Kansas
Kansas City Royals offense ignites as Carlos Santana has 4 hits in win over Blue Jays
After two days handcuffed by their guests from the North, the Kansas Metropolis Royals hitters abruptly heated up and carried the day. They produced their highest run whole in three and a half weeks, they usually did it with out assistance from the house run.
The Royals, who’d been shut out in every of their earlier two video games, swatted 5 extra-base hits and 6 gamers drove in runs in an 8-4 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Wednesday afternoon in entrance of an introduced 12,196 at Kauffman Stadium.
With the win, the Royals (18-37) averted being swept within the three-game sequence. Additionally they stopped a three-game shedding slide.
“I preferred how guys went in regards to the situational hitting, making issues occur,” Royals supervisor Mike Matheny stated. “That’s the type of crew we should be, having the ability to hit and run, having the ability to put a bunt down, transfer guys round after which get the massive hit. That’s what they did.”
Carlos Santana (4 for 4, stroll, run scored, RBI) had a team-high 4 hits, whereas Whit Merrifield (2 for five, RBI), Bobby Witt Jr. (2 for 4, stroll, two runs scored) and Salvador Perez (2 for five, run, RBI) had two hits apiece for the Royals.
Within the sixth inning, Perez hit his first triple since July 19, 2017. He’s 7 for 19 with seven RBIs in his final 5 video games.
Michael A. Taylor (1 for two) had a double, a stroll, a run scored and was hit by a pitch. Taylor is 5 for 11 with three walks and two runs scored since he returned from the IL on June 3.
In the meantime, Andrew Benintendi walked twice and scored twice. MJ Melendez (1 for five, run scored, two RBIs) and Emmanuel Rivera (1 for 4, two RBIs) additionally drove in runs as a part of a vital first-inning offensive spurt.
“The sport is loopy,” Perez stated. “Typically you’re going to attain a bunch of runs. Typically we’re attempting to do our greatest and we’re going through actually good pitchers for the opposite crew. However we nonetheless hit the ball onerous. The final two video games we hit the ball onerous, however we didn’t get any hits. It’s a part of the sport. What I all the time say, each day is a brand new day.”
The Royals chased Blue Jays beginning pitcher Yusei Kikuchi within the first inning, scoring all three of their runs with two outs.
With two outs and two runners on, because of walks by Benintendi and Witt, the Royals watched as Melendez blooped an RBI double up the left subject line, then Santana loaded the bases through a stroll and Rivera lined a two-run single into middle subject.
Melendez’s double got here after he fouled off consecutive pitches with two strikes. Rivera’s single got here on a 1-2 pitch.
Taylor drew a stroll to load the bases for a second time, and that marked the tip of Kikuchi’s outing. He threw 45 first-inning pitches and didn’t get the third out of the body.
“I believe it’s essential,” Taylor stated of the offense’s quick begin. “Everytime you’re enjoying with the lead, it makes issues so much simpler. And to provide an early result in Singer proper there may be additionally good, simply to type of put him comfy and let him go on the market and do his factor.”
All 9 members of the Royals batting order got here to the plate within the first. They’d only one extra-base hit, however scored three runs on two hits and 4 walks.
“I believed they have been very relentless in how they took their at-bats,” Matheny stated. “Clearly, an enormous day for Santana — him getting on base 5 instances and placing collectively some good at-bats. Clearly, he wanted that. We would have liked that. However I believed there have been actually good at-bats throughout the lineup immediately.”
Singer regular regardless of homers
Royals beginning pitcher Brady Singer (3-1) allowed three runs and eight hits, together with two house runs. He struck out 5 and didn’t stroll a batter.
The Blue Jays’ house run-reliant lineup minimize into that deficit simply two batters into the second inning when Singer hung a slider to Raimel Tapia, who pummeled it 441 toes into the right-center subject fountain.
Zack Collins made Singer pay once more to start out the third when he belted a 3-2 sinker into the stands for the Blue Jays’ second solo homer of the day. The following batter, Cavan Biggio, singled, went first-to-third on a one-out single after which scored on an RBI groundout by Vladimir Guerrero.
The Royals’ three-run lead on the finish of the primary had develop into a tie recreation by the tip of the highest of the third inning.
“I believed the command was OK,” Singer stated. “The slider helped me out so much immediately. I felt like I battled, gave the crew an opportunity to win.”
Singer didn’t enable the Blue Jays (33-23) to attain within the fourth or the fifth and stranded a pair of runners on base in every inning.
As soon as the Blue Jays tied the rating, the Royals scored the following 5 runs. They began with two runs within the fourth on a Perez RBI single up the center and a Melendez’s infield grounder that scored Witt.
They added a run within the sixth, seventh and eighth innings.
“That was unimaginable,” Singer stated. “You knew it was going to occur. The offense was going to interrupt out. They’re nonetheless doing an unimaginable job. They’re working each single day attempting to struggle for us, put runs on the board. So it was a very good crew win.”
The Royals scored no less than eight runs for the fourth time this season, the latest time approaching Might 15 at Colorado.
The Blue Jays scored their fourth run within the ninth inning.
“That’s kinda the system, rating early, rating late and provides our pitcher some cushion and put collectively good at-bats all through the course of the sport,” Merrifield stated. “That’s the system. Let’s see if we are able to do it extra typically.”
This story was initially printed June 8, 2022 4:43 PM.
Kansas
Kansas governor wary of overspending as Legislature’s budget overhaul takes shape • Kansas Reflector
TOPEKA — The Kansas Legislature’s unprecedented budget takeover will enter the 2025 legislative session with a bare bones spending plan and sweeping cuts while Republican lawmakers eye property and corporation tax reductions.
Gov. Laura Kelly is still preparing her own budget — as is customarily the governor’s duty — and said her greatest apprehension ahead of the 2025 session is overspending, she told Kansas Reflector on Wednesday.
The apprehension applies both to spending on programs and further tax cuts, she said.
“Obviously, we know what happens when you go too far too fast on tax cuts,” Kelly said, recalling her predecessor Gov. Sam Brownback’s tenure, during which he implemented an experimental tax program that diminished the state’s tax base creating revenue deficits. “And I don’t think anybody in the state of Kansas wants to go back to that, including the Legislature.”
Kansas Republicans created a new committee this year to give legislators the opportunity to craft their own preliminary budget. The committee wrapped up its meetings Thursday.
The meetings consisted of iterative presentations from almost 100 state agencies and departments seeking funding enhancements, which also were presented to the governor.
Under Kansas’ customary budget process, state agencies can appeal the Division of Budget’s recommendations to the governor. This year, about $1.1 billion worth of requests are up for appeal, according to committee chairman Rep. Troy Waymaster, a Bunker Hill Republican. The governor typically gets the final say on whether to accept or reject an appeal.
Waymaster weighed the possibility of denying all appeals requests in the legislative budget, regardless of what the governor decides.
“If we want to do property tax relief for the people of the state of Kansas, there’s no way we can approve the 1.1 billion that’s been appealed,” he said.
But House Speaker Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita, proposed eliminating all requested budget enhancements that added any new staff and the salary increases associated with them, leaving the Legislature with a base budget that could see additions as the session proceeds. A majority of committee members supported Hawkins’ proposal.
Expanding bureaucracy
Mounting requests for new facilities and expanded bureaucracy have too often flown under the radar, said Rep. Henry Helgerson, a Democrat from Eastborough, at a Dec. 12 committee meeting. He pointed to a $114 million ask from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for a new headquarters and the now over-budget Docking State Office Building, which is set to finish renovations in April.
“We have gotten to a point where we just approve things and don’t say anything,” Helgerson said.
It’s up to legislators to curtail spending, he said, wary, too, of the majority party’s plans for further tax cuts.
“This group has to change the trajectory of our spending in the state,” he said, referring to the legislative budget committee.
Rep. Kristey Williams, an Augusta Republican who chairs the K-12 Education Budget Committee, agreed but said spending scrutiny must be applied indiscriminately. Lawmakers can’t ignore certain “golden areas” the Legislature refuses to touch, she said, specifically referencing the Kansas State Department of Education.
Kansas
Kansas school board rejects textbooks because they’re too anti-Trump
A Kansas school board reportedly rejected textbooks because they believed that the teaching materials were too “biased” against Donald Trump.
A proposed contract with a Boston-based education company was also voted down by the newly elected conservative majority on the Derby Board of Education over their public statements on diversity, equity, and inclusion, KCUR-FM reported.
The $400,000 contract with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt was rejected even though it was recommended by Derby High School teachers, who requested a new school curriculum after being left without social studies textbooks for several years.
But board members reportedly said that parts of textbooks and other learning materials offered by the company did not reflect fairly on Trump’s first presidency.
“My biggest concern … involved what I would define as bias of omission,” board member Cathy Boote said, according to the outlet.
Boote then shared examples of the material she deemed did not accurately reflect the president-elect’s time in office, including the controversial “Muslim travel ban.”
“Then there was the ‘Muslim ban,’” Boote said and made air quotes as she spoke.
“With no mention of the fact it wasn’t aimed at all Muslim countries, just those that have no ability to vet. Safety was the top priority, but they leave it sit there, with no explanation, to make you think he was xenophobic.”
Trump’s travel ban, issued in January 2017, restricted entry into the US for certain people from foreign nations. It was nicknamed the “Muslim ban” by Trump as well as his aides and critics because a majority of those affected by the executive actions came from predominantly Muslim countries.
President Joe Biden issued a proclamation revoking the travel ban when he entered office, but in May this year Trump said he would reinstate the ban.
“We will bring back the travel ban — you remember the famous travel ban,” he said.
Boote said that she was also concerned about the way Trump was portrayed in the text books when it came to trade deals with China, the January 6 Capitol riot and his position on Cuba.
Another board member, Michael Blankenship, reportedly agreed with the concerns raised by Boote, but also rejected the proposal to work with the company because of a pro-Black Lives Matter statement they made in 2020.
“We believe Black Lives Matter [and] we believe in social justice,” the company said.
“That’s a pretty bold statement,” Blankenship reportedly said. “Wouldn’t anybody want to know, ‘What do you mean?’ I still don’t have that answer.”
The Independent has contacted Houghton Mifflin Harcourt for comment.
Kansas
With of help generous Kansas Citians, families receive holiday gifts at Season of Hope toy drive
KANSAS CITY, Mo — KSHB 41 News and the Salvation Army held the 2024 Season of Hope toy drive Thursday.
It’s the fourth year of a partnership to help Kansas City area families during the holiday season.
With it being this close to the holidays, stores were probably packed with last-minute shoppers, but so was the Salvation Army for the drive, with families picking out the perfect gifts for their loved ones.
Mariah Nicholas is a mom of four — two girls and two boys.
Spending Christmas with them means a little more this year. She almost lost her life in a car accident right before Thanksgiving.
“I hydroplaned off the road and slammed into a tree line on my side,” Nicholas said. “So, I took the blunt of it but I’m hanging in there.”
She signed up for the Season of Hope toy drive to fill a void she couldn’t this Christmas. She says this will take off some of the financial burden.
“I lost my job right before Thanksgiving due to my wreck,” Nicholas said. “So, I’m waiting to go back, but without this help, I probably wouldn’t be able to do much.”
She’s one of 300 families that will benefit from the drive.
It was set up department style, allowing each family to get a personal shopping experience to pick out toys that their children would like.
“There are a lot of toys that my kids will actually enjoy,” said Nina Velazquez, a mom of two. “Usually, I’m very very stressed out because I’m at Walmart in line with 100,000 people and my pocket usually doesn’t have enough to cover everything.”
In total, 11,250 toys were donated this year, and each family received gift cards to Aldi’s, helping to fill their table and tree.
“They get not just a single toy,” Salvation Army Pastor Dawn Windham said. “It’s a big toy and a small toy, and stocking stuffers, and books and family games and clothing — it’s just amazing.”
This event giving more than just hope this holiday season.
“To watch them open, you know more than what I could give them on Christmas this year,” Nicholas said. “So, I’m super grateful to the Salvation Army and them helping us.”
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KSHB 41 reporter La’Nita Brooks covers stories providing solutions and offering discussions on topics of crime and violence. Share your story idea with La’Nita.
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