The State of the Unified Government address is scheduled from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28, at the Reardon Convention Center, 500 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kan.
Mayor Mark Holland will address the Downtown Rotary Club, residents, and business people at the luncheon event.
Registration closed prior to the luncheon event. Residents who cannot attend may watch the speech on UGTV, carried on cable channels, or visit the UG website at www.wycokck.org.
by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC
Nothing like a no-hitter and a walk-off home run to spice up Kansas City Kansas Community College’s first big baseball home stand over the weekend.
Shae Stephens and Cole Gacke combined on a no-hitter in a 5-0 win over North Iowa in the opener of a doubleheader Sunday after Brandon Still put the finishing touches of a twin bill sweep with a game-winning two-run home in the bottom of the seventh for a 4-2 win Saturday. A 13-1 winner in Saturday’s opener, the Blue Devils’ bid for a four-game sweep ended a 5-2 loss in Sunday’s nightcap.
The Blue Devils (7-4) are right back in action Tuesday, as hosts of Baker JV in one 9-inning game at 2 p.m. before diving into the Jayhawk Conference schedule against perennial power and odds-on favorite Cowley College in a doubleheader Thursday starting at 1 p.m. The Blue Devils then close out the week with a twin bill at Cowley on Saturday.
A lefthanded sophomore from Mill Valley, Stephens struck out eight and walked three in five innings in Sunday’s 5-0 opening win before Liberty North freshman Cole Gacke closed out the no-hitter, striking out four and walking two. KCKCC took a 2-0 lead in the third. After a leadoff single by Josh Schumacher, Drew Holtgrieve delivered a triple and scored on one of two singles by Alex Phillips. Albert Woodard also had two hits including an RBI double in the fourth and Still doubled in the final run in the sixth.
However, the Blue Devils managed just two hits of four North Iowa pitchers in the nightcap, singles by Easton Fortuna and Still, in the 5-2 loss. North Iowa, meanwhile, had nine hits off four KCKCC hurlers.
A freshman from Springdale, Ark., Brandon Still wrote a dramatic finish to a come-from-behind 4-2 win in Saturday’s nightcap. Trailing 2-0 going into the bottom of the sixth, the Blue Devils tied it on a triple by Schumacher and doubles by Tyler Pittman and Phillips. Zach Mahoney then led off the seventh with a single and Still hammered the second pitch he saw over the fence in left-center.
“A no doubter,” KCKCC assistant coach Bill Sharp said. The home run made a winner out of Luke Ostenson, who struck out two in one inning of relief after Chad Cox had given up two runs on four hits while striking out six in six innings.
The top three hitters in the Blue Devil lineup combined for eight hits and eight RBI in the 13-1 win Saturday. Leadoff hitter Albert Woodard drove in three runs with a single, triple and his second home run of the season; Tyler Pittman tripled and singled twice and drove in two runs; and Drew Holtgrieve knocked in three runs with a pair of singles. Zach Mahoney also launched his first home run and Still tripled in the 13-hit assault.
Sophomore Jacob Purl allowed no hits in four innings before Colton Kenagy and Cameron Bednar finished up. Purl, who has not allowed an earned run in three starts this season, struck out six and walked two.
“Our pitching staff as a whole pitched well, striking out 38 batters (out of 84 outs) and allowing just eight runs against a team that traditionally is a good-hitting team,” KCKCC coach Matt Goldbeck said. “And we hit the ball well. Albert Woodard had a very good weekend with six hits in 11 times at bat with a double, triple and home run and two stolen bases.”
A red flag warning is in effect today for Wyandotte County and some nearby counties. (National Weather Service graphic)
National Weather Service graphic
A red flag warning is in effect today from noon through 6 p.m. for Wyandotte County and the Kansas City area, according to the National Weather Service.
Counties to the south and west also are under the red flag warning, which means there is heightened fire danger, the weather service said. Do not burn outdoors, the weather service advised.
Gusty winds will combine with dry conditions, including low relative humidity values and persistent dry fuels, leading to a threat for fires to spread rapidly, according to the weather service.
For this evening and tonight, there is a chance for strong to potentially severe thunderstorms to develop along and ahead of a cold front dropping down from the northwest.
Primary hazards with any stronger storm that develops will be gusty to damaging winds and hail, according to the weather service.
Today’s high will be near 77, with a south southwest wind of 13 to 20 mph, gusting as high as 28 mph, the weather service said.
Tonight, there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before midnight, then a chance of rain between midnight and 3 a.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 38. A west southwest wind of 11 to 16 mph will become north northwest in the evening, with winds gusting as high as 24 mph.
Wednesday, it will be sunny with a high of 52. A west northwest wind of 10 to 15 mph will gust as high as 25 mph, the weather service said.
Wednesday night, the low will be around 29, according to the weather service. A west northwest wind of 10 to 15 mph will become southwest after midnight.
Thursday, it will be sunny with a high near 54, the weather service said. A southwest wind of 6 to 15 mph will become northwest in the afternoon, and winds will gust as high as 24 mph.
Thursday night, there will be a low of 28, according to the weather service.
Wyandotte County is in a marginal area for storms this evening, according to the National Weather Service. (National Weather Service graphic)
Wyandotte County is in the “marginal” category for this graphic from the National Weather Service. (National Weather Service graphic)