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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
Highland Park boys basketball coach Mike Williams notched his 100th career victory in an 81-42 romp at Topeka High Friday night.
Following the contest, Williams received the game ball from Trojans coach Geo Lyons and a plaque from Highland Park athletic director Boshner Whitaker to commemorate the accomplishment.
Highland Park coach Mike Williams receives a plaque commemorating his 100th win from Hi Park athletic director Boshner Whitaker after Friday's 81-42 win at Topeka High. [Photo by Todd Fertig/TSN]
Highland Park coach Mike Williams celebrates his 100th career victory with his Scots after Friday's 81-42 win at Topeka High. [Photo by Todd Fertig/TSN]
Williams took over the Scots program in 2018, a season in which they won just three games. His son, Mikey, a senior on the current Scots team, recalls those difficult days.
“It was hard on him,” Mikey Williams said. “He would come home and tell me, ‘I wish things were different, but I’m never going to give up.’ So, I just watched him keep working to get to this point. It’s just a testimony to who he is as a person.”
Senior MIkey Williams slams down a dunk in Friday's 81-42 Highland Park win at Topeka High. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
The younger Williams threw down several impressive dunks to spark the Scots. He finished with 19 points on the special night.
“When I got into coaching, I didn’t know it would come to this point,” coach Williams said. “I got into it to coach my son. I wanted to impact him, and then some things changed. Some coaching positions came open and I was an assistant. You get into something because you love the game, you love teaching and working with young people. You want to impact the community.
“Then you look up and, through the grace of the Most High, you’re winning games and things are coming together.”
Williams said lessons learned during the losing seasons helped him harness his optimism and channel it into a coaching style.
“The crazy thing about it was, I never thought we would lose,” Williams said. “I always had belief. I’m a competitor. I’m a winner. Even in those years where we were losing, I didn’t think we were (losing).
“That’s what I want to get across to the guys. That you can manipulate situations through your focus, through your approach, through doing things right, day in and day out. Doing things together. And I think we’re finding that recipe this year, and I think we’re onto something really special.”

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By Todd Fertig
TopSports.news
The Topeka High girls survived a nine-point deficit to race past Wichita Life Prep Academy 50-42 Friday night on the Trojans’ home court.
Sophomore Ahsieyrhuajh Rayton scored 25 points, including her team's final nine points, in Friday's 50-42 Topeka High win over Life Prep. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
Sophomore Ahsieryrhuajh Rayton scored 19 of her 25 points in the second half – including the Trojans’ last nine of the game – to fuel the comeback.
Topeka High fell behind 19-10 midway through the second period when it went scoreless for about eight minutes of game action. But coach Ron Slaymaker and the Trojans didn’t fold.
Topeka High coach Ron Slaymaker talks to his team during Friday's 50-42 win over Wichita Life Prep Academy. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
“We just tried to do what we were trying to do from the beginning -- be solid, run our fast break and play good defense,” Slaymaker said. “And that’s exactly what got us back into it.”
Despite giving up height at essentially every position on the court, Topeka High kept revving the accelerator and tormenting the Life Prep ballhandlers.
“We came out nervous, scared of their height,” Rayton said. “I had to tell the girls, 'Don’t worry about the height. Play hard and have fun. It’s just basketball.’ ”
Topeka High steadily made up ground and took the lead early in the fourth period on a jump shot by junior Keimara Marshall, who chipped in 12 points. The Trojans gave up the lead momentarily, but they outscored the Fire 13-4 over the final five minutes of the game.
“I just told (the team in the locker room) that the thing I was most pleased with was the way we made adjustments,” Slaymaker said. “I’m not sure I would have anticipated that. We just haven’t had enough practices. We made very good adjustments. That’s what got us the lead.”
“When we came in at halftime, Keimara and I told the girls that we didn’t have energy, hanging our head after mistakes,” Rayton said. “We came together as a team.”

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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Shawnee Heights' boys basketball team isn't scheduled to practice on Saturday and, depending on how much inclement weather the Topeka area gets over the weekend, Heights might not even be able to practice on Monday.
Shawnee Heights senior Jaret Sanchez (3), pressuring Hayden senior Cooper Zwiesler (30), scored a game-high 27 points in Friday's 61-52 win at Hayden. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
Shawnee Heights senior Deacon Pomeroy (1) scored 23 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in Friday's 61-52 win over Hayden. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
That break away from veteran coach Ken Darting could be good news for the T-Birds, because even though Shawnee Heights survived a gutsy effort from short-handed Hayden Friday to improve to 4-1 with a 61-52 non-league road win, Darting was far from pleased with his No. 3-ranked (Class 5A) team's performance against the Wildcats.
"We played offensively and defensively as selfish as hell,'' Darting said. "It's that simple. Everybody wanted steals. We're going to play Hayden and beat them by 40, so I don't have to guard somebody, I've got to run around and see if I can get a steal.
"After a game I like to go home and, good or bad, look at a film, but I didn't see anything good tonight that I can think of. What I'm saying is that if you're getting all your points on freelance, fall-aways, step-aways, double-clutches you're not going to win against good teams. You're playing St. Thomas Aquinas tonight we lose by 25. You aint winning when it matters when we play like we did tonight on either end.
"I'm not going to say we don't play hard, we play hard. We're just selfish both ways. Both sides of the ball we're just selfish.''
Shawnee Heights actually went wire to wire for its third straight win, but Hayden, which played without injured sophomore guard Mason Becker, was still within four points twice in the final period before the T-Birds were finally able to put the Wildcats away.
Seniors Jaret Sanchez and Deacon Pomeroy combined for 50 points -- 27 for Sanchez, 23 for Pomeroy -- but the rest of Shawnee Heights' team combined for just 11 points.

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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Hayden girls basketball coach Carvel Reynoldson has seen his team play a lot better than the Wildcats did Friday in their 2025 debut.
But thanks to a huge first half from senior Norma Greco and double-figure performances from all four players who cracked the scoring column, the third-ranked (Class 4A) Wildcats played plenty well enough to take a 60-47 non-league win over Shawnee Heights at Hayden.
Senior Norma Greco led Hayden with a game-high 17 points in Friday's 60-47 home win over Shawnee Heights. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
"We practiced really well over break and moved the ball really well and were strong with it,'' Reynoldson said. "So I don't know if the emotion of being in front of our home crowd for the first real tough game got the best of us or what, but it was definitely sloppy.''
Hayden, which improved to 6-0, trailed a couple of times early but the Wildcats took an 11-10 lead at the 2:54 mark of the opening quarter on a hoop from senior Brylee Meier and never trailed again.
The Wildcats led 19-14 at the end of the quarter and led by as many as 13 points in the second stanza before taking a 38-27 advantage to the locker room at the half.
Greco was the catalyst for the Wildcats, scoring 15 points in the half with four 3-pointers on the way to a game-high 17-point game.
"Norma had been struggling scoring,'' Reynoldson said. "She had been doing a lot of other things really well, but it was good to see her break through.''
After the Wildcats pushed their lead to 47-29 with 3:12 left in the third quarter on a Meier 3-pointer, the 3-2 T-Birds ended the quarter with six straight point to cut their deficit to 47-35.

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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University women's basketball starts the new year with another chapter against its most storied rival, with the Ichabods facing Emporia State at 4 p.m. on Saturday in Emporia's White Auditorium.
unior Yibari Nwidadah averages team-highs of 17.6 points and 7.5 rebounds for Washburn, which opens 2025 Saturday at Emporia State. [File photo/TSN]
Washburn is 6-7 on the year overall and 0-3 in the MIAA after falling 85-72 on the road to Central Missouri on Dec. 21 in its final game of 2024 while Emporia State moved to 7-5 on the year and 2-1 in the MIAA after defeating Central Missouri 70-66 on Thursday at home.
Saturday's meeting with Emporia State will be the 114th all-time meeting between the two teams.
Junior Yibari Nwidadah leads Washburn with a 17.6 scoring average while shooting a team-high 71.8 percent from the field and grabbing a team-best 7.5 rebounds. Nwidadah has started all 11 games she has played and has shot over 50.0 percent in every game this season while recording two double-doubles. The Olathe North product has the best field goal percentage in the nation.
With 178 career offensive rebounds Nwidadah is ninth in program history and is eight boards away from moving up to No. 8. In overall rebounds she ranks 24th in Washburn history with 473.
Junior Payton Sterk is scoring 15.6 points a game while starting all 13 contests and playing a team-high 29.7 minutes per game. Sterk is shooting 44.0 percent from the floor and a team-high 39.2 percent from deep while dishing out 2.6 assists a game. The Colorado Springs native has drilled a team-high 29 3-pointers.
Former Bishop Miege star Gabi Giovannetti is averaging 11.3 points for the Ichabods, with the junior starting all 13 games and playing 26.3 minutes a game. She is second on the team with 20 made triples and has made a 3-pointer in all but two games.