Sporting KC ends losing streak

Sporting Kansas City came from behind to snap a three-game losing streak on Wednesday, earning a 1-1 draw against Vancouver Whitecaps FC at BC Place.

Christian Bolanos put the home side ahead early, but Diego Rubio’s first MLS goal in the 27th minute extended Sporting Kansas City’s unbeaten run against Vancouver to four matches.

The result gives Sporting Kansas City (4-4-1, 13 points) its first draw of the 2016 season and keeps the club in sixth place in the Western Conference, one spot ahead of Vancouver (3-4-2, 11 points) and just four points behind leaders FC Dallas.

Wednesday’s starting lineup included four changes from Sporting Kansas City’s 1-0 defeat at the San Jose Earthquakes on Sunday.

Goalkeeper Alec Kann made his club debut and earned his second career MLS start, while Rubio, Jimmy Medranda and Connor Hallisey formed a three-pronged attack with Graham Zusi, Dom Dwyer and Brad Davis available off the substitutes’ bench. In defense, captain Matt Besler made his 200th career MLS appearance for his hometown club (including playoffs).

Vancouver drew first blood in the 14th minute, converting their fourth set piece goal of the season. Cristian Techera’s out-swinging corner kick found Christian Bolanos, who fired into the top left corner with a side-footed volley near the penalty spot. The goal snapped Sporting Kansas City’s 514-minute road shutout streak against Cascadia clubs (Vancouver, Portland and Seattle) in the regular season dating back to August 2014.

The visitors remained undeterred and struck back through Rubio, who opened his MLS scoring account after joining the club this offseason on loan from Spanish side Real Valladolid. Settling into space on the right flank, Saad Abdul-Salaam squared the ball for Lawrence Olum, whose low strike through the box was deftly redirected into the net by Rubio to level the score.

Medranda nearly put Sporting Kansas City ahead four minutes later. Amadou Dia exploited space down the left wing and cut the ball across the face of goal to the diminutive midfielder, whose stinging one-time effort was saved by the outstretched David Ousted. Benny Feilhaber was well-positioned to poke home the rebound, but Vancouver defender Tim Parker hammered the loose ball clear downfield.

Six minutes into the second half, Rubio played a prominent role in changing the complexion of the match. The Chilean striker intercepted an errant back pass from Tim Parker and was almost through on goal, only to be toppled from behind by Kendall Waston. The Vancouver center back received his second yellow card from Armando Villarreal, reducing Whitecaps FC to 10 men for the remainder of the evening.

Vermes recognized the opportunity to secure a vital road win and flexed his squad’s firepower from the substitutes’ bench, introducing Dwyer, Davis and Zusi over the course of the second half. Sporting Kansas City translated their numerical advantage into 59 percent possession and a 4-0 shot advantage during the final stanza, but Vancouver maintained the requisite defensive organization to keep Vermes’ men at bay.

With a three-game road swing in the books, Sporting Kansas City returns to Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kan., on Sunday to be the host of LA Galaxy at 7 p.m. The high-profile matchup will be televised nationally on FS1 and FOX Deportes with local radio broadcasts on Sports Radio 810 WHB and La Grande 1340 AM. The Galaxy (4-1-2, 14 points) enter Sunday on a five-game unbeaten run and lead the league with 17 goals scored.

The first 10,000 fans through the Children’s Mercy Park gates on Sunday will receive a free pair of sunglasses, and a limited number of tickets for the game are available via Ticketmaster.com or by calling 888-4KC-GOAL.

Advocacy groups ask Kansas lawmakers to reverse tax cuts

by Stephen Koranda

Advocacy organizations joined forces Wednesday at the Statehouse and asked Kansas legislators to change course on tax policy.

The event coincided with the Legislature’s return to Topeka to wrap up the session. One major issue that stands between them and adjournment is a $290 million revenue shortfall.

Gov. Sam Brownback recently proposed three options to address the projected shortfall, but the groups at Wednesday’s event say he should consider a fourth: reversing a 2012 tax cut bill that exempted more than 330,000 business owners and farmers from state income taxes.

Annie McKay, with the Kansas Center for Economic Growth, is a frequent critic of the governor’s tax policy. She said the state needs a long-term budget fix. Without one, she said, growing costs for services such as education and Medicaid will produce continued budget deficits.

“We don’t have the ongoing revenue to pay for those, so this idea that we can cut our way out of this is simply a false choice that’s being presented,” McKay said. “It’s not a long-term solution.”

That plan will be a tough sell in the Statehouse, where Brownback and his supporters in the Legislature maintain the tax cuts are helping boost the economy. They also say now is not the time to raise taxes.

The three options established by state revenue leaders and the governor would take money from higher education, the Kansas Department of Transportation and early childhood programs, among other programs.

However, McKay and others said a revamped tax plan could help the state avoid repeated revenue shortfalls.

“We are going to be in this situation year after year after year, because we will be facing budget shortfalls and gaps year after year after year until we address the structural issue that we face,” she said.

Groups participating in the event included the Kansas-National Education Association, Kansas Action for Children, Kansas Organization of State Employees and Kansas Contractors Association.

Stephen Koranda is a reporter for Kansas Public Radio.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Update: Roads closed in northeast Kansas because of flooding

Update:
All roads are now open, according to KDOT.

As of Thursday morning, there were still some roads closed in northeast Kansas from flooding, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

They included:

• K-68 in Osage County north of Quenemo was closed to all traffic because of flood waters over the roadway.

• K-87 in Marshall County from the K-9 junction south to the Village of Vilets was closed to all traffic because of flood waters over the roadway.

Also, now open is K-30 in Wabaunsee County from I-70 north to Maple Hill, according to KDOT.

Drivers must use alternate routes where the roads are closed, KDOT stated. No marked detours are provided. Drivers should not attempt to drive through flooded or high water on roadways, a spokesman said.