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Governor Who? Jeff Colyer Finally Takes Over In Kansas

By JIM MCLEAN

Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer will rise next week to become governor when Sam Brownback steps down to take a job in the Trump administration.
BRIAN GRIMMETT / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

On Wednesday, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer goes from one of the most anonymous jobs in state politics to its most prominent.

Kansans, in turn, will find themselves with a new governor. Colyer’s politics may run as conservative as the man he’ll replace, Sam Brownback, just more low key.

Brownback is stepping away from the job with a year left in his term to work in the U.S. State Department for the Trump administration. That gives Colyer a chance to show that he’s up to the job and to catapult his prominence in this year’s race for a full term as governor.

The interim promotion gives Colyer a chance to rise above what’s been a relatively low-profile political career, marked more by gradual success than confrontation or daring choices.

Yet friends who know him best rarely use his political biography — failed run for the U.S. House, election to the Kansas House, the state Senate and as lieutenant governor — to explain him.

Instead, they talk about the plastic surgeon who travels to war-torn corners of the world to fix the battle wounds of children.

“Gosh,” said former Kansas House colleague Steve Brunk, “Lt. Gov. Colyer is certainly a real humanitarian.”

In 2002, for instance, the Johnson County physician traveled to Sierra Leone to fix scars, including on children who had rebel brands burned into their flesh by various factions in the west African country’s civil war.

“I don’t think you can ever accept the fact that you’re taking children and branding them,” he told a “60 Minutes” crew that documented some of the work he did on a volunteer medical team.

Colyer’s charity work is also the focus of TV ad designed to introduce him to voters at the outset of the governor’s race. A young woman talks about how Colyer transformed her life by surgically repairing a disfiguring birth defect.

“Dr. Colyer,” she says in the spot, “does the right thing even when nobody’s looking.”

A group connected to Koch Industries paid for the commercial. That suggests that Koch’s powerful political network is backing Colyer and not Secretary of State Kris Kobach, his more dynamic conservative rival in the governor’s race.

Still, it doesn’t reveal much about either Colyer’s politics or his policies.

Kansas House Democratic Leader – and candidate for governor – Jim Ward said Colyer has always been a bit of a political mystery man, even when he was a legislator.

“He served in the House for four years and didn’t leave much of a footprint,” Ward said. “(Colyer) wasn’t in the Senate long enough to leave a footprint. And he’s been kind of the back room guy for the governor.”

The lieutenant governor has left a mark in at least one policy area – health care. He’s the architect of KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program.

Launched in 2013, it has reduced the cost of providing health care for low-income, elderly and disabled Kansans. But increased red tape and billing disputes have frustrated both providers and patients.

Colyer was recently forced by legislative resistance to back off an attempt to preserve his signature program while adding some controversial features, such as a requirement that some recipients work in exchange for their health care benefits.

Colyer insists there’s real no mystery about his politics. He’s an anti-abortion conservative who believes that government at both the state and national levels is too big.

“Everybody knows I worked for Bob Dole and Ronald Reagan, so you know where I’m coming from,” he said in an interview.

Since Brownback’s nomination for an ambassadorship began the conversation about a transition several months ago, Colyer has said he’ll be a different kind of governor. He’s talked a lot about listening to Kansans and “changing the tone.”

“You just need to be a good governor,” he said. “We’re going to do a very good job. And we’re going to work for Kansas. We’re going to listen for them. We’re going to change the tone. And we’re going to work very hard.”

Even before the transition, Colyer was gearing up to use the power of incumbency by making appointments and scheduling events across the state that allowed him to connect with voters, local officials and business leaders with reporters tagging along.

Former Kansas House Speaker Mike O’Neal spent decades in Kansas Republican politics. He said Colyer needs to use the next several months to define how he’s different if he hopes to top a crowded field of GOP hopefuls in the governor’s race.

O’Neal and others say running as an incumbent could be a real advantage for Colyer. But only if he uses the opportunity to show that he’s up to the job.

“This is his opportunity,” O’Neal said, “to show what he’s made of and that he’s just not going to be a carbon copy of the last administration.”

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Sunny, breezy Sunday


Today
Sunny, with a high near 47. West wind 5 to 10 mph becoming north northwest 12 to 17 mph in the afternoon.

Tonight
Partly cloudy, with a low around 16. North wind 7 to 10 mph.

Monday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 44. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.

Monday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 25. Southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.

Tuesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 62. South wind 8 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph.

Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 31.

Wednesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 53.

Wednesday Night
A 30 percent chance of snow after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 25.

Thursday
A chance of snow before 1pm, then a slight chance of rain and snow between 1pm and 4pm, then a slight chance of snow after 4pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 35. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Alternative programs produce huge rewards for Fort Hays State graduate

By DIANE GASPER-O’BRIEN
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

Complete High School Maize is an alternative school that educates students in grades 9 through 12 who struggled in a traditional high school setting. So Heidi Albin, in her ninth year as a science teacher at the school, comes up with alternative ways to make things work.

Because of her innovative approach to helping students learn, Albin was awarded the prestigious Milken Educator Award for 2017, which has been coined by Teacher Magazine as the “Oscars of Teaching.”

Albin, who earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Fort Hays State University, joins an elite group of numerous FHSU grads who have won the award. It gave FHSU its first back-to-back Milken winners since 2000. Albin follows Stephanie Conklin, a 2002 Fort Hays State graduate and now principal of Brougham Elementary School in Olathe, who was honored in 2016.

Albin teaches biology, earth science, health and agriculture at CHSM, a school for ninth- through 12-graders. In addition to the traditional curriculum, students are exposed to life skills through elective units such as survival skills, first aid and cooking. They get to experience chick hatching and husbandry. Albin wrote a grant for a community garden at her school and raised funds to acquire a therapy dog to help students cope with depression and anxiety.

“Whatever the students need to know is what we teach,” Albin said. “An alternative school is focused on meeting needs of students in more direct ways that traditional schools. Our program is targeted to those issues.”

Using alternative methods to learn is nothing new to Albin, who began her teaching career in a path different than the traditional teacher education program at FHSU.

After earning her bachelor’s degree in cellular molecular biology in 2009, Albin accepted a job at the Maize alternative school and immediately began working on her teaching certification through FHSU’s Transition to Teaching (T2T) program.

T2T, an alternative route to teacher licensure in Kansas, is an online program that offers a professional education curriculum that meets the state’s restricted licensure qualifications. It is designed for mid-career professionals seeking a chance to enter the teaching profession.

Albin knew she wanted to teach from the get-go, but she had a passion for learning as much as possible about teaching science. So she chose to pursue a biology degree, then immediately started taking the T2T classes while working simultaneously on her master’s degree in secondary education.

“I was able to learn some more about science than I might not have had the opportunity to learn in the teacher education program,” she said. “The T2T program was perfect for what I wanted to do.”

FHSU professors remember the student who sat in the first or second row each class period.

“(Albin) was one of the first to come to class and one of the last to leave,” said Dr. Robert Moody, professor of advanced education programs at FHSU. “She would ask really thought-provoking questions. I can remember having to provide pretty deep answers directly toward her, and the entire class benefitted.”

Dr. James Barrett, chair of the advanced education department and coordinator of the T2T program at the time, agreed.

“I was very pleased to learn she had won such an award, but not really surprised,” Barrett said. “She was always one of our shining stars.”

Albin is the only Milken Educator Award winner from Kansas for 2017 and is among a group of less than 50 honorees nationwide for that year. She is the first FHSU alum who went the T2T route and won a Milken.

“That’s a verification that our program is a quality program,” Barrett said.

“That definitely speaks to the quality of students we attract into that program,” added Dr. Paul Adams, dean of the College of Education.

Besides being able to tout its quality, Fort Hays State’s T2T program is also the largest of its kind in the state. More about the T2T program can be found at www.fhsu.edu/transition-to-teaching.

“The program has grown tremendously since we started it in 2003,” Barrett said. “It’s a great hands-on kind of experience for students, and it’s been very successful.”

The first Milken Educator Awards were presented by the Milken Family Foundation 30 years ago “to celebrate and empower outstanding educators.” In addition to public recognition and an abundance of network opportunities for Milken Award winners, the award comes with a $25,000 cash prize.

Not surprisingly, Albin has chosen to share that with her staff and students. She has plans to buy each of her fellow staff members a gift and take them out for a meal.

“The entire staff at Complete High School Maize deserves this award,” Albin explained. “There is nothing I do by myself. It’s a team effort. I want the school to be recognized. It’s a real testament to our program, not me.”

Plus, Albin is thrilled to have a little extra to spend for classroom projects, “for some student needs, some school needs.”

“We’ve never had a huge budget, but there’s a lot you can do on a shoestring budget,” she said. “Most of the things I find to do are free are supported by other people. A key is to find ways to do something that doesn’t require money. It’s about reaching out into the community because there are so many people who will help you.”

One of those who helped Albin was Dr. Steve Woolf, superintendent of Erie USD 101.
Woolf, a Milken Award winner in 1995, started a program called WILD that helps teachers engage students in the outdoors with adventure and experiences, learning, leadership and service.

Woolf helped Albin implement the WILD program, which promotes the environment and conservation, at her school and nominated her for the Milken Award.

“His mission is to help young teachers do great things,” Albin said. “I want to pass that on. I work really hard, but I don’t want to keep that to myself. It’s more worthwhile if I can share it.”

FHSU grads who were Milken Award recipients in the 1990s could tell Albin a bit about the perpetual benefits of Milken winners.

“Whenever I have applied for a job somewhere, anywhere I send my resume, I get a look,” said Keith Hall, a Milken winner in 1997. “It’s something that people really pay attention to.”

Hall, now superintendent of Osborne USD 392, was the industrial education teacher at Stockton High School when he was tabbed for a Milken Award.

With technology looming on the horizon, Hall decided to change the industrial education program’s name to technology and design and adjusted his curriculum accordingly.

“We were straight shop at the time,” he said. “With technology coming in, it was obvious that to be viable, we needed to make some changes.”

So Hall used a model from Pittsburg Middle School, which was using modules that gave students a broad-based education. The modules feature areas such as transportation, electronics, desktop printing, manufacturing and computer-aided drafting.

“That was a national model at the time,” he said. “We made it our own and put in principles of technology, an applied physics program. It just really took off. What we were able to do was keep a lot of what we were doing before and make the change so our kids had other opportunities.”

Hall also incorporated numerous methods of teaching technology that he learned as a college student at FHSU.

“Fort Hays State became a leader in the technology education program,” he said.

Just this fall, FHSU opened a new state-of-the-art Center for Applied Technology that replaced the existing Davis Hall, built in the early 1950s.

“(FHSU) has always been great at hands-on, work-ethic culture – and still is,” Hall said.

Several other FHSU grads who won Milken Awards stayed in western Kansas to teach. Three of those were educators who won the Milken while working in Hays schools – Nancy Costigan Talbott, science teacher at Kennedy Middle School in 1993; Deliece Mullen Hofer, O’Loughlin Elementary School teacher, 1996; and Nancy Harman, O’Loughlin principal, 2000.

In fact, Talbott and Harman still live in Hays in retirement. Talbott was part of a boon decade of FHSU winners in the 1990s. Nine Fort Hays State alumni were Milken winners from 1992-99.

Talbott said that even today, she still reaps the benefits of winning a Milken.

“You get the chance to network with some wonderful people,” Talbott said. “I still network with them. Once a Milken, you’re always a Milken.”

Kansas teen dead, 2 children hospitalized after crash

The scene of Saturday’s fatal crash photo courtesy WIBW TV

SHAWNEE COUNTY — A Kansas teen died in an accident just before 1p.m. Saturday in Shawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Jeep Cherokee driven by Abigail R. Medley, 17, Topeka, was eastbound on Interstate 470 at Gage.

The driver overcorrected to the left and the vehicle fell towards the median, overturned and landed in westbound lanes of I-470.

Medley was pronounced dead at the scene.  Passengers Brooke Medley, 15, Topeka, and Mattie Hosie, 2, were transported to the hospital in Topeka.

All three were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Silver Alert continues for missing Salina man

SALINE COUNTY –  The Kansas Bureau of Investigation and Salina Police issued a Silver Alert Saturday for a missing Salina man.

The whereabouts of Gene Oliver Wolfe, 89, are unknown. Wolfe suffers from Alzheimer’s and dementia. He is 5’5″, 155 lbs., has short gray hair, hazel eyes, and wears glasses.

Wolfe was last seen in Salina, at approximately 3 p.m. Saturday. He is believed to have left home in a 2002 White Ford Taurus with Kansas tag number 096JGM. The Taurus also has a broken tail light.

Wolfe’s direction of travel is unknown. He mentioned going to his parents’ gravesite in Manchester, Kan. but has not been located there.

The Salina Police Department asks anyone with information, or who has had contact with Wolfe, to immediately call them at 785-826-7210.

The Salina Police Department is requesting activation of a Silver Alert for the following individual:

Name: Gene Oliver Wolfe
Age: 89
Sex: Male
Race: White
Height: 5’5”
Weight: 155
Hair: Gray, Short
Eyes: Hazel, wears glasses
Vehicle: 2002 White Ford Taurus 4-door, broken tail light
KS Tag: 096JGM
Clothing: Last seen wearing blue jeans, red t-shirt, black suspenders
Last Known Location: Salina, Kansas. Made mention of going to parent’s gravesite in Manchester, Kansas.
Public Contact: Salina Police Department 785-826-7210
Photo: Provided by Family, attached

Mr. Wolfe suffers from diagnosed Alzheimer’s and dementia and has been known to show physically violent tendencies with his family. He was last seen in Salina, Kansas at approximately 3:00pm on today’s date. He left home in the above vehicle, a white 2002 Ford Taurus. Mr. Wolfe made mention of going to his parents gravesite in Manchester, Kansas but has not been located there. The Salina Police Department asks that anyone with information as to the whereabouts of Mr. Wolfe contact them at 785-826-7210 or by calling 911.

Brownback recognizes K-5 fire safety poster contest winners

TOPEKA—Students from across the state recently put their creative talents to work to help spread the message about fire safety by participating in the Fire Safety Poster Contest conducted annually by the Office of the State Fire Marshal. The agency is delighted to announce the winners of this contest who were honored by Governor Brownback and State Fire Marshal Doug Jorgensen at a ceremony in the Governor’s office Friday.

The winning posters, along with those earning Honorable Mention recognition, are currently being featured on a display in the Capitol Building rotunda and are highlighted in the 2018 Fire Safety Calendar.

The competition kicked off in October in conjunction with Fire Prevention Week. The poster contest is designed to support the fire safety education efforts of local fire departments. Participants were asked to use this year’s theme, “Every Second Counts, Know 2 Ways Out,” in their entries.

“Teaching fire safety to our youngest learners in Kansas is critical to promoting a safer Kansas for the future,” State Fire Marshal Doug Jorgensen said. “We very much appreciate the efforts of all students who participated, and the schools and teachers who recognize the importance of ensuring their students know about this important subject.”

Schools across Kansas encouraged participation from their students, who demonstrated their knowledge of fire safety that they have learned in school or at home. The poster contest was divided into grade categories: Kindergarten through fifth grade.

Northwest Kansas winner was Blaire Beougher, third grade, Stockton Grade School, Stockton, Kansas

Several students’ entries are being recognized as s and their posters are also featured in the annual Fire Safety Calendar along with the winners.

Northwest Kansas honorable mention were Sara Pando, third-grade, Greeley County Elementary School, Tribune, Kansas and Hailey Nolan, fourth-grade, Greeley County Elementary School, Tribune, Kansas

 

Former Kansas police officer sentenced for fatal DUI crash

Heafey-photo Douglas Co.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A former Lawrence police officer will serve a year of supervised probation for driving under the influence during a wreck that killed a motorcycle driver.

The Lawrence Journal-World Thursday that 51-year-old Robert Heafey, of Lawrence, was ordered to participate in a weekend alcohol/drug intervention program and pay about $1,300 in fines.

Heafey pleaded no contest to misdemeanor DUI on Jan. 12. The 11-year police veteran resigned the day the charges were filed in September 2017.

Investigators say Heafey and 56-year-old Jesse del Campo were riding their motorcycles in July 2017 when a deer ran in front of them. Heafey laid his bike down and del Campo to run over him. Del Campo died later of his injuries.

Investigators said both men’s blood alcohol levels were above the state’s legal limit.

No. 5 Kansas builds big early lead, beats Texas A&M

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas has white-knuckled its way to the top of the Big 12.

It took hopping out of conference play to finally breeze to a comfortable win.

Svi Mykhailiuk poured in 24 points, Malik Newman added 15 and the fifth-ranked Jayhawks built a big lead on Texas A&M in the first half before sustaining it most of the way in a 79-68 victory Saturday.

Lagerald Vick added 10 points, and Udoka Azubuike had a couple of rim-rattling dunks, as the Jayhawks (17-4) — so accustomed to sweating out down-to-the-wire games this season — won their fourth straight in the Big 12/SEC Challenge and 10th in a row over the Aggies.

“Oh, we sweated,” Mykhailiuk said, smiling.

Just not a whole lot. The Jayhawks built a 45-27 halftime advantage, kept the gap nearly that wide in the second half and managed to breathe easy in the final minute for a change.

“It wasn’t as easy,” Jayhawks coach Bill Self said, “as I would have hoped.”

Tyler Davis had 18 points and nine rebounds to lead Texas A&M (13-8), which began the season 11-1 with wins over Big 12 foes West Virginia and Oklahoma State. But after ascending to No. 5 in the AP poll, coach Billy Kennedy’s club has lost seven of its last nine in a calamitous freefall.

“I really think Kansas played as well as any team we’ve played all year, the way they shared the ball,” Kennedy said. “I think the Mykhailiuk kid, he made some special 3s, and giving up 10 3s in the first half was really hard to overcome against a good team.”

Robert Williams added 11 points, nine boards and four blocks for the Aggies, whose only win over Kansas in 22 tries came in 2007, before they bolted the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference.

The Jayhawks took control with a 10-0 run midway through the first half, stretching a 20-18 lead into a 30-18 advantage behind the kind of 3-point barrage that has become so common this season.

At one point, they had hit nine of their first 13 from beyond the arc.

Mykhailiuk had three in the first half, part of his 17 points in 17 minutes, as the Jayhawks shot 53 percent from the field and took a 45-27 lead into the break against one of the nation’s best defenses.

“It seemed like every back-breaking play, we’d get a bad bounce and they’d hit a 3,” Kennedy said. “Every bounce, every play, they made it, and that’s the mark of a good team.”

Kansas kept the pace hot in the second half, creating run-outs every time the Aggies missed a shot — and there were plenty of them. And even when they were forced to set up offense, the Jayhawks managed to get high percentage shots, including a rim-shaking dunk by Azubuike early on.

Azubuike had barreled through Davis before slamming it home, then straddled the Aggies’ big man as he dropped back to the floor. He gave him a mean mug, too, that earned him a technical foul.

The Aggies finally clawed within 72-62 on free throws by Davis with 4:40 to go, but Marcus Garrett scored on a driving layup and Azubuike added a baby hook to restore the Jayhawks’ advantage.

The Aggies never managed to get within single-digits down the stretch.

DOKE’S TECHNICAL

Self was not happy with Azubuike’s technical foul, which he called “selfish.” The play also took some of the fire out of the big guy, who had a big first half but was quiet in the second. Azubuike ended up with eight points, six boards and four blocks in 22 minutes.

BIG PICTURE

Texas A&M tried to establish its size in the paint, but the Jayhawks made up for their lack of size with scrappiness. The Aggies’ guards were outhustled to seemingly every loose ball, and that put too much pressure on Davis and Williams to make things happen in a game that hardly suited their style.

Kansas bounced back nicely from a late collapse at Oklahoma, showing a bit more moxie than the Jayhawks have in recent weeks. They had a 15-2 edge on fast-break points, and they hung with the bigger Aggies on the boards in a positive sign for a team that has struggled to rebound.

UP NEXT

Texas A&M plays Arkansas on Tuesday night.

Kansas visits Kansas State on Monday night.

Road struggles continue for Tigers; lose at Lindenwood

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Lindenwood outscored Fort Hays State 39-13 over an 18 minute stretch of the first and second halves then held off a late Tiger rally for a 69-63 win at Hyland Arena. The Tigers (12-8, 5-6 MIAA), who fall to 0-4 all time in St. Charles, led by nine with 4:27 to play in the first half, trailed by as many as 17 in the second half before barrage of threes late.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Trey O’Neil hit five 3-pointers and led the Tigers with a career-high 23 points. Hadley Gillum added 14 and Kyler Kinnamon 13.

Lindenwood was led by Chandler Diekvoss who scored 18. Jackson Price came off the bench to score 15 with Adam Pohlman adding 14 and Dominique Dobbs 10.

UPDATE: Mom whose 4 kids were killed in Kan. house fire dies

Photo courtesy GoFundMe

PRATT, Kan. (AP) — Hospital officials say the mother of four children who all died in a house fire in Pratt has died.

Officials with St. Francis Hospital in Wichita confirmed that Charee Eggleston was taken off life support Saturday and died soon after.

Eggleston suffered burns and was flown Thursday morning from Pratt to St. Francis Hospital. Her children, the youngest a baby, died after being trapped in the home’s basement. Several other adults survived the fire.

Authorities have not announced the cause of the fire. The state fire marshal launched an investigation the day of the fire.

Pratt is about 80 miles (128.74 kilometers) west of Wichita.

 

PRATT, Kan. (AP) — A hospital official says a mother whose four children were killed in a southern Kansas house fire is in critical condition.

Cheree Eggleston suffered burns and was flown Thursday morning from the town of Pratt to St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. Her children, the youngest a baby, died after being trapped in the home’s basement. Besides the mother, three other adults in the home survived.

Pratt police Detective Jeff Ward says the cause of the fire is unknown. A state fire marshal is on scene investigating.

Pratt is about 80 miles (128.74 kilometers) west of Wichita.

——–

PRATT COUNTY — Officials remain on the scene of a deadly Thursday morning house fire near the intersection of 2nd and Austin in Pratt, according to the city law enforcement center.

Four children died in the fire, according to Pratt police Detective Jeff Ward.

The children’s mother, Charee Eggleston, was transported to a Wichita hospital for treatment of severe burns.

The children, ranging in age from 4 months to 4 years, were trapped in the basement of the home.

Friends of the family have established an online fundraiser to assist the family.

 

1 hospitalized after Kansas church fire

First responders on the scene of Friday’s fire-photo courtesy WIBW TV

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say one person was hospitalized after a fire started inside a Topeka church.

The fire was reported about 4:30 p.m. Friday at Divine Love Outreach Ministries Church in the eastern part of the city.

Firefighters arriving at the scene found heavy smoke and flames coming from the rear of the church. Officials say a person found outside the church had sustained injuries from the fire was taken to a local hospital.

Investigators determined the fire started in the church’s kitchen.

Fire officials estimated the damage of the structure somewhere between $25,000 and $90,000 and loss of contents at around $65,000.

Hot shooting Tiger women win at Lindenwood

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Lanie Page scored a career-high 21 points and the Fort Hays State fought through foul trouble to hold off a fourth quarter rally and beat Lindenwood 87-73 at Hyland Arena. The Tigers (16-4, 7-4 MIAA), who shot a season-high 57-percent, used a 19-1 second quarter run to go up 19 at halftime. Then after building a 23-point third quarter lead, held off the Lions (10-11, 2-10 MIAA) who pulled within 12 with 2:26 to play.

It’s FHSU’s fourth straight win while the Lions have dropped their last seven games.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Page scored her 21 points on 8-of-13 shooting. The K-State transfer had three rebounds, four assists, three blocks and a steal.

Carly Heim scored 18 on 6-of-7 shooting and went 4-for-4 from the free throw line. Taylor Rolfs added 14 points on 6-of-8 shooting and Emma Stroyan added 10. Tatyana Legette was held to nine before fouling out but pulled down a team-best nine rebounds.

The Tigers outrebounded the Lions, who were the MIAA’s top rebounding team, by 19.

K-State outscores Georgia late, rallies for win

MANHATTAN, Kansas (AP) — Over the last week or so, Kansas State fans have taken to social media and used the hashtag of #DeanWolf to support the star forward Dean Wade as he’s led the charge during Kansas State’s three game winning streak.

In the final minutes against Georgia on Saturday the hashtag #DeanWolf came alive and so did the Wildcats.

Wade scored six of his 20 points as Kansas State outscored Georgia 12-2 in the final 6:11, winning 56-51 in Bramlage Coliseum in the annual challenge between teams from the Southeastern Conference and the Big 12.

For this Kansas State team, games like they had against Georgia were ones that they had seen before. A back-and-forth contest that would see the Wildcats eventually fade down the stretch but in this game, the team showed the maturity and experience.

“I think we have matured a lot, at the end of games we do not panic like we used to,” Wade said. “We are playing strong and confident. Getting a little more experience just helps our confidence and maturity a lot.”

It was a ground out affair for the Wildcats (16-5) who were held well below their season average 77.1 points per contest. Wade picked up his 20 points on 7 of 17 shooting including hitting some clutch second-half baskets down the stretch to help extend the Wildcats lead.

Georgia (12-8) was led in scoring by Yante Maten with 14 points on 6-11 shooting.

Bulldogs took the lead early in the second half and used tough defense, tough shot making, and solid rebounding as they trounced the Wildcats in that category with a 38-27 edge, including 12 on the offensive end alone.

With the Wildcats beginning their climb back into the ballgame, the Bulldog offense stalled as they went 1 of 11 from the field and didn’t pick up their first basket until Derek Ogbeide scored on a layup with 34 seconds left in the ballgame.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State: Kansas State showed that they can win those “grind out” games as they scored well below their 83.3 points per game they averaged in the last three contests.

Georgia: The Bulldogs struggles continue as they now have lost five of their last six with the lone victory coming against LSU.

THEY SAID IT: “He is a player who can shoot the three and drive it. He can score mid-range off a fade away or a pull-up and is a very good passer. Because he has good shooters around him it is usually one-on-one so he is able to finish a lot of plays.” — Georgia coach Mark Fox on Wade.

POLL IMPLICATIONS: Kansas State could be in a position to have their first ranking since January of 2017.

STATS AND STREAKS: The win by Kansas State makes them 3-2 all-time in the Big 12-SEC Challenge.

UP NEXT

Georgia: The Bulldogs host Florida on Tuesday.

Kansas State: The Wildcats host Kansas on Monday.

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