Washburn defensive standout Jordan Finnesy chomping at the bit to get back on the field for Ichabods
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Jordan Finnesy was a three-sport athlete at Plainville before immediately earning playing time for Washburn University's football team as a freshman in 2021 and quickly developing into a defensive leader for the Ichabods at safety over his first two seasons.
So being forced to watch from the sidelines after suffering a season-ending knee injury on the third play of the second game of the year was one of the most frustrating experiences Finnesy has ever had to deal with.
Now back at 100 percent, the 6-foot-1, 210-pound junior is focusing all of his attention on making up for lost time this fall, beginning with the Ichabods' Aug. 29 season-opener at Emporia State.
"I just feel like a big bundled up ball of emotion and when that first game comes I'm going to let it all out and I'm going to be ready to go,'' said Finnesy, who has played in 25 games with 13 starts for the Ichabods.
Finnesy's injury was one of many the Ichabods suffered in '23 en route to a 2-9 record and he said that, along with being picked ninth out of 10 teams in the MIAA preseason polls, should serve as motivation for the entire Washburn team.
"All the guys, we're just hungry to get going and really just prove ourselves,'' said Finnesy, who has registered 106 career tackles with 72 solo stops. "Going out the way that we did (last season) you never really get over it. That's always on your mind and I'm just really excited for that first game for all the guys. It's going to be a different Washburn team than a lot of people have seen and we're going to go out and attack anybody they put in front of us.
"A lot of things go into a season and a record like that, but at the end of the day all you see is the record so nothing else matters. We lost nine games and that's how it is, so it's really just coming back and regrouping as a team and figuring out areas that we need to be better in and areas that we were good in that we can take to the next level.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Kansas basketball legend Ron Slaymaker and veteran soccer coach Tim Collins are part of a group of 12 new varsity head coaches who have been announced by Shawnee County high schools for the 2024-2025 school year.
Slaymaker, the former longtime Emporia State men's basketball coach who most recently coached girls basketball at Olpe after a seven-year stint with the Chase County girls, takes over as the girls coach at Topeka High.
Topeka High has also added former Augusta head coach Jason Filbeck as the Trojans' new football coach.
Collins, who coached a state championship team at Topeka West and also coached the women's team at Washburn University, will coach the Seaman boys soccer team this fall.
Collins is one of three new coaches for the Vikings, with Madison Lamond taking over as Seaman's new girls swimming coach and former softball assistant Daniel Ruda moving up to the head coaching position to replace Jay Monhollon, who retired at the end of the 2024 season.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University senior fullback Connor Searcy will welcome any chance he gets to carry the football this fall, but the 6-foot-1, 220-pound Tonganoxie product also knows that's toting the pigskin is not where he's most valuable to the Ichabods.
"I'll take as many as (coach Craig Schurig) will give me,'' Searcy said during last week's MIAA Media Day in Kansas City, Mo. "That's up to him, but I'll always take the ball whenever he wants to give it to me.''
Searcy, who has appeared in 30 games with 21 starts for Washburn, got just three carries for 4 yards and a touchdown in 11 games last season but was a valuable receiver for the Ichabods with 15 catches for 163 yards and three TDS and probably his most important role is to pave the way for WU's other backs.
"I just need to be the lead blocker and kind of open up holes for the running back,'' said Searcy a third-team All-MIAA pick in 2022. "I think about it like I put my life on the line -- quote, unquote -- for my running back.
"I take the hit so he doesn't have to. It's my job to lead the way for him and make sure that they stay healthy because they're the ones running the ball. I just embrace my role.''
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Entering Monday's final round of the Topeka Golf Association City Stroke Play championship at Topeka Country Club, the individual title was definitely up for grabs.
Recent Topeka West graduate Myles Alonzo and Washburn Rural product Luke Leonetti went into the final 18 holes locked in a tie for the lead while Max Stuckey-Halley was just a stroke back.
But by the end of the day, Alonzo, who won the city high school championship at TCC in April, was all alone at the top of the mountain, carding a final-round 68 to win the title by a whopping nine strokes over Leonetti, with another Rural grad, Hayden Beck, finishing third.
"I felt pretty good,'' Alonzo said. "I knew if I just kept everything the same and just chilled out and made sure everything I was supposed to do was right I knew I'd be just fine.
"I was pretty consistent. I had a few bogeys out there but then I got a few lucky shots, with a chip-in for eagle.''
Alonzo, who will play college golf at Fort Hays State, finished with a 54-hole total of 205 (68-69-68) while Leonetti, who plays at Missouri-Kansas City, finished at 214 (70-67-77), two strokes ahead of Beck, a Washburn University golfer (75-70-71).
Patrick Golden finished fourth (217) while Stuckey-Halley, 2023 champion Brian Walker and Jeremiah Nelson tied for fifth place at 218.
Nelson was one of two golfers who carded holes in one on Monday, with Jeremiah Nelson acing the No. 6 hole and Aaron Rethman acing the 11th hole.
Alonzo's championship came after older brother Addison won the Stroke Play crown in 2022.
"I'm going to try a little bit better than him,'' the 18-year-old Myles cracked. "I'm going to try to beat him (with more titles).''
TGA CITY STROKE PLAY TOURNAMENT
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
For the record, the No. 1 men's spot on TopSports.news' list of the Top 100 Athletes in Shawnee County history wasn't decided by a coin flip ... but it was briefly considered.
Picking the top spot, and really the entire Top 10, was that tough of a task.
Topeka High baseball legend Mike Torrez and former Shawnee Heights basketball and golf star Gary Woodland, the 2019 U.S. Open champion, had both been selected No. 1 in previous Top 100 projects and were both worthy candidates this time around as were several other nationally and world-renowned local greats.
In the end Torrez, a World Series champion and 20-game winner over an 18-year year Major League career, got the nod by the slightest of margins over Woodland, a two-time state basketball champ for the T-Birds and a four-time winner on the PGA Tour.
Former American League All-Star and two-time Gold Glove winner Ken Berry holds down the No. 3 position on the TSN list followed by two-time Olympic wrestler Melvin Douglas and Silver Lake and Kansas State basketball icon Lon Krugeer.
The second five on the Top 10 include PBA Hall of Famer Chris Barnes, Olympic long-jumper Preston Carrington (Syed Abdul-Mutfi), former NFL veterans and Super Bowl participants Troy Wilson and Tom Dinkel, and two-time state high school and NAIA national basketball champion Tom Meier.
All of the Top 10 honorees are members of the Topeka Shawnee County Sports Hall of Fame.
TSN SHAWNEE COUNTY ALL-TIME TOP 100 MEN’S ATHLETES