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VCU Defeats Wichita State 62-59 To Advance

(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

PORTLAND, Ore. – Shaka Smart and Co. pulled off the first major surprise of the NCAA tournament.

Yep, VCU is back again.

Bradford Burgess hit a key 3-pointer with 1:33 left and the 12th-seeded Rams held off Wichita State 62-59 on Thursday night.

Smart was one of the tournament’s biggest stars last year when he coached VCU to victories over Georgetown, Purdue, Florida State and Kansas, making the Rams just the third No. 11 seed to reach the Final Four. The run ended when they lost to Butler in Houston.

This VCU team moves on to a matchup with fourth-seeded Indiana (26-8), which advanced to Saturday’s game with a 79-66 victory over New Mexico State at the Rose Garden.

“We have different guys doing different things than last year’s team,” Burgess said. “We want to make our own mark on this year’s tournament.”

Still, there are already similarities to last year’s run. Just take a look at the last few frantic minutes of this one.

With 12 seconds left and the Rams clinging to a 62-59 lead, Smart was so animated during a timeout that he swooped down on his team at midcourt and started strategizing.

The intense huddle was eventually brushed back to near the bench by the referees, but the Rams (29-6) came out of the timeout and buckled down defensively, hurrying Wichita State center Garrett Stutz’s errant 3-point attempt before the final buzzer.

“Our guys did a good job executing our defensive plan,” Smart said of those final seconds. “They didn’t get a good look at a 3, and that’s what won it for us.”

The Rams led by as many as 13 in the second half, but Wichita State (26-6) closed to 54-53 on Stutz’s layup with 5:39 left. Troy Daniels hit a 3-pointer for the Rams, and Joe Ragland answered with his own for the Shockers.

Toure Murry made a 3 that gave Wichita State the lead, but Burgess came back with his big shot to give the Rams a 60-59 edge. Darius Theus then tacked on a runner before Stutz’s last-chance attempt was off.

“I was kind of the last option on top, and VCU read the play well,” Stutz said. “By the time I got the ball I knew there wasn’t enough time to go for a two. Couldn’t have been more than 2 or 3 seconds left.”

Said VCU guard Rob Brandenberg: “Everybody was on the same page that last (defensive) play.”

Burgess finished with 16 points, and Theus and Daniels had 10 points apiece for the Rams, who edged Drexel 59-56 in the Colonial Athletic Association Tournament final to make it to the NCAAs.

Because of their unexpected run last season, the Rams were expected to give the Shockers trouble. Even President Barack Obama picked them to advance.

Ragland finished with 15 points after getting off to a slow start.

“They obviously pressured the ball and the first half we didn’t handle it as well as we should have,” Ragland said. “The second half we handled it pretty well and had a chance to win the game.”

Wichita State was ranked No. 18 in the final The Associated Press poll. The Shockers won the regular-season title in the Missouri Valley Conference, but lost to Illinois State in the semifinals of the conference tournament.

It was the first NCAA tournament appearance for Wichita State since 2006, when it advanced to the regional semifinals.

There were lots of missed shots on both sides early, but Rob Brandenberg hit a 3-pointer to put VCU in front 17-13 midway through the first half.

Wichita State put together an 11-0 run to make it 24-21 with 5:27 left. Carl Hall capped the surge with a layup.

Treveon Graham broke the VCU scoring drought with a jumper and Burgess added a 3-pointer, sparking a 13-1 run that lifted the Rams to a 34-25 lead at the break.

Burgess scored 13 points during a dominating first half, except for an errant 3-pointer that fell far short of the basket.

Virginia Commonwealth stretched the lead to 41-29 after Brandenberg’s layup. His jumper a short time later gave the Rams a 46-33 lead, but Ben Smith had a layup before David Kyles scored five quick points to trim VCU’s lead to 46-40.

Ragland, who was quiet most of the first half, made a 3-pointer with 7:23 left and Stutz tapped in a shot to get Wichita State within one at 54-53.

“They came at us with kind of a dose of our own medicine and pressed us,” Smart said. “I thought it gave us troubles for part of the second half but we hung in there and made all the big plays in the end.”

– Associated Press –

HIRING: EMT/Firefighter

Job Opportunity

Stafford County is taking applications for an EMT/Firefighter.

Applications can be picked up at the courthouse in the Clerk’s office at 209 N. Broadway in St. John, Kansas.

Call 620-549-3509 if you need an electronic copy.

Applications must be received at the Clerk’s office by Friday March 23, 2012 by 5 p.m.

Stafford County is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Kobach’s Bill On Voter Citizenship In Limbo

State senators aren’t sure they’ll vote on Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s proposal to require new voters to prove their U.S. citizenship ahead of this year’s presidential election.

Testimony from opponents took up most of the Senate Ethics and Election Committee’s hourlong meeting Thursday. It adjourned without taking a vote.

It was the committee’s last scheduled meeting of the year. Chairwoman Terrie Huntington, a Fairway Republican, said she’s not sure she can schedule another meeting.

Kansas has a proof-of-citizenship rule set to take effect Jan. 1, 2013, for people registering to vote for the first time in the state. Kobach wants to move up the effective date to June 15.

Kobach said if the committee wants to move forward, it will find a way to have another meeting.

Special Olympics Basketball & Chearleading Tournament Kicks Off With Opening Ceremony

Watch the opening ceremony of this year’s Kansas Special Olympics State Basketball and Cheerleading Championship live from Gross Memorial Coliseum. The ceremony begins at 7:30 p.m.

Over 1,200 athletes will participate in the games and cheerleading competition. The tournament will be March 15-17 at Gross Memorial Coliseum, Hays High School and Hays Recreation Center.


Broadcasting live with Ustream

 

McGruder Leads Kansas State By Southern Miss 70-64

(Sidney Davis | Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

PITTSBURGH – Frank Martin watched freshman point guard Angel Rodriguez flub his way through the first half against Southern Miss on Thursday and tried to keep his sanity.

At one point the always animated Martin feared Rodriguez and his fellow freshmen were “going to make me cry on national TV.”

Tears of joy, maybe.

Rodriguez overcame his early jitters to score seven of his 13 points in the final 2:10 as the eighth-seeded Wildcats surged past the ninth-seeded Golden Eagles 70-64 and into the third round of the NCAA tournament.

Martin called it no coincidence that Rodriguez – who airballed a couple of shots early and gave it away three times – was the player with the ball in his hands and the season on the line.

“It’s not like I trust him with 10 minutes to go and not trust him with two minutes to go,” Martin said. “I’ve got tremendous faith in him. That’s why you saw him out there making the plays he made towards the end of the game.”

Southern Miss, making its first NCAA appearance in 21 years, pulled within 62-59 on a steal and dunk by Darnell Dodson with 2:34 to play.

No biggie. Rodriguez, handed the starting job in January after the Wildcats got off to a slow start in Big 12 play, calmly dribbled on the wing after a timeout then slipped past two defenders before hitting a nifty reverse lay-up.

Kansas State’s defense tightened up, and Rodriguez nailed five free throws over the final 57 seconds to send the Wildcats into a third-round game Saturday against the winner of the Syracuse-UNC-Asheville matchup.

“We were fortunate to take the punch and stop the bleeding by making another run,” Rodriguez said

Rodney McGruder led Kansas State (22-10) with 30 points – including 18 in the first half when the Wildcats could muster little else – and center Jordan Henriquez added 15 points, nine rebounds and six blocks for Kansas State, which won its opening NCAA game for the third straight year.

“We’ve elevated our program to one of the better programs in the country,” Martin said. “We have been in this thing consistently. I don’t know how many people can claim they’ve been in it four out of five years.”

Certainly not Southern Miss (25-9), making its third tournament appearance since the program moved to Division I in 1972-73.

The Golden Eagles overcame some early jitters to build a five-point lead midway through the second half but couldn’t win in coach Larry Eustachy’s return to the game’s biggest stage.

“We just didn’t make the plays,” Eustachy said. “We didn’t execute the things we needed to do, particularly in critical situations.”

Neil Watson led the Golden Eagles with 16 points, and LaShay Page had 15. Kentucky transfer Darnell Dodson scored all 14 of his points in the second half, but Southern Miss fell to 0-3 in NCAA play by wilting during a critical stretch midway through the second half.

The Golden Eagles had all the momentum after a Dodson 3-pointer gave them a 45-40 lead.

Kansas State responded with a 18-6 run led by McGruder and Henriquez, who combined for 13 points during the burst, including a 3-pointer by McGruder that hit every inch of the rim before rolling in.

Southern Miss made one last run but couldn’t extend Eustachy’s revival act through the weekend.

The former Iowa State coach led the Cyclones to a pair of Big 12 titles over a decade ago before his stunning downfall. He resigned in 2003 shortly after photos of him partying with students surfaced.

Eustachy went to rehabilitation to treat alcoholism and found a job at Southern Miss in 2004, where he’s slowly built the program into a Conference USA contender by providing a home for cast-offs from other programs and junior college transfers.

The Golden Eagles repaid Eustachy’s patience by leading the program to the tournament for the first time since Brett Favre was still in school, but Southern Miss had trouble all game overcoming the bigger, tougher Wildcats.

No Wildcat was bigger or tougher than Henriquez. The 6-foot-11 center dominated the lane, swatting six shots and altering a handful of others.

He wasn’t too bad on the other end of the floor either. Henriquez – a 52 percent free-throw shooter – made 9-of-10 at the line to give McGruder some help after a first half in which McGruder singlehandedly kept Kansas State in front.

It’s the way Martin expected Henriquez to play all season. There were flashes of brilliance last fall before Henriquez got “a little full of himself” according to his coach. Though never technically in the doghouse, Henriquez slumped during most of the Big 12 season before finding his footing in the last two weeks.

Brimming with confidence, Henriquez provided a presence in the middle that let the guys in front of him play aggressively knowing he would erase mistakes. His long arms made every Southern Miss foray into the lane a difficult task and he wasn’t too bad at the other end of the floor either.

A 52 percent free-throw shooter on the season, Henriquez made 9-of-10 at the line to help send the Wildcats rolling into the third round.

“We have to do what I told the team,” Martin said. “We got to be on a bunch of one-game winning streaks. That’s all we got to do.”

– Associated Press –

Hospice Care of Kansas Lays Off 28 Workers

A Wichita-based hospice care business has laid off 28 workers after being acquired by a Texas company.

Hospice Care of Kansas says the layoffs are the result of being acquired in 2010 by Harden Healthcare of Austin, Texas.

Rick Breuss, a vice president for Hospice Care, told the Wichita Eagle Wednesday that most of the layoffs will occur in administrative positions.

He also said the company plans to hire more caregivers, such as registered nurses and home health aides.

Hospice Care has 92 employees in Wichita and 326 employees in Kansas.

Schultz of Hays Named to University of Kansas Fall 2011 Honor Roll

More than 4,400 undergraduate students at the University of Kansas earned honor roll distinction for the fall 2011 semester, including Rachel Schultz, of Hays. Schultz made the honor roll for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and School of Journalism.

The honor roll comprises undergraduates who meet requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and in the schools of allied health; architecture, design and planning; business; education; engineering; journalism; music; nursing; pharmacy; and social welfare.

Honor roll criteria vary among the university’s academic units. Some schools honor the top 10 percent of students enrolled, some establish a minimum grade-point average and others raise the minimum GPA for each year students are in school. Students must complete a minimum number of credit hours to be considered for the honor roll.

OPINION: KanCare is Ill-Advised Plan

Governor Brownback;

 Are you listening? Can you hear the collective plea coming from the community of disabled Kansans and their families? Can you feel the primal passion? Do you know what it is like to be different? To be disabled?

 Your insistence upon including long-term care services for the disabled in your privatization of the Kansas Medicaid system is insensitive, ill-informed and disturbing. Your form letters and your repeated mantra “we have heard no compelling reason to carve out” our services are only serving to stimulate and galvanize our community into action. In the end, we are determined to convince you that this revenue neutral request is in the best interest of both government and client.

The current Kansas model for serving the disabled is efficient both structurally and financially; and effective in serving clients’ needs. The “proposed new model” KanCare is fraught with peril and risk. $2.9 billion is being transferred to insurance companies. The primary but unspoken objective is $850,000,000 in cost savings. Mr. Sullivan has stated that cddo’s and case managers will be retained, according to the current model. Unfortunately, under the management of insurance companies, the priorities will drastically change! The effects will be: additional complexity of administration (adding a layer of management), a new layer of cost (insurance company profits), leading to decreased supports and services for those who need them most.

Can you imagine the effect of profit incentives for the insurance companies to reduce spending? The administration points to improving health outcomes via manages care, but you fail to mention the underlying but central driving force behind this initiative: cost savings. FACT: the annul spending per dd client served has actually declined from $49M in 1993, to $41M currently. This is a population that is actually underfunded as witnessed by the 5,000 qualified but unfunded persons on the waiting list. For decades, Kansas has been a national leader in serving the DD community. In structure and in efficiency of spending. Dismantling this model and transferring responsibility to the insurance industry would represent a massive step backwards and in the wrong direction.

Have you evaluated what is happening in Kentucky under their new system of managed care? Are you prepared for the potential complexity, confusion, legal actions, dissatisfaction among your constituents both providers and patients and other implications, all of which are being experienced in Kentucky?

 Do you know what it is like to have a person of special needs living in your home? Have you ever visited a group home or day center workplace? Please consider; you may attain great perspective by investing a small amount of time.

In summary, the informed people within the community of the disabled are simply seeking to exclude long-term care services from this potential fiasco. This “carve out” would be revenue neutral, but would have tremendous benefit to the DD community.

Are we seeking to fix something that is not broken?

Respectfully;

Ray Rollins

Overland Park, KS

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. These views and opinions do not represent those of HaysPost.com, and/or any/all contributors to this site.

Hutchinson Man Arrested After Slow-Speed Chase On A Moped

By Fred Gough ~ Hutch Post

A 29-year-old Hutchinson man led police and sheriff deputies on a less than high speed chase Tuesday afternoon.

Matthew Pritchard was arrested on charges of flee and elude, reckless driving, driving while suspended, criminal damage to property, DUI, his 3rd, illegal transportation of liquor, interference with law enforcement and misdemeanor theft.

The chase started when police attempted to make a traffic stop and Pritchard fled on the scooter.

The chase ran through the west side of Hutchinson, and even on a portion of the Jim Martinez trail before he was stopped near the trail off of Avenue F.

Police say the chase never reached speeds above 30-miles-per-hour.

Viaero Wireless Pot of Gold Scavenger Hunt – March 15th

Viaero Wireless is joining with local businesses to bring you the Viaero Pot of Gold scavenger hunt.

Throughout the month of March, participating businesses will be announced on 101.9 the Country Bull and the Viaero Show & Tell page on hayspost.com. Collect 12 pieces of gold from the participating businesses to qualify for a chance to win great prizes including a Nintendo Wii & Gold Accessory Bundle, Chamber Bucks, and gift certificates to local businesses.

Print your pot of gold worksheet or pick one up at Viaero Wireless, 2703 Vine Street.

Pick Up Your First Piece Today At….

Regal Audio/Video
124 W 9th St. Hays, KS
(785)628-2700
www.regalaudiovideo.com

2703 Vine Street
Hays KS, 67601
(785) 365-5000

Monday-Friday 9:00am-6:00pm
Saturday 9:00am-1:00pm
viaerowireless.com

TMP-Marian’s O’Brien Signs With FHSU

TMP-Marian senior kicker Drew O’Brien is taking his skills to Fort Hays State. The two-sport all-stater signed a letter of intent yesterday to play football for the Tigers.

O’Brien was a four-year starter on the Monarchs soccer team and earned all-state honors as a goal keeper last fall. He played football for the first time this past fall and booted three field goals of 45-yards or longer and more than half of his kickoffs went into the endzone. O’Brien was 19-of-24 on extra points. He also had a 38-yard punting average with a long of 60 earning him all-state honors in 3A by the Kansas Football Coaches Association.

Proposals for Comprehensive Plan Discussed During Open House

Approximately 40 people attended Wednesday night’s Community Open House to discuss the development of a new comprehensive plan for the City of Hays. Project Manager Amy Haase says the new land use map is a tool to guide development policy.

A new design for two key districts, downtown and North Vine, were discussed in depth, as well as, a concern among many stakeholders who have participated in the planning process, which is housing availability.

More public hearings will be held in the next few months as the process wraps up.

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