Kansas City snags first win of 2022

by Jaxson Webb, Monarchs

The Kansas City Monarchs (1-2) fell in its first two games of the 2022 season, but got back on track Sunday afternoon with an impressive 10-3 victory over the visiting Sioux City Explorers (2-1).

The Monarchs offense exploded late to solidify the win.

Left-handed pitcher Lewis Thorpe made his Monarchs debut. The Fort Myers, Florida, product stayed aggressive in the strike zone through all 4.2 innings, but gave up a few hits and runs along the way.

The Kansas City Monarchs struggled offensively in the first two games, but were able to strike first in the second inning of the weekend finale.

Matt Adams, former 10 year big leaguer and World Series champion, blasted his first home run of the season to open the scoring (1-0). Moments later Jan Hernandez was driven in by a line drive single from David Thompson (2-0).

The Explorers were quick to answer, though as they scratched three runs across in top of the third inning with two doubles and a single (2-3).

Thorpe exited after 4 ⅔ innings, surrendering four hits, three runs, three walks, and struck out four Explorers. He was replaced by Kansas native, Brock Gilliam.

Things remained the same until Jan Hernandez came up big in the sixth. Hernandez’s ground ball single up the middle drove in Guerrero to tie the game at 3-3. From that point on it was all Monarchs.

The Kansas City offense rattled off eight runs between the sixth and eighth to cruise to a commanding 10-3 victory.

Six players for the Monarchs recorded a double, and Matt Adams hit the second home run by the team of the season. Jan Hernandez, Darnell Sweeney, and David Thompson all recorded multi-hit games as well.

Joe Calfapietra called Jameson McGrane out of the Swope Health Bullpen to come in and close out the final inning. McGrane was also the closing pitcher for the 2021 American Association Championship game a season ago.

McGrane made quick work of three Sioux City hitters, striking out one, helping the Monarchs get that first taste of victory this season.

The next Monarchs game will be Tuesday, May 18, at Legends Field against the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks, a rematch of last year’s American Association Championship.

The game can be heard on the Monarchs Broadcast Network with the pre-game beginning at 6:30 p.m. and the video stream airing on aabaseball.tv.

Tickets to all Monarchs games can be purchased by calling 913-328-5618 or by visiting monarchsbaseball.com.

Kansas Supreme Court set for high-stakes oral argument on legislative, congressional maps

Justices obliged to review state House, Senate maps; U.S. House map is on appeal

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — League of Women Voters co-president Martha Pint wants the Kansas Supreme Court to declare new district boundary maps for the Legislature’s House and Senate districts a violation of the Kansas Constitution.

Pint, in preparation of the Supreme Court’s oral argument Monday on the maps, said the Legislature allocated 125 House districts and 40 Senate districts in ways that intentionally fractured neighborhoods with high racial and ethnic minorities and purposefully weakened minority voting strength in Wichita, Olathe, Leavenworth and Kansas City, Kansas.

She said state lawmakers also violated redistricting guidelines while constructing maps based on Kansas population shifts chronicled in the 2020 U.S. Census.

“These maps do not adhere to the principles adopted and we ask the Kansas Supreme Court to consider the process behind the creation of the maps as integral to the final product,” Pint said. “Truly representative districts are vital at all levels of government and Kansans deserve a fair process.”

Under the state Constitution, the Legislature must produce every 10 years updated maps for the Kansas House, Kansas Senate, Kansas Board of Education as well as the state’s four U.S. House districts.

The Kansas Supreme Court will review state House and Senate maps contained in Senate Bill 563 in response to a petition filed April 25 by Attorney General Derek Schmidt. The Supreme Court is required to issue an opinion on the legislative maps within 30 days of Schmidt’s initial filing.

Schmidt, who is a candidate for governor, recommended the Supreme Court validate the legislative maps. The candidate filing deadline is typically June 1, but the court’s rejection of the maps could force a postponement to buy time for the Legislature to redraw the maps or take other legal action. The statewide primary election is Aug. 2.

Schmidt filed a response to written comments on legislative maps submitted to the Supreme Court from “any interested person.” In Schmidt’s rebuttal submitted to the Supreme Court, the attorney general dismissed some criticism as “irrelevant” or unworthy of a reply.

He did answer complaints raised about the Legislature’s alleged political gerrymandering, dilution of minority voting and targeting of incumbents.

“Anyone who believes a redistricting map is unfair or dissatisfying in some respect can claim gerrymandering, but there is no legal standard to measure such claims,” Schmidt said. “Entertaining political gerrymandering claims would require this court to substitute its political judgment for that of the Legislature and plunge this court into a political morass.”

Schmidt said individuals claiming impermissible voter dilution along racial lines provided “no evidence” to the Supreme Court. He said redistricting inevitably had political consequences, including pitting incumbents against each other. One such person, Democratic Sen. Tom Holland of Baldwin City was placed in a new district where he’d have to run in 2024 against incumbent Republican Sen. Beverly Gossage of Eudora. Holland filed a brief challenging the Senate map.

Other comments submitted to the Supreme Court in objection to the House and Senate maps delved into the Legislature’s bipartisan public listening tour in 2021, the Legislature’s guidelines for mapping decisions, compactness of new legislative districts and the undermining of communities of interest.

Schmidt said no legal deficiency was identified in terms of the Legislature’s tour of more than a dozen communities to gather public input. Redistricting guidelines were the work of an “advisory group” and the Legislature wasn’t required to adhere to any of those ideas, he said.

“The guidelines are not law,” Schmidt said.

Schmidt argued the Supreme Court had no role in reviewing House and Senate maps in terms of splitting communities of economic, political, social or geographic interest. Supreme Court precedent, he said, indicated “the fact that someone who may have drawn different lines does not render a map invalid.”

In addition to oral argument Monday on state House and Senate maps, the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear argument in the attorney general’s appeal of a Wyandotte County District Court judge’s ruling that the congressional map was unconstitutional.

Twenty people filed lawsuits challenging the congressional map. Some objected to shifting half of Wyandotte County out of the metropolitan 3rd District and placing it in the 2nd District extending from Nebraska to Oklahoma. The map pulled Lawrence out of the 2nd District and inserted it into the rural 1st District that crosses the state to the Colorado border.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Marla Luckert set argument on the Legislature’s reapportionment of state Senate and House districts for 9 a.m. Monday and argument on the congressional map at 1:30 p.m. Monday. The sessions will be livestreamed on www.youtube.com/kansassupremecourt.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/05/15/kansas-supreme-court-set-for-high-stakes-oral-argument-on-legislative-congressional-maps/

KCKCC softball advances to championship game

The KCKCC softball team celebrated head coach Lana Ross’s 700th victory as a head softball coach on Saturday. KCKCC advanced to the championship match at 2 p.m. Monday in Topeka. (KCKCC photo)

by Tyler Scott, KCKCC sports information director

The KCKCC softball team entered the Plains District B Championship bracket as the No. 5 seed on Saturday.

Knowing they would have to win two games to make it to the championship match, the Lady Blue Devils were able to prevail by defeating No. 4 seed Johnson County Community College 11-5 before shocking No. 1 seed Highland Community College 1-0 in eight innings later that same evening.

The win over Johnson County earlier in the day also gave head coach Lana Ross her 700th career win as a head softball coach.

The Blue Devils are now 42-14 overall.

In the first game against Johnson County, the Blue Devils were the away team and came out of the gate fast.

The Cavaliers’ pitching struggled early as KCKCC was able to cash in three runs on a couple of walks from the opposing pitching staff. In the second frame, the Blue Devils got a hot bat from McKenna Lester as she hit a double to score another pair of runs – giving the Blue Devils a 5-0 lead.

Johnson County scored its first run in the third inning, but the Blue Devils continued to pile it on in the fourth frame. Lester and Lindsey Gettle each hit RBI singles, while Trinity De Tauer hit a pop fly ball that fell in to score another run. Madison Pope was later hit by a pitch and that sent another run across the plate for KCKCC.

Bradi Basler got the start in the circle and shutdown the Cavaliers through the first three innings despite allowing one run. Johnson County was able to find some life in the fourth as they cut the deficit to 9-5 at one point, but with KCKCC adding two more runs in the game, Basler settled down and didn’t allow another run the rest of the way.

Against Highland Community College neither team could find a run through the regulated seven innings. It was another strong pitching performance by Basler.

In the bottom of the eighth inning the Blue Devils were up and with a runner on second base, Kaitlyn Bradbury laid a bunt down the first base line – reaching safely just ahead of the throw. It was then runners on first and third with nobody out when Savannah Maynard hit a sacrifice fly ball to left field to score the winning run as Highland was unable to get the ball to home plate in time.

The win over Highland now puts KCKCC into the championship game with a 2-0 record in the tournament.

With forecasted bad weather on Sunday, the Blue Devils will wait to play the championship game on Monday at 2 p.m. at Lake Shawnee Softball Complex in Topeka. KCKCC will play the winner of Highland-Hesston Community College, which takes place Monday at noon.

Here’s a look at the remaining games in the District B bracket:
Lake Shawnee Softball Complex – Topeka, Kansas

May 16 – Game 5, Noon – (1) Highland (40-8) vs (21-29) (8) Hesston
May 16 – Game 6, 2 p.m. – (5) Kansas City, Kansas (42-14) vs Highland-Hesston Winner (District B Championship)
May 16 – Game 7, 4 p.m. – Game 6 (If Needed)

A District B Championship win would send the Blue Devils to the NJCAA Division II Softball Championship in Oxford, Alabama, May 24-28.