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A magazine focusing on all things sports in northwest Kansas JANUARY 2013 INK. The Hays Daily News Oakley has the talent. Can the Plainsmen break through? READY ROLL to

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A magazine focusing on all things sports in northwest Kansas

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A magazine focusing on all things sports in northwest Kansas

January 2013

INK.

The Hays Daily News

Oakley has the talent.

Can the Plainsmen

break through?

ReadyROllto

1

2

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What’sup?A look inside

this issue

Volume 2, Issue 11Sports Ink. is published and distributed by The Hays Daily News. Copyright © 2012 Harris Enterprises. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in

part without permission is prohibited. Sports Ink. is a registered trademark of The Hays Daily News, 507 Main, Hays, KS 67601 (785) 628-1081.

Cover illustration by steven Hausler [email protected]

sports ink. Contributors: niCk MCQueen [email protected] Conor niCHoll [email protected] everett royer [email protected]

steven Hausler [email protected] klint spiller [email protected] CHelsy luetH [email protected] niCk sCHwien [email protected]

Bring it

6

8

14

Solid core

Despite DwinDling numbers in the school, the oberlin wrestling

squaD continues a strong traDition.

ready to rollthe oakley boys’ basketball team has a talenteD

squaD. the only question is can the plainsmen make a Deep run?

rorabaugh’S railerS

the longtime basketball coach is back for another stint with the ellis boys’

basketball team.

Nick Schwien, Sports Ink.Hoxie junior Chase Kennedy looks for an open teammate as he sets up the offense against Quinter during a game earlier this month at the 29th annual Castle Rock Classic in Quinter.

3

An athletic director’s life can be frustrat-ing, especially in western Kansas.

If you’re in charge of a large school out here, good luck, because it’s tough to get similar level competition to actually face you. Why would a Wichita school travel three hours to compete against you when it could travel 10 to 30 minutes to find a similar-sized school?

Oh, and don’t forget super leagues, such as the multi-tiered, 26-team Ark Valley Chisholm Trail League, whose league obligations make non-league games difficult to schedule.

It creates scheduling nightmares for Class 6-4A schools west of U.S. Highway 281.

Class 6A Garden City was forced to have an open slot in its football schedule in Week 2 five years ago. In 2010 and ‘11, the same hap-pened to Great Bend, and the Panthers aren’t even that far west.

Hays High Athletic Director Clint Albers said he has come close to similar problems.

“It’s extremely difficult to find games,” Albers said. “There have been years where

we’ve nearly been short games.”The Indians already play the big schools in

the west, and the small schools are reluctant to face Hays. Then with AVCTL obligations filling the schedules of teams in the central corridor of Kansas, Hays typically has to venture far east or far south.

“Because of our location, we are some of the last ones left in the room looking to see

what else is left to pick from,” Albers said.

It’s a problem that has been rampant in other states, but while others have taken steps to address it, Kansas has stuck with its system that

doesn’t encourage schools to branch outside of their geography.

Nebraska has made strides in this area. Like Kansas, Nebraska has a dense eastern

population and rural western population, but unlike Kansas, Nebraska changed its postseason format to make it easier for west-ern schools to fill their schedules.

In football, the Nebraska School Activities Association is in charge of assigning team’s schedules, so that’s not a problem.

Then in basketball, the NSAA switched to

a seeded district tournament that isn’t based upon geography. Instead, it is based on seed-ing with teams earning higher seeds based on their wild-card points earned throughout the year, with the top seven seeds as tourna-ment sites. The amount of points earned is based on the success of their opponents, so winning teams with difficult schedules are rewarded with higher seeds.

Under this format, it makes the regular season important, and teams can’t get into an “easy” district tournament.

It makes the post-season format fairer, and encourages schools in dense urban centers to escape the city. Because if they don’t, the large schools in the western half of the state can play smaller schools and out-of-state schools that count for the same wild-card points.

As a result, the Class A schools in Nebras-ka, the classification with the largest schools, met together and devised ways to play each other, even if it meant more traveling costs.

KSHSAA would be wise to make a similar change. After all, with small towns drying up, medium-sized schools, such as Norton, soon might even have trouble finding op-ponents.

Spiller

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Who’sThat?

Notable performancesin northwest Kansas

Sydney BenoitBenoit, a senior for the Smith Center girls’

basketball team averaged 24.5 points through a 4-0 start for the Lady Red. After scor-

ing 34 points in a season0-opening win against Victoria, Benoit, one of five seniors, spurred Smith Center’s title performance in the preseason Purple & Gold Tournament at WaKeeney. Benoit scored 22 points in a the tourney opener, then 26 in a semifinal win against host Trego Community. In the title game, a rematch with

Victoria, Benoit was one of four Lady Red players in double figures, leading the way with 16 points.

Kate LehmanA sophomore center for the Fort Hays State

University women’s basketball team, Lehman helped guide the Tigers to an 8-0 start. The Ti-gers started 2-0 in MIAA play and climbed to No. 11 in NCAA Division II, the highest ranking for the Tigers in their NCAA era. Lehman averaged 18.4 points through the first eight games and blocked 36 total shots. She also averaged 8.3 rebounds per night. Lehman, a native of Newton, was named MIAA Player of the Week in Week 3 of the season.

Kip KeeleyAfter helping the La Crosse High School

football team to another spectacular season, Keeley, a senior on the bas-ketball team, got off to a hot start for the Leopards this winter. Keeley, despite a 1-3 start for the Leopards, aver-aged a little more than 23 points in the first four games. On two different occasions in the first four games, Keeley notched at least 34 points. He scored 34 in a loss to Smith Center and 35 in a win

against Trego Community.

Got an idea of someone who you think should be included in Who’s That?

Send it to [email protected] Who’s that? in the subject line,

or call (800) 657-6017.

Dalton GantzGantz, a 6-0 senior linebacker/fullback for the

Eight-Man Division I Ness City football team this fall, was honored several times across the state for his efforts.

Gantz was named to the Hays Daily News All-Area Super 11 squad, one of three Ness City players selected and was later named the Offensive and Defensive MVP in Eight-Man Division I, District 8 by kpreps.com, an honor influenced by coaches throughout the district. Gantz finished with 1,155 rushing yards and 23 scores for the Eagles’ offense, and racked up 90 tackles, two interceptions and a sack on defense.

5

COReSOLIDOberlin has high expectations for

2012-13

Carrying on a solid tradition at Oberlin-Decatur Com-munity High School has not been an easy task for the Red

Devil wrestling team.And, though, it seems to become a

little more difficult each season, it’s a duty members of the squad don’t take lightly.

With numbers dwindling in rural communities and their schools each year, the task of finding enough partici-pants to be able to contend in the team rankings has proven daunting.

“It gets tougher and tougher every year as enrollment declines,” said Oberlin’s 17th-year head coach, Joe Dreher, whose squad competed with many larger schools at the Colby Dual

Tournament earlier this month.“Obviously, those bigger schools, you

look at pictures in the program and some of them have 40 to 60 kids. It makes a heck of a difference.

“It’s tougher to fill a full team,” Dreher added.

Still, here the Red Devils are, filling all but one weight class with competi-tive wrestlers, despite a roster of just 18. Oberlin has been in early-season conversations about possibly contend-ing for some state hardware in late Feb-ruary, when champions are crowned at the Class 3-2-1A State Wrestling Cham-pionships at Gross Memorial Coliseum in Hays.

Though they did lose two state plac-ers to graduation, the Red Devils credit

their chances this season to a solid core of returning wrestlers.

“We know we have a lot of talent, and we have set our goals high,” said 152-pounder Kade Brown, a senior and one of four returning state qualifiers from 2011-12. “We are definitely thinking top three as a team in the state, if not trying to win it, depending on how we wrestle.

“We want to get better each week, and see how it goes.”

If the early season was any indication, the Red Devils can certainly hold their own — even with the larger schools.

Oberlin was fourth in the Colby tour-nament, the only 2A school in the top six. They held their own with the likes of Pine Creek and Wray, Colo., Class

Page 6 January 2013 SPORTS INK.

STEVEN HAUSLER, Sports InkOberlin’s Dayton Dreher, rear, wrestles in the third-place match last season at the Class 3-2-1A state wrestling champion-ships at Gross Memorial Coliseum in Hays.

6

“TheRe’s a Really sTROng TRadiTiOn in ObeRlin. We haven’T WOn a ChamPiOnshiP in quiTe a While …”

- Channing fORTin, ObeRlin seniOR

SOLID

3A Scott City and Class 6A Hutchin-son. The Red Devils were 4-1 in pool play and won in the placing rounds to finish fourth.

Though duals don’t mean a great deal in the scheme of things, and many coaches believe the early season is comparable to a glorified practice, it still shows what the Red Devils might be capable of.

“We lost two seniors, two state quali-fiers, but we also have a lot of kids that got quite a bit of experience last year,” said 220-pounder Channing Fortin, a senior and returning state qualifier. “I think we could be taking quite a few more kids to the tourney this year.”

With six state qualifiers last winter, the Red Devils finished fifth, and did it without a placing from Brown, who was expected to compete for a medal.

Entering state with a 33-2 record, Brown broke a joint on his finger. He was on medication for a skin condi-tion many wrestlers suffer from, im-petigo, and mixed ibuprofen for pain, and the results were not good. Brown was disoriented in Day 1, and lost his

first match, then finished 2-2 for the tourney with no medal.

“Sometimes you just have to forget that stuff that’s not in your control,” Brown said. “How that ended up gave me a lot of motivation to continue to work harder this year and step it up.”

The four returning qualifiers — Brown, Fortin, two-time third-place medalist Dayton Dreher, a junior and the coach’s son, and sophomore Troy Juenemann — fuel Oberlin’s hopes of state hardware.

“Those kids, hopefully everyone feeds off them,” coach Dreher said. “The competition is mixed up a little bit with the returners.”

Juenemann wrestles at 113 with Day-ton Dreher at 138, then Brown and Fortin higher up.

Dayton Dreher was third the last two seasons. The junior, up two classes, expects to be right back in the mix.

“Just have to get better on my feet and be more aggressive,” he said. “Go out and get that first takedown.”

Brown, who already has verbally co-mitted to golf at Creighton University, has a younger brother, Kelly, on the

squad as well. Kelly Brown, a freshman, competes

at 132. Their father was a back-to-back state champion wrestler for Oberlin in the early 1970s.

“There’s a really strong tradition at Oberlin,” said Fortin, whose uncle was a state runner-up in the 90s. “We haven’t won a championship in quite a while, but we’ve had some really close team match ups.”

The last title for the Red Devils was in 1977, the school’s 10th overall. That was two years prior to the field switch-ing to include Class 3A. Oberlin’s last state trophy was third place in 2004, a streak these Red Devils hope to break.

But, as with every season, it all comes down to the 3-2-1A regional, arguably the toughest in the state every season. This year, it is in Norton.

“It’s a whole new tournament once you get there,” coach Dreher said. “It doesn’t matter who you’ve beat or who has beat you — it matters what hap-pens on those two days.

“The past doesn’t matter, it’s what happens right then.”

- Nick McQueen, Sports Ink.

7

Good Luck Oberlin Red Devils!

The Oak-ley High School boys’

basketball team showcased plenty of positives in a 61-50 season-opening home victory against Leoti-Wichita County on Nov. 30. Senior 6-foot-6 forward Ste-phen Llewellyn dunked once, nearly dunked a second time and displayed a smooth, all-around game. Junior 6-foot-5 forward Austin Baalman finished with a double-double, and through four games, averaged 17.3 points and 13.8 rebounds.

Oakley will miss point guard Cody Gabel for the season be-cause of a knee injury suffered in football, but 6-foot-3 junior Darius Herl moved from shooting guard to point guard and finished with a career-best 19 points.

Oakley isn’t very deep, but had solid contributions from senior Cayle Hubert, junior Eric Rucker and junior Braydon Hubert. Eight of the Plainsmen’s top nine players return from a 10-11 season.

The Plainsmen opened the year 3-1 with quality victories against Leoti, Norton and Goodland, all squads expected to be at least .500. The lone loss came against Ottawa, ranked No. 1 in Class 4A, and Semi Ojeleye, a Duke University signee.

After the Leoti victory, Herl sat on the bleachers and looked up at the wall on one side of the Plainsmen’s gym. He saw multiple banners from various sports, including football, volleyball, cross country, track, girls’ basketball and wrestling. All those teams

have enjoyed success in the past and present.Under coach Randall Rath, football is 80-19 since the start of

the 2004 season and has made the playoffs every year except one in that span. Rath also has led girls’ basketball to back-to-back state appearances and a state championship in 2006-07. However, boys’ basketball has had little success in recent years. Oakley has five state appearances, with four coming from 1976-82, none since.

“I want to bring some banners back to Oakley,” Herl said.While Oakley has a blend of talent, height and experience that

few area teams can match, the question remains: Can the best Plainsmen boys’ basketball team in years post a big year and reach the state tournament?

ReadyROllto

Loaded with taLent, the oakLey boys Look

to break through

Page 8 January 2013 SPORTS INK.

story byconor nicholl

photos bysteven hausler

8

“That’s something that we all want to happen,” Rath said. “We want everything to be successful here.”

The answer won’t come until March, but Oakley will have plenty of competition. The Plainsmen are in the difficult Pla-inville sub-state with Ness City, ranked No. 3 in Class 2A and coming off back-to-back state appearances, perennially tough Hill City and Ellis, a strong squad looking to end a lengthly drought from the state tournament.

Since 2007, Oakley has lost seven in a row against Hill City, three straight to Ellis and two in a row to Ness City.

Coach Steve Allison called Oakley’s ultimate goal winning a state championship — and believes his squad can make a run

in 2A.“We have gotten ourselves to where we can set some higher

goals,” Allison, 38-51 as Oakley’s head coach, said.Shortly before the Oakley-Leoti boys’ game started, Rath stood

near the Plainsmen girls’ locker room. Rath, a St. Francis gradu-ate, has coached the Plainsmen girls’ basketball team for the past 21 years and also serves as athletic director and track coach. When Rath was in high school, he played against then-Oakley boys’ basketball coach Fred Teeter.

“As a player, I have always respected him from another team in the league,” Rath said. “He was a tremendous basketball coach.“

Sports Ink. January 2013 Page 9

Oakley’s Austin Baalman (40) shoots against Wichita County’s Tailar Bremer during the Plainsmen’s season opener in Oakley.

PAGE 10

Stephen Llewellyn looks for a rebound against Wichita County’s Casey Day during the season opener in Oakley.

10

Teeter led the Oakley program for many years and currently serves as middle school principal. He won a Class 2A state title in 1976.

“People see success and they want to see it in your program, too,” Allison said. “I think a lot of it is that internal pressure that you put on yourselves. We are trying to build some tradition and work up a program. Mr. Teeter, he was head coach for 23-25 years, had (several) state appear-ances, had a state championship early in his career. I feel like there is tradition at Oakley, but we need to get it back.”

Rath was Teeter’s assistant his first year in Oakley before he inherited the girls’ team.

“I learned a lot coaching under him,” Rath said. “Fred and I, I would go into his office, I went in there a lot of times my first five or six years coaching girls and we hashed things out. He was a tremendous principal.”

At some schools, football success yields basketball success. However, for several reasons that hasn’t occurred at Oakley. Several of the top football players in re-cent years, including Kelly Younkin, Aaron

Racette, Eric Albers, Ethan Jirak and Jace Campbell, have excelled in wrestling. This group, though, is slightly different.

“They play hard and the coaches, and the kids have high expectations and there is a group of kids that really likes basketball right now, and they spend some time at it and the kids, I think they have gotten a lot stronger and they are turning into really good athletes,” Rath said. “I think the kids have bought into understanding that they’ve got to get into the weight room in the offseason. That helps in all sports.”

The basketball team had many key play-ers on a successful football team in the fall that started the year unranked, but finished 7-3 and No. 5 in the final Class 2-1A media poll.

“Football just boosted our confidence,” Herl said. “We thought we’d be good in bas-ketball coming into the season.”

Herl played quarterback and, Baalman and Llewellyn started at ends. Sopho-more Ryan Kuhn, the starting nose guard and the lone NWKL unanimous selection, is a reserve in basketball.

“i feel like TheRe is a TRadiTiOn aT Oakley, buT We need TO geT iT baCk.”

- sTeve allisOn, Oakley bOys’ COaCh

PAGE 12

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“I don’t know,” Herl said of why boys’ basketball hasn’t succeeded in re-cent years. “We have had good athletes come through. Maybe we didn’t come together well as a team, but I think we are coming together well this year and I think we can make a run. We are all pretty close friends, and I think we can make a run as a team if we stick together.”

Allison, a rare Rule 10 basketball coach, leads the squad. He graduated from Minneapolis, a school with a strong basketball tradition. He played a couple of years at Tabor College and came out to Oakley on a job. He worked insurance for 15 years and is now the human resource director at Logan County Hospital for the last two and a half years. Allison has always loved basketball and the Oakley school

board asked him if we would come onto staff as an assistant.

When the head coaching job opened, Allison moved up the ranks.

“The teachers stay here,” Rath said.

“All the ones that are here right now are active doing something or don’t want to coach, so we have to look out-side to find somebody. We are fortu-nate to find somebody like Steve who

Llewellyn, right, and Baalman defend the paint during Oakley’s season opener.

12

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has a passion and is really good with kids.”

Baalman and Llewellyn pose a match-up issue with virtually every opponent on Oakley’s schedule. Allison said the two forwards run the floor as well as any Class 2A/3A big men in northwest Kansas. Allison likes to play man-to-man defense, but because of Oakley’s length believes his team is sometimes better at zone.

Last year, Baalman averaged 10.2 points and 8.2 rebounds, while Llewellyn averaged 10.2 points and 6.9 rebounds. This season, Baalman has delivered some of the state’s best numbers, while Llewellyn, still raw, is averaging 8.5 points and 6.3 rebounds. Llewellyn has range out to the 3-point line and good touch on his 10-foot jumper, but was homeschooled early on and didn’t play basketball until his sophomore year.

“Austin is a workhorse,” Allison said. “He will battle on defense. He is just an animal on the boards and will just defend any post on the boards very well. Strong kid. He has gotten more and more into our offensive game. A little better going left and right now. …Steven is one of the more improved players that I have had the opportunity to work with.”

Herl has tacked on 14.8 points and three assists per contest, while Cayle Hubert averages a team-high 3.3 assists per game.

“They open a lot of shots for you on the perimeter,” Herl said.

Baalman and Llewellyn have seen significant playing time throughout their careers.

Two years ago, Oakley finished with just six wins, eight fewer victories than it had the previous season. The Plains-men finished 1-7 in games decided by seven points or fewer. Last year, Oakley five straight contests by six points or fewer.

On Jan. 17, Oakley fell to Hoxie, 50-48, in the Northwest Kansas League tournament. Oakley led after every quarter, but Hoxie — which eventually finished third in Class 1A, Division I — outscored the Plainsmen 17-9 in the fourth quarter. Oakley had a chance to win when Llewellyn came off a screen in the middle of the lane and had about a 4-foot jumper. The ball rolled

out and Oakley lost.“We controlled a lot of that game,”

Allison said.After that, Allison said the team start-

ed to believe it could win. Oakley went 7-2 in its next nine games, including five wins by seven points or fewer. It finished the season with losses by four and one to Hill City.

This winter, the 3-1 start ties the best opening four-game record under Al-lison — and could be a precursor for a big season and new banner in the Plainsman gym.

Oakley coach Steve Allison

13

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Page 14 January 2013 SPORTS INK.

14

Rorabaugh’sRailers

Sports Ink. January 2013 Page 15

The 16-year-old version of Chris Rorabaugh never wanted to move to Ellis.

After growing up in Highland, his father took a job as superintendent there in 1968, and Rorabaugh moved to Ellis kicking and screaming.

Funny thing is, now it seems like he can’t stay away.Rorabaugh, a longtime Ellis resident, an Ellis High

School alumnus and former Ellis coach from 1990-2006, returned to the helm of the Railroaders’ boys basketball team this summer after coaching two years at Plainville and two years before that at Ransom-West-ern Plains.

It’s Rorabaugh’s dream retirement scenario.“I couldn’t think of anything better, really,” he said.The Railers are poised to make a run this season. They

have a senior-laden squad, and combined with Rora-baugh’s fast-paced style of play, they’ve been tough to beat early in the season.

Ellis starts five seniors. Many of whom have started or seen plenty of playing time since they were sopho-mores, including 6-foot-4 forward Luke Lohrmeyer and 6-foot-6 forward Thatcher Brown.

“We are really experienced in the league, so this is

our best chance and (for the seniors) last chance to do something,” Brown said. “It is a good chance to do something great.”

Rorabaugh replaced Dave Wildeman, who led the Railers to a 13-9 record last season.

Rorabaugh, who coached at Plainville from 2010-2012, actually dispatched Ellis 63-38 last season at sub-state.

“It’s a little weird, but at the same time, it’s kind of nice to have him,” Lohrmeyer said. “Watching him coach last year, he did really well with that Plainville team.”

Plainville went 40-4 in Rorabaugh’s two years there but fell both years in sub-state.

In 2011, the Cardinals’ best player, Andrew Casey, sat on the bench with a head injury late in the game in an overtime loss to Salina-Sacred Heart, and in 2012, Casey fouled out once all season and it happened dur-ing the fourth quarter of Plainville’s 54-53 sub-state final loss to Ness City.

“I’m not making excuses, but he’s a hell of a ballplayer,” Rorabaugh said. “If he’s sitting beside me, we’re not near as good.”

IIball COaCh ReTuRns COuRTside in ellis

PAGE 16

15

Those losses still bother the highly com-petitive Rorabaugh.

“You win 40 games and lose four games total,” Rorabaugh said. “We won league. We won the league tournament twice. We won the Russell tournament both years, and the only thing anybody remembers about it is that we couldn’t beat Ness City last year.”

Rorabaugh has coached for a long time. This is his 36th year, and he’s spent all of

them at small schools. He first coached at Utica for 11 years, and

then followed that by coaching at Bushton-Quivira Heights and Copeland.

Rorabaugh’s had a lot of success, compil-ing more than 400 wins, but he’s never had much success at the state level. Rorabaugh never won state, and he made state just twice in his 16 years at Ellis, despite having 12 winning seasons there.

The disappointments wore on Rorabaugh at Ellis and culminated in his retirement from coaching in 2006.

“I wasn’t bored (of coaching),” he said. “I was totally burned out.”

“The last year I coached at Ellis, we weren’t any good,” Rorabaugh added. “We only won like six games, and it was one thing

after another. I’m going, ‘Why am I doing this?’ ... I told myself I’m done. I’m not go-ing to coach again.”

Rorabaugh thought he would ride off into the sunset and fill his time honing his golf skills, but that didn’t last long.

He took a year off and quickly got bored with golf. He watched his son, Dustin, coach at Russell. His son asked him for advice on occasion, and Rorabaugh often found himself in the coaching office draw-ing up “Xs and Os” with his son.

“It got to be January, and I was like I really miss this,” Rorabaugh said. “I sat that one year out, and it about drove me nuts.”

Rorabaugh wasn’t on the bench with his son during games. Instead, he was confined to the stands, but as a fan, he said at times, he got more fired up than he did when he was a coach.

“I got a little carried away that year sitting there,” he said. “It was hard to watch. After you’ve been doing it for so many years, you need to chill, but I couldn’t. I just couldn’t. I was ready to get back into it.”

Rorabaugh, who has worked as a starter for track and field meets for many years, was at a meet, and a parent from Western Plains

approached him about the possibility of filling a coaching vacancy there.

He applied and got the job and coached two years there, but after that, he was di-agnosed with prostate cancer, which made him take a year off.

He said if he wouldn’t have gotten can-cer, he likely would have spent his third year coaching both the Bobcats’ boys and girls squads.

It would have been the third time in his career doing that. He also did it for two years at Utica, and he said he was mas-sively overworked.

“That’s how dumb I am,” Rorabaugh said regarding how he nearly repeated that feat at Western Plains.

Within a year, Rorabaugh was cancer-free and back in the hunt for coaching jobs.

He heard about an opening in Plainville and jumped at the opportunity to coach the Cardinals’ talented team.

“I’ve got nothing bad to say about Plain-ville,” Rorabaugh said. “Those kids were great. I had fun. I really did.”

Rorabaugh had two solid seasons there, but then several Ellis community mem-bers reached out to Rorabaugh about how

Page 16 January 2013 SPORTS INK.

NICK SCHWIEN, Sports InkEllis coach Chris Rorabaugh talks to his team during a timeout of their game against Golden Plains in the first round of the Castle Rock Classic earlier this month in Quinter.

16

Ellis might have a coaching vacancy. A return to Ellis was difficult to pass up,

especially with its talented squad.Not only that, but Rorabaugh would

travel much less. It also was his alma mater; his daughter, Jessica Bollig, is the assistant girls’ basketball coach there; and he would have the opportunity to coach his grand-son, sophomore guard Brandon Bollig.

“I’m going, why wouldn’t I be interested?” Rorabaugh said. “I live right here. I live six blocks from the gym. I would rather drive six blocks than 75 miles every day.”

Rorabaugh said he told his Plainville players about the possibility of him leav-ing shortly after the season was over, but if he didn’t get the job at Ellis, he was planning on staying at Plainville. Unfor-tunately, he wasn’t hired at Ellis until July, leaving Plainville with little time to find a new coach.

Rorabaugh said some Plainville parents were displeased with his decision to return to Ellis. Though he said most understood, Rorabaugh said the few parents who ex-pressed their dissatisfaction with him did

trouble him.“That did bother me a little bit,” he said.

“I’m not a very good politician, I guess.”But now he’s back at Ellis.“The lights still come on when you walk

in,” Rorabaugh said. “The old gym — the floor is slippery as hell, just like it used

to be. It’s like I was hardly gone, it seems like. Nothing’s really changed, but the kids have changed obvi-ously.”

This year’s squad is talented. The Rail-ers have eight varsity players standing at 6 feet or taller.

However, it’s going to take some time to get the players used to his system, he said.

Rorabaugh wants the Railers to play a fast-paced game, and last season, they played slower and more methodically under Wildeman.

“I think kids become better basketball players if you play faster, because you’ve got to do stuff on your own and develop stuff,” Rorabaugh said.

Brown said practices are much more intense with Rorabaugh than they were under Wildeman.

“We run all the time,” Brown said. “He just makes sure we are in shape. There’s no rest time in his practices at all. We just

keep going, going and going non-stop.”Lohrmeyer, who has played with many

of his teammates since grade school, said it’s a style of play that fits them since they played that way when they were younger.

“Back in junior high, we would always run on teams,” he said. “It’s good to be doing that again. That’s how us seniors have always played ball since fifth grade.”

In their first game of the season, their ball handling was exposed against Phil-lipsburg. The Panthers applied a full-court press, and the Railers’ guards melted under the pressure and surrendered their fourth-quarter lead in an eventual loss.

“That was definitely a weak spot that I didn’t really see,” Rorabaugh said. “I thought I had a couple guards that could handle that stuff, but boy, they couldn’t.”

Rorabaugh said the Railers have a long way to go, but he said they are getting better.

“I tell the kids play as hard as you can, because you know you’re going to get a break,” Rorabaugh said. “I’m not going to leave you in for eight minutes. I’m not even going to leave you in for four min-utes. Just play two or three minutes as hard as you can.”

With Rorabaugh added into the mix, Brown admitted the Railers’ aspirations are high.

“We obviously want to go to state,” Brown said. “We want to win it. This is our best chance to do that.”

- Klint Spiller, Sports Ink

NICK SCHWIEN, Sports Ink. Ellis senior Blake Hudson prepares to shoot during a game at the Castle Rock Classic earlier this month in Quinter.

17

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ON

with Nick McQueen

Just a MinuteHuser

Victoria High School junior

KriStin

Page 18 January 2013 SPORTS INK.

Q: After making state last year, what are the expectations you girls have this year?

A: Well, we did move up in the division, so it’s prob-ably going to be more difficult. But, I honestly think we can do this. We really have nothing to lose and have started out great, and we played a really great first four games. I’m excited to see how we’re going to finish.

Q: Does making the state tournament make it easier to focus on getting there?

A: We know now what to expect. I think we were more experienced and know what to expect. We can prepare for what we need to do to get back there.

Q: How do you describe the feeling of making it and playing that first game in the Coliseum last year?

A: It was great. Just because it was so close, just be-ing in Hays. Basically, the whole town of Victoria was up there to watch us girls. It was just an amazing feeling — and to hear your name being called over the intercom, that was just awesome.

Q: What is an advantage that Victoria has over other teams on the floor.

A: Last year we lost two main components to our team, so we have to rebuild, but a lot of the players played last year. I think we’re a bit more experienced than we were last year.

Q: Do you have any favorite athletes or teams you like to follow?

A: I really like Fort Hays. I watch them probably the most out of anything — go to as many games as I can. Sometimes the games fall on religion night, so it’s dif-ficult to make all of them.

Q: Is something with college basketball some-thing you are considering in the future?

A: Oh yeah. I really would like to play in college and maybe get a scholarship, that would be great.

Q: Off the court, what kinds of things do you like to do?

A: I love to hang out with my friends and family. My whole entire family is really close. We do a lot of things together. And, quite honestly, I play a lot of basketball. Weekends, my younger cousin and I are in the gym playing. Other than that, not too much.

Q: Who is Victoria’s biggest basketball rival?A: We had a really tough one to start the year

against Smith Center. Ellis is in there, too, probably. Otis-Bison, too. They’ll be tough.

Q: So far in high school, what is your greatest athletic moment?

A: Winning the sub-state title game last year — winning it and knowing that all the hard work paid off because we got to to go state. That was our main goal we set at the beginning of the year. It felt great to know we made it and we achieved our goal.

Q: Who has been the biggest influence on your athletic career so far?

A: My whole family, and I couldn’t point out just one. My mom, my dad, my uncle, my aunt. They just have all helped me and pushed me to do better. I have cousins that have helped me, and I’m help-ing cousins. We are a really close family and we like sports so that’s what we do for our free time.

It’s All or NothingShe

Got Game

Audra Nowak

Friend/teammate

Anne Dinkel

B-ball coach

If her athletic career (so far) were a movie, what would it be called?

Energizer BunnyThe

Huser Bruiser

If NIKE were to name a shoe after her, what would it be called?

Cheetah Wolverine

What kind of animal best describes her?

Lamborghini Ferrari

If she were a car, she would be a …?

“Copperhead Road”“Get Ready For

This”

If a song played when she waled on the court, what would it be?

RoadrunnerMighty Mouse

What cartoon character is she most like?

18

19

Office: 785.798.2300Cell: 785-798-5341

[email protected]. Box 466,

Ness City, KS 67560

ACIDIZING CEMENT TOOL RENTAL

Deutscher was key in the Ellis girls’ basketball team’s 3-1 start and second-place finish in the preseason Castle Rock Classic in Quinter. She scored 27 points in the season open-er on the road against Phillipsburg, a 56-44 win for the Railers, then had two 14-point games in the Castle Rock Classic, including the title game in a loss to Hoxie.

Ellis FreshmanALEXCIA DEUTSCHER

@THE BUZZER

nick

klint

conor

mcqueen

spiller

nicholl

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2019

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(High school is only 4 years of their life)