Kansas
⚾️ Kansas Earns Series Win Against Baylor with 11-6 Victory
LAWRENCE, Kan. – For a second straight day, the Kansas offense had a giant day on the plate en path to a 13-6 win towards the Baylor Bears on Saturday afternoon at Hoglund Ballpark. Kansas earned the collection win behind robust performances from freshman Kodey Shojinaga who had 4 hits for a second straight day and senior Cal switch Cole Elvis who had three extra-base hits, together with a house run within the win.
Kansas jumped out to a 2-0 lead for the second straight day within the first inning. Freshmen Jackson Kline and Kodey Shojinaga each singled to steer off the underside of the primary. Senior Cal switch Cole Elvis got here up subsequent and hit a ball of the batter’s eye in heart subject for an RBI double. Junior Cowley Group School switch Janson Reeder adopted that with a sacrifice fly to present the Jayhawks a 2-0 lead.
Baylor (9-18, 2-6 Huge 12) took its first lead of the collection within the third inning when the Bears scored three runs. After a leadoff stroll, Kobe Andrade hit an RBI triple to attain the primary run. Andrade scored on an RBI groundout earlier than Hunter Teplanszky hit a solo homer to take a 3-2 lead.
After scoring seven runs within the fourth inning on Friday, the Jayhawks scored 4 within the fourth on Saturday. With two outs, Shojinaga hit a 2-run double to attain Kline and Michael Brooks. Elvis adopted Shojinaga and hit a 2-run homer out to heart subject to place the Jayhawks forward 7-3. Kansas wouldn’t relinquish that lead the remainder of the way in which.
The Bears did lower the deficit to 7-4 within the prime of the fifth on an RBI single by Teplanszky. Nevertheless, KU received that run again within the backside of the sixth on an RBI single from sophomore Chase Jans. That made the rating 8-4.
The Jayhawks added three extra runs within the seventh inning on an error, sacrifice fly from Kline and an RBI single by Reeder. Baylor received two of these runs again within the prime of the eighth, however the Bears gave them proper again with two bases loaded walks within the backside of the eighth. Kansas held a 13-6 lead heading into the ninth the place junior Stone Hewlett struck out the facet.
Junior Minnesota switch Sam Eire began and gave Kansas 5 robust innings. He allowed 4 runs on 4 hits, whereas strolling three and hanging out two. Junior and Doane College switch Thaniel Trumper mixed with Hewlett for 4 innings of aid.
PITCHERS OF RECORD
Win: Sam Eire (3-3)
Closing line: 5.0 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 2 SO
Loss: Cam Caley (0-4)
Closing line: 2.0 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 2 SO
QUOTABLE
“I’m pleased with how our guys competed. Once you compete at a excessive degree you give your self a chance to have nice issues occur. Profitable a collection is a giant deal, but it surely’s like each different sport, now now we have a brand new one to prepare for. I’m pleased with the blokes and pleased with their focus. I assumed now we have been very targeted the previous couple of video games and I’m pleased with how they’ve gone about it.” – Coach Dan Fitzgerald
NOTES
• Kansas is 4-0 at Hoglund Ballpark this season.
• Kansas scored 10+ runs in consecutive video games for the primary time this season and first since April 10-12, 2022. The final time Kansas had at the very least 10 runs in back-to-back convention video games was April 25-30, 2010 vs. Texas Tech/at Oklahoma State. The final time Kansas did it in consecutive Huge 12 video games at dwelling was Could 2-3, 2008 vs. Oklahoma.
• Saturday’s attendance of 1,547 was the most important attendance at Hoglund Ballpark since April 13, 2019 vs. Oklahoma State (1,557).
• Kansas tallied 14 hits marking the primary time this season with double-digit hits in back-to-back video games. The final time Kansas had 10+ hits in consecutive video games was April 26-Could 1, 2022 (5 video games).
• The 13 runs scored by Kansas have been its second highest run whole of the season.
• Shojinaga matched his profession excessive with 4 hits, which he set on Friday night time. The final Kansas participant to have back-to-back 4-hit video games was Maui Ahuna on March 19-20, 2021 vs. Creighton. Shojinaga completed 4-for-5 with a double, two RBIs and a career-high 4 runs scored.
• Jans prolonged his on-base streak to 21 video games, which is the longest of the sophomore’s profession and the longest by a Jayhawk this season. He completed 1-for-3 with an RBI and two walks.
• Elvis linked on his third dwelling run of the season. He completed 3-for-4 with two doubles, a house run, a season-high 4 RBIs, one run scored and two walks. His 9 multi-hit video games lead the staff.
• Reeder completed with three RBIs and has a team-high seven multi-RBI video games this season.
• Brooks had two hits, two walks and three runs scored. He has a success in seven of his final eight video games.
UP NEXT
Kansas (11-14, 2-3 Huge 12) will wrap up the collection on Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m. CT towards Baylor. The Jayhawks shall be vying for his or her first collection sweep of the season.
Sunday is World Autism Consciousness Day and Kansas shall be making a sensory-inclusive setting for the competition. Stadium quantity shall be silenced at 12:45 p.m. and can progressively improve by inning all through the sport. Sensory toys shall be out there in the course of the sport on the advertising desk whereas provides final and the Jayhawks shall be sporting particular uniforms for the sport.
Kansas
Block Of Snow Smashes Kansas Driver’s Windshield – Videos from The Weather Channel
Kansas
3 keys for UC Bearcats to beat Kansas who makes their 1st visit to Cincinnati since 1964
Cincinnati Bearcats coach Wes Miller on team approaching Kansas game
Cincinnati Bearcats coach Wes Miller on team approaching Kansas game Saturday, Jan. 11 at Fifth Third Arena
The Kansas Jayhawks visited the Armory Fieldhouse just a few months after The Beatles appeared at Cincinnati Gardens in 1964. Then-coach Tay Baker’s squad beat them 76-72, which would be the last UC win in the series until last year’s Big 12 tournament.
After falling short at Allen Fieldhouse in January 2024, 74-69 UC beat the Jayhawks 72-52 last March 13 in Kansas City, just 47 miles from their home. To be fair, Kansas played without Big 12 First Team players Hunter Dickinson and Kevin McCullar Jr., but the game was in front of over 18,000 at the T-Mobile Center pulling for the Jayhawks.
Kansas coach Bill Self was none too pleased about exiting a tournament his team had owned for years. Now, Kansas is again a highly-ranked team with 7-foot-2 Dickinson back as they come to Cincinnati for the first time in over 60 years Saturday.
Saturday a tall order for Cincinnati Bearcats
This Kansas team has only lost three times. Wednesday, they came from behind against Arizona State at halftime to win by 19, 74-55. The Jayhawks fell against Quad 1 opponents in Missouri, Creighton and had a one-point home loss to West Virginia. The Bearcats and Jayhawks share one common opponent: Howard. Kansas began their regular season beating the Bison by 30, while UC beat them by 17 in early December.
The Bearcats are coming off their worst game of the season, a 68-48 thrashing at Baylor Tuesday in Waco. UC will look to bounce back with a sellout crowd at Fifth Third Arena.
“You know you’re going to hit tough stretches, that is part of this,” UC coach Wes Miller said of the 0-3 Big 12 start. “That doesn’t make it fun. It’s part of college basketball, it’s part of high-level competition. Going into the year, I went, ‘When we do, we’re going to be OK because of who we have in the locker room’. I’ve got high-character guys that are bought into this place and our program and they want to win.”
A boost from UC AD John Cunningham
Miller and company received support from athletic director John Cunningham Thursday as they await the powerhouse Jayhawks.
“It’s everything we always wanted when we got into the Big 12,” Cunningham said. “It does remind a lot of people of the competition we saw week in and week out when we were in the Big East. This is even more so.”
As for UC’s 0-3 start, Cunningham says the Bearcats are a really good team going through a tough stretch in a demanding league.
“I see no cracks in the armor in terms of the confidence of the team,” Cunningham said. “If I’m going to battle, I want Wes Miller and his staff right next to me. He’s the right man to get this thing moving the right direction. Honestly, sometimes the shots don’t drop. They’re going to start to drop.”
Tough travels for Cincinnati Bearcats
After waiting four hours to fly to Waco Monday night and arriving early on game day, the Bearcats were also delayed getting home. Though Miller mentioned it had nothing to do with the Baylor loss, he said UC didn’t arrive home until Wednesday afternoon due to flight complications. By NCAA rules, they took that day off and didn’t get back to practice until Thursday.
“We had to get a new plane so we slept in Waco and couldn’t leave until that morning,” Miller said. “This isn’t news to anyone who knows our program but the will, the want, the mindset, I believe it’s where he needs to be and I believe it’ll continue to be where it needs to be regardless of the results and circumstances. This team has the right internal stuff and internal fortitude. We’ll figure it out.”
A ‘Big O’ moment
On March 12, 1960 in an Elite Eight NCAA tournament game in Manhattan, Kansas, UC beat the Kansas Jayhawks 82-71 as Naismith Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson had 48 points and 14 rebounds.
3 keys for Cincinnati Bearcats to beat Kansas Jayhawks
1. Seize momentum on your home floor
The University of Cincinnati winter semester begins Monday and Fifth Third Arena will be packed for a matchup with a team that has briefly been No. 1 and for the most part in the Top 10.
While the Arizona game drew 11, 212, students were not yet back and the intensity was nowhere near Skyline Chili Crosstown Shootout levels. Of course, the Bearcats didn’t help matters getting behind by 13 at halftime. With an 0-3 Big 12 start, the Bearcats could use every piece of motivation they can find.
“You have to go through difficult moments, speed bumps and hurdles in order to do the things you have to do to become who you’re trying to become,” Miller said. “My fire burns in these moments. It burns brightest when things are at their most difficult times.”
2. Hound Kansas big man Hunter Dickinson
UC was able to hold him to 10 points and six rebounds in Lawrence last year thanks to foul trouble. They also outrebounded the Jayhawks 40-29 and the game was tied at halftime 35-35. Getting the prolific pivot in foul trouble would be beneficial again, as would the glass advantage.
Dickinson is often good for 16 points and 10 rebounds. He finished with 15 points and 12 rebounds in their Arizona State win Wednesday.
“They’re the oldest team in the country, the most experienced team in the country,” Miller said of Kansas. “They’re a national championship contender. They present a load of challenges. The first is the depth and experience. You’re talking about guys on their roster that were the leading scorers at other high-major schools. They’re as deep as I’ve seen a college basketball team in the portal area.”
3. Let Dan Skillings Jr. get his minutes
Skillings was electric off the bench at Kansas last year with 16 points and even more so in the Big 12 tournament game when he popped in 25. When the 6-foot-6 wing is rolling, the Bearcats often follow suit. They didn’t on Tuesday, but maybe they do after a few spirited practices.
One solution might be to leave him on the floor. To date, Big 12 opponents are playing their starters more minutes than the UC starting five. No Bearcat has played 34 minutes yet and most games the starters are in for roughly 28 to 31 minutes of a 40-minute contest.
“We look at our coaching decisions after every game,” Miller said. “We always want to be consistent. I don’t ever want to be the guy that’s changing every game because I don’t think players can be effective like that. Over the course of time, we’re going to evaluate that. We have real data, real information, not just reactive information. We’ll adjust accordingly.”
Cincinnati Bearcats vs. Kansas Jayhawks
Tip: Saturday, 2 p.m., Fifth Third Arena (12,012)
TV/Radio: ESPN+/700WLW
Series: UC leads 5-4 (Bearcats won March 13, 2024, in Big 12 tournament 72-52)
Kansas Jayhawks scouting report
Record: 11-3 (2-1 Big 12)
Coach: Bill Self (21st season, 599-146)
Offense: 78.9 ppg
Defense: 63.6 ppg
Projected starting lineup
(Position, Height, Stats)
Hunter Dickinson (C, 7’2″, 15.9 ppg, 10.4 reb)
Dajuan Harris (G, 6’2″, 10.3 ppg)
K.J. Adams (F, 6’7″, 8.5. ppg)
Zeke Mayo (G, 6’4″, 14.6 ppg)
Shakeel Moore (G, 6’1″, 3.3 ppg)
Cincinnati Bearcats scouting report
Record: 10-4 (0-3 Big 12)
Coach: Wes Miller (fourth season, 73-47, overall 258-182)
Offense: 75.4 ppg
Defense: 61 ppg
Projected starting lineup
Simas Lukošius (G-F, 6’8″, 13 ppg)
Dan Skillings Jr. (G-F, 6’6″, 13.1 ppg)
Dillon Mitchell (F, 6’8″, 10.9 ppg)
Jizzle James (G, 6’3″, 11.1 ppg)
Aziz Bandaogo (C, 7′, 9.4 ppg)
Players to watch
Hunter Dickinson is a fifth-year player who reliably has been at or near averaging a double-double since he began in 2020. He has seven double-doubles this year. If UC has another game where they’re destroyed in the paint (40-16 at Baylor) that means Dickinson had his way.
Dillon Mitchell has been UC’s double-double leader with three but he’s coming off a scoreless game where he had just two rebounds. He hasn’t been held without a point since his freshman year at Texas. For the Bearcats to have a chance, Mitchell must be productive.
Rankings
KenPom.com: Kansas is No. 10, Cincinnati is No. 33
NCAA NET: Kansas is No. 9, Cincinnati is No. 35
Kansas
Mayor Quinton Lucas grades Kansas City's snow response as A-minus
KSHB 41 reporter Charlie Keegan covers politics on both sides of the state line. If you have a story idea to share, you can send Charlie an email at charlie.keegan@kshb.com.
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The mayor of Kansas City, Missouri, applauded city staff for their efforts to plow snow following Sunday’s storm.
On Thursday, KCMO Mayor Quinton Lucas gave the city an A-minus grade for the job, even if the job isn’t totally complete. Drivers continue working in 12-hour shifts clearing the nearly one foot of snow which fell.
“Nobody is ever perfect,” Lucas said. “I think we continue to pursue getting every street addressed. But I think it was a really darn good response. I’d give an A-minus.”
Lucas said the city’s made changes to its snow response in the past four years. Those changes are paying off in the way of improved service.
“When I was growing up in Kansas City, the story was, ‘You go to the suburbs and everything is perfect,’ ‘You go to the city, and everything is not,’” Lucas said as he reiterated a narrative KSHB 41 News has heard before. “With respect to all of our peers around the region, I think you’ve seen that change a bit.”
Changes to the snow plan were the product of KCMO City Manager Brian Platt, who took over in December of 2020.
The following the year, the city began implementing four main changes to its plow routine:
- purchases newer trucks
- shifted employees from other departments and trained them to drive snow plows (even Platt drove a plow this week)
- those additional drivers allow the city to plow main streets and side streets simultaneously
- the city keeps drivers assigned to snow duty for longer periods of time
“It’s going to continue to get better. We’re not where we want to be, but we are going to get better,” KCMO director of Public Works Michael Shaw said. “So we have changed expectations because we are delivering a higher, better quality service.”
The changes seem to be changing opinions from residents.
“Considering how much snow came and how fast it was, I’m pretty satisfied,” Shawn Colby, a KCMO resident, said.
“This year seems to be better,” added Eileen Cohen. “It’s always the side streets, but what do you do? But I think they did a good job, it was a blizzard.”
“Honestly, I feel like they could do better with the side streets and stop pushing the snow people just shoveled back in front of their yard,” DJ Juan said, offering some advice to the city.
At Thursday’s council meeting, members introduced a resolution asking the city manager to review snow removal plans. The proposal should come up for more discussion next week.
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