Two game-saving plays paved KCKCC’s way to soccer national

Joined by Leonardo Da Silva and Brajan Huyke (7), Guilhermie Grave (9) celebrated the first of his two goals in KCKCC’s 3-2 win over Ranger (Texas) in the Plains District championship game. (KCKCC photo by Emilie Lutz)

Blue Devils one of 12 teams qualified for next week’s NJCAA Division 1 tourney in Arizona

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

A near tragedy was averted on Kansas City Kansas Community College’s amazing ride to its first ever NJCAA Region VI and Plains District soccer championships:

“On one of Rose State’s kicks in the Shootout, the ball hit the cross bar,” recounted KCKCC assistant coach Burke Slusher. “Fortunately, our goalkeeper, Youssef Gadelkerim, alertly picked up the ball because the ball was still in play. The referee told Youssef he made a smart play because the ball would have rolled back into the goal.”

Minutes later, Gadelkerim made the biggest play of his young collegiate career, a diving deflection of a shot by Rose State star Ala Ramadan that gave the Blue Devils an 1-1, 8-7 win and a berth in the Plains District championship game against Ranger (Texas) College.

“It was very satisfying because of the way he had improved throughout the season,” KCKCC head coach Ruben Rodriguez said.

The Blue Devils (12-3-1) now await the pairings for the national tournament starting next Monday on Mountain Valley Field in Prescott, Ariz. A field of 12 teams will be divided into pods of three teams with each team playing the other two teams in its pod. The four winners will then advance to the national semifinals.

Gadelkerim was just one of a bunch of stars in the dramatic semifinal win. Guilherme Grave had KCKCC’s lone goal in regulation time while Ricardo Angelo, Gustavo Paleiri, Giovannie Calderon, Leonardo DaSilva, Pa Ousman Jobe, Mario Sandoval and Emmanuel Hernandez all had goals in the Shootout before Angelo’s second successful kick in sudden death proved to be the winner.

“Towards the end of the game, it became evident Rose State wanted to go to penalty kicks,” Rodriguez said. “They were focused on stopping us defensively. We had chances but couldn’t convert.”

“Anytime you go to a Shootout, there’s going to be high drama,” Slusher said. “And going to sudden death adds even more. Being the first game of the district, I think there was a little bit of nerves for some of the guys. They played a little bit tentative, we weren’t quite as sharp.”

The drama, however, had started much earlier – a 1-0 regional win over No. 7 ranked Cloud County in Concordia won on a header by Ricardo Angelo off a corner kick by Gustavo Paleiri just 2:32 into the first overtime.

“That may have been the biggest highlight for the team – playing the No. 7 in the country, their place, in overtime, not a good field,” Slusher said. “It was a real intensive game for 94 minutes. You could see on the celebration video what a major win it was for the team.”

“Long trip and difficult field conditions but about 10 minutes into the game I thought the boys felt comfortable,” echoed Rodriguez. “The key was we were able to stick to the game plan of high pressure and not allowing them to set the tempo of the game.”

According to Cloud coach James Ross, it was the difference in the outcome.

“They (the Blue Devils) came in here with the mentality of playing physical, disrupting us and they did that,” Ross said. “That really sped up our play, which is not our game. KCKCC did a really good job of taking us out of our game.”

The Blue Devils never trailed in the 3-2 win over Ranger in the championship game. Grave scored the first of his two goals on a deflection of a free kick just 14:42 into the contest and then extended the lead to 2-0 on a pass from Ricardo Angelo at the 28:33 mark. The Blue Devils dominated most of the first half only to give up a goal on a free kick to Kyle Edwards with just 1:17 left in the first half.

Ousman Pa Jobe reopened the lead to 3-1 on an assist from Hector Valles just six minutes into the second half and it stayed that way until the final 13 minutes when Ranger scored on a goal by Azinho Solomon assisted by Edwards.

Playing with very little rest following a double overtime win over Rose State Thursday night, the Blue Devils took every punch Ranger could throw at them to hang on for the historic victory.

“I really felt confident,” Slusher said. “The guys were in the right frame and clicking in sync.”

“Getting the early lead on the goal by G (Grave) helped tremendously,” Rodriguez said. “And it was important that we again stuck to our game plan of high pressure. A total team effort; the boys really stepped up.”

KCKCC sophomore Pa Ousman Jobe (6) sent the kick away that proved to be the game-winning goal in the Blue Devils’ 3-2 win over Ranger (Texas). Teammate Reed Axthelm (19) watched the successful kick. (KCKCC photo by Emilie Lutz)
Sophomore Guilherme Grave followed through on the kick that gave KCKCC its first goal and a 1-0 lead on the way to a 3-2 win over Ranger (Texas) in the Plains District tournament in Topeka Nov. 3. (KCKCC photo by Emilie Lutz)
For the first time in more than 25 years of soccer at Kansas City Kansas Community College, the Blue Devils are bound for the NJCAA Division I national tournament in Prescott, Ariz., next week. KCKCC defeated Garden City 4-0, No. 7 Cloud County 1-0 in overtime, Rose State in a 1-1, 8-7 Shootout and Ranger (Texas) 3-2. (KCKCC photo by Emilie Lutz)

Voters to go to polls Nov. 7 for general election

Voters will go to the polls Tuesday, Nov. 7, in Wyandotte County for the general election for city, county, school board and Board of Public Utilities positions.

Unified Government mayor-CEO, Wyandotte County sheriff, Unified Government Commission districts 1, 5, 7 and 8, and Board of Public Utilities, 1st District at large, and 2nd District at large, are on the ballot on Tuesday. Also on the ballot are positions for the Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education and Kansas City Kansas Community College Board of Trustees. These are all nonpartisan positions.

Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voters should bring a driver’s license or other form of approved identification.

For information on polling places, voting requirements and other election information, visit the Election Commissioner’s website at http://www.wycovotes.org/, or call the election office at 913-573-8500 or email [email protected].

Following are links to stories about the election:

Unified Government, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-unified-government-office-in-general-election-tuesday/

Mayor-CEO, https://wyandotteonline.com/holland-alvey-spar-about-utility-rates-taxes-and-spending/

Wyandotte County Sheriff, https://wyandotteonline.com/incumbent-sheriff-faces-challenger-in-general-election-nov-7/

Unified Government Commission, 2nd District at large, https://wyandotteonline.com/burroughs-rios-contend-for-ug-commission-2nd-district-at-large/

Unified Government Commission, 1st District, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-unified-government-office-in-general-election-tuesday/

Unified Government Commission, 5th District, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-unified-government-office-in-general-election-tuesday/

Unified Government Commission, 7th District, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-unified-government-office-in-general-election-tuesday/

Unified Government Commission, 8th District, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-unified-government-office-in-general-election-tuesday/

Board of Public Utilities, at large Position 1 and at large Position 2, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-run-for-bpu-offices-in-general-election-tuesday/

Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education, https://wyandotteonline.com/kansas-city-kansas-school-board-candidates-run-for-office/

KCKCC Board of Trustees, https://wyandotteonline.com/candidates-seek-positions-on-kckcc-board-in-tuesdays-election/

Candidates also are running in municipal and school elections in Bonner Springs, Edwardsville, Turner and Piper. For a complete list of candidates on the ballot, visit https://static1.squarespace.com/static/56606b47e4b0b9403ad6ff96/t/59b14288f14aa1a00089537c/1504789128300/Candidate+on+the+General+Election+Ballot+110717.pdf

For past stories about the election, go to the Wyandotte Daily’s Election 17 pages, https://wyandotteonline.com/category/election-2017/.

Candidates seek positions on KCKCC board in Tuesday’s election

Candidates for the KCKCC Board of Trustees include, front row, left to right, Leslie Smith, Linda Hoskins Sutton, Evelyn Criswell, back row, left to right, Christal Watson, Janice McIntyre and Tom Earp. They were at a candidate forum Oct. 18 at KCKCC. (Staff photo)

Seven candidates are on the ballot for regular terms on the Kansas City Kansas Community College Board of Trustees.

Candidates include Evelyn Criswell, Thomas G. Earp, Colton J. Gibson, Linda Hoskins Sutton, Janice L. McIntyre, Leslie Smith and Christal Watson. Voters will choose three of the candidates on Nov. 7. None is an incumbent.

At the Oct. 18 candidate forum at KCKCC, Criswell said she had 20 years of business and finance success, expertise and advocacy in key programming, competitive positioning, sustainability, fundraising, financial stewardship and aligning the college with community priorities.

She said the key programs at the college needed to be increased and improved to align with employer needs, particularly in technology, biomed and health care information technology. She said she would ensure the students, community and college played a major role in those technical pipelines. She said she would ensure the college continues its research on best practices for KCKCC compared with other community colleges.

On sustainability, she said she would work with the board and foundation to build out a private donor and alumni database to put a program in place and support it. She foresees a full-fledged program raising several million dollars.

Linda Hoskins Sutton said she is qualified because she retired from the college after 30 years of service in financial services, continuing education and community services, student services and adjunct faculty. She said she could use her expertise and knowledge to serve the college.

“Being on the inside, I could bring a different perspective to the Board of Trustees that could help all of the trustees,” she said.

She said students are her priority, and all decisions made should consider how they would affect the students.

She said she wants the college, the Wyandotte County school districts and community to collaborate and see how they can improve the college readiness of children from kindergarten through 12th grade. Until that is done, they will not realize their potential.

Hoskins Sutton has lived in Wyandotte County for 37 years, and has been a member of the Women’s Chamber of Commerce, and is a past board member of the Greater Kansas City People to People International. She has received an associate of business degree from a community college in Mississippi and a business administration degree from Baker University.

Leslie Smith said she attended the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools and lived here all her life. She has worked with young adults and senior citizens. She said she has a passion to help others in the community by listening to their concerns.

Smith said she would like to promote the importance of education, rejuvenate the atmosphere of social programs and increase student participation.

Listening to students would have a positive effect, encouraging and empowering the students, she said. Promoting and building relationships with students would be a primary concern of hers, she said.

She added she would like to improve the academic achievement for students.

Tom Earp, who formerly owned two retail businesses here, originally came from Independence, Mo. He graduated from Pittsburg State University and has lived here since the 1960s.

He formerly ran for city council here. He is a former member of the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department, working there for seven years. Earp said the campus police are short-handed.

“The community college – we have a gem here, a diamond,” Earp said. “I don’t think it’s been fully utilized.”

He said he supports looking at the child care center at the college, to be reopened. He also said dorms may need to be expanded for out-of-state athletes.

He also said he would like to see credits from the community college transfer to all four-year colleges in the state.

Janice L. McIntyre retired from KCKCC after 33 years. She ran classes and programs for first-semester students, plus college career development work.

McIntyre, who has a doctorate degree in adult education, curriculum and instruction, served on a number of boards for professional organizations that had done research for college success, and how to get students organized.

“My plank is for student success first, student support services and community connections,” McIntyre said.

After retirement, McIntyre came back to KCKCC as a yoga instructor at the Wellness and Fitness Center. She also helped with student career planning and the World of Work Week. McIntyre helped to found the American Association of University Women chapter at KCKCC. She also has written grants and done fundraising.

She is currently teaching at the KCKCC Leavenworth campus and at Harmon High School.

McIntyre said she knows how to make successful programs, how to promote and support people who are in the positions to help students. She said as a board member, she will know how to advocate for students in an organizational structure that will make everyone successful.

Christal Watson, the president and CEO of the Heartland Black Chamber of Commerce, said she knows what it takes to be creative, resourceful, to have a background and experience that enables people to reach specific markets. She said the top thing she does in her job is to build partnerships.

“I will be able to advocate on behalf of the college, build bridges with government, local government, state government and federal government,” she said. She also will be able to build bridges with the community, the neighborhood groups, and with the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools. She is a former Kansas City, Kansas, school board member.

She said it was nice to be noticed at the recent meet-and-greet from the KCKCC Student Senate as “Alan’s mom, B.J.’s mom and Neil’s mom.”

“They can relate to me because of who my children are, but I can relate to them because I have children who are almost grown and I know what it is like for them to be in college,” Watson said. As a former student at KCKCC, it’s like coming home, she added.

She said she has experience in public policy that boards handle, and it is important that board members work together, are cohesive and are on the same page. With changes coming and the new board having three new board members, it will allow a fresh perspective on how to build the mission of the college in a way that not only builds students, but also builds community, she said.

Colton J. Gibson was not at this forum Oct. 18.

Two incumbents who were appointed, Rosalyn K. Brown and Tyrone Garner, are also on the ballot, running for unexpired terms on the KCKCC Board of Trustees. They do not have opposition. Voters may vote for two persons in the unexpired terms category.

Polling places will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 7.

For information on voting, see the website, http://www.wycovotes.org/, or voters may call the election office at 913-573-8500.

For past stories about the election, go to the Wyandotte Daily’s Election 17 pages, https://wyandotteonline.com/category/election-2017/.

More issues were discussed at the candidate forum, which is online at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsFhUbq98Fw.