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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University's women's basketball team had nine different players score and turned in a strong defensive showing in the Ichabods' 61-49 MIAA win over Northeastern State on Saturday afternoon at Lee Arena.
The Ichabods held an 8-6 advantage midway through the first quarter when a free throw from freshman Yibari Nwidadah started a 7-0 run to extend the lead.
Washburn finished the opening period in front, 15-9, and made nine of 10 attemps at the free throw line.
Washburn, 9-10 overall and 5-8 in the MIAA, scored five unanswered points in the second quarter and the Ichabod defense held Northeastern State scoreless until the 3:36 mark.
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Entering Saturday's third annual Washburn Women's Invitational, Washburn Rural senior star Addison Broxterman had no idea she was on the cusp of Kansas girls wrestling history.
And Broxterman, who set state records for pins and total wins en route to the 125-pound championship in the 34-school tournament, is very grateful that Junior Blues coach Damon Parker kept that secret from her.
"I'm a very nervous person and everybody knows that,'' Broxterman said. "It was definitely a good thing not to know. That was probably one of the best matches I ever wrestled (setting the pin record). It felt really good so I'm very grateful that he did not tell me.''
Broxterman opened the day with back-to-back pins to move past Great Bend's Brianna Ridgeway for the state pin record and became the winningest wrestler in Kansas girls history with her third win of the day, also moving past Ridgeway in that category.
In both cases Broxterman had no idea what was going on until it was announced to the large crowd in attendance.
"No, neither time,'' Broxterman said. "I was like, 'What is happening?' I was like, 'Why are they announcing my 117th pin?' That's so random.''
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Taylin Stallbaumer hit a 3-pointer as time ran down, Seaman, top-ranked in Class 5A, the Glaciers Edge Tournament championship with a 46-43 win over tournament host Emporia Saturday at Emporia.
Emporia, ranked No. 4 in 5A, tied the game with a traditional three-point play with 49 seconds remaining, but Stallbaumer, a junior, canned her game-winning shot to cap a 15-point game with her third 3-pointer.
"I told the girls before the game to do the things that are hard to do and the power will come,'' Seaman coach Matt Tinsley said. "We had some kids step up and be brave tonight.''
Seaman, which improved to 11-1, led 7-5 at the end of the opening quarter before Emporia took a 20-18 advantage at the half.
Seaman got hot in the third quarter en route to opening up a 36-38 advantage over the 12-2 Spartans and Vikings went in front 41-32 in the fourth stanza before Emporia used an 8-0 run to get within a point (41-40) with under two minutes remaining, setting the stage for the exciting finish.
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By ISAAC DEER
TopSports.news
LAWRENCE – No. 7-ranked (Class 6A) Topeka High avenged its 2022 state quarterfinal loss to No. 8 Blue Valley with a thrilling 56-51 win in Saturday's championship game of the Firebird Winter Classic.
Topeka High coach Brittney Redmond's whiteboard said, 'You owe them,' and although Redmond wasn't the coach last year when the Lady Trojans lost to Blue Valley in the state tournament, she echoed this game's importance to the players.
"Before this game, I told them you owe them something," Redmond said. "We kind of got off to a rough start and dug a hole for ourselves, but our halftime talk was that we were beating ourselves.
"It was all about effort and who wanted it more. If we could control our effort and give everything we got, we were going to win this game."
A key component to Blue Valley's squad is Oklahoma State commit Jayden Wooten. Wooten ended Topeka High's season last year on a driving layup as time ran out. On Saturday afternoon, that was on the mind of Topeka High.
"Coming into this game, I didn't know if we were going to stop (Wooten), but our game plan was to contain (Wooten)," Redmond said. "We had to play tight defense on her, but I told Keimara (Marshall) to take a step back and force her to shoot the ball."
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
When Hayden and Spring Hill met in the Wildcats' season opener it took a dramatic comeback from a 19-point deficit as well as an overtime period for Hayden to outlast the Broncos.
Saturday's rematch wasn't quite as dramatic, but even more important, with No. 10-ranked (Class 4A) Hayden taking control in the second half to win the Wellsville Top Gun Tournament championship with a 48-39 win over the Broncos.
With Saturday's win Hayden avenged a loss to Spring Hill in the 2022 Wellsville championship game.
Hayden trailed by a point (11-10) at the end of the first quarter and led by just a point (18-17) at halftime before outscoring the Broncos by a 30-22 margin in the second half.
"I thought we really guarded well and when we got the lead really played with poise and made smart decisions,'' Hayden coach Carvel Reynoldson said.