- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Seaman multi-sport standout Taylin Stallbaumer, who helped lead the Vikings to their first Class 5A state volleyball championship, was named the TopSports.news Topeka Shawnee County Fall Female Athlete of the Year during Wednesday's awards banquet at Washburn University.
"Taylin was a three-sport athlete at Seaman, excelling in all of them,'' Seaman coach Tatiana Dowling said. "She is highly competitive and athletic. She makes people around her better, leads by example and is a great teammate.''
Stallbaumer ranks second on Seaman's all-time list in assists (1,394), fourth in aces (134), fifth in kills (663), sixth in digs (873), seventh in hitting percentage (.205) and ninth in blocks (91).
Stallbaumer also helped the Vikings win the 5A state basketball title and helped Seaman reach the state quarterfinals in soccer.
Stallbaumer will play volleyball at Johnson County Community College.
The daughter of Todd and Tonya Stallbaumer, Taylin compiled a 3.5 cumulative grade point average.
Other candidates:
FALL SPORTS: OUTSTANDING FEMALE NOMINEES
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Recent Topeka High graduate McCall Beall was selected as the Topeka Shawnee County Most Inspirational Female Athlete of the Year Wedneday night at Washburn University.
Beall was a team captain for the Topeka High softball team while earning first-team All-Class 6A and All-Centennial League and second-team All-Shawnee County recognition as a senior.
A part of back-to-back state championship softball teams as a freshman and sophomore, Beall was also a tennis standout for the Trojans, qualifying for the Class 6A state tournament in as a junior and senior.
"As much as she has excelled on the field, she also helped to lead the Topeka High student body as the student body president,'' Beall's nomination form stated.
Beall also participated in band and the Topeka High Drumline, Scholars Bowl and numerous academic-based clubs.
The daughter of Thomas Beall and Andrea Palmer, Beall compiled a 4.3 grade point average in high school.
SPRING SPORTS: MOST INSPIRATIONAL FEMALE NOMINEES
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
As Barrett Lietz's high school athletic career wound down his senior year, the Rossville three-sport standout had some tough decisions to make.
Lietz's options came down to playing football or wrestling in college or opting to concentrate on his academics.
The third option eventually won out, with Lietz headed to Kansas State to study mechanical engineering.
"I'm just going to focus on school and study,'' said Lietz, a two-time All-Shawnee County Top 22 pick in football, a Class 3A-1A state runnerup in wrestling and a state qualifier in track and field while posting a 4.10 grade point average.
"It was a pretty tough decision because I'm done sports all my life, but I felt like it was time to be done.''
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Longtime Hayden football coach Bill Arnold is a proud graduate of Benedictine College, playing quarterback for the Ravens in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
But when it came time for standout Wildcat lineman Carter Charvat to pick a college, Charvat said Arnold didn't try to influence his decision.
He didn't have to.
"He did tell me it was a great school, but I already have some family connections there -- my brother (Mason) goes there right now -- and they had the major I wanted (mechicanical engineering) and I could play football, too, so it just all worked out,'' Charvat said.
A three-sport athlete, Charvat helped lead Hayden to the Class 3A state championship game last fall, earning All-Shawnee County Top 22 and All-Class 3A recognition. Charvat was in on 117 tackles as a senior, including 71 solo stops and registered eight sacks and four tackles for loss while intercepting two passes.
Charvat also helped the Wildcats advance to the 3A state tournament in basketball and was a standout thrower in track and field, qualifying for the 3A state meet.
Charvat said that after he took everything into consideration, Benedictine was a relatively easy choice.
"It just made sense,'' Charvat said. "The whole community and family is what I was looking for, going from a close-knit community in high school to a close-knit community in college.''
- Details
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Recent Hayden graduate Finn Dunshee raised a lot of eyebrows with his dominating performance in last month's Class 3A state track meet, capturing three gold medals for the second straight season.
And that performance also helped change Dunshee's mind about his future plans.
Dunshee, who helped Hayden finish second as a team in Class 3A in both football and track as a senior, had planned to walk away from sports and concentrate on academics at the University of Dallas.
But after sweeping the 3A titles in the 100-meter (10.60 seconds) and 200-meter (21.99) dashes and helping the Wildcats win the 4x400 relay (3:26.01) and post a runnerup finish in the 4x100 relay (42.52), Dunshee started having second thoughts.
"After that state meet I knew I had more in me,'' said Dunshee, who will play his final football game in Saturday night's Kansas Shrine Bowl at Emporia State's Welch Stadium. "I wasn't done peaking. I had been improving for the last consecutive five or six weeks before that state race.
"And at state I really didn't have anyone to push me, so I was like, 'I've got more time in me, I can do more.' ''
So while Dunshee is still headed to the state of Texas for college, he's changed his destination to Fort Worth and Texas Christian University.
"The plan is, if all things go according to plan, I hope to walk on for TCU track,'' Dunshee said. "That would be the ideal. I've been talking with them. I go down for orientation next week and hopefully meet with them.''