KCKCC survives, advances to district championship

KCKCC has advanced to the district championship game to be held May 17 in Manhattan, Kansas. (Submitted photo)

by Tyler Scott, KCKCC sports information director

The No. 3 seeded Kansas City Kansas Community College baseball team was able to surpass No. 14 seeded Pratt Community College on Wednesday and Thursday to advance to the NJCAA Central District Championship next week in Manhattan, Kansas.

The Blue Devils defeated the Beavers 16-6 and 6-5 in 12 innings.

The Blue Devils eased past Pratt in the first contest, but faced an uphill battle in the second game after giving up a late 5-2 lead in the eighth inning.

The Blue Devils and Beavers had to decide the victor in extra innings and that is when Darius Freeman knocked in the winning run with one out in the 12th frame.

KCKCC is now 47-10 overall on the year.


In the first game the Blue Devils pounded out six straight runs and a game total of 18 hits.

Pratt got on the board in the fourth inning with a pair of runs, but KCKCC scored three runs in the bottom of the inning – taking a 9-2 lead.

Pratt tacked on four more runs in the next two innings, but the Blue Devils offense stayed consistent and closed out the game in the eighth inning after scoring three runs to win the game early.

Palmer Hutchison led the team with four hits and added three RBI along with Brendyn Bard. KCKCC had seven extra base hits in the game, with Bard, Caleb Adams, Freeman and Matthew Buffington hitting one triple apiece. Camden Karlin improved to 5-0 on the mound with five innings pitched.

In game two, the Blue Devils worked their way to a 5-2 lead in the seventh inning after breaking a 2-2 tie in the fifth. The Beavers climbed back with two runs and loaded the bases in the eighth inning.

A questionable miscue by the Blue Devils let the Beavers tie the game at 5-5. However, KCKCC escaped the jam and started its attempt to take advantage of opportunities to score.

Neither team could score in the next three and a half innings, so when the Blue Devils got their at bats in the 12th, they took care of business. Bard scored the winning run on a hit by Freeman and it was settled at that point.

Sanchez and Freeman each had three hits in the game. William Hann secured the victory on the mound, moving to 3-0 on the year.

KCKCC now awaits the winner of No. 11 seed Neosho County Community College – No. 6 seed Cloud County Community College, meeting one of those teams in Manhattan, Kansas, at 10 a.m. May 17.

Davids, Moran taking part in U.S. supply-chain, domestic manufacturing reform negotiations

Weaknesses exposed by COVID-19 pandemic focus of bipartisan innovation bill

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran and U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids offered input Thursday into development of a compromise bill designed to improve domestic manufacturing and the nation’s supply chain that were exposed as competitively deficient during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sen. Moran, a Republican, and Rep. Davids, a Democrat, were appointed to the Senate and House negotiating committee working on a combined version of the Bipartisan Innovation Act. An agreement resolving differences in the House and Senate versions of the bill, if approved by both chambers, would be forwarded to President Joe Biden.

The legislation’s objective has been to come to terms with shortcomings in U.S. supply-chain resiliency and domestic manufacturing limitations — semiconductors, for example. One aim of Congress would be lowing costs in the wake of record-setting inflation. In addition, lawmakers feel pressure to grapple with growth in China’s economic and technological power, fuel U.S. research and development and reinforcement U.S. workforce programs.

In Sen. Moran’s remarks to the conference committee in Washington, D.C., the senator said the package ought to feature improved support of so-called STEM fields of science, technology, engineering and math. It should to be designed to promote entrepreneurial business activity, he said.

“This committee is tasked with making certain our country is out-competing adversarial nations, including China, which we can do,” he said.

Sen. Moran recommended the final version of the bill include provisions to solidify federal funding of NASA. He said Congress had pieced together financial backing of NASA missions for several years without passage of formal authorization legislation.

“When you can present a bipartisan authorization followed up with the funding of programs, it sends a strong signal to the agency, industry and our global partners that we remain committed in accomplishing our stated missions. This is especially critical as our adversaries continue to advance within the space domain,” Sen. Moran said.

Rep. Davids, in remarks to colleagues on the Senate-House conference committee, said she’d spoken with dozens of Kansas business owners, workers, students and entrepreneurs about the federal manufacturing and supply chain legislation.

“I’ve been on the factory floor with welders who make the railroads that get goods from ship to shelf across our country,” the 3rd District representative said. “I’ve seen firsthand how a Kansas battery manufacturer recycles their materials through the production process to reduce waste and improve efficiency. I’ve met with union autoworkers who were off the line for seven months last year because the chip shortage idled a GM plant in my district.”

“I’ve been out in the community because I want to make sure that during this negotiation, I’m fighting for what our businesses and workers really need,” Rep. Davids said.

She said the COVID-19 pandemic caused global disruption in the international supply chain that escalated prices paid by large and small businesses and consumers.

“But I have to tell you: This isn’t new,” Rep. Davids said. “The reality is we’ve been reliant on goods made in other countries for far too long, and Kansans are paying the price. When we focus on domestic manufacturing, it will not only bring jobs back and boost our economy, it will help lower costs across the board and reduce inflation.”

She said the United States possessed the “innovation, the grit and the talent” to compete with countries like China, but the United States had relied on goods made in other countries for too long. She said focus of the House-Senate agreement had to be investment in American manufacturing and workers, especially those engaged in small businesses.

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See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/05/13/davids-moran-taking-part-in-u-s-supply-chain-domestic-manufacturing-reform-negotiations/