- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
NOTE: Top.Sports.news will compile a weekly track and field honor roll for Shawnee County high schools throughout the 2023 season. Coaches are asked to email updated times and marks or any corrections to Rick Peterson at
BOYS
100 METERS
Dunshee, Hayden 10.94
Rollenhagen, Silver Lake 11.08
Heiman, Silver Lake 11.23
Murph, Topeka High 11.28
Peoples, Topeka High 11.35
200 METERS
Cochran, Seaman 22.70
Rollenhagen, Silver Lake 22.79
Murph, Topeka High 23.06
Berry-Briggs, Shawnee Heights 23.08
Mack, Topeka High 23.55
400 METERS
Schrickel, Hayden 51.09
Terry, Washburn Rural 52.95
Benz, Shawnee Heights 53.02
Roeder, Topeka High 53.25
Chooncharoen, Washburn Rural 53.41
800 METERS
Esquibel, Shawnee Heights 2:05.09
Anderson, Seaman 2:05.59
Johnson, Washburn Rual 2:07.92
Stuke, Seaman 2:10.22
Dial, Washburn Rural 2:10.62
1,600 METERS
Esquibel, Shawnee Heights 4:29.61
Njoroge, Topeka West 4:29.84
Dial, Washburn Rural 4:39.16
Wilkie, Topeka West 4:55.15
King, Washburn Rural 5:00.00
3,200 METERS
Njoroge, Topeka West 9:34.11
Jowers, Seaman 10:23.75
Fink, Washburn Rual 10:34.34
Wilkie, Topeka West 11:01.38
Carter, Shawnee Heights 11:16.39
- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
With Washburn University's football team graduating 21 seniors from last year's 7-4 team, including All-Americans JJ Letcher and Grant Bruner, there's going to be plenty of opportunities for many of the Ichabods' younger players to step into major roles this fall.
And veteran WU coach Craig Schurig felt that like spring practice, which concluded with Saturday's Spring Game at Yager Stadium, showed that a lot of those young players are ready for that.
"I really felt good about the work our young guys got in,'' Schurig said. "We had a lot of guys over the last two years, because of the extra senior class that you had, that haven't really been able to play and we got them involved in what we call our 1s-2s scrimmages and they stepped up.
"So I like our depth, I like the way those guys performed. They've been patient and it seems like it's going to pay off for them. I really liked the way some of the young guys really showed out and the older guys were good leaders and they got the reps they needed.''
- Details
By ISAAC DEER
TopSports.news
Despite suffering a 15-3, run-rule loss to Manhattan in the first game of the twinbill, Topeka High’s softball team had a memorable rally fall just short in a 14-12 extra-inning loss in Game 2 on Friday night at Hummer Sports Park.
As usual, the Kansas weather played a factor in Friday night’s Centennial League matchup. With 55 mph winds in effect and an unbeaten rival rolling into the Capital City, it wasn’t going to be an easy matchup for a young, mostly inexperienced Topeka High team.
The two-time defending Class 6A state champions have a lot of new faces in the lineup this season, and the coach that led them to those state championships knows that it’s going to take some repetitions to get fully acclimated to this season.
"We got a target on our back, being the defending 6A state champion the last two years,” Topeka High coach Shane Miles said. “Everybody is going to give us their best shot. We have a lot of new faces, too. We are just trying to find that mix that works for us. We just have to go back to work on Monday and forget about this. We will be a tough team to put out come later this season.”
- Details
By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights rolled through a doubleheader with Topeka West Friday at Hummer Sports Park, getting two good starts from its pitchers and extended rallies at the plate to sweep the United Kansas Conference twinbill, 16-1 and 18-2.
T-Bird senior pitcher Nic Perez set the tone, recording all nine outs of a shortened game by strikeout. Perez permitted a walk and a double that produced a run in the first frame, but then struck out the next seven batters he faced.
Shawnee Heights coach Ryan Schmidt said it was good to see Perez, an Emporia State baseball commit, bounce back from a rough first outing against Bishop Miege last week.
“Nic is a senior we’re going to look to as a leader on the mound,” Schmidt said. “He needed to get a good start and we got that out of him today. He needed that for himself to get on a roll.”
“I was struggling to finish guys off,” Perez said of his first start last Tuesday. “It seemed like just about every single one of my counts were 0-2 or 1-2 but then I struggled finishing guys off. Today I think I was just able to command my fastball better.”
- Details
By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
After rolling to a 17-7 six-inning win over Washburn Rural in the first-game of Friday's non-league twinbill, Seaman's baseball team failed to capitalize on several opportunities to put the nightcap away.
But after seeing Rural rally from 7-4, 8-5 and 9-6 deficits to tie the game in the top of the seventh, Trent Oliva's Vikings came up with the clincher in the bottom of the seventh, with junior Kaiden Griffin delivering a two-out walkoff single to give Seaman a 10-9 win and a sweep of the home doubleheader.
"We felt like some things weren't going our way,'' Oliva said. "We were ahead after the first inning but it always felt like it was a tie game or we were one down. But we were able to keep the lead the whole time until the seventh and just battled through some adversity the whole game.
"Give credit to Washburn Rural because they put the pressure on us, but we were able to answer the call at the end of the game.''
Washburn Rural was within one strike of forcing extra innings before Griffin put a ball in the hole between first and second to score junior Holden Finley, who walked.
"In that situation (Griffin) has two strikes, with the bases loaded and two outs and the goal there for us is to put the ball in play and see what happens and that's exactly what he did and it went our way that time,'' Oliva said.