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By JUSTIN BURKHARDT
TopSports.news
It was a nice evening Friday night at Hayden High School as the Wildcats would bounce back from a Week 4 loss at Wamego in dominating fashion with a 49-0 shutout Class 3A district win.
The game would start off with Hayden receiving and junior Kade Mitchell catching the kickoff and returning it 85 yards to the house to open up the scoring for the Wildcats.
“I thought we did a great job blocking for him as he didn’t get touched, he made one cut and was gone.” Hayden coach Bill Arnold said.
“They kicked it to me and I was like, 'This is my time to do something,' and I made a cut and went.” Mitchell said.
That isn’t all the Wildcats would get from their standout back as he would add 112 yards on eight carries and 26 yards on three catches with a total of four touchdowns.
“It's all glory to God. I thank him every time I come out here and trust in him and he lets me come out here and play and thank you to my teammates. My o-line does a great job and its awesome to play behind them.” Mitchell said.
“I think offensively he did a good job running the ball, I thought all our kids played hard tonight.” Arnold said.
Hayden would go into halftime up 28-0 and added three more touchdowns in the second half.
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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
The connection between Seaman quarterback Max Huston and receiver Bryer Finley turned a tight battle with Lansing into a rout Friday night at Seaman.
Huston hit Finley 12 times for 298 yards and three touchdowns in a 43-22 victory that was much closer than the final score would indicate.
Tied with Seaman at 15-15 at the half, Lansing seized a 22-15 lead midway through the third period. From that moment on, it was all Vikings.
“In the first half it was awfully close and a really good game, really back and forth. Then in the second half we were able to start making some plays and get on a roll,” said Seaman coach Jared Swafford. “I think it was just the excitement of our kids, to pick each other up instead of putting each other down. It was that belief that we were going to get some things figured out.”
The Vikings opened the game with a Huston 14-yard touchdown throw to Finley. But Lansing responded with two touchdowns to go up 15-7. A 22-yard touchdown run by the Vikings’ Kaden McKinney tied it at halftime.
A second touchdown pass from Lansing’s Jaxon Pollard put the Lions ahead in the third quarter. Pollard was not the quarterback the Vikings had prepared for. Lansing played the entire game without Reid Oakley, their highly accomplished senior quarterback.
“We had no idea that (Oakley) wasn’t going to be playing,” Swafford said. “We prepared all week like he was going to play. It’s very unfortunate (for Lansing). He’s a very good player.”
Normally the team’s tailback, Pollard tried to do it all for Lansing. He carried 22 times for 82 yards in addition to trying to attack Seaman through the air.
“Pollard is also a heck of a player, but he was playing out of position tonight,” Swafford said. “They did some good things with him that sort of put us in a bind, that we weren’t quite ready for. But give him a lot of credit. He did a heck of a job.”
The Vikings picked off Pollard to close the first half. In the second half, they forced Lansing into passing situations and intercepted Pollard four more times, which completely changed the game.
“We had to win some battles up front to put them behind the chains and force them to have to throw the ball,” Swafford said.
Finley had four receptions for 106 yards in the first half. But in the second half, he completely took over the game. Lansing had no answer for him.
“Bryer is very dynamic,” Swafford said. “He’s a dude, and we knew he was going to be a dude for us this year. It just took us some time to get clicking on offense. He’s a heck of a player for us and we love the heck out of him.”
“He’s been my best friend since kindergarten, and we have a great connection,” Finley said of the chemistry with Huston. “I was just seeing green out there. I was running my routes hard, seeing green, and we connected for a lot of good completions.”
Huston and McKinney kept the Viking ground game churning. McKinney ran for 129 yards and three touchdowns while Huston added 78 more yards on the ground.
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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
After battling through a murderer's row of three teams who were a combined 12-1 on the season, Washburn Rural faced another tough test Friday night at Hummer Sports Park, with the Junior Blues facing unbeaten Topeka High.
But Rural looked more like the team that advanced to the 2023 Class 6A semifinals on Friday, opening defense of its Centennial League championship with a 49-21 romp past the Trojans.
"They put so much work into this and after last year the expectation was to do the same thing we did last year, go undefeated (in the regular season) and run that but sometimes it doesn't work out the way you want it to and you've got to re-establish the goals and figure out what you want to do,'' Rural coach Steve Buhler said. "We pressed really hard this week about the idea that it's another season, it's a second season, because we're defending our league championship from last year. So we've got four games to fight for that and the kids responded really well this week.
"Their motivation was really good, their focus was really good and they were excited to play with a lot of energy. That takes a lot of character because of what we've been through the last three weeks. We could have just kind of decided that we'll just play this thing out and see where it goes. They weren't that way. They worked really hard and had a good night tonight.''
Washburn Rural, now 2-3 overall and 1-0 in the Centennial League, took advantage of a couple of big plays early to jump in front 7-0 and never trailed, opening up a 28-7 halftime advantage and going in front 49-7 early in the fourth quarter before Topeka (4-1, 1-1) added a pair of TDs over the final 5:27.
Rural's defense stopped Topeka High on 4th-and-inches at the Trojan 29 to end High's first possession and the the Junior Blues drew a pass interference penalty on High on a 3rd-and-16 play, leading to a 6-yard touchdown pass from John Hoytal to Kellan Roth at the 7:36 mark of the opening quarter.
After stopping the Trojans on their ensuing possession, Rural junior TJ Minikwu burst loose for a 52-yard touchdown run, the first of his three TDs on the night.
Topeka High answered with a 49-yard TD pass from Zane Smith to Tevante Ewing at the 4:18 mark of the first quarter but the Trojans got no closer, with Minikwu adding a 3-yard TD and Hoytal connecting with Roth on a 16-yard scoring strike to put Rural in command by three touchdowns at the half.
Washburn Rural picked up in the second half where it left off, getting a 10-yard scoring run from Jadyn Baum, a 14-yard TD from Minikwu and a 5-yard run from Lafayette Thompson to cap its scoring.
Chiefs great, NFL Hall of Famer Will Shields cherishes Kansas ties, Kansas Sports Hall of Fame honor
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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
In the mind of Kansas City Chiefs’ great Will Shields, he isn’t being inducted to the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame on a technicality.
Born at Fort Riley in 1971, he spent just the first two years of his life there while his father was stationed at the Army base in the early 1970s before moving out of state. He gained fame as a football player on teams in Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri.
But Shields is quick to point out that, though the Chiefs technically are based in Missouri, he lived in Kansas throughout his NFL career and continues to make Kansas his home.
Shields spent most of his youth in Lawton, Okla. and is a member of the Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame. His number is retired by the University of Nebraska, where he was a highly decorated offensive lineman. But when he was drafted by the Chiefs in 1993, he put down roots in Kansas and currently resides in the Overland Park area.
“It’s a great thing for the place where you were born to give you that recognition. But also, the cool thing about it is that I feel like I am a Kansan because I spent over 30 years of my life in Kansas, including when I played (in the NFL),” Shields said. “The biggest part of my life was spent there and I’m part of the fabric of the community. My kids were born there and that’s where you built your adult life. That’s a deeper-rooted thing than just saying ‘I was born here.’ ”
Shields’ affinity for the Army in general, and Fort Riley specifically, is deep. He is proud of his father’s military service and he credits his mother for leading the family in Lawton while his father served three years in Germany.
“Outside my house, I have Big Red One rock which reminds me of where I was born,” Shields said. “That’s part of the lineage piece of where you came from. I’m proud to be part of the military world.”
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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
The Topeka West Charger football team will continue to hunt for its first win of the season after dropping a meeting with undefeated Basehor-Linwood 59-6 Thursday at Hummer Sports Park.
The fifth loss in as many tries ensures the character building will continue for at least another week for the Chargers.
“We knew coming in that this wasn’t an easy turnaround,” said Topeka West coach Trey Parker. “The kids knew. We sat them down and told them it wouldn’t be easy to get where we want to be. But they’re bought in, and they understand that it’s a process.
“Obviously, right now we’re not seeing what we want to see, but we’ll get there soon. I think the kids are starting to see that.”
The Bobcats controlled Thursday’s contest from the outset, scoring on their first play from scrimmage on a long pass. They added scores on another pass, a long run play, and a field goal in the first half to lead 24-0.
The highlight of the night for the Chargers came early in the second half. Topeka High scored on a long pass from quarterback Jacob Brewster to a streaking Alesecio Batson, who finished a 79-yard scoring play.