Kansas
đ Jayhawks Hold off Kansas City for 70-61 Victory
KANSAS CITY, Mo. â Four starters scored in double figures as Kansas led wire-to-wire and defeated Kansas City 70-61 on Saturday afternoon at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri.Â
With the win, Kansas improves to 2-1 on the year, while the Roos fall to 1-3 on the season.Â
“It’s the third game in a row where the lead guard is our opponent’s leading scorer. We have to evaluate that, whether that’s because we’re switching certain people off of others or not getting better players to her early enough when a player like that gets going. She has not shown that she’s their best player but today she was. “
Head Coach Brandon Schneider
Kansas scored the first six points of the game and pushed ahead for a 15-2 advantage midway through the first quarter. The Jayhawks went on to shoot 71.4% (10-of-14) in the first quarter and led 23-8 at the end of one behind six points from Taiyanna Jackson and four points a piece from Wyvette Mayberry and SâMya Nichols.Â
The Jayhawks outscored the Roos 19-12 in the second quarter as Holly Kergieter hit two threes in the period. Kansas took its largest lead of the half into the locker room as they led 42-20. Nichols and Kergieter both entered double-figures in the first half with 11 points a piece at the break. Danai Papadopoulou topped her previous career-high with six rebounds in the first half.
The second half started with back-to-back scoring by both teams, but the Roos were able to outscore the Jayhawks 16-11 in the first six minutes of the second half. Up 17 with 2:24 left in the third, Ryan Cobbins splashed a three to increase the lead to 20. Kansas City knocked down a three-pointer as time expired in the third to cut Kansasâ lead down to 17, 58-41.
Kansas City continued to fight back in the fourth as they went on a 10-4 run in the first 3:37 of the fourth period. Kansas City only trailed by seven with 2:03 left in the game, but Jackson made a tough put-back layup to increase Kansasâ lead to nine. Kansas controlled the rest of the way as Kansas City resorted to fouling.Â
Kansas was led by a double-double of 12 points and 12 rebounds by Jackson, who recorded her second double-double in three games and 29th of her career. Nichols scored a team-high 18 points, while Kersgieter finished with 15 and Mayberry added 13.
Next Up
Kansas heads to George Town, Cayman Islands next week for the Cayman Islands Classic, where the Jayhawks will meet a pair of highly ranked non-conference opponents. KU will play No. 9 Virginia Tech on Nov. 24, before facing No. 8 UConn on Nov. 25.
Kansas
The Kansas City Chiefs Pray And Follow God And Other Franchises Might Be Wise To Copy Them
After a short field goal attempt flew directly into one upright and, as if guided by Devine Intervention, bounded in between the posts to give the Kansas City Chiefs another victory, coach Andy Reid called up his team in a locker room speech that eventually led to prayer.
The Kansas City Chiefs Pray
“Let’s take a knee,” Reid ordered his players.
And as they have for years, the Chiefs prayed after the game.Â
This has been the way for the team that has won three Super Bowls in five years. In good times and bad, after wins and after losses, the Chiefs pray as a team.
And, to be honest, a lot of these players get on their knees before games as well.Â
No, not to protest something â although that happened to varying degrees from 2016-2020 â but to get help from God. Or thank God for help he’s already provided.
Patrick Mahomes Prays Before Each Game
So, backup quarterback Carson Wentz is praying. And starting quarterback Patrick Mahomes is praying.
Guys about to try taking an opponent’s head off (figuratively, of course) are praying. And guys hoping nobody takes their heads off are praying.
“Before every game, I walk the field and I do a prayer at the goal post,” quarterback Patrick Mahomes said before Super Bowl LV in Tampa. “I just thank God for those opportunities and I thank God for letting me be on a stage where I can glorify Him.”
That leads to questions: Why does this matter? What’s the point?
Well, maybe a full review of the Kansas City Chiefs as an organization will say they are successful because they have great coaching, great personnel management, a great quarterback in Mahomes, and supportive ownership.Â
But perhaps that’s an incomplete picture of the organization. Because it makes no room for the possibility the Chiefs, winners of 15 consecutive one-possession games, have the favor of God on their franchise for a time such as this.
Copycat NFL Should Copy Chiefs
Sound foolish? Ridiculous, even?
The NFL is an often foolish and ridiculous league for much lesser things than the presence of God.Â
The NFL, for example, is a copycat league. If one team is winning and having success, other teams almost reflexively copy what the winners are doing to try to increase their chances of producing similar results.
This was a thing during the New England Patriots dynasty when teams suddenly clamped down on giving out injury information because the Patriots were doing it.Â
Teams similarly didn’t want assistant coaches speaking with the press because the Patriots didn’t allow it for fear the coaches would inadvertently provide opponents with information that could be used against them â a practice that eventually stopped because the NFL now mandates assistants speak to the media.
If teams spent time copying something so mundane as keeping coaches from talking to reporters, you would think they might try to copy the Chiefs in the manner and frequency they talk to God.
The Naysayers Get Their Say
And I know what’s incoming:Â
The scoffers.Â
The cynics.Â
The doubters. The people who mock the very idea God exists, and more so the possibility that the Chiefs are in any way successful because of their obvious attempts to connect with Him.
Those people will point out that the Chiefs have offensive line problems. Why hasn’t God fixed that? Or the Chiefs don’t win every game. Isn’t God perfect?
Or what about the other teams that pray to God? How come they’re not making a run at a Super Bowl three-peat?
My answer: I don’t know, non-believers.Â
Ask God.
Chiefs Provide Church On Game Day
What I do know is the Chiefs are fully invested in their faith. Maybe not every single individual. Each person in that organization is obviously free to worship whichever way they want or whomever they want. And they’re also free to worship nothing, or no one.
But from the franchise perspective, the Kansas City Chiefs worship God and his son Jesus Christ.
It doesn’t take a well-trained investigative journalist to find this out. Not that too many investigative journalists are interested in such matters.
The Chiefs, for example, have for a decade offered non-denominational pregame Faith and Family Chapel service for fans at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium before each Sunday noon home game.Â
In an age when most other franchises have gotten rid of the on-field pregame invocation so common decades ago, the Chiefs have Cedric Hardimon, the lead Pastor of Life Church of East Kansas City, lead services along with team chaplain Marcellus Casey.
Mission: Lead People To Jesus Christ
And what are the pastor and chaplain preaching about?Â
“Our mission is to lead people to become fully devoted followers of Christ,” the church’s mission statement reads.
A number of Chiefs players, coaches and staff are already there.Â
Star defensive tackle Chris Jones, for example, told Sports Spectrum in 2021, “I play for God, Jesus Christ.
“I believe my faith is everything and that’s what I live by.”
Hunt Family Are Christians
Chiefs’ ownership is definitely on board with that.
The Chiefs are owned by the Hunt family, with Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt leading the way.
“My identity is my faith in Christ,” Hunt said prior to Super Bowl LVII. “The Lord has blessed our family in so many ways.”
The Hunt family gets a lot of publicity because of its sports, business and philanthropic initiatives.Â
The family also has its very own social media influencer, Gracie Hunt, who is popular because she’s young and beautiful and a former beauty pageant winner. Â Mother Tavia, by the way, was also a beauty pageant winner.
Gracie Hunt Spotlights RomansÂ
Gracie Hunt has 570,000 followers on Instagram. And her biography includes her favorite Scripture â Romans 8:28.
“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
Interesting, no?Â
God works for good for those who love Him. And that has obviously manifested for the Kansas City Chiefs.
Kansas
2 injured in shooting Monday night at Budd Park in Kansas City, police say
KANSAS CITY, Mo. â Two people were injured in a shooting Monday night in at Budd Park in Kansas City, Missouri’s, Historic Northeast, police said.
Police were called to the scene about 7:30 p.m.
One of the victims suffered life-threatening injuries in the shooting; a second suffered injuries not considered to be life-threatening, police said.
No word on what led to the violence.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
â
Kansas
Wichita dealership owner barred from business in Kansas after cars sold with blown airbags
WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) – The Sedgwick County District Attorneyâs Office announced that a consumer complaint led to a nearly $400,000 judgment against a Wichita car dealership, which can no longer sell vehicles in Kansas.
The $394,197 default judgment entered against the owner of Carnation LLC accuses him of âengaging in deceptive acts and willfully violating a previous consent judgment under the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA)â Carnationâs owner, Kayode Ajibolade, also known as Olukayode I. Ajibolade, violated the KCPA by failing to disclose that a car had blown airbags before selling it, the Sedgwick County DAâs Office explained.
âAfter purchasing the car, the consumer later found an airbag simulator device which disabled the airbag light on the dash, concealing the fact that the airbag had been deployed,â the DAâs office said. âFurther investigation by the Consumer Protection Division found 12 more cars sold by Ajibolade and Carnation in the first quarter of 2023 with blown airbags. Ajibolade and Carnation failed to disclose the blown airbags when selling the cars to consumers from the car lot at 1301 E. Lincoln.â
This isnât the first complaint against Carnation that went to court. In 2019, Carnation LLC entered into a prior consent judgment with the DAâs Consumer Protection Division in which the business admitted to being deceptive by failing to disclose a blown airbag.
In the current case, the Sedgwick County DAâs Office said the court previously found that in April, Carnationâs sales of 13 cars âwas undisclosed and concealed blown airbags constituted willful violations of the 2019 consent judgment and the KCPA.â
âThe court ordered Carnation LLC to pay $2,000.00 per car in restitution to each of the 12 consumers for a total of $24,000.00. The restitution was later paid by the dealershipâs bonding company. Carnation was also ordered to pay $390,000.00 in civil penalties, along with court costs and investigation fees,â the DAâs office explained.
In the latest default judgment, entered against Ajibolade on Nov. 22, the dealership owner âwas found to be personally liable, âjointly and severallyâ with Carnation LLC, for the remaining balance of the judgment, $394,197,â the DAâs office said. This judgment accompanied the courtâs decision to revoke Ajiboladeâs license to do business and permanently prohibited him from selling cars in Kansas.
In a news release on the judgment against Carnation LLC and its owner, Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett âreminds buyers to exercise care when shopping for a used vehicle.â
âBecause devices can be used to conceal that a car is missing functioning airbags, even if inspected by a mechanic, it is important to also examine a Carfax or similar history of the vehicle before purchase to identify accidents that may have resulted in the deployment of airbags,â Bennett said. âIn addition, it is recommended that the consumer perform a general online search of the VIN number of a prospective car purchase, which can often reveal photos of prior damage to the car.â
Copyright 2024 KWCH. All rights reserved. To report a correction or typo, please email news@kwch.com
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