Bonner grad youngest Sunflower Hills Club champion

Marc McClain (Photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins

Youth was served in the 2014 Sunflower Hills Club Championship Saturday.

At age 17, Marc McClain became the youngest club champion in history with a one-over par 73. McClain is a May graduate of Bonner Springs High School.

The club championship came on the heels of McClain’s winning the Kansas Class 4A state championship, a title won by three strokes with a 3-under 69 at Firekeeper Golf Course in Marietta. McClain will continue his golf career this fall at Kansas City Kansas Community College as one of several top prospects recruited by coach Gary Shrader.

McClain’s 73 was two shots better than another youngster, Tristan Abts, 19, and a 2013 graduate of Bonner Springs, and veteran Jerry Reid, a former Wyandotte County senior champion.

“I didn’t think 73 would be good enough,” said McClain, a past entrant in the Wyandotte County Open playing in his first club championship. “I thought 70 or 72 would win it. I was disappointed I wasn’t under par because I had a lot of good holes.”

Two came on the first two holes as McClain came out blazing with back-to-back birdies, running in his longest putt of the day, a 50-footer on No. 1 and then two-putting No. 2 after reaching the 476-yard par 5 with a drive and 8-iron.

However, bogeys at Nos. 3, 6 and 8 dropped him to one over at the turn before rebounding with birdies at Nos. 10 and 12. After the day’s longest drive on No. 10, McClain’s lob wedge hit the flag and stopped within three feet on No. 10 and a pitching wedge to within 15 feet on 12 produced the birdies.

A double bogey on No. 14 and bogey on the difficult 15th ended McClain’s hopes of a sub-par round but he finished the final three holes one under, birdieing the par 5 17th by chipping to within three feet.

A natural righthander, McClain swings lefthanded, something he picked up at an early age.

“My dad is lefthanded and when I was about 2 I started swinging his clubs and my parents thought I swung pretty good so I’ve stayed with it,” said McClain. By age 6, he was playing competitively and at 15, he fired a 5-under par 65 in the annual Vinzant-Cosnotti tourney at Overland Park while finishing second to an 18-year-old in the 54-hole tournament.

The son of Marc and Amy McClain, his older sister, Cassie, followed him on his title trail.

2014 Sunflower Hills Club Championship
Championship flight – 1. Marc McClain, 73; 2. (tie) Tristan Abts, Jerry Reid, 75; 4. Bob Chatterton, 76.
A – 1 Mike McNellis, 80; 2. (tie) Dave Hunt, Todd Milberger, 81; 4. Bretty Ricky, 82.
B – 1. Rick Richardson, 78; 2. (tie) Roger DeLong, Steve Sirridge, 80; 4. Moe Ryan, Charlie Sirridge, 82.
C – 1. Greg Loethen, 82; 2. Mike Tobin, 86. 3. (tie) Phil Hoffman, Dave VanDerwell, 87.
D – 1. Bill Pratt, 92; 2. Ted McClellan, 95; 3. Dan Schmidt, 99; 4. Tim Allen, 100.
Closest to hole No. 4, Moe Ryan; Longest putt No. 9, Dan Schmidt; Longest Drive, No. 10, Marc McClain.

Marc McClain (Photo by Alan Hoskins)

El Centro employee joins Swope board of directors

Cielo Ortega-Fernandez

Swope Health Services recently added Cielo Fernandez-Ortega to its board of directors.

Ms. Fernandez-Ortega currently serves as the chief program officer at El Centro, Inc., where she develops services that meet the needs of the Hispanic community such as health literacy, financial empowerment and preschool education.
“Connecting El Centro clients to quality health providers is another key service we provide,” Fernandez-Ortega said. “I see such potential in the level of care Swope Health Wyandotte can provide to our community and I am committed to strengthening this connection.”

Ortega has served on the boards of the Mother and Child Health Coalition, the Mexican American Women’s National Association of Kansas City and the Coalition of Hispanic Women Against Cancer.

“I’m honored that someone of Ms. Fernandez-Ortega’s caliber agreed to sit on our board,” said Dave Barber, SHS president and CEO. “We look forward to working with her to better serve the healthcare needs of Wyandotte County.”

More than 3,000 concealed carry licenses issued for Wyandotte County

More than 3,000 concealed carry licenses were issued for Wyandotte County from Jan. 1, 2007, through June 30, 2014, according to statistics from the Kansas attorney general’s office.

In all, there were 3,234 applications for concealed carry from Wyandotte County from July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2014, the attorney general’s office stated. Of those, 3,091 were approved.

Statewide, 2014 was the second-highest year on record for concealed carry applications. The state received 14,205 applications in 2014 as compared to 25,316 in 2013, according to the attorney general’s office. Since the program began in 2006, the office has received more than 90,000 applications statewide.

Johnson County has a total of 13,723 concealed carry licenses issued, while Leavenworth County has 3,012.

Sedgwick County has a total of 17,426 concealed carry licenses issued over the seven-year period.