KCKCC’s MVP Lovell to NCAA Division 1 Florida Gulf Coast

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College outfielder Eli Lovell played the recruiting waiting game and came out a winner.

The Blue Devils’ Most Valuable Player and leading hitter this season, Lovell was being courted by such NCAA Division I teams as Michigan State, Missouri, Missouri State and Central Arkansas along with most of the teams in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA).

That was until Florida Gulf Coast University got involved.

“They saw my stats on the NJCAA website and contacted Coach (Matt) Goldbeck and then came up and watched me in our game against Labette,” said Lovell, who more than lived up to any advance billing, just missing hitting for the cycle with a double, triple and home run.

“I went down for a visit and they offered me a 60 percent scholarship,” Lovell said. “A week later, they made the offer a full ride. I said yes the next day.”

The deal was made even sweeter by the history and location of Florida Gulf Coast in Fort Myers, the one-time spring training site of the Kansas City Royals.

“Playing in Florida, you’re scouted by pro teams a lot and Florida Gulf Coast has had 20 players drafted by major league teams since 2000, which is the ultimate goal,” Lovell said. That draft list is headed by Chris Sale of the Chicago White Sox, the winningest pitcher in baseball this season. “Also, they make the ASC (Atlantic Sun Conference) tournament every year.”

A graduate of Lincoln Southwest in Lincoln, Neb., Lovell was contacted by Blue Devil coaches after a recommendation from Easton Edmond, who was a teammate of Lovell before coming to KCKCC a year ahead of Lovell. He was recruited in the fall of his senior year.

A two-year starter, Lovell had 69 hits, 38 RBI and a .358 batting average as a freshman but no home runs. This year he had a team leading 15 home runs while pacing the Blue Devils in hits (96), extra base hits (41), stolen bases (16) and batting average (.451) and finished in the Top Three in voting for the Jayhawk East’s Most Valuable Player award.

“Eli put up tremendous numbers because of all his hard work,” Goldbeck said. “He really worked hard on his craft. He also made himself into a good centerfielder after playing the corner outfield spots last year.”

In addition to a rigorous training schedule, Lovell played for the Midwest A’s in the Mid-Plains League in Kansas City last summer.

“I worked my tail off, lifting and hitting every day and before and after practice in the fall. It was a lot harder my freshman year. I enjoyed my time here at KCKCC for sure. I definitely learned a lot my freshman year about the conference and where I needed to be my sophomore year and how much more prepared I needed to be.”

T-Bones sign former Wichita State pitcher

The Kansas City T-Bones have signed pitcher Jordan Cooper to a contract for the 2016 season.

Cooper, 27 (05-10-89), is a 6-foot-2 and 190-pound right hander from Topeka, Kan. He has spent the first six-plus seasons of his professional career in the Cleveland Indians’ organization, including three appearances this season at triple-A Columbus. In those three appearances, all in relief, Cooper was 1-0 with a 3.00 ERA. In 3 innings, he gave up three hits and one run, while striking out two and walking one.

Cleveland selected Cooper in the ninth round of the 2010 June MLB Amateur Draft out of Wichita State University. In six-plus professional seasons, Cooper is 33-38 with a 4.18 ERA in 157 games (74 starts). He has 376 career strikeouts and 187 walks.

Cooper is scheduled to start Monday night’s game for Kansas City against Lincoln at 7:05 p.m. at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas City, Kan.

Additionally, the T-Bones traded pitcher Richard Castillo-Diaz to Gary SouthShore in exchange for future considerations. Castillo-Diaz had yet to make an appearance for Kansas City during the regular season.
– Story from T-Bones

Kansas City, Mo., man sentenced to 17 years in Overland Park bank robbery

A Kansas City, Mo., man who threatened employees with a gun and dragged a woman by her hair during a bank robbery was sentenced Monday to 17 years in federal prison, acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said.

Clifton B. Cloyd, 54, Kansas City, Mo., pleaded guilty to one count of bank robbery and one count of brandishing a firearm during the robbery. On Oct. 29, 2014, he and another man robbed the Bank of America at 9500 Mission in Overland Park, Kan. In his plea, Cloyd admitted:

• He and his accomplice held five bank employees and one customer at gunpoint.

• Cloyd, who was carrying a handgun, grabbed one of the bank employees and pulled her by the hair and scarf to the teller station. He struck her in the face with a handgun.

• Cloyd struck a customer so hard her glasses flew off and she was knocked to the floor.

• Cloyd struck a male bank employee with such force that his head started bleeding.

Co-defendant Steve A. Watts, 55, Kansas City, Mo., is awaiting sentencing.

Beall commended the Overland Park Police Department, the Prairie Village Police Department, the Leawood Police Department, the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney David Zabel for their work on the case.