
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights junior running back Allen Baughman went into Friday night's United Kansas Conference game against Topeka West knowing that he needed just 13 yards to reach the 1,000-yard rushing mark on the season.
Shawnee Heights junior running back Allen Baughman went over the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the season in Friday's 49-6 UKC win over Topeka West. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
Shawnee Heights junior Allen Baughman (5) is congratulated by teammates after one of his five touchdowns in Friday's 49-6 win over Topeka West. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
Baughman took care of that milestone when he gained 22 yards on his first carry of the night and he went on to 128 yards and five touchdowns on just 10 attempts as Shawnee Heights (4-3 overall, 4-2 UKC) snapped a two-game losing streak with a 49-6 romp past the Chargers at Hummer Sports Park.
"I didn't think I would come out this season do what I've done but I really just powered through the adversity of coming straight to varsity from JV and not really seeing the field (last year),'' Baughman said. "I am doing good, my whole line's doing good and we're doing good things.''
Baughman said it was important for the T-Birds to get back on track Friday after back-to-back losses to undefeated De Soto and Wamego.
"It was real important,'' Baughman said. "We knew we had to come out here and handle business. They have some good players and we knew if we won this game we'd have momentum going to Homecoming week and we needed that.''
Topeka West (1-6, 1-6) put together one of its best drives of the night on its opening possession, reaching the Shawnee Heights 12-yard-line before senior Jayden Berry recovered a Charger fumble.
"I thought Topeka West did a great job of coming out and giving us their best shot and they moved the ball, but credit our defense for bending and not breaking and making a great strip of the ball,'' Shawnee Heights coach Jason Swift said. "The offense did a nice job of answering and that was big. The offense needed to come back and show that they could run the ball and set the tone for the night and they did on that first series.''
Baughman gained 58 yards on four carries on Heights' first possession, capping the drive with a 4-yard touchdown run with 6:16 left in the first quarter.
Baughman made it 13-0 with a 26-yard TD with 2:15 left in the first and added his third TD of the opening stanza with a 17-yard scamper and followed with a 2-point conversion to put the T-Birds in command 21-0 with 3.9 seconds left in the period.

- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Returning state champions Ainzley Zulueta of Hayden and Lauren Sweeney of Seaman are two wins away from another title, advancing to the semifinals in their respective state tournaments, while the Hayden doubles team of Lauren Sandstrom and Emily Sheetz also advanced to the final four.
Hayden sophomore Ainzley Zulueta advanced to the Class 4A singles semifinals Friday with two straight-set wins. [FIle photo/TSN]
Hayden junior Lauren Sandstrom (left) and Emily Sheetz (middle) advanced to the Class 4A doubles semifinals with a pair of Friday wins. [File photo/TSN]
After winning a state doubles title last season, Seaman senior Lauren Sweeney advanced to the Class 5A singles semifinals on Friday in Andover. [File photo/TSN]
Zulueta, who won the Class 4A state singles championship as a freshman, advanced to Saturday's semifinals with a pair of wins at Harmon Park.
Zulueta, now 26-2, earned her semifinal berth with a 6-1, 6-2 quarterfinal win over Winfield senior Vivien Laszlo.
Sandstrom, a junior, and sophomore Sheetz (32-4) will play in a 4A doubles semifinal after going 2-0 on the day, including a 6-1, 6-4 win over Buhler in the quarterfinals.
Seaman's Sweeney, a senior, won a 5A doubles championship as a junior and will take a 31-5 record into the singles semifinals on Saturday in Andover.
Sweeney went 2-0 on Friday including a 6-2, 6-3 win over Andover's Gaddis in the state quarterfinals.
Several other Shawnee County players remained alive for state medalis, competing on the backside of the state brackets.
Saturday competition at all sites will get under way at 9 a.m.
Related Stories and Videos

- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn men's basketball coach Brett Ballard knows you don't lose players like Tyler Geiman, Jalen Lewis and Jonny Clausing without feeling it.
But as the Ichabods prepare to open official practice on Saturday for the 2022-2023 season, Ballard feels good about the group he'll go to battle with.
Michael Keegan (23) is a top returner for Washburn men's basketball, which officially opens practice on Saturday. [File photo/TSN]
Brett Ballard's Washburn University men's basketball team is coming off a 22-11 record and an NCAA Tournament appearance last season. [File photo/TSN]
"When you loe guys who were as good of players as Geiman and Lewis and Clausing and as good of people as they were, it's always concerning,'' said Ballard, whose Ichabods went 22-11 and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament last season. "But I will say this about our returning core group of guys, they have been phenomenal, starting last spring.
"With our workouts last spring and this summer and with our fall stuff they have been really invested, really connected, great effort, attitude, all the things you look for, so that's really encouraging because you never know. You lose a group and you wonder what your culture's going to be like, but I'm really pleased with where this group is.''
Washburn will build this year's team around veterans like 6-foot-6 sophomore Michael Keegan, 6-3 junior Connor Deffebaugh, 6-3 junior Tyler Nelson and 6-4 sophomore Levi Braun.
Keegan averaged 9.4 points and 6.1 rebounds a year ago while Deffebaugh averaged 9.1 points and Nelson 6.5 points.
Braun, the former Hayden standout, averaged 4.1 points last season and connected on 32 3-pointers.

- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Former Washburn University women's basketball standout Lora Westling said she never really seriously thought about getting the chance to coach her alma mater as she climbed the coaching ranks.
But when longtime WU coach Ron McHenry announced his retirement following the 2021-2022 season, there was no doubt that Washburn was the place Westling wanted to be.
"I was a little bit heartbroken. as I'm sure everyone was, when coach Mac decided to retire, but once that news kind of settled in, then of course I was interested,'' Westling said. "This is one of the best Division II jobs in the country,.so anybody who says they wouldn't be interested is lying to you.''
Westling played at Washburn from 2001 to 2005 and helped McHenry's Lady Blues win the school's first NCAA Division II national championship in 2005 before embarking on her coaching career.
Westling, who coached the past six seasons at Western Colorado, was tapped as McHenry's successor last spring and will get her official start on Saturday when the Ichabods begin practice for the upcoming season.
Westling said she is pleased with the progress the Ichabods, 14-16 last season, have made in the offseason.
"It's been great from the standpoint that the women in our program have been really receptive to all of the new and it's been a lot of new really quickly for them, not just technically on the floor but also culturally and just kind of getting adjusted to a whole new staff,'' Westling said.
"They've been tremendously receptive and I've been really proud of them for that. They've had great coachability and they're trying. I'm really fortunate to have two outstanding assistants (J'nae Squires-Horton and Will Marchino) here with me and we're all growing in the same direction. I'm really excited about the foundation that we're laying.''

- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Nobody has to tell Washburn University star receiver/returner James Letcher Jr. how big he is -- the 5-foot-8, 175-pounder has been reminded of that his whole career.
But sometime Satuday afternoon in Maryville, Mo., the little guy that very few colleges gave a second look to is likely to stride proudly into Washburn's record book as the leading receiver in school history.
Senior star James Letcher Jr. is two catches away from being the leading receiver in Washburn school history. [Photo courtesy of Washburn Athletics]
The Ichabod All-American will enter Saturday's 1:30 p.m. game at Northwest Missouri with 189 career receptions, just two catches behind Sam Sisson, who played at WU from 2002-2006.
"I just wanted to get on the field and play,'' Letcher said. "Coming out of high school I wasn't recruited that much, so I wasn't too sure if I was actually going to be able to play college football.
"Believe it or not, I was actually going to go to Fort Hays at first. I liked the coach they had and the way they were talking to me about how much they wanted me. I was like, 'OK, I think this is where I want to go,' but they didn't get to offer me and then Washburn came in and offered me. That was the only reason I ended up coming here because they offered me. If nobody would have offered me I don't think I would have been playing, but I think everything worked out great.''
Fast forward to the 2022 season and Letcher is in line to finish among the top five in WU history in virtually every receiving/return category.
Letcher's 24.9 yards per kickoff return is second all-time at Washburn, his 2,482 receiving yards rank fifth and his 25 TD receptions also rank No. 5.
His 4,840 career all-purpose yards rank second all-time at Washburn and Letcher ranks third among active NCAA Division II players with 4,903 all-purpose yards, fourth with 2,521 receiving yards and third with his 189 receptions.
"I didn't even know if I was going to play on a team, so being able to work this hard and have unrealistic dreams come true is just crazy,'' Letcher said. "I never would have thought I would be at the top of the list for receptions or top five or top 10 in any of these things, but it's really a blessing and I can't do nothing but thank God and thank my parents for making me this monster on the field.''