KCKCC Hutch playoff opener a battle of powerful offenses

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Pitching is always critical when it comes to post-season tournament play but never is it more important than when Kansas City Kansas Community College and Hutchinson collide in a battle of two offensive juggernauts in opening round Region VI Division I super-regional playoff action Friday morning.

Seeded No. 5, KCKCC will put its 40-18 record on the line against the No. 4 seeded Blue Dragons (38-18) in the tournament opener Friday at 10 a.m. at Dumont Stadium in Wichita.

Led by Caden Doga, the national leader in home runs with 31, Hutch comes into the tourney with 80 home runs, a team batting average of .343 and an offense that scored 55 runs and pounded out 56 hits in a three-game elimination series with Independence, winning 23-5 and 16-14 while losing 17-16.

KCKCC will counter with a team batting average of .356 and 60 home runs and a starting lineup of all nine players hitting .317 or better.

“Hutch looks like a lot of teams in the Jayhawk East, very good offensively so we’re going to have to be at our best,” said KCKCC coach Matt Goldbeck. “In an 8-team double elimination tournament like this, any team can win. You just have to get hot at the right time and catch a few breaks.”

That was never more evident than in the opening round playoffs when Coffeyville, the No. 8 team in the Jayhawk, eliminated the West’s No. 1 team, Colby, in just two games, the first time in history a No. 8 team had defeated a No. 1 seed.

KCKCC will send righthander Brandon Reid (6-2) to the mound in the opener. A sophomore from Toronto, Ontario, Reid is coming off two outstanding pitching performances, a 2-hitter against league champion Neosho County in which he had a no-hitter for five innings; and a 2-hitter in a 13-0 win over Barton County last Saturday. He’ll be opposed by the ace of the Hutch staff, Nolan Hoffman, who has an 8-2 record with a 2.19 earned run average.

A win Friday would advance the Blue Devils into second round play against the Neosho-Allen County winner Saturday at 7 p.m., a loss would drop them into the loser’s bracket against the Neosho-Allen loser Saturday at 10 a.m. Jake Purl (9-2) will get the start in the second game with Dustin Eby (4-2) the likely starter in a game three. Avery Fliger, who is 7-2 with a 3.15 ERA, is the top reliever along with Chad Cox (4-1), Tanner Vestal (3-2) and Cameron Bednar (3-2).

Semifinal games will be played Sunday with the championship game Monday night unless a second game is needed. It would be played Tuesday. “You can win it in four games but if you lose in the first or second rounds, it takes seven wins and six in you lose in the semifinals,” Goldbeck said.

Rightfielder Chase Redick, who is hitting .354 with 34 RBI from the leadoff spot, will bat first followed by the three Blue Devil leaders in home runs – first baseman Conor Behrens, a .389 hitter with nine homers and 47 RBI; third baseman Travis Stroup, the team leader in hitting at .466 with 13 homers and 55 RBI; and centerfielder Eli Lovell, who is hitting .465 and leads in home runs with 15 and RBI with 82.

Lefthanded hitting leftfielder Ryan Fisher, who is hitting .362 with six homers and 57 RBI, will hit fifth followed by catcher Drew Holtgrieve (.352, 6 homers and 49 RBI); shortstop Albert Woodard (.317, 36 RBI); designated hitter Ty Bradshaw (.469 in 19 games); and second baseman Easton Fortuna (.343, 21 RBI).

Teams from the Jayhawk East captured six of the eight spots in the super-regional. Other opening round games Friday send Cowley (39-16) against Garden City and Johnson County (42-16) against Coffeyville. All games will be nine innings with a 10-run rule after seven innings.

Sporting KC plays match in Colorado today

Sporting KC (4-5-2, 14 points) looks to break its winless streak on Wednesday as the team travels west to square off against Colorado Rapids (6-2-2, 20 points), who sit atop the Western Conference and Supporters’ Shield standings.

The match kicks off at 8 p.m. at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, with three hours of live television coverage beginning at 7:30 p.m. on 38 The Spot and SKCTV. La Grande 1340 AM and 99.3 FM will also provide live broadcasts of the game.

With its 2-0 loss to Houston on Saturday in the rearview mirror, Sporting KC is officially a third of the way through its 2016 regular season. Saturday’s game also nudged the team to a losing record at 4-5-2, with the club on a six-game winless streak ahead of the midweek match in Colorado.

The skid began against Colorado on April 13 in a match that ended in a 2-1 defeat at Children’s Mercy Park. Dom Dwyer scored in the 77th minute of the contest, but goals from Luis Solignac and Shkelzen Gashi gave the visitors three points.

Colorado, on the other hand, will enter Wednesday’s match riding a five-game unbeaten streak – part of the Rapids’ best 10-game start to the regular season in club history.

Colorado’s earlier triumph over manager Peter Vermes’ men a month ago at Children’s Mercy Park may have sparked KC’s winless streak, but it also kicked off the Rapids’ current unbeaten run. The Colorado side most recently bested Real Salt Lake with a tight 1-0 victory at home on Saturday. Coming off a meager 2015 MLS season, Colorado has taken the MLS by storm in the first third of the 2016 campaign with more wins than any other team in the league.

Wednesday will be the second of three times that Sporting KC and Colorado will meet during the 2016 regular season, with Vermes’ side returning to Dick’s Sporting Goods Park yet again on July 16. Wednesday’s match marks the 71st occasion the clubs have gone head-to-head, making the Rapids the most frequent opponent in Kansas City history.

– Story from Sporting KC

Editorial: Community mourns loss of police detective

It is a great loss for Wyandotte County and the Kansas City, Kan., community whenever a police officer is lost. Even moreso, it is a grievous loss when a needless violent action claims the life of a dedicated public servant.

Detective Brad Lancaster died in the line of duty on Monday, protecting the citizens of Kansas City, Kan., and Wyandotte County. There is no greater sacrifice than the one made by Detective Lancaster.

There are many questions still remaining about the death of Detective Lancaster. How did an ex-felon get a gun? Why was the suspect allowed to remain in the community after failing some drug tests? Why were the suspect’s continuing tendencies toward violence and drug use not identified before he was released from prison?

However, Detective Lancaster’s life provided many answers in the way he lived, in his duty on the police force and in his work as a volunteer.

We would hope the citizens of Kansas City, Kan., and Wyandotte County will keep Detective Lancaster’s family and fellow officers in their thoughts and prayers at this time of loss.