Ag Hall inducts Sen. Pat Roberts, two others in ceremonies

Former U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, right, and U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, left, look at the past honorees in the National Agricultural Center’s Hall of Fame. Roberts was inducted into the Hall of Fame on Saturday. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
Former U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, second from left, received a plaque honoring his induction into the National Agricultural Center’s Hall of Fame on Saturday at the Ag Hall in Bonner Springs. U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, second from right, presented the plaque. U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall is at left, and Dave Hurrelbrink, president of the board of directors of the Ag Hall, is at the right. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
Mary Jean Eisenhower, granddaughter of President Dwight Eisenhower, was a guest speaker at the induction ceremony Saturday at the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, Bonner Springs. President Eisenhower signed the 1960 charter establishing the Hall of Fame. It is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year, delayed a year by COVID. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall, left, visited with former U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, center, and U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran on Saturday at the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, Bonner Springs. Roberts was inducted into the Hall of Fame. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
Dean Rolando Flores, New Mexico State University, left, and President John Floros, New Mexico State University, center, accept a plaque recognizing the induction of the late Fabian Garcia into the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame. Presenting the plaque was Jeff Witte, right, New Mexico secretary of agriculture. The induction ceremony was Saturday at the Ag Hall in Bonner Springs. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
Dave Hurrelbrink, right, president of the board of directors of the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, honored the late Elmo Mahoney with a plaque noting his induction into the Hall of Fame. Accepting the plaque was Garry Mahoney, center, accompanied by Linda Mahoney Vopat, second from left, and Jan Mahoney Hopkins, left. (Photo by Steve Rupert)

Three men who contributed to advancing American agriculture – former Sen. Pat Roberts, late horticulturist Fabián García and late farmer activist Elmo Mahoney – were inducted into the Agricultural Hall of Fame Oct. 23, at the National Agricultural Center in Bonner Springs, Kansas.

Giving remarks was Mary Jean Eisenhower, granddaughter of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who signed the 1960 charter establishing the Agricultural Hall of Fame. Delayed by COVID, the Hall of Fame is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year.

The inductees join George Washington Carver, John Deere, Willie Nelson and other notables, with contributions including:

Former Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts supported America’s agricultural producers and advancement of bioscience, biotechnology and biosecurity. He was first to chair both the House and Senate Agriculture Committees and pass farm bills in both chambers. He supported bipartisan child nutrition programs, crop protection and insurance.

Roberts helped develop a production agriculture safety net, expand trade and ensure food sustainability. He wrote the bipartisan 2018 farm bill to support farmers and rural communities developing renewable production methods, bio-based products and advanced biofuels.

He helped bring to Kansas the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility and the Biosecurity Research Institute. A Marine veteran, he was chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. As first chairman of the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities, he helped pass biosecurity legislation.

Fabián García (1871-1948), “Father of the New Mexican Food Industry,” pioneered breeding and growing sustainable plants that advanced agriculture nationwide. Born in Mexico, he became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1889.
As director of the New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station in 1914, he was the first Hispanic to lead a land-grant agricultural research station. He produced the first reliable chile pod and introduced the Grano onion breed.
He helped plant the first pecan trees in Mesilla Valley, including some still standing today. García developed modern irrigated agriculture in the state. New Mexico’s chile pepper, onion and pecan industries are attributed to his research.


Elmo Mahoney (1908-1979) worked to improve farming techniques, influence farm policy and promote farmers’ achievements. Born on a farm near Dorrance, Kansas, he invented the sickle-head drive used in harvester combine headers.
He was president of the Russell County Farm Bureau Association, director of the Kansas Wheat Growers Association and charter member of Kansas Flying Farmers. Mahoney served in the 1949-1950 Kansas House of Representatives and was policy consultant through the U.S. Department of Agriculture for the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.


Mahoney was an early preservationist of farm equipment and a national authority on Avery equipment. As its first curator he helped establish the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame.

  • Information from National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame

Gibbs wins first race in Saturday doubleheader at Kansas Speedway

Ty Gibbs (54) came around turn 4 ahead of Austin Cindric (22). (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

Ty Gibbs won the Kansas Lottery 300 race at Kansas Speedway on Saturday. The 19-year-old driver fought his way back to the front of the field after suffering an early penalty for speeding into pit lane, overtaking Austin Cindric for the lead with 10 laps remaining in the race.

The victory was Gibbs’s fourth of the Xfinity Series 2021 season, despite having entered only 17 of the 31 races. His primary circuit is the ARCA series, where he leads in the 2021 standings. He sits ahead of Josh Berry to win the Xfinity Series rookie of the year award.

Cindric led for 151 laps and won stage 2 of the race. He remains in first place in the Xfinity Series playoffs, tied on points with third-place finisher A.J. Allmendinger but nudging in front based on top 5 finishes.

Gibbs had only a short break between his victory lane celebration and jumping back into the car for Saturday evening’s ARCA race, where he came in second, and celebrated an ARCA series championship. 

Nick Sanchez, driving a Chevrolet, came from behind to beat Gibbs in the ARCA Reese’s 150 race.

Just 19, Ty Gibbs got a Monster Energy shower, not champagne, in victory lane. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Ty Gibbs got a hug from his mother Heather Gibbs after the race. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Race radio, awesome shades, autographed flag, ready to roll. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

The pit crew on Loris Hezernan’s No. 61 Toyota swapped out tires on a pit stop. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

As evening settled in, the speedway prepared to run the ARCA Reese’s 150. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Ty Gibbs spun his wheels in celebration after winning the Kansas Lottery 300 race at Kansas Speedway. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

The pack came around turn 4 on a restart. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Justin Allgaier (7) raced side-by-side with Harrison Burton (20) as they entered the front straight. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Kyle Weatherman (47), Noah Gragson (9), and Daniel Hemric (18) raced three-wide through turn 4. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Harrison Burton (20) gave a push to Daniel Hemric (18) on a restart. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Ty Gibbs crossed the finish line to take the victory in the Kansas Lottery 300. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Ty Gibbs crossed the finish line at the end of the Kansas Lottery 300. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

 

Noah Gragson led the field on a restart in his beat-up Camaro in the Xfinity race. Gragson led 9 laps, but was taken out in an accident late in the race. (Photo copyright 2021 by Brian Turrel)

Win over Seattle gives Sporting KC playoff berth

Sporting Kansas City (16-7-7, 55 points) punched its ticket to the 2021 MLS Cup Playoffs in resounding fashion, earning a 2-1 road win over Western Conference leaders Seattle Sounders FC (17-7-7, 58 points) on Saturday afternoon at Lumen Field in Seattle.

Remi Walter hammered home his first MLS goal in the fourth minute and captain Johnny Russell extended his club-record scoring streak to seven matches with a 79th-minute winner as second-place Sporting climbed within three points of Seattle at the top of the West and secured its 10th playoff appearance in 11 seasons.

Saturday’s result saw Sporting manager Peter Vermes take sole possession of fourth place in MLS history with 171 regular season coaching wins and set a league record by clinching his 17th appearance in the MLS Cup Playoffs as a player or a coach.

Sporting also became just the second club in MLS history to win at Seattle twice in the same regular season and equaled a single-season club record with its eighth away victory of the 2021 campaign.

Boasting a perfect 7-0-0 record in matches immediately following losses this season, Sporting will return to Children’s Mercy Park on Wednesday to host longtime rival LA Galaxy.

The contest will kick off at 7:50 p.m. Wednesday with national coverage beginning at 7:30 p.m. on FS1 and FOX Deportes. Tickets for the match are available at SeatGeek.com.

Vermes made two injury-induced changes to the Sporting lineup from a 2-1 loss at Vancouver Whitecaps FC last Sunday. Jose Mauri and MLS MVP candidate Daniel Salloi missed with ankle problems, prompting the return of center back Nicolas Isimat-Mirin — who landed his first start since Aug. 7 — and veteran midfielder Roger Espinoza, who logged his 250th regular season start in a Sporting uniform.

Ilie Sanchez moved from central defense into his long-held holding midfield spot and Gadi Kinda was deployed as a false nine up top.

Walter landed an absolute haymaker inside four minutes to give the upstart visitors a 1-0 lead. Khiry Shelton and Russell combined neatly on the right edge of the box before the latter swung a low delivery across the face of the six-yard area.

Seattle goalkeeper Stefan Frei punched clear only as far as Kinda, whose rebound effort near the penalty spot was blocked through traffic. Luis Martins converged on the ball and crucially won possession by poking the ball to Walter, who lashed a left-footed strike into the top left corner to open his MLS scoring account.

Brimming with confidence, Sporting could have doubled its advantage after seven minutes. Russell was once again a danger man, flicking a pass into the path of Kinda. He swiftly beat a defender at the top of the box and uncorked a right-footed blast that screamed narrowly high.

The Sounders were kept at bay in the opening stages, although Sporting goalkeeper Tim Melia was called to action in the 15th minute when he corralled Nicolas Benezet’s well-struck shot. The 35-year-old veteran picked up another first-half save near halftime, thwarting U.S. international Cristian Roldan.

Near the half-hour interval, Russell asked further questions of the Seattle backline by chipping in a cross from the right endline. Espinoza was there to pull the trigger, but his effort was deflected behind for a corner kick.

On Russell’s ensuing delivery, the ball skipped through a swarm of bodies and was nearly prodded home by Sounders defender Shane O’Neill, whose blushes were saved as his redirect carried inches over the bar.

Outplayed in the first half, Seattle responded in the early moments of the second period with a deluge of attacking pressure.

Melia and Alex Roldan were shown yellow cards after a hasty altercation in which Cristian Roldan blundered into Melia amid a goalmouth scramble.

Shortly thereafter, Sporting center back Andreu Fontas blocked a side volley attempt from former Kansas City midfielder Jimmy Medranda, who was deployed as a left wing back on Saturday.

The Sounders restored parity in the 58th minute as Sporting came undone on a corner kick. Cristian Roldan glanced Joao Paulo’s service to the back post where Benezet nodded into a gaping net for his third goal of the campaign.

Cristian Roldan almost went from provider to goal scorer in the 64th minute, planting a powerful header on target, but Melia produced a phenomenal reflex save at point-blank range and Isimat-Mirin ushered clear upfield to extinguish the danger. Sporting’s gloveman racked up another stop on Roldan 10 minutes later, dropping low to his right to smother a seething turf-trimmer.

Russell had bagged seven goals in his previous six games, and fired Sporting back in front with 11 minutes remaining. In a move that punctuated a dazzling 38-pass sequence, Espinoza charged into the attacking third and played an inch-perfect diagonal through ball to Russell. The Scottish winger took a touch on the right side of the box and sent a side-footed effort past Frei for his 12th goal of 2021, all of which have come since the start of July.

Sporting defended bravely to the very end as Seattle piled numbers forward in search of a late lever. The Sounders went close to leveling terms in the 93rd minute, but Cristian Roldan’s booming strike rattled the crossbar and referee Ismail Elfath blew the full-time whistle seconds later.

  • Story from Sporting KC