Braves create new lifetime memories at state track meet

Bonner Springs track coach Heather Campbell, center, posed with sophomore McKenzie Campbell, left, and Mariyah Noel after the awards ceremony at the KSHSAA state track meet in Wichita on Saturday. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

Bonner Springs track coach Heather Campbell already had one unforgettable memory from the Kansas state track and field meet, winning gold medals for Garden City High School in the shot put and discus in 1999.

She has another after this weekend. Campbell’s daughter McKenzie, a Bonner Springs sophomore, placed third at state in the 5A girls’ shot put, and McKenzie’s teammate Mariyah Noel won first place in the girls’ discus throw.

Making the event even more special, as a previous gold medalist Heather was able to sign up to present medals for the events she won, and in front of the thousands of applauding track and field fans in Wichita State’s Cessna Stadium, she awarded the medals to her own student-athletes.

The 5A girls’ shot put was held Friday morning, and McKenzie threw 37-feet, 3-inches on her second throw to reach the finals, bettering her previous personal best by over a foot. In the finals, she was narrowly edged out for second place by Taryn Warren of Great Bend. Aarion Pickens of Leavenworth won the event with a throw of 38-feet, 6 1/4-inches.

In Saturday morning’s discus throw, Noel, last year’s 5A girls’ discus champion, kept the crowd — and her coach — in suspense whether she could repeat.

Sitting below the cut line after two of three throws in her preliminary flight, Noel hit 123-feet, 11-inches to jump to second place and into the final round.

In the finals, the Bonner Springs junior set the top mark with her first throw, only to see it passed immediately by Spring Hill’s Margo Todd at 130-feet, 8-inches. On the third throw of the finals, Maize South’s Kieran Burke also topped Noel, pushing her down to third place.

Noel met the pressure head on, hitting her best throw of the meet when she needed it most, 134-feet, a Bonner Springs school record. Todd had one throw remaining to surpass her, the crowd holding its breath, but she fouled on the attempt, ceding the gold medal.

The Braves also brought home medals in the 5A boys’ 4×100-meter relay and girls’ 100-meter hurdles.

Junior Jenna Knight finished 6th in the preliminaries of the 100-meter hurdles, then turned on the jets in the finals to jump to 2nd, with a time of 15.68 seconds.

The boys’ 4×100-meter relay team of Alex Amayo, Kahliek Rainey, Jacob Jones, and Noah Doss finished third with a time of 43.02 seconds, bested only by Piper and De Soto.

Junior Mariyah Noel threw in the 5A girls’ discus and won the event with a school record throw 134-feet, 0-inches. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Junior Jenna Knight placed second in the girls’ 100-meter hurdles with a time of 15.68 seconds. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Sophomore McKenzie Campbell threw in the girls’ shot put. Campbell placed third with a distance of 37-feet, 3-inches. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Senior Noah Doss crossed the finish line in the boys’ 4×100-meter relay. The team placed third with a time of 43.02 seconds. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Senior Alex Amayo sprinted out in the first leg of the 4×100-meter relay. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Senior Cooper McWilliams competed in the boys’ high jump. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Junior Mariyah Noel got a hug from coach Heather Campbell as she received her medal for winning the girls’ discus throw. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

Lady Sabres overcome early deficit, earn 8-2 playoff win over Bonner

Sumner Academy junior Joselyn Clark took a shot on goal in the first half. Clark scored three goals in Sumner’s 8-2 win over Bonner Springs in the 5A girls’ soccer regional semi-final. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

The Sumner Lady Sabres gave up early 1-0 and 2-1 leads to the Bonner Springs Lady Braves in their first-round playoff match, but a full-team effort brought Sumner back to an 8-2 lead at the final whistle.

Speedy Bonner forward Jenna Knight caused the Sumner defense problems early, and runs from Knight led to both Bonner goals. In the 9th minute, she took an open shot that ricocheted off the post, but the rebound fell to teammate Jaelyn Romo to put away for the early lead.

Sumner got the equalizer less than two minutes later, when the ball squirted out of a goalmouth scrum to Brenda Guevara-Alatorre who knocked it in from 15 yards out.

In the 22nd minute, Knight got onto the end of a pass from Mercedes Madlock and raced to fire it in to re-establish a one goal lead.

Sumner took less than a minute to come back to tie the score at 2-2, with Joselyn Clark racing unchecked up the middle. Bonner goalkeeper Alyssa King parried the shot, but the rebound fell back to Clark, who put it away.

Sumner made defensive adjustments to prevent Knight from getting open with running room, and the Lady Sabres started to pull away before halftime, scoring three unanswered goals. The most notable was Ashley Terrazas heading in a cross in the 35th minute.

Sumner added on three more goals in the second half, the last two off Terrazas free kicks. In the 66th minute, Terrazas picked out Clark, who knocked the ball in from the near post. In the 67th minute, Terrazas scored on a direct kick from 40 yards out, over the goalkeeper’s hands.

Clark scored three goals in the match. Terrazas and Guevara-Alatorre both notched two, and Gabriella Lopez scored one.

After the match, head coach Jon Borger talked about his team’s victory.

“We got some nice passing patterns, really played team ball,” the coach said. “We usually look to Joselyn Clark, our number 8, but we were able to put together some great team goals tonight. That’s what I was really proud of.”

The Lady Sabres advance to meet the Spring Hill Lady Broncos in the regional final on Thursday, starting at 6 p.m. The match will be played at Schlagle stadium. The winner of that game will advance to the 5A state tournament in Wichita on May 27 and 28.

The Bonner Springs Lady Braves finish their season with a 4-12 record. With 8 freshmen and 6 sophomores on the varsity roster, many of them playing significant minutes, the team is poised for a lot of growth in the next two years.

Sumner senior Brenda Guevara-Alatorre fought for a loose ball with Bonner Springs sophomore Esther Solomon Holland. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs junior Jenna Knight raced to stay ahead of Sumner sophomore Ashley Terrazas. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs senior Mercedes Madlock cleared the ball just ahead of a takeaway attempt by Sumner junior Joselyn Clark. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs freshman Jordan Powell got some space from Sumner junior Emily Baltazar. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs junior goalkeeper Alyssa King secured the ball after a Sumner shot attempt. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner senior Brenda Guevara-Alatorre scored Sumner’s third goal, set up by a cross from Valery Chacon in the left corner. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner sophomore Ashley Terrazas and Bonner Springs freshman Jaelyn Romo fought for possession. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs freshman Kylie Enriquez raced after a loose ball against Sumner senior Brenda Guevara-Alatorre. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner freshman Gabriella Lopez took a shot in the first half. Lopez later scored just before halftime. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner sophomore Ashley Terrazas split two Bonner Springs defenders. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

Bonner’s Olivia Stean wins second consecutive state wrestling title

Bonner Springs sophomore Olivia Stean showed off her growing collection of state championship medals after winning the 170-pound championship at the KSHSAA 5A-6A girls’ wrestling tournament. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

Bonner Springs sophomore Olivia Stean took the top spot on the podium at the KSHSAA 5A-6A girls’ wrestling tournament Thursday, repeating her championship performance from a year ago.

She capped a group of four Wyandotte County medal winners from Bonner Springs, Harmon and Turner high schools.

The tournament took place Wednesday and Thursday at Hartman Arena in Park City.

Stean defeated Basehor-Linwood senior Mandy Wilson in the championship round of the 170-pound weight class. Familiar adversaries, they had already faced each other twice this season. Stean pinned Wilson just 49 seconds into the match to earn the win.

Forty-nine seconds was Stean’s longest match of the tournament. She blew through Wednesday’s preliminary rounds by pinning opponents in 15, 30 and 22 seconds.

Speaking after the tournament, she dedicated the performance to her friend, Hayleigh Wempe, a wrestler from Baldwin who took her own life last year.

“I’ve been thinking about her a lot,” Stean said. “I want to wrestle in her name. I want to win these titles for her because our goal was to win state together and now sadly that’s not going to happen.”

Stean finished the season undefeated with a 42-0 record, and she has her sights set beyond the Kansas state championship to becoming a finalist at the 16U national championships in Fargo, North Dakota, this summer.

Turner junior Arianna Ortiz earned state finalist honors in the 101-pound weight class, winning her way through the bracket with two falls and a major decision on Wednesday.

Ortiz faced Derby sophomore Amara Ehsa in Thursday’s final. Though Ortiz took control of the match early, Ehsa recovered and caught her momentarily off balance to make a pin and win the match.

Harmon freshman Kamahni Jackson earned sixth place in the 132-pound class. She won her first two matches Wednesday, pinning both opponents, but she lost in the semi-final to eventual champion Breanna Ridgeway of Great Bend.

Bonner Springs junior Jenna Knight won sixth place in the 120-pound class. She defeated Kaylynn Ottenschnieder of Spring Hill and Addison Otte of Hays in her first two rounds, but class winner Hannah Glynn of Blue Valley Southwest pinned her in the semi-final round.

The performances from Stean and Knight helped Bonner Springs place 15th in the team competition out of 58 schools at the tournament.

Bonner Springs sophomore Olivia Stean pointed skyward after her win over Kapaun Mount Carmel’s Gianna Redcorn in their quarterfinal match. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Turner junior Arianna Ortiz subdued Salina Central’s Haylie James in the quarterfinal round. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Harmon freshman Kamahni Jackson wrestled Kapaun Mount Carmel’s Aalyra Arguelles, winning by fall in the second period. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs junior Jenna Knight wrestled Hays’s Addison Otte in a quarterfinal match in the 120-pound weight class. Knight won by fall in the first round. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Turner junior Arianna Ortiz overpowered Garden City’s Anahi Cervantes and won by fall in the second round. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs sophomore Chloie Knapp wrestled Garden City’s Angel Serrano in the opening round of the tournament. Serrano won by fall in the third period. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs junior Olivia Stean rushed Spring Hill’s Lexi Suter for a quick win in the opening round. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Harmon junior Kamahni Jackson received her medal at the end of the two-day tournament. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Turner junior Arianna Ortiz wrestled Derby sophomore Amara Ehsa in the finals of the 101-pound weight class. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner junior Alissa Harris wrestled Washburn Rural’s Alexis Fredrickson in the third round of the tournament. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Harmon freshman Kamahni Jackson was all smiles after a win. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)
Bonner Springs junior Jenna Knight wrestled Spring Hill’s Kaylynn Ottenschnieder in the opening round of the tournament, getting a pin in the first period. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)