- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Hayden and Seaman traded blows through the first half of Tuesday's Centennial League boys contest, but the Vikings got the best of the offensive flurry on the way to a 56-45 road win.
Hayden came out smoking against the Vikings, hitting four first-quarter 3-pointers while also converting a traditional 3-point play en route to a 19-7 advantage late in the quarter.
The Wildcats took a 19-9 lead into the second quarter, but Seaman responded to its double-digit deficit with a vengeance, hitting the Wildcats with a 21-5 second-quarter lick to take a 30-24 advantage at the half and held off Hayden the rest of the way to improve to 5-5 overall and 4-3 in the league.
"I was hoping at some point they might cool off, but they've got a number of capable guys and they came off a (Topeka West) game where they shot it really well, so they came out with a lot of confidence,'' Seaman coach Craig Cox said of the Wildcats. "It was more about picking up our defense, but also us being better offensively and to flip it like we did was a huge turnaround.''
"Their second quarter mirrored our first quarter,'' Hayden coach Torrey Head said. "They came back, and to their credit, smacked us right back as hard as we hit them and then they hit us a little harder. When baskets are falling it's easier to play and when baskets aren't falling you don't guard quite as well.''
Hayden (3-8, 2-6) battled back from a 10-point deficit early in the third quarter to get as close as 3 points on three occasions.
Hayden was within 5 (41-36) going into the fourth quarter and was still within 5 with 6:19 remaining before Seaman ended the game with a 10-4 run and led by 13 late.
The Wildcats fought foul problems throughout the game, with sophomore Joe Otting (10 points, 9 rebounds) and junior Trent Duffey both fouling out.
"I thought we came out the third quarter and made a little bit of a flurry and had a chance to make it a ballgame, but when certain guys aren't in the game for us it's awfully difficult for us to play like we'd like to,'' Head said.
Both teams lost key players to injuries in the second half, with Hayden senior Geivonnii Williams, who led the Wildcats with 12 points, leaving the game with 2:47 left in the third quarter and Seaman sophomore Kaeden Bonner exiting with 2:46 left in the game. Both players suffered injuries to their left ankles.
Junior Ty Henry led a balanced Seaman attack with 12 points while junior Mateo Hyman added 11 points and senior Micah Kobuszewski 10 as five Vikings scored at least seven points.
"After playing three games last weekend and just having the one practice, I wasn't sure how we were going to be and if we'd be able to respond with our legs, but our guys did a really good job and it always helps when you get contributions down the line,'' Cox said.
SEAMAN BOYS 56, HAYDEN 45
Seaman 9 21 11 15 -- 56
Hayden 19 5 12 9 -- 45
Seaman (5-5, 4-3) -- Hyman 2-3 7-8 11, Henry 5-12 0-1 12, Bonner 3-9 2-2 9, Stallbaumer 3-7 1-2 7, Davis 2-4 0-0 4, Brewer 1-2 0-0 2, Stuewe 0-2 0-0 0, Kobuszewski 4-5 1-2 10, Gormley 0-0 1-3 1, Finley 0-0 0-0 0, Griess 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-44 12-18 56
Hayden (3-8, 2-6) -- Williams 4-9 3-3 12, Muller 2-6 3-4 8, Duffey 2-6 0-0 6, Pivarnik 2-8 0-0 6, Otting 2-3 6-6 10, Bartlett 0-2 0-0 0, Gorman 1-4 0-0 3, Rice 0-2 0-0 0, Munoz-Frye 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 13-40 12-13 45.
3-point goals -- Seaman 4 (Henry 2, Bonner, Kobuszewski), Hayden 7 (Duffey 2, Pivarnik 2, Williams, Muller, Gorman). Total fouls -- Seaman 12, Hayden 18. Fouled out -- Duffey, Otting.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University track and field assistant Rick Attig doesn’t have anything left to prove in a coaching career that has included outstanding success at the high school, NCAA Division I and now Division II levels.
But the 68-year-old Attig is still enjoying himself too much to even think about walking away from the sport he loves.
“I don’t think I could do that,’’ Attig said. “I think it would drive me nuts. We have three acres and I could mow my grass. I still do that, but I just couldn’t imagine doing anything else than coaching. I’m still loving it.
“It’s one of those type of things that if I was retired, I would still want to do it as a hobby because I get lots of enjoyment out of it.’’
Attig may be best known for his work as a jumps and multi-events coach at the University of Kansas and Nebraska, but also enjoyed success at Raytown South (Mo.) High School early in his coaching career and at Blue Valley North before joining Washburn head coach Cameron Babb in 2016 to help relaunch the Ichabods’ track and field program after a long hiatus.
“I recruited Cameron to help me there at Blue Valley North,’’ Attig said. “I would try to recruit decathletes or heptathletes to help coach at Blue Valley North and Cameron came in and did just a really good job. He’s a really good coach and I really like him.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Veteran Washburn Rural volleyball and girls basketball coach Kevin Bordewick is one of 23 high school coaches from across the nation selected as 2020 National Coaches of the Year by the National Federation of of State High School Associations Coaches Association.
Bordewick, the lone honoree from Kansas, has been at Washburn Rural for 28 years, including 26 seasons as the Junior Blues' head volleyball coach and 12 seasons as Rural's head girls basketball coach.
Bordewick has coached Washburn Rural to seven Class 6A state championships in volleyball and one in basketball while compiling a 1,099-284 record at Rural (896-218 in volleyball, 203-66 in basketball). Bordewick has 1,175 career victories.
Bordewick was named a national coach of the year for the 2019-20 school year for volleyball.
"It's very humbling and I really think it's more of an award for eveybody that's been involved in some way, form or fashion for the Washburn Rural community,'' Bordewick said. "All the assistant coaches that we've had, the administrators, the athletic directors, the principals, the school board, to me you can't have any of that (success) without their support and continual backing.''
And, of course, Bordewick knows his programs have been blessed with talented student-athletes over the years.
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
HUNTER BENTLEY, Washburn University
A senior guard, Bentley scored 34 points in two games on the week for the Ichabods en route to becoming the 24th member of Washburn women's basketball 1,000-point club. Bentley scored a game-high 21 points (4 3-pointers) in a 73-49 win over Lincoln and reached her career milestone with 13 points (3 3-pointers) in a 64-55 loss to Emporia State.
NOAH HASTERT, Cair Paravel Latin
Hastert, a 6-foot-6 junior, scored 19 points and also contributed 6 rebounds, 6 assists and 5 steals as Cair Paravel improved to 7-3 on the season with a 74-45 road victory at Burlingame, the Lions' 4th straight victory.
- Details
TopSports.news
Romain Henry won a gold medal and set school records in a pair of events to lead the Washburn University men's track and field team in Saturday's Kansas Open at the Washburn Indoor Athletic Facility.
The Ichabod men set two school records while posting 20 top-10 finishes with 12 personal-bests and NCAA provisional marks in Saturday's meet while the WU women tallied 15 top-10 finishes, two NCAA provisionals and a school record.
Henry, a freshman from Aix En Provence, France, broke his own school record in the 60-meter hurdles in 8.12 seconds, recording an NCAA provisional mark with the fifth-fastest time in the nation this season en route to his second straight win in that event.
Henry placed second in the 400-meter dash, breaking the school record in the event by over a half second while turning in a time of 49.41.
Logan Stock finished second in the men's high jump with a jump of 6-foot-61/4 inch and was fourth in the 60 hurdles (8.51), while Nasjon Porter was second in the triple jump at 45-11/2, while Peyton Lane was fourth in the pole vaul at 15-10, earning an NCAA provisional mark. Former Washburn Rural state champ Zac Chandler was sixth in the pole vault at 14-101/4.
Junior Sierra Mortensen, a Maize South product, won the women's mile run in a time of 5:18.24, while Lily Johnson finished second in the 800 meters, breaking her own school record in a time of 2:19.46.
Junior Virgi Scardanzan, from Preganziol, Italy, was second in the women's pole vault, recording an NCAA provisional mark and a indoor personal-best at 12-113/4. That vault is tied for the second-best in the nation this season. Rachael Mayberry placed third in the pole vault at 12-4. Skyler Saunders finished second in the high jump, clearing 5-51/4.
Hayden product Darian Hillebert placed fifth in the 200 (26.35).