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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Former Seaman volleyball star Camryn Turner, who will play at Kansas this fall, was named the TopSports.news Topeka Shawnee County Fall Female Athlete of the year during Wednesday's banquet and Hall of Fame induction ceremony at the Maner Conference Center.
Turner was the city and Centennial League player of the year and earned All-Class 5A honors as the Vikings ended a lengthy state tournament drought last fall.
"Camryn Turner was an outstanding volleyball player for our program,'' Seaman coach Tatiana Dowling said. "She elevated the level of our program through her play in practice and in games. Cam .worked harder than anyone on the team and she did that all the time. She had a positive attitude and became a leader for our team, especially in her last season.''
Turner was also an All-City and All-Centennial League basketball player for the Vikings over her three seasons in that sport.
Other nominees:
AUBREY BAHNER | Silver Lake
PARENTS: Darwin and Antoinette Bahner
SPORT: Cross Country | GPA: 4.0
Bahner was a cross and track standout for Silver Lake, earning four varsity letters in both sports for the Eagles. In cross country Bahner was a three-time Class 3A state qualifier and a two-time state medalist, earning medals in all but one meet over those two seasons. She was also a state qualifier in multiple events in track. "Aubrey methodically works hard to get better every day,'' Silver Lake cross country coach Kevin Brokaw said. "She makes every team she is part of better. She is truly a quality individual.'' Bahner will attend Tabor College, where she plans to compete in both cross country and track.
SARA EGGENBERGER | Shawnee Heights
PARENTS: Melinda Clemens
SPORT: Golf | GPA: 4.45
Eggenberger earned second-team All-City recognition as a senior. "Sara brings a positive level of energy and spirit to practice and meets,'' Shawnee Heights golf coach Jane Yi said. "Sara is focused and determined, often practicing many hours a week on her own time. She has a sense of friendliness and fair play, often treating people courteously especially when they are not doing so well. Sara's healthy perspective and cheerful demeanor have made her a wonderful “cheerleader'' on the team. Sara also puts the same positive and hard work attitude into her studies.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Kyle McNorton was one of the greatest linebackers in University of Kansas football history, helping lead the Jayhawks to a major turnaround in the late 1970s and early '80s.
The former Seaman star still bleeds Jayhawk Blue and continues to hold out hope for a similar KU turnaround after its recent struggles.
"We've had season tickets through all this, the good and the bad,'' said McNorton, inducted Wednesday into the Topeka Shawnee County Sports Hall of Fame. "We went to the (2008) Orange Bowl, and at the time we joked about it, but now it might be true that it might have been the only chance I had to go to a big bowl game.''
McNorton played at Kansas from 1978-81 and at the time was the all-time leading tackler in school history with 381 tackles.
He was named the Jayhawks' MVP and was a unanimous first-team All Big 8 selection and earned All-America recognition his senior season after KU earned a berth in the Hall of Fame Classic.
"We went 1-10 my first year under Bud Moore and then got better each year under Coach Fam (Don Fambrough) and our senior year we were a Top 20 team,'' McNorton said.
The Jayhawks have struggled off and on since then, particularly in recent seasons, but McNorton maintains optimism that things will get better.
"We still have season tickets and we tailgate with a lot of my old teammates, so it's fun,'' he said. "You keep hoping, right? It's disappointing, there's no doubt about that. You're disappointed in the fact that they can't do better than they are, but they are also in one of the top conferences, which makes it even harder.
"And football is such a team sport. You have to have all the pieces. It takes 11 or really 22 to be a really good team, so I think it's really harder for a football team to turn it around.''
After finishing up his career at Kansas, McNorton got the opportunity to play two seasons for the Kansas City Chiefs before knee injuries ended his NFL career.
"I got hurt both years, the same knee,'' McNorton said. "The first year it didn't tear it up. It was twisted or stretched or whatever, and then the next year in the second or third game I tore it up on an interception (against the Bengals).
"I should have dropped the ball. I was covering a guy out in the flat and made a one-handed grab and took off. Turk Schonert (the Cincinnati quarterback) was who it was and he had the angle on me and hit me and it just twisted and tore it all up. I got a fake knee out of that deal now.''
McNorton was cut loose by the Chiefs after the second injury and said he knew in his heart that his playing days were over.
"They called me in and told me they weren't re-signing my contract and you're free to go play for somebody else, but I was done,'' he said.
McNorton still feels that if not for the injuries he could have put together an extended NFL career.
"Being there and playing in a few games and practicing, I really do,'' McNorton said. "Now it wouldn't have been a Tom Brady career, but I think it was very reasonable to think I could have made it.''
As is the case with KU, McNorton continues to be a big fan of the Chiefs.
"I've watched them and been just as loyal as I have been to KU through every game throughout the years,'' he said. "It's a lot more furn watching now than it had been.''
And although his playing career ended a lot sooner than he would have liked, McNorton has no complaints with how things turned out.
McNorton went back to school and got his college degree from Kansas. Then, after going through a few other jobs, he hooked on with Topeka's Capital City Oil 27 years ago.
"It's been a good run,'' he said. "This has been a good fit. When I started here I was the fifth employee and we've got 35 now, so we've grown a lot. We've done a lot of good things and its been through the hard work that everybody here has put in. It's a team effort.''
Hall of Fame Class of 2021 capsules:
KYLE McNORTON
McNorton attended Northern Hills Junior High and graduated from Seaman, where he was student council president, Homecoming King and participated in football, basketball, wrestling and track.
McNorton qualified for the state meet in his one season of wrestling while in track McNorton ran sprints, setting the school record in the 440-yard dash, and competed in various field events.
He started all three years as a running back and linebacker for the Vikings in football and led the city of Topeka in yards per carry as a senior while earning all-league and All-City recognition. McNorton earned Most Valuable Player honors in the Kansas Shrine Bowl the summer following his high school graduation.
McNorton started the last three games of his freshman season at linebacker for Kansas and started the next three seasons as the Jayhawks improved from 1-10 his freshman season to a nationally-ranked Top 20 team his senior year.
McNorton ended his career with 381 tackles, at the time the all-time leading tackler in school history. He was named the Jayhawks' MVP and was a unanimous first-team All Big 8 selection and earned All-America recognition.
McNorton signed a professional contract with the Chiefs and was selected the MVP of a game against New Orleans Saints game before his NFL career was cut short due to knee injuries.
KYLE WEEMS
Weems earned All-State basketball honors as a senior at Highland Park after the Scots became only the second boys team in city history to post anundefeated season en route to the Class 5A state championship.
Weems went on to put together one of the most outstanding college careers in Missouri State history. He was named the Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year and an NCAA Division I All-American following the 2010-11 season.
Weems averaged 16 points and 8 rebounds as a junior as the Bears won the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title.
Weems finished his college career No. 2 on Missouri State's career scoring list with 1,868 points, tied for No. 4 in rebounds with 844 and No. 6 in blocks with 114.
A 6-foot-6 forward, Weems has played professional basketball overseas since 2012, playing in Germany, France, Turkey and Italy.
Weems, who played in the NBA Summer League in 2012 and 2013 for the Warriors, Raptors and Hawks, is currently playing for Virtus Bologna of the Italian Lega Basket Serie A, helping the team win the Italian title earlier this spring.
MICHAEL WILHOITE
Wilhoite was a football and basketball standout at Highland Park before becoming a football standout for Washburn University and playing in the NFL for the San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks.
Wilhoite played quarterback at Highland Park and was used at six different positions for Washburn before playing linebacker and becoming a special teams standout in the NFL.
Wilhoite, 6-foot, 245 pounds, earned a spot on the 49ers practice squad in late 2011 and was promoted to the active roster late in the 2012 season, helping San Francisco make a run to Super Bowl XLVII.
"We were battling to be the cellar-dweller. My freshman year they beat us out there and I can remember the game. The crowd rushed the field with about a minute to go and they were trying to tear down the goal post and the game was still going on. It was crazy.
After playing five seasons for the 49ers, Wilhoite finished his playing career with the Seahawks in '17.
Wilhoite played in 79 NFL games with 45 starts, recording 298 tackles with four pass interceptions.
Wilhoite spent the '19 and '20 seasons as an assistant coach for the New Orleans Saints and is currently the linebackers coach for the Los Angeles Chargers.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
The 2020-21 basketball season was so much fun that Washburn University star point guard Tyler Geiman jumped at the chance to do it all over again.
Geiman, who will be honored Wednesday night as TopSports.news' Washburn Co-Male Athlete of the Year, has already earned his bachelor's degree and had several other options he could have explored.
There were other Division II stars who opted to transfer to the Division I level while Geiman could have also looked into playing professionally, but for Geiman the choice to return to the Ichabods for one last go-around was an easy one.
"I'd say it was pretty much a done deal,'' the 6-foot-1 Geiman said. "I wanted to get my masters so I was like, 'I don't want to be working on that and not still play basketball,' so it worked out really well actually because now I can still do both.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University All-American pole-vaulter Virgi Scardanzan is already looking forward to the next Olympic Summer Games after a near miss in last weekend's Absolute Italian Championships.
Scardanzan finished a strong second in her country's national meet at Rovereto, Italy to put herself in a spot to represent Italy in the upcoming Tokyo Summer Games, but her second-place jump of 4.3 meters (14 feet, 1.25 inches) fell short of the minimum height of 4.7 meters to be able to compete in the Olympics.
Nevertheless, Scardanzan's performance left her nothing but upbeat looking ahead.
"It's an incredible sensation," Scardanzan said in a Zoom call with Topeka media Monday morning. "I've worked so hard for it this year and behind this year there are many years of dedication, passion and hard working. I want to say that this year has been an incredible year."
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Before the 2021 college golf season began, Andrew Beckler was ready to walk away from competitive sports at the end of his senior year.
One of the greatest seasons in Washburn University history changed his mind, with the Division II Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year now looking forward to launching his professional golf career later this summer.
"I was pretty dead set on just finding a job after golf,'' Beckler said. "I expected myself to play well, but I won some tournaments and I won a few by a little bit more than I was expecting to, had some really good rounds, and then winning the Jack Nicklaus Award I think was a big confidence boost for me.
"That kind of showed me that I could compete in this game at a professional level, so I'm going to turn pro in August. I'll play a few more amateur events and one more Kansas Amateur and then turn pro.''