Kansas
Toughness and confidence in approach leading to explosive offense
With 22 games left in the regular season, Kansas already sits one home run away from tying the program record of 75 set in 2023, the first year of the Dan Fitzgerald era. The high-powered offense propelled Kansas to match the best 30-game start to a season, with the team’s record currently sitting at 27-7.
The Jayhawks have obviously dug the long ball, but the offense’s success has been multi-faceted. Kansas is tied for third in Division One in walks (235), 7th in runs scored (320), 11th in hits (367), and 15th in on-base percentage (.432).
“I think so much of hitting is approach, and I think so much of approach is mental toughness,” Fitzgerald said. “Mental toughness is doing the thing you’re supposed to do when you’re supposed to do it every time you’re called on to do it.”
Kansas showcased its toughness from game one of the season, going into extra innings in the opener against Texas A&M Corpus-Christi. Fitzgerald said he told his team that they were going to love, embrace, and enjoy the moments in tight games. The Jayhawks have had a flair for the dramatic this season, notching four walk-off wins with a pair of final-inning comebacks.
“I don’t think anyone enjoys it more than we do, and so a one-run game, a tie game, down two runs in the ninth– whatever it is, there’s a true joy of being in that situation and a gratitude,” Fitzgerald said. “I think what makes these guys different is how much they love to compete together.”
Fitzgerald has a variety of statistical markers for what makes up a successful offense– who wins the “freebie war,” getting on-base to lead off at least four out of the nine innings, and chasing starting pitchers before the fifth inning. Kansas has been good in all three areas, but especially the latter, not allowing a single opposing starter to tally more than five innings in a game against the Jayhawks this season.
Kansas is currently averaging 7.3 walks per game this season. Fitzgerald and hitting coach Tyler Hancock have emphasized winning the 17 inches across the plate.
“I think Fitz and T do a great job of outlining just winning the strike zone and not being able to chase,” Brady Counsell said. “I think them outlining that and us practicing that constantly throughout the year has been a pretty good reason why we’ve not chased a lot.”
When Kansas hitters hop in the cage, they’re instructed not to swing at a pitch outside the strike zone, “Staple 101” of the program. Hitters learn the strike zone in a variety of ways, with experience and confidence playing a major factor. Fitzgerald said good hitters get to two strikes in 45-48% of their at-bats, and you have to remain confident in your ability to work a count.
“I think it’s time, it’s confidence, and it’s the ability to get to two strikes and still string together what you want to do,” Fitzgerald said.
Kansas faces one of its bigger pitching tests this weekend, taking on TCU. The Horned Frogs are second in the Big 12 in ERA and strikeouts, with Tommy LaPour coming off a 7-inning, no-hit outing against BYU last weekend. No matter the face, nothing changes for the Jayhawk lineup.
“It’s gonna be the same approach you always have, just winning the 17 across the plate, as Fitz always says, and just swinging at strikes and taking balls,” Counsell said. “I think we stick to that game plan, we’ll keep that good success on the offensive side.”

Kansas
Man shot, killed Tuesday night in Kansas City, Kansas, homicide

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Police in Kansas City, Kansas, are investigating the shooting death of a man Tuesday night.
A KCKPD spokesperson said officers received a call just after 6 p.m. Tuesday on a reported shooting in the 1500 block of N. 25th Street.
Officers and paramedics arrived on the scene and found the adult male suffering from a gunshot wound.
The victim was transported to an area hospital where he died from his injuries.
Police did not provide any information about the circumstances of the homicide or provide any initial suspect information.
This is a developing story and may be updated.
—
If you have any information about a crime, you may contact your local police department directly. But if you want or need to remain anonymous, you should contact the Greater Kansas City Crime Stoppers Tips Hotline by calling 816-474-TIPS (8477), submitting the tip online or through the free mobile app at P3Tips.com. Depending on your tip, Crime Stoppers could offer you a cash reward.
Annual homicide details and data for the Kansas City area are available through the KSHB 41 News Homicide Tracker, which was launched in 2015. Read the KSHB 41 News Mug Shot Policy.
Kansas
Panasonic’s vision for massive Kansas battery plant becomes reality with grand opening
Kansas
Patrick Mahomes in a dome? The Kansas City Chiefs’ terrifyingly good idea

Former Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes has been an unstoppable force since joining the Kansas City Chiefs. The young gunslinger has already won three Super Bowls (2020, 2023, 2024) and added two NFL MVPs to his resume (2018, 2022). Mahomes and the Chiefs have been perennial Super Bowl contenders since he took over the starting role. Based on his stats and accolades, it doesn’t appear that Mahomes needs any other advantages to continue his dominance of the NFL and his onslaught of the NFL record books. The Kansas City Chiefs organization disagrees.
Mahomes put up video game-like numbers while quarterbacking the Texas Tech Red Raiders. One advantage he had in Lubbock was playing on turf. Turf play speeds the game up and allows receivers to make more crisp and concise cuts, increasing the chances of separation from hapless defensive backs and linebackers. Mahomes used this to his advantage, utilizing his incredible accuracy to put the ball where his receivers would be, and not allowing defenders a chance to interfere with the passing game plan. The Chiefs want to give that advantage back to their star quarterback.
Kansas is dangling the idea of a domed stadium to the Chiefs, hoping to turn the state into a “professional sports powerhouse.”
The Chiefs are delaying their stadium decision as they weigh their future either in Missouri or Kansas.
— Front Office Sports (@FOS) July 13, 2025
Putting Mahomes in a dome does two things: it removes the weather aspect and puts his speedy wideouts back on turf. Thinking about Kansas City speedster Xavier Worthy on turf with Mahomes throwing to him harkens me back to the St Louis Rams days of old. The Rams were known as “the fastest show on turf.” They destroyed NFL offensive records on their way to a Super Bowl win in 2000 over the Tennessee Titans. If the Chiefs can pull off this dome dream, Mahomes could elevate his game even further than it already is. The Chiefs and Mahomes would revitalize their franchise, giving them a marked advantage over visiting teams.
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