Wingnuts beat T-Bones, 6-3

On an overcast Warrior Wednesday, the Kansas City T-Bones couldn’t get out from under the clouds as the Wichita Wingnuts stormed into T-Bones Stadium.

While the T-Bones were awarded the designation of a Purple Heart Sports Team for their long-time support of veterans, they couldn’t muster a win against the Wingnuts, dropping game one of the series, 6-3.

A lead-off walk plagued the T-Bones right away, and then a bases-clearing triple by Zach Nehrir made the score 1-0 Wingnuts after the first two batters of the game. An infield single by Abel Nieves followed, making the score a quick 2-0.

In the second inning, Noah Perio Jr. hit a double off Wichita starter Travis Banwart into right field. A walk for Danny Hayes brought some life back into the T-Bones. Keeping the dream alive, Keith Curcio hit a ground-rule double that brought Perio Jr. home, earning him his 55th RBI for the season and making the score 2-1.

Great defense by the Wingnuts’ Logan Watkins at the end of the second inning robbed Mason Davis of what would have been a two RBI single and saved Wichita’s lead.

The next inning was highlighted by Nieves’s defense. Colin Walsh hit a bullet to first, but Nieves made the play on the hard bounce from his knees and threw to second from that position with short stop Leo Vargas getting it back to Nieves for a double play. That play came in the third inning and kept the game 2-1 in favor of Wichita at the end of the third.

The wind was with Wichita in the fourth inning as another lead-off walk by Mortenson put Chase Simpson on base. Rotola then reached first on a base hit, but it was the bases-clearing double by Watkins that gave Wichita a 4-1 lead.

The Wingnuts weren’t finished yet, however. Another base hit and a stolen base by Nehrir quickly increased the Wingnut lead to 5-1.

Kansas City struggled offensively in the fifth and sixth innings, but Jared Mortenson left the game after some gutsy pitching in those innings for the T-Bones, keeping the Wichita lead at 5-1. Banwart retired 14 in a row for Wichita.

Jackson Lowery came on to the mound for the T-Bones, relieving Mortenson, but he walked bases loaded right away. Rotola then was hit by a pitch, bringing in Reyes, which earned another run for Wichita and made the score 6-1.

With no answer for Banwart, the T-Bones continued to trail 6-1 going into the ninth inning.

As Daniel Tillman took the mound for Wichita, the T-Bones bats awakened. A base hit for Nieto started the bottom of the ninth. Danny Hayes hit his first home run for KC, a two-run blast to right. Though the T-Bones rallied, it wasn’t enough as they dropped game one 6-3.

Banwart (8-4) got the win, and Mortenson (4-6) was credited with the loss. And with this loss, the T-Bones (59-35) narrowed their lead in the wild card race to only half a game over Wichita (59-36).

The T-Bones return looking for a comeback in game two of the three game series at 7:05 p.m. Thursday at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas.

Left-handed pitcher Casey Harman (11-4, 3.66) will start for Wichita while right-handed pitcher Tommy Collier (11-3, 3.27) will get the nod for Kansas City.
The game can be heard online on the T-Bones Broadcast Network, http://mixlr.com/t-bones-baseball/.

Season, group tickets, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium. Call the box office at 913-328-5618 or purchase and print at www.tbonesbaseball.com. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
– Story from T-Bones

KCKCC women win Jayhawk conference volleyball opener for 3-1 start

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College got its Jayhawk Conference season off to an impressive start Wednesday by shooting down Cloud County 3-2 in the conference opener.

The Lady Blue Devils, who are now 3-1, took command early with 25-12 and 25-14 wins. Cloud rallied for a 25-22 third set win before KCKCC closed out the contest with a solid 25-15 win.

“Truly a team win,” KCKCC coach Mary Bruno-Ballou said. “Everyone played excellent volleyball and it was great to have sophomores Yvette Tamez and Randi Johnson back in the lineup. Cloud is a very, very good team with excellent hitters but we were able to play very clean volleyball and minimize our errors. Very proud of our team effort.”

The Blue Devils now take to the road for the first time this season, playing Friday and Saturday in the seven-state Jimmy John’s Invitational hosted by Southeastern Community College in West Burlington, Iowa. The Blue Devils will play Southeastern in the tournament opener Friday at 10 a.m. and then take on North Iowa Area Community College (NIACC) at 2 p.m. On Saturday, KCKCC will play Macomb Mich.) at 8 a.m. and Iowa Lakes at 10 a.m.

Other teams in the tourney are Carl Sandburg College and John Wood, both Illinois teams; East Central Missouri; Nassau (New York); and Hawkeye Community College out of Waterloo, Iowa.

Voting equipment vendor for Johnson County apologizes after coding snafu delays primary results

by Andrea Tudhope, Kansas News Service

A voting equipment vendor says a coding error is behind the delay in this year’s primary election results in Johnson County, which left some statewide races undecided until the following morning earlier this month.

Nebraska-based Election Systems and Software (ES&S) issued an apology Monday, taking responsibility for the delay. Gary Weber, vice president of software development for ES&S, said it came down to a “non-performing” piece of software, which caused slow processing of the 192 encrypted master thumb drives that held the votes.

“There were several different things that all kind of came together on election night that really exposed this section of code, and exacerbated the problem,” Weber said.

Part of the issue was a failure to test the system with the actual number of ballot positions that a Johnson County voter would see on August’s ballot. ES&S conducted many tests ahead of time, but Weber told KCUR that if they had increased the capacity in the tests, they would have likely run into and identified the coding issue ahead of the election.

Moving forward, he said, the company has expanded the numbers of contests and candidates for testing of the systems.

Weber emphasized that the flawed software in question is separate from the vote tallying software and the voting machines.

The delay in August called into question the seeming last-minute purchase of ES&S equipment this year, two years after the Johnson County Election Commission approved $13 million to replace 15-year-old voting machines. The commission didn’t select ES&S until earlier this year, and the selection wasn’t certified until July.

“We were coming under the wire on getting the version of the software certified and ready to go for this election, but the voting machine itself, and waiting ’til late in the game like it may appear that we did, had no bearing on that,” Johnson County election commissioner Ronnie Metsker told KCUR.

After conducting an investigation, ES&S has rewritten the software code, which the company said it will submit for federal certification later this week. Kathy Rogers, senior vice president of government relations, said it usually takes about a month for approval.

At that rate, Johnson County may not see the updates installed until early to mid-October. But Rogers told KCUR it will be enough time ahead of the general election Nov. 7.

“Plenty of time,” she said. “We’ll be doing testing here, Johnson County will be testing concurrently, we’ll continue testing, and also, testing will be ongoing at the lab.”

The Johnson County Election Office also plans to install an additional thousand voting machines and hire 1,000 more workers to ease issues voters reportedly experienced at the polls in August.

Andrea Tudhope is a reporter for KCUR 89.3. Email her at [email protected], and follow her on Twitter @_tudhope. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.
See more at http://www.kcur.org/post/voting-equipment-vendor-apologizes-after-coding-snafu-delayed-kansas-primary-results.