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Martin set to kick off first official tour of Kansas

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Mirta M. Martin, president of Fort Hays State University, believes that when people see excellence and excitement and success, they want to be part of it.

“Almost 30 years ago, Fort Hays State University captured the imagination of Kansans with its revolutionary vision of a high-tech high-touch education. Now, it is time for a bold new vision, a vision that builds upon the strengths of our successes and furthers our commitment to remain a true forward-thinking, world-ready university,” she said today at a news conference launching a four-day tour of Kansas to visit with media, legislators, civic leaders and alumni.

Dr. Mirta Martin
Dr. Mirta Martin

The tour, beginning on Sunday, Oct. 26, and lasting through Wednesday, Oct. 29, includes more than 30 events in 11 cities.

“I am here today to invite you to join our quest for distinction; to join our quest to become the destination of choice,” she said. “Ladies and gentlemen, at Fort Hays State University, we are indeed forward thinking and world ready. We are superbly positioned to become the destination of choice through our programs of distinction and our people of excellence for extraordinary students, faculty, researchers and staff.”

Martin assumed the presidency at Fort Hays State four months ago, on July 1, succeeding Dr. Edward H. Hammond, who had been president for the previous 27 years.

“Our new vision will serve the needs of the students who fill our classes today and those who will fill them in the future,” said President Martin. “We will engage this new generation of learners who are creative, technologically savvy, energetic, collaborative, socially conscious and adventurous.

“This new generation is certainly the ‘now’ generation. They are chomping at the bit to participate in the excitement of our age, to make a difference in the world, to improve the human condition and to do so actively, directly, wholeheartedly and now,” she said, her voice underlining that final “now.”

Dr. Martin’s personal story can serve as an inspiration for young people who want to find a path to success.

“I was born in Havana, Cuba, grew up in Madrid, Spain, and immigrated to the United States,” she said. “A journey like that stays with you, shapes you and guides your perspective on practically everything. The gift that journey gave me is an unshakable belief in the American dream.”

She noted that author James Truslow Adams coined the phrase in 1931, during the Great Depression, when he wrote of the “American dream of a better, richer and happier life for all our citizens of every rank.”

“I believe the American dream is the exceptional combination of determination, hard work and opportunity that allows anyone in this country to shape his or her future,” she said. “That dream can seem a little beat up these days. The challenges facing our middle class don’t help. Neither do the rising costs of higher education. Critics and cynics look for reasons to say the American dream is dying. Someone, somewhere, is probably drafting its obituary this very moment. But not so fast. My own story is an affirmation that the American dream is alive and well. People pursue it today, and their journey leads them to the front door of Fort Hays State University.”

President Martin used the example of the current generation of students to emphasize the necessity for 21st-century thinking.

“This is the generation of Twitter, YouTube and crowd funding,” she said. “They have watched cataclysmic world events, social phenomena and the creation of new social world orders, all in real time. Our university will possess the ability to attract and retain this increasingly diverse and incredibly ingenious student population. And they will be welcomed by our gifted faculty and our dedicated staff.”

She said her vision is to accomplish this vision through creating “an energized and supportive academic environment marked by bold interdisciplinary and collaborative initiatives, by rewarding “innovative and entrepreneurial initiatives.”

“We will foster a culture of trust and unleash our talented faculty to share their passions,” she said.

The special commitment, she said, is to the students and the university that serves them.

“We will employ a teacher-scholar model and ensure that what we do today, tomorrow and always is in the best interests of our students and our university,” she said.

As evidence of that commitment, she pointed to the addition of 24 new faculty positions. “That’s 21st-century thinking,” she said. She also noted that U.S. News and World Report recognized FHSU’s spirit of innovation and commitment to excellence when it named the university’s Virtual College as “the best in Kansas and one of the elite programs in the nation.”

“The list of national accolades earned throughout our university is long and impressive,” she said.

She gave four examples of recent successes:

• In the College of Education and Technology, the National Council on Teacher Quality, in its 2014 Teacher Prep Review, ranked FHSU No. 3 in the nation for Elementary Education and No. 12 in Secondary Education. FHSU was ranked No. 1 among all schools in Kansas.

• In the College of Arts and Sciences, the political science online program was ranked No. 11 in the country by Social Science Careers, a guide to careers and educational programs in the social sciences.

• In the College of Health and Life Sciences, the Kansas Ornithological Society named Dr. Elmer Finck, professor of the Department of Biological Sciences, the Avian Conservationist of the Year for his significant contributions in the field of avian studies.

• In the College of Business and Entrepreneurship, FHSU is one of only 13 colleges and universities in the United States with two accounting graduates to win the Sells Award in the last three years. The Sells Award goes only to those who pass all four sections of the Certified Public Accountant exam with a specified high score and on the first try. Of the nearly 100,000 accountants who take the exam each year, only a few, sometimes less than 10, win the award. In the past 25 years, only 13 schools — and that includes Wharton, Harvard, Stanford and now FHSU — have had two graduates in that group. No other Kansas school in the last 25 years has had even one finish in that elite category.

President Martin said the national rankings do not happen by accident but are earned by hard-working, high-quality faculty. “It is FHSU’s openness to innovation that makes it possible to offer a high-quality education that meets the needs of the students, employers and communities we serve,” she said.

“There is nothing more important to me than family,” she concluded. “No matter how wonderful our facilities are, no matter how incredible our technology is, higher education remains a people business. We have world-class faculty and staff who instill knowledge in our talented students so that, together, we can improve the human condition.”

Royals edge Giants for 2-1 World Series lead

By JANIE McCAULEY
AP Baseball Writer

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Jeremy Guthrie pitched shutout ball into the sixth inning, Lorenzo Cain drove in an early run off Tim Hudson and made a pair of nifty catches, and the Kansas City Royals beat the San Francisco Giants 3-2 Friday night to take a 2-1 World Series lead.

Cain’s RBI groundout three batters in put the Royals ahead, and Kansas City expanded its lead to 3-0 in the sixth when Alex Gordon hit an RBI double off Hudson and scored on Eric Hosmer’s single off left-hander Javier Lopez.

San Francisco finally got to Guthrie in the bottom of the sixth when pinch-hitter Michael Morse hit an RBI double over third base just past the glove of a diving Mike Moustakas and scored on Buster Posey’s groundout against Kelvin Herrera.

Herrera, Brandon Finnegan, Wade Davis and Greg Holland combined for four innings of hitless relief, the longest in a Series game in 22 years.

91 artists from 33 cities take part in annual Russell art review

RUSSELL — Last weekend’s 2014 ROAR (Russell Original Art Review) Show was comprised of 262 entries offered by 91 artists from 33 cities.

Participants include high school students from Russell, Colby and the Little River, as well as students from Fort Hays State University. The artists entering works in ceramics, computer generated, mixed media, oil, pastel, photography, sculpture and watercolor media.

Click HERE for a list of the winners. ROAR has been a Russell tradition since 1969.

Western Kan. group among winners of art commission grants

KS Dept of Commerce logo

The Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission has announced it has awarded $40,580 in grants to 11 organizations. The grants were awarded through the Strategic Investment and Arts Integration programs. KCAIC programs are designed to promote partnerships, enhance community and economic development, encourage risk and innovation, maximize statewide impact and highlight the role the arts play in all areas of community life. Grantees are selected by the KCAIC through an application and review process.

To learn more about KCAIC programs, visit KansasCommerce.com/CAICPrograms.

In northwest Kansas, the Western Plains Arts Association received a grant of $1,046.

The association will engage visiting artist Jeff Davidson in a series of interactive Kansas Day musical and visual presentations that integrate Kansas history and Western art for residents of St. Francis and Rawlins County and students in the Rawlins County school district.

Kansas man dies after car hits a tree

fatal crashMOUNT HOPE, Kan –  A Kansas man died in an accident just before 10 p.m. on Friday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Lincoln passenger car driven by Tanner Anthony Flores, 24, Hutchinson, was eastbound on Kansas 96 three miles east of Mount Hope.

The vehicle veered off right side of road and struck a tree.

Flores was pronounced dead at the scene.

The KHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

 

Unseasonably warm Saturday

FileEnjoy this weekend as this may be the warmest we will see until next spring! Record and near record warmth will continue through Sunday under a large dome of high pressure. Some patchy fog is possible after midnight.

For Monday, gusty northwest winds are expected along with a slight chance for rain Monday night as a cold front moves through.

Looking ahead to Halloween, preliminary forecasts predict dry weather and a high temperature in the 60s.

Today: Sunny, with a high near 82. Light and variable wind becoming southeast 6 to 11 mph in the afternoon.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 52. East southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 82. Southwest wind 7 to 10 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 52. Southwest wind 5 to 9 mph.

Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 67. Breezy, with a north wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 18 to 23 mph in the afternoon.

Obama: Science, not fear, key to Ebola response (VIDEO)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says the U.S. must be guided by science — not fear — as it responds to Ebola.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Obama says he was proud to give Texas nurse Nina Pham a hug in the Oval Office after she was cured of Ebola. He says the other nurse who contracted Ebola is also improving.

Obama is praising New York’s quick reaction to its first Ebola case. He says he’s promised local officials any federal help they need.

Obama is reminding Americans they can’t contract Ebola unless they come into direct contact with a patient’s bodily fluids.

The president says the U.S. can beat the disease if it remains vigilant. He says the best way to stop it is at its source in West Africa

US official: Auto safety agency under review

National Highway Traffic Safety AdministrationJOAN LOWY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — A senior Obama administration official says the “safety culture” of the federal agency that oversees auto recalls is being reviewed.

The agency has been criticized for not acting aggressively enough regarding recalls of millions of vehicles with defective air bags or faulty ignition switches.

The official says a team is examining risk management and the safety posture in general at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The official also says that further action is possible involving air bag inflators made by Takata Corp. The inflators can rupture, ejecting shrapnel in a crash. Recalls have been limited to vehicles registered in regions with high humidity, but millions more could be affected if recalls are extended nationwide.

The official requested not to be named as a condition of briefing reporters.

 

Sidelined player steps up game in concussion awareness effort

Kylee Bliss, 18, has formed a nonprofit foundation to raise awareness about and spur research into post-concussion syndrome after sustaining life-altering concussions herself.-photo by Mike Sherry
Kylee Bliss, 18, has formed a nonprofit foundation to raise awareness about and spur research into post-concussion syndrome after sustaining life-altering concussions herself.-photo by Mike Sherry

By Mike Sherry
Hale Center for Journalism

LAWRENCE — A talented athlete, Kylee Bliss could have been a scholarship basketball player at a small college.

As a sophomore point guard at Blue Valley High School in Stilwell, she practiced hard and had a real feel for the game. That changed after she sustained two concussions on the court in the span of eight weeks nearly three years ago.
Since then, Bliss has been publicizing her symptoms, intent on informing other high school athletes of the seriousness of traumatic brain injuries.

That’s not where the story ends, however. Bliss still deals with the chronic headaches, dizziness and concentration lapses that are common after-effects of concussions.

Her depth perception also is askew. “I can’t tell you how many times I have run into doors because it looks a lot farther,” she says.

Now a freshman at the University of Kansas, Bliss, 18, is still involved in sports, but from the sidelines. Working part-time in the KU football office, she hopes to specialize in pediatric medicine one day.

She’s also taken another step to raise awareness about and spur research into post-concussion syndrome (PCS) by forming the nonprofit HeadsUp Foundation for PCS.

Just three months after its establishment in August 2013, the foundation raised about $12,000 through its initial HeadsUp 10K trail run and 5K walk/run at Shawnee Mission Park. The second annual event is scheduled to start at 9 a.m. Oct. 25 at Shelter No. 2.

Bliss recently answered some questions about her condition and the events that inform her efforts today.

Please start by taking me through the events that led to your concussions.

My first concussion was my first night of basketball tryouts my sophomore year, so 2011, and it wasn’t a big enough deal to stop practice. I just collided with another girl. … And so after practice in the locker room, I was just walking around. I had no clue who I was, where I was, when my birthday was, address, any of those things. And so the trainer, she called my Dad to come pick me up, and then I went to the doctor the next day, and it was confirmed I had a concussion. He said I should get brain rest — no talking on the phone, no texting, no watching TV. And that was Tuesday when I went to see him, and then Wednesday morning I went to school.

Was that the wrong or right thing to do?

No, that was wrong. But I begged my parents to let me go, and I told them that I was fine and that I didn’t really have a headache and all my other symptoms were gone. They weren’t, and I lasted, I think, a few hours, and then they sent me home.

What was happening? How come you only lasted a few hours?

My headache was really bad. I was dizzy. I asked my teacher to go fill up my water bottle, and I was gone for like 30 minutes, and nobody knew where I was. Eventually, they sent someone to come find me and I was sitting down, I was like, “I don’t know where I came from; I don’t know where I’m supposed to be.”

Not many people would be eager to go back to school.

When I was diagnosed with a concussion, I had to be out until all my symptoms were completely gone, and then after that I had to have a week of working into playing. So I knew it was going to be at least a week, if my symptoms were completely gone, so I was trying to speed that process up as quickly as possible.

The trainer would not let me practice until I was cleared by a doctor, and I knew that the doctor who had seen me before still wouldn’t clear me, so I had my Mom take me to a different doctor — just my family doctor, and I lied to him. I was just like, “No, I don’t have any headaches.” And for him, it was not fair at all to him. I put everyone in a bad situation. I wanted to play, and I didn’t want to let my team down, and so I did that, and he cleared me, and then I just had to wait a week, and then I went back.

So when did the second concussion occur?

It was my third game back. Somewhere, I think around the fourth quarter, it was a really close game and my team hadn’t won a game yet, so that was another reason for me to get back. So I dove for a loose ball like I normally would, not thinking, “Oh my head still hurts. I probably shouldn’t do that,” and I collided with a girl and then I hit my head on the floor. And then after that, I came out for a few minutes. I was like “please put me back in the game,” and so (the coach) did. I got fouled right after I went back in, and I went to shoot the free throw to put us ahead. I got up there and I couldn’t see the basket. I was just disoriented and I shot. I got close; I didn’t make it. That was the last time I ever played basketball.

What happened after the second concussion?

I went to speech therapy, vestibular therapy, and then I can’t even remember the other (therapists). There were a lot because the symptoms were still so bad every day. The first (concussion) happened right around winter break. So over that time, I wasn’t able to concentrate; I wasn’t able to remember. But once I went back, I took my finals. I failed every single one. On one, I got about a 12 percent because I just could not focus; I could not remember any of it. So that was kind of like when everyone said, “OK, there is something really wrong here.” Because I have always gotten straight A’s. OK there was like one B, but we don’t like to talk about that.

How long did it take before you started feeling decent again after the second one?

They started me on all these different types of medicines. Some of it helped, some of it didn’t. So until I really started to feel better a little bit, it would’ve been more than a month, probably three, because I had to do the therapies and do all that stuff. It was more just learning how to manage the symptoms as opposed to them getting better because they are still all here.

You specifically wanted to make the 10K more difficult during the fundraiser. Why is that?

Running on a paved surface, for most people, is a challenge. But to run on a mountain bike trail is just an added challenge. It takes more concentration and more effort. It is just kind of symbolic of how things that I used to be able to do very easily now just take extra time, and more work and more effort.

How are you working through the rigors of college classes?

I use pretty much all the time that I am not sleeping to study or work on other things. When I read, I have to take notes over every chapter, which takes longer. But if I don’t, I can read something and I can read it 400 times and not tell you a word of what it says.

Mornings are really hard just because my head, when I wake up, always hurts in the morning. So pushing yourself to get out of bed is rough. It hasn’t been as bad as I thought it would be; being able to go to a class for 50 minutes and go home and take a nap and then study and go back to class has been a lot easier than going to school for seven or eight hours a day.

I just have to find my places where I can go study, like the Natural History Museum (on the University of Kansas campus). People don’t go there during the day, so it’s very quiet. I have to find things that work for me — and just knowing Thursday nights, it’s going to be loud; Saturday nights, it’s going to be loud. So I just have to do other things to counteract what everybody else does.

Do you think your symptoms will ever go away?

No, just because of the fact that I have lived with them every day for practically three years. But at the same time, that is OK. I have learned how to deal with them. You know, there are people who go through a lot worse. Obviously, I hope they will go away.

How do you feel about having established a foundation by the age of 18?

I am pretty proud of it, but more than anything, I just want to be able to hopefully prevent other people from going through the same things. All my friends go out and have a good time, and go to football games and go to basketball games and go to concerts and stuff. I can’t do those things without feeling bad for a week after. So I’ve had to grow up a lot quicker, and I’ve had to make those choices that, “Hey, I’m not going to go this concert because I have to do what is best for my health.”

 

Mike Sherry is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Kansas High School Football Scoreboard for Week 8

https://insuringhays.com/Area Scores
District Records in Parenthesis

4A-I District 8
Hays (1-1) 34, Abilene (0-2) 33
McPherson (2-0) 44, Buhler (1-1) 42

3A District 14
Russell (1-1) 24, Hays-TMP-Marian (0-2) 17
Norton (2-0) 34, Beloit (1-1) 16

6A District 8
Wichita Northwest (2-0) 35, Garden City (0-2) 14
Hutchinson (2-0) 48, Dodge City (0-2) 28

5A District 6
Salina Central (1-1) 41, Great Bend (1-1) 15
Salina South (2-0) 42, Newton (0-2) 14

5A District 8
Liberal (2-0) 13, Goddard-Eisenhower (0-2) 10
Goddard (1-1) 27, Arkansas City (1-1) 10

2-1A District 6
Phillipsburg (3-0) 20, Ell-Saline (2-1) 14
Smith Center (2-1) 34, Bennington (1-3) 8

2-1A District 7
LaCrosse (3-0) 47, Wichita County (0-4) 8
Oakley (3-1) 41, Plainville (1-2) 20

8 Man-I District 4
Hanover (5-0) 58, Clifton-Clyde (1-4) 6
Osborne (5-0) 56, Wakefield (4-2) 54 OT
Mankato-Rock Hills (2-3)) 54, Lakeside-Downs (0-5) 42

8 Man-I District 5
Central Plains (4-0) 58, Solomon (3-1) 0
Little River (3-1) 44, Ellinwood (1-3) 28
Canton-Galva (1-3) 62, Goessel (0-4) 12

8 Man-I District 7
Spearville (4-0) 50, Hodgeman County (3-1) 28
Ness City (3-1) 52, Trego (1-3) 8
South Gray (1-3) 38, Dighton/Healy (0-4) 32

8 Man-I District 8
Oberlin-Decatur (5-0) 52, Rawlins County (4-1) 44
Logan (2-3) 28, Hill City (3-2) 20
St. Francis (2-3) 55, Stockton (0-6) 8

8 Man-II District 7
Victoria (4-0) 1, Natoma (0-4) 0 Forfeiture
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton (3-1) 54, Thunder Ridge (2-2) 50
Northern Valley (2-2) 76, Otis-Bison (1-3) 26

8 Man-II District 8
Wallace County (5-0) 68, Cheylin (0-5) 0
Hoxie (5-1) 70, Golden Plains (0-5) 0

Non-District Games
Ellis 34, Sublette 14
Lincoln 50, Quinter 46

Statewide Scores
Andale 21, Clearwater 0
Andover 24, Kapaun Mount Carmel 21
Andover Central 41, Circle 0
Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 21, Cheney 0
Ashland 66, Fairfield 64
Attica/Argonia 54, Norwich 6
Augusta 31, Coffeyville 28
Axtell 46, BV Randolph 0
Basehor-Linwood 27, Atchison 14
Baxter Springs 20, Parsons 9
Bishop Miege 41, Louisburg 14
Blue Valley Stillwell 28, Olathe South 0
Bluestem 46, Douglass 26
BV North 45, SM Northwest 35
BV Northwest 45, Gardner-Edgerton 17
Caldwell 50, South Haven 0
Caney Valley 35, Neodesha 20
Centralia 35, St. Mary’s 0
Chapman 34, Nickerson 0
Chase 46, Tescott 0
Chetopa 96, Elk Valley 0
Concordia 45, Goodland 7
Conway Springs 72, Belle Plaine 8
Derby 52, Wichita South 14
Elkhart 27, Meade 26
Ellsworth 20, Lyons 13
Eudora 28, DeSoto 14
Fort Scott 49, Labette County 12
Fredonia 44, Eureka 22
Frontenac 22, Columbus 13
Galena 34, Southeast 8
Girard 45, Burlington 7
Halstead 58, Garden Plain 0
Hartford 56, Altoona-Midway 0
Hesston 59, Council Grove 2
Highland Park 8, Topeka Seaman 7
Hoisington 42, Sterling 0
Holcomb 57, Pratt 36
Holton 56, Perry-Lecompton 27
Hugoton 14, Larned 6
Hutchinson Trinity 42, Kingman 10
Immaculata def. Doniphan West, forfeit
Independence 30, Winfield 28
Ingalls 50, Deerfield 0
Iola 42, Anderson County 13
Jackson Heights 41, Wabaunsee 8
Jefferson North 46, Maranatha Academy 16
Jefferson West 24, Royal Valley 6
Junction City 34, Wichita East 7
Kiowa County 48, St. John 24
Lawrence Free State 21, Manhattan 7
Leavenworth 59, KC Washington 16
Lyndon 61, Yates Center 6
Madison 54, Flinthills 0
Marais des Cygnes Valley 49, St. Paul 22
Marion 56, Herington 8
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 20, Pleasant Ridge 8
McLouth 24, Atchison County 12
Mill Valley 42, Bonner Springs 0
Minneola def. Cunningham, forfeit
Mission Valley 20, Northern Heights 18
Moscow 68, Fowler 18
Mulvane 14, Wellington 7
Nemaha Central 28, Rock Creek 9
Northeast-Arma 48, Erie 22
Olathe North 14, Lawrence 0
Olathe Northwest 34, Olathe East 7
Olpe 26, Chase County 14
Onaga 28, Valley Falls 26
Ottawa 48, Baldwin 21
Paola 21, Chanute 20
Peabody-Burns 42, Burlingame 34
Pike Valley 57, Linn 22
Pittsburg 41, Blue Valley Southwest 34
Pratt Skyline 46, Kinsley 0
Pretty Prairie 50, South Barber 48
Remington 44, Oswego 8
Riley County 21, Minneapolis 17
Riverside 47, Hiawatha 8
Riverton 43, Cherryvale 6
Rossville 91, Osage City 22
Sabetha 34, Horton 7
Salina Sacred Heart 35, Moundridge 0
Santa Fe Trail 22, Prairie View 15
Satanta 58, Rolla 12
Scott City 59, Lakin 20
Sedgwick 63, Medicine Lodge 21
Shawnee Heights 60, Topeka West 13
Silver Lake 55, Oskaloosa 8
SM East 56, KC Wyandotte 12
SM North 41, KC Harmon 6
SM West 27, SM South 24
South Central 60, Macksville 0
Southeast Saline 42, Hillsboro 0
Spring Hill 42, KC Sumner 12
St. James Academy 51, KC Turner 28
St. Mary’s Academy 42, Veritas Christian 20
St. Thomas Aquinas 52, BV West 28
Stafford 50, Bucklin 0
Topeka 49, Washburn Rural 28
Topeka Hayden 49, El Dorado 20
Triplains-Brewster 37, Weskan 25
Troy 63, Inman 0
Ulysses 42, Rose Hill 21
Uniontown 56, Pleasanton 8
Valley Center 28, Maize 14
Valley Heights 48, Republic County 6
Wamego 35, Smoky Valley 14
Washington County 28, Marysville 7
Wellsville 63, West Franklin 0
West Elk 80, Oxford 34
Wichita Bishop Carroll 37, Maize South 0
Wichita Collegiate 60, Wichita Independent 7
Wichita Heights 41, Emporia 28
Wichita Home School 76, Hutchinson Central Christian 26
Wichita Southeast 26, Wichita North 7
Wichita Trinity 50, Haven 14
Wichita West 14, Wichita Campus 7
Wilson 42, Centre 24

Hays Keeps Playoff Hopes Alive With Win

By Dustin Armbruster

It wasn’t easy…nor should it have been. Hays and Abilene were each coming off their first loss of the season and met up in week 2 of district play, both needing a victory to keep the best picture of the playoffs in front of them.

Things did not start well for Hays High as Abilene took the first play of the game 68 yards for a touchdown by quarterback Hartley Hazlett. Trailing 7-0 Hays reponded with a nine play 77 yard drive capped by a three yard Isaiah Blackmon run. The Indians missed the extra point and trailed 7-6.

Neither team could grab a first half stop. Abilene scored on a Tanner Hoekman 1 yard run answered by a Isaiah Blackmon 2 yard scoring run and with a two point conversion tied the game at 14.

Abilene took the lead again on a Hazlett touchdown pass to Hoekman from 76 yards out. Only to see Hays tie the game at 21 with a Alex Delton one yard quarterback sneak.

Abilene had the ball to end the first half and scored on a one yard dive by Hoekman to take a 27-21 lead after the Indians blocked the extra points.

Hays got the ball to begin the second half, but threw an interception just four plays into their drive. Abilene drove inside of the Indian’s five yard line, but lost the possession downs following a Brendan Ibarra tackle for loss on fourth down. The very next play Hays tied the game up on a 90 yard touchdown run by Delton. The extra point though hit the left upright to leave the game tied at 27.

Abilene scored on the ensuing drive again on a touchdown down pass from Hazlett to Hoekman. Hays again though blocked the extra point leaving Abilene with a 33-27 lead with 1:16 remaining in the third quarter.

The ensuing drive by Hays High looked to be stalled until Delton found Garrett Pfannenstiel for his first career reception. It was a 12 yard catch on 4th and 9. Delton capped off the 4:45 drive with a 17 yard run. Kyler Leiker extra point just made it past the cross bar to give Hays High their first lead at 34-33 with 8:38 remaining in the game.

Abilene drove to the Hays 23 yard line but couldn’t convert on 4th and 10. Hays took over and 12 plays later ran out the clock for the 34-33 win.

Alex Delton led the Indians on the ground with 257 yards and three scores on 24 carries. Isaiah Blackmon rushed for 40 yards and two touchdowns. Connor Rule ran for 41 yards and Hayden Kreutzer finished the game with 57 yards rushing. Hays ended the game with 484 yards of offense. Abilene totaled 402 yards. Hays was 9 for 10 on third downs and converted on the one fourth down they faced. Neither team punted in the game.

Hays with the win moves to 7-1 on the year and 1-1 in district play. Abilene is 6-2 and 0-2.

There are many scenarios that are set up for Hays to potentially make the playoffs, but it all comes down to winning. If Hays wins by 17+ points at McPherson and Buhler beats Abilene, the Indians are playoff bound. If Abilene beat Buhler, Hays only needs to beat McPherson by any margin to become district champions. McPherson moved to 2-0 in district play with a 44-42 in over Buhler. Hays lost to Buhler last week 55-21.

Russell outlasts TMP

By JEREMY McGUIRE
HaysPost

Russell 24, TMP 17

TMP opened up play on Friday night with a 55 yard touchdown scoring drive to take an early seven to nothing lead.  The Monarchs wouldn’t find the endzone again until late in the fourth quarter in a 24-17 loss, keeping TMP winless through eight games in the 2014 season.  Cameron Fouts accounted for both TMP touchdowns.  The first a 40 yard strike to Jared Schumacher  in the first quarter and the next a late 14 yard connection with Chase Romme at the 5:20 mark of the fourth quarter.  His last pass was intercepted in the red zone with under 2 minutes to play in the game that sealed TMP’s fate.

Russell used the playmaking ability of junior Reshean Holloway who returned a punt 63 yards for a touchdown and also threw 2 passes for scores.  The Broncos are now two and six on the season and will travel to Beloit next Thursday.  TMP is oh and eight and will finish the season at home on Thursday against Norton.

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