 6A-5A state crown
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
PARK CITY -- Washburn Rural's Damon Parker loves every team he's coached, but the 2023-2024 Junior Blues girls wrestling team will always hold a special place in his heart.
The Junior Blues spent much of the season-unranked in Class 6A-5A and entered the state meet ranked sixth, but Saturday night Washburn Rural was back on the Hartman Arena floor celebrating their second straight state team championship and an amazing fourth title in five years.
Parker looked at the championship as icing on the cake to what he said has been the most fun he's ever had as a coach.
"Ever,'' Parker said. "It's not like one of the most, it is the most. When you've really got to earn it, it is so much more rewarding, it's so much more valuable and we had to earn everything this year. We have four kids this year that we anticipated having on the roster that weren't able to compete with us this year, and those four kids were state medalists.
"That's worth about 60 team points and you don't take 60 points off the board and then repeat as state champs. It doesn't happen. That's taking Jordan and Scottie Pippen off the Bulls and then expecting them to repeat. It doesn't work that way and (the Junior Blues) somehow found a way. They got it done.''
Junior 105-pound runnerup Molly Spader, who earned her second state medal with a 35-3 record on the year, was one of six Junior Blues to earn state medals as Rural posted a 118-96 win over Garden City, with Dodge City third with 87 points.
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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
A Thursday night home win over Lincoln gave the Washburn women’s basketball team a brief reprieve from a seven-game losing streak. But the Ichabods couldn’t string together a second win Saturday, losing 69-56 at home to Central Missouri State.
The loss dropped Washburn to 7-13 in the MIAA and 12-14 overall.
“Winning is that magic drug that cures a lot,” Washburn coach Lora Westling said. “We had good practices coming off that. But this league is pretty unforgiving.”
The Ichabods were plagued by turnovers and struggled to get much offense going in the first 15 minutes. Their slow start permitted the Jennies to establish a double-digit advantage in the second period.
But Washburn came rushing back late in the period with a seven-point run, closing the gap to 30-27 at halftime.
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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
The Washburn men took another step Saturday toward achieving their goals, and took revenge on a team that beat them earlier in the season in the process.
The Ichabods trounced Central Missouri State – a team that beat them by 11 points in January – at Lee Arena Saturday by a score of 68-49.
The Mules warmed up with just eight players and employed just seven of them in the contest. The two leading scorers from the first meeting did not suit up on Saturday. Still, Washburn coach Brett Ballard saw no need to apologize for the drubbing.
“They weren’t at full strength, and they were trying to piece some things together. But still, I don’t think we have to apologize for winning a league game by 20,” Ballard said. “You never want to lose twice to a team, so winning today was big for a lot of reasons.”
The Ichabods were methodical in their handling of the Mules. They steadily pulled away, leading 33-19 at halftime and continuing to stretch the lead throughout. With two minutes remaining, Ballard cleared his bench.
The Ichabods had four players in double figures, led by guard Jarmell Johnson, who came off the bench to score 14, his high point output in the MIAA this year.
“My teammates looked for me today,” Johnson said. “I kind of had the hot hand, so they kept looking for me. We had a really great game plan.”