Five arms combine to shut out RailCats

Five Kansas City T-Bones pitchers combined to shut out the Gary SouthShore RailCats 6-0 in game two of the 2017 exhibition schedule Wednesday night at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas City, Kansas.

The T-Bones got all the runs they would need in the first inning when Omar Garcia and Marcus Lemon each singled off RailCats starter Tyler Harris. With Kevin Keyes at the plate, both runners were on the move, executing a perfect double steal.

Gary SouthShore Catcher Jaime Del Valle over threw third base, which allowed Garcia to race home, and the score was 1-0. Keyes then hit a deep fly to center to bring home Lemon who moved up to third on the errant throw by Del Valle.

In the third inning, the T-Bones loaded the bases off Harris. Then Joe Jackson delivered a bases-clearing double to left center field, hitting off the warning track and the 411 sign at CommunityAmerican Ballpark. With the T-Bones in business 5-0, it was the pitching staff that shined the entire night.

Kansas City starter Gabe Perez retired all six batters he faced in two innings of work, which included three strike outs. He was followed by lefty Mark McCoy who like wise retired the six men he faced, including a nine pitch fourth inning.

Luis Paula worked a pair of scoreless innings for Kansas City in the fifth and sixth innings and was followed by Myles Smith who allowed an infield single with a four strike outs in his two innings of work. The T-Bones then brought in Aaron Brooks who worked a 1-2-3 ninth to preserve the one hit shutout.

In one of the more interesting quirks of spring training baseball, the two clubs played the bottom of the ninth despite Kansas City leading at the time 5-0.

That decision benefitted the T-Bones as Jordan Edgerton took Laetten Galbraith deep to right field, hitting a solo homerun up on the grassy berm to make it 6-0 and to finish off the RailCats. The T-Bones have allowed just one run so far in the first two spring training games and have not allowed a run in the last 12 innings.

The T-Bones will once again host Gary SouthShore in the third game of the exhibition season Thursday night at 7:05 at CommunityAmercia Ballpark. Tickets are available online or by calling 913-328-5618 or by visiting in person the Providence Medical Center Box Office.

The T-Bones will open the 2017 regular season at home on May 19 against Lincoln.

– Story from T-Bones

Gaming revenues reported for Hollywood Casino

Gaming revenues at Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway were up in April as compared to the previous April, according to a report Wednesday at the Kansas Lottery Commission.

The gaming revenues at Hollywood Casino were down in a March to April comparison, and gaming revenues for Boot Hill Casino in Dodge City, Kan., and Kansas Star Casino in Mulvane, Kan., also were slightly down in a March to April comparison.

Hollywood Casino in Kansas City, Kansas, revenues were up by 1.75 percent in April as compared to last April, according to Keith Kocher, director of program assurance for the Kansas Lottery.

Figures from the Kansas Lottery Commission showed $13.4 million in gaming revenues for Hollywood Casino in March, compared to $12.25 million In April.

Revenues for the combined four state casinos in Kansas increased during the month, Kocher said. With new state casino revenues coming in from the Pittsburg, Kan., area, the total casino gaming revenues for April were up slightly in Kansas.

The four state casinos produced $35.3 million in gaming revenues in April as compared to $34.4 million in March. In March, there were only two days that a new Kansas Crossing Casino was open in Pittsburg, Kan. The new casino produced $3.1 million in gaming revenue in April.

The Kansas Star Casino in Mulvane, Kan., near the Wichita area, reported $16.26 million in casino revenues during April, compared to $16.79 million in March, according to lottery figures. Kocher said there was a 4.5 percent increase when last April was compared to April 2017.

Boot Hill Casino in Dodge City, Kan., reported $3.67 million in gaming revenue during April as compared to $3.6 million in March. According to Kocher, gaming revenues were up 7.8 percent at Boot Hill in a comparison of April 2016 to April 2017.

So far, in fiscal 2017, total casino gaming revenues have been up just short of one-half of one percent, Kocher said.

During the month of April, total casino gaming revenue produced by the state casinos since they first opened in 2009 went over the $2 billion mark, he said.

Rejection of tax bill could send Kansas lawmakers into overtime

by Jim McLean and Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

After several false starts, the Kansas Senate on Wednesday finally took up a tax bill.

But after a brief debate, Democrats and conservative Republicans voted for different reasons to reject it.

Two Democrats joined 16 moderate Republicans in voting for the bill, which failed 18-22.

The seven Democrats who voted against the measure said they feared it would not generate sufficient revenue to both balance the state budget and increase funding for public schools by enough to satisfy the Kansas Supreme Court.

Sen. Lynn Rogers, a Wichita Democrat, said like many new members, he ran for the Legislature to fix the budget problems triggered by the income tax cuts that Gov. Sam Brownback pushed through in 2012, when conservative Republicans were firmly in control.

“While this (bill) makes many of the right moves in that direction, it does not fix school funding,” Rogers said.

Fifteen conservative Republicans, including Senate President Susan Wagle of Wichita, opposed raising taxes by more than $1 billion. They also objected to specifics of the plan, which would have effectively reversed Brownback’s income tax cuts by raising rates, restoring a third bracket and repealing a controversial business tax exemption.

Sen. Gene Suellentrop, a Wichita Republican, said any plan to balance the budget also should reduce the cost of government.

“There are some ways to lower that cost so that we do not have to take that much money from the citizens of Kansas,” Suellentrop said.

Senate Vice President Jeff Longbine, an Emporia Republican, warned members that rejecting the plan likely would push the session into overtime.

“My constituents and other people I’ve talked to around Kansas have told me time and time and time again, ‘You know what the problem is, find the political courage to fix it.’ I think this is the fix,” Longbine said, noting that lawmakers were approaching the 100-day deadline they set for ending the session.

Earlier this session, the House and Senate approved a tax plan, but it was vetoed by Brownback, who has staunchly defended the 2012 tax cuts. The House voted to override the veto, but the Senate was a few votes short of the 27 needed for an override.

Longbine was clearly frustrated after Wednesday’s vote.

“I think we went backward today,” he said. “Politics got in the way of good policy.”

Before they go home, legislators must approve plans to erase a projected two-year budget hole of $900 million and increase funding for public schools in response to a Kansas Supreme Court ruling that declared the state’s current formula unconstitutional.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/rejection-tax-bill-could-send-kansas-lawmakers-overtime.