Johnson County was as good as advertised Saturday in an 86-72 win over Kansas City Kansas Community College.
Ranked as high as No. 2 in the NJCAA Division II poll before a 3-point loss to Penn Valley, the No. 6 Cavaliers rolled behind blistering 57.8 percent shooting.
The loss snapped a 5-game KCKCC winning streak and dropped the Blue Devils to 12-7 heading into a road game at Ottawa University JV Wednesday at 7 p.m. JCCC, meanwhile, improved to 15-2.
The Cavaliers took command late in the first half, scoring the final 10 points of the period to forge a 41-35 lead they never gave up. The Blue Devils made one big second half run. Trailing 51-41, KCKCC closed to 54-50 on two field goals by Mike Lee, one by Lashawn Lewis and a 3-pointer by Kellan Turner only to have JCCC run off the next seven points for a 61-50 lead and KCKCC never got closer.
“Johnson County is a very talented team,” said KCKCC coach Kelley Newton. “They came into our gym and went right at us. More focused than we were, they ran their offense to a T.”
Newton was particularly impressed by the Cavalier guards and particularly Denzel Wright, who had 33 points, the most scored against KCKCC this season, and Jerry Perry who had 14 points, six rebounds and six assists.
“Their guard play was outstanding,” Newton said. “Denzel Wright was the best player on the floor.”
Joe Lendway led KCKCC with 19 points and nine rebounds while Jonathan Murray added 14 points and six rebounds and Mike Lee 13 points and a game high eight assists. Dehaven Talley and Lashawn Lewis chipped in with 9 points each and Kellan Turner 8 points and 7 rebounds.
Alan Hoskins is the sports information director with KCKCC.
All too often when two heavyweights collide in a highly ballyhooed contest, it turns into a dud.
Not so Saturday when Johnson County put its No. 1 NJCAA ranking on the line against No. 6 Kansas City Kansas Community College, the Lady Cavaliers escaping with a 64-60 win in one of the most fiercely contested women’s games in KCKCC home court history.
Tied 11 times, the game had six lead changes before JCCC went ahead to stay 61-58 on Shelby Dahl’s 3-point field goal from the baseline with just 2:29 remaining and held on as the tiring Lady Blue Devils misfired on their final six shots from the field. Dahl finally put the game out of reach with two free throws with 18 seconds to go.
The lead was the 18th straight for the unbeaten Cavaliers while KCKCC’s loss came on the heels of an 82-71 setback at Highland Wednesday that dropped the Blue Devils to 16-2. At Missouri Valley JV Monday at 6:30 p.m., the Blue Devils do not return home until Jan. 30 when they are hosts to Labette.
Leading 17-15 after one quarter, KCKCC fell behind 32-22 late in the second period before Erin Anderson’s 3-point goal and two Arrica Daye layups cut the Blue Devil deficit to 32-30 and set up a second half in which neither team led by more than five points until the closing seconds.
Daye’s 3-pointer with 6:21 left gave KCKCC its last lead at 54-53. JCCC twice regained the lead but each time the Blue Devils battled back on game-tying goals by Brie Tauai and Anderson and missed a chance to go ahead before Dahl’s game-deciding trey with 2:29 left.
Freshman Brooklyn Wagler followed up her 23-point performance at Highland with 17 points and game high 14 rebounds to lead KCKCC. Anderson and Tauai each added 9 points and Valencia Scott, Cheyenne North and Daye 7 points apiece. North also had eight rebounds, three assists and five blocked shots.
With just eight players against a deep JCCC squad, the Blue Devils stayed close despite making just 9-of-35 second half shots for 25.7 percent. KCKCC also had a 48-44 rebound edge and committed nine turnovers to 13 for JCCC, which got 19 points from Dahl and 17 points, 10 rebounds and three assists from guard Erica Nelson.
“I’m very proud of the fight we showed tonight,” said KCKCC coach Joe McKinstry. “Obviously that’s a very good Johnson County team and it feels good to know that we are that close to being one of the top teams in the country. I think if we can learn from certain situations that we went through this week, our team can channel the hurt and disappointments that they feel right now and direct it so that we are a better team when it’s most important.”
The game was this season’s biggest scare for the Lady Cavaliers, who won two of three over KCKCC en route to winning the national title last year.
“We had a close one at Miami Dade before getting away at the end but this was the closest,” said JCCC coach Ben Conrad.
Alan Hoskins is the sports information director for KCKCC.
Editor’s note: A male in Wyandotte County can expect to live about seven fewer years than a male in Johnson County. A female in Wyandotte County can expect to live nearly six fewer years than her Johnson County counterpart. About 21 percent of Wyandotte County residents consider themselves to be in poor or fair health; fewer than one in 12 in Johnson County do so.
Those are just a few of the many health disparities that sometimes make the side-by-side Kansas counties seem like different countries.
This week’s “Crossing To Health” series explores that health divide and examines attempts to narrow the gap. Today’s story looks at recreational opportunities in the two counties.
Take a Saturday morning bike ride along the Kansas side of the state line and you’ll see plenty of people playing tennis or soccer or jogging in Johnson County. Ride a bit farther north to Wyandotte County, though, and it’s hard not to notice that outdoor recreation is a much rarer phenomenon.
On a map, the counties appear to have about the same amount of parks and recreational space. But over several decades, Wyandotte County’s parks fell into a state of neglect and disrepair — to the point of being ignored by many residents.
Now that many Wyandotte County leaders are looking at ways to improve residents’ health, they’re re-evaluating the importance of parks, hopeful their once-grand park system will undergo a rebirth.
To understand how different parks can be, it helps to visit them in person.
On the western edge of Kansas City, Kan., in Wyandotte County, a team of 8-year-old boys in giant pads huddle and shout a cheer led by teammate Cecil Cotton, a small powerhouse with a voice that can be heard across the field.
“He’s a mouth. He’s a grown man in a little kid’s body,” Cotton’s father, also named Cecil, says with a laugh.
The elder Cotton is a coach in the KC United Youth Football league, which plays weekly in an empty field next to a church.
League organizer Adrion Roberson says that what happens here on Saturday mornings is about much more than fun and games.
“It causes community, so you have a community of families and teams that come together all for the kids,” Roberson said.
In Johnson County to the south, a similar scene unfolds, with cheering parents and diminutive athletes. But here’s the big difference: At Heritage Park in Olathe, the fenced-off football complex boasts 10 carefully trimmed fields, towering light fixture and bleachers. Fans enjoy amenities that include a snack bar, ample parking and restrooms.
The action on the field may be similar, but the facilities are in an altogether different league.
That wasn’t always the case.
‘Facebook of 1900s’
Just west of downtown Kansas City, Kan., you can see the green space, pond and stone walls that were created as part of the original Waterway Park 100 years ago.
“It was the Facebook of the 1900s. It’s where everybody went to socialize,” said Jeremy Rogers, director of the Parks and Recreation Department for the Unified Government of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kan.
The area was once home to an elaborate park system including sunken gardens, baseball fields and winding walkways. The park system was designed in part by George Kessler, the legendary landscape architect who masterminded Kansas City’s boulevard system and created renowned parks throughout the country.
But a few decades after Waterway Park’s creation, as white flight to the suburbs accelerated and the tax base eroded, the county started a long downward slide that reached crisis levels by the 1980s.
“So with that, tax dollars went away,” Rogers said. “People started moving out of the city. And once that hit, Wyandotte County’s parks system really bottomed out.”
An uptick in crime exacerbated the trend. Many residents no longer felt safe in certain parts of town. Today, the ’80s are often recalled as a time when community bonds seemed to wither away.
When Wyandotte County consolidated with the Kansas City, Kan., government in 1997, the parks department was scrapped. Control of the parks was handed over to the public works department, which was essentially put on life support.
“They were understaffed,” Rogers said. “Not enough equipment. And they were just, as things happened, trying to react to it.”
The decline of urban parks in the wake of white flight wasn’t unique to Kansas City, Kan., said James Sallis, a professor of family medicine and public health at the University of California-San Diego.
It happened in low-income areas throughout the country in the second half of the 20th century, he said. Urban planners now see it as a major loss.
“These are essential components of a community if you want your community to be healthy,” Sallis said.
More than green space
It’s precisely residents of low-income communities who tend to need parks most. But green spaces alone are not enough.
“We find that parks without many facilities for activity get visited less and generate less physical activity, regardless of size,” Sallis said.
To attract residents, urban planners say, parks must have well-maintained sports facilities and trails, along with amenities like restrooms, water fountains and parking. And residents need to feel safe there.
The Unified Government brought back the parks and recreation department a few years ago with the help of grant funding. Since then, it has undertaken many incremental renovations and updates.
But now it has more ambitious ideas, including an expansion of the parks west of downtown Kansas City, Kan., as part of the Unified Government’s “Healthy Campus” plan.
In the same vein, the Unified Government’s Healthy Communities Wyandotte program includes an infrastructure action team made up of community leaders who aim to add 20 miles of bike lanes, trails and sidewalks over the next four years.
Will that be enough to attract residents? If you build it, will they come?
“It probably takes a little more nudging than that,” Sallis acknowledges.
In the past decade, health experts working to eliminate food deserts have discovered that communities with new grocery stores often need to be reintroduced to healthy foods. And getting neighbors back into parks may require a similar strategy.
“If there are programs going on or events that are advertised and your neighbors are going, then you’ve got multiple reasons to go to the park,” Sallis said. “You say, ‘Oh, I’ll go to this event. Looks like fun.’ And you get there, ‘Hey, this park has been updated and looks really good, so maybe I’ll come back again.’”
Rachel Jefferson, who heads the Historic Northeast-Midtown Association, is aiming to do just that: Get people to take advantage of that green space.
Jefferson grew up in Kansas City, Kan., left to attend college and recently returned to be part of what she hopes will be a renaissance for the area.
A few months ago she started a walking group to get people out on the Jersey Creek Trail, which was renovated in 2015.
Right now, the group has just five members, but Jefferson said she doesn’t necessarily measure success by numbers.
“It’s in the little victories, as much in life is anyway,” Jefferson said.
Even if it’s slow going at first, the idea is for groups like hers to get more people to use the county’s parks. And she’s hopeful that improved physical health will be just one of its many benefits.
“The more we can spend time together, getting to know each other, and breed that sense of community, the stronger our community will inherently become,” she said.
— This article was produced as a project for the Dennis A. Hunt Fund for Health Journalism and the National Health Journalism Fellowship, programs of USC Annenberg’s Center for Health Journalism.