KCKCC baseball to build around three returning starting pitchers

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

It’s an old baseball axiom you can never have too much pitching but Kansas City Kansas Community College’s baseball team will go into Jayhawk Conference play with its most experienced staff in recent years.

Three sophomores who combined to start 34 games last year head a deep and promising mound staff to go along with an experienced infield.

Matt Goldbeck (KCKCC photo)

“The strength of this team should be our pitching staff,” said fourth year head coach Matt Goldbeck. “We have a lot of quality arms and ‘plus stuff’ as a staff. If we can throw strikes, I think we’ll be able to pitch and play defense.”

Kept inside by this year’s snow, ice and cold, the Blue Devils finally got outside this past weekend with a five-game spring trip to the Dallas area where faced Eastfield in doubleheaders Friday and Saturday and Brookhaven in a single game Sunday. The home opener will come Saturday, Feb. 23, when the Blue Devils play host to State Fair in a twin bill.

Goldbeck will build his pitching staff around three sophomore righthanders from Florida – Orlando Ortiz and Victor Gotay, both of Miami Beach; and Carlos Soto of Kissimmee. All were in the starting rotation a year ago when the Blue Devils finished 34-26.

Gotay was 3-3 with a 3.94 earned run average in 10 starts; Soto 4-7 with a 5.05 ERA in 11 starts; and Ortiz 3-6 and a 6.06 ERA in 13 starts. Ortiz struck out 91 in 69 innings but also surrendered 65 walks. Soto had 52 strikeouts in 66 innings and Gotay 42 strikeouts in 45 innings. Each gave up 30 walks.

Osvaldo Mendez, a freshman lefthander from Carolina, Puerto Rico, is expected to fill the fourth spot in the starting rotation with Matt Fred, a freshman righthander from Saint Mary, Kansas, slated to start in this weekend’s fifth game in Texas. Sophomore lefthander Hunter Paxton of Mill Valley, who was 3-1 in five starts last season, will also see starting duty along with sophomore Maxwell Storch of Olathe South and freshmen Jose Amaro and Zavier Morin of Gardner-Atchison.

The relief corps will be built around three freshmen – righthanders Phillip Bryant of Little Rock, Arkansas, and Gabriel Ramos of Deltona, Florida, and southpaw Jake Martin of Aurora, Colorado.

Kevin Santiago (KCKCC photo)

Kevin Santiago returns to lead the offense. A sophomore from Puerto Rico, Santiago led the Blue Devils with 11 home runs, 63 runs-batted-in and a .713 slugging percentage while hitting .386 in a banner freshman season.

“We’re counting on him for a big year,” Goldbeck said.


Santiago will be joined on the infield by Eric Hinostroza of Shawnee at first, Trace Harter of Topeka Seaman at second and Kemper Bednar of Saint James at third. All are sophomores but only Bednar saw action last year, hitting .250 in 20 games. Harter is a transfer from Johnson County while Hinostroza is a former Blue Devil returning from military duty.

Three freshmen have won the starting outfield spots – Tyler Henry of Gardner-Edgerton in left, Eduardo Acosta of Puerto Rico in center and Matt Schrick of Atchison in right. Sophomore Brady Holder of Kearney and freshmen Jose Soto of Kissimmee, Trey Hoover of Maryville, Missouri, and Kaleb Harrison of Neola, Iowa, will vie for the role of designated hitter as well as infield and outfield duties.

Catching will be another strength. Sophomore J.T. Goodfellow of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, who caught 30 games last season, will be joined by freshman Griffin Everett of Lincoln, Nebraska.

“Offensively, this is going to be a team that will try to put pressure on the defense by stealing bases, bunting for hits and using the hit-and-run, all the little things,” Goldbeck said. “Santiago, Henry and Schrick will provide some power.”

Goldbeck is being assisted by veterans Bill Sharp, Dean Long and Ryne McDonald and newcomers Andrew Kreiling and Pedro Leon. All but Leon are former Blue Devils.

The Blue Devils have been tabbed for fifth place in the Jayhawk Conference behind Cowley, which is ranked No. 6 in the NJCAA preseason poll; Neosho County, Johnson County and Fort Scott. The Blue Devils will play a 32-game Jayhawk schedule, four-game series with each other league member rotating on a home-and-home basis on Thursdays and Saturdays.

Kansas City Kansas Community College

2019 Baseball Schedule

Friday, Feb. 15 Eastfield CC Dallas, TX. Noon
Saturday, Feb 16 Eastfield CC Dallas, TX. Noon
Sunday, Feb. 17 Brookhaven (1×9) Farmers Branch, TX. Noon
Thursday, Feb. 21 State Fair CC Sedalia, MO. Noon
Saturday, Feb. 23 State Fair CC KCKCC Noon
Tuesday, Feb. 26 William Jewell (1×9) KCKCC Noon
Friday, March 1 Marshalltown CC KCKCC Noon
Saturday, March 2 Marshalltown CC KCKCC Noon
Tuesday, March 5 Baker University JV (1×9) KCKCC 2 p.m.
Thursday, March 7 Labette* Parsons, KS. 1 p.m.
Saturday, March 9 Labette* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Tuesday, March 12 Maple Woods (1×9) Kansas City, MO. 2 p.m.
Thursday, March 14 Highland* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Saturday, March 16 Highland* Highland, KS. 1 p.m.
Tuesday, March 19 Baker University JV (1×9) Baldwin, KS. 2 p.m.
Thursday, March 21 Allen County* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Saturday, March 23 Allen County* Iola, KS. 1 p.m.
Thursday, March 28 Fort Scott* Fort Scott, KS. 1 p.m.
Saturday, March 30 Fort Scott* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Tuesday, April 2 Maple Woods (1×9) KCKCC 2 p.m.
Thursday, April 4 Neosho County* Chanute, KS. 1 p.m.
Saturday, April 6 Neosho County* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Monday, April 8 Rockhurst JV Kansas City, MO. 5 p.m.
Thursday, April 11 Johnson County* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Saturday, April 13 Johnson County* Overland Park, KS. 1 p.m.
Thursday, April 18 Cowley College* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Saturday, April 20 Cowley College* Arkansas City, KS. 1 p.m.
Monday, April 22 Rockhurst JV (1×9) KCKCC 3 p.m.
Thursday, April 25 Coffeyville* Coffeyville, KS. 1 p.m.
Saturday, April 27 Coffeyville* KCKCC 1 p.m.
Tuesday, April 30 Maple Woods (1×9) KCKCC 2 p.m.
May 3-5 Region VI (1st round) TBA
May 16-21 Region VI Super-Regional TBA
May 23-June 6 NJCAA World Series Grand Junction, CO

Toluca scheduled to visit Thursday for Sporting KC’s season opener in Concacaf match

Sporting Kansas City will open the club’s 2019 season on Thursday with a highly anticipated showdown against Mexican side Deportivo Toluca FC in the first leg of the Scotiabank Concacaf Champions League Round of 16, slated for 7 p.m. at Children’s Mercy Park, Kansas City, Kansas.

Tickets for the marquee matchup are included in Sporting KC season ticket member packages and remain available to the general public at SeatGeek.com.

Thursday’s contest, the earliest competitive match in Sporting KC history, will stream live in English on YahooSports.com and the Yahoo Sports app, while a Spanish-language telecast will air live on Univision Deportes.

In addition, Sports Radio 810 WHB and ESPN Deportes KC 1480 AM will carry the game over the radio, with 810 WHB airing The Final Whistle postgame show immediately after the match.

  • Information from Sporting KC

Kelly rolls back changes to child welfare contracts, rings in oversight

by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service

Before Laura Kelly took over as governor, the Kansas Department for Children and Families overhauled which private companies would manage its child welfare system, and how the department would oversee their work.

Kelly put the brakes on that whole plan in December.

On Thursday, she announced she’d be rolling back major parts of the changes. She canceled grants with two companies and said the state would renegotiate grants with three companies.

The main child welfare programs that DCF outsources fall into two categories: services to kids who have been removed from their homes, and programs aimed to help keep kids safely with their families.

The grants for that family preservation have been scrapped entirely. DCF Secretary Laura Howard said she had concerns about how they were awarded. One company received three regions despite not bidding on one of the regions, and receiving far lower scores in the other two regions than any other company reviewed by the agency.

The Kansas City Star reported Wednesday that that company was Eckerd Connects and that it received the grants because it had underbid its competitors.

Howard said DCF will change the family preservation grants — mostly to take advantage of federal funding from the Family First Preservation Services Act — and put out a new call for applicants.

She said many bidders “just didn’t come to the table” because the grant expectations were higher than was feasible with the amount of money DCF was looking to spend.

“We do need to align outcomes and money,” she said.

In the meantime, the two current family preservation contractors, KVC Kansas and St. Francis Community Services, will have their contracts extended by six months to the end of 2019.

Howard said she didn’t see the same mismatch of grants being awarded to low-scoring applicants on the foster care side. So those grants will just be renegotiated, not scrapped and rebid. DCF is still extending the current foster care contracts — also with KVC and St. Francis — but only by three months.

Bringing in oversight

When the new grant system was announced, then-DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel promised it would improve accountability and oversight. She said it would also offer more transparency into who was tasked with taking care of kids, and how.

But many lawmakers and child welfare advocates don’t think she delivered.

Rather than going through a contract bid process with the Department of Administration — which has previously evaluated companies’ bids, scored them, and awarded contracts — DCF’s new grant process allowed them to pick the companies in-house without that oversight.

The idea was to let the department that knew child welfare best pick the best child welfare providers.

Instead, foster care watchers were flummoxed when grants were awarded to Eckerd Connects. It had many problems familiar to Kansas, including kids sleeping in offices and bouncing from home to home, in its Florida foster care operations. Child welfare advocates were even more perplexed when the Star revealed Eckerd got the grants despite low scores.

“There needs to be a full accounting,” said Benet Magnuson, head of the nonprofit advocacy organization Kansas Appleseed. “I’m encouraged to see the governor seems determined to shine a light on what happened, and why.”

Kelly and Howard are bringing the Department of Administration back into the mix. That department, not DCF, will put out the call for new family preservation providers. And representatives from that department will join DCF staff during renegotiations of the foster care grants.

Why does it matter?

The state is obligated to provide care and services to foster kids in its custody, even when it has outsourced those responsibilities to private companies. Those services aren’t supposed to disappear or get delayed because of who’s handling them.

But some of the high-profile problems at DCF show its struggles. Children have slept in offices, been bounced from home to home, struggled to access needed mental health services and even died from abuse despite calls into the state hotline warning that they were at risk.

The grant system proposed by the previous DCF administration was meant to give DCF more control over the companies it was paying to meet care for children. It was also intended to bring more companies to the table with the hope that more players would mean more resources, more ideas, and better outcomes.

The new system would also mean multiple changes at once — to which companies handled foster care and family preservation, as well as which providers would be responsible for various regions of Kansas. Transitions are chaotic, raising fears about what that upheaval would mean for children already in crisis.

Child welfare advocates are quick to add that that doesn’t mean changes should never be made. In a privatized system, DCF’s ability to reduce the role of or outright drop a private company is one of its tools to make sure that a company delivers on its obligations to kids.

And some were hoping for change, even if it did mean disruption.

Some foster parents are frustrated that they can’t get the services they need from current contractors. Though some were encouraged that Kelly’s administration was taking a hard look at who had been awarded grants, putting the grants on pause left them in limbo about whether changes would be made.

Many advocates, lawmakers and other child welfare observers questioned the necessity of so much transition at once — and whether the changes would actually make foster kids’ experiences in the system any better.

Joni Hiatt, director of Kansas programs for the foster care advocacy group FosterAdopt Connect, says she wasn’t surprised by reports that Eckerd had been chosen over groups that were deemed more qualified by the teams who reviewed family preservation proposals.

“To find out that this was how these contracts were chosen,” she said, “that’s so disappointing in so many ways.”

Putting the grants on hold left foster and birth parents in regions where new companies had been awarded grants in a holding pattern. They had to wait to see if they would have the same company handling their kids’ cases, or if it would change.

With the Kelly administration’s decision to extend out the current contracts for a little while longer, and renegotiate foster care and rebid family preservation, many are hopeful for better outcomes. But that process will take time.

“Children, their birth families, foster and adoptive parents,” Hiatt said, “they’re going to have to wait that much longer to access quality services and promised accountability.”

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow her on Twitter @maddycfox. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/kansas-gov-kelly-rolls-back-changes-child-welfare-contracts-brings-oversight