The Sumner Academy boys soccer team traveled to Basehor-Linwood High School for the 4-1A northeast regional final on Thursday evening, coming away with a 4 – 0 win and the championship plaque. The regional championship is the first in the program’s history.
The cold, windy weather played an active part in the game. Sumner, playing out of the south goal in the first half, faced into strong northerly gusts that knocked down every long pass forward. Even so, the Sabres struck in the 10th minute, with a goal from senior forward Alfonso Vela.
Sumner used accurate passing from its back line and sideline runs from speedy senior midfielder Brian Alvarez to control the ball for much of the first half, but they were unable to add to their total.
The 1 – 0 Sumner lead stood for much of the second half. Basehor stepped up its defensive pressure, and the game became more of a grind. The tough, physical play eventually led to three yellow cards handed out to the Sabres.
With only 11 minutes remaining, Sumner slammed the door on the Bobcats’ hopes for a comeback, picking up three goals in the span of 9 minutes. Senior forward Mauricio Moya started the surge with a hot shot down the middle from 18 yards out.
Alvarez picked up Sumner’s third goal with a sliding cross from the left corner. Freshman midfielder Luis Navidad-Hernandez closed out the scoring by putting back a rebound off the Basehor goalkeeper from close range.
Sumner, now 12-2-1 on the season, moves on to the state quarterfinals, to be played on Tuesday, Oct. 31.
With firefighters carrying signs tonight in front of City Hall, Mayor Mark Holland called a news conference on the 9th floor of City Hall to tell his side of the story.
Holland, while complimenting the firefighters as “the best in the world,” also called the firefighters’ protest “a display of political theater.” He said firefighters’ leaders were stirring up fear before the Nov. 7 mayoral election.
Both sides referenced a task force that is working on issues and recommendations in a 2015 fire study.
“Given the process that is under way, and given that the union is participating in that process, it is disingenuous and irresponsible of the union to draw conclusions about how we as a community move forward with strengthening our fire coverage,” Holland said. “I am especially disappointed that they have chosen to do this before the task force’s report is completed, and to do so less than two weeks before the election.”
But the firefighters said they were responding to recent statements made by the mayor at candidate forums.
At the heart of the issue are the possible reductions in fire companies, and the possible loss of positions.
A 2015 study looked at the issues and made several recommendations. A task force was appointed to study issues and will make a recommendation before the end of the year, according to the mayor.
The 2015 study, for example, recommended combining some fire stations that were close to each other, such as in Fairfax and the northeast area, and building other new stations, such as one in Piper. There were also possible cuts in personnel to the Rosedale area, including the University of Kansas Hospital area, in the study.
The UG phrased the fire station changes differently: “No proposals call for the closing of fire stations,” the UG stated in a fact sheet. “However, it is likely older, outdated stations will be replaced with new, modern fire stations in different locations.”
“We’re 18 people down,” said Bob Wing, the business manager for the International Association of Firefighters, Local 64. These positions were formerly funded by a grant, and the positions were eliminated. It is not a layoff, but the grant money was let go by not reapplying for it, according to Wing. There were three positions added, and the UG stated 16 positions had been eliminated by the grant.
There were some plans to close and consolidate some stations in the 2015 study, build new stations and reduce some companies, according to firefighters. Wing said he is concerned about the time it will take to respond to emergencies. Holland said the goal is still to keep response time to a standard of 4 minutes.
“Let the committee do their work, that was agreed to, let us complete our task, take it to the commissioners, what was agreed to, and let them make a decision based on what we come up with,” Wing said.
But the mayor making public statements at forums undermines the committee’s work, Wing said. If the mayor hadn’t made statements at the forums, the firefighters wouldn’t be standing there, he said. Wing said the firefighters’ protest was not political.
Wing said he wants to be able to assure his family, coworkers and residents that they have the safest place they can have.
“If we’re being slighted, then the community’s being slighted,” he said. “We’re all paying for the service we’re not getting.”
Wing added that the citizen survey conducted by the UG ranks public safety – police, fire and sheriff – as the top priorities of the residents.
The firefighters’ union has endorsed mayoral candidate David Alvey, who marched with the firefighters. The signs read, “The city’s burning us now. Are you next?”
Alvey said at the rally that it was a sad state of affairs that the first responders have to hold a protest in order to get their message across to the mayor and the community.
“He alienates the very people who are charged with our protection,” Alvey said. “That’s not good leadership.”
When Alvey was asked about the mayor’s statement that this protest was all political, he said, “He’s entitled to his opinion.”
Commissioner Mike Kane, who is running for re-election, last week announced the location of the new Piper fire station would be at Leavenworth Road and Hutton Road, on the west side of the city. That station is being worked on ahead of some other changes that could take place as a result of the fire study.
Mark Holland, Mayor/CEO of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, issued the following statement today in response to false claims made by the city’s Fire Union leadership (please see attached letter referred to in the Mayor’s statement):
Kansas City, Kansas, has the best firefighters in the world. They’re putting their lives on the line every day and they deserve our support and every effort we can make to keep them safe, just as they do everything they can to keep our community safe.
This is why I pledged in 2014 to conduct a comprehensive study of each public safety department: Police, Fire, and Sheriff. These 3 departments are our top priority and represent 60% of the Unified Government’s general fund budget. The fire study is a collaborative effort between the union, the command staff, the administration, and elected officials. The union helped select the team, has participated at every point in the process, and has signed off on the completed study. I have a copy of the letter for everyone here.
The protest organized today by Fire Union leadership is a display of political theater. The Union’s leadership has made false claims about the Unified Government’s process in order to stir up fear ahead of the Nov. 7 Mayoral Election.
This surprises me because the Union is actively participating in a task force that includes Fire Command staff and UG administration. This task force is charged with determining how best to realign our fire coverage in response to shifting population densities that have occurred over the last several decades.
Its recommendations are scheduled to come before the Unified Board of Commissioners at the end of the year. At that point will we begin a thorough and transparent public discussion about the best path forward for fire coverage in our community.
One pressing need that arose before that report could be completed was a fire station in the Piper neighborhood, at Hutton Road and Leavenworth Road, where population has surged. The station is scheduled to be completed next year.
Given the process that is under way, and given that the union is participating in that process, it is disingenuous and irresponsible of the union to draw conclusions about how we as a community move forward with strengthening our fire coverage. I am especially disappointed that they have chosen to do this before the task force’s report is completed, and to do so less than two weeks before the election. Their claims are false, and they are purely political, and appear to be made in an effort to protect outdated policies. I am committed to best practice standards that support both our firefighters and responsible use of taxpayer dollars.
When the election is over, I look forward to putting this political theater behind us and getting to work on what really matters: giving our community the best fire coverage possible.
A new era in Kansas City Kansas Community College women’s basketball will get underway Wednesday when the Lady Blue Devils open the 2017-2018 season.
The opener Wednesday will be against North Central Missouri College in Trenton, Mo., with the home opener Thursday against Graceland junior varsity at 6 p.m. The Blue Devils have six games in their first 11 days including St. Mary junior varsity Nov. 6 and the annual Keith Lindsey Classic against William Penn junior varsity and Penn Valley Nov. 10-11.
With only one returnee from last year’s 19-win team, Joe McKinstry faces a total rebuilding job in his third season as Lady Blue Devil head coach.
“Obviously we knew the way we recruited last year we would be in this situation,” McKinstry said. “We’re very young and inexperienced. But for our staff, this is the start of a two-year plan. We spent a lot of time recruiting and putting this team together and we’re very excited about the group we have here.
“The key for us as a staff and program will be to try and stay patient and focus on the big picture. We do have good talent and good depth – more size, length and athleticism than the past two years.”
That says a lot. Two years ago in McKinstry’s first year, the Blue Devils surged to the NJCAA Division II national championship, KCKCC’s first ever. Without a 6-foot starter, KCKCC swept the four-game national tournament by an average margin of 19 points a game to cap a 33-3 season. Despite losing four starters, the Blue Devils were 19-13 last year.
Alix Wilson, a 5-9 guard from St. Joseph (Mo.) Central, is the lone returnee from last year, Wilson, who played in 32 games (eight as starter), is coming off hip surgery following last season.
“We’re looking forward to her being healthy and filling a bigger role,” McKinstry said. The only other sophomore is guard Ally Lollis, a transfer from the University of Tampa. A good shooter, she’ll be counted on as a perimeter scoring threat. A capsule look at the Blue Devil roster by position:
Point guard – “Two very capable players who will share playing time,” McKinstry said. “Caitlyn Stewart from Wichita Maize is more of a traditional point guard with her speed and ability to involve teammates; Tyrionne Martin from New Orleans is more of a scoring point guard and ball handler who is learning how to run the offense.”
Shooting guard – “An abundance of guards,” McKinstry said. “Very wide open with a lot of competition every day to pick up the speed of the game and immediately contribute at this level.”
In addition to the two sophomores, Wilson and Lollis, the wealth of freshmen hopefuls include 5-10 Caroline Hoppock from Olathe East; 5-9 Camryn Swanson, Blue Springs, Mo.; 5-7 Ashley Daniels, Schlagle; Miya Ford, Piper; and 5-4 Gene Ojeda, Shawnee Mission Northwest. Once the KCKCC volleyball concludes, the Blue Devils will also get the services of 6-0 Randi Johnson of Lee’s Summit, Mo.
Power forward – No pure post player but four solid candidates to rebound and score inside. They are 6-0 Nija Collier of Roseville, Mich.; 5-11 Lizzie Stark of Liberty (Mo.) North and a pair of teammates from Magnolia, Ark., 6-1 Lillie Moore and 5-9 Kisi Young.
“All will get plenty of playing time and the opportunity to contribute,” McKinstry said. “A lot of talent that’s working hard to learn to play at this level.”
Makayla Jacobs, a 6-0 sophomore transfer from Tabor College in Hillsboro, and 5-10 guard Kiara Brown of Schlagle, will redshirt this season.
“It’s a team I think can be fun to watch,” McKinstry said. “Our goal from the start of practice is to get better every day and build towards getting our talent to come together and understand how to compete at this level, especially when playing in the toughest conference in the country.”
That’s no exaggeration – national tournament finalists in each of the last four seasons. In 2014, Highland finished second in the Division II national tournament. The next year Johnson County won it; KCKCC followed suit in 2016; and JCCC was second last season. In KCKCC’s national championship season, the Blue Devils defeated the No. 1, No. 2, No. 5 and No. 12 seeded teams in the national tourney and none came closer than 14 points.
“Last year, all five teams in our conference were ranked in the Top 20 at one time or another,” McKinstry said. “Johnson, Highland and Labette all finished in the top 15 in the national rankings. We finished fourth in the conference and won 19 games. That says a lot about the Jayhawk.”
McKinstry is being assisted by Chamissa Anderson, a former Michigan and Chicago area standout and coach in her third season, and newcomer Timeka O’Neal, who earned All-American honors at JCCC and then played two years at the University of Kansas.
Kansas City Kansas Community College
2017-2018 Women’s Basketball Schedule
Nov. 1 – N. Central Missouri, Away 5:30 p.m.
Nov. 2 – GRACELAND JV, Home 6 p.m.
Nov. 6 – SAINT MARY JV, Home 5 p.m.
Nov. 8 – Ottawa JV, Away Noon
KEITH LINDSEY CLASSIC
Nov. 10 – WILLIAM PENN JV 6 p.m.
Nov. 11 – PENN VALLEY 4 p.m.
Nov. 15 – North Arkansas, Away 5 p.m.
Nov. 17 – PARK UNIV. JV, Home 5 p.m.
Nov. 18 – Penn Valley, Away TBA
Nov. 26 – ELLSWORTH, Home 2 p.m.
Nov. 27 – Washburn JV, Away 5 p.m.
Dec. 1 – NORTH ARKANSAS, Home 5 p.m.
Dec. 2 – MARSHALLTOWN, Home 2 p.m.
Dec. 6 – N. CENT. MISSOURI, Home TBA
Dec. 10 – Wabash @ St. Louis TBA
Dec. 15 – Des Moines Area, Away 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 11 – OTTAWA JV, Home 7 p.m.
Jan. 16 – Saint Mary JV, Away 5:30 p.m.
Jan.18 – William Penn JV, Away 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 24 – Johnson County*, Away 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 27 – HESSTON*, Home 2 p.m.
Jan. 31 – Fort Scott*, Away 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 3 – HIGHLAND*, Home 2 p.m.
Feb. 7 – LABETTE*, Home 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 10 – JOHNSON COUNTY*, Home 2 p.m.
Feb. 14 – Hesston*, Away 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 17 – FORT SCOTT*, Home 2 p.m.
Feb. 21 – Highland*, Away 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 24 – Labette*, Away 2 p.m.
• – Jayhawk Conference game
Feb. 28 – Region VI quarterfinals TBA
March 3 – Region VI semifinals TBA
March 7 – Region VI finals Park City