Freshmen hurlers pitch Blue Devils to sweep in Dallas

Cole Gacke

Jake Bartshe

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College got outstanding pitching performances from a pair of freshmen from Liberty North High School to get back on the winning track on their annual spring road trip to Dallas, Texas.

Cole Gacke hurled a 3-hit gem in blanking Richland Community College 2-0 to snap a 3-game KCKCC losing streak Sunday and Jake Bartshe worked five innings of one-run relief in a 6-3 nightcap win for a sweep that boosted the Blue Devils’ season record to 4-3. The two wins came after KCKCC had dropped a doubleheader to Eastfield 7-0 and 12-11 on Saturday.

Gacke allowed only one runner to reach third base in his 2-0 shutout. He walked two, stranded four and finished spectacularly, striking out the side in the seventh in a six strikeout performance. The Blue Devils scored the game’s only runs in the first. After a one-out walk, Alex Phillips and Drew Holtgrieve rapped back-to-back run-scoring doubles.

Bartshe came on in relief in the third inning after Richland had scored twice in the first inning off starter Corey Cowan and scattered four hits, striking out five and walking one in five innings. The Blue Devils backed him with 10 hits including two each by Tyler Pittman, Chase Redick and Phillips.

Tied 3-3 in the sixth, the Blue Devils went ahead on Pittman’s two-out single following a one-out hit by Dade Wheeler. KCKCC added a pair of insurance runs in the seventh on Zach Mahoney’s 2-run double following a pair of errors. Pittman also had a run-scoring double in the fourth and Phillips also drove in two runs with a single and double.

KCKCC got two home runs including a grand slam and seven RBI from Drew Holtgrieve in the 12-11 loss to Eastfield. The Blue Devils also got a solo home run and a single by Albert Woodard and a pair of singles from Pittman in a 10-hit attack in a game in which they led 5-3, trailed 11-6 and were tied 11-11 before Eastfield scored the game-winning run in the bottom of the fifth on a walk, hit batsman and single.

Trailing 11-6, KCKCC tied the game with five runs in the fifth. After a leadoff home run by Woodard, the Blue Devils loaded the bases on a single by Pittman and two walks to set up Holtgrieve’s grand slam. Holtgrieve also capped a four-run first inning with a two-run home run and then singled in another run in the second. KCKCC;s other run came in the fourth on a double by Phillips.

Eastfield took advantage of wildness for a 7-0 win in Saturday’s opening game. Three Blue Devil hurlers walked eight and six of the eight scored. Offensively, KCKCC had a 7-6 edge in hits including two each by Albert Woodard and Rorey Combs but left seven runners stranded.

Spring-like weather in today’s forecast

National Weather Service graphic

Today’s forecast is sunny with a high near 73, according to the National Weather Service.

There is also a north wind of 5 mph that will become light and variable in the afternoon, the weather service said.

Looking ahead, fire weather concerns are possible Wednesday afternoon, and there is a chance of rain and storms on Thursday afternoon and evening, according to the weather service. Friday, temperatures will drop, with a freeze predicted Friday night.

Fire weather concerns will be elevated Wednesday afternoon as the relative humidity falls to around 25 percent combined with southwest winds of 10 to 20 mph, the weather service said.

The next chance for rain and isolated thunderstorms is expected on Thursday afternoon and evening – severe weather is not expected, according to the weather service.

Tonight, the low will be around 46 with clear skies, according to the weather service. A calm wind will become south southwest around 6 mph in the evening.

Wednesday, it will be sunny with a high near 75, the weather service said. A south southwest wind of 6 to 13 mph may gust as high as 22 mph.

Wednesday night, expect a low of 47 with partly cloudy skies, according to the weather service. A south southwest wind around 6 mph will become light and variable.

Thursday, there is a 30 percent chance of showers, with thunderstorms possible after 2 p.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 66, with a southeast wind of 6 to 11 mph.

On Friday, it will be mostly cloudy with a high near 48, according to the weather service. Friday night, the low will be around 26.

Saturday, it will be mostly sunny with a high near 42, the weather service said. The low Saturday night will be around 27.

Sunday, expect a high of 50 with partly sunny skies, according to the weather service. Sunday night, the low will be around 33.

Monday, it will be partly sunny with a high near 54, the weather service said.

House Committee votes to sideline KanCare expansion bill

Monday’s hearing on a bill that would expand eligibility for Medicaid drew a crowd. The House Health and Human Services Committee voted to table the bill, essentially killing it for this session. (Photo by Meg Wingerter, Kansas News Service)

by Meg Wingerter, Kansas News Service

A bill to expand KanCare most likely is dead after a House committee voted Monday to table it until April.

The House Health and Human Services Committee was expected to vote on a bill that would expand eligibility for Kansas’ privatized Medicaid program known as KanCare. Instead, the members narrowly approved a motion by Rep. John Barker, an Abilene Republican, to sideline it until the veto session, a move that most likely kills the bill.

Monday is the legislative deadline for most bills to pass out of their committee or stay alive by passing through an exempt committee. But it doesn’t appear that Medicaid expansion supporters have any viable options for keeping the bill alive.

“It’s dead,” said Rep. Dan Hawkins, the Wichita Republican who chairs the committee.

Barker said the committee needed more time to assess the state’s financial situation before voting to expand Medicaid. He said the Kansas Supreme Court could order the state to find more funding for schools in the next few months, for example.

“I try not to make a decision until I have all the facts,” he said.

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, said the move to table deceived new legislators, who may not have understood they were killing the bill.

“I’m just speechless because it was such an underhanded move,” she said.

Kansas limits eligibility for Medicaid to children, pregnant women, people with severe disabilities and parents earning less than a third of the federal poverty line, or about $9,200 annually for a four-person family.

If Kansas expanded eligibility, as 31 other states have done, a four-person family could have up to $33,465 in income and a single adult up to $16,642 to be eligible for Medicaid.

The committee spent much of its meeting debating the merits of expanding Medicaid. Advocates pushed expansion as a way to allow low-income working people to pay for insurance and to shore up the finances of rural hospitals.

“To me, the big question we have to ask ourselves is this good for the people,” said Rep. Cindy Holscher, an Olathe Democrat. “I think we have to see it is.”

Opponents said expanding Medicaid would be costly and do little to improve patients’ health. Rep. Abraham Rafie, an Overland Park Republican, said not enough of the Medicaid expansion money would directly benefit rural hospitals and safety net clinics.

“I think there’s many things we can do to improve access to care in our state,” he said.

Advocates said they weren’t giving up pushing for Medicaid expansion, but they acknowledged their chances were slimmer. Mike Oxford, executive director of the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, said after the hearing that he doubts lawmakers will want to take up the bill later in the session.

“I think we’ve got a steep climb,” he said.

Even if an expansion bill clears the procedural hurdles and overcomes the skepticism of many lawmakers, Gov. Sam Brownback has repeatedly said he is opposed to such a proposal. He recently it would be foolish for the state to move forward given plans by President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Meg Wingerter is a reporter for KCUR’s Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach her on Twitter @MegWingerter. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

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