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Book shows BTK as ‘selfish, egotistical’ killer "IF WHAT HE DID WEREN'T SO TERRIBLE, HE'D BE LAUGHABLY FUNNY, WITH HIS

EGO AND HIS PSEUDO-INTELLECTUAL COMMENTARY." Former Sedgwick District

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THE TOUGH PART OF THE JOURNEY Climbing a mountain in the Himalayas was difficult, but it was the journey ahead that would test Glenn Nyberg. 1B

Attorney

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A new book on Dennis Rader is based on his words, but those who know his case say his version of events doesn’t match reality. BY ROY WENZL

rwenzl@wichitaeagle.com

ust and a desire for fame and power drove the BTK serial killer to murder 10 people in Wichita from 1974 to 1991. So says professor of forensic psychology Katherine Ramsland,

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a research scholar who trains detectives and other criminologists, and who has written 58 nonfiction books, many about criminals and crime. Her latest book, “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer,” goes on sale Aug. 30. It won’t surprise those familiar with Rader’s story that lust drove him. In this book, Ramsland guides the narrative but often lets Rader describe in his own words (and sometimes at great length) how abnormal sexual desires led him to kill 10

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BTK’s plan for 11th victim disgusts the police who helped capture him, 11A

people. The BTK serial killer literally wrote most of this book. He wrote Ramsland letters and answered her questions in phone calls. Ramsland constructed the book not as a textbook for criminologists but as a page-turner narrative. “There is something powerful about the raw experience of

having someone freely describe something that most of us find odious, and yet this person doesn’t mind doing this,” she said. “I felt like I’d hit on something.” That something is a core explanation, she said, backed by years of her research about how and why Rader, Ted Bundy and other serial killers became who they are, and why they do such terrible things. Wichita natives familiar with Rader say he made up details in

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MAN MISSING AFTER FLOODING Officials continued to search for a Wichita man after flash flooding in Butler County. 2A

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BTK’s daughter: Book allows Rader to feed ego BY ROY WENZL

rwenzl@wichitaeagle.com

TRAVIS HEYING File photo

“Dad is clearly enjoying himself here,” Kerri Rawson said of her father, Dennis Rader, subject of a new book. “Being interviewed. Playing up his stories, feeding his ego and his narcissism.”

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Kerri Rawson, the daughter of the BTK serial killer who terrorized Wichita over 31 years, says her father made up some of the stories he tells in a new book that attempts to explain why serial killers kill. There are several anecdotes that Rawson questions, all involving Paula Rader — her mother and Dennis Rader’s

wife. In the book, Dennis Rader told the author, professor of forensic psychology Katherine Ramsland, that he liked to fantasize by dressing in a woman’s slip at home and tying himself up so he could play the role of victim. Police say Paula Rader was innocent of any wrongdoing during her husband’s crimes and was unaware of any of her SEE DAUGHTER, 11A

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Federal financial aid deadline changed for coming school year

Michael Smith: Don’t throw a fit if your candidate loses this fall

Emporia State student on target at national shooting competition

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Federal college aid deadline, data changed BY MADELINE FOX

mfox@wichitaeagle.com

Students will be able to file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, much earlier this year after the Department of Education moved up the release date for the form. The FAFSA, which de-

termines eligibility for student financial aid, will now be released Oct. 1, as opposed to its release date of Jan. 1 in previous years. Students will also be able to use “prior-prior year” income data, meaning a student applying for aid for the 2017-2018 school year will use 2015 tax data. This makes it easier for

students to apply for financial aid, said Sheelu Surender, director of Wichita State University’s Office of Financial Aid. “The tax return is already done for most people by the time October rolls around, even if they’ve gotten extensions,” Surender said. She contrasted this to the old policy, which

would release the form in January but required the prior year’s tax data. That often forced students to wait until February or March when they had received all the necessary information to complete their taxes, or to use estimates that they would have to update once their families filed tax returns. The FAFSA requires students to provide information about siblings in college, income and savings, family assets and other data, which is used to determine their eligibility for grants, scholar-

ships and loans. The form must be filled out each year the student applies for financial aid. The decision to use priorprior year data will allow more students to use the IRS Data Retrieval Tool, which lets students and parents access the IRS tax return information needed to complete the FAFSA and transfer it directly into their FAFSA from the IRS website. Before the change, students were not always able to access the tax return data required through the IRS site by the time they filed their FAFSA.

Mother and young son cling to tree as rains flood Butler County BY ROY WENZL

rwenzl@wichitaeagle.com

Cassandra Phillips pulled her 3-year-old son out of his car seat as their minivan was swept into a deep, rushing flash flood south of Rose Hill. For the next hour, she clung to a tree limb with one leg, held Ethan in the crook of an arm and talked to emergency dispatchers on her cellphone as the rain poured down Friday night and the rushing water roared underneath them. When rescuers at last reached them, her leg, with her circulation cut off for an hour, no longer worked. They had to carry her to a nearby ambulance. Phillips, 32, is a National Guard soldier with the 137th Transportation Company, based in Topeka. She’s also a stay-athome mom in Burlington, in eastern Kansas, with her husband and three children, she said. This night was terrifying, she said. The limb she clung to was weak, only about 2 1/2 inches in diameter, and she could hear it cracking – and slowly fracturing – in the crook of her leg. “We’re not lucky,” Phillips said. “We’re blessed. We’re blessed.” She did not mean to drive into a flood, she said. At about 10 p.m., she was coming north out of Udall, several miles south of Rose Hill. The light was

ROY WENZL The Wichita Eagle

Cassandra Phillips and her son Ethan, 3, survived a flash flood that pulled her van into rising water. ROY WENZL The Wichita Eagle

so dim from the night rain on the rural stretch of highway that “all I could see were the white lines of the road.” “And then my van was taken.” As the van floated into the trees on the east side of Butler Road, she gathered herself, pushed the button to lower the van windows, then turned and jumped into the back seat, where Ethan was strapped into his car seat. “I got him out of the seat,” she said. “I called 911 dispatchers. And then the van went right into the tree.” With water rushing all around them, she stuffed her phone into her bra, with the line still open to the dispatchers. She held on to Ethan, climbed out of the van and onto a small branch of the tree. She twisted herself into a sitting position on top of the limb, held it tight with her right leg, told Ethan to hold on to her neck with both arms, then stuck one SEE MOTHER, 4A

Setting it straight A

Corrections and clarifications of articles in The Eagle normally appear in this space and on Kansas.com.

If you see an error, tell us at 316-268-6351 or wenews@wichitaeagle.com.

Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet, left, confers with other searchers trying to find a Wichita man missing after his pickup was pulled into a creek Friday evening.

Search continues for man after heavy rains in Butler County A father and son were swept away in floodwaters Friday; the son walked out of a bean field hours later, but his father remained missing Saturday. BY ROY WENZL

rwenzl@wichitaeagle.com

A father and son were swept away in Butler County floodwaters on Friday evening. The son walked out of a bean field nine hours later, but his father remained missing Saturday afternoon. Searchers using boats, a helicopter and wading boots are trying to find him along Polecat Creek south of Rose Hill, Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet said. Herzet said the missing

man is Richard Lowery, 62, of Wichita. Search crews were using wet suits, an inflatable boat and a helicopter to try to find him. “About 7 this morning, some of the (rescue) guys were sitting here (at the intersection) and saw a guy walk out of a bean field,” Herzet said. “It was the son; they sent him to a Wichita hospital. He had some hypothermia and was a little disoriented.” The man and his son were riding in a truck near a creek at Southwest 210th Road and Butler Road, south of Rose Hill, before 10 p.m. on Friday, a Butler County emergency dispatcher said. “We’re hoping for the best on the gentleman we haven’t found yet; I hope

he made it to a tree,” Herzet said. “There were some reports about people seeing him wash downstream. He could be a long way down there. “With the amount of rain we had, it started covering the road here, and people started driving through it, which they should never, ever do,” Herzet said. Crews from the Butler County Sheriff’s Office, from Augusta and from the Rose Hill Fire Department spent part of the night searching, then pulled back to let the flooded creek subside a few feet. By late morning on Saturday, the water had gone down many feet, but it and debris were still a danger to searchers or anyone else trying to wade

Though financial aid officials are excited about the change, they have raised concerns that the earlier FAFSA release date may prompt schools to move up their financial aid application deadlines. The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators – a nonprofit organization of financial aid professionals from around the country – outlined the concerns in a recent news release. “Some colleges are doing a reset of their own SEE DEADLINE, 3A

into it. One of the searchers rode alongside the helicopter pilot to peer down into the thick vegetation surrounding both sides of the creek. At midmorning, the pilot landed and said they’d seen nothing and wanted to let the creek subside more before trying again. By 4 p.m., searchers had found articles of the man’s clothing and other items from his truck. Searchers were using K-9 dogs to search both banks of Polecat Creek, Herzet said. “If we don’t find him by dark, we’ll stop and then resume looking at 9 tomorrow morning,” Herzet said. Elsewhere, rescuers used boats to take some Mulvane residents from their homes Friday night as water rose 5 feet or more, Sedgwick County dispatchers said. Several people were rescued from vehicles stranded on flooded streets on Friday, a Sedgwick County emergency dispatch supervisor said. No injuries were reported. National Weather Service radar indicated between 5 and 7 inches of rain fell in southern Sedgwick County and western Butler County stretching from I-35 to Rose Hill and from Derby south to Mulvane. The American Red Cross has opened a service center in Mulvane to help those affected by the flooding Friday. The center is at City Hall, 211 N. Second St. in Mulvane. It will be open on Monday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Red Cross help line is 844-334-7569. Contributing: Stan Finger and Julie Mah of The Eagle Roy Wenzl: 316-268-6219, @roywenzl

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The Wichita Eagle (ISSN 1046-3127) is published daily by Wichita Eagle & Beacon Publishing Co. Inc., 825 E. Douglas, Wichita, Kan. 67202. Periodicals postage paid at Wichita, Kansas. The entire contents of each issue of The Wichita Eagle are protected under the federal copyright law. Reproduction of any portion will not be permitted without our express permission. Our 144th year. Incorporating The Wichita Beacon. VOLUME 144, ISSUE 234


Local

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Wichita golfers may soon be riding gas-powered Yamahas BY DION LEFLER

dlefler@wichitaeagle.com

The city of Wichita is going for gas over electric as it replaces about half of its aging golf-cart fleet. The City Council is expected to approve a purchase Tuesday to buy 120 new carts, according to a city report. They’ll be the 2016 Yamaha YDRA Drive model.

The new carts will have gas-powered, fuel-injected engines and will replace battery-powered carts that are “well past the end of their useful life,” said a staff report from the Parks and Recreation Department. Golf Manager Troy Hendricks said electric carts have to be recharged for three to nine hours a day depending on the age of the batteries. With the

gas-powered carts, workers can simply refill the tank and send them back out on the course. They’ll last longer, require less maintenance and be environmentally cleaner than the electric 20012002 carts the city is replacing. Yamaha’s fuelinjected engines emit less pollution than comes off the current carts’ batteries when they boil during recharging, Hendricks said.

Yamaha is the only company that makes a fuel-injected golf cart, the city report said. Brand new, the carts cost about $4,500 per unit. The city is getting about $400 off each, because they were used for about two weeks for ground transportation at the national middle- and high school rodeos in Wyoming and Tennessee. Electric carts cost about $3,800 new, but battery replacement becomes an issue about every four years, Hendricks said. “We’ve replaced the batteries (in the current

carts) at least four times each at $600 a set,” he said. The price tag on the new carts is $446,000. The Parks Department will spend about $150,000 that’s budgeted in the golf fund for cart replacement and borrow the rest from a $1 million fund earmarked for the development of a new park. The Yamaha carts will be deployed at two city courses, although department officials haven’t yet

3A

decided which two will get them, Hendricks said. The purchase will be considered at Tuesday’s City Council meeting, which starts at 9 a.m at City Hall, 455 N. Main. Dion Lefler: 316-268-6527, @DionKansas

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FROM PAGE 2A

DEADLINE by demanding that students file for financial aid earlier than in the past, especially for priority aid that comes largely from the schools themselves,” the release said. “This puts students under the gun at a time when they are just wading into the application process, collecting reference letters and writing personal essays.” Megan Coval, vice president for public policy for the organization, said although schools may move up their priority deadlines for financial aid, many will still be able to award money to students who apply after the deadline. “A priority deadline is usually just a deadline that a school established to get a picture of the need,” Coval said. “And they’re moving those up in order to get (financial aid award) information to students earlier, which is always a good thing.” Tony Lubbers, director of financial aid at Friends

University, said the school is not moving any of its financial aid deadlines. Although WSU does not have a deadline for students to apply for financial aid, Surender said it is moving its “priority date” for applications to Dec. 1, three months earlier than its previous date. Both WSU and Friends plan to work with the Wichita school district to educate prospective students about the change, Surender and Lubbers said. Both schools will also help their current students adjust to the change. Joe

Kleinsasser, director of media relations for WSU, said the school will notify students, faculty and staff about the deadline move through its community newsletter. Friends is hosting a FAFSA financial aid night on campus on Oct. 27 for current and prospective students. Both Lubbers and Surender said they are excited about the FAFSA changes because they would give students and parents a clearer financial picture much earlier in the academic year. “This is definitely a positive thing,” Lubbers said. “It helps parents and students make decisions earlier in the process — they will theoretically

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News

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

AREA NEWS IN BRIEF Funds to help Kansas groups combat underage drinking, pot use The state is giving money to 17 organizations around Kansas – two in Sedgwick County – to prevent underage drinking

her van away from where they’d spent the night. She made the tow truck driver wait while her friend went through the flooded van until she found Phillips’ wallet. Lt. Tim Follis of the Augusta Department of Public Safety was one of the rescuers who found them and pulled them to safety.

“That little boy is special, just a good little kid,” Follis said. “We got him into the back of the vehicle. He was so young, I don’t know that he actually knew what he’d just been through. But then we looked in on him, and asked, ‘Hey, how are you doing?’ and he said. ‘I’m bwave! (brave).’ ” Asked about this Sat-

urday, Ethan nodded and smiled as Phillips held him in her arms. “I was bwave,” he said.

and low educational achievement. The statement said the grants can help communities with suicide, problem gambling and depression as well.

her and placed her in the ambulance. On Saturday, when she met a tow truck driver to haul away her minivan, she was still limping. She fell trying to climb the road embankment. “I rolled my ankle,” she said. “I’m heading to an emergency room now.” She could not walk. She later sent a message about the emergency

crews who saved her. “Words are not enough; they seem too small compared with what they did for us,” she said. Doctors determined her leg had nerve damage from the loss of circulation and that her ankle was badly sprained, she said. The ankle and the nerve damage will heal over time, they told her. Twelve hours after she almost drowned, Phillips and her son had not yet left the scene; they waited, sitting in a friend’s car, until a tow truck hauled

MOTHER

$

ita police Sgt. Nikki Woodrow said in a statement. Sedgwick County’s Exploited and Missing Child Unit is investigating, coordinating with the KTA and St. Louis County, Woodrow said. Vallejo was booked into the Sedgwick County Jail at 2 a.m. Saturday on suspicion of rape, kidnapping and aggravated human trafficking, Woodrow said.

receive $35,000. The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services awarded the money as part of the Kansas Prevention Collaborative Community Initiative. Tim Keck, secretary of the department, said in a statement that the grants would help organizations use data to better understand risk factors such as adverse childhood experiences, divorce, poverty

FROM PAGE 2A

arm behind her to hold on to the tree. With the other hand, she pulled her phone out of her bra and resumed talking to 911 dispatchers. “For a while there, I was pretty scared about anyone finding us,” she said. “I could talk to the dispatchers, but I didn’t know where we were. I finally told them ‘I can see another car out there. If you have anybody out here, tell them to flash their lights on and off.’ ” When rescuers at last found her and shined flashlights on her, they shouted to her that the rushing water was too dangerous, they couldn’t get to her. For the harrowing minutes that followed, she held on, with the branch cracking and bending beneath her. When it cracked loudly, she’d yell at the rescuers that the branch might be giving way. At last they put a boat into the water and reached her. They floated her back to the road. Her leg no longer worked from having her blood circulation cut off for an hour; one of the rescuers carried

Kansas authorities tracked an abduction

suspect out of Missouri on Friday, arrested a Wichita man and located a 16year-old girl, Wichita police said Saturday. Authorities from St. Louis County in Missouri alerted the Kansas Turnpike Authority on Friday evening about a possible abduction. KTA officials tracked the suspect’s vehicle to an address in south Wichita. Authorities arrested a 39-year-old Wichita man, Johnny Vallejo, Wich-

and youth marijuana use. In total, the organizations will receive $580,000. An organization in Wichita called Safe Streets, which works to stop violence and crime through neighborhood involvement in Planeview, El Pueblo and Historic Midtown, will receive $50,000, according to a news release from the state. Haysville Healthy Habits, an educational group that meets monthly, will

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Nation

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Trump and new team have little time to execute new strategy BY STEVE PEOPLES

Associated Press WASHINGTON

Donald Trump is on the clock. He has about 80 days to reset and rally a presidential campaign that has done little but stagger since the close of the Republican convention. The GOP nominee’s allies say the celebrity businessman and his new leadership team are “laser-focused” and ready to direct the billionaire’s venom against Democratic Hillary Clinton. “This has been one of the best weeks the campaign has had,” said Sean Spicer, chief strategist at the Republican National Committee. For much of the past year, Trump has ignored the tools of modern-day presidential campaigns. That’s a big reason why his Republican critics are skeptical their party’s nominee has the time or discipline to rescue his struggling White House bid. “The Trump campaign is at a ludicrously high disadvantage,” said Dan Senor, a former adviser to 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “The Democrats have something that the Republicans don’t: They have a nominee that’s built a real campaign organization.” While Trump did bring in a new set of advisers in the past week, it appears all but certain his comeback strategy cannot benefit from the proven building blocks of winning campaigns, especially when compared with the structure Clinton has assembled. Trump has few loyal staffers devoted to his election working in the tightly contested states that will decide the election; little early investment in the data operation needed to help ensure his supporters vote; and no significant effort to take advantage of early voting, which begins next month in some states. If not for the Republican National Committee’s staff, Trump would have a skeleton presence in the most competitive states. Only in the past week did Trump place his first round of general election advertising – nearly $5 million for TV commercials in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and North Carolina. By contrast, Clinton’s campaign has spent more than $75 million on ads in the weeks since she effectively locked up the nomination in early June, according to Kantar Media’s political ad tracker. Out of time to build a campaign to match Clinton’s, the team at Trump Tower will by necessity focus on a broad messaging effort to capture the attention of voters and try to highlight Clinton’s shortcomings. For now, Trump finds himself behind Clinton in preference polls in nearly every battleground state. “This new team will be very, very aggressive. They understand the nature of taking on the left,” said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Trump ally. “They will be on the attack.” That team includes Stephen Bannon, a combative conservative media executive with no presidential campaign experience, and pollster Kellyanne Conway, who has known Trump for years. Campaign chairman Paul Manafort, resigned Friday amid scrutiny of his past work for Ukraine’s former pro-Russian political leaders. Bannon and Conway will

have money to work with. In July, Trump raised more than $80 million for his campaign and allied Republican Party groups, his campaign has said. That’s

just shy of the $90 million that Clinton’s aides said she collected in July for her campaign and fellow Democratic committees. The goal for the Trump

campaign’s leaders is not to tame the candidate’s passion, according to Trump’s allies, but refocus his attacks on Clinton. The hope is that Trump

can avoid the missteps that have defined his campaign since the end of the conventions. “Unfortunately, it took them two months to figure

out that Donald Trump is Donald Trump,” former Trump adviser Barry Bennet said of Manafort and his team. “He’s the bulldozer candidate. What you need to do is aim him at an immovable object, not try to change him.”

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Dr. Kevin Geier, D.C., Clinic Director

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Torrential rains trigger ‘unprecedented’ flooding A stalled weather front brought more than 9 inches of rain to parts of Butler County on Friday night, with widespread flooding also reported in Derby and Mulvane. BY STAN FINGER

sfinger@wichitaeagle.com

At first, it seemed like nothing more than a good late-summer rain. But hard rain kept falling late Friday night, and soon the calls started coming in to Butler County Emergency Management. “They were saying, ‘Hey, we’ve got water over here and water over here,’ and I was, like, ‘We’ve never had water there before,’ ” said Jim Schmidt, Butler County Emergency Management director. Rain gauges near Rose Hill indicated more than 9 inches of rain fell in the area over the span of a couple of hours, spawning flash flooding that swept vehicles off rural roads in the black of night. Searchers on Saturday were still looking for a Wichita man whose truck was swept off the road next to Polecat Creek at Southwest 210th Street and Butler Road south of Rose Hill shortly before 10 p.m. Friday. Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet identified the missing man as Richard Lowery, 62. Lowery’s son, who was with him in the truck, emerged from a soybean field several hours later and was taken to a Wichita hospital for treatment. “We had water lapping at the doors of the fire station” in Rose Hill, Schmidt said. “That’s unheard of.” Flash flooding also inundated Derby and Mulvane, where more than 6 inches of rain fell in little more than an hour. The rain fell so hard and so fast it overwhelmed drainage systems in the Wichita suburbs. “Basically the whole city of Derby” was enduring street flooding Friday night, a Sedgwick County emergency dispatch supervisor said. In Mulvane, the force of the water surging through the drainage pipes was so strong that manhole covers were blown into the street. Mulvane first responders gave rescue teams directions on which parts of the streets to use so they wouldn’t hit open manholes. “No, no,” Mulvane Fire Lt. Kyle Gasaway said when asked whether he’d ever seen such flooding in Mulvane before. “All hell broke loose here,” as one Mulvane Fire Department employee put it. About 20 people were plucked from homes or stranded vehicles in Mulvane and taken to a Red Cross shelter set up in the Mulvane United Metho-

dist Church, said Michelle Jantz, executive director of the Red Cross. Many others stayed with friends or relatives in parts of town spared from the high water. On Saturday, the shelter was moved to Mulvane City Hall so the church could be used as part of Mulvane Old Settlers Day, which went ahead as planned Saturday despite the deluge the night be-

‘‘

WE’VE HAD PEOPLE THAT HAVE BEEN HERE FOREVER SAYING THEY’VE NEVER SEEN THE WATER THIS HIGH. Jim Schmidt, Butler County Emergency Management director fore. “Time to make the best of a horrible situation and show the indomitable spirit of Mulvane!” a Facebook post offering updates on Mulvane Old Settlers proclaimed. The event’s parade was canceled and the rodeo was rescheduled for Oct. 7-8. Flooding hit downtown hard, shutting down the carnival and all but a couple of food vendors on hand, Mulvane City Administrator Kent Hixson said. About 40 homes sustained significant damage,

Hixson said, along with a handful of businesses. Several streets will require repair in the wake of the flooding damage. City officials will meet on Monday to add up all the damage caused by the flooding, he said. The city’s water and electrical utility systems were unaffected. “It’s quite unprecedented in how far it got” from Styx Creek in the lowlying parts of town, Hixson said. “I was amazed.” He spoke to a lifelong Mulvane resident in his 60s who told him: “It’s never been like this.” Authorities in Butler County were using Saturday to assess flood damage as well. A number of township roads remained closed by water or debris, Schmidt said. “We can’t even get to some of our township roads” yet, he said. A historic bridge on Southwest 230th Street in the southwest corner of Butler County is “virtually destroyed,” Schmidt said. “We’ve had people that have been here forever saying they’ve never seen the water this high,” he said. Rainfall rates of 3 to 4 inches an hour were reported after a line of potent storms stalled over parts of Sedgwick and Butler counties, National Weather Service meteorologist Robb Lawson said. “All it did was sit over there for two hours,” Lawson said. With so much humidity, the storms were prolific rain producers.

IN MULVANE, THE FORCE OF THE WATER SURGING THROUGH THE DRAINAGE PIPES WAS SO STRONG THAT MANHOLE COVERS WERE BLOWN INTO THE STREET.

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Do you suffer from knee “Storm sewers and storm drains – they just couldn’t keep up,” Lawson said. “It was true flash flooding. Water came up quickly.” Wichita’s official rainfall total from the storm was 1.78 inches, according to the weather service. But nearly 2.5 inches fell 3 miles south of downtown, and more than 5 inches fell just south of Haysville. Rainfall totals topping 6 inches were widespread between Derby and Mulvane. The Red Cross service center in Mulvane will be closed on Sunday but will reopen at 9 a.m. on Monday, Jantz said. Trained caseworkers will be available to help people create personal recovery plans, navigate paperwork and locate assistance such as housing information, groceries, clothing, medicine, household items, cleanup support and financial assistance. Those unable to get to the service center during operating hours can call the Red Cross disaster help line at 844-334-7569, Jantz said. Stan Finger: 316-268-6437, @StanFinger

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Nation

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

AROUND THE U.S. Calif. firefighters make headway Firefighters tightened their grip on California’s fast-moving Blue Cut fire overnight Friday, capitalizing on humid weather conditions to gain greater control over the 37,020-acre blaze, authorities said Saturday. The fire, which is 68 percent contained, has destroyed 105 homes and 213 other structures in San Bernardino County since it broke out Tuesday for reasons investigators are still trying to determine. Most of the damage was concentrated in rural communities perched on the edge of vast open spaces. More than 80,000 people were evacuated at one point, and no one has died or been hurt. — LOS ANGELES TIMES

Bin Laden book author must pay government The Navy SEAL who wrote a best-selling book detailing the secretive raid that killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden must pay the federal government at least $6.8 million under a deal reached to avoid prosecution for not getting pre-publication approval for the work. The deal had been expected and was outlined in a six-page decree filed in federal court in Alexandria, Va. It ends a nearly four-year saga for Matthew Bissonnette that began with the publication of “No Easy Day: The Firsthand of the Mission that Killed Osama bin Laden” one year after the raid. Bissonnette ran afoul of the law for not adhering to a non-disclosure agreement he signed as a SEAL that stated that he would submit any work for review by the Pentagon to make sure no classified information was revealed. A decree signed by federal authorities and Bissonnette and filed Friday said the SEAL and the government reached the deal after “extensive negotiations.” It holds that Bissonnette must pay $2.76 million within 30

days, and an additional $1.38 million within six months. He also must file amended tax returns within six months that all of the proceeds he made on the book belong to the United States. — WP BLOOMBERG

Zoo celebrates panda’s first birthday WASHINGTON

The youngest giant panda cub at the National Zoo is celebrating his first birthday with a traditional Chinese ceremony and the sweet taste of honey. The National Zoo held a first birthday party for Bei Bei on Saturday. He was born Aug. 22, 2015. The zoo performed a ceremony in which symbolic objects are placed in front of a baby. Three banners with symbols painted on them were placed in the panda yard. The poles supporting the banners were slathered in honey. Bei Bei’s mother, Mei Xiang, picked the banner displaying a red knot, which the zoo says symbolizes friendship and luck. — ASSOCIATED PRESS

3 dead, 1 injured after boat overturns RIMERSBURG, PA.

Three men died and another was injured after a boat ran aground and overturned on the Allegheny River, authorities said Saturday. Officials in Clarion County, Pa., said the 21foot boat apparently ran onto the riverbank at about 1:30 a.m. Saturday below Phillipston. Waterways conservation officer Gregory Pochron, of the Fish and Boat Commission, said three men were found dead in the boat. A man in his 70s found pinned underneath the boat was reported to be conscious and alert when he was taken to a hospital in Pittsburgh. — ASSOCIATED PRESS

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Diesel: ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ to be in next ‘Avengers’ The actor who voices the talking tree in “Guardians of the Galaxy” let it slip that his Marvel superhero team will sprout up in “Avengers: Infinity War.” Vin Diesel teased Diesel during a Facebook Live video that the intergalactic do-gooders will be part of the third “Avengers” movie. The “Infinity War” installment is expected to unite several Marvel characters from across 18 films. Diesel, the star of “Fast & Furious,” portrayed extraterrestrial Groot in 2014’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” alongside Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana and Bradley Cooper. Diesel called the planned “Avengers” mash-up “incredibly exciting.” A spokeswoman for “Avengers” studio Disney

did not immediately respond to a request for comment. “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” is scheduled to launch May 5, 2017, while “Infinity War” is set for release May 4, 2018. BIG DRAW FOR WEST’S STORE Kanye West’s pop-up clothing store has opened in downtown Boston. The “Pablo” store is one of 21 that opened worldwide for three days only. Visitors camped out overnight and hundreds waited in long lines ahead of Friday’s opening on Boylston Street in the city’s Back Bay neighborhood. The temporary storefront sells clothing inspired by West’s latest album, “The Life of Pablo.” Items for sale at other stores have included a $400 military jacket and a $50 baseball cap. The stores have opened in Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami and New York, among other cities. Overseas locations include

MAX BECHERER Associated Press

Daniel Stover, 17, moves a boat of personal belongings from a friend’s flooded home in Sorrento, La., on Saturday.

In flood-swept Louisiana, a search for living, dead BY REBECCA SANTANA

Associated Press ST. AMANT, LA.

Flood-weary residents cleaned out houses Saturday as search parties went door to door looking for survivors or bodies trapped by flooding so powerful in some cases it disturbed the dead and sent caskets floating from cemeteries. At least 13 people died in the flooding that swept through parts of southern Louisiana after torrential rains lashed the region. As waters are receding, residents are faced with mudcaked homes so thoroughly soaked that mold is a top concern. “It’s much worse than I expected,” said Sheila Siener. “The water, the dirt, the smell. Water in the cabinets. Everything’s filthy. I’ve never been through a flood, so I really didn’t know.” In other areas the water is still high enough to cause concern. In Lake Arthur, pumps and sandbags were keeping floodwaters out of the town of 2,700 in southwest Loui-

siana. But authorities said there’s still too much danger for people to return. In a uniquely Louisiana problem, some families are also trying to rebury relatives whose caskets were unearthed by the floods. At least 15 cemeteries across seven parishes have had disruptions, the Louisiana Department of Health reported Saturday, although they don’t yet have an estimate of how many graves, tombs and vaults have been damaged. The department is reaching out to affected

parishes to do assessments. In most cases, the disinterred caskets and vaults are still within the territory of the cemetery, although one casket ended up in a nearby backyard. In one case, a local funeral home has already recovered and re-interred the small number of caskets that surfaced. At the Plainview Cemetery in Denham Springs, relatives gathered to see what had become of their plots, only to find a chaotic mess with some vaults overturned and in other cases only empty outlines of graves remaining. “This is bad, it’s just

bad. You can’t even come to see people. You don’t know where they’re at,” said Ravonte Thomas, whose relative’s casket was missing. In southern Louisiana, the water table is so high that people generally cannot be buried six feet under. Caskets are often encased in vaults that are partially above ground, said Zeb Johnson, with the Calcasieu Parish coroner’s office, who has extensive experience with recovering caskets scattered by flooding or hurricanes. In Livingston Parish, which was hard-hit by the floods, John Marston from the coroner’s office said they’ve received reports of about 30 caskets unearthed, and they anticipate finding more when waters recede off the southern part of the parish. “As the water table gets high and the ground gets saturated, it’s just like a boat. It’s going to float,” he said. Breaking down the various parishes where floods swept through on a grid, search teams have been knocking on doors, checking for signs of life like fresh tire tracks or debris piled up indicating someone is inside cleaning things out. They hope for the best, but with floods this catastrophic that caught many by surprise, they’re also prepared for the worst. In many areas the water is still so high that people are rowing boats out to their houses to see what the situation is like inside. “It is devastation, absolute devastation,” said Stacey Rand of the Louisiana State Fire Marshal’s office. “It caught everyone by surprise.”

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Amsterdam, Berlin, Cape Town, London and Singapore. SUNDAY NEWS SHOWS ABC’s “This Week” Kellyanne Conway, campaign manager for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump; Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus; Robby Mook, campaign manager for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton; Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein. NBC’s “Meet the Press” Pre-empted by coverage of the Olympics. CBS’ “Face the Nation” Priebus, Mook; Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala. CNN’s “State of the Union” Conway “Fox News Sunday” Conway; Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md. ANOTHER YEAR OLDER Today’s birthdays: Singer Kenny Rogers, 78 ... actor Clarence Williams III (“The Mod Squad”), 77 ... actress Patty McCormack (“The Roper”), 71 ... actress Loretta Devine (“Boston Public”), 67 ... actress Kim Cattrall, 60 ... comedian Brooks Wheelan (“Saturday Night Live”), 30 ... actress Hayden Panettiere, 27 ... actor RJ Mitte (“Breaking Bad”), 24

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

THE WICHITA EAGLE ...................................................................................

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News

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

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FROM PAGE 1A

BTK the book. A detective who helped capture him says Ramsland didn’t do enough to challenge Rader’s version of events. INTERNATIONAL ATTENTION For Rader to reappear like this is not new, no matter how much his ego and deeds appall people. He has drawn international attention nearly every year since his arrest 11 years ago. There have been books, multiple film documentaries both foreign and domestic, and at least two movies, including one based upon author Stephen King’s novella “A Good Marriage.” From Ramsland’s book, people interested in true crime and Rader’s deeds may learn two words: Paraphilia: Abnormal sexual desire coupled with a penchant for carrying out reckless deeds. Erotophonophilia: A sub-paraphilia – abnormal sexual desire, coupled with murder fantasies and sometimes real murders. Forensic psychologists also call it “lust murder.” Rader and several of his serial killer heroes shared the desire for lust killing, Ramsland said, among them Bundy, John Wayne Gacy and Jack the Ripper. She goes into some depth, quoting Rader (and Bundy), to help people understand what drives these deviants. Rader, in a letter from prison to The Eagle, said there may be no understandable reason why he or others kill people. Life is mostly chaos, he wrote. “Every one of us will be touch(ed) with Bad news or Bad luck in our own lifes (sic), more to some than others. There seems to be no reason for why it happens … some humans are going to turn evil or bad, and they may be like me, a ‘Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing.’ ”

‘‘

IF HE REALLY WAS THE MINOTAUR HE SAYS HE IS, WE’D HAVE HUNDREDS OF DEAD WOMEN HERE. Kelly Otis, BTK task force He hopes the book “will help others to understand part of that ‘Dark Chaos,’ and shine a light on ‘why.’ ” With Rader concurring, Ramsland made a deal with lawyers representing families of Rader’s victims. “And so the majority of the proceeds from the book will go to them,” she said. Rader’s daughter, Kerri Rawson, said her father cooperated because he’s proud of his murders – and glad to come back into public view. REOPENING WOUNDS Some who remember BTK’s terror period in Wichita’s history already regard this book as a reopening of wounds, and a chance for Rader to pose once again as the dangerous alpha male he fancies himself to be. “He’s a selfish, egotistical bastard,” former Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston said. “If what he did weren’t so terrible, he’d be laughably funny, with his ego and his pseudointellectual commentary.” “He’s not Hannibal Lecter (a fictional serial killer from the movie ‘The Silence of the Lambs’),” said Kelly Otis, one of the BTK task force detectives who helped capture Rader in 2005. “He’s an idiot

who is a sexual pervert who does nothing but fantasize when he was out, and certainly now that he’s in prison, fantasizing is all he does.” Tim Relph is a Wichita homicide detective and also a former BTK task force investigator. “I think time and loneliness has allowed him to fantasize and make himself much more of a master criminal than the facts or history would show,” Relph said. After they all realized what a clumsy and stupid man Rader was, Otis said, police and prosecutors decided to show the public what he was really like. “That’s why Nola arranged at his plea hearing to show everyone the photos he’d taken of himself all tied up and wearing women’s clothing,” Otis said. “He’s a freak.” “Some of the things that it seems like (Ramsland) takes his word on … it’s almost like she takes everything he says as being the truth, when in actuality Dennis Rader’s whole life is fantasy,” Otis said. “And she never confronts him on any of this.” None of these criticisms trouble Ramsland. “I don’t think he necessarily told me the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” she said. “I’m better than that.” “I can’t go back and prove any of it, but that wasn’t the point. The point is to have him tell the story the way he wants to tell it, with the idea that he wants to create impressions. I don’t have any investment in whether he’s telling the truth, but in the behaviors he shows us,” she said. “If Rader totally made up the items about Paula (his wife), he’s really quite cruel,” Ramsland added. “Yes, he has that side, but he speaks of her with care. Such a cubed individual.” CHESS GAME For a full year, Rader called Ramsland once a week from the El Dorado Correctional Facility, and the two of them would talk for an hour each time, Ramsland said. They are still in touch. The chess game they are playing has lasted more than a year, with Rader and Ramsland mailing their next moves to each other. Ramsland says she learned much from Rader and her research that should intrigue police who hunt killers and readers who try to understand why people kill. Detectives need to know that serial killers don’t fit the patterns of media and movie portrayals, or the common assumptions of many veteran police investigators, she said. Rader didn’t fit the supposed profiles of other serial killers, and he killed victims at random – a tactic that Otis and other detectives said was key to how he got away with murder for 31 years. There were no connections between his 10 victims, no patterns in the murders that could have provided clues or leads for detectives to run down. Ramsland teaches forensic psychology at DeSales University in Pennsylvania. “Investigators sometimes make the mistake of locking in on tunnel vision,” she said. “So they sometimes don’t see things that are right in front of them.” “The number one thing (for law enforcement investigations) is to not get bogged down in stereotypes and simplified formulas,” Ramsland said. “The idea that there is a common profile for serial killers

BO RADER File photo

Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston serves Dennis Rader with papers at his trial on 10 counts of murder in 2005.

– that’s a media notion.” WHAT CREATES SERIAL KILLERS How to stop a BTK or a Bundy is hard; learning what created them, or what they say created them, is easier. Serial killers ruled by the kick of lust murder start by surrendering themselves to a fantasy world, Ramsland said. Besides sexual arousal, Rader was ruled by two other drives. “He wanted a sense of power over his victims; and there is a third drive: He also wants to be famous,” Ramsland said. It all played out in a sequence and involved dopamine, the human chemical neurotransmitter that affects the pleasure centers of our brains. Rader says he began fantasizing as a young boy. This led to killing chickens and cats, then to stalking women. Those deeds increased his internal dopamine levels, Ramsland said. Stalking led to burglaries, and the theft of women’s underwear. Eventually it led to murder, which released more dopamine but subsequently required more murderous acts to get the dopamine boost. Bundy killed perhaps 40 women, a number that appealed to Rader. He says in Ramsland’s book that 30 to 40 murders was his goal, never achieved. Bundy, as Ramsland reports in the book, said the predatory urge is like the addiction of an alcoholic: It “can be demanding.” RADER’S CHILDHOOD The fantasy life that led to BTK’s murders started early, Rader says in the book. He knew as a child that he’d become a killer, he told Ramsland. “Sins pick us according to our weaknesses, and sometimes it run (sic) in the family line,” he wrote. “Mine were selfishness, sex and control.” As a boy, Rader would go off alone near a cattle water tank; he’d bind himself, which aroused him. Already fascinated with suffocation, “I did drown a cat or two,” he said. One day, Rader wrote Ramsland, his mother beat him with a belt. It sexually aroused him. He was fascinated by the dual life of H.H. Holmes, a respected 19thcentury Chicago hotel owner who trapped and tortured women. In fifth grade, while the other kids were at recess, Rader drew pictures of castles of doom on the chalkboard. He read his father’s true crime magazines, which had photos of women, tied up, on the cover. In high school he was fascinated by the Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoon show, where Snidely Whiplash tied Nell to a train track. He became a peeping Tom at age 10 or 11. He began breaking into houses and stealing women’s underwear at age 14 or 15. The more he did such

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Katherine Ramsland book signing Who: Katherine Ramsland, author of “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer” When: 6 p.m. Sept. 19 Where: Watermark Books, 4701 E. Douglas .......................................................

things, Ramsland writes, the more he wanted it. “The reward mechanism for doing those things was greater than the reward he got for being a good person,” she said. “It was exciting. It made him feel alive.” Rader said the killings started in 1974, after he was laid off from Cessna and had time to indulge his fantasies. He studied other serial killers. He saw himself as a spy. When he stalked victims, he said, he wore his “James Bond” tweed jacket. He called his murders “hits” and nicknamed the women he stalked “projects.” He had hundreds of projects – Project Crest, for a woman who lived near the Crest Theater; Project Steaks and Ale, for someone who lived near the restaurant on East Kellogg; Project Waco; Project Delano; Project West Lincoln. In 1989, when he worked for the U.S. Census Bureau, he traveled the state. He stalked women in Newton, Topeka, Manhattan, Dodge City, Pittsburg, Great Bend, Hays and Salina. Police asked him why he killed five people in 1974 and then stopped for three years. Rader wrote that he was busy with his family and work but never quit stalking. He equated it to going fishing and not being lucky. “Bottom line,” he wrote, “I was always on the prowl.” Anyone reading this book will get the impression that Rader, for all his protestations of being an apologetic Christian now, is proud of the crimes he committed. “He’s a narcissist,” Ramsland said. “There is some kind of arrested

development with narcissism. The person involved becomes very centered on childish things, becomes very ego-driven, unaware of how they affect others – and not caring.” TAUNTING NOTES Dennis Rader of Park City, Kan., was a husband and a father of two, a code enforcement officer, a Boy Scout volunteer, president of the congregation at Christ Lutheran Church – and a serial killer who tortured, strangled or suffocated 10 people from 1974 to 1991. Two victims were children. After a public silence of 25 years, BTK resurfaced in 2004 with taunting notes to The Wichita Eagle and Wichita police. Police tricked him into revealing clues to his identity 11 months later, in February 2005. “My main theme was to hang someone,” he wrote in the book. “The act of hanging was sexually exciting to me – the elements of being bound or straining with the rope or noose around the neck, legs bound, and no escape. For self-gratification, I’d hanged myself, to the point of almost passing out.” He killed no one after 1991, and police thought then that he might be dead or in prison. But in 2004, irritated by a Wichita Eagle story that implied he was being forgotten, he resurfaced, with a cryptic message to the newspaper. Police, led by Lt. Ken Landwehr, hunted him for the next 11 months. Landwehr made public statements that deliberately played to BTK’s considerable ego. Their fear, which Rader later said was justified, was that he’d kill again to show he could still do it. Their hope was that playing to his ego would encourage him to send more messages, and that in those messages he’d reveal clues to his identity. It worked; they caught him in February 2005. BTK, or Dennis Rader, or whoever he was, could no longer kill with impunity, be unknown, command terrified audiences to listen and watch and check under their beds when they came home at night. He no longer got to

play God and decide who lives and who dies. BTK would probably fail as a serial killer today, said Otis, one of the task force investigators: His signature move was to cut the phone line so his victim couldn’t call for help. Nearly everyone has a cellphone now. Women today, Otis said, are far more prone to carry handguns or pepper spray or own big dogs. When Rader saw the paw prints in the snow outside the Otero house, where he killed four people in 1974, he nearly walked away. Had he known about the dog, he wrote, “I probably would not have pursued the Oteros.” RADER GROUPIES After he got locked up in the El Dorado Correctional Facility in 2005, women began to write Rader. And he wrote back. “He has groupies – I don’t know how many,” Ramsland said. “He tells me he is very busy writing people.” Bad guys exert an appeal to the subconscious minds of some people, she said. A bad guy is an alpha male, she said. “Those who get obsessively attached – they are responding to what he represents to them. He makes them feel like they are coming near a strong person. They want that strength to radiate outward, to them.” The irony is that Rader is not a strong person, Otis said. “If he really was the Minotaur he says he is, we’d have hundreds of dead women here,” he said. There were only 10 dead, “because he was scared.” Far from being a clever and careful planner, Otis said, Rader was a klutz, frequently sloppy: He targeted Kathryn Bright as a female victim living alone, but her brother, Kevin, came home with her. Rader murdered Kathryn, but Kevin fought to save her and himself, and escaped. Rader got away with all of it for three decades in spite of what a clumsy killer he was, Otis said. This has bothered two generations of Wichita police investigators, who have wondered how a man as stupid as Rader could elude them. “He did two smart things,” said Detective Relph. “He was absolutely random about who he killed – and he kept his mouth shut. That’s key, because 86 to 88 percent of all murder victims are killed by someone they know by name. With his murders, there was no connection, no methodology, no commonality in anything he did.” Killers at random are extraordinarily hard to track down, he said. “But he’s no Hannibal Lecter,” Otis said. “He’s a sex pervert, and a pedophile. He used to cut photos of women wearing underwear or swimsuits out of JC Penney advertisements in the newspaper, and glue them to index cards, and put them on the seat of his truck. He’d name them. And then he’d drive around at work and fantasize all day. “I wish people would stop trying to talk to him,” Otis said. “In his mind, that’s an honor.” Some quotes excerpted from “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer” by Katherine Ramsland, published by ForeEdge, an imprint of University Press of New England. Roy Wenzl: 316-268-6219, @roywenzl

File photo

A letter that Dennis Rader, the BTK serial killer, wrote Eagle reporter Roy Wenzl on Aug. 9, 2016.

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

BTK’s plan to kill 11th victim disgusts police who helped capture him

‘‘

BY ROY WENZL

rwenzl@wichitaeagle.com

The BTK serial killer says he planned to kill an 11th victim in 2004, hanging her upside down in her north Wichita home. It’s a story police heard from Dennis Rader himself in 2005, and decided until now to suppress. Wichita police detectives who helped capture Rader in 2005 are disgusted by how Rader tells the story now, in a new book due out this month. They are incensed with the pride they say he exhibits as he goes into detail about the tortures he planned to inflict on the woman. “For him to reveal this information now is cruel,” said Tim Relph, a former BTK task force investigator who still works as a homicide unit detective. “But Rader is still as stuck on himself as he was in 1974, when he thought he was entitled to kill those four people in that (Otero family) house. He has no sorrow or sympathy for anyone.” The book allows BTK to carry out one more act of horror, Relph and former BTK task force investigator Kelly Otis say. The book, “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer,” goes on sale Aug. 30. Author Katherine Ramsland spent five years talking with Rader by phone and studying more than 100 letters he wrote about the 10 murders he committed between 1974 and 1991. ‘GRAND FINALE’ Ramsland wanted Rader to tell his life story in his own words. He recounts his murders in detail, including how, just before

BO RADER File photo

Wichita police Detective Tim Relph, wearing protective gloves, unfolds a nightgown worn by BTK victim Nancy Fox the night she was killed. Relph investigated the murders that were later linked to Dennis Rader and testified at his 2005 trial.

he hanged 11-year-old Josie Otero, he told her he was going to send her to heaven with her just-murdered parents. He wrote 3 1/2 pages of the book about his plans for his last kill. He doesn’t name the woman but gives a detailed description of where she lived. “This was supposed to be my opus, my grand finale, and to make it different, I would set the house on fire using propane canisters,” Rader wrote. “I had tools that I had brought along to rig up a hoist in the door

knocked on her door – and aborted his murder only because a city street crew showed up unexpectedly to work outside her house. Rader drove away, and said in the book that he planned to come back to kill her in the spring. He was captured in February. A ‘SOMBER DAY’ The problem with anything Rader says is that most of it is fantasy, including in this book, Otis said. “Did he actually get on her porch? Maybe,” Otis said. “He did provide

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FOR HIM TO REVEAL THIS INFORMATION NOW IS CRUEL. BUT RADER IS STILL AS STUCK ON HIMSELF AS HE WAS IN 1974, WHEN HE THOUGHT HE WAS ENTITLED TO KILL THOSE FOUR PEOPLE IN THAT (OTERO FAMILY) HOUSE. HE HAS NO SORROW OR SYMPATHY FOR ANYONE Tim Relph, a former BTK task force investigator

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DAUGHTER husband’s crimes until after police caught him. She has never spoken to news reporters since her husband’s arrest, and did not speak directly for this story. But those anecdotes prompted her to tell her daughter that her exhusband made up stories. The book, “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer,” goes on sale Aug. 30. Ramsland says Dennis Rader wrote most of the book, with her giving it a narrative structure and an academic purpose. She talked with Rader by phone once a week for a year and read more than 100 of his letters. Ramsland arranged for Rawson to obtain an advance copy of the book. “Dad is clearly enjoying himself here,” Rawson said. “Being interviewed. Playing up his stories, feeding his ego and his narcissism.” Reading the book upset her for a number of reasons, she said, among them that Rader spent a lot of time discussing his family life. Ramsland took this in stride, saying her purpose was to give criminologists, forensic psychologists and others some first-hand insights into a serial killer’s mind, by relating the stories he tells, and how he tells them. Rader said that twice his wife came home and

frame of her bedroom. At the bottom I was going to screw in an eye bolt for a rope attachment. Once she was secure, upside down, I would place a plastic bag over her head …” He came within minutes of killing her, he wrote. He had stalked her for years, followed her driving from work to home, watched her house at times. He says he got into her backyard and stepped onto her porch, carrying rope and a hoist to hang her. On Oct. 22, 2004, he

found him tied up and dressed as a woman. Rawson said she called her mother several weeks ago, after she read the two anecdotes about Paula surprising him in female clothes. Talking with her mother about her father is always problematic, Rawson said. “Mom is horrified by what my Dad did to those people. “So when I asked her about these stories, I said, ‘Hey, did you ever catch him dressed up like that?’ And she got real quiet. And after a few seconds she said, very quiet, “No, that never happened.’ “So I thought, well, it’s a terrible thing, what happened, so maybe Mom is just pushing it down in her memory. And when this supposedly happened, Mom’s got two little kids to raise, and is financially dependent on Dad. “So I said to her, ‘Well, Dad is pretty clear about it in what he wrote – that he dressed up in women’s slips, and in bondage.’ And Mom said, ‘No. No, no, no. That wasn’t true. It did not happen.’ ” Rader also claimed that his wife found a draft of a BTK poem written after he murdered Shirley Vian, which was intended for the police. “Shirleylocks! Shirleylocks! Wilt thou be mine. Thou shalt not screem ...” it began. “My wife actually found

my drafts on Shirleylocks,” Rader told Ramsland. “I was working on them in the living room one evening. She came home, so I quickly stuffed them in the pocket of the easy chair. I forget about them. She later, while cleaning, asked about them.” Rader says he told Paula that he and other students were studying BTK in a college class he was attending at Wichita State University. “She didn’t ask anything else about it.” Paula says this story is also made up, Rawson said. “Mom is not the type to lie,” Rawson said. “Dad has told many lies. He said different things when he was arrested, different things when he was in court, different things after he went to prison.” “He’s a psychopath,” she said. “You can’t take anything he says as truth.” Police detectives also say much of what Rader says in the book are lies or exaggerations stemming from Rader living constantly in a fantasy world. “I’ve talked to Paula several times,” said Tim Relph, one of the Wichita

‘‘

Tim Relph, former BTK task force investigator enough details that we could check out, and some of those details were true. He had her name. And we checked city records, and there was a street crew that showed up outside her house on Oct. 22, 2004.” “Rader had even made a partial drawing of this victim’s house, and a map of her neighborhood, which by the way is confusing and inaccurate, like so much of the other crap he does,” Relph said. Police suppressed most of the details of the nearmurder for the past 11 years because they feared what the shock of a public revelation might do to the woman, Relph and Otis said. “It would take a court order for us to ever divulge her name,” Relph said. “Reading some of the crap he spews out in that book makes me nauseous,” said Otis, now the

‘‘

MOM IS NOT THE TYPE TO LIE. DAD HAS TOLD MANY LIES. HE SAID DIFFERENT THINGS WHEN HE WAS ARRESTED, DIFFERENT THINGS WHEN HE WAS IN COURT, DIFFERENT THINGS AFTER HE WENT TO PRISON. Kerri Rawson, Dennis Rader’s daughter police detectives who captured Dennis Rader. “Paula is a good and decent person. If she had seen anything like that book says, she’d have told us. So if Paula says it didn’t occur – it didn’t occur.” “She’s been downplayed by some people as some sort of ignorant Christian person,” Relph added. “But her only mistake in life was to care for Dennis Rader.” Rawson grew up with her father, her mother and her brother, Brian, in Park City, where Dennis Rader worked as a code enforcement officer. ‘MAKE OF IT WHAT YOU WILL’ When asked in a letter from The Eagle whether he’d made up stories,

IT MAY BE THAT IT DIDN’T HAPPEN, BUT IN MY WORLD IT DOESN’T MATTER. WHAT MATTERS IS HOW HE TELLS HOW IT HAPPENED. Author Katherine Ramsland

IT WAS A SOMBER DAY FOR ALL OF US, DEALING WITH AN ARRAY OF EMOTION. IF YOU’RE THAT PERSON, YOU REALIZE YOU WERE IN THE SIGHTS OF A KILLER. SO WE TOLD HER THAT HE WAS NEVER GOING TO GET OUT.

Rader declined to answer, in a polite reply. Perhaps he and his family could settle this question in letters to each other, he wrote. “Not sure how Dr. Ramsland addresses this,” he wrote. Ramsland said it’s possible Rader made up or exaggerated stories. “It may be that it didn’t happen, but in my world it doesn’t matter,” she said. “What matters is how he tells how it happened. “We also know that each person who comes to the material will have their own memories, their own interpretations, their reason for why they want it to be a certain way. “And that’s OK. I’m not going to defend that it’s the truth, but to show that this is how he said it – and you can make of it what you will.” JEWELRY Another story Rawson found in the book was her father describing the sexual high he achieved while strangling Nancy Fox in 1977 – and how he says he debated afterward what to do with jewelry

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chief investigator for the Sedgwick County District Attorney. He has read much of an advance copy of Ramsland’s book. Police first heard that Rader planned an 11th murder from Rader himself, in the 33 hours they interrogated him after his capture in February 2005. They decided almost immediately to not make public the specifics. “We sat on that information,” Otis said. “And then we learned that the defense (attorneys for Rader) had hired a couple of private investigators. And of course they had the same access to the interviews with Rader that we had done. They had the recordings.” And then Lt. Ken Landwehr, who commanded the BTK task force, became concerned that the defense attorneys could contact her. Landwehr and Relph went to see the woman. “She’s a pretty tough lady, but this shook her up quite a bit,” Relph said. “It was a somber day for all of us, dealing with an array of emotion,” Relph said. “If you’re that person, you realize you were in the sights of a killer. So we told her that he was never going to get out. We assured her of that. We told her we were confident that we had the right person and that he operated alone. “She was very thankful by the time we left,” Relph said. “She was not an emotional mess. “But she was facing a realization of what could have been – kind of a bullet-that-missed mentality.” Some quotes in this story were excerpted from “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer” by Katherine Ramsland, published by ForeEdge, an imprint of University Press of New England. Roy Wenzl: 316-268-6219, @roywenzl

he stole from Fox. He thought about giving the jewelry to Paula. “I thought, no, I’m not going to give it to my wife, that’s too cruel,” Rader said in the book. “I thought about giving it to my daughter once. And I maybe did give it to my daughter. But I don’t think so. I think I still have it.” Rawson was horrified. “Thanks so much, Dad,” she said. “He gave me some of Fox’s jewelry? Crap! As far as we know, we don’t have any jewelry from murdered people. But we don’t know for sure.” Rader says in the book that he has little or no relationship to his onceclose family. “Although I’m not dead,” Rader wrote Ramsland, “to the living world and my family I’m a lost soul.” Some quotes in this story were excerpted from “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer” by Katherine Ramsland, published by ForeEdge, an imprint of University Press of New England. Roy Wenzl: 316-268-6219, @roywenzl

VIDEO

Rader’s daughter speaks out for victims at Kansas.com/video.


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Local

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

MANNY DE LOS SANTOS The Wichita Eagle

GETTING IN THE WING OF THINGS Spicy Nashville wings sit prepared for attendees during Saturday’s Wingapalooza at Intrust Bank Arena.

MANNY DE LOS SANTOS The Wichita Eagle

Chicken wing fan Jay Colucci enjoys his meal Saturday afternoon during Wingapalooza at the Intrust Bank Arena.

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Obituaries

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News

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM


Nation & World

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Chickens flock back to state fairs after last year’s bird flu outbreak Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS

Chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese are flocking back to state fairs across the country after a one-year absence due to a historic bird flu outbreak that forced a ban on live poultry exhibitions in several states. The outbreak of the highly pathogenic H5N2 avian influenza was regarded as the worst livestock disease disaster to ever hit the country, costing farmers nearly 50 million birds by the time it ended in June 2015. Iowa, the country’s top egg producer, and Minnesota, the No. 1 turkey producer, were by far the hardest hit states. But because the disease hasn’t been detected in the U.S. since the outbreak, the fairs now are allowing bird exhibitions – including competitions for

AROUND THE WORLD 22 killed, 94 hurt in wedding blast in Turkey ANKARA, TURKEY

Officials say at least 22 people were killed in a bomb attack targeting an outdoor wedding ceremony in southeastern Turkey. The governor’s office for the province of Gaziantep said 94 people were wounded in Saturday’s attack in the city of Gaziantep. Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Simsek said the “barbaric” attack appeared to be a suicide bombing. Other officials say it could have been carried out by Kurdish rebels or the Islamic State group. — ASSOCIATED PRESS

JIM MONE Associated Press

Sisters Tiana, left, and Kayla Lenzmeier pose at their North Branch, Minn., home with their special 4-H projects for last year’s Minnesota State Fair.

kids sponsored by 4-H and FFA. Tiana and Kayla Lenzmeier, who live near the east-central Minnesota town of North Branch, grew up in 4-H, and their 10-year-old sister, Ella, is following in their footsteps. But the two older girls missed out on the chance to show their birds

last year after the Minnesota State Fair canceled its poultry exhibitions. The sisters were disappointed, but they jumped at the chance to make special projects to display at last year’s fair instead. And they said what they learned during the hiatus is helping them now as they get ready for

the latest operation near the Afghan border. The military says its warplanes also destroyed an ammunition dump used by militants in the Khyber tribal region. It provided no further details about Saturday’s strikes, and the information could not be independently confirmed as journalists are barred from entering tribal areas. The military says it has killed 35 militants in the latest operation, which was launched in Khyber earlier this week.

held capital, Sanaa, was in support of a new combined governing council the rebels and Saleh announced last month, but which was immediately rejected by the internationally recognized government and the United Nations. Saleh was forced to step down in 2012 amid Arab Spring protests after more than three decades in power. Yemen’s war pits troops and militiamen loyal to the government, backed by a Saudi-led coalition, against the Shiite rebels and Saleh loyalists. The Houthis captured Sanaa in 2014, and the U.S.-backed coalition began its offensive against them in March 2015.

— ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thousands rally in Yemen SANAA, YEMEN

— ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis marched Saturday in support of Shiite Houthi rebels and their ally, former president Ali Abdullah Saleh. The march in the rebel-

Kerry heading to Africa

the fair, which opens Thursday. “Everybody is very glad to have poultry back,” said Marla Calico, president and CEO of the Missouribased International Association of Fairs and Expositions. Fairs had no choice last year because of the need to protect the country’s food supply, Calico said. But they rose to the challenge and came up with innovative ways to let the affected kids participate anyway, she added. Tiana Lenzmeier, 17, will be showing market geese this year. Since she couldn’t show her birds last year, she did her alternative project on the digestive system and poultry nutrition. “We had the opportunity to learn about our birds in depth, and I think it helps us with showmanship,” she said. “We were handed a whole bushel of lemons and somehow figured out how to make it into lemonade,” said Brad Rugg, director of fairs and animal science programs for Minnesota 4-H. Rugg expects only a slight decrease in poultry showings this year compared with a normal 250 birds. One reason for the

Kerry will be in Africa on Monday for talks in Kenya and Nigeria on countering terrorism before visiting Saudi Arabia to discuss the conflict in Yemen. Kerry first meets with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on regional issues including the upheaval in neighboring South Sudan and security in Somalia, where homegrown, al-Qaida-linked extremist group al-Shabab continues to launch deadly attacks in the capital. On his last visit to the region in May 2015, Kerry became the first secretary of state to set foot in Somalia two decades after dead U.S. soldiers were dragged through the streets of its capital, Mogadishu. It was a symbolic visit to show support for the Horn of Africa nation’s fledgling government.

dip is that some kids switched last year to rabbits or other animals that weren’t affected by the ban and stuck with them. Poultry returned to the Iowa State Fair earlier this

month. Participation was down “just a few,” said Derek Straube, superintendent of the fair’s FFA Poultry Show.

Continued from previous page Zach, Thomas Joseph 58, passed away Saturday, August 13, 2016. Private family services will be held at a later date. Tom collected artwork, and as his collection grew, he donated items to school libraries, museums, and gifted to friends and family to encourage the arts, diversity, and cultural appreciation. He was very ambitious, working multiple jobs and volunteering his time keeping up church gardens. He had an unending list of people that he loved to correspond with. Tom was known for his generosity, intellectual nature, wit and wisdom, humor and ability to overcome many obstacles in life. He was preceded in death by mother, Margaret Mary Zach; brother, Mark Zach; and brother-in-law, Ron Classen. Survivors include father, Erwin Zach of Genoa, NE; siblings, Cathi (Larry) Beiermann of Columbus, NE, Lyle (Kim) Zach of Elkhorn, NE, Mary Beth Classen and fiance Paul Wietfeld of Humphrey, NE, Brenda (Terry) Eller of Shelby, NE, Ed (Tawny) Zach of Cortland, NE, Ann (Kelly) Thieman of Randolph, NE and Roy Zach of Genoa, NE. Share online condolences at www.CozineMemorial.com. Arrangements by Broadway Mortuary.

CLEARWATER-Bloomer, Jane F. (Kountz) Age, 77, Office Manager for Kansas Plastics, passed away Wednesday, August 17, 2016. Visitation, 1-4 p.m. Sunday, at Webb-Shinkle Mortuary. Rosary, 7 p.m. Sunday; Funeral Mass, 10:30 a.m. Monday, BOTH at St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church, Schulte. Preceded by her parents, Merrill and Marie (Dueser) Kountz; sons, James and Keith Bloomer; sister, Marilyn Merkel. Survivors: husband, Richard; children, Nancy Quaney of Wichita, Paul Bloomer of Clearwater, Brian Bloomer of Phoenix, AZ, Amy (Jason) O’Byrne of Wichita; brother, Jack (Nancy) Kountz of Wichita; sisters, Helen Wilson of Hutchinson, Carol (Ken) Ratzlaff of Buhler; 8 grandchildren; 3 great-grandchildren. Memorial: Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, 6811 Shawnee Mission Pkwy, Ste 202, Shawnee Mission, KS 66202. www.wsmortuary.com

NEWTON-Ruebke, Don 52, died August 15, 2016. Beloved husband of Michelle, father of ten, and grandfather of six. He was an executive at Spirit Aerosystems. The memorial service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, August 23, at Grace Community Church, Newton. Memorials can be sent in Don’s memory to The Citizens State Bank.

— ASSOCIATED PRESS NAIROBI, KENYA

Secretary of State John

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Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said Saturday that his country is willing to accept a role for Syrian President Bashar Assad during a transitional period but insisted he has no place in Syria’s future. The comments came after Assad’s forces began attacking Kurdish positions this week, leading some Kurdish officials to speculate that a SyrianTurkish rapprochement was underway at the expense of Kurdish autonomy in northern Syria. Turkey is one of the main supporters of rebels fighting to overthrow Assad, and hosts more than 2.7 million Syrian refugees. But Istanbul is concerned about the growing power of U.S.backed Syrian Kurdish forces across the border and opposes any moves toward Kurdish autonomy or independence.

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WHAT ULTIMATELY HAPPENED WAS AS I GOT ABOUT HALFWAY UP, MY HANDS BEGAN TO FREEZE. Glenn Nyberg, mountaineer

course of about five days, he traveled by jeep into Tibet and to Chinese Base Camp, which is about 16,000 feet above sea level. Climbers then trekked to Advanced Base Camp, at 18,500 feet. Guided by four sherpas and expedition leader Dan Mazur, the climbers began a process of ascending and descending, setting up tents and equipment at different points along the way. “You slowly make your way up and up and up until you reach a certain elevation, and then you come all the way back down to Advanced Base Camp and you rest, and you wait for a window,” Nyberg said. That window is when the forecast predicts the best climbing conditions.

GLENN NYBERG Courtesy photo

Glenn Nyberg stands on Cho Oyu in the Himalayas, the sixth-highest mountain in the world. Mount Everest is in the background.

WICHITAN SURVIVES FROSTBITE, BLEEDING

Climb a test for mountaineer Glenn Nyberg of Wichita had just tackled a nearly 27,000foot mountain, but it was the journey ahead that would prove the most difficult. BY MORGAN BELL

The Wichita Eagle

lenn Nyberg had just reached the top of Tibet’s Cho Oyu, the sixth-highest mountain in the world and the highest he had ever climbed. It was Sept. 29, 2014, and in the distance he could see Mount Everest. “It was a beautiful morning,” Nyberg said. But something was wrong. As he waited on the peak for the rest of his climbing party, minutes turned into more than an hour. Nyberg took off his gloves and noticed his fingers were discolored from the extreme cold. Another medical problem brewed – complications from an ulcer in his stomach – that would sap his energy and threaten his life. Nyberg had tackled a nearly 27,000-foot mountain, but the journey ahead would prove more difficult.

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YOU ‘PUSH YOURSELF’ Nyberg’s journey to the top of Cho Oyu began long before 2014. Nyberg, 58, started climbing in his mid-20s. He has climbed about 50 of the 14,000-foot mountains in Colorado, where he first started backpacking. It’s the challenge that Nyberg

GLENN NYBERG Courtesy photo

This photo shows one of the advance base camps that Glenn Nyberg stayed at on his ascent of Cho Oyu in the Himalayas. As the altitude got higher and the air thinner, the climbers got weaker.

said he loves. “(You) push yourself to a point where you don’t think you can really go much further, and then you just continue to go,” he said from his home in College Hill. “To me, that’s part of the experience, getting to the top.” His first experience with glacier climbing was on Mount Rainier in Washington, and he also has climbed three mountains in Ecuador, one in Mexico, one in Chile, Aconcagua in Argentina and Machu Picchu in Peru. “Leaving the country gets you involved in other cultures, other environments, and you get out-

side of your comfort zone,” Nyberg said. “You get to experience those other cultures, and you also get to climb.” His expedition to the top of Cho Oyu, through the company SummitClimb, began Sept. 1, 2014, and the team’s goal was to reach the summit around Oct. 1. His team had experienced climbers from around the world: China, Germany, Sweden, Portugal, Iceland, Austria, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. His wife, Camille, didn’t want him to make the climb. She worried about his safety.

“I had a fear in my heart,” Camille said to her husband during a recent interview. “I didn’t want you to get hurt, but still even then, there was no way for me to imagine the scope of the injuries that you had when you came back.” FINDING A WINDOW The journey to the top of a mountain like Cho Oyu requires climbers to get acclimated to the increasing elevation. Kathmandu, where Nyberg landed in Nepal, is about 4,500 feet above sea level, and the trip up from there is slow. Over the

THE ‘DEATH ZONE’ Once they climbed to 24,400 feet, Nyberg and most other climbers started to use supplemental oxygen. “From there on up, it is the ‘Death Zone,’ ” he said. The level of oxygen in the air is only about one-third the level at normal altitudes, Nyberg said. As the altitude got higher and the air thinner, the climbers got weaker. They burned about 8,000 to 12,000 calories a day, but it was hard to eat at such high altitudes, and they had little appetite. “You’re slowly wearing your body down, and you’re losing a lot of weight and it’s pretty much muscle,” Nyberg said. “So that’s having an effect on you. “Mentally it’s dragging you down … so I don’t think anybody’s feeling that good at that point,” he said. Around 11:30 p.m. on Sept. 28, Nyberg and his team left camp to make their final push to the summit. “It’s really good conditions,” Nyberg said. “And when I tell you this, it’s 15-below temperature, and the winds are blowing maybe 30 or 35 miles per hour, which is good climbing conditions for that elevation.” But problems soon began for Nyberg. He had been taking his thick outer gloves off to better manipulate his climbing gear. Though he had liners underneath, they didn’t provide enough protection. “What ultimately happened was as I got about halfway up, my hands began to freeze,” Nyberg said. Frostbite had begun. “It really didn’t occur to me because my hands had been cold before – hunting, snow skiing, being out in the cold – and I just didn’t think that much of it,” Nyberg said. SEE CLIMB, 2B VIDEO

Glenn Nyberg talks about his harrowing experience while mountain climbing in the Himalayas at kansas.com/video.

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attached in case he fell. They arrived at Camp One, at 20,450 feet, around dark.

GLENN NYBERG Courtesy photo

Glenn Nyberg with a nurse at a hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, after he became ill during a Himalayan climbing trip. Nyberg returned to Nepal in June to thank his caregivers.

FROM PAGE 1B

CLIMB Nyberg reached the summit of Cho Oyu around 7:30 a.m. on Sept. 29, his wedding anniversary. “That’s how I remember that day,” he said. But something was wrong. “When I got to the top of Aconcagua down in South America, I remember feeling very elated and emotional up there. I just had this great feeling,” Nyberg said. “That wasn’t the case when I got up (to Cho Oyu).” He had reached the summit before the other members of his team, so an exhausted Nyberg waited for the slower climbers. “I sat there for a long time, what ultimately became about an hour and 20 minutes … which is way too long to spend on the summit,” he said.

As Nyberg waited, he inspected his fingers. They were light blue. “The main thing at that point was to get everything covered up and to get down as soon as we could,” Nyberg said. “If you can get down quick, you’ll have a better chance.” Little did he know, he also had an ulcer causing him to bleed internally. ‘SOMETHING HIT ME’ Tired and physically exhausted, Nyberg knew it was time to descend. Nyberg was again ahead of the others in his group, but he collapsed within sight of the camp they had left 18 hours earlier. “Something hit me, and I just fell over,” he said. Other climbers who passed him asked whether he was OK, and he said he

just needed to rest. “It took me a long time to get that final 100 yards down to our camp,” he said. Nyberg needed help to get his backpack off and crawled into his tent to rest. Mazur, the expedition leader, cared for him through the night and watched his condition worsen. “That’s when I got really sick and started bleeding out,” Nyberg said. The morning of Sept. 30, Mazur assigned the strongest sherpa, Tenji, to help Nyberg down the mountain. “The sherpas did a lot,” Mazur said. “They deserve a lot of credit on this whole thing.” But the internal bleeding was draining Nyberg. Two members of Nyberg’s team abandoned their push to the summit to help him. They helped to short-rope Nyberg down, keeping him in front of them with ropes

BARTERING FOR LIFE When it was time to leave Camp One, Nyberg crawled out of his tent, raised up, blacked out and hit his head on a rock. After a short rest, he tried again — and blacked out again. “At that point, I don’t know how I’m going to get out of here,” Nyberg said. Helicopter evacuations are forbidden by the government in Tibet. Mazur, with the help of sherpas, began negotiating with Tibetan porters – who carry equipment up and down the mountain – trying to broker a deal to persuade the porters to carry Nyberg down the mountain. “I would basically sit on their backs at the base of

‘‘

THE SHERPAS DID A LOT. THEY DESERVE A LOT OF CREDIT ON THIS WHOLE THING. Dan Mazur, expedition leader their lower back and straddle them, put my arms over them, and they would begin to carry me as far as they could,” Nyberg said. Nyberg didn’t think about death. “I had too many reasons to get down,” he said. “… That didn’t ever enter into my mind. Not at all.” Once they made it to Advanced Base Camp, the porters would not go any farther. So another deal was

brokered with other porters to get Nyberg farther down the mountain. “These guys wanted to be paid before they moved me much further down the mountain,” Nyberg said. More than 18,000 feet in the air and battling for his life, Nyberg was out of cash, so the porters used a satellite phone to make a credit card transaction. But Nyberg’s credit card was declined. It had expired. He handed over his debit card, and it was accepted. The process of carrying Nyberg down the mountain began again. Nyberg’s feet were fine at Advanced Base Camp, but while there, someone had taken his leather boots off and put on his trekking shoes, which are lighter hiking shoes. He said he doesn’t know why. SEE CLIMB, 4B

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Most limits on U.S.-Mexico flights are about to be lifted Associated Press DALLAS

Most restrictions on flights between the U.S. and Mexico will lift on Sunday, a change expected to bring more options and possibly lower prices for travelers. American, Delta and Southwest have already announced that they will offer new flights across the border later this year. United is watching the demand for flights and will respond accordingly, a spokesman said. The United States and Mexico agreed in Decem-

between the U.S. and many destinations in Mexico are already low, but both countries impose taxes that inflate the price of a ticket. “The fares are low, it’s the rest that makes it seem expensive,” he said. For example, on a round trip between Dallas-Fort Worth and Cancun, Mexico – already a popular route – taxes and fees can account for between 20 and 30 percent of the price of a bargain, economy-class ticket of $383 to $585. Southwest promoted fares as low as $258 round trip, though seats were limited and the offer was scheduled to end Sunday. The agreement between the U.S. and Mexico does not relax limits on takeoffs and landings at Mexico City’s busy main international airport. So the first new flights from U.S. carriers will focus on resort towns.

ber to open their aviation markets to each other’s carriers. Rules that had generally limited two or three airlines from each country to a particular route will go away. Airlines on both sides of the border will be able to fly whatever routes they want as often as they want and set their own prices, said Thomas Engle, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for transportation. “This will help reduce airfares for sure,” said George Hobica, founder of the travel site airfarewatchdog.com. Hobica said base fares

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Return to post-earthquake Nepal Glenn Nyberg wants to bring something back to Nepal and is researching the possibility of building a school in the village of Patle. BY MORGAN BELL

The Wichita Eagle

An earthquake wrecked the country of Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world, on April 25, 2015. More than 8,500 people died. Glenn Nyberg was talking with people in the country and watching drone videos of the car-

nage. “It’s just resonating with me about how bad it is,” Nyberg said. He made plans to return to Nepal, and last June flew back to Kathmandu. He wanted to find the doctors and nurses who cared for him while he was in the hospital there after his near-fatal mountain climbing accident in 2014. But he also wanted to visit the sherpa villages and assess the damage caused by the earthquake. More than a year after the quake, Nepal is still trying to recover. “Nepal is a country

that’s been forgotten, if you ask me,” Nyberg said. He went back through an earthquake service trek organized by Dan Mazur, his expedition leader. He reconnected with his caregivers and the lead sherpa during his climb, Jangbu. With Jangbu, he visited the “wrong side of Everest,” where no tourists go. It took an 11.5-hour jeep ride and an extensive hike to reach Jangbu’s village of Patle, which is home to around 4,000 people spread out through the hills. People were living in handmade temporary

FERNANDO SALAZAR The Wichita Eagle

Glenn Nyberg, shown with his wife, Camille, in their Wichita home, recently returned from Nepal, where he went to thank the doctors, nurses and sherpa who saved his life.

FROM PAGE 2B

CLIMB On the way down, the wind was blowing hard off the mountain, mainly hitting Nyberg’s outside foot, his right foot. “What that move did is it cost me my toes.” About 48 hours from when they originally left camp to summit, Nyberg and the others finally reached a beat-up road. After two rides on motorcycles and another in a jeep, they checked into a hotel at the Tibet-Nepal border. It was 3 a.m., so they couldn’t cross. In his room, Nyberg saw discoloration in his toes, just like his fingers. He called his wife. “I knew something was wrong,” Camille said, “because I said, ‘Did you summit?’ and he said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Congratulations, I’m so proud of you.’ And it was silent. “He said, ‘It wasn’t worth it.’ That’s when my heart went. I knew something was wrong, and he said he was sick.” ONLY THE BEGINNING Nyberg finally reached a hospital in Kathmandu, and his plan was to have his frostbite treated and then go home. The doctor told him that if he left, he would die. He needed a transfusion, but he didn’t want to have one in Nepal. So he got his family doctor on the phone, who told him to get the transfusion immediately. Over the course of the next week, Nyberg waited for his hemoglobin levels to return to normal while the nurses treated his frostbite. He said he underwent five blood transfusions in Kathmandu. With his hands wrapped up, he wasn’t able to do anything, so the nurses bathed and fed him. “These nurses were unbelievable,” Nyberg said. ‘ALL HELL BROKE LOOSE’ On Oct. 7, 2014, Ca-

mille tried to tell security at Wichita’s airport that her husband was sick and would need help when he landed, but they wouldn’t let her pass. “I see him come around in his wheelchair, and he was just a shadow of what I remember,” she said. “The guy tried to push him in the wheelchair to me, and he pushed the guy away. “He gets up out of that

wheelchair – I don’t know how he did it – and walked down the ramp to meet me.” Nyberg’s first night back in the U.S. was difficult for them both. He just wanted to go home and rest. “He was adamant that he was fine,” Camille said. Two blackouts and a phone call with a doctor convinced Nyberg that he needed to go back to the hospital. His internal bleeding was back. “I knew that we were going to be in for a long haul,” Camille said. “I knew that from the time I

structures. They could not live in their homes because they weren’t safe, but if they started any rebuilding efforts, they would be disqualified from receiving relief money from the government. While there, Nyberg stayed in a tent outside Jangbu’s house. They visited schools that were destroyed by the earthquake and delivered medical supplies to the clinics. “What I witnessed back in this village was staggering,” Nyberg said. “They’re getting by, and they’re doing fine and they don’t whine.

“They are such hard people, all the way from kids all the way up … but it can be so much better.” Nyberg wants to bring something back to Nepal, and his focus is Patle. He is hoping to work with Mazur through the Mount Everest Foundation to research the possibility of building a school to help change lives. “They want a better life for their children,” Nyberg said of Patle’s residents. “They understand it’s hard.” He is in the process of creating a plan, and he hopes to eventually lead a

saw him get off the airplane. He was so frail, thin. “You never think that’s the way he’s going to come back.” Forty pounds lighter than when he left for Nepal, Nyberg was weak and in the burn unit at Via Christi Hospital St. Francis in Wichita. His frostbite was similar to the type of burns treated there. The doctors had treated his bleeding ulcer again. But he began to vomit blood in the middle of the night, and things happened quickly after that. “All hell broke loose,” Nyberg said. His ulcer had pressed down on an artery and infected it, causing it to burst. He heard the surgeon say: “I’m losing him.” “I looked over at (Camille), and I said, ‘Tell my kids I love them.’ ” Nyberg woke up hooked to tubes. The surgeons had stopped the bleeding, and Nyberg spent the next

two weeks in the hospital. He received more blood transfusions than he did in Nepal. Camille slept at the

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REAL ESTATE All Real Estate advertising is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to indicate any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for Real Estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe that you may have been discriminated against in connection with the sale, rental or financing of housing, call The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at 1-800-669-9777.

150 S. Gorin, Clearwater, Ks Look at this 4 bedroom 1786 sq. ft. home with detached 2 car garage, lots of mature trees. New roof. Call Katie Ternes at 316-524-8345

Gene Francis & Associates Real Estate Brokers 18 acre building site located 1 mile west of Viola convenience store on K-42 and ½ mile south. Radio tower lease of $3500 per year goes with property. Sedgwick Co. Rural Electric service is to the property. Small pond. Conway Springs schools. Call Gene Francis at 524-8345 120 acres located just southwest of Wichita. Located ½ mile west of 31st St & 135th . Blanket silt loam soils. Excellent location. Call Gene Francis at 524-8345

All Real Estate advertising is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to indicate any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for Real Estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe that you may have been discriminated against in connection with the sale, rental or financing of housing, call The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at 1-800-669-9777.

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AUCTIONS Consignment Gun & Sporting Goods Auction Saturday, Oct. 15, 9 am Gene Francis Auction Facility 12140 W. K-42 Hwy, Wichita Call 316-524-8345 to consign your guns, mounts, wildlife art, reloading equipment to our semiannual gun & sporting goods auction. Already consigned one estate with a large amount of fishing equipment. We will limit guns to the first 350 consigned.

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Elwood Zuercher Whitewater,Ks Auction location: Southside of Whitewater on Hwy 196 Saturday, Sept. 24 10:00 am Allis Chalmers tractors7040,7010, 190XT,190, D17,WD45, Gleaner L2 combine, gravity flow grain box , IHC grain drill 20 x8, Kelley Ryan feedwagons, JD 7000 planter, 1979 Ford grain truck, 1965 Ford grain truck, 1974 Chev ½ T pu, 1989 Ford pickup, JD silage cutter, IHC manure spreaders, Krause foldup offset discs, lots of metal wheels, anvil, AC baler small round, feed grinder, Artsway feed grinder, lots of salvage. Much more. Consignments welcome.

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fundraising campaign. “You see the faces of these kids, and you look at so much potential,” Nyberg said. “They don’t have that opportunity, and that’s what you want to try to give somebody, just an opportunity.” Nyberg said that every day, he thinks of the people of Nepal. “All I have to do is get up and look at where I am physically, and that’s a reminder of what happened, so that brings me back to Nepal and brings me back to the people of Nepal,” he said. “My experience opened my eyes to the unconditional kindness and compassion of the Nepalese and sherpa people, and for that I am grateful.”

Gun & Sporting Goods Auction Saturday, Sept 17, 10:00 am Gene Francis Auction Facility 12140 W. K-42 Hwy Wichita, KS Private collection of nearly 100 guns lots of Winchester and Marlin guns, mounts, quality wildlife art, goose shells, duck decoys, 2 – ATV’s, 2004 Chev. Tahoe Danali

Wichita State University is seeking comments about the University in preparation for its periodic evaluation by its regional accrediting agency. The University will host a visit October 10–11, 2016, with a team representing the Higher Learning Commission. Wichita State University has been accredited by HLC since 1927. The team will review the institution’s ongoing ability to meet HLC’s Criteria for Accreditation. Interested parties are invited to submit comments regarding the university to the following address: Public Comment on Wichita State University Higher Learning Commission 230 South LaSalle Street, Suite 7-500 Chicago, IL 60604-1411 The public may also submit comments on HLC’s website at www.hlcommission.org/comment Comments must address substantive matters related to the quality of the institution or its academic programs. Comments must be in writing.

All comments must be received by September 12, 2016.


Insight

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

5B

FROM PAGE 4B

CLIMB “I was afraid to leave him because he couldn’t push a call button,” Camille said. “He had nothing.” Nyberg had his first amputation about five weeks after leaving St. Francis. He and Camille decided to have doctors from the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City evaluate and treat his frostbite. “There’s nothing you can do about it, so you just have to accept it,” Nyberg said. Doctors were able to save his left foot, but they had to remove the toes on his right foot. Within a week, they amputated each finger. They removed the tips of two fingers, some at the middle knuckle and others below that. Not knowing what was going to happen was the hardest part. “The unknown was how I was going to be able to live my life with what I was going to have left,” Nyberg said. ‘A DAY LASTED A WEEK’ Nyberg began physical and occupational therapy about a month after his last amputation. The therapists came three days a week and at first simply worked to help him retain the flexibility in his hands, stretching and pulling the parts of his fingers he had left. Then he began working on his balance, and by Christmas, Nyberg could walk down the stairs. “At the time, it seemed like it was forever,” Camille said. “Like a day lasted a week.” But also around Christ-

mas, the therapists stopped coming, and by January 2015, Nyberg was back at IMA Financial Group working half days. By February, he was working full time and was once again able to drive. He retired from IMA last January. “People are resilient. They really are,” Camille said. “You have a weakness, and you use one of your strengths to overcome.” After Nyberg accepted his amputations, it was just a matter of adjusting to a new way of doing things. Small tasks were the most difficult. “I had to learn how to tie my shoes, which sounds pretty easy, but I couldn’t do it for awhile. And button my buttons,” Nyberg said. “But just over time, you learn how to do it.” Gradually, Nyberg was able to get back into the physical activities he was doing before his climb. First, he started swimming, and from there, he began lifting weights and riding his bike. His hands still hurt, and he has to be careful in the cold, but everything is basically back to normal. “There are some things I don’t do the same as I did before, but I can’t really think of anything

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Glenn Nyberg, middle, poses with members of his climbing expedition on Cho Oyu in the Himalayas in 2014. Cho Oyu is the sixth-highest mountain in the world.

that I was doing before that I’m not doing now,” Nyberg said. During the summer of 2015, he made a few trips to Colorado, where he climbed some 14,000-foot mountains with his 25year-old daughter, Morgan. He has been backpacking and climbing with her since she was 5. They planned to climb again in Colorado this month. “We’re climbing a difficult mountain that I won’t let her climb by herself,” Nyberg said. Camille said it was her husband’s determination that not only got him up the mountain, but back

down and through all of the hardships. “He’s humble in that

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 7 will begin the Sixth Five-Year Review for the Johns’ Sludge Pond Superfund Site Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will begin the sixth five-year review for the Johns’ Sludge Pond Superfund Site. The review is required by the Superfund law to make sure completed cleanups continue to protect human health and the environment. This five-year review should be completed by September 2017. EPA encourages community members to ask questions and report any concerns about this site. A final report will be prepared at the end of the review. EPA has assessed the ability of the local public to access the five-year review through an internet-based repository and has determined that the local community has this ability. As a result the sixth five-year review for this site will be available through an internet site once completed. Questions or requests for site information and/or the five-year-review process can be submitted to: Pamela Houston U.S. EPA Community Engagement Specialist Toll-free: 800-223-0425 Email: houston.pamela@epa.gov Additional site information is available at the following website: www.epa.gov/superfund/johnssludgepond

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6B

Opinion

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

FACEBOOK.COM/WICHITAEAGLE » TWITTER.COM/KANSASDOTCOM

Ramsay wants police to step up Eagle Editorial Board

o his credit, Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay is taking ownership of the role police have played in the unfair treatment of many African-Americans over the years. But even more significantly, he wants the police to step up and help fix the problem – including going beyond what many people might consider the police’s responsibility. In a commentary he wrote with community activist Djuan Wash that was published on these pages last Sunday, Ramsay acknowledged how “for generations communities of color have faced disparities in health care, education, employment, arrests and incarceration.” He also noted that “long-term mistrust between police and communities of color continues to this day.” Ramsay, Wash and others have been working on various police reforms, including the addition of body cameras, the creation of a citizens’ review board, and the development of cultural competency and diversity training of police officers. Ramsay also pledged to seek legislative approval for independent prosecutorial review of officerinvolved shootings. But what was most striking in the commentary was the call for police to help address economic and social disparities. “Now is the time for police to help lead the way in furthering accountability and transparency along with a conscious effort to recognize and help address the economic divide within these communities,” Ramsay and Wash wrote. How might police help address the economic divide? Ramsay responded in an e-mail to the Eagle editorial board that Wichita police are already doing some of that through efforts such as the Homeless Outreach Team. “They are working with community resources to stabilize individuals in crisis and get them on track with treatment, housing

T

Wichita Police Chief Gordon Ramsay talks to residents at a community cookout in July.

and employment opportunities,” he said. Police also are having discussions about how petty traffic charges can impact someone’s driver’s license and pocket book, and whether they should use more discretion in ticketing for minor traffic violations. And when dealing with youth and petty ordinance violations, police should consider options such as mentoring, guiding and coaching rather than citations, Ramsay said. “Let’s divert kids from the system whenever possible,” he said. Such outreach and reforms also can benefit police. Ramsay and Wash noted in the commentary that “issues of misguided policies, poverty and mental illness are straining police resources and are positioning officers to be the weekly news story.” But Ramsay believes police have a larger responsibility, because they “have become the government entity for many of the social problems we face.” Police can’t solve all these problems. Many of them require state and national actions, as well as help from churches and charities and personal responsibility. But as Ramsay realizes, police have an important role in bridging the divide. “Whether medical, employment, housing, education, we must recognize how these go hand and hand with disparities in the criminal justice system,” Ramsay said. “We need to lead our way out of the place where we are today.”

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Don’t sit out the next election What has our wonderful and beautiful country come to? Look at our choice in candidates for president. Again, it’s a choice of two evils. I’m not going to tell you whom I’m voting for, nor am I going to try and influence your vote. The main thing is get off your backside and vote. Only 17 percent of the eligible voters in Sedgwick County voted in the August primary. That’s just plain stupid. Somewhere in your background, it’s likely that you or one or more of your ancestors fought for this country and your right to vote. You dishonor their memory by not voting. I know Kansas is a red state, but stop and think about the candidates. Don’t pull that handle just because of the “R” by the name. Look what that got you for governor, twice. While I’m ranting, was that not a stupid statement by a local GOP leader, who said to “hold your nose” and vote for Donald Trump? That’s what I’m talking about, folks. – Dave Wessel, Wichita

NOW CONSIDER THIS STATE’S JULY JOB GROWTH RATE WAS WORST IN NATION There is no way to put a positive spin on Kansas’ latest job numbers. The state lost 5,600 seasonally adjusted nonfarm jobs in July, and it has 4,500 fewer jobs now than it did 12 months ago. Kansas’ job growth rate for July was -0.4 percent, which tied for worst in the nation. Its job growth rate for the past 12 months was -0.3 percent, the fifth worst in the nation. The state’s unemployment rate, while still very low, also got worse, increasing from 3.8 percent in June to 4.1 percent. Kansas lost 4,600 private-sector jobs in July, with the largest decrease in the professional and business services sector. Gov. Sam Brownback set a goal of adding 25,000 jobs each year of his second term. So far, Kansas is going the opposite direction. PROVIDER TAX COULD BE BETTER THAN MEDICAID CUTS The day after his administration canceled five public meetings aimed at gathering reaction to the imposition of a 4 percent cut to Medicaid providers, Gov. Sam Brownback announced last week that he wants to reverse the cut. Instead, he wants to increase a provider tax on hospitals. The move could be better than the reimbursement cut, because it would allow the state to draw additional federal funding. But it is a Band-Aid on the real problem, which is the state’s loss of revenue due to excessive tax cuts. Kansas collected nearly $600 million less in tax revenue this past fiscal year than it did in 2013. Also, if Brownback really wants to help hospitals and low-income Kansans, he would reserve his opposition to Medicaid expansion. POMPEO: OBAMA RESPONSIBLE FOR EXPANSION OF ISIS Donald Trump has been roundly criticized for his claims that President Obama and Hillary Clinton co-founded ISIS. But Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Wichita, argued that Trump has a point. Speaking recently on Fox New Radio, Pompeo acknowledged that ISIS was founded in Egypt. But he argued that Obama “has done far too little to push back against this threat of radical Islamic terrorism, and in that way, Mr. Pompeo Trump has it right.” Pompeo also contends that the Obama administration has “allowed this to expand and threaten us here at home and throughout the west, and for that he is responsible.” – Phillip Brownlee

Established 1872 Incorporating the Wichita Beacon

Cuts affect care KanCare, Home and Community Based Services, and other state-funded programs have come with a lot of unfulfilled promises. The current clearinghouse in Topeka is doing anything but clearing through applications or questions. The system is backed up, and calls are not answered or even returned. Additionally, the state has not given long-term care an increase in Medicaid rates since 2011. 2016 finally brought a rate increase of 8 percent. But because legislators ended their session with an unbalanced budget, the governor took 4.47 percent of that 8 percent increase to balance the budget. The result is that long-term care is getting only a 3.53 percent increase, which equates to an average 0.706 percent increase over the past five years. The cost of care continues to rise, but providers don’t get paid for it. Long-term care is not the only field taking a huge hit from the governor’s budget cuts. It’s more important than ever to stay educated on current issues, as these cuts affect all of us. Get to know your elected officials. Grassroots efforts do make a difference. – Shelby Shaw, Moundridge

The state has been shunning the private and home-schooled children for decades. Yet they continually extract tax money from the parents of these kids to educate public school children who will compete against their children in the workplace. This is fair? The fairest thing is school vouchers so that the money follows the student. The irony is that vouchers effectively already exist for the magnate school students. How to make vouchers happen? In late August, the day after the public school budgets are finalized, parents of the private/home school students should take their students to the nearest public school and insist that they be enrolled, and be prepared to leave their students there until vouchers are available or new fully staffed schools are built. This will show how much money the private schools/ home scholars have been saving the state and the cost it would to accommodate them. Hopefully, some organization or someone will organize this effort.

the Washington establishment. The mainly white supporters of Donald Trump have turned from protest mode to mob mode because of the irresponsible rhetoric of Trump. Trump has advocated action that would violate the Constitution and laws of the land. He has proposed acts that are in deep conflict with our national values. He has railed against races and religions that are not his own. He admires dictators. The list goes on. Trump is not qualified in any way to be president. A percentage of protesters, no matter what they are protesting, can be incited to destructive behavior as a means of venting their frustrations. Reasonable people know this behavior is not the solution. Imagine the destruction of our country’s economy and values that would result from electing Trump. So we have a group of voters (primarily white) who would elect an egomaniac whose stated policies would destroy our country. The phenomena has developed into a race riot. Let’s call it what it is. – Dwayne Jennings, Derby

– Richard A. Hopper, Derby

Overcome self Jesus summarized God’s Ten Commandments with just two: Love God above all things and love your neighbor as yourself. Both of these commandments tell us to love. That’s all God asks us to do. Yet no one keeps these commandments perfectly, as Jesus did. We are born with a natural desire to focus on ourselves. Christians spend their lives trying to overcome this desire to put ourselves first, but because it is our nature, we cannot do it without God’s help. That is what faith in God’s grace does for us. How well we have accomplished this surrendering of our free will to God’s will is the true measure of a person’s faith. Because I hold these beliefs, the more self-centered and egocentric candidates are at election time, the less likely I am to vote for them. The more they recognize their own limitations, the less prideful they are, the more they trust in God, and the more they place the needs of others before their own selfish needs, the more likely I am to vote for them. Using these criteria, I don’t think I could ever vote for Donald Trump. – Chris Anderson, Wichita

Don’t elect Clinton Democrats need to pull their heads out of the sand and not elect Hillary Clinton for president. Think about how she lied to Congress about Benghazi and her e-mails and how she is lying about how great the economy is today. Clinton should never be given any classified security clearance, much less the key for our nukes. If she were to be elected, our Second Amendment rights would be in jeopardy, the coal industry would shut down, and our borders would effectively be wide open for anyone to enter our country (even ISIS). It would be another four years of President Obama. To save our country, vote for Donald Trump. He may not be a proven politician, but at least he is telling the truth and wants to make American great again. – R. Miller, Haysville YOUR OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Include your full name, home address and phone number for verification purposes. All letters are edited for clarity and length; 200 words or fewer are best. Letters may be published in any format and become the property of The Eagle. A

A

Need vouchers Many say that the state isn’t treating all Kansas school children fairly. I agree.

Roy Heatherly Publisher & President

Trump phenomena The phenomena started as a protest by primary election voters against current economic conditions and the policies of

Steve Coffman Executive Editor

A

Mail: Letters to the Editor, The Wichita Eagle, 825 E. Douglas, Wichita, KS 67202 E-mail: letters@wichitaeagle.com Fax: 316-269-6799

For more information, contact Phillip Brownlee at 316-268-6262, pbrownlee@wichitaeagle.com.

Phillip Brownlee Opinion Editor


Opinion

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Don’t throw a fit if your candidate loses

BY MICHAEL A. SMITH

I do not know if American democracy will survive this bizarre election year, but if it does not make it, I can predict the cause of death. The smoking gun will be the growing, highly toxic, self-serving, and baseless belief that whenever one’s favored candidate, party or issue loses an election, it must be because “the system” was “rigged” by the winning side. Nonsense. While GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump spews this bile on the national stage, we also have problems right here in Kansas. Secretary of State Kris Kobach will not quit insisting that restrictive new voting laws are needed to prevent rampant voter fraud, despite the failure of his or any other office to find any substantial evidence that it exists. On the other side of the aisle, critics have wondered if the particularly high voter turnout for Republicans in large, high-turnout precincts is due to some sort of tampering with the voting machines. Not so fast: These precincts tend to be located in higherincome, suburban areas such as Olathe and Maize – areas that vote heavily Republican, where demographics alone explain the results. Supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders were

devastated by his loss to Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary, but Clinton finished more than three and a half million votes ahead. No voter is always going to like the results of our process, but when we lose, instead of throwing brickbats and broken bottles at the officials like disgruntled sports fans, we need to take the high road. Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow used mathematics to demonstrate that no system of counting votes can guarantee an absolutely fair outcome, every time. Just ask Al Gore, who won the popular vote but lost the presidency in 2000 amid a circus of butterfly ballots and hanging chads. Clinton knows, too – she narrowly lost the Democratic presidential nomination to Barack Obama in 2008 despite her slight edge in popular votes. Complications such as races with more than two candidates, low-turnout elections, unstable public attitudes, the electoral college, and convention superdelegates can skew outcomes in close races. No wonder the Democrats have pledged to eliminate two-thirds of their superdelegates by 2020. Even then, democracy will still be imperfect. But it still beats the alternatives. Yet democracy is also vulnerable. The only thing holding it in place is us. It cannot survive unless we all take one for the team sometimes, even when it hurts. Michael A. Smith teaches political science at Emporia State University.

VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AP

Millions of Syrian children are facing starvation or bombing.

What if my dog had been a Syrian? BY NICHOLAS KRISTOF

New York Times

Our beloved family dog, Katie, died at the age of 12. She was a gentle giant who respectfully deferred even to any mite-size puppy with a prior claim to a bone. I mourned Katie’s passing on social media and received a torrent of touching condolences. Yet on the same day that Katie died, I published a column calling for greater international efforts to end Syria’s suffering and civil war, which has claimed perhaps 470,000 lives so far. That column led to a different torrent of comments, many laced with a harsh indifference: Why should we help them? These mingled on my

Twitter feed: heartfelt sympathy for an American dog who expired of old age, and what felt to me like callousness toward millions of Syrian children facing starvation or bombing. For five years the world has been largely paralyzed as Syrian President Bashar Assad has massacred his people, nurturing in turn the rise of ISIS and what the U.S. government calls genocide by ISIS. That’s why I argued in my column that President Obama’s passivity on Syria was his worst mistake, a shadow over his legacy. A reader from Delaware commented, “I hear ya, Nicholas, but so far every Middle East venture has not turned out good for the world.” Likewise, a reader in Minnesota argued, “Surely the George W. Bush experience taught us something.” Let me push back. I opposed the Iraq War, but to me the public seems to

have absorbed the wrong lesson – that military intervention never works, rather than the more complex lesson that it is a blunt and expensive tool with a very mixed record. Yes, the Iraq War was a disaster, but the no-fly zone in northern Iraq after the first gulf war was a huge success. Vietnam was a monumental catastrophe, but the British intervention in Sierra Leone in 2000 was a spectacular success. Afghanistan remains a mess, but airstrikes helped end genocide in the Balkans. And even if we eschew the military toolbox, what excuse do we have for not trying harder to give Syrian refugee children an education in neighboring countries like Jordan and Lebanon? I grant that cratering runways or establishing a safe zone – even educating refugees – won’t necessarily work as hoped, and Obama is right to be concerned about slippery slopes. But those concerns must be weighed against the lives of hundreds of thousands of children. I wonder what would happen if Aleppo were full of golden retrievers, if we could see barrel bombs maiming helpless, innocent puppies. Would we still harden our hearts and “otherize” the victims? Would we still say “it’s an Arab problem; let the Arabs solve it”? Yes, solutions in Syria are hard and uncertain. But I think even Katie in her gentle wisdom would have agreed that not only do all human lives have value, but also that a human’s life is worth every bit as much as a golden retriever’s. Nicholas Kristof is a columnist with the New York Times.

7B

OPINION LINE E-mail comments, 40 words or fewer, to opline@wichitaeagle.com

Wichita should rename some of its streets with these names: Rumble Road, Destruction Drive, Catastrophic Lane, Pothole Avenue and Alignment Boulevard, just for a start. In the past two months, I’ve spent $700 on car repairs caused by potholes. Do I ask the city for reimbursement or the state? Sedgwick County Commissioner Jim Howell’s complaint about the zoo “getting involved in someone’s campaign” was sour grapes over Karl Peterjohn’s primary loss. The former Sedgwick County GOP chairman and party faithful be advised: To “hold your nose” and vote for Donald Trump is to disengage your brain. Trump is slowly being surrounded by increasingly good people. Clinton, not so much. I remember when John Edwards caught a lot of flack for a $400 haircut. Imagine how much it costs Trump for his hair care. If Clinton becomes president, will they need to paint her jail cell white? George W. Bush said he is worried he will be the last Republican president. Just for once, I hope he’s right. Milwaukee burned, Louisiana flooded and President Obama continued his vacation and did fundraising for Clinton. That’s real leadership.

Olympics a respite from divisive election

That $400 million we sent to Iran could have been used in Louisiana to help the flood victims.

well as his life. He also talks about the changes he made to steer his life and swimming back on course with a renewed purpose and spiritual power. It was family and friends who helped persuade Phelps to enter The Meadows, an Arizona psychological trauma and addiction treatment center, five days after his second DUI arrest in 2014. While in treatment, Phelps found spiritual guidance in Rick Warren’s best-selling book, “The Purpose Driven Life,” given to him by friend and former Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis. If faith helped save Phelps, then love did the same for Biles. The 19-year-old was born to drug- and alcohol-addicted parents. Who knows how things would have turned out for Biles if her grandfather, Ronald, and his second wife, Nellie, had not adopted her. The Games are about to end, and we will be back full-time to a divisive political campaign – back to separating ourselves by party, class, race and religion. My hope is that the national pride on display during the Olympics will linger, and we’ll remember how the Games and its athletes inspired and united us in a common purpose.

If you think cutting taxes for the rich creates jobs, Gov. Sam Brownback and Trump have some great swamp land they will sell you.

BY ALBERTA PHILLIPS

Austin American-Statesman

With all of the negative hype in the lead-up to the Olympics – the Zika virus, massive doping by Russian athletes, polluted Brazilian waters and the country’s woeful economy – I had all but given up on watching. But then Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps raised the roof with five gold medals. Gymnast Simone Biles leaped, soared and vaulted to four gold medals. Katie Ledecky left it all in the pool, swimming for four gold medals. Their riveting performances captivated audiences and gave Americans something to cheer for in the midst of a bruising and bitter presidential campaign that has fractured our country in very disturbing ways. Keeping tab of medals was one way to tally our athletes’ achievements. But sometimes looking behind the medals can give us equally compelling insights. That certainly was the case with Phelps and Biles. In several news stories, Phelps talked openly about the problems, including repeated DUIs, excessive partying and thoughts of suicide, which nearly destroyed his swimming career as

Alberta Phillips writes for the Austin American-Statesman.

You may be the job creator. I’m the profit creator. It’s funny seeing all the angst about increased health care costs for state employees. The private sector that has been dealing with these increased costs ever since Obama and Kathleen Sebelius improved things. Many times those who complain about political correctness just want an excuse to be disrespectful. If you want respect, be respectful first. A big thank you to Westar and its constant rate increases. It just sent me the highest bill I’ve ever received. Funeral processions should not be canceled as one person requested. A funeral procession shows much respect and gives healing to the sorrowful family of the deceased. It has touched my heart more than once.

DAILY PRAYER God, bless the farmers who cultivate your earth and deliver its nourishing bounty to our tables. Thank you for the tools of their trade, starting with sun and rain. Amen.


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Five books to make you laugh in these dire times

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Arts &Culture . ..................................................................

Virtual park visit If you’re not able to visit one of the 412 National Park Service sites in person to celebrate the centennial, you can visit several dozen by making the drive to Hutchinson’s Cosmosphere. The Carey Digital Dome Theatre is showing “National Park Adventures,” a 45-minute immersive IMAX film shot in more than 30 national parks and narrated by Robert Redford. Tickets are $6.50-$7.50 and can be purchased at cosmo.org. Call the box office, 800-397-0330 ext. 312, to confirm showtimes. ...................................................................

TRAVIS HEYING File photo

The original ranch home at the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve near Cottonwood Falls. The National Park Service celebrates its 100th birthday this week with events at all sites.

Kansas sites mark 100 years of Park Service BY MELINDA SCHNYDER

Eagle correspondent

hroughout the summer, Ellen Jones has seen an uptick in the number of buses stopping to tour Fort Larned National Historic Site, where she is park ranger of the Indian Wars-era fort on the Santa Fe Trail. She’s also seeing more families from across the country stopping in Larned, about 130 miles northwest of Wichita, as part of cross-country road trips to explore National Park Service sites. Jones wants to see as many locals exploring her fort – and all of Kansas’ national park sites – and is expecting that this week’s National Park Service birthday celebrations will attract Kansans. “If they know it’s a big celebration that only comes about once in a lifetime, then hopeful-

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File photo

Commissary at the Fort Larned National Historic Site

ly they’ll go the extra mile to see what we’re all about,” Jones said. The National Park Service has celebrated its centennial throughout 2016 and this Thursday, Aug. 25, is its actual 100th birthday. Many sites – including

the five in Kansas – have events planned. “The whole goal of the centennial is to help people find their parks, become more aware of them and care about them,” Lauren Blacik, assistant centennial coordinator for the National

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Crown Uptown brings ‘Hedwig home to Kansas’ BY BOB CURTRIGHT

Eagle correspondent

One of the advantages of playing the glam-rock lead in “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” joked Dalton Zogleman, is that wearing 4-inch heels gives him a whole new perspective. “For a 5-foot-7 guy, suddenly being nearly 6 feet tall was incredible. The first time I wore them to get my balance, I went

to get a bottle of water and could see over the fridge. I’ve never been able to do that before,” Zogleman said. “Another benefit is that I now have incredibly toned legs,” he added. “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” an award-winning offBroadway cult phenomenon from 1998 that spawned a 2001 movie version and became a SEE ‘HEDWIG’, 2C

Park Service Midwest Region, said in a news release. “If people have wonderful, unforgettable experiences right in the state they live, then that’s a centennial success.” President Woodrow Wilson created the National Park Service by signing an act on Aug. 25, 1916, and established oversight for a growing list of parks that had started with Yellowstone National Park in 1872. The National Park Service is a bureau of the Department of the Interior tasked with preserving local history and creating closeto-home recreational opportunities. There are 412 sites covering more than 84 million acres, with 59 national parks plus monuments, battlefields, military parks, historical parks, historic sites, lakeshores, seashores, recreation areas, scenic rivers and trails, and the White House. There is at least one site in every state. Kansas has a national

‘Hedwig and the Angry Inch’

Where: Crown Uptown Theater, 3207 E. Douglas

Courtesy photo

SEE PARKS , 4C

AUTHOR SPEAKING Jeffrey Toobin, author of “American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst,” will speak at 6 p.m. Monday at Adobe Venue, 1330 E. Douglas. His 1996 book Toobin “The Run of His Life” was the main source for the recent hit FX series “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story.” See story, Page 3C.

What: Tony Award-winning glam-rock musical about a transgender East German rocker coming to America; from DZ Productions

Dalton Zogleman plays the leading role in “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” playing Aug. 25-27 at Crown Uptown.

preserve and four national historic sites. There also are parts of five national trails in the state. During the birthday celebrations – Aug. 25 through Aug. 28 – admission is free to all 412 sites. Admission is always free in Kansas, however Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site, Nicodemus National Historic Site, Fort Scott National Historic Site and Fort Larned National Historic Site all have special events planned next weekend. All events are free and open to the public. Jones has been working more than a year on Fort Larned’s Picnic in the Park celebration scheduled for 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 27. Visitors are encouraged to pack a lunch and stay for the entire day of special events in addition to seeing nine original buildings at the 1859-1878 Army post, historical exhibits and living-history demonstrations. “You only turn 100 once and I want it to have a certain energy to it with something for everyone,” she said. There will be art classes, a ranger presentation on the history of the National Park Service and another on the history of Fort Larned, musicians playing old fashioned instruments, a prairie dog show, animal

When: 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25; 7 and 10 p.m. Friday, Aug. 26; 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 27 Tickets: $12 adults, $10 students; available at door ..................................................................

AUG 10-14 & 19-21 RATED PG | Extra performances added

316.265.3107 | mtwichita.org Century II Performing Arts Center


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Arts & Culture

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

For good communication, focus on listening

BY BONNIE BING

phrase we hear more and more is “skill set.” I suppose everyone has their very own skill set for the job they’re doing, or the job they want. But don’t you think we need a basic skill set for life, not just for employment? At the top of the list

A

I would put communication. A teacher I once knew told me she was happy she had developed excellent communication skills. Turned out she came to that conclusion because she talked a lot. She had a lot to say, and she never missed a chance to say it. Let’s think quality, not quantity here. I thought about that teacher the other day when I got trapped by a woman who, without drawing a breath, told me how tired she was and why. I had never seen the woman before in my life but I listened, nodding my

FROM PAGE 1C

‘HEDWIG’ 2014 Broadway hit that won Tony Awards for best musical revival and best actor (Neil Patrick Harris), will receive its Kansas premiere this weekend from DZ Productions at Crown Uptown Theater. The gaudy, sometimes raunchy 90-minute musical about an East German singer who undergoes a botched sex-change operation to marry an American soldier, only to be abandoned in a Junction City, Kan., trailer park, will be performed Thursday through Saturday. Starring as Hedwig (nee Hansel) is Zogleman, a 2016 Rutgers University music theater grad who co-founded DZ Productions three years ago with his mother, Deanne Zogleman, longtime director of music at Newman University. This is the fifth production for the company, whose mission is to present cutting-edge shows (“Heathers: the Musical,” “Spring Awakening”) to encourage and challenge “pre-professional” local talent.

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HEDWIG IS AN INCREDIBLY DIFFICULT CHARACTER TO UNDERSTAND, BUT I’M HAVING THE TIME OF MY LIFE TRYING TO GET INTO HER HEAD. Dalton Zogleman Also starring is Darian Leatherman, local actress/ director/costumer, as Hedwig’s back-up singer and husband, Yitzhak, a Jewish drag queen from Zagreb – a role traditionally played by a woman. The Angry Inch band includes Ben Karnes on keyboards as Skszp, Chris DeGrandmont on guitar as Krzyzhtof, Ted Myers on drums as Schlatko and William Quincy on bass as Jacek. Directing is Deanne Zogleman with costume design by Dalton Zogleman and Roxana Stitt, set

by Dalton Zogleman and lights by Tyler GallegosLessin. “This is kind of a dream show for us – to bring Hedwig home to Kansas, so to speak,” Dalton Zogleman says. “I had seen it on Broadway, and while it was a lot of fun, I also left emotionally challenged. Hedwig has been beaten down and cast aside, but like a phoenix, she keeps rising from the ashes.” With music and lyrics by Stephen Trask in the 1970s glam-rock genre epitomized by David Bowie, the show was written by John Cameron Mitchell, who played Hedwig in the off-Broadway original and in the movie. Mitchell is the son of an Army major general who was in charge in West Berlin at one point, and his inspiration for Hedwig was a divorced German housewife who baby-sat the young Mitchell and occasionally moonlighted as a prostitute out of her Junction City trailer park. “Hedwig is an incredibly difficult character to understand, but I’m having the time of my life trying to get into her head,” Zogleman said. “We are very different kinds of people. I’m very mild-mannered, and she is not, obviously. She is fun and in your face, but it comes from a place of pain. She uses humor as a coping mechanism.” Despite Hedwig’s outlandish appearance – “a little punky, a little trashy, a little scary” – everyone can identify with her motivations, Zogleman said. “Her search for her other half, the person who makes her whole, is something we all can identify with.” A number of wellknown actors have played the role, from Harris (TV’s “How I Met Your Mother”) to Andrew Rannells (“The Book of Mormon,” “Hamilton”) to Taye Diggs (TV’s “Murder in the First,” “Private Practice”) to the upcoming national tour starring Darren Criss (TV’s “Glee”) starting in October. “I’m hoping I can do justice to Hedwig, because she has become such an icon to so many people,” Zogleman said. “I am

head, and finally said, “Well, no wonder you’re tired, that’s quite a schedule.” Maybe she lives alone and didn’t have anyone else to tell. When I got in the car I looked in the mirror thinking maybe she told me all that because I looked tired. Nope. For once I didn’t even have dark circles under my eyes. When a friend of mine, who demands to remain nameless, was trying to describe a person she had just met, she couldn’t think of a good adjective. “All I know is everything I said prompted her to tell me a story about her,” my

friend explained. I asked for an example. “All right. I told her I lost my mom not long ago to cancer. For the next 15 minutes she told me about three people she knew who had died of cancer,” my friend explained. But this sealed it. My friend is recovering from knee surgery. This same woman told her how much worse her knee surgery several years ago had been. She went on to describe her recovery week by week. I’ve decided there are two schools of thought regarding people like this: They are intent on talking about themselves, which means they could be described as self-centered. Or they think telling their story is the best way to relate to the experience you’ve had. In those cases

they can be described as delusional. Read almost any book on the art of communicating and somewhere in the pages the same simple point is always made: We need to concentrate on listening instead of talking. I couldn’t agree more, and I’m still working on being a good listener. Having good communication skills is a necessity of life. That’s why I worry about the consequences of texting and tweeting and all that typing instead of talking. But that’s another story for another time. Sometimes it’s important to note why someone is telling you something. Usually it’s obvious that they want and need to be heard. Have you noticed how some people launch into giving advice when the one speaking wasn’t

asking for advice, or even an opinion? They simply wanted to express what they were feeling or thinking. The older I get the more difficult it is to refrain from offering advice before it’s asked for. But when someone does ask advice, it’s important to think first. Ask questions. If you don’t have all the information or know all the people involved, how can you give good advice? I learned that lesson the hard way. All that said, the place to start is to shut our mouths and open our ears when someone says, “Hey, listen.”

equal measures thrilled and terrified.” The role may also be Zogleman’s swan song as a performer – at least for the foreseeable future. He’s accepted a job as an arts manager with a Boston theater company and will begin his duties after “Hedwig” closes. In the show, Hedwig tells her life story, particularly her ill-fated affairs, from the gay American soldier, Luther, who per-

suades her to have the aforementioned sexchange operation so they can marry and move to the U.S., to self-centered rock star Tommy, who luxuriates in her groupie adoration but abandons her when he discovers she’s not a biological woman. Among the dozen songs are “Tear Me Down,” “The Origin of Love,” “Wig in a Box,” “Exquisite Corpse” and “Wicked

Little Town.” “Rock can be such a different style for a musical theater major, because it has so much grit. It can be really raw. It’s a difficult show to sing, because it’s 90 minutes without an intermission. But I find that I enjoy that style,” Zogleman said. Will the show be controversial because of the transgender issues that have been so much in the national news this past

year, including here in Kansas, over use of school restrooms and locker rooms? Zogleman doesn’t think so. “At least, I hope it’s not controversial. It has met with such acclaim during its recent Broadway revival. I know that Broadway is different than the Midwest, but it shouldn’t be controversial because of its humanity.”

Reach Bonnie Bing at bingbylines@gmail.com.


Books

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

spent the next several weeks locked in a closet. Gradually, she learned who her captors were: the Symbionese Liberation Army. The SLA’s first demands after Hearst’s kidnapping were not for ransom but for the family to set up a massive food distribution program for the poor – and Randy Hearst did all he could to comply. But Patricia herself threw a curveball when, after several weeks of captivity, she told the members she wanted to join the SLA. Like the other members, she adopted a nom de guerre, Tania. Her decision, and their acceptance of it, would have unforeseeable results. Public perception of her would reverse; Toobin writes that “she was a symbol no longer of wounded innocence but rather of wayward youth.” In May 1975, five SLA members would die in the largest police shootout in Los Angeles history, which Toobin describes in

breathless detail. Hearst’s journey would take her to Pennsylvania and New York City, then back to California, where she and other SLA members were arrested in September 1975. Toobin astutely describes the circuslike trial that followed, in which Hearst was defended by F. Lee Bailey. The jury convicted her in less than 24 hours. President Jimmy Carter commuted her seven-year sentence in 1979; in 2000, she became the first person ever to receive both a presidential commutation and a presidential pardon, from Bill Clinton. The revolutionary returned, emphatically, to the fold. After Hearst was released from prison, she married Bernie Shaw, one of her bodyguards and a former police officer, moved to Connecticut and had two daughters. Aside from her appearances in several of John Waters’ movies, she has kept a low profile. Now 62, she was last in the news in 2015, when her shih tzu, Rocket, was a winner at the Westminster Dog Show. As Toobin explains in his author’s note, Hearst refused to participate in the writing of “American Heiress.” His research is extremely thorough: He not only interviewed more than 100 people involved in the case, he also had access to trial transcripts, witness statements, evidence notes and thousands of pages of interviews with Hearst herself, including those conducted by the FBI, as well as her own 1982 memoir, “Every Secret Thing.” “American Heiress” may never quite get us inside Patricia Hearst’s head, may not definitively answer the question of whether her conversion was real or a survival tactic. But this book certainly gives us a panoramic picture of her times and a gripping, insightful account of her place in them.

Guy’s 1963 Buick Special “standing astride a red puddle of transmission fluid.” What follows is a road saga of exquisite deadpan humor and almost surreal bathos. 3. “A Man Called Ove,” by Fredrik Backman, had me laughing out loud. Ove is a curmudgeon’s curmudgeon, and the humor as he grumbles and judges his way through old age is dry but dead on. 4. “Where’d You Go, Bernadette” by Maria Semple. When the world seems insane, and depressingly so, it’s good to laugh and better yet to get away. “Family trip to Antarctica!” Fifteen-year-old Bee’s parents promise her anything if she aces her report

card, and that’s what she wants. But first she takes us on a nightmarishly hilarious journey through the story of her disappearing mother, neighborhood intrigues, school politics and high-tech romance via e-mail, FBI reports, memos and letters. 5. Jimmy Breslin’s “Can’t Anybody Here Play this Game?” is a wry look at the unsuccessful 1962 New York Mets, and it’s surely one of the funniest sports books ever written. “They lost an awful lot of games by one run, which is the mark of a bad team,” Breslin wrote. “They also lost innumerable games by 14 runs or so. This is the mark of a terrible team.”

NONFICTION

‘American Heiress’ tells an extraordinary tale . ......................................................

COLETTE BANCROFT

Jeffrey Toobin book signing

Tampa Bay Times

“American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst” Jeffrey Toobin, Doubleday Books, $28.95. In the middle of the 1970s, the Patty Hearst case was unavoidable. Starting with the dramatic kidnapping on Feb. 4, 1974, of the 19-year-old scion of a wealthy newspaper dynasty, followed by her rapid conversion to membership in the radical group that snatched her and a violent bank robbery where she was caught on camera expertly slinging a sawed-off M1 carbine, then a more than yearlong pursuit by the FBI and a bizarre trial and ending with her return to the privileged world she came from, Hearst’s story is one of those stranger-thanfiction true tales that nevertheless captures the zeitgeist of its times. In his new book, “American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst,” Jeffrey Toobin skillfully enlarges and deepens the story, filling in gaps with material that will be new to many readers. A longtime New Yorker staff member and senior legal analyst on CNN, Toobin has written a number of books about the intersections of celebrity, law and politics. His 1996 book “The Run of His Life” was the main source for the recent hit FX series “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story,” and “American

What: Book signing and talk by the author of “American Heiress.” When: 6 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22. Doors open at 5 p.m. Where: Abode Venue, 1330 E. Douglas

MIKE HUTMACHER File photo

Jeffrey Toobin, author of “American Heiress,” will speak at 6 p.m. Monday at Abode Venue in Wichita.

Heiress” certainly has the potential to make a similar transition to the screen. Toobin plunges us into the kidnapping on the book’s first pages. Hearst was living in Berkeley, Calif., with Steven Weed, who was one of her high school teachers when she began an affair with him. By 1974, the two were University of California students and had recently become engaged. On a quiet evening, three armed intruders burst into their apartment. Weed was beaten and took off running; Hearst, who was wearing only a bathrobe, underwear and slippers, was bound, dragged outside and, with some difficulty – she fought fiercely – stuffed into the trunk of a car. Her distraught parents – Catherine, a conservative Georgia belle and friend of Ronald Reagan’s, and Randolph, one of the sons of media mogul William Randolph Hearst (the

DOUBLEDAY Courtesy photo

In his new book, Jeffrey Toobin tells the story of Patricia Hearst.

inspiration for “Citizen Kane”) – held endless news conferences and moved several FBI agents into their mansion in Hillsborough, a tony suburb of San Francisco, as the search for their daughter went on for months. In the meantime, Patricia (Toobin notes she detests being called Patty)

REVIEW

Five books to make you laugh in these dire times BY LAURIE HERTZEL

Minneapolis Star Tribune

The first funny book I remember reading was James Thurber’s “My Life and Hard Times.” I read it over and over, and it never failed to make me laugh. (“The Night the Bed Fell.” “The Day the Dam Broke.” “The Night the Ghost Got In.” All hilarious.) This has been a dire summer. The news is crushingly bad. We need

to laugh. Here, to the rescue, are seven recommendations. 1. Muriel Spark’s “Loitering With Intent,” published in 1981 but set in 1949, is a sinister comedy in the mode of her 1959 “Memento Mori.” It’s drolly narrated by Fleur Talbot, a cash-strapped literary secretary and aspiring novelist whose plot points start coming to life. Like all of Spark’s best novels, it’s an ingeniously constructed

book, unsentimental but not cold, hilarious but never frivolous. 2. “The Dog of the South” by Charles Portis. Portis is best known for “True Grit,” but he also produced five other novels. “The Dog of the South” will propel you from melancholy to jubilation in exactly one page flat. Ray Midge’s wife, Norma, has run off with a sorry character called Guy Dupree, taking Ray’s beloved Ford Torino and leaving him

How much: Free; discounted drink tickets are available in advance from Watermark Books, 4701 E. Douglas. .......................................................

BOOK NOTES EIGHTH DAY BOOKS Best-sellers 1. “Go Down Moses” by William Faulkner 2. “The World of Silence” by Max Picard 3. “Strong and Weak: Embracing a Life of Love, Risk, and True Flourishing” by Andy Crouch 4. “In Solitary with God” by Jim Rundell 5 “Laurus: A Novel” by Eugene Vodolazkin 6. “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” by J.K. Rowling 7. “St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Francis of Assisi” by G.K. Chesterton 8. “Wichita: The Magic City” by Craig Miner 9. “Orfthodoxy: The Cosmos Transfigured” by Paul Evdokimov 10. “Night Comes: Death, Imagination, and the Last Things” by Dale C. Allison New and Noteworthy: The Patient Ferment of the Early Churchby Alan Kreider (Baker Academic, $26.99). How and why did the early church grow in its first four centuries despite harassment and persecution? In this unique study, Alan Kreider describes the spread of Christianity in the Roman Empire. He contends the church grew because the virtue of patience was of central importance in the life and witness of the early Christians. They wrote about it and exercised it in prayer, catechesis, and worship. The church grew-- not by specific strategies but by patient ferment. The Sport of Kings: A Novel by C.E. Morgan (FSG, $27.00). Hellsmouth, an indomitable Thoroughbred with the blood of Triple Crown winners in her veins, runs for the glory of the Forge family, one of Kentucky s oldest and most powerful dynasties. Henry Forge has partnered with his daughter, Henrietta, in an endeavor of raw obsession: to breed the next superhorse, the next Secretariat, tethering their personal dreams of glory to the speed and grace of Hellsmouth.

WATERMARK BESTSELLER 1. "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" by J. K. Rowling, John Tiffany, and Jack Thorne 2. "LaRose" by Louise Erdrich 3. "The Underground Railroad" by Colson Whitehead 4. "I Will Send Rain" by Rae Meadows 5. "For the Sake of Art" by Cindy Mines 6. "Wichita Artists in Their Studios" by Sondra Langel 7. "All the Ugly and Wonderful Things" by Bryn Greenwood 8. "American Heiress" by Jeffrey Toobin 9. "Make This Town Big" by Tim O'Bryhim and Michael Romalis 10. "Cake Magic" by Caroline Wright "Eileen" by Ottessa Moshfegh (Penguin, $16) - Set in a New England coastal town during the winter, Eileen is drawn into a relationship that pulls her into a life of complicity in a crime that is beyond her wildest imagination. Moshfegh will be at Watermark on Thursday, Aug. 25 at 6 p.m. "Leave Me" by Gayle Forman (Algonquin, $26.95) - With engaging characters who stumble and trip, grow and forgive, "Leave Me" is about facing the fears we’re all running from. Forman will be at Watermark on Tuesday, Sept. 27 at 6 p.m.

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Arts & Culture

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

FROM PAGE 1C

PARKS exhibits and hands-on crafts activities. The local high school band director has re-established the Fort Larned Post Band with students and community musicians; they will perform at 1 p.m. There will be a talent show after the band, with a focus on old-fashioned, 1860s-era talents, for example singing, magic, skill demonstrations, storytelling and card tricks. Call 620-285-6911 to reserve a spot in the talent show. “One of our featured activities is ‘Foods of the Cultures’ which will be small samplings of food from different cultures like German, Native American, African, Mexican,” Jones said. “We want to show that because of our history, we were a community where different cultures blended.” Jones and the staff at Kansas’ other National Park Service sites are pleased with the boost in awareness and attendance the centennial celebration is bringing. Through midsummer, the National Park Service was on track to break last year’s attendance record of 307 million visitors. “I’m hoping the centennial encourages more visitation at all parks,” said Heather Brown, chief of interpretation at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. “That’s very important for the next 100 years, and it’s especially important to instill a sense of pride and stewardship in the next generation. The parks belong to everyone.” In addition to Picnic in the Park at Fort Larned Historic Site, here’s what you’ll find at each of the state’s sites this week: TALLGRASS PRAIRIE NATIONAL PRESERVE Eighty miles northeast of Wichita near Strong City, the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve protects a nationally significant

remnant of the once vast tallgrass prairie and its cultural resources. Visitors to the preserve, which turns 20 in November, can see a portion of its 11,000 acres through guided bus tours or by hiking on 40 miles of trails. At the ranch headquarters is an 1880s limestone mansion, threestory limestone barn and one-room schoolhouse. The preserve’s Picnic in the Park on Saturday, Aug. 27 is called “Voices of the Past,” and will celebrate people and their stories. Hear a first-person characterization of a historic surveyor at 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. They are inviting anyone who has stories about the park to speak, and they will record oral histories from folks with a direct connection to the ranch. Bring lunch to enjoy on the grounds and have birthday cake at 1 p.m. That’s when organizers will unveil the Centennial Quilt, which tells the story of the natural and cultural resources of the preserve. The preserve is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will have its regular slate of wagon rides, bus tours, house tours and activities. FORT SCOTT NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE In the eastern Kansas town of Fort Scott, you can enjoy your picnic while watching a vintage baseball game on the grounds of an 1840s frontier fort. On Saturday, Aug. 27, Fort Scott National Historic Site’s Picnic in the Park activities begin at 11 a.m. with period music by the Holmes Brigade Minstrels and old-fashioned family activities like “Hunt the Hare” and “Duck on the Rock.” The Friends of Fort Scott National Historic Site will serve free centennial birthday cake and ice cream toward the end of the picnic, which will wrap up at 1 p.m.

JAIME GREEN File photo

The Monroe Elementary School is a national historic site that was the segregated school attended by Linda Brown and is now part of the national park system, which celebrates its 100th anniversary.

when the baseball game starts. Starting at noon, baseball player Adam LaRoche, who graduated from Fort Scott High School and recently retired from the Chicago White Sox, will sign autographs until he throws out the first pitch in a game between the Topeka Westerns and the Wichita Bull Stockings played with 1860s rules, uniforms and equipment. NICODEMUS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE The Nicodemus National Historic Site in western Kansas preserves the oldest and only remaining all-black settlement west of the Mississippi River and interprets African American involvement in the westward expansion and settlement of the Great Plains. The five historic buildings here became a unit of the National Park System in 1996. The Nicodemus Historical Society is partnering with the site to celebrate the site’s 20th anniversary as well as the NPS centennial with a living history presentation starting at 1 p.m. on Sat-

Happy 40th Anniversary We love you!

Walter Dietz and Margaret Kaiser were married August 26, 1956 at Trinity Lutheran Church in Otis, KS. Their children are: David (Moira) Dietz of Scottsdale, AZ; Janice (Robert) Wessa of Ovilla, TX; Gloria (Steve) Peacock of Wichita, Their grandchildren are Lauren (Nathan) Harr of Ft. Worth, TX and Lindsey (David) Hagler of Arlington, TX.

Rickie Ray Lansdown There have been short days & long days; not many fun days since you’ve been gone. With each passing season I am overwhelmed with memories of our life together. I so enjoyed your quick wit & dry humor; your tender touch & manly ways about the house. Rick, I love you, I miss you & will until the day I depart into the unknown as you did 08.25.2015. Love, peace, sadness & joy, Terri

Kent and Betty Jacobs Happy 65th Anniversary

Ken & Angie Wright Happy 50th Anniversary - 8/27/66

and local musicians will perform. BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE Located at Monroe

GRAND OPENING! Southeast High School 2641 South 127th Street East Thur., August 25, 2016 The community is invited to attend the grand opening of Southeast High School’s new campus. 7-7:30 p.m. – Dedication in the auditorium 7:30-9 p.m. – Open house This is the largest project completed as part of the 2008 bond issue.

Kenneth and Carol Flower Happy 50th Anniversary Married August 17, 1966 at McConnell AFB. They will celebrate with family on Saturday with an intimate dinner.

Thank you, Wichita voters!

Kent and Betty Jacobs of Wichita are celebrating their 65th wedding anniversary on Saturday, August 27th. The celebration will be held at Eastminster Presbyterian Church, 1958 N. Webb Road, from 2pm to 5pm. Kent Jacobs and Betty Marken were born and raised in Sterling, IL where they graduated from Sterling High School. They were married on September 2, 1951 and moved to Wichita shortly after. Their daughters are Debbie O’Brien and the late Kathy Jacobs. Their two granddaughters are Jennifer Rollins and Mary Kate Elliott and one great granddaughter Isabella Elliott. Casual dress and no gifts.

George Kilbane Happy 92nd Birthday Please help George celebrate his birthday (Aug. 27) with a card shower. Send cards to 8513 W Nantucket St Wichita, KS 67212

East Heights UMC Preschool 40th Anniversary Celebration We are delighted to invite you to celebrate our 40th Anniversary with us. Please join us on Sunday, Aug. 21st between 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. for a cookie reception at East Heights UMC Holy Grounds Coffee House and a Preschool Open House. We are hoping to celebrate this Anniversary with East Heights Preschool teachers, students, and their families from the past 40 years to present.

Taking energy to heart.

Emmett and Gerry McGreevy

Walter and Margaret Dietz Happy 60th Anniversary

urday, Aug. 27. Re-enactors will portray newspaper editors, merchants, ministers and other townspeople from the timeframe of 1886-87 in “Is Nicodemus Getting the Railroad?” at 1:30 p.m. Western National Parks Association will serve birthday cake and punch during the event,

Elementary School, once a segregated school in Topeka, the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site is an interactive museum that documents the landmark decision that ended legal segregation in America’s public schools. “A Tale of Two Nations: Reconnecting our African-Native Heritage” is the site’s centennial celebration on Saturday, Aug. 27. The event celebrates the interconnectedness of African American and Native American cultures through art, music and commonalities of lifestyles. Programming is 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will include music and dance performances, art exhibits, spoken word poets, storytelling, keynote speakers, interpreters dressed as buffalo soldiers, loom demonstrations, kids activities and giveaways.


Food & Drink

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Queso is king at Cactus Cantina, which serves secret family recipes BY DANA FLEMING-MASTIO

Wichita Eagle Dining Panel

You’re in for a true Mexican food experience the minute you cross the intersection of Hydraulic and Wassall. There, on the southeast corner, sits a delightfully incongruous adobe hacienda known as Cactus Cantina. As you walk inside, you are beset with an abundance of Mexican statues, flowers, artwork and furniture that are as colorful as Cactus’ owner, Daniel Ramirez. Born in Jalisco, Mexico, Ramirez has been in the United States since 1989. While working at a wellknown Los Angeles eatery, he daydreamed about owning his own restaurant. His dream was realized when he purchased Cactus Cantina from its previous owner in 2000. Since then, he has been serving a compilation of recipes from his mother, father and other family members seven days a week. A few visits, and perhaps a few pounds later, it’s safe to say it’s hard to go wrong with just about anything on the Cactus menu. We like to start with the chili con queso ($6.95) and guacamole ($4.95). The queso is a velvety blend of Monterey Jack cheese, cilantro, jalapenos and tomatoes. Unlike many queso dips, this one doesn’t turn into a globby mess five minutes after it’s served. Our family members visiting

DANA FLEMING-MASTIO Wichita Eagle Dining Panel

The Nachitos Deluxe at Cactus Cantina are best eaten fresh from the kitchen.

from Des Moines boasted that the guacamole at Cactus is as good as they’ve ever had anywhere. “Fresh” is the word they used to describe it. But our favorite appetizer is the Nachitos Deluxe: fried flour chips smothered with creamy white queso, diced chicken, lettuce, tomatoes and a scoop of homemade guacamole. We like to add ground beef, which makes it a meal in itself for $9.95. A little hint: Eat them right away while the freshly-fried chips are still crispy. On one of our trips, we had what Ramirez refers to as his Famous Flaming Fajitas ($13.95). The dramatic tableside lighting “ceremony” is a prescient sign of great things to come. For a $3 upcharge, we like to add shrimp to

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Cactus Cantina Where: 2802 S. Hydraulic; 316-529-0238 Type of food: Mexican Alcohol: Full bar Hours: 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, noon-6 p.m. Sunday .......................................................

the steak and chicken combo, all served with grilled peppers and onions, lettuce, sour cream, pico de gallo and warm soft flour tortillas. (We prefer soft corn tortillas.) The secret to their goodness is, well, a secret. About all we could get out of Ramirez is that a 24- to 48-hour marinade is involved, using boiled New

Mexico peppers, orange juice, cumin and black pepper. The lengthy marinating time permeates the meat and vegetables with flavor. Ramirez says his favorite thing on the menu is the queso, because “it goes on anything.” We put his theory to the test with the absolutely decadent chicken con queso ($12.95), a tender chicken breast swimming in the ooey-gooey cheese sauce. It’s fork-tender and tastes surprisingly light, even though we know it’s covered with delicious calories. Another favorite is a dish named after Ramirez’s hometown in Mexico, the Teocaltiche plate, chunks of very tender pork simmered for hours in a blend of Mexican spices. The tamales at Cactus are made with the same recipe those as back in Teocaltiche, where his family makes and sells more than 3,000 of the meat and masa delectables each day. What makes these tamales stand out is the perfect ratio of masa to meat, in this case the traditional pork filling. Cactus Cantina offers a full bar, but the evident choice if you’re imbibing alcohol is one of Ramirez’s refreshing margaritas made with his homemade mix. If you’ve paced yourself better than most and still have room for dessert, top off your meal with the made-from-scratch tres leches cake, or three milks cake, a sponge cake soaked in evaporated milk, condensed milk and heavy cream. It’s a rich and refreshing traditional Mexican dessert and serves as a perfect example of Ramirez’s motto: “If you can’t go to Mexico, we’ll bring Mexico to you.”

Now is the time to enter The Eagle’s 2016 Holiday Cookbook Contest BY BETH BOWER

Eagle correspondent

It’s time to dig out your favorite recipes for the Wichita Eagle’s Holiday Cookbook Contest, which is now in its 61st year. Categories in this year’s cookbook contest are: A Appetizers A Desserts A Main course A Soups and sides A Bread and quick bread A Secret Ingredient: You can use coconut in any form – flakes, flavoring, milk, cream, etc. – and you can incorporate it into any type of recipe, including desserts, sides and main courses. Once we’ve selected the top recipes in each category, a panel of judges will choose the winners. Those top three – plus other qualifying recipes – will be printed in the Holiday Cookbook. Recipes will be judged on taste, appearance, clarity of cooking directions and creativity. The first-place winners in each category will receive a $100 gift card, and the second- and third-place winners will each receive $50 gift cards. THE RULES Each contestant may enter only one recipe per category. Only Kansas residents are eligible to win. Eagle employees and their families are not eligible. At the top of each page, include this information in this order: 1. Category in which recipe is to be judged

TRIBUNE File photo

Coconut cake

2. Name of sender 3. Address, including ZIP code 4. Daytime phone number (or best number to reach you) 5. Title of recipe 6. List all ingredients, followed by directions in standard recipe form. 7. Short, personal comments about the recipe’s origin or any other detail you care to share. We’re looking for originality and creativity. Do not submit recipes directly from a website or cookbook without changing at least three ingredients. You may submit entries by e-mail or mail, but they must be typed, not handwritten or scanned in. All recipes must be e-mailed or postmarked by midnight Sept. 6. Email entries to contests @wichitaeagle.com or mail entries to: Holiday Cookbook Contest, The Wichita Eagle, 825 E. Douglas, Wichita, KS 67202. Questions? Please contact Jean Hays at jhays@wichitaeagle.com or 316-268-6557.

OCTOBER 8 & 9

Wichita Symphony Presents Dan Dunn’s

PaintJam WHERE ART COMES TO LIFE AT THE SYMPHONY

BEETHOVEN’S EROICA BEETHOVEN Triple Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 3, “Eroica” Experience Beethoven’s revolutionary work that celebrates the indomitable human spirit and discover what The Eroica will inspire in you.

OCTOBER 29 & 30

MOZART & SHOSTAKOVICH MOZART Piano Concerto No. 24 SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 10 Presented in partnership with the Wichita Public Library’s Big Read of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451.

 VISIT WICHITASYMPHONY.ORG TO PURCHASE TICKETS

SA SAT SATU TU TU TUR UR RD SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 @ 8PM CEN C CE CENTU E TU Y II CONCERT HALL ENT CENTURY Join Symphony as speed painter Dan Dunn Jo Joi oin the Wichita W creates larger-than-life portraits of pop culture ess stunning, e sttun icons in five fiv minutes or less! The amazing details of his large-scale paintings and stunning sand art will be projected above the Orchestra as it performs a live musical soundtrack of Broadway, Blues, Classics, and Pop music as passionate as his brush strokes. As seen on: Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Ellen, Rachael Ray

Wichita Symphony Orchestra 2016 - 2017 SEASON Daniel Hege, Music Director & Conductor

5C

SEPTEMBER 9-11

TOUR DESIGNERS’ DIGS TO SUPPORT SYMPHONY GIGS Tour the homes of five of Wichita’s top interior designers in support of the Wichita Symphony.

Century II Concert Hall, 225 W Douglas Ave Monday - Friday, 10am - 5pm WichitaSymphony.org 316.267.7658


6C

Arts & Culture

CALENDAR Submit your event at events.kansas.com for possible inclusion in this calendar. Deadline is noon Thursday a week prior to publication.

Live music Beehive: The 60s Musical 8 p.m. Fri./Sat., 2 p.m. Sun. through Sept. 3. Roxy’s Downtown, 412 1/2 E. Douglas. $20-$30. 316265-4400, www .roxysdowntown.com Art For Your Ears 7-9 p.m., Thu., Aug. 25, Wichita State University Ulrich Museum of Art, 1845 N. Fairmount. Free. Moreland and Arbuckle will perform. Bring a lawn chair. 316-978-3664. Old Crow Medicine Show 8 p.m., Thu., Aug. 25, The Cotillion, 11120 W. Kellogg. $26.50 advance; $30 day of show. 316-7224201, www.thecotillion .com Gary Allan 8 p.m., Fri., Aug. 26, The Cotillion, 11120 W. Kellogg. $45$85. Country singer-songwriter. 316-722-4201, www.thecotillion.com 80’z Enuf 10 p.m., Fri., Aug. 26, Kansas Star Casino, 777 Kansas Star Drive. Free. Tribute to the early days of MTV and the bands it made famous. 316-719-5000, www .kansasstarcasino.com Sellouts 10 p.m., Fri., Sept. 2, Kansas Star Casino, 777 Kansas Star Drive. Free. Old school soul, rock, country, alternative, pop and blues. 316-7195000, www .kansasstarcasino.com

Theater Mamma Mia! Sun., Aug. 21, Century II, 225 W. Douglas. $26-$64. 316264-9121. The Debbie & Doyle Show Show runs Sat. and Sun. through Sept. 19. PG-13. On Saturdays, doors open at 10:45 p.m.

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

and curtain at 11:15 p.m. On Sundays, doors open at 6:30 p.m. and curtain at 7 p.m. Mosley Street Melodrama, 234 N. Mosley. $20. 316-263-0222, www .mosleystreet.com Tons of Money: A Comedy 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., and 2:30 p.m. Sun. through Aug. 28. Kechi Playhouse, 100 E. Kechi Road. 316-744-2152. $13. Tickets are $12 on Sundays. Bite It, Wichita 2: The Prequel or How Julia Got Her Gravy Back Dinner 6:15 p.m., show 7:50 p.m. Thu.-Sat. through Sept. 3. Mosley Street Melodrama, 234 N. Mosley. $20 show only; $30 with dinner. 316-263-0222, www .mosleystreet.com Mike Baldwin 8 p.m., Thu., Aug. 25, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Fri., Aug. 26, The Loony Bin Comedy Club, 215 N. St. Francis. $8 Thursday, women free; $12 Friday/Saturday. 316618-4242 Todd Yohn 8 p.m., Thu., Sept. 1, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Fri., Sept. 2, and 8 p.m. Sun., Sept. 4. The Loony Bin Comedy Club, 215 N. St. Francis. $15. Stand-up, improv, and music. 316618-4242, www.wichita .loonybincomedy.com Wichita Grand Opera’s Rigoletto 7 p.m., Sat., Sept. 3, Century II, 225 W. Douglas. $37-$85. Wichita Grand Opera’s new production is a dramatic journey of undeniable force. 316-264-9121, www .selectaseat.com

Special events Cowtown at Night 2-9 p.m. Tue.-Sat. and 4-9 p.m. Sun. through August. Old Cowtown Museum, 1865 W. Museum Blvd. $5.50-$7.75. 316-219-1871. Dinosaurs in Motion National traveling exhibit, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Sat., noon-5 p.m. Sun. through Labor Day. Exploration Place, 300 N. McLean

Blvd. Museum admission: $9.50; $8 for ages 65 and older; $6 for ages 3-11. 14 interactive recycled dinosaur sculptures. 316-6600620, www.exploration.org Wichita Stamp Club Show 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun., Aug. 21, Cessna Activity Center, 2744 George Washington Blvd. Free. Senior Wednesdays 1:30 p.m., Wed., Aug. 24, Exploration Place, 300 N. McLean Blvd. $4. For active adults 55 and older. 316-660-0620, www.exploration.org The Big Splash 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat., Aug. 27, Exploration Place, 300 N. McLean Blvd. Included in admission of $9.50, $6 for ages 3-11. Dive into why water is such a precious resource. Water activities presented by the Water Center, Great Plains Nature Center and more. 316-660-0620, www.exploration.org Disrobing the Decades 8-10 p.m., Sat., Aug. 27, Wichita Scottish Rite Masonic Center, 332 E. First St. $20-$35. Watch your favorite burlesque performers shimmy and shake to the popular songs of the decades. Dress as your favorite decade for a chance to win a prize. 316-263-4218, www .americanrosetheater.com Kansas State Fiddling and Picking Championships noon to 5 p.m., Sun., Aug. 28, South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St., Lawrence. Free. Musicians form circles jamming under trees throughout the park. Food vendors, artists and community groups fill the street and park paths. 785-691-7314 www.fidpick.com Global Learning Center Monthly Program & Meal: Islam 6-8:45 p.m., Sun., Aug. 28, Olive Tree, 2949 N. Rock Road. Dinner is SEE CALENDAR, 8C

2017 Summer Season: “Hollywood to Broadway”

JUN 14-18

JUN 28-JUL 2

JUL 12-16

JUL 26-30

Shows and dates subject to change.

Season tickets are on sale now! 316.265.3107 | mtwichita.org

AUG 11-20


SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

THE WICHITA EAGLE ...................................................................................

SO MUCH HAPPENED BEFORE DOROTHY DROPPED IN

“Broadway’s Biggest Blockbuster.” -The New York Times

OCTOBER 12 – 23 CENTURY II CONCERT HALL TICKETS ON SALE NOW WichitaTIX.com • BroadwayWichita.com 316-303-8100 • Groups 15+ 866-314-7687

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Arts & Culture

FROM PAGE 6C

CALENDAR $10-$14; presentation is free. A hallal meal will be served at 6 p.m., followed by a presentation on Islam, its core belief system and traditions, by Bassam Samara. 316-838-7900 Midwest Battle Buddies Fundraiser 6:30 p.m., Wed., Aug. 31, Loony Bin Comedy Club, 215 N. St. Francis. $15. Benefit for Midwest Battle Buddies, a nonprofit that helps pair service dogs to veterans, is hosting a benefit event at featuring a night of standup comedy. 316-618-4242, www.facebook.com/events /1742461732677143 A Conversation with Roy Clark 6:30-9 p.m., Fri., Sept. 2, Prairie Rose Chuckwagon Supper, 15231 SW Parallel St. $50. Legendary Country Music star Roy Clark makes his first appearance at the Prairie Rose. Gates open at 5 p.m. Horse-drawn wagon rides, cowboy movies & the Silver Screen Cowboy Museum. The all-you-can-eat supper is at 6:30, followed by the program. 316-778-2121, www .prairierosechuckwagon .com Creature Campouts 5:30 p.m., Fri., Sept. 2, Sedgwick County Zoo, 5555 W. Zoo Blvd. Registration is required. Campers equipped with their own tents, sleeping bags and flashlights are invited. Events include dinner, a guided tour, activities, and a bedtime snack. 316-942-2212, www.scz.org Fireworks at Cheney Lake Sun., Sept. 4, Ninnescah Sailing Association, 5104 E. Smoots Creek Road. Free. 316540-9990

Art Chihuly Drawings Noon-5 p.m. Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tue.-Sat. through Sept. 11. Wichita Art Museum,

1400 W. Museum Blvd. Included in admission of $7 for adults and $3 for students. Admission is free on Saturdays. 316268-4921 Building Bridges: Student & Community Showcase 1-4 p.m., Wed., Aug. 24 and 31, Shift Space Gallery, 416 S. Commerce. Free. Paintings by professional displaced Middle Eastern artists in four Wichita-area venues. The artwork from refugee artists will be sold by silent auction with proceeds benefiting the artists. 316-266-6476, www.shiftspacegallery .com Printmaking Is Imaginative Noon-5 p.m. Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tue.-Sat. through Nov. 6. Wichita Art Museum, 1400 W. Museum Blvd. Included in admission of $7 for adults and $3 for students. Admission is free on Saturdays. 316-268-4921, www.wichitaartmuseum .org/exhibitions/current Vernon Rickman: A Kansan’s Soulful Life in Art Noon-5 p.m. Tue.-Fri., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. Carriage Factory Art Gallery, 128 E. 6th St., Newton. 316-2842749, www .carriagefactoryartgallery .com Katie Maher: No Longer Slaves 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat., and 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. through the month of August. Reverie Coffee Roasters, 2611 E. Douglas. Free. Photography. 316201-1144, www .reverieroasters.com Small Oil National Exhibition Opening Reception 5 p.m., Fri., Aug. 26, Mark Arts, 9112 E. Central. Free. Light hors d’oeuvres and cash bar. 316-634-2787, www.wcfta .com

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Small Oil National Exhibition 1 p.m. Tue.-Sun. through Sept. 21. Mark Arts, 9112 E. Central. Free. Abstract art. 316-6342787, www.wcfta.com David Christiansen: The Dance Sun., Aug. 21, Artist Central, 5014 E. Central. Art of the Ballet paintings. 316-686-2266 Do It 1-5 p.m. Sun., Aug. 21, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tue., Aug. 23, and 1-5 p.m. Sat., Aug. 27. Wichita State University Ulrich Museum of Art, 1845 N. Fairmount. Free. Fluctuating exhibition of ideas and art. 316978-3664 Auditions Madagascar, A Musical Adventure auditions 5 p.m. Tue., Aug. 30. Wichita Children’s Theater and Dance Center, 201 Lulu. No prepared material necessary. Rehearsals will be 3-4 times a week after school. Performances will be Oct. 7-8. 316-262-2282 The 25th Annual Putnum County Spelling Bee auditions 6:30 p.m. Tue., Aug. 30. Wichita Children’s Theater and Dance Center, 201 Lulu. Bring a prepared musical piece with sheet music. An accompanist will be provided. Rehearsals will be 3-4 times a week after school and possibly Saturdays during the day. No rehearsals on Fridays. Performances will be Nov. 18-20. 316-262-2282

Talks and readings Otessa Moshfegh 6-7 p.m., Thu., Aug. 25, Watermark Books & Cafe, 4701 E. Douglas. Free. 316-682-1181, www .watermarkbooks.com. Louise Penny Reading and Signing 6-7 p.m., Wed., Aug. 31, Abode, 1330 E. Douglas. $33-$38. Watermark Books & Cafe, in cooperation with Abode Venue. Event is ticketed. 316-267-1330, www .watermarkbooks.com

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WESLEYMEDICAL


SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

THE WICHITA EAGLE ...................................................................................

NURSING

Butler/KU Nursing Partnership Earn your ADN & BSN at the same time Butler is partnering with KU to make your nursing degree come around a little sooner. Complete approximately 60 hrs. of gen-eds, then complete your ADN from Butler and your BSN from KU at the SAME time. For more information: Contact Kerri Smith at 316.322.3140 and butlercc.edu/nursing-partnership or Jill Weishaubt at 913.588.1619, jweishaubt@kumc.edu

STAY AT BUTLER,

GRADUATE A

GRIZZLY& JAYHAWK!

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10C

Arts & Culture

How an artisan turns Broadway costumes from riches to rags ERIK PIEPENBURG

New York Times News Service NEW YORK

The nicest thing you can say to Hochi Asiatico is that his work looks like hell. That is because Asiatico is one of a small number of Broadway distressors, artisans who make costumes look beautifully bad. In the play “Eclipsed,” he turned a “Rugrats” T-shirt, worn by Lupita Nyong’o, into a sweaty rag that looked as if it had spent weeks forsaken in Liberia, where the play is set. Clint Ramos, who won a Tony Award for his “Eclipsed” costume design, said that Asiatico created “a history for a garment” that came across onstage as “organic and inherent.” “In his mind, he can picture how the character goes through his or her day,” Ramos said. “He has a relationship to the clothing and how it interacts with the environment in a physical way. It informs everything.” Asiatico does more than make clothes look as if they had been dragged through the mud or bloodied in a fight. He is mostly a costume painter, whose brushstrokes can be seen on the unitards in the Broadway revival of “Cats.” In “The Color Purple,” his painting and silk-screening add elegance to the kimono worn by the actress Heather Headley. Hiring Asiatico, who also designs costumes, is not cheap. The cost can range from $3,000 to $140,000 per production.

Perfectly ragged clothing does not just come off the rack. “Producers say, ‘There’s no fabric out there that can do the part?’” said Asiatico, who has been in the business for some 22 years. “But costume designers know that what I’m going to give adds finesse to the show.” Distressing for the stage requires exaggerated painting and destruction techniques, such that color, shadows and “damage” can be read under the lights and from a distance. Recently, Asiatico added subtle variations of “blood” and “sweat” to costumes in the revival of “The Crucible,” and made uniforms in the musical “Doctor Zhivago” look as if they had gotten wet from fresh snow. The New York Times recently asked Asiatico to modify some of his techniques to turn a jean jacket into a wearable, distressed, chic-looking garment that anyone can make. Here, in four relatively easy steps, is Asiatico’s guide to DIY distressing. Step 1: Shred Distressing a garment requires a combination of washing (to break down the fabric), painting and working it over with tools, like scissors and sandpaper. Asiatico begins with a shredder, a handheld, spiky comb that looks like a torture chamber device. In short, quick strokes, he breaks down the fibers, pulls down the shape and trims the edges, giving the garment the appearance of everyday wear. “You don’t want it to look fake,” Asiatico said.

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

“It has to look lived in.” It is a workout to distress a fabric as tough as denim, but the result can be almost delicately soft. And expensive-looking, like “Ralph Lauren, what you’d find in a vintage store,” Asiatico said. Step 2: Paint After shredding, Asiatico applies layers of paint, usually with an airbrush. Here, he uses a spray bottle that can accommodate attachable jars, each with different colors of thinneddown, Setasilk paint (about 25 percent paint and 75 percent water). He applies thin layers of gold, brown and black on the chest and arms, spraying more heavily around the collar and the sides, “where the garment tends to get more of the dirt.” He then uses a small brush to apply black low lights, or shadows, on the sides of the denim. This “blocking” technique creates depth and gives the garment dimension. Step 3: Dry After he paints the garment, Asiatico uses a hair dryer to make the paint permanent. (For Broadway, the costumes are usually heatset in a clothes dryer.) When dried, the paint will appear on the garment in a lighter shade. And it is not going anywhere. “If you don’t heat set, you can wash and remove the paint,” Asiatico said. “It’s hard to remove paint when it’s dry.” After drying, he adds more accents of paint here and there, and dries those areas again. Step 4: Sand After the paint is dried, Asiatico sandpapers parts of the jacket, a technique that returns highlights to the garment by forcing the paint into the fabric. “It brings back life into the garment,” he said. “It was becoming too painted. Now it has shadows and light.”

JOIN THE KINDNESS MOVEMENT 1-Mile Walk - Pancake Feed - Art in the Park - Games

08.27.16 SEDGWICK CO PARK

PLUM SHELTER 8:30AM | COST: $35 Kids free with donation to food pantry. Includes t-shirt

REGISTER AT http://runsignup.com/Race/KS/Wichita/KindnessMovesMe OR CALL 316.269.4160 TEAM FUNDRAISING PAGE FOR SOCIAL MEDIA http://runsignup.com/Race/Donate/KS/Wichita/KindnessMovesMe

The Kindness Moves Me Walk supports Venture House & Breakthrough Club of Sedgwick Co. www.esswichita.org

NE TW OR K. LE AR N. PI TC H.

VISIT CoxBlue .com/Ge tStarte dWichit a/ TO RESERVE YOUR SPOT TODAY!

ME ET TH E FI NA LI ST S


SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

THE WICHITA EAGLE ...................................................................................

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Fun & Games

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

ACES ON BRIDGE By Bobby Wolff Dear Mr. Wolff: Please comment on the merits of support doubles — to show three-card support for partner. It seems to me that in competitive auction, the double lets partner judge more precisely what level to compete to than would be the case without competition, when a raise could be based on only three trumps. — Upping the Stakes, Salinas, Calif. ANSWER: Support doubles eliminate judgment — but to me, some hands with three trumps are not worth a raise, while some unbalanced hands with three trumps look more like they have four trumps in them. And these doubles also provide a blueprint for the opponents. A compromise position would be to follow the French style of using the double to show three trumps, plus extras of one sort or another. Dear Mr. Wolff: My partnership had a defensive problem, where partner led from A-K-J-7-4 in a suit he had bid and I had not raised. I held 9-6-3-2 and did not know whether to risk an echo, or if that would mislead my partner. Would the signal vary depending on whether dummy had a doubleton or queen-third? — Signal Failure, Selma, Ala. ANSWER: My view may not be standard, but it is coherent and consistent. When you don’t want partner to shift, play the six or three on your first turn, followed by a higher card after partner continues the suit. If dummy has queenthird, you should have the firm partnership agreement to play third-highest from four. Thus partner has a good chance to work out when you have two, not four. Similarly, if he sees you play the very smallest card, he knows you have three, not four. Dear Mr. Wolff: Do you have any recommendations for CDs on bridge that might help me master the tricks of the trade? — Rom-Com Fan, Boca Raton, Fla. ANSWER: The BridgeTrix series that I wrote is pretty good! And my erstwhile partner Bob Hamman has produced Bridge at the Top, which I enjoyed a lot. Larry Cohen’s CDs on learning bridge are also excellent. Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS

No. 0814 MORAL THINKING

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12 Subj. for an au pair, maybe 13 Product possibly named after a real physician 14 One stop on Chicago’s Blue Line 15 Greasy spoons 16 Common soccer score 17 100% 20 Caligula, e.g. 24 Gallbladder neighbor 25 Like dirty water 29 Ruckus 31 “Enough!” to a Roman 32 ____ park 33 “____ me!” 34 Focus of onomastics 35 Frost-covered biochemical solid? 36 See 5-Across 40 Hell of a location? 41 Banana Republic competitor 42 Good listeners 43 Big name in Scotch 45 “Love Actually,” e.g. 46 Battle of Hastings participants 48 Like actor Flynn post-dieting? 49 A good thing to get out of 50 Black ____ 52 Gung-ho 53 Cutting costs? 54 Bathroom fixture 55 One of the Jacksons 58 Banished 61 “I’m still waiting …?”

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85 ____ acid 86 Died down 87 Little fingers or toes 88 Buzz in space 90 Tut-tutters 91 Attacked, with “out” 93 One-eyed female on “Futurama” 94 Shake 95 The Cascades, e.g.

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96 Monument Valley sighting 99 “Gimme!” 100 Common calculus calculation 101 Signs (on) 102 Booking time 104 Bunny boss 105 Small lump of tobacco


Fun & Games

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

13C

Coaches should quiet obnoxious parents NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

JEANNE PHILLIPS

Dear Abby: I need some words of wisdom from you. This past weekend I went to see my 7-year-old nephew play baseball. These are all young kids just learning the game. There was one young player whose father kept shouting horrible things at him like, “Catch like a MAN!” and, “I don’t know why I waste my time coming here!” It was horrible to see that poor kid just wilt under his father’s abuse.

HIDATO

Maybe I should have spoken up, but I was scared. Was there anything I could have said? What can be done under those circumstances? I worry there may be a lot more parents out there like this dad. Say something, Abby! We need your help. — Ashamed of That Dad in Decatur Dear Ashamed of That Dad: Children who are encouraged usually do well at an activity. Those who are bullied, as that child was, do not. What you witnessed was someone trying to relive his own youth through his child. The person to address the belligerent parent should have been the coach of the team. Dear Abby: I just want to let you know you changed my life. I’m 68 years old with

two grown girls and two grandchildren. My husband and I had the old-fashioned flip phones and were not “into” texting like our children and grandchildren. Every few weeks, we’d get the obligatory phone call from one of the daughters, and I would feel a tinge resentful that both of our girls didn’t call more. Along came your column about a grandma who was miffed because her family didn’t call often and were more into texting. I was thinking, “You go, Grandma!” because I identified with her. Your answer surprised me. You told Gram to get with the program and enter her kids’ world. Well, that’s what I did. I got a new cellphone with a keyboard for texting.

(Smartphones are not practical where we live.) Abby, texting has transformed my world! I’m closer than ever with the girls. We send pictures and little “thinking of you” notes. I can never thank you enough for your wise advice. If I hadn’t read your response, my life would be the poorer for it. Bless you. — Barb in Rodeo, N.M. Dear Barb: Your letter brightened my day. You’re welcome! But kudos to you for taking it to heart. Technology is constantly evolving and becoming easier to use, and it’s meant to help bring people closer. I’m glad it has done that for you. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

AROUND THE REMOTE: TV PICKS FOR AUG. 21-27 Don’t miss: Olympics closing ceremony – Turn out the flame, the party’s over. After bonding with Michael Phelps, Simone Biles, Katie Ledecky and other golden greats for the past 16 days, it’s time to bid farewell to Rio de Janeiro and the summer games. But first comes a festive celebration and final speeches from Maracana Stadium, where the medal ceremony for the men’s marathon will also be held. 7 p.m. Sunday, NBC.

PREMIER

CRYPTOQUIP

HOROSCOPE IF YOUR BIRTHDAY IS SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, 2016: A chance to make some money, change the way you live or pursue your dreams looks welcoming this year. ARIES (March 21-April 19): A positive gain is heading your way that will help you secure your position and ensure that you reach your goal. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t lose sight of what you want to accomplish. You don’t have to spend a lot to start something new. Baby steps will help you gain momentum. 3 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Take a little extra time to help friends or the youngsters in your life. Your genuine concern for others will help you alleviate a problem before it escalates. 4 stars CANCER (June 21-July 22): An emotional incident will be difficult to forget, but if you don’t try to move on, it could affect your ability to enjoy the company of those you love. 2 stars LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Getting together with an old friend will clear up a lot of confusion about things that happened in the past and what’s possible now. 5 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Attend an event that promises to make you more aware of important issues. A

self-help program will give you insight into those you deal with daily. 3 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep the peace, but don’t ignore the things that upset you. The experience you have dealing with others can help you avoid conflicts. 3 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): People will gravitate toward you. Your persuasiveness will pay off, giving you the support you need to follow through with your plans. 3 stars SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t give anyone the chance to take advantage of you. Your optimistic nature will be welcomed by those you love. 5 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stay on course no matter what others do. Emotional tactics should not be allowed to draw you away from what you want to accomplish. 2 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Consider what you love to do, and do it. Don’t wait for someone else to give you the go-ahead. Initiate the changes you want to make. 4 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Consider what you can do to stop others from controlling the way you do things. Personal satisfaction will be yours. 3 stars By Eugenia Last

OTHER BETS Sunday: “Fear the Walking Dead,” the zombie spin off that we love to hate, returns to kick off the second half of Season 2. Now that they’re back on land, the Clark, Manawa and Salazar families fracture and it’s every clan for itself. 8 p.m., AMC. Sunday: Season 11 of “The Voice” doesn’t launch until Sept. 19, but tonight’s special preview show introduces two new coaches – Miley Cyrus and Alicia Keys – who will be joining veterans Adam Levine and Blake Shelton in the spinning red chairs. 9:30 p.m., NBC. Monday: We’ve got spirit, how ‘bout you? The new reality series “Cheer Squad” takes us into the world of high-stakes competitive cheerleading as it follows The Great White Sharks, a celebrated team from Canada, through an intense season. 9 p.m., Freeform. Tuesday: Season 3 of “Halt and Catch Fire” picks up in March 1986 as Mutiny leaves Texas for the big leagues of Silicon Valley. Founders Cameron Howe (Mackenzie Davis) and Donna Clark (Kerry Bishe) search for the idea that will turn the company into a major player, but new collaborators test their partnership. 8 p.m., AMC. Tuesday: Straight from the red carpet comes “Adam Ruins Everything.” In the midseason opener, Adam Conover exposes the hidden truth behind Hollywood’s glitz and glamour. Rachel Bloom and Ariana Madix aid him in his quest. 9 p.m., truTV. Wednesday: The acclaimed Italian drama “Gomorrah” debuts on American television with back-to-back actionpacked episodes. Set in the suburbs of Naples, it focuses on the exploits of a powerful drugrunning crime family. 9 p.m., Sundance TV. Wednesday: LeBron James not only rules the NBA, he executive produces TV shows. Hence, “Cleveland Hustles,” a reality series that lends an assist to local entrepreneurs

AMC Courtesy photo

Kerry Bishe plays Donna Clark and Scoot McNairy plays Gordon Clark in “Halt and Catch Fire.”

Sea Gold” begins tonight, which prompts us to ask: Is there now anyone in Alaska who hasn’t been on a reality TV show? 8 p.m., Discovery. Saturday: In the new TV film, “Summer of Dreams,” 1980s pop star Debbie Gibson plays a 1980s pop star named Debbie Taylor. Yes, it’s a stretch, but we hope she can pull it off. 8 p.m., Hallmark.

working to revitalize a Cleveland neighborhood that desperately needs some support. 9 p.m., CNBC. Thursday: Break out the wigs and heavy mascara. “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars” is back with a big new twist: The queens will now eliminate each other. And yes, this could get ugly. 7 p.m., Logo. Friday: A new season of “Bering

SUNDAY 7:00 ABC CBS FOX NBC PBS CW UNIV A&E AMC BET BRAVO CMT CNN COMEDY DISC DISN ESPN FNC FOOD FREE FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NICK OWN SYFY TBS TNT USA HBO MAX SHOW STARZ

MOVIES

7:30

8:00

8:30

8/21/16 9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

Celebrity Family Feud ‘PG’ (DVS) Big Brother (7:01) (N) ‘PG’

The $100,000 Pyramid Match Game (N) ‘14’ KAKE News Lawyer on (N) ‘14’ at 10pm ‘G’ the Line ‘G’ Madam Secretary “Ghost BrainDead (N) ‘14’ Eyewitness Eyewitness Detainee” ‘14’ News News The SimpBrooklyn Family Guy Last ManKansas News Sharyl The Big Bang The Big Bang sons ‘PG’ Nine-Nine ‘14’ Earth Attkisson Theory Theory Rio Olympics Closing Ceremony. The first-ever Olympics in South America The Voice (N) KSN News at Rio Olympics concludes with the Closing Ceremony. (N) ‘PG’ 10p (N) Secrets of Westminster ‘PG’ Masterpiece Mystery! Bomb attack kills a The Tunnel “He’s Here to Doc Martin mathematician. (N) ‘PG’ (DVS) Help” Karl falls apart. ‘14’ ‘PG’ Person of Interest “The Castle Dr. Nieman is impli- Eyewitness Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight Fix” ‘14’ cated in a murder. ‘PG’ (9:35) ‘PG’ (N) ‘PG’ Va Por Tí (N) Sal y Pimienta (N) ‘PG’ Durmiendo Noticiero con mi Jefe Hoarders: Then & Now Intervention “Ryan” ‘14’ Escaping Polygamy ‘14’ The First 48 (10:01) ‘PG’ Fear the Walking Dead Fear the Walking Dead Talking Dead (9:01) “Fear the Walking Dead 208” Dave (6:59) “Shiva” ‘MA’ “Grotesque” (N) ‘MA’ Erickson; Danay Garcia. (N) ‘14’ Bad Boys National Security (’03, Comedy) Martin Lawrence, Steve Zahn. ›› Payne Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/OC Happens Housewives The Proposal (6:30) (’09) Sandra Bullock. ›› Double Jeopardy (’99) Tommy Lee Jones. ››› The Hunt With John Walsh The Hunt With John Walsh Declassified Declassified Joe Dirt 2: Beautiful Loser (6:45) (’15, Comedy) David Spade. Joe Dirt 2: Beautiful Loser (’15) Naked and Afraid XL “Rock Naked and Afraid XL: Un- Naked and Afraid XL “The Naked and Afraid (10:05) Bottom” ‘14’ censored All-Stars (N) ‘14’ Sickness” (N) ‘14’ “From the Ashes” ‘14’ Bizaardvark Bizaardvark K.C. Undercover ‘Y7’ Bunk’d ‘G’ Girl Meets Liv-Mad. Stuck MLB Baseball New York Mets at San Francisco Giants. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) Watters World The Greg Gutfeld Show Watters World Guy’s Grocery Games ‘G’ Chopped (N) ‘G’ Cooks vs. Cons (N) ‘G’ Cooks vs. Cons ‘G’ Monsters University (6:15) (’13) ››› Brave (8:45) (’12, Adventure) Voices of Kevin McKidd. ››› Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (’14, Action) Chris Pine, Kevin Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (’14, Action) Chris Pine, Kevin Costner. ›› Costner. ›› Stop the Wedding (6:00) Chesapeake Shores “Home to Roost, Part One” ‘PG’ Golden Girls Golden Girls Beach Beach Mexico Life Mexico Life Island Island Beach Beach American Pickers ‘PG’ American Pickers ‘PG’ Ozzy & Jack’s American Pickers (10:03) A Mother Betrayed (6:00) The Wrong Roommate (’16) Eric Roberts. (PG) A Mother Betrayed (10:02) Dateline Extra “Tangled” Dateline Extra “The Deed” Dateline Extra “Tangled” Dateline Extra 8 Mile (5:00) (’02) ››› Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Nick Cannon: Wild ’n Out Ice Age 2: The Meltdown Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ‘PG’ Skyfall (’12, Action) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench. ››› Quantum of Solace (’08) Step Brothers (’08) Will Ferrell. (DVS) ›› Step Brothers (’08) Will Ferrell. (DVS) ›› Rush Hour 2 (6:00) (’01) The Last Ship “Scuttle” Murder in the First Terry The Last Ship “Scuttle” ‘14’ Jackie Chan. ›› (N) ‘14’ and Hildy struggle. (N) ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Motive (N) ‘14’ Point Break (6:00) (’15) The Night Of (N) (Part 7 of Ballers (N) Vice Princi- Last Week To. Ballers Édgar Ramírez. ›› 8) ‘MA’ ‘MA’ pals (N) ‘MA’ (10:32) ‘MA’ Outcast Scream 3 (7:20) (’00, Horror) David Arquette. A copycat Sinister 2 (9:20) (’15, Horror) James Ran(6:30) ‘MA’ killer stalks actors on the set of “Stab 3.” ››› sone, Shannyn Sossamon. ›› Roadies Phil shares a story Ray Donovan Avi and Lena Roadies The band’s first Ray Donovan Avi and Lena from his past. ‘MA’ doubt Ray’s loyalty. ‘MA’ corporate gig. (N) ‘MA’ doubt Ray’s loyalty. ‘MA’ Power Ruiz is pressured to Power (iTV) Ghost and Survivor’s Power (iTV) Ghost and Survivor’s give up Ghost. ‘MA’ Tommy reunite. (N) ‘MA’ Remorse Tommy reunite. ‘MA’ Remorse

TODAY’S HIGHLIGHTS

7 p.m. on NBC Rio Olympics Two weeks-plus of competition concludes in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, with the traditional pageantry of the closing ceremony featuring athletes from various nations as they bid farewell — along with the world — to the latest edition of the every-four-years Summer Games. Bob Costas will be among those offering commentary. 8 p.m. on AMC Fear the Walking Dead Day of the Dead may be a joyous occasion in Mexico, but there is little celebrating going-on by the fractured Clark and Manawa family

Bob Costas-Rio Olympics

group as this series returns in its midseason premiere. With Travis and Madison (Cliff Curtis, Kim Dickens) currently separated by circumstances, the former focuses

his attention on son Chris (Lorenzo James Henrie), who is quickly shedding his innocence. 9 p.m. on HBO Ballers Spencer (Dwayne Johnson) tries to negotiate peace between Travis (Adam Aalderks) and a critic in the new episode “Saturdaze.” Charles (Omar Benson Miller) struggles to adjust to his new role on the team, especially when he is forced to deliver some bad news. Ricky (John David Washington) is taken aback when Dennis (Robert Ray Wisdom) decides to have more of a voice in his life. Elsewhere, Joe (Rob Corddry) has a face-to-face encounter with Andre (Andy Garcia).


14C

Travel

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

TRAVEL TROUBLESHOOTER

Hotels.com left us waiting in the rain for our room

File photo

The Main Street Electrical Parade moves down Main Street in Disneyland, in Anaheim, Calif., in 1996. The parade will return to Disneyland in October for a limited run.

BY CHRISTOPHER ELLIOTT

Q: I have a question about a recent reservation I made for a hotel apartment in Barcelona, Spain, through Hotels.com. In the fine print of my reservation, it instructed me to call 24 hours before I arrived to make arrangements to pick up the key. For me, that was an international call. The phone number was printed incorrectly on the form, so I couldn’t reach the hotel. I called Hotels.com, and a representative put me on hold for five to 10 minutes. I asked to be called back. Someone called after an hour, by which time my husband and I were already at sea and could not receive any calls. Hotels.com didn’t send me a text or email. The next day, we arrived at the hotel, in the rain. No one was there. We found the correct phone number on the door, made another international call, and discovered that the hotel had no record of my reservation. I called Hotels.com. A Q:

Main Street Electrical Parade ending at Disney World BY SANDRA PEDICINI

Orlando Sentinel ORLANDO, FLA.

The Main Street Electrical Parade at Walt Disney World will soon come to an end. The last glowing procession down Main Street in the Magic Kingdom will be Oct. 9. Disney says the parade will next travel crosscountry to Disneyland in California for a limited

engagement beginning early next year. The Electrical Parade made its debut at Disneyland in 1972. Versions of it ran in Florida from 1977 to 1991 and then from 1999 to 2001. It returned to Disney World again in 2010. The parade features half a million shimmering lights. Some of its features include a 23-foot-tall Clock Tower over Cinderella’s Ball, complete with elegant ballroom dancers

How you can save on airfare SHIVANI VORA

New York Times News Service

The airfare for your family vacation to Orlando, Fla., cost you $500 a person. Your friend snagged tickets there during the same week for nearly half the price. What gives? It may not be pure luck, according to Rick Seaney, the founder of farecompare.com, an airline ticket comparison site. “There are ways to save on airfare, but you have to know the tricks,” he said. Here, he shares his top ones. A Pick your travel days wisely: If you’re traveling within the United States, flying on a Tuesday, Wednesday or Saturday will get you the lowest airfare because there are fewer fliers on these days, Seaney said. “You can save between 10 and 40 percent per ticket, if not more, compared to a Monday, Friday and Sunday, when air traffic is heavier,” he said. (Thursday falls between the two categories.) If you can’t both depart and return on the cheapest days, you still get half the savings if you pick one for your inbound or outbound flight. For trans-Atlantic flights, Monday through Thursday are the cheapest, though the savings are only around 5 percent compared with Friday through Sunday. A Shop ahead, but not too far: For domestic travel, buy your ticket three months before your departure date; for trans-Atlantic travel, buy five months beforehand. Any further in advance has no benefit, according to Seaney, because airlines have not yet included cheap seats as part of their inventory. But be sure to buy 30 days before departure, because prices increase substantially thereafter. The exception to this rule is if you plan to travel over a busy holiday period, espe-

cially Thanksgiving and Christmas. Airlines don’t offer discounts during the holidays, so it’s best to buy your ticket as soon as possible. A The golden time: Tuesday at 3 p.m. Eastern time: The airline departments that create fare sales usually do so on Monday afternoons. These sales are then distributed to travel sites such as Expedia.com and are posted on the airline’s own site. Competing airlines see these sales the next morning and adjust their fares accordingly, and final sale pricing hits reservations systems at 3 p.m. Eastern time. “This is when you get the maximum number of cheap seats,” Seaney said. Most of these sales last only for three days, so don’t procrastinate. A Buy as if you’re going solo: Reservation systems at airlines and travel sites sell tickets at the same price to all the fliers on one reservation. If you’re buying airfare for your family of four, for example, it does not matter if the airline has three seats for sale in a lower price

September 2016 20-25 Wisconsin Cranberry Festival October 2016 5-9 Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta 7-15 Northwoods Fall Foliage 17-20 Mississippi River Cruise 17-20 Fall Mystery Tour NEW! 19-22 Branson in the Fall November 2016 28-12/2 Christmas at the Opryland Hotel 30-12/3 Branson Christmas 30-12/5 Christmas in Texas December 2016 8-11 Omaha Holiday February 2017 15-21 Yellowstone in Winter 18-26 Cajun Country/New Orleans March 2017 26-4/9 Historic East 28-4/2 Heart of Texas April 2017 23-5/6 Charming Carolinas 19-22 Branson in the Spring May 2017 1-5 Spring Mystery Tour

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in light-covered costumes; the smoke-breathing, tail-wagging Pete’s Dragon; and a 108-foot-long red, white and blue flag finale. Classic characters such as Snow White and Peter Pan also appear. The parade’s musical theme, the electrically synthesized “Baroque Hoedown,” is interwoven with Disney themes. Disney World guests interested in seeing the parade before it departs on Oct. 9 can check for the latest parade dates and times on waltdisneyworld.com or in the My Disney Experience app. The parade will not appear during Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party nights.

category and the fourth at a higher one. To find out for sure, he advised shopping for one flier at a time to see whether there is a price difference compared to buying multiple tickets together.

representative said the company’s computers were down, and he refused to do anything. I asked him to write down the reservation number and to cancel my reservation once the computers were running, so I could book elsewhere. The representative refused; he told me to call back in one to two hours, when the computers were up. I asked for a supervisor but got nowhere. He hung up on me. By then, I had been on the phone for 40 minutes at 40 cents per minute. The hotel finally sent someone who looked at my written reservation and got a key. I’ve contacted Hotels.com by email but have not received an answer. I’d like a refund of my phone bill and an apology. Can you help? – Gail Jaworski, West Palm Beach, Fla. A: Wow, talk about a streak of bad luck. First, the wrong number for your property. Then the rain and the missing reservation. And Hotels.com didn’t make things any better with its computer failures and lack of service. I think you deserved better – much better. Hotel apartments are not like standard hotels. Sometimes, there’s no lobby where you can check in, which means you either need a key or you’ll be left standing outside in the A:

rain. So a company like Hotels.com, which rents these accommodations, needs to be extra careful to make sure the numbers it lists are right. A Hotels.com representative shouldn’t have hung up on you or forced you to call back to cancel your reservation because the company’s computers were down. Instead, a representative should have politely helped you find a solution instead of telling you to phone back later, from a foreign country, at your expense. Incidents like these are what give online agencies a bad name – and frankly, keep human travel agents in business. A person you know, with whom you had booked your vacation, would have worked directly with you to make sure you had a key to your hotel room. A real agent wouldn’t have left you standing outside in the rain. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the customer-service managers at Hotels.com’s parent company, Expedia, on my consumer-advocacy website: http://elliott.org/ company-contacts/expedia. A brief phone call to one of them might have resolved this when you arrived in Barcelona. After you returned, Hotels.com should have responded to you promptly, not ignored you for three days. I contacted the company on your behalf. It offered you an $89 gift card and an apology. Christopher Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine and the author of “How to Be the World’s Smartest Traveler.” You can read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org, or email him at chris@elliott.org.

Jim & Cindy’s Tours LLC WICHITA, KS.

We Charter Arrow Stage Lines Motor Coaches!

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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

1D

Sports K-STATE FOOTBALL

OLYMPICS

Frantz faces difficult chore Scott Frantz faces one of the most difficult tasks of anyone on the K-State football roster this season. As the projected starter at left tackle, he will try to replace former standout Cody Whitehair. BY KELLIS ROBINETT

krobinett@wichitaeagle.com JULIO CORTEZ Associated Press

Michael Phelps walks with the U.S. flag during the medal ceremony for the men’s 4 x 100-meter medley relay final on Aug. 14 in Rio de Janeiro. Phelps won six medals, five of them gold, during this summer’s Games.

The good (and bad) from Rio From Phelps and Bolt to Puig and Biles, defeats worth celebrating and a scandal that clouded the Olympics, the Rio Games were not lacking for memorable moments. BY TIM REYNOLDS

Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO

Michael Phelps won more medals than anyone else, again. And then he said farewell, also again. Usain Bolt kissed the finish line good-bye after enhancing his Olympic legacy. Simone Biles and Katie Ledecky delivered under the burden of enormous expectations. Two strangers went from rivals to forever linked by a display of kindness, an entire nation seemed to celebrate a tennis match, and a

gold medalist scampered home to avoid legal issues after a robbery story unraveled. The Rio de Janeiro Olympics were not perfect. But there were moments – some great, some dreadful and some downright ugly – that will not, and should not, be forgotten.

DMITRI LOVETSKY Associated Press

Simone Biles celebrates after winning gold for floor during the artistic gymnastics women’s apparatus final, one of her four golds.

OLYMPIC BASKETBALL DAVID J. PHILLIP Associated Press

Usain Bolt celebrates winning the gold medal in the men’s 200-meter final on Thursday. Bolt won three golds for the third time.

ROYALS

KC’s next homegrown ace KANSAS CITY, MO.

JOHN SLEEZER Kansas City Star

Royals pitcher Danny Duffy heads to the dugout after completing an inning against the Rangers on July 22.

The pitch began as an experiment, a curious blend of desperation and preservation, a pitcher looking for something to spark a career. It was a quiet afternoon last October, during the early days of the American League Championship Series, and Danny Duffy stood in the Kauffman Stadium outfield, cuffing a baseball in his right hand. He re-adjusted his fingers and he let his mind go blank, and as he played a simple game of catch, an exercise he had

Football isn’t fair. That’s a lesson Kansas State freshman Scott Frantz learned at the start of preseason practices earlier this month. Frantz faces one of the most difficult tasks of Wildcat. As the projected left tackle, he will try to replace former standout Cody Whitehair, a second-round pick now playing for the Chicago Bears. It’s unfair Frantz to expect him to play at the same level as a NFL blocker, at least right away, but that’s what coaches have asked of him. “It’s tough, but that is just how this business works,” Frantz said. “If you are lined up and you are starting, you have got to get the job done. It doesn’t matter if you are a fifthyear senior or a true freshSEE K-STATE, 9D

MEDAL LEADERS The U.S. dominated the medal count, a rare romp in a nonboycotted games (there’s still more medals to win Sunday, but the margin of overall victory could be the most in a fully attended games in 68 years). Phelps won six medals, five of them gold, to increase his career haul to 23 Olympic titles and 28 medals overall. Ledecky and Biles each won five medSEE HIGHLIGHTS, 6D

MANHATTAN

done thousands of times in his life, he decided to try something different. This is how he remembers an afternoon that helped changed his baseball life, a day that became part of a career breakthrough and a dark horse Cy Young campaign, the day a homegrown ace began to evolve. This is not to say Duffy wouldn’t have become one of baseball’s most dominant starters anyway. Baseball is funny that way, he says. There are no

cure-alls here. There are few “Aha” moments. There are rarely any clean narratives. In baseball, where failure is an expectation and adjustments are currency, progress can often be defined by incremental steps, by trying this or that, by the process of breaking a few eggs. The path to dominance is a messy one, littered with small moves and random games of catch. So it was that Duffy found SEE ROYALS, 2D

U.S. WOMEN WIN GOLD AGAIN The dominant U.S. women’s basketball team won a sixth consecutive Olympic gold medal in impressive fashion, routing Spain 101-72. 4D

KANSAS FOOTBALL

BEATY NOT READY TO CHOOSE QB Ryan Willis was at the front of the quarterback line Saturday, but KU coach David Beaty said that doesn’t mean Willis is the starter. 7D

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2D

Calendar

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

FIVE-GAME PLANNER KANSAS FOOTBALL Sept. 3 Rhode Island, 6 p.m. Sept. 10 Ohio, 1:30 p.m. Sept. 17 at Memphis, 11 a.m. Sept. 29 at Texas Tech, 7:30 Oct. 8 TCU, TBA

WINGNUTS Sunday at Gary, 2 p.m. Monday at St. Paul, 7 p.m. Tuesday at St. Paul, noon Wed. at St. Paul, 7 p.m. Friday Texas, 7 p.m.

KANSAS STATE FOOTBALL Sept. 2 at Stanford, 8 p.m. (FS1) Sept. 17 Fla. Atlantic, 1:30 p.m. Sept. 24 Missouri St., 6 p.m. Oct. 1 at West Virginia, TBA Oct. 8 Texas Tech, TBA

KANSAS CITY ROYALS Sunday Twins, 1 p.m. (FSKC) Tuesday at Marlins, 6 p.m. Wed. at Marlins, 6 p.m. Thursday at Marlins, 6 p.m. Friday at Red Sox, 6 p.m. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Aug. 27-p at Bears, noon Sept. 1-p Packers, 7 p.m. Sept. 11 Chargers, noon Sept. 18 at Texans, noon Sept. 25 Jets, 3:25 p.m. p-preseason

JOHN SLEEZER Kansas City Star

ON THE AIR

Royals pitcher Danny Duffy and catcher Drew Butera hug after Duffy’s complete game win over the White Sox on Aug. 11 at Kauffman Stadium.

Sunday’s TV / radio BASEBALL LLWS: International winners game, 10 a.m., ESPN Junior League Championship, noon, ESPN LLWS: U.S. winners game, 2 p.m., KAKE AA: Wingnuts at Gary-Southshore, 2 p.m., 1410-AM LLWS: International winners game, 4 p.m., ESPN LLWS: U.S. winners game, 6 p.m., ESPN2 BOXING Premier Champions, 4 p.m., KSNW Premier Champions, 8 p.m., NBCSN COLLEGE SOCCER Women: Loyola Mary. at Oklahoma, 3 p.m., FCSC Women: Colorado St. at Colorado, 4 p.m., PAC12 Women: Beijing Normal at Southern Cal, 6 p.m., PAC12 GOLF European: Czech Masters, 6 a.m., GOLF PGA: Wyndham Championship, noon, GOLF U.S. Amateur, 2 p.m., KSAS PGA: Wyndham Championship, 2 p.m., KWCH HORSE RACING Saratoga coverage, 3 p.m., FS2 MLB Red Sox at Tigers, noon, TBS Twins at Royals, 1 p.m., FSKC, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM Mets at Giants, 7 p.m., ESPN, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM MOTORSPORTS FIM MotoGP, 5 a.m., beIN NHRA Nationals, 1 p.m., FS1 IndyCar: ABC Supply 500, 2 p.m., NBCSN OLYMPICS Full listings, See Page 4D SOCCER EPL: Sunderland vs. Middlesbrough, 7:30 a.m., NBCSN EPL: West Ham vs. Bournemouth, 10 a.m., CNBC Serie A: AC Milan vs. Torino, 11 a.m., beIN La Liga: Real Sociedad vs. Real Madrid, 1:15 p.m., beIN MLS: D.C. vs. New York, 2 p.m., ESPN La Liga: Atl. Madrid vs. Deportivo, 3:15 p.m., beIN MLS: Seattle vs. Portland, 8:30 p.m., FS1 SOFTBALL NPF Championship, 4 p.m., CBSSN TENNIS Western & Southern Open, 1 p.m., ESPN2 Western & Southern Open, 1:30 p.m., TENNIS

Monday’s TV highlights MLB Nationals at Orioles, 6 p.m., MLB WICHITA-AREA TV SPORTS CHANNELS Local networks: KAKE (ABC) is Cox 10, DirecTV 10, Dish 10, U-Verse 10; KMTW is Cox 6, DirecTV 36, Dish 36, U-Verse 36; KSAS (Fox) is Cox 4, DirecTV 24, Dish 24, U-Verse 24; KSCW is Cox 5, DirecTV 33, Dish 5, U-Verse 5; KSNW (NBC) is Cox 3, DirecTV 3, Dish 3, U-Verse 3; KWCH (CBS) is Cox 12, DirecTV 12, Dish 12, U-Verse 12; Cox 22 and 122 are available only on Cox. National networks: beIN is Cox 292, DirecTV 620, Dish 392, U-Verse 662; BTN is Cox 273-275, DirecTV 610, Dish 392, U-Verse 650; BYU is Cox 152, DirecTV 374, Dish 9403, U-Verse 567; CNBC is Cox 53, DirecTV 355, Dish 208, U-verse 216; CBSSN is Cox 260, DirecTV 221, Dish 158, U-Verse 643; ESPN is Cox 32, DirecTV 206; Dish 140, U-Verse 602; ESPN2 is Cox 33, DirecTV 209, Dish 144, U-Verse 606; ESPNU is Cox 244, DirecTV 208, Dish 141, U-Verse 605; ESPNC is Cox 246, DirecTV 614, NA on Dish, U-Verse 603; ESPNN is Cox 245, DirecTV 207, Dish 142, U-Verse 604; FCSA is Cox 264, DirecTV 608, NA on Dish, U-Verse 647; FCSC is Cox 265, DirecTV 623, NA on Dish, U-Verse 648; FCSP is Cox 266, DirecTV 626, NA on Dish, U-Verse 649; FS1 is Cox 60, DirecTV 219, Dish 150, U-Verse 652; FS2 is Cox 243, DirecTV 618, Dish 397, U-Verse 651; FSKC is Cox 34, DirecTV 671, Dish 418, U-Verse 750; FSN+ is Cox 76, DirecTV 646-680, NA on Dish, U-Verse 690s; Golf is Cox 79, DirecTV 218, Dish 401, U-Verse 641; Longhorn is Cox 285, DirecTV 677, Dish 407, U-Verse 611; MLB on Cox 263, DirecTV 213, Dish 152, U-Verse 634; NBA is Cox 259, DirecTV 216, Dish 156, U-Verse 632; NBCSN is Cox 78, DirecTV 220, Dish 159, U-Verse 640; NFL is Cox 261, DirecTV 212, Dish 154, U-Verse 630; NHL is Cox 262, DirecTV 215, Dish 157, NA on U-Verse; Pac-12 is Cox 247, NA on DirecTV, Dish 406, U-Verse 759; SEC is Cox 276-277, DirecTV 611, Dish 408, U-Verse 607; TBS is Cox 29, DirecTV 247, Dish 139, U-Verse 112; TNT is Cox 30, DirecTV 245, Dish 138, U-Verse 108; Tennis is Cox 248, DirecTV 217, Dish 400, U-Verse 660; TRU is Cox 51, DirecTV 246, Dish 242, U-Verse 164; USA is Cox 28, DirecTV 242, Dish 105, U-Verse 124; WGN is Cox 9, DirecTV 307, Dish 239, U-Verse 180.

FROM PAGE 1D

ROYALS himself throwing with teammate Kris Medlen last year, toying around with a new breaking ball. For years, he had subsisted with a loopy breaking pitch, a classic 12-to-6 curveball. He began crafting it when he was in high school in Lompoc, Calif., and he held onto it during his rise through the minor leagues. The pitch was there in 2014, when he posted a 2.53 ERA in 1491⁄3 innings, helping the Royals to their first playoff appearance in 29 years. And it was there last year, too, as Duffy suffered through his worst year since his rookie in 2011. Some days, the pitch could be effective. Other days, it would fall apart, leading to another inconsistent performance. By late September, Duffy was relegated to a role in the Royals’ bullpen. “It wasn’t really a consistent competitive pitch,” Royals pitching coach Dave Eiland says. There was also the physical toll. In the years after Duffy underwent Tommy John surgery in 2012, a mental block formed around the pitch, he says. To snap off a breaking pitch at 79 mph, he had to expose his reconstructed elbow ligament to a host of external forces. Every time Duffy threw the pitch, a measure of doubt crept in. “It was hard to grasp that it wouldn’t break my arm,” Duffy says. His future as a starting pitcher uncertain, his career at a plateau, Duffy stood in the outfield grass, looking out toward Medlen, some 60 feet away. He gripped the baseball like a fastball, and he chucked it like a football, and even now, one year later, the moment still kind of blows him away. “It literally was one of the nastiest breaking balls I’ve ever thrown,” Duffy says. The baseball broke late and darted down, popping into the glove of Medlen. As he caught the ball, he looked back toward Duffy. “Dude,” Medlen said. “You got to use this in the game.” Ten months later, Duffy stands in the bowels of a major-league stadium on a recent afternoon and finishes the story. The confidence in this new pitch would come later, he says. So would the polish. The mastery would come last. But as he returned to the clubhouse that day, he placed his glove in his locker and pondered the experiment, the feeling of a new weapon in his arsenal. This, he thought, could be useful. A

Ten months later, so much has changed. Danny Duffy is no longer the promising starter who could not harness his potential. He is no longer

the former top prospect plagued by fits of poor command and mental blowups. He is 27 years old now, transformed from rotation enigma to shutdown reliever to one of the best starters in baseball in 2016. On Sunday, he will take the mound against the Minnesota Twins at Kauffman Stadium, and his numbers will illustrate a story of excellence. Among American League pitchers who are qualified for the ERA title, Duffy ranks second in ERA (2.73), first in WHIP (0.98) and third in strikeouts per nine innings (9.75). He is on pace to become the first Royals starter have an ERA under 3.00 since Zack Greinke in 2009 (2.16) and just the third since 1990 (Kevin Appier, being the other). He could become the first Kansas City left-hander to post a sub 3.00 ERA since Charlie Leibrandt in 1985. Inside the clubhouse and all around baseball, people have begun to take notice. First baseman Eric Hosmer calls him an ace. Royals manager Ned Yost calls him dominant. Toronto manager John Gibbons calls him one of the “better young starters in baseball.” “He’s come a long way,” says Gibbons, a former bench coach in Kansas City. The transformation of Duffy has kept the defending World Series champions on the fringe of the playoff race and reinvigorated the franchise’s hopes for another run 2017. But the journey from also-ran starter to homegrown ace began last fall, during the final weeks of frustrating 2015 season. In the span of the last year, Duffy added a new breaking ball and used a sojourn to the bullpen to simplify his delivery. He ditched the windup, opting to pitch solely from the stretch. The result is a pitcher who can finally repeat his delivery with consistency and command his devastating repertoire. “He’s keeping it simple,” Eiland says. “It’s understanding who he is. You’re a power left-handed pitcher.” In 2016, Duffy has cut his walks in half, issuing just 1.8 per nine innings, while his strikeouts have spiked. One season after discovering a new breaking ball — formally, he calls it a slider — Duffy has become a different pitcher. In 2015, he induced swings and misses on just 8.4 percent of his pitches, according to numbers at FanGraphs.com. This year, the number has ballooned to 13.5, the sixth best mark in baseball. A year ago, he struck out just 6.7 batters per nine innings, a number that never seemed to correlate with his power stuff. This

year, the number is 9.75. The secret, Eiland says, is the way the slider resembles Duffy’s fastball. “They have to respect the fact that it’s coming out of the same grip, the same slot, the same plane as my fastball,” Duffy says. “But it’s got a lastsecond drop to it. “My curveball had a different kind of effect because it was loopy. It would stay up sometimes. For one, it was extremely frustrating. And two, it wasn’t very effective.” As spring training began in February, Eiland sensed that Duffy was positioned for a rebound year after a disappointing 2015. But perhaps nobody could predict what happened next. After re-joining the rotation in May, Duffy has logged a 2.68 ERA in 18 starts. In four outings in August, he has allowed just four earned runs in 311⁄3 innings. And then there was Aug. 1, a Monday night at Tampa Bay. As the Royals faced the Rays, Duffy displayed the sheer potency of his stuff, finishing with a franchiserecord 16 strikeouts while allowing one hit across eight innings. “He’s been in some kind of zone,” Royals starter Ian Kennedy says. A

As the Royals convened at spring training in February, club officials sought to script out a rough sketch for their starting rotation in 2016. In the winter months, Royals general manager Dayton Moore had attempted to create depth in the rotation, looking for eight or nine guys who could potentially contribute in the rotation this season. Duffy was among them, but his role was still uncertain. The team had re-signed right-hander Chris Young in the offseason and club officials were banking on a strong year from righthander Kris Medlen, who had returned from his second Tommy John surgery in 2015. And there were other factors to consider: After a strong finish in the bullpen last year, Duffy expressed a preference for a return to relief work this season. Club officials were also skeptical that Duffy could handle 200 innings. So the front office, Moore sauys, envisioned the following scenario. Young and Medlen would begin the year in the rotation in April, and if everything went to plan, Duffy could be ready to join the rotation in June or July. “We all looked at him, as a potential to be an impact starting pitcher,” Moore says. “But Danny will tell you, I’m sure, that he preferred to be in the bullpen. That’s what he wanted to do.” While some in the organization were convinced that Duffy’s future was in the rotation, Yost concedes he was not so sure. For five years, he had watched Duffy battle command issues and in-

consistency. As he pondered Duffy’s potential in the bullpen, he thought back to the career paths of Wade Davis and Luke Hochevar, two pitchers who had struggled as starters before taking off in the bullpen. Maybe Duffy was just more suited for the pen. “Up until that point, he was a 100-pitch pitcher in five innings,” Yost says. “He just wasn’t a guy that would go consistently into the seventh inning. His pitch counts would get high. He would be very erratic and inconsistent in terms of coming out and throwing a good game and then throwing another good game and then have a clunker and then a so-so game. It was all predicated around his command. So it was like, ‘Alright, let’s just put him in the pen, take that freaking 97 mph fastball — like Hoch did, like Wade did — and just go with it.’ ” The script, of course, would not go to plan. Young and Medlen crashed out in early May, each suffering injuries after some early struggles. The Royals were in need of starters. As the front office mulled decision, Moore pulled out his phone and scanned the text messages from scouts and officials in the organization. It was time to put Duffy back in the rotation. “We’ve always felt as a baseball operations department that he needs to be a major-league starter,” Moore said. “He’s got three good pitches. It was just a matter of repeating his stuff. The only way you’re going to learn to repeat your stuff is to go out there on a continuous basis and gain the necessary experience.” In some ways, the path back to starting was unplanned. But Yost remains convinced that Duffy’s time in the bullpen changed his career, convinced that it showed him a new way to pitch. For years, Eiland says, Duffy had a habit of trying to pace himself during starts. He would hold a pitch back during the early innings. He would try to save some velocity, throwing his fastball in the 93 to 94 range when he had 96 in the tank. “Maybe back then I was trying to do too much without knowing enough,” Duffy says. “I still don’t think I know much. But back then, I think I was trying to be a little bit too fine. I’d throw one or two pitches through the first one or two innings and not even think about throwing my third or my fourth pitch.” When he headed to the bullpen, that mentality washed away. In some cases, he had one inning to pitch. There was no sense in holding back, no sense in no attacking from the start. “That’s when the lightbulb kind of went on,” Yost says. “ ‘I got a good fastball. I can get guys out.’ ” In some ways, of course, the parallels here are too obvious. For this is not the first time the Royals have possessed a homegrown frontline starter, one who needed a stint in the bullpen to understand how good he could be. In his early days in Kansas City, as he laid the foundation for a champion Moore witnessed the same career transformation with Greinke. This time, it was Duffy who learned to let go. “Zack Greinke realized he could be a dominant pitcher,” Moore says. “Danny Duffy, by being in the bullpen, realized he could be a dominant pitcher. And I think that does a lot for the mentality of a pitcher.”


Sports

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

3D

WSU NOTES

Rare swing overseas Civita during practice while she gains confidence in her new language. Sometimes, coaches uses a dry-erase board to explain the Shocker lingo with Xs and Os. When interviewed, Civita spoke some English and was most comfortable using an Internet translation tool and responding with text on her phone. “She might say, ‘I get it,’ just to be polite and she doesn’t get it,” senior libero Dani Mostrom said. “If you have actually, physically, have a small (dry-erase) board and you show her, it’s a lot easier for her to picture it. She’s been working a lot with Sean.” Civita targeted the top 50 U.S. college programs with her video, helped by her brother, Luca. WSU coaches corresponded with them using Skype and email starting in December. “The coach and the atmosphere made a beautiful impression,” she wrote.

BY PAUL SUELLENTROP

psuellentrop@wichitaeagle.com

Wichita State volleyball assistant coach Sean Carter estimates he gets thousands of highlight videos during recruiting season. Coaches watch and quickly discern if a player is talented enough to pursue. The bar for an overseas player is higher, because of the complications with travel, admissions and NCAA eligibility. When Carter and coach Chris Lamb watched libero Giorgia Civita’s video, however, they put aside their usual reservations for recruiting internationally. “Hers stood out quite a bit,” Carter said. “What we noticed was the level of attackers that she was having to defend against, better than any incoming college freshman for sure. The levels of volleyball she played at was much higher than the average freshman.” Civita, a 5-foot-6 freshman, is from Milan, Italy and played for Unendo Yamamay Busto Arsizio. While the adjustment to WSU and the United States is significant, Lamb is impresssed with her performance in practice. “IQ — she’s seen a lot of volleyball,” he said. “She understands volleyball things and she knows reading.” Carter often explains strategies and drills to

Stay close to home — The MVC will coordinate assignments of basketball officials with the Big 12, Conference USA, Ohio Valley and Southland conferences this season as part of a regional Men’s Basketball Officiating Consortium. The primary benefit is reducing travel for officials by giving them more games regionally. Fatigue has been an increasing concern for coaches and administrators in a time when it’s common for referees to work five or six games in a week, often

stretching across time zones. “Maximizing officials’ schedules and reducing the amount of travel,” said Eddie Jackson, MVC coordinator of men’s basketball officials. “We’ll have access to a much bigger and better pool of officials. If we’ve a guy that’s working at (Kansas) and we’ve got a game at Wichita State the next day, that would be a good fit.” Open up for Shockers tennis — WSU junior Gabriela Porubin and former Shocker Julia Schiller open play in the U.S. Open national playoffs on Saturday in New Haven, Conn. They need to win four matches to earn their way into a wild card entry in the U.S. Open. Porubin and Schiller play Furman’s Aryn Greene and Ansley Speaks in their first match. Former Shocker Thiago Santos is teamed with Victor Melo in the men’s doubles draw. They play Benjamin Collier and Joel Rubio Moreno on Sunday and must win three matches to earn a wild card into the U.S. Open. Worth noting — Baseball catcher Taylor Sanagorski transferred from WSU to Emporia State. He played in 15 games last season, starting two. … WSU’s baseball alumni golf tournament is Oct. 14 at Sand Creek Station in Newton. Cost is $100 for former Shockers and $125 for others. Proceeds benefit League 42, a youth baseball program. For information, go to league42.org.

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Rio 2016

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

EDUARDO VERDUGO Associated Press

Members of the Serbian men’s water polo team celebrate after winning the gold medal match against Croatia.

MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ Associated Press

Bianca Walkden of Great Britain, right, and Zheng Shuyin of China compete in a semifinal Taekwondo event.

NATACHA PISARENKO Associated Press

DMITRI LOVETSKY Associated Press

Aleksander Lesun of Russia celebrates winning the gold medal at the end of the men’s modern pentathlon.

South Korea’s Son Yeon-jae performs during the rhythmic gymnastics individual all-around final.

Shields set for second gold

SATURDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS AMERICAN WINS MEN’S 1,500 Matt Centrowitz of the United States ran from the front and held off Taoufik Makhloufi of Algeria at the line to win the gold medal in the men’s 1,500 meters. The last American to win the men’s 1,500 was Mel Sheppard at the 1908 London Olympics. Centrowitz led the pack through a leisurely first 600 meters, and he was able turn the race into an extended sprit. His last lap was 50.62 seconds. Nick Willis of New Zealand took bronze. Kenya favorite Asbel Kiprop fell halfway through the race and could not get back into medal contention. He finished sixth. BRAZIL CAPTURES ITS BIGGEST PRIZE Brazil’s trophy case is finally complete. The five-time World Cup champion won the only men’s soccer championship it was still missing, defeating Germany 5-4 in a penalty shootout and winning a soccer gold medal for the first time. Neymar scored with a superb free kick in regulation and converted the decisive penalty in the shootout after Brazilian goalkeeper Weverton stopped Nils Petersen’s shot in the fifth round of PKs. It was the crowning achievement of the 2016 Olympics for Brazil, restoring some of the nation’s soccer pride after a series of disappointing results. Neymar fell to the field sobbing after he was mobbed by his teammates as the crowd at iconic Maracana Stadium roared. Germany made it hard for Brazil, hitting crossbar three times in the first half and sending the game into extra time after a 59th minute equalizer by captain Maximilian Meyer. The men’s soccer tournament attracted most of the attention of Brazilian fans at the Olympics. The Brazilian football federation took the Olympic tournament as seriously as ever, bringing Neymar and many talented youngsters that are expected to be in the main squad in the 2018 World Cup in Russia. PARK WINS WOMEN’S GOLF GOLD Inbee Park is taking a gold medal back to South Korea to show anyone who doubted whether she should play in the Olympics. Slowed all year by a thumb injury that led to speculation she might retire, Park was dominant as ever Saturday at Olympic Golf Course. She made three straight birdies early, never let anyone closer than three shots the rest of the way and closed with a 5-under 66 for a five-shot victory. “Because I had an injury, a lot of people were saying maybe it was better to have another player in the field, which is understandable,” Park said. “But I really wanted to do well this week to show a lot of people that I can still play.” Lydia Ko, who replaced Park at No. 1 in women’s golf 10 months ago, didn’t make a birdie until the seventh hole. The 19-year-old Kiwi claimed the silver by one shot over Shanshan Feng of China, who also shot 69. JORGENSEN FINALLY GETS TRIATHLON WIN As she wobbled along on a flat tire four years ago in London, Gwen Jorgensen promised to turn that heartbreak at Hyde Park into a conquering of Copacabana Beach at the Rio Games. She crushed both the course and the competition Saturday, giving the U.S. its first Olympic triathlon gold medal by cruising across the finish line in 1 hour, 56 minutes, 16 seconds. That was 40 seconds ahead of silver medalist Nicola Spirig of Switzerland, who won gold at the 2012 Games. Jorgensen and Spirig were even until Jorgensen made her move with 2 kilometers left in the 10K final leg that followed a steep, 38.5K bike ride and a one-loop ocean swim. She said she was thinking of all the sacrifices, not just hers, but those of coach Jamie Turner and her husband, Patrick Lemieux, who abandoned his pro cycling career to serve as her operations manager. “I’ve been pretty vocal about my goal for the past four years. After London, I said I wanted to go to Rio and I wanted to win gold,” Jorgensen said. VOLLEYBALL Just by stepping on the court Saturday, Foluke Akinradewo showed how U.S. women’s volleyball squad stuck together. She returned from an injury to her left leg that forced her out early in the semifinal loss to Serbia. The star middle blocker took charge as the top-ranked Americans bounced back two days later to beat the Netherlands 25-23, 25-27, 25-22, 25-19 on Saturday. After Kim Hill’s ace on match point, the U.S. women fell into an embrace. Coach Karch Kiraly hugged his coaches and brought the women into a huddle for one last cheer. “In a way, selfishly, I wanted a gold medal to almost prove the way this culture is, or the way the culture has grown and the foundation that we’ve built, almost to prove it right – that the way we did it was right,” captain Christa Dietzen said.

BY GREG BEACHAM

Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO

ERIC GAY Associated Press

Diana Taurasi leaps into the arms of U.S. teammate Angel McCoughtry as they celebrate the win over Spain in the gold medal game Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.

U.S. wins 6th straight women’s hoops gold SUNDAY’S OLYMPICS ON TV

BY DOUG FEINBERG

Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO

Geno Auriemma and Diana Taurasi shared a long, emotional embrace. Mission accomplished. The dominant U.S. women’s basketball team did what was expected, winning a sixth consecutive Olympic gold medal and doing it in impressive fashion. In yet another rout, the U.S. dismantled Spain 101-72 on Saturday. Taurasi and the Americans played nearly flawless basketball in Rio, and were never challenged. They have won 49 consecutive games in the Olympics with only one of those decided by single digits. “It’s amazing isn’t it? I mean when you think, that’s 20 years of 20 years,” Auriemma said. “You know the first one was 96 and here we are 2016. It’s mindboggling when you think about it what this team has been able to accomplish, this program of the USA Basketball program. There is such a level of expectation, there’s such a level of respect for the people at the very top. “We’re doing stuff that may never be done again.” Even with that kind of sustained success by some very talented U.S. teams, this may be the best women’s basketball squad ever assembled. The team won by nearly 40 points a game, but fell short of the record 102.4 points the 1996 team averaged. But if this isn’t the best ever, it’s close. Taurasi puts the 2016 group at the top of the list. “I mean I’m not just saying talent-wise. I’m not saying margin of victory. I’m saying this is the most determined, unselfish team I’ve ever been on – hands down,” the fourtime gold medalist said. Unlike their semifinal win over France when the Americans looked discombobulated for a half, the U.S. was more fluid offensively. It helped having Bird back in the lineup. The four-time gold medalist and team captain missed the semifinal game with a sprained right knee capsule. She wasn’t 100

Network NBC NBCSN USA MSNBC CNBC Bravo Golf Telemundo Universo Basketball Soccer

Cox 3 78 28 24 53 61 79 308 304 2111 2112

DirecTV 3 220 242 356 355 237 218 406 410 205 600

Dish 3 159 105 209 208 129 401 835 838

U-Verse 3 640 124 215 216 181 641 3007 192 639 638

NBC — Men’s Track & Field - Marathon (LIVE), 8-11 a.m. Rhythmic Gymnastics - Group Gold Medal Final; Men’s Volleyball - Gold Medal Final (LIVE); Men’s Basketball - Gold Medal Final (LIVE), 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Rio Gold, 7-8 p.m.; Closing Ceremony, 8-10:30 p.m. NBCSN — Men’s Basketball - Bronze Medal (LIVE); Men’s Wrestling - Freestyle Gold Medal Finals; Boxing - Gold Medal Finals (LIVE), 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. USA — Men’s Volleyball - Bronze Medal (LIVE); Men’s Handball - Bronze Medal (LIVE); Men’s Cycling - Mountain Bike Gold Medal Final (LIVE); Men’s Handball - Gold Medal Final (LIVE), 7 a.m.-3 p.m. NBC BASKETBALL CHANNEL — Men’s Basketball - Bronze Medal (LIVE); Men’s Basketball Gold Medal Final (LIVE), 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.7:30 p.m. TELEMUNDO — Men’s Volleyball - Gold Medal Finals; Men’s Basketball - Gold Medal Final, 11 a.m.-6 p.m.

MEDALS LEADERS 283 of 306 total medal events Nation G S United States China Britain Russia Japan France Germany Australia Italy Canada South Korea Netherlands New Zealand Kazakhstan Brazil Hungary Denmark Azerbaijan Spain Cuba Sweden Ukraine Poland Kenya Jamaica Croatia Uzbekistan South Africa Belarus Czech Republic Colombia Iran Turkey North Korea Georgia Greece Belgium Serbia Switzerland Thailand Ethiopia

40 24 26 17 12 9 16 8 8 4 9 8 4 3 5 8 1 0 6 5 2 2 2 5 6 5 2 1 1 1 3 3 1 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 1

36 18 22 17 8 17 9 11 11 3 3 6 9 5 6 3 6 4 3 2 6 5 3 5 1 3 2 6 4 1 2 1 3 3 1 1 2 2 2 2 1

B Tot 35 111 26 68 15 63 19 53 21 41 14 40 14 39 10 29 7 26 15 22 8 20 4 18 4 17 9 17 5 16 4 15 7 14 10 14 4 13 4 11 3 11 4 11 6 11 0 10 2 9 1 9 5 9 2 9 4 9 7 9 3 8 4 8 4 8 2 7 4 7 2 6 2 6 2 6 2 6 2 6 4 6

percent Saturday, but was good enough. The U.S., which beat Spain by 40 in a preliminary round game, got off to a slow start and only led 21-17 after the first quarter. The Americans were up 27-24 in the second quarter before getting going. Auriemma turned to something very familiar to him to spark the Americans. The UConn coach put his five former Huskie players on the court at the

Malaysia Argentina Slovakia Armenia Slovenia Romania Mexico Lithuania Norway Indonesia Taiwan Venezuela Egypt Tunisia Bahrain Vietnam Independent Ivory Coast Ireland India Mongolia Israel Bahamas Fiji Jordan Kosovo Puerto Rico Singapore Tajikistan Algeria Grenada Philippines Qatar Austria Bulgaria Dominican Republic Estonia Finland Kyrgyzstan Moldova Morocco Nigeria Portugal United Arab Emirates

0 3 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

4 1 2 3 2 1 2 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 0 1 2 2 3 4 0 2 2 3 3 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

same time for the first time in the Olympics and that group started the 16-3 run that blew it open. Breanna Stewart got the spurt started with two free throws. Taurasi then hit consecutive three-pointers – her first points of the game – as the Americans scored 10 straight. By the time Lindsay Whalen’s layup just beat the halftime buzzer, the U.S. led 49-32 and Spain had just two baskets in the final 6:55 of the half.

Shortly after Claressa Shields punched her way through yet another elite opponent to reach another Olympic gold-medal bout, she spontaneously broke into song. Swaying gently to the tune in her head, the world’s best middleweight ripped through several bars of the Bill Withers classic “Just the Two of Us,” only with altered lyrics to reflect her shared mission with Shakur Stevenson as the only Americans left in the Rio Olympic boxing tournament. “Just the two of us, building gold medals in the sky!” Shields sang. “Just the two of us, me and Shakur.” U.S. coach Kay Koroma could only watch and smile. “The thing about Claressa, when she’s smiling and joking around, that’s when she’s the most dangerous,” he said. Cuba’s Robeisy Ramirez won a split-decision victory over Shakur Stevenson in the Olympic bantamweight boxing final Saturday, but Rio has been a song for Shields, who takes on the Netherlands’ Nouchka Fontijn on Sunday for her second Olympic gold medal. The rest of the world’s top boxers haven’t been able to wreck Shields’ good moods ever since she burst onto the international scene at the London Games. Her final bout in Rio de Janeiro is the culmination of a four-year stretch in which she hasn’t lost a fight and has rarely even been tested – certainly not yet at the Rio Olympics, where top female fighters only must win three bouts to claim gold. “A lot of girls are here just to beat me, but I’m here to win a gold medal,” Shields said. “Beating me is winning a gold medal to them, so they go out there and they fight me a lot harder than they did any other opponent.” Koroma and U.S. women’s coach Billy Walsh work on game plans with Shields, but her superior skills and athleticism often make it relatively easy work. “You don’t have to worry about if I’m going to get out there and not let my hands go,” Shields said.

KANSANS TO WATCH IN RIO Saturday A Kyle Clemons, ex-KU, 1600 relay (Rowlett, Texas), final A Alyx Treasure, KSU, high jump (for Canada), final A Florian Skilang Temengil, Newman, (for Palau) lost his freestyle wrestling match 3-1


SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

THE WICHITA EAGLE ...................................................................................

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Rio 2016

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

U.S. men’s basketball goes for 3 in a row BY BRIAN MAHONEY

Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO

No gold, no glory. That’s the way it is for the U.S. men’s basketball team. The Americans, the standard in the sport since winning their first 63 games after it debuted 80 years ago in the Olympics, are either winners or failures. There is no celebrating silver. When they say adeus to Rio, it can be with only one thing around their necks to deem the games a success. “That’s what we came here for and we don’t want to leave with anything less than the gold medal,” forward Carmelo Anthony said. Anthony and the Americans will be playing for their third in a row Sunday

when they face Serbia, a team of heroes back home no matter what the scoreboard says after 40 minutes. They have restored the pride of a basketballcrazed country, already secured their first medal since becoming an independent nation in 2006. And as they whooped it up following their 87-61 semifinal rout of Australia on Friday, it was easy to think the Serbs’ work was already finished. Their coach won’t let them. “I know just two ways,” Sasha Djordjevic said during his postgame press conference. “You just play basketball or you just play basketball to win. You guys don’t know me, but my answer is B.” Yet the Serbs delivered a happy-to-be-here performance last time they had a crack at the mighty

FROM PAGE 1D

HIGHLIGHTS als, Biles gets to carry the U.S. flag into the closing ceremony, and U.S. shooter Kim Rhode has now won a medal in six consecutive Olympiads – and might not be done, either. BEST FINISH Bolt kissing the finish line after his ninth and final Olympic gold – in nine final races – was a perfect ending. He ran the anchor leg of the 4x100meter relay for Jamaica, won emphatically to become the third athlete ever with nine golds in track and field, and insists that this will be the end of his Olympic career. “Nothing left to prove,” Bolt said. He’s right. “I am the greatest,” he added. Right again. BEST SPORTSMANSHIP An easy pick. In the women’s 5,000meter heat, Abbey D'Agostino of the U.S. and New Zealand’s Nikki Hamblin – strangers before that day – were involved in a tumble. D'Agostino helped Hamblin up, encouraging her to finish the race. D'Agostino tore a knee ligament in the fall and obviously couldn’t finish. Hamblin wound up finishing last of 17 in the 5,000 final, so neither left with a medal. Instead, they got so much more.

“That girl is the Olympic spirit right there,” Hamblin said of D'Agostino. “I’ve never met her before. Like I never met this girl before. And isn’t that just so amazing?” Yes, it is. BIGGEST EMBARRASSMENT Another easy pick, even in a games where an Egyptian was sent home after failing to shake an Israeli judo opponent’s hand. Ryan Lochte is a 12time Olympic medalist, and the odds that he'll have a chance to ever swim for a 13th are as murky as some of the pools were in these Rio Games. Lochte’s story that a robber put a gun to his head quickly unraveled, his three teammates who were companions that night all were left to answer legal questions after he scurried home, and more repercussions from the U.S. Olympic Committee are likely coming. “It’s traumatic to be out late with your friends in a foreign country – with a language barrier,” read part of the apology that Lochte released on social media Friday. Maybe so, but it bears noting that language barrier or no language barrier, the incident occurred after Lochte left a night out at … Club France. So it

Americans for a championship. They teams met in 2014 in Madrid in the Basketball World Cup final and the Americans romped to a 129-92 victory, finishing a tournament where they won by 33 points per game. “Two years ago in Spain we get into the game not mentally ready,” Serbia captain Milos Teodosic said. “We were too much happy that we reached the final and we had that experience and we cannot allow that to repeat.” The U.S. isn’t expecting it. These Olympics have been way too tough to believe they will end easily. This U.S. team, less talented and experienced then the last two gold medalists, has already had four games decided by 10 points or less, including its 82-76 victory over Spain in

the semifinals. The close calls didn’t play well back home, where winning big in basketball is the American way. But they were just what this team needed to get ready for its golden opportunity. Djordjevic played for Yugoslavia back when Vlade Divac, Toni Kukoc and teammates were a basketball power, too big, strong and savvy for the college players the Americans were sending. Yugoslavia beat the U.S. – coached by Mike Krzyzewski – in the semifinals of the 1990 world basketball championship, the last major tournament for the Americans before NBA players arrived with the Dream Team in 1992. That ushered in an era of American dominance that seemed to be returning. The Americans rolled into Rio de Janeiro un-

would seem like not all foreign atmospheres struck him as traumatic before now.

Niekerk to Olympic gold and a world record in the men’s 400. Her style is simple. When the smile goes away and the voice gets stern, it’s time to get serious. In other words, sort of like most great-grandmothers. “She’s an amazing woman,” Van Niekerk said. “Her work … I think it speaks for itself.”

BREAKOUT STAR We asked. You voted. Narrowing the list of potential candidates to four – Simone Manuel (four swimming medals), Joseph Schooling (beat Phelps for a gold in the pool), Monica Puig (whose tennis gold was Puerto Rico’s first Olympic title in any sport) and Ibtihaj Muhammad (the barrierbreaking fencing medalist) – AP asked its Twitter followers to have a say in deciding this one. The response was overwhelming, and one-sided: Puig is the breakout star of these games. Reduced to tears many times after draping the Puerto Rican flag across her body after the goldmedal match, Puig beat two of the world’s best five players to win the title. “To do this for my country is everything,” Puig said. The Olympic ideal, personified. BEST COACH Due respect to Mike Krzyzewski, Geno Auriemma, Martha Karolyi and the Japanese wrestling coach who found himself getting bodyslammed twice in celebration by women’s gold medalist Risako Kawai, this one goes to Ans Botha – the 74-year-old greatgrandmother who guided South Africa’s Wayde Van

BEST COUPLE Decathlon champion Ashton Eaton of the U.S. and his wife, heptathlon bronze medalist Brianne Thiesen-Eaton of Canada, would be a very easy selection here. But what Kate Richardson-Walsh and Helen Richardson-Walsh did was even more rare. They’re married, and played for the same goldmedal winning British women’s field hockey team. In a games that had more openly gay athletes than ever before, theirs was a moment that surely resonated with many around the world who don’t know the first thing about field hockey. “To win an Olympic medal is special. To win an Olympic medal with your wife standing next to you … we will cherish this for the rest of our lives,” Kate Richardson-Walsh said. BEST BACK-AND-FORTH When the U.S. women’s soccer team was ousted by Sweden (and former U.S. coach Pia Sundhage), American goalkeeper

ERIC GAY Associated Press

United States’ Kevin Durant (5) stands with Carmelo Anthony during their semifinal round game against Spain on Friday in Rio de Janeiro.

beaten in 10 years, such an overwhelming favorite that Djordjevic predicted early in the tournament that it would be a “long way to go” before somebody beat the Americans. The Serbs provided the toughest in a string of tough games for the Amer-

icans, the U.S. winning 94-91 when Bogdan Bogdanovic missed a threepointer at the buzzer. “Serbia came within a whisker of beating us in our pool play, so we absolutely respect them,” Krzyzewski said. “We know how good they are.”

Hope Solo raised eyebrows with her assessment of the match. But her former coach had the perfect rebuttal. “We lost to a bunch of cowards,” Solo said. “It’s OK to be cowards if you win,” Sundhage countered.

tional Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams held daily hourlong briefings with reporters, and Andrada offered up some quote gems. So we'll go ahead and award his head-scratching statements their own set of medals. The bronze: “Numbers mislead,” he said, as part of an answer about ticket sales and poor crowds. The silver: “Let’s give these kids a break,” he said of 32-year-old Ryan Lochte and his U.S. swimming teammates, after their incident. The gold: “Chemistry is not an exact science,” he said, talking about why the water at a diving pool went from blue to green.

BIGGEST OFF-FIELD STAR A tough category, especially after Leslie Jones of “Saturday Night Live” parlayed hilarious Twitter commentary into an invite to Rio. Matthew McConaughey hung out with everyone from the U.S. women’s rugby team to Phelps, and Gisele Bundchen’s catwalk in the opening ceremony was one not to forget. But the pick here is Zac Efron, who flew to Rio just to surprise the U.S. women’s gymnastics team – particularly Biles, who doesn’t hide her enormous crush on the actor. He also saw Bolt and the U.S. men’s basketball team, but let’s face it, no one is going to ignore invites to hang with Biles and the U.S. gymnasts right now. BEST SPIN No one might have been better at their job during the Olympics than Mario Andrada, the spokesman for the Rio Games organizing committee. When something went wrong it was his job to explain it – and do so with the world watching and listening. He and Interna-

BEST BRAZILIAN MOMENT Stand up and cheer, City of God. One of your own is now an Olympic champion. Slums, or favelas, are everywhere in Rio – none more infamous than the City of God, which rose to fame through the 2002 movie of the same name that depicted life in the slum. Rafaela Silva grew up there, and she won gold in judo at these Rio Games. Now that’s a made-forHollywood story. And with that, it’s time to start thinking about PyeongChang and the 2018 Winter Games. When the cauldron in Rio goes out Sunday night, those games will be only 536 days away.

Just Plain Thanks. © 2016 INTRUST Bank


Sports

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

KU’s Beaty still mulling QBs BY JESSE NEWELL

jnewell@wichitaeagle.com LAWRENCE

Sophomore Ryan Willis was at the front of the quarterback line. Maybe that means a lot, maybe not much at all. But the fact remains that during Saturday morning’s open practice as part of fan appreciation day activities, the sophomore was being treated like Kansas football’s No. 1 guy on the depth chart. KU coach David Beaty continues to say a starting quarterback has not been selected. During a meeting with reporters on Friday, he reiterated that he needed more time to evaluate both Willis and junior Montell Cozart. “We won’t make that decision until we feel good about it,” Beaty said. “So it could be all the way up to gametime. It could be next week. It could be tomorrow. It just depends on when I feel like it’s time for us to make that decision.” Willis showed glimpses of what he could do a season ago while starting KU’s final eight games. Though his decision-making led to some costly interceptions, he displayed

RON JENKINS Associated Press

Ryan Willis, left, started eight games last season, but coach David Beaty isn’t ready to commit to Willis this summer.

a strong arm and also toughness after taking numerous hits while playing behind an inexperienced offensive line. Cozart, meanwhile, has had opportunities to start each of KU’s last two seasons with inconsistent results. He was lauded by

Beaty for a strong offseason, though, and was voted a team captain in 2015. “We’ve got really good players, so it would be a different deal if I thought we didn’t have much to choose from,” Beaty said. “But those dudes are all

MOTORSPORTS

Aleshin will start in front at Pocono Associated Press

After the last car sped past the finish line at Pocono Raceway, Mikhail Aleshin raised his arms in triumph. Fastest in morning practice on the tricky 2.5-mile triangular track, Aleshin was fastest in qualifying to win the IndyCar pole on Saturday. He turned a fast lap of 220.454 mph to edge Josef Newgarden for the top spot. It’s the first career pole for the Russian, who drives for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports. “I had two good laps. I knew I couldn’t do better,” Aleshin said. “I just kept it flat. Obviously, it worked this time. I just knew that we couldn’t do any better. I was just happy for the team. From the first lap, the car was just at the edge of what we needed.” It’s the third time this season Newgarden has qualified second. He was on the front row at the Indy 500 and at Iowa, just missing the top spot Saturday with a lap of 220.195 mph. “He’s pretty daring. Not a lot spooks him,” Newgarden said of Aleshin.

“He gets better and better the more seat time he has. I think you’re seeing that.” Takuma Sato qualified third, followed by Helio Castroneves, Carlos Munoz, Aleshin’s teammate James Hinchcliffe, Alexander Rossi, Will Power, Tony Kanaan and Ed Carpenter. Points leader Simon Pagenaud qualified 14th in windy conditions. Defending race winner Ryan Hunter-Reay crashed in morning practice and did not qualify. Aleshin led 33 laps at Mid-Ohio in the previous race but was caught up in a late pit road crash with Newgarden and finished 17th. Still, it’s a team on the rise. He finished fifth at Iowa and was sixth at Toronto in July. “We have some new team members. We needed some work together,” Aleshin said. “We came to this point and now we can see progress in the last couple of races. I hope this pole position is not all that we can show you.” For Newgarden, it was a step in the right direction. He’s fourth in points behind the Penske trio of Pagenaud, Power and Castroneves.

“The pressure is not on us,” Newgarden said. “The pressure is on Simon and Will. They’re in a tougher spot. We can afford to get a little more aggressive than those guys. I feel pretty cool going into these races.” Pocono Raceway painted the letters JW on the track at the finish line and Union Jacks flew at halfstaff in honor of Englishman Justin Wilson, who died a year ago after being struck by debris in the closing laps of the IndyCar race here. Hunter-Reay crashed early in the first practice. His car broke free in Turn 1, spun around and slammed the outside wall hard before caroming back across the track and coming to rest along the inside wall. Hunter-Reay wasn’t injured, but the left front of the Honda was demolished, forcing his Andretti Autosport team to switch to a backup car. “The rear all of a sudden just snapped,” said Hunter-Reay, who won this race a year ago. “It’s a setback. This is really unfortunate that we have to reset. We have a lot of oval wins in that car. We'll have to deal with it.” Later in the morning

MEL EVANS Associated Press

Mikhall Aleshin drives during qualifying Saturday for Sunday’s Pocono IndyCar 500 in Long Pond, Pa. Aleshin qualified for the pole position.

really talented.” Beaty, who doubles as the team’s quarterbacks coach, is evaluating more than throws as well. “The thing that we really have to do as a quarterback right now in our program is we have to have a guy, whoever it is

practice, Charlie Kimball’s car slammed into the same wall, his steering wheel flying out of the cockpit onto the track as the Chevrolet bounced along the wall and rolled to a stop, its left side severely damaged.

in there, that can control that team and do a good job of managing that team,” Beaty said. “The leadership aspect is going to be huge for us.” The coach has been harping on tiny details in practice. He tells the quarterbacks they need to be

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aware of their facial expressions while working to get teammates ready for the next play. “The team goes as you go,” Willis said. “So if you’re showing bad body language, something else is going to happen elsewhere. The left tackle might think, ‘Oh crap. What’s wrong with him?’ It all starts at quarterback.” Beaty says he’s been around a few QBs who thrived in this aspect. That includes former Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel, with Beaty saying he was “as good as I’ve ever seen anywhere at his sideline demeanor and his controlling of his team.” Former KU quarterback Todd Reesing also fit the same mold. “He was never out of it,” Beaty said. “His body language was always one that … we could be down three touchdowns, and he’d be telling (receiver) Kerry (Meier), ‘Hey listen, you’re going to hitch and go here, and I’m going to put you over on this.’ He’d be over there drawing things up in the dirt.” Though Beaty hasn’t consistently seen these same mannerisms with this year’s quarterbacks, he’s not discouraged at this early stage. “They’re progressing well,” Beaty said, “but we’ve got to get better.” Jesse Newell: @jessenewell

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...................................................................................THE WICHITA EAGLE

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

Don McGinty, McGinty Machine Co; City Councilman Pete Meitzner

Wayne Chambers, High Touch; Craig Simon, Landmark Commercial Real Estate; Vernon Dolezal, High Touch

Carla Lee, La Familia Community Center; Don Sherman, Westar Energy

Jack Pulley, Davis Moore; Bob Dool, Americans For Prosperity; Joe Kiefer, Cox Communications; Ray Frederick, WIBA

Nicole Alexander, Textron Aviation; Barby Jobe, Wichita Metro Chamber; Sam Sackett, Spirit AeroSystems

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Sports

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

Arrests in 2 incidents at Notre Dame

BY BRETT MARTEL

Associated Press BATON ROUGE, LA.

The topic of discussion in Les Miles’ second-floor office at LSU’s expansive football complex centered on how the coach intended to handle the everheightening scrutiny upon him this season – particularly in light of the raging speculation that he was on the brink of being fired last November. At one point, Miles casually leaned forward from the sofa he sat upon, peaked inside a crinkled paper bag on the coffee table in front of him and uttered, “That’s a bummer.” Either his wife, Kathy, or 13-year-old daughter, Macy, had finished the tortilla chips while dining with Miles following LSU’s evening practice, and the coach asked, “How the heck are you supposed to eat guacamole without chips?” That might have been the toughest question facing LSU’s charismatic, hat-wearing, grass-chewing coach that evening. When it came to how he'll deal with the perception of uncertainty swirling around him heading into his 12th season with the Tigers, Miles offered a straight-forward response that seemed obvious to him. “Our plan would be to win and to play very, very well and not to really worry or commiserate and waste time about things you cannot control,” Miles said in an interview with The Associated Press. “You can only put the plan in place to win. … You can’t be the best you can be if you’re not fully consumed with that very, very specific goal.” In Baton Rouge, many fans are fed up with the Tigers’ five-game losing streak against Alabama and question why a program with LSU’s profile, highly rated recruiting classes and first-class facilities hasn’t played in an elite bowl game for four seasons. That’s why pressure mounted on LSU’s administration to fire Miles during a threegame skid late last season. But Miles and his famously unconventional syntax are back for what many see as make-orbreak campaign. In terms of pure numbers, the Miles era has involved plenty of winning – 112 victories in 11 seasons, second only at LSU to Charlie McClendon’s 137 victories in 18 seasons (1962-79). Miles’ highlights include the 2007 national title. He’d never lost three straight at LSU before last year. Miles’ backers see him as a friendly, funny, wellgrounded family man who is committed to his community for the long-term. All four of his children

BY RICK CALLAHAN

Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS

DAVE MARTIN Associated Press

LSU coach Les Miles shouts at an official during a game against Alabama in 2013, in Tuscaloosa, Ala.

LSU’s Miles ignores scrutiny in 12th season have spent at least part of their childhood in Baton Rouge, and the 62-yearold Miles doesn’t sound inclined to entertain leaving, even if his tenure as LSU coach ends before he’d prefer. “I see four kids who grew up here and have lifetime friends here and will always want to come back to Baton Rouge,” Miles said. “I’ve had tremendous experiences in Tiger Stadium with young men I’ve been fortunate to coach and I am not going to minimize that for a moment.” Kathy Miles said her husband has always been steady through rough patches, even last season. “In terms of Les, (last season) never felt any different at all from the first day we got here,” she said. “You just put your head down, you just try to win and you hope that you do that a great majority of the time – especially at LSU – because the expectations are high. But Les knew that when he got here.” Similar sentiments echo from Miles’ players. “All the speculation that was going on, I know he had to feel some type of way about it,” receiver Malachi Dupre said. “But through that whole process, seeing him stay the same just shows the way you have to handle things in life. “He did a great job of handling it and taught us all a lesson about fighting through it and doing the best you possibly can.”

Miles said that when he travels around Louisiana, fans continue to greet him graciously. Some thank him for making LSU football a bright spot during tough times, such as in his first season in 2005, when the Tigers had a strong season amid disruptions caused by devastating hurricanes Katrina and Rita. More recently, Miles has sought to lend moral support to law enforcement in the wake of a deadly police shooting in Baton Rouge in July. Now Miles is eyeing ways to help victims of flooding that has damaged an estimated 40,000 south Louisiana homes; LSU players were helping out at a shelter for flood victims this past week. Miles’ backers were out in force during LSU’s regular season finale last season, when his job status appeared in doubt. They roared for him when he walked from the team bus to the stadium, and again when he appeared on the field. But it wasn’t until after the Tigers’ triumph in that game that LSU confirmed Miles’ return in 2016 – an unpopular decision among fans who believe LSU should have won more in recent years – particularly against rival Alabama and coach Nick Saban, a former LSU coach who has won four national titles with the Crimson Tide since 2009. “The reason LSU fired Charlie McClendon was he couldn’t beat Bear Bryant, but nobody would

take a step back and realize nobody else could beat Bear Bryant, either,” said Baton Rouge sports talk radio host Derek Ponamsky. “Now people are saying Miles has got to beat Saban. Who else is consistently doing that?” The Tigers host Alabama on Nov. 5. Before that, LSU’s slate includes a challenging season opener against Wisconsin at Green Bay’s Lambeau Field and a visit to resurgent Florida. Most starters have returned to a Tigers squad that won nine games last season, including a lopsided bowl victory over Texas Tech. Those back on offense include junior running back Leonard Fournette, who is a Heisman Trophy candidate, along with junior quarterback Brandon Harris and his top two receivers, senior Travin Dural and Dupre. The defensive standouts returning include linebacker Kendell Beckwith, cornerback Tre'Davious White and lineman Arden Key. Yet, if LSU falls short of the College Football Playoff, Miles could be blamed for squandering what many view as LSU’s best team since 2011. Harris grinned when asked if he’s noticed anything different about Miles this season and called Miles “the chilliest coach I’ve ever been around.” “A lot of fans don’t like me, either, but I don’t think me or coach cares,” Harris said.

men,” Frantz said. “He did a great job of getting me and a lot of other tackles ready. I couldn’t have asked for a better situation to be able to be under him for a year and learn how to do things the right way.” Frantz will get to show off his progress quickly. He suspects those who watched him play two years ago will hardly recognize him. He has added noticeable muscle. His speed has improved, too. In the past, he typically lined up against the biggest players on the opposing team. Now, he is capable of using his long arms and

quick feet to keep smaller, faster pass-rushers away from the pocket. “I like his foot speed and his quickness,” offensive line coach Charlie Dickey said. “He’s got some toughness about him, too. He tries to get better every day. If he keeps doing that, we will have a chance.” Frantz will be joined by several new starters up front. The Wildcats lost everyone but center Dalton Risner from its offensive line last year, and he has since moved to right tackle. Offensive coordinator Dana Dimel says Frantz is “loaded with upside.” “He is really motivated and intelligent,” Dimel said. “He has a chance to be really good.” That much is obvious

by his placement on the offensive line. The Wildcats typically like to put their top blocker at left tackle, regardless of size. Frantz will have to prove himself before he can live up to that label, but he’s not worried about that. Few things seem challenging compared to replacing Whitehair. “We had really good starters last year, so people are going to be expecting young guys like me to step up and fill those roles,” Frantz said. “That is a huge challenge for us. We have got to live up to those expectations and pick up where they left off.”

FROM PAGE 1D

K-STATE man, you have to produce and play at a high level. Expectations never change.” Frantz, a 6-foot-5, 293pounder from Lawrence, is embracing the challenge. It’s what he trained for last season when he took a redshirt and played for the scout team, pushing himself in the weight room and studying Whitehair’s technique. He learned a lot thanks to a good role model. “Replacing Cody’s legacy here is quite a challenge, but Cody was such a great mentor to me and all the other young offensive line-

9D

Kellis Robinett: @kellisrobinett

Notre Dame cornerback Devin Butler was jailed Saturday after a police officer said the player punched and slammed him to the ground outside a bar, and five teammates were arrested in a separate incident when a trooper found marijuana and a loaded handgun inside their car during a traffic stop. Officers had to use a stun gun to subdue Butler in the altercation outside the Linebacker Lounge in South Bend, according to a probable cause affidavit. South Bend police spokesman Lt. Joe Galea said that after officers broke up a fight inside the bar they saw two women fighting outside when Butler allegedly shoved one of the women. Butler was agitated and when officers told him to back away he allegedly pushed the officers and then attacked one of them. The affidavit says Butler tackled an officer to the ground, punched him several times in the side and stomach and pulled off his duty belt. “He shouted profanities at the officers and started swinging his fist,” Galea said of Butler. The St. Joseph County prosecutor’s office said Butler faced possible charges of resisting law enforcement and battery to a police officer, both felonies. Butler was being

SPORTS IN BRIEF Golf Si Woo Kim followed his tournament-record 10under 60 with a 64 on Saturday to increase his lead to three strokes in the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, N.C. The 21-year-old South Korean player had an 18-under 192 total at Sedgefield, a stroke off the tournament 54-hole record set by Carl Pettersson in his 2008 victory. Kim played the front nine in 3-under 35 with four birdies and a bogey, added birdies on the par-4 13th and par-5 15th and parred the final three holes. Rafa Cabrera Bello was second after a 65 in the PGA Tour’s regular-season finale. The Spaniard was fifth last week in the Rio Olympics.

Tennis Angelique Kerber reached the Western & Southern Open final, leaving her one win away from unseating Serena Williams at No. 1. Kerber took control after a 33-minute rain delay in the first set and beat Simona Halep 6-3, 6-4 in humid, windy conditions in Mason, Ohio, putting her within reach of the world’s top ranking. Williams has led the WTA rankings for 183 consecutive weeks, the secondlongest such stretch. A win on Sunday over 15th-seeded Karolina Pliskova would move Kerber to the top spot in next week’s rankings. Pliskova advanced to the championship match for the first time by beating Garbine Muguruza 6-1, 6-3.

held at the county jail on $10,000 surety bond. Prosecutor Kenneth P. Cotter said in a statement Saturday that he’s seeking court approval for additional time to investigate the case so that his office can “determine whether formal charges are appropriate.” The five other players were arrested Friday night after Indiana State Police said a trooper stopped a car in Fulton County about 35 miles south of South Bend for speeding. The trooper detected the odor of marijuana and with the help of a drugsniffing dog, he found the marijuana and handgun, police said. The university confirmed that those arrested were: cornerback Ashton White, starting safety Max Redfield, wide receiver Kevin Stepherson Jr., linebacker Te'von Coney and Dexter Williams, who’s one of three running backs expected to play regularly for the Irish this season. All five were released Saturday afternoon from the Fulton County Jail in Rochester, where they had been held on a misdemeanor marijuana possession charge. Redfield, Stepherson and Williams face an additional misdemeanor charge of possession of an unlicensed handgun. Notre Dame also confirmed the arrest of Butler. University spokesman Paul Browne said in a statement that “any student arrested on a felony charge also faces dismissal from the university.”

Andy Murray was scheduled to play Milo Raonic in an evening semifinal. Marin Cilic faced unseeded Grigor Dimitrov in the other semifinal.

Baseball Kenny Rix hit a threerun home run to lead Warwick, R.I., to an 8-0 victory over Bend, Ore., in an elimination game on Saturday in the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa.… Gael Cortez hit two home runs and Mexico beat Italy 12-7 in an international elimination game.

Football Buffalo Bills star defensive tackle Marcell Dareus says he will enter a rehabilitation facility after violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy for a second consecutive season. Dareus said he took “careful consideration” before announcing his plans in a statement released by the Bills on Saturday, about an hour before Buffalo hosted the New York Giants in a preseason game. General manager Doug Whaley said the team supported Dareus’ decision, but he provided few other details. He didn’t know when Dareus would check into a rehab facility or how long the process would take.

Horse racing Three-year-old filly Songbird remained unbeaten, winning the her 10th straight race in the Grade I Alabama Stakes by six lengths at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga, N.Y.


10D

Baseball

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

MLB ROUNDUP Nationals bring Zimmerman, Lobaton off DL

MLB STANDINGS AND SCHEDULE AMERICAN LEAGUE

The Washington Nationals reinstated first baseman Ryan Zimmerman (wrist) and catcher Jose Lobaton (elbow) from the 15-day disabled list. Zimmerman was scheduled to start Saturday night’s game against the Atlanta Braves. Right-hander A.J. Cole and catcher Pedro Severino were optioned to Class AAA Syracuse. BEN MARGOT Associated Press

More roster moves

The Mets’ Yoenis Cespedes rejoices Saturday after a home run off Giants pitcher Matt Moore in the third inning in San Francisco. He had another homer in the seventh.

A Cleveland Indians pitcher Josh Tomlin was activated from the family medical emergency list and was scheduled to start Saturday against the Toronto Blue Jays. Tomlin returned to his home in Tyler, Texas, on Wednesday. The righthander is 11-6 with a 4.14 ERA in 22 starts. Right-hander Shawn Armstrong was optioned to Class AAA Buffalo. A The Cincinnati Reds recalled infielder Jose Peraza from Class AAA Louisville and optioned right-hander Keyvius Sampson to the Bats. A The Baltimore Orioles placed starting catcher Matt Wieters on paternity leave. Four-time All-Star Wieters left the team to join his wife, Maria, who is due to give birth to the couple’s second child. A The Texas Rangers signed outfielder Carlos Gomez to a minor league contract and assigned him to Class AAA Round Rock. General manager Jon

Daniels said the Rangers hope to get the two-time All-Star on the major league roster “sooner (rather) than later.”

Royals’ secret behind surge? Rally Mantis The Kansas City Royals didn’t have a postseason prayer. Until, that is, a praying mantis showed up in their dugout. Since then, the defending World Series champions are playing like world beaters. Perhaps the Royals can thank Billy Burns for their 9-1 run. He’s a spare outfielder, stuck on the bench almost all the time since being traded over from Oakland last month. But Burns holds an important side job: He’s the caretaker of Rally Mantis Jr. “I think the only reason I’m taking care of him is I actually care about him not dying,” Burns said. “So people are like, ‘You

can take care of him.’ I spent one night researching, how to take care of him, so hopefully we can keep him alive.” The Royals were sputtering, their playoff hopes fading, when a praying mantis appeared in their dugout at Kauffman Stadium on Aug. 6. They beat Toronto that night and the bug-eyed insect with a triangular head had a new home. Really, who needs a Rally Monkey when you have a Rally Mantis? “The first mantis crawled up on my hat and just kind of camped out there for a while,” Burns said. “Some of the guys just thought it was funny.” Adopted by the team, it was christened the Rally Mantis and Kansas City went on to win five of six. Their new mascot traveled with the club to Minnesota, but died on Aug. 13 – the Royals lost that day, too. “The first one lasted about five or six games,” Burns said. “The first one

was on his way out. The first one was dying when we found him.” Then Junior showed up. “The second one flew in out of nowhere during the game the other day in Detroit,” Burns said. Burns said shortstop Alcides Escobar and pitcher Edinson Volquez “used the help of a fan to catch him.” After that, with extra time on his hands, Burns took over. The Royals swept their first three-game series in Detroit since 2008 and Rally Mantis Jr. boarded the charter flight for Kansas City, where the Royals beat the Twins on Thursday night to move back over .500. — ASSOCIATED PRESS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Mets 9, Giants 5: Yoenis Cespedes hit two long home runs and an RBI double in his second game back from the disabled list to boost Bartolo Colon and visiting New York.

East

W

L

Pct

Toronto Boston Baltimore New York Tampa Bay Central

69 68 67 62 50 W

53 53 54 59 70 L

.566 .562 .554 .512 .417 Pct

Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Chicago Minnesota West

70 64 62 57 49 W

Texas Seattle Houston Oakland Los Angeles

73 65 62 53 51

NATIONAL LEAGUE GB L10

East

W

L

— 1 ⁄2 11⁄2 61⁄2 18 GB

6-4 7-3 4-6 6-4 5-5 L10

Washington Miami New York Philadelphia Atlanta Central

72 63 61 57 44 W

49 59 62 66 78 L

.595 — .516 91⁄2 .496 12 .463 16 .361 281⁄2 Pct GB

6-4 4-6 4-6 5-5 2-8 L10

50 58 60 64 73 L

.583 — .525 7 .508 9 .471 131⁄2 .402 22 Pct GB

7-3 3-7 9-1 4-6 3-7 L10

Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee West

77 65 62 52 52 W

44 56 57 69 69 L

.636 .537 .521 .430 .430 Pct

— 12 14 25 25 GB

7-3 7-3 7-3 7-3 3-7 L10

50 56 60 69 71

.593 — .537 7 .508 101⁄2 .434 191⁄2 .418 211⁄2

7-3 7-3 5-5 4-6 2-8

Los Angeles San Francisco Colorado San Diego Arizona

67 68 59 52 50

54 55 63 70 72

.554 — .553 — .484 81⁄2 .426 151⁄2 .410 171⁄2

5-5 4-6 4-6 4-6 4-6

FRIDAY’S GAMES Houston 15.................Baltimore 8 Cleveland 3 ...................Toronto 2 Boston 10 .......................Detroit 2 Texas 6.....................Tampa Bay 2 Oakland 9..........Chi. White Sox 0 Kansas City 5......Minnesota 4 (11) N.Y. Yankees 7.........L.A. Angels 0 Seattle 7 ...................Milwaukee 6 SATURDAY’S GAMES Texas at Tampa Bay ...............late Houston at Baltimore.............late Boston at Detroit....................late Oakland at Chi. White Sox.....late Toronto at Cleveland .............late Minnesota at Kansas City.......late Milwaukee at Seattle ..............late N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels....late SUNDAY’S GAMES Boston (Rodriguez 2-5) at Detroit (Verlander 12-7) ....12:10 p.m. Texas (Perez 8-8) at Tampa Bay (Smyly 5-11)...................12:10 p.m. Toronto (Stroman 9-5) at Cleveland (Kluber 13-8).........12:10 p.m. Houston (Keuchel 7-12) at Baltimore (Gallardo 4-4) .....12:35 p.m. Oakland (Hahn 2-4) at Chi. White Sox (Quintana 9-9) .........................................1:10 p.m. Minnesota (Santana 6-9) at Kansas City (Duffy 10-1) .1:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Green 2-2) at L.A. Angels (Chacin 3-8) .......2:35 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 4-5) at Seattle (Miranda 1-0)..................3:10 p.m. MONDAY’S GAMES Houston at Pittsburgh ..6:05 p.m. Washington at Baltimore .......................................6:05 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay ....6:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland ...9:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle ..9:10 p.m.

Pct

GB L10

FRIDAY’S GAMES Miami 6 .....................Pittsburgh 5 St. Louis 4 .......Philadelphia 3 (11) Cincinnati 9 ..........L.A. Dodgers 2 Washington 7.................Atlanta 6 Colorado 7...........Chi. Cubs 6 (11) Seattle 7 ...................Milwaukee 6 San Fran. 8...................N.Y. Mets 1 San Diego 7 ...........Arizona 4 (10) SATURDAY’S GAMES N.Y. Mets 9 ..................San Fran. 5 Miami at Pittsburgh................late St. Louis at Philadelphia ........late L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati.....late Washington at Atlanta ...........late Chi. Cubs at Colorado ............late Arizona at San Diego .............late Milwaukee at Seattle ..............late SUNDAY’S GAMES L.A. Dodgers (Urias 3-2) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 7-1) .......................................12:10 p.m. Miami (Urena 1-4) at Pittsburgh (Vogelsong 2-2) ............12:35 p.m. St. Louis (Leake 8-9) at Philadelphia (Velasquez 8-5).....12:35 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 8-9) at Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-6) .......................................12:35 p.m. Chi. Cubs (Hammel 13-5) at Colorado (De La Rosa 7-7) ........................................3:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 4-5) at Seattle (Miranda 1-0)..................3:10 p.m. Arizona (Shipley 2-2) at San Diego (Perdomo 5-7) ....3:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 10-7) at San Fran. (Samardzija 10-8) ........................................7:05 p.m. MONDAY’S GAMES L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati ...11:35 a.m Houston at Pittsburgh ..6:05 p.m. Washington at Baltimore .......................................6:05 p.m. Colorado at Milwaukee.6:20 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona .........8:40 p.m. Chi. Cubs at San Diego .9:10 p.m.

Find expanded standings and box scores from yesterday's games in our electronic edition. Learn about the e-edition at kansas.com.

Royals win after long wait

Yost chose to trust his starter, a decision that appeared defensible the way Volquez was pitching. Through four innings, he’d allowed one run on two hits while striking out four. He also retired the side in order in the fourth. After restarting at 11:44, the teams faced a second delay at 12:17, as a bank of stadium lights went out when Royals officials failed to override a previously scheduled timer. Including delays, the game took 6 hours, 59 minutes before its 2:15 finish. “Longest game in history,” Cain said while walking through the clubhouse afterward.

BY JESSE NEWELL

jnewell@wichitaeagle.com KANSAS CITY, MO.

If the Royals somehow pull off the improbable — turning less-than-onepercent odds into a playoff berth — they will remember this night. They’ll remember the 5-4 victory Friday (and early Saturday) over the Twins, the dedicated fans who stuck around for seven hours to watch it, Eric Hosmer extending both hands in the air at 2:15 a.m. after delivering a walkoff single in the 11th inning that drove in Cheslor Cuthbert. “You’re here this long,” Royals manager Ned Yost said, “you’ve got to win it.” Cuthbert started the 11th with an infield single before Lorenzo Cain walked. That set up Hosmer, who squared to bunt twice earlier in the at-bat before deciding to swing away. “I didn’t want to risk anything,” Hosmer said. “I wanted to get those guys over.” When he failed to do that — Yost said he was just as curious about Hosmer’s decision to bunt and hadn’t talked to him before the postgame interview — Hosmer turned on a 3-2 fastball, knocking it off the warning track in right to start the celebration. With its sixth straight win, KC improved to 6260 while picking up a game in the Wild Card race, moving to 51⁄2 games back with 40 to play. And while Hosmer was the hero — and the one

ORLIN WAGNER Associated Press

The Royals’ Eric Hosmer celebrates his game-ending single against the Twins early Saturday in Kansas City, Mo.

that was mobbed by his teammates afterwards — the Royals bullpen gave him the opportunity. Following a three-hour, three-minute rain delay, six Royals relievers combined for 62⁄3 scoreless. The bullpen last surrendered a run on Aug. 10 — a stretch that is up to 252⁄3 innings. “Everyone’s doing their part,” Royals reliever Matt Strahm said. “Team chemistry is huge right now. We’re just rolling.” If they were honest, the Royals would probably tell you they should have won this one about five hours sooner. Before Friday’s game, Yost attempted to play

meteorologist in his office. He rotated a chair toward a tablet on his desk, using a Stylus Pen to zoom in on a weather map that showed a glob of storms in central Kansas. “I don’t know,” Yost said. “Some people say it’ll be here at 7. Some people say it’ll be here at 9.” The 9 p.m. predictors were closer, with light rain and distant lightning making an 8:30 appearance at Kauffman Stadium. At 8:32, Edinson Volquez took the mound with a 4-1 lead in the fifth while understanding the weird reality of the situation. With the rain starting to fall harder and a

storm approaching, the right-hander likely needed to secure three outs before Minnesota scored three runs to make it an official game and secure the Royals’ victory. Volquez couldn’t do it. The Twins came up with three runs on four hits to tie it before the rain delay, extending a game that appeared to be close to ending. After Jorge Polanco lined a 1-2 pitch for a two-run double to right that tied the score, KC’s grounds crew was told to take the field, rushing to unroll the tarp before the ensuing downpour. Volquez walked off with his head down, knowing 18 pitches had kept him

from a potential win. “We definitely know if we could have got a couple of outs there, it would have been an earlier night for us,” Hosmer said. “From that point on, you’ve got to forget about it, realize it didn’t happen and continue to grind it out. That’s one thing this group does well is grind it out.” The strange circumstances also left Yost with an unconventional possibility. Knowing the rain was likely coming — and it was likely to be the Twins’ last time at bat — he could have decided to go to his bullpen to bring in closer Kelvin Herrera for the fifth.

Minnesota Dozier 2b Polanco ss Mauer 1b Plouffe 3b Kepler rf Sano dh Rosario cf Centeno c Santana lf Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 5 4 5 5 5 40

R 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4

H 2 1 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 7

BI BB SO 1 1 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 2 4 5 12

Avg. .269 .314 .279 .255 .254 .245 .273 .269 .250

Kansas City Dyson cf Cuthbert 3b Cain rf Hosmer 1b Morales dh Perez c Burns pr Butera c Gordon lf Escobar ss Mondesi 2b Totals

AB 5 5 5 5 5 4 0 1 3 4 3 40

R 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 5

H 1 1 2 1 1 2 0 0 1 2 1 12

BI BB SO 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 5 7 7

Avg. .250 .295 .284 .273 .243 .257 .125 .277 .220 .259 .211

Minnesota 001 030 000 00 — 4 7 0 Kansas City 030 100 000 01 — 5 12 0 No outs when winning run scored. LOB—Minnesota 8, Kansas City 14. 2B—Polanco (7), Rosario (15), Centeno (9), Perez (24). HR—Dozier (28), off Volquez. RBIs—Dozier (74), Polanco 2 (12), Centeno (20), Dyson 2 (17), Cuthbert (39), Hosmer (71), Escobar (34). SB—Dozier (9), Cain (10). S—Mondesi. DP—Minnesota 1. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO ERA Berrios 4 5 4 4 4 2 9.28 O’Rourke 12⁄3 1 0 0 1 2 3.48 2 Tonkin ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 3.86 Rogers 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 3.02 Pressly 2 3 0 0 1 1 3.27 Chargois L, 0-1 0 2 1 1 1 0 10.12 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO ERA Volquez 41⁄3 6 4 4 1 5 5.04 Strahm 12⁄3 0 0 0 1 3 1.08 1 Moylan ⁄3 0 0 0 2 0 3.56 2 Flynn ⁄3 0 0 0 1 1 2.79 Soria 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.96 Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.98 Wang W, 6-0 2 1 0 0 0 0 4.66 Inherited runners-scored—Tonkin 1-0, Strahm 1-0, Flynn 2-0. IBB—off Pressly (Hosmer). HBP—Berrios (Mondesi). PB—Centeno (3). T—3:44. A—28,463 (37,903).


Sports

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

11D

SCOREBOARD

BASEBALL AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Central

W

L Pct. GB

Sioux City Lincoln Gary Southshore Kansas City North

45 44 43 38 W

39 40 42 45 L

.536 — .524 1 .506 21⁄2 .458 61⁄2 Pct. GB

St. Paul Winnipeg Fargo-Moorhead Sioux Falls South

55 50 42 30 W

30 34 41 55 L

.647 — .595 41⁄2 .506 12 .353 25 Pct. GB

Wichita 52 32 .619 — Laredo 48 37 .565 41⁄2 Joplin 30 54 .357 22 Texas 28 56 .333 24 Friday’s Games Fargo-Moorhead 4, St. Paul 1 Sioux City 16, Winnipeg 1 Laredo 8, Joplin 5 Texas at Kansas City, suspended Sioux Falls 2, Lincoln 1 Gary Southshore 5, Wichita 1 Saturday’s Games St. Paul at Fargo-Moorhead Lincoln at Sioux Falls Wichita at Gary Southshore Winnipeg at Sioux City Texas at Kansas City Joplin at Laredo Sunday’s Games St. Paul at Fargo-Moorhead, 1 p.m. Winnipeg at Sioux City, 2 p.m. Wichita at Gary Southshore, 2:10 p.m. Lincoln at Sioux Falls, 4:05 p.m. Texas at Kansas City, 7:05 p.m. Joplin at Laredo, 7:05 p.m.

RAILCATS 5, WINGNUTS 1 Late Friday Wichita ab r Stringer 2b 4 0 Cox 3b 4 0 Clevlen dh 4 0 Mttlstt lf 4 1 Chavez 1b 4 0 VStrttn cf 4 0 Prigtno rf 4 0 Dean c 4 0 Vargas ss 3 0 Totals 35 1 Wichita Gary

h 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 9

bi Gary ab 0 Harris rf 4 0 Willis lf 4 0 Cheky cf 2 0 Martinez dh 4 0 Crosby 1b 4 1 Del Valle c 4 0 Devarie 3b 4 0 Holland 2b 3 0 DeJesus ss 3 1 Totals 32

r 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 5

h 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 7

bi 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 5

000 100 000 — 1 9 1 004 000 10x — 5 7 0

E — Pardo (1). DP — Gary. LOB — Wichita 7, Gary 7. 2B — Cox (23). Van Stratten (1), Cheky (5), Devarie 8), DeJesus (1). 3B — Mittelstaedt (6), Martginez (3). SB — Stringer (18), Harris (4), Willis (2). Wichita IP H R ER BB SO Medina L,5-5 61⁄3 6 4 4 1 6 2 Johnson ⁄3 1 0 0 1 1 Pardo 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gary IP H R ER BB SO Black W,6-6 6 7 1 1 0 5 Liguori 1 1 0 0 0 1 Rodriguez 1 1 0 0 0 0 De Leon S,7 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP — Holland (by Medina). WP — Medina 2 (12). T — 2:50. A — 3491.

MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS BATTING—Altuve, Houston, .365; Escobar, Los Angeles, .320; Ortiz, Boston, .317; Betts, Boston, .316; Ramirez, Cleveland, .311; Bogaerts, Boston, .311; Trout, Los Angeles, .310; Lindor, Cleveland, .310; Cabrera, Detroit, .308; Pedroia, Boston, .307. RUNS—Betts, Boston, 98; Donaldson, Toronto, 96; Trout, Los Angeles, 94; Kinsler, Detroit, 93; Springer, Houston, 89; Altuve, Houston, 88; Bogaerts, Boston, 86; Desmond, Texas, 85; Machado, Baltimore, 84; Lindor, Cleveland, 81. RBI—Encarnacion, Toronto, 100; Pujols, Los Angeles, 95; Ortiz, Boston, 95; Betts, Boston, 89; Trumbo, Baltimore, 89; Napoli, Cleveland, 86; Correa, Houston, 83; Altuve, Houston, 80; Donaldson, Toronto, 80; Seager, Seattle, 80. HITS—Altuve, Houston, 175; Betts, Boston, 162; Bogaerts, Boston, 153; Pedroia, Boston, 146; Lindor, Cleveland, 145; Cano, Seattle, 144; Desmond, Texas, 143; Machado, Baltimore, 143; Escobar, Los Angeles, 140; Cabrera, Detroit, 139. DOUBLES—Ortiz, Boston, 38; Machado, Baltimore, 35; Altuve, Houston, 35; Betts, Boston, 34; Schoop, Baltimore, 31; Ramirez, Cleveland, 31; Seager, Seattle, 31; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 31; Pedroia, Boston, 29; Correa, Houston, 29. TRIPLES—Eaton, Chicago, 7; Andrus, Texas, 6; Bradley Jr., Boston, 6; Gardner, New York, 5; Naquin, Cleveland, 5; Ellsbury, New York, 5; Miller, Tampa Bay, 5; Dozier, Minnesota, 5; Betts, Boston, 5; Donaldson, Toronto, 5. HOME RUNS—Trumbo, Baltimore, 36; Encarnacion, Toronto, 34; Cruz, Seattle, 31; Davis, Oakland, 31; Frazier, Chicago, 31; Napoli, Cleveland, 29; Betts, Boston, 28; Dozier, Minnesota, 28; Cano, Seattle, 28; Ortiz, Boston, 28; Donaldson, Toronto, 28; Davis, Baltimore, 28; Machado, Baltimore, 28. STOLEN BASES—Davis, Cleveland, 33; Altuve, Houston, 26; Upton Jr., Toronto, 23; Ramirez, Cleveland, 20; Trout, Los Angeles, 20; Betts, Boston, 19; Desmond, Texas, 18; Dyson, Kansas City, 18; Ellsbury, New York, 17; Andrus, Texas, 16. ERA—Fulmer, Detroit, 2.58; Duffy, Kansas City, 2.73; Hamels, Texas, 2.80; Sanchez,

Toronto, 2.84; Quintana, Chicago, 2.85; Pomeranz, Boston, 2.99; Wright, Boston, 3.01; Happ, Toronto, 3.05; Kluber, Cleveland, 3.15; Estrada, Toronto, 3.20. STRIKEOUTS—Archer, Tampa Bay, 186; Verlander, Detroit, 176; Price, Boston, 171; Kluber, Cleveland, 163; Hamels, Texas, 159; Sale, Chicago, 157; Pineda, New York, 154; Pomeranz, Boston, 147; Duffy, Kansas City, 143; Kennedy, Kansas City, 139. SAVES—Britton, Baltimore, 37; Rodriguez, Detroit, 34; Robertson, Chicago, 30; Colome, Tampa Bay, 28; Osuna, Toronto, 27; Jeffress, Texas, 27; Dyson, Texas, 27; Cishek, Seattle, 25; Madson, Oakland, 25; Allen, Cleveland, 23. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS BATTING—Murphy, Washington, .344; LeMahieu, Colorado, .343; Ramos, Washington, .328; Prado, Miami, .326; Gonzalez, Colorado, .322; Segura, Arizona, .321; Blackmon, Colorado, .321; Braun, Milwaukee, .319; Yelich, Miami, .317; Marte, Pittsburgh, .316. RUNS—Bryant, Chicago, 96; Arenado, Colorado, 88; Blackmon, Colorado, 84; LeMahieu, Colorado, 81; Myers, San Diego, 80; Seager, Los Angeles, 79; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 79; Votto, Cincinnati, 77; Segura, Arizona, 75; Rizzo, Chicago, 73; Gonzalez, Colorado, 73; Zobrist, Chicago, 73; Murphy, Washington, 73. RBI—Arenado, Colorado, 98; Rizzo, Chicago, 87; Murphy, Washington, 87; Bruce, New York, 86; Gonzalez, Colorado, 80; Bryant, Chicago, 79; Kemp, Atlanta, 77; Russell, Chicago, 76; Duvall, Cincinnati, 76; Lamb, Arizona, 75. HITS—Segura, Arizona, 156; Prado, Miami, 150; Seager, Los Angeles, 148; Murphy, Washington, 147; LeMahieu, Colorado, 147; Blackmon, Colorado, 141; Gonzalez, Colorado, 139; Yelich, Miami, 139; Bryant, Chicago, 137; Marte, Pittsburgh, 133. DOUBLES—Rizzo, Chicago, 36; Murphy, Washington, 35; Seager, Los Angeles, 34; Yelich, Miami, 33; Segura, Arizona, 31; Freeman, Atlanta, 31; Belt, San Francisco, 31; Gonzalez, Colorado, 31; Kemp, Atlanta, 30; Marte, Pittsburgh, 30. TRIPLES—Hernandez, Philadelphia, 9; Crawford, San Francisco, 8; Lamb, Arizona, 8; Harrison, Pittsburgh, 7; LeMahieu, Colorado, 7; Revere, Washington, 7; Owings, Arizona, 7; Bruce, New York, 6; Segura, Arizona, 6; Turner, Washington, 6; Carpenter, St. Louis, 6; Belt, San Francisco, 6; Bourjos, Philadelphia, 6; Freeman, Atlanta, 6. HOME RUNS—Bryant, Chicago, 30; Arenado, Colorado, 30; Carter, Milwaukee, 28; Duvall, Cincinnati, 27; Bruce, New York, 27; Story, Colorado, 27; Tomas, Arizona, 25; Stanton, Miami, 25; Rizzo, Chicago, 25; Kemp, Atlanta, 24; Lamb, Arizona, 24; Freeman, Atlanta, 24. STOLEN BASES—Hamilton, Cincinnati, 52; Villar, Milwaukee, 47; Marte, Pittsburgh, 41; Nunez, San Francisco, 31; Segura, Arizona, 27; Jankowski, San Diego, 26; Perez, Milwaukee, 23; Myers, San Diego, 21; Herrera, Philadelphia, 19; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 19. ERA—Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.79; Hendricks, Chicago, 2.16; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 2.25; deGrom, New York, 2.73; Hammel, Chicago, 2.75; Arrieta, Chicago, 2.75; Syndergaard, New York, 2.76; Lester, Chicago, 2.86; Roark, Washington, 2.87; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.90; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.90. STRIKEOUTS—Scherzer, Washington, 211; Fernandez, Miami, 204; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 195; Strasburg, Washington, 179; Syndergaard, New York, 171; Ray, Arizona, 161; Lackey, Chicago, 156; Cueto, San Francisco, 152; Arrieta, Chicago, 152; Lester, Chicago, 146. SAVES—Familia, New York, 40; Jansen, Los Angeles, 35; Melancon, Washington, 35; Ramos, Miami, 32; Gomez, Philadelphia, 32; Casilla, San Francisco, 28; Chapman, Chicago, 27; Rodney, Miami, 22; Papelbon, Washington, 19; Rondon, Chicago, 18.

NBC ALL-AMERICA First base — Rhett Aplin, National Junior College. Second base — Grant Buchanan, Colorado Cyclones. Shortstop — Jacob Boston, Hays Larks. Third base — Bret Boswell, Santa Barbara Foresters. Outfield — Michael Burns, Hays Larks; Derek Nakasoto, San Diego Force; Parker O’Dell, Park City Rangers. Catchers — Brady Cox, Liberal BeeJays; Sam Thorne, San Diego Force. Utility — Joseph Delloche-Duffin, San Diego Force; Cale O’Donnell, Liberal BeeJays. Designated hitter — Isaiah Aluko, Alaska Goldpanners. Pitchers — Jayson Yano, San Diego Force; Jacob Patterson, Santa Barbara Foresters; Kyle Johnson, Santa Barbara Foresters; Keegan Curtis, Hays Larks; Daniel James, Hays Larks.

LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES At Williamsport, Pa. Friday’s Games Vancouver, B.C. 10, Tokyo 4 Johnston, Iowa 5, Chula Vista, Calif. 1 Seoul, South Korea 3, Willemstad, Curacao 0 Bowling Green, Ky. 11, San Antonio 1 Saturday’s Games Nuevo Leo, Mexico 12, Emilia, Italy 7, Emilia eliminated Warwick R.I. vs. Bend, Ore., 2 p.m. Game 11: Tokyo vs. Willemstad, Curacao, 5 p.m. Game 12: Chula Vista, Calif. vs. San

Antonio, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Aguadulce, Panama vs. Sydney, 10 a.m. Endwell, N.Y. vs. Goodlettsville, Tenn., 2 p.m. Canada vs. Seoul, South Korea, 4 p.m. Johnston, Iowa vs. Bowling Green, Ky., 6 p.m.

BASKETBALL WNBA Eastern

W

L

Pct

GB

New York Atlanta Indiana Chicago Washington Connecticut Western

18 13 12 11 9 8 W

8 12 12 13 15 16 L

.692 .520 .500 .458 .375 .333 Pct

— 41⁄2 5 6 8 9 GB

x-Los Angeles 21 3 .875 — 1 ⁄2 x-Minnesota 21 4 .840 Phoenix 10 14 .417 11 Seattle 9 15 .375 12 Dallas 9 16 .360 121⁄2 San Antonio 5 18 .217 151⁄2 x-clinched a playoff spot NOTE: Olympic break, season resumes Friday

FOOTBALL NFL PRESEASON American Conference East W L T

Pct PF PA

Miami N.Y. Jets New England Buffalo South

1 1 2 0 W

0 0 0 1 L

0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 T Pct

27 17 57 18 PF

10 13 44 19 PA

Tennessee Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville North

1 1 1 0 W

0 0 0 1 L

0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 T Pct

27 24 19 13 PF

10 13 18 17 PA

Baltimore Cincinnati Pittsburgh Cleveland West

1 1 0 0 W

0 1 2 2 L

0 1.000 0 .500 0 .000 0 .000 T Pct

22 46 17 24 PF

19 31 47 41 PA

Denver 1 Oakland 1 San Diego 0 Kansas City 0 National Conference East W

0 1 1 1

0 1.000 0 .500 0 .000 0 .000

22 0 43 30 10 27 16 17

Philadelphia N.Y. Giants Washington Dallas South

2 0 0 0 W

0 1 1 1 L

0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 T Pct

34 10 17 24 PF

9 27 23 28 PA

Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans Carolina North

2 0 0 0 W

0 1 1 1 L

0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 T Pct

47 9 22 19 PF

30 17 34 22 PA

Minnesota Green Bay Detroit Chicago West

2 2 1 0 W

0 0 1 2 L

0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .500 0 .000 T Pct

35 37 44 22 PF

27 23 47 45 PA

Los Angeles 1 0 0 1.000 28 Seattle 1 1 0 .500 28 San Francisco 0 1 0 .000 13 Arizona 0 1 0 .000 10 Thursday’s Games Philadelphia 17, Pittsburgh 0 Cincinnati 30, Detroit 14 Atlanta 24, Cleveland 13 New England 23, Chicago 22 Green Bay 20, Oakland 12 Minnesota 18, Seattle 11 Friday’s Games N.Y. Jets at Washington Miami at Dallas Arizona at San Diego Saturday’s Games Carolina at Tennessee, 2 p.m. New York Giants at Buffalo, 3 p.m. Baltimore at Indianapolis, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Jacksonville, 6:30 p.m. New Orleans at Houston, 7 p.m. San Francisco at Denver, 8 p.m. Kansas City at Los Angeles, 8 p.m.

24 34 24 31

L T

Pct PF PA

GOLF PGA WYNDHAM CHAMPIONSHIP At Sedgefield CC Greensboro, N.C. Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,127; Par: 70 (35-35) Si Woo Kim ...............68-60-64—192 Rafa Cabrera Bello ....63-68-65—196 Luke Donald ..............65-68-64—197 Jim Furyk ..................66-64-67—197 Kevin Na....................63-67-67—197 Graeme McDowell .....68-66-64—198 Billy Horschel ............66-68-64—198 Brandt Snedeker .......65-68-65—198 Hideki Matsuyama.....66-64-68—198 Scott Langley ............67-70-62—199 D.A. Points................70-66-63—199 Johnson Wagner .......66-68-65—199 Bill Haas....................66-68-65—199 Tim Wilkinson ...........69-67-64—200 Bud Cauley................67-69-64—200 Jerry Kelly .................67-68-65—200

-18 -14 -13 -13 -13 -12 -12 -12 -12 -11 -11 -11 -11 -10 -10 -10

Kyle Stanley ..............69-65-66—200 Patrick Reed...............66-71-64—201 Sean O’Hair ................69-68-64—201 Dicky Pride.................66-70-65—201 Alex Prugh .................69-66-66—201 Cameron Percy...........71-64-66—201 Scott Pinckney ...........67-67-67—201 Peter Malnati .............65-69-67—201 Blayne Barber.............67-70-65—202 Adam Hadwin.............69-67-66—202 Shawn Stefani ............66-70-66—202 Lucas Lee ...................68-66-68—202 Rickie Fowler..............67-67-68—202 Russell Henley............67-67-68—202 Robert Streb ..............67-67-68—202 Brett Stegmaier .........66-67-69—202 Keegan Bradley ..........70-67-66—203 Jason Dufner..............70-67-66—203 Sam Saunders ............66-70-67—203 Jonas Blixt .................69-67-67—203 Robert Garrigus..........67-67-69—203 Thomas Aiken.............68-66-69—203 Andrew Landry...........66-67-70—203 Lucas Glover...............69-61-73—203 Brice Garnett .............69-68-67—204 Sung Kang..................67-70-67—204 Scott Piercy................70-67-67—204 Kevin Kisner ...............70-67-67—204 Rhein Gibson..............72-65-67—204 Stewart Cink ..............70-66-68—204 Chris Kirk ...................68-68-68—204 Geoff Ogilvy ...............71-65-68—204 Greg Owen .................67-69-68—204 Roberto Castro...........72-64-68—204 Greg Chalmers............66-69-69—204 Tom Gillis ...................68-66-70—204 Chesson Hadley ..........68-69-68—205 Harris English.............71-66-68—205 Ryan Moore................68-68-69—205 Shane Lowry ..............70-65-70—205 John Huh....................70-67-69—206 Adam Hart .................70-66-70—206 Scott Brown ...............68-68-70—206 Boo Weekley ..............70-66-70—206 Patton Kizzire ............67-68-71—206 Mark Wilson ...............69-68-70—207 Dawie van der Walt ....71-66-70—207 Chad Campbell ...........69-66-72—207 Brian Stuard...............67-68-72—207 Freddie Jacobson........69-66-72—207 Kelly Kraft ..................67-70-71—208 Webb Simpson ...........70-67-71—208 Carlos Ortiz ................69-67-72—208 Andres Gonzales.........66-68-74—208 Luke Guthrie ..............67-70-72—209 Chris Stroud ...............69-67-73—209 Martin Laird ...............67-69-73—209 Michael Kim.................69-67-74—210 Troy Merritt...............66-71-75—212

-10 -9 -9 -9 -9 -9 -9 -9 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 E +2

WEB.COM NEWS SENTINEL OPEN At Fox Den CC Knoxville, Tenn. Sam Ryder ..........................64-64-63—191 J.J. Spaun ...........................66-62-64—192 Rick Lamb...........................67-64-63—194 Ryan Brehm........................69-64-62—195 Jonathan Randolph.............67-67-62—196 Jin Park ..............................66-64-67—197 Jhared Hack........................67-67-64—198 Adam Schenk......................68-63-67—198 Ryan Yip .............................65-67-66—198 Kevin Tway .........................63-68-67—198 Kyle Thompson ...................64-66-69—199 Grayson Murray ..................67-61-71—199 Adam Svensson...................69-66-65—200 Chris Wilson .......................69-67-64—200 James Driscoll.....................68-66-66—200 Doug Letson .......................66-67-67—200 Jack Maguire ......................67-66-67—200 Ryan Blaum ........................66-66-68—200 Jason Millard ......................66-64-70—200 Kent Bulle...........................70-65-66—201 Ben Silverman ....................68-67-66—201 JT Poston............................66-70-65—201 Steven Fox..........................66-68-67—201 Zack Sucher ........................69-67-65—201 Stephan Jaeger...................67-67-67—201 Jesse Speirs ........................68-65-68—201 Matt Davidson ....................67-66-68—201 Matt Atkins ........................67-70-64—201 Marc Turnesa......................63-67-72—202 Peter Tomasulo...................67-68-68—203 Andy Winings......................69-67-67—203 Brian Richey .......................69-67-67—203 Michael Gellerman ..............67-67-69—203 Michael Putnam..................69-67-67—203 Bryan Bigley .......................69-67-67—203 Bhavik Patel .......................68-66-69—203 Chris Baker .........................66-70-67—203 Xander Schauffele ..............65-69-69—203 Keith Mitchell .....................61-76-66—203 Ian Davis ............................68-69-66—203 Ryan Armour ......................68-69-66—203 Nate Lashley.......................64-71-69—204 Michael Hebert ...................67-68-69—204 Chris Smith.........................69-67-68—204 Josh Teater .........................69-65-70—204 Chris Thompson..................67-67-70—204 Albin Choi...........................67-70-67—204 Austin Cook ........................68-65-71—204 Brian Campbell ...................67-65-72—204 Brad Fritsch........................66-71-67—204 Drew Weaver ......................74-62-69—205 Justin Hueber .....................68-68-69—205 Adam Mitchell ....................69-68-68—205 Andrew Dorn ......................68-69-68—205 Michael Arnaud...................70-67-68—205 Bryan Martin ......................67-68-71—206 Andrew Yun ........................72-64-70—206 Brad Elder...........................68-67-71—206 Scott Gardiner ....................69-66-71—206 Trey Mullinax ......................67-66-73—206 Scott Harrington.................70-67-69—206

U.S. AMATEUR At Oakland Hills South Course Bloomfield Hills, Mich Yardage: 7,334; Par: 70 Semifinals Curtis Luck, Australia, def. Nick Carlson, Hamilton, Mich., 21 holes. Brad Dalke, Norman, Okla., def. Jonah Texeira, Porter Ranch, Calif., 3 and 2.

MOTORSPORTS INDYCAR ABC SUPPLY 500 After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (7) Mikhail Aleshin, Honda, 220.445 mph. 2. (21) Josef Newgarden, Chevy, 220.195. 3. (14) Takuma Sato, Honda, 220.067. 4. (3) Helio Castroneves, Chevy, 219.781. 5. (26) Carlos Munoz, Honda, 219.647. 6. (5) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 219.463. 7. (98) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 219.326. 8. (12) Will Power, Chevy, 218.617. 9. (10) Tony Kanaan, Chevy, 218.606. 10. (20) Ed Carpenter, Chevy, 218.424. 11. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, 218.204. 12. (41) Jack Hawksworth, Honda, 218.051. 13. (27) Marco Andretti, Honda, 218.012. 14. (22) Simon Pagenaud, Chevy, 217.721. 15. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevy, 217.284. 16. (83) Charlie Kimball, Chevy, 216.917. 17. (8) Max Chilton, Chevy, 216.689. 18. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, Chevy, 216.263. 19. (9) Scott Dixon, Chevy, 215.337. 20. (88) Conor Daly, Honda, 214.757. 21. (19) Pippa Mann, Honda, 211.267. 22. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, no speed.

XFINITY FOOD CITY 300 At Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .533 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (5) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 308 laps, 0 rating, 0 points. 2. (8) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 39. 3. (7) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 0. 4. (15) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 37. 5. (14) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 36. 6. (12) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 35. 7. (6) Darrell Wallace Jr, Ford, 308, 0, 35. 8. (17) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 308, 0, 33. 9. (4) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 307, 0, 32. 10. (20) Corey Lajoie, Toyota, 307, 0, 31. 11. (9) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 306, 0, 0. 12. (11) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 306, 0, 0. 13. (21) Gray Gaulding, Ford, 303, 0, 28. 14. (28) Ray Black Jr, Chevrolet, 302, 0, 27. 15. (18) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 301, 0, 26. 16. (30) David Starr, Chevrolet, 301, 0, 25. 17. (25) Mario Gosselin, Chevrolet, 301, 0, 24. 18. (29) Dakoda Armstrong, Toyota, 301, 0, 23. 19. (26) B J McLeod, Ford, 300, 0, 22. 20. (27) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 299, 0, 0. 21. (32) Brandon Gdovic, Chevrolet, 299, 0, 20. 22. (31) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 299, 0, 19. 23. (38) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 299, 0, 18. 24. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, accident, 296, 0, 0. 25. (10) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, accident, 296, 0, 17. 26. (39) Camden Murphy, Ford, 295, 0, 15. 27. (19) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 293, 0, 14. 28. (13) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 291, 0, 13. 29. (35) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 290, 0, 12. 30. (3) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 286, 0, 11. 31. (37) T.J. Bell, Chevrolet, 286, 0, 10. 32. (16) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, accident, 278, 0, 9. 33. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, accident, 244, 0, 9. 34. (36) Hermie Sadler, Toyota, fuelpump, 228, 0, 7. 35. (22) Ryan Reed, Ford, 226, 0, 6. 36. (40) Mike Harmon, Dodge, brakes, 168, 0, 5. 37. (23) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, suspension, 165, 0, 4. 38. (34) Harrison Rhodes, Toyota, engine, 36, 0, 3. 39. (33) Morgan Shepherd, Chevrolet, handling, 27, 0, 2. 40. (24) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, brakes, 3, 0, 0. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 84.815 mph. Time of Race: 1 hour, 56 minutes, 7 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.277 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 54 laps. Lead Changes: 16 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: E.Jones 1; D.Wallace 2-5; E.Jones 6-31; K.Larson 32-33; E.Jones 34; K.Larson 35-77; E.Jones 78; K.Larson 79-153; E.Jones 154; K.Larson 155-234; E.Jones 235; B.Keselowski 236-287; K.Busch 288; B.Keselowski 289; T.Dillon 290; B.Keselowski 291-304; A.Dillon 305-308 Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Larson, 4 times for 196 laps; B.Keselowski, 3 times for 64 laps; E.Jones, 6 times for 25 laps; A.Dillon, 1 time for 3 laps; D.Wallace, 1 time for 3 laps; K.Busch, 1 time for 0 laps; T.Dillon, 1 time for 0

laps. Wins: K.Busch, 7; E.Jones, 3; A.Dillon, 1; K.Larson, 1; E.Sadler, 1; D.Suarez, 1. Top 10 in Points: 1. E.Sadler, 700; 2. D.Suarez, 675; 3. T.Dillon, 667; 4. E.Jones, 648; 5. J.Allgaier, 646; 6. B.Gaughan, 631; 7. B.Poole, 618; 8. B.Jones, 595; 9. D.Wallace, 539; 10. R.Reed, 526.

NHRA NATIONALS At Brainerd, Minn. Pairings based on results in qualifying, which ended Saturday. DNQs listed below pairings. Top Fuel 1. Antron Brown, 3.679 seconds, 328.30 mph vs. 16. Chris Karamesines, 6.373, 226.32. 2. Shawn Langdon, 3.690, 330.15 vs. 15. Luigi Novelli, 4.347, 211.73. 3. Brittany Force, 3.693, 323.97 vs. 14. Terry Haddock, 3.906, 306.26. 4. Tony Schumacher, 3.694, 332.51 vs. 13. Scott Palmer, 3.855, 320.89. 5. Steve Torrence, 3.699, 329.83 vs. 12. Terry McMillen, 3.800, 302.01. 6. Doug Kalitta, 3.704, 331.20 vs. 11. Morgan Lucas, 3.739, 325.77. 7. Richie Crampton, 3.717, 319.14 vs. 10. J.R. Todd, 3.734, 326.24. 8. Leah Pritchett, 3.727, 320.28 vs. 9. Clay Millican, 3.730, 323.12. Did Not Qualify: 17. Rob Passey, broke. Funny Car 1. Matt Hagan, Dodge Charger, 3.822, 333.82 vs. 16. John Bojec, Toyota Solara, 4.735, 167.18. 2. Del Worsham, Toyota Camry, 3.856, 329.34 vs. 15. Bob Bode, Solara, 4.283, 232.13. 3. Tommy Johnson Jr., Charger, 3.859, 327.98 vs. 14. Dale Creasy Jr., Chevy Impala, 4.160, 278.06. 4. Jack Beckman, Charger, 3.859, 326.24 vs. 13. Cruz Pedregon, Camry, 4.110, 248.48. 5. Ron Capps, Charger, 3.866, 327.27 vs. 12. John Hale, Charger, 4.000, 319.75. 6. Courtney Force, Chevy Camaro, 3.892, 317.34 vs. 11. Brian Stewart, Ford Mustang, 3.962, 309.56. 7. John Force, Camaro, 3.915, 328.06 vs. 10. Tim Wilkerson, Mustang, 3.935, 323.50. 8. Chad Head, Camry, 3.921, 326.79 vs. 9. Robert Hight, Camaro, 3.933, 318.99. Pro Stock 1. Vincent Nobile, Chevy Camaro, 6.597, 209.17 vs. Bye. 2. Jason Line, Camaro, 6.606, 208.75 vs. 15. Alan Prusiensky, Dodge Dart, 6.804, 203.55. 3. Allen Johnson, Dart, 6.613, 208.59 vs. 14. Mark Hogan, Pontiac GXP, 6.796, 202.27. 4. Drew Skillman, Camaro, 6.615, 208.68 vs. 13. Dave River, Chevy Cobalt, 6.763, 203.74. 5. Bo Butner, Camaro, 6.620, 207.88 vs. 12. Jeg Coughlin, Dart, 6.661, 206.83. 6. Shane Gray, Camaro, 6.622, 208.49 vs. 11. Erica Enders, Dart, 6.660, 207.08. 7. Chris McGaha, Camaro, 6.636, 208.71 vs. 10. Deric Kramer, Dart, 6.654, 207.46. 8. Greg Anderson, Camaro, 6.636, 207.66 vs. 9. Alex Laughlin, Camaro, 6.652, 208.49. Pro Stock Motorcycle 1. Angelle Sampey, Buell, 6.830, 196.64 vs. 16. Angie Smith, Victory, 7.007, 191.02. 2. Andrew Hines, Harley-Davidson, 6.852, 194.24 vs. 15. Steve Johnson, Suzuki, 6.998, 191.08. 3. Hector Arana Jr, Buell, 6.855, 193.82 vs. 14. Jim Underdahl, Suzuki, 6.964, 193.43. 4. LE Tonglet, Suzuki, 6.865, 195.08 vs. 13. Karen Stoffer, Suzuki, 6.950, 192.11. 5. Eddie Krawiec, Harley-Davidson, 6.874, 195.19 vs. 12. Chip Ellis, Buell, 6.943, 193.52. 6. Matt Smith, Victory, 6.879, 194.66 vs. 11. Hector Arana, Buell, 6.917, 194.94. 7. Cory Reed, Buell, 6.884, 192.22 vs. 10. Michael Ray, Buell, 6.915, 194.46. 8. Jerry Savoie, Suzuki, 6.895, 195.31 vs. 9. Scotty Pollacheck, Buell, 6.896, 194.02. Did Not Qualify: 17. Joe DeSantis, 7.033, 189.82. 18. Kristen Ashby, 7.236, 183.67. 19. Melissa Surber, 7.277, 190.59.

SOCCER MLS Eastern

W L T Pts GF GA

New York City FC Toronto FC New York Philadelphia Montreal D.C. United Orlando City New England Columbus Chicago Western

11 10 10 9 8 6 5 6 3 4 W

7 7 9 8 6 8 6 10 8 11 L

8 7 6 7 9 9 12 8 11 7 T

41 37 36 34 33 27 27 26 20 19 Pts

44 34 43 42 38 24 38 29 29 22 GF

43 25 33 37 34 28 41 44 38 32 GA

FC Dallas 13 6 6 45 39 33 Colorado 11 3 9 42 27 20 Los Angeles 9 4 11 38 38 24 Real Salt Lake 10 8 7 37 36 36 Sporting Kansas City 10 11 5 35 30 30 Portland 8 9 8 32 36 36 San Jose 7 7 10 31 26 27 Vancouver 8 11 6 30 34 41 Seattle 8 12 3 27 26 30 Houston 5 10 9 24 27 30 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Friday’s Game Houston 2, San Jose 1 Saturday’s Games New York City FC 1, Los Angeles 0 Toronto FC at Philadelphia Chicago at Montreal Columbus at New England Orlando City at Colorado FC Dallas at Real Salt Lake Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City Sunday’s Games New York at D.C. United, 2 p.m. Portland at Seattle, 8:30 p.m.


Sports Extra

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

BASEBALL STANDINGS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

ALL TIMES CENTRAL

RAYS 8, RANGERS 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Texas Profar lf-3b Desmond cf Stubbs cf Beltran dh Beltre 3b 1-Rua pr-lf Odor 2b Lucroy c Moreland 1b Mazara rf Andrus ss Totals

AB 5 4 0 3 4 0 4 4 4 4 3 35

R H BI BB SO 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 2 9 2 2 6

Avg. .260 .293 .278 .274 .293 .264 .274 .264 .251 .281 .296

Tampa Bay Mahtook cf Dickerson lf Longoria 3b Shaffer 3b Miller 1b Duffy ss Morrison dh Beckham 2b Souza Jr. rf Maile c Totals

AB 5 4 3 0 4 4 4 4 3 3 34

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 0 0 1 1 2 2 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 8 12 8 1 7

Avg. .140 .227 .292 .333 .265 .370 .225 .218 .242 .219

WEST

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

Texas Seattle Houston Oakland Los Angeles

73 66 63 53 51

51 56 60 70 72

.589 .541 .512 .431 .415

— 6 91⁄2 191⁄2 211⁄2

6-4 7-3 5-5 3-7 2-8

L1 W2 W2 L1 L2

39-20 35-25 34-28 28-35 28-33

34-31 31-31 29-32 25-35 23-39

CENTRAL

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Chicago Minnesota

70 64 63 58 49

51 59 60 64 74

.579 .520 .512 .475 .398

— 7 8 121⁄2 22

7-3 3-7 9-1 4-6 3-7

L1 L2 W7 W1 L3

38-23 34-26 39-21 30-27 25-37

32-28 30-33 24-39 28-37 24-37

EAST

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

Toronto Boston Baltimore New York Tampa Bay

70 69 67 63 51

53 53 55 59 70

.569 .566 .549 .516 .421

— 1 ⁄2 21⁄2 61⁄2 18

6-4 8-2 4-6 7-3 6-4

W1 W2 L2 W2 W1

36-26 38-27 40-21 35-27 29-35

34-27 31-26 27-34 28-32 22-35

FRIDAY’S RESULTS Houston 15, Baltimore 8 Texas 6, Tampa Bay 2 Oakland 9, Chi. White Sox 0 N.Y. Yankees 7, L.A. Angels 0

Boston 10, Detroit 2 Cleveland 3, Toronto 2 Kansas City 5, Minnesota 4, 11 innings

SATURDAY’S RESULTS Tampa Bay 8, Texas 2 Boston 3, Detroit 2 Toronto 6, Cleveland 5 N.Y. Yankees 5, L.A. Angels 1

Houston 12, Baltimore 2 Chi. White Sox 6, Oakland 2 Kansas City 10, Minnesota 0

TODAY’S GAMES Boston (Owens, 0-0, 5.11) at Detroit (Verlander, 12-7, 3.44) .....................12:10 p.m. Texas (M. Perez, 8-8, 4.09) at Tampa Bay (Smyly, 5-11, 4.85)....................12:10 p.m. Toronto (Stroman, 9-5, 4.63) at Cleveland (Kluber, 13-8, 3.15) .................12:10 p.m. Houston (Keuchel, 7-12, 4.76) at Baltimore (Gallardo, 4-4, 5.18) ..............12:35 p.m. Oakland (Neal, 2-2, 5.19) at Chi. White Sox (Quintana, 9-9, 2.85) ................1:10 p.m. Minnesota (E. Santana, 6-9, 3.43) at Kansas City (D. Duffy, 10-1, 2.73).......1:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (C. Green, 2-2, 4.05) at L.A. Angels (Chacin, 3-8, 5.92)...........2:35 p.m.

MONDAY’S GAMES Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

Cleveland at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.

TUESDAY’S GAMES L.A. Angels at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 2:40 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.

THURSDAY’S GAMES Boston at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Seattle at Chi. White Sox, 7:10 p.m.

Detroit at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m. Cleveland at Texas, 7:05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE WEST

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona

68 67 59 52 51

55 55 64 71 72

.553 .549 .480 .423 .415

— 1 ⁄2 9 16 17

4-6 4-6 4-6 3-7 4-6

L1 L3 L1 L1 W1

35-27 38-24 31-31 29-31 21-40

33-28 29-31 28-33 23-40 30-32

CENTRAL

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee

78 65 62 53 52

44 57 58 69 70

.639 .533 .517 .434 .426

— 13 15 25 26

7-3 6-4 6-4 7-3 2-8

W1 L1 L2 W5 L6

45-19 28-33 33-27 31-30 33-29

33-25 37-24 29-31 22-39 19-41

EAST

W

L

Pct

GB

L10

Str

Hm

Aw

Washington Miami New York Philadelphia Atlanta

73 64 61 58 44

49 59 62 66 79

.598 .520 .496 .468 .358

— 91⁄2 121⁄2 16 291⁄2

7-3 4-6 4-6 6-4 1-9

W3 W2 W1 W1 L7

36-23 31-28 31-30 30-32 18-44

37-26 33-31 30-32 28-34 26-35

FRIDAY’S RESULTS Miami 6, Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 9, L.A. Dodgers 2 Colorado 7, Chi. Cubs 6, 11 innings San Diego 7, Arizona 4, 10 innings

St. Louis 4, Philadelphia 3, 11 innings Washington 7, Atlanta 6 San Francisco 8, N.Y. Mets 1

SATURDAY’S RESULTS N.Y. Mets 9, San Francisco 5 Philadelphia 4, St. Louis 2 Washington 11, Atlanta 9 Arizona 2, San Diego 1

WHITE SOX 6, ATHLETICS 2

Texas 000 100 001 — 2 9 0 Tampa Bay 110 001 41x — 8 12 1 1-ran for Beltre in the 8th. E—Miller (16). LOB—Texas 8, Tampa Bay 5. 2B—Beltre (22), Lucroy (20), Andrus (21), Dickerson (23), Miller (22), Souza Jr. (16). 3B—Beckham 2 (5). HR—Odor (23), off Odorizzi; Mazara (14), off Jepsen; Maile (1), off Griffin; Longoria (28), off Griffin. RBIs—Odor (62), Mazara (46), Longoria 2 (75), Miller 3 (60), Souza Jr. 2 (40), Maile (10). SB—Andrus (17). CS—Duffy (5), Souza Jr. (6). S—Maile. Runners left in scoring position—Texas 5 (Profar 2, Beltre, Odor 2); Tampa Bay 3 (Mahtook, Duffy, Morrison). RISP—Texas 1 for 9; Tampa Bay 4 for 10. DP—Texas 1 (Lucroy, Andrus). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Griffin L, 5-3 52⁄3 7 3 3 0 4 86 4.68 1 Claudio ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 4 2.39 2 ⁄3 3 4 4 1 1 20 7.59 Kela 1 Martinez 1 ⁄3 2 1 1 0 1 22 7.16 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Odorizzi W, 8-5 6 6 1 1 1 4 101 3.63 Cedeno H, 19 1 1 0 0 0 1 21 4.06 Ramirez 1 1 0 0 0 0 14 3.94 2 Romero ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 9 5.13 1 Jepsen ⁄3 1 1 1 1 0 13 2.89 Inherited runners-scored—Claudio 1-0, Martinez 1-0. HBP—Griffin (Souza Jr.). Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Adrian Johnson; Third, Chad Whitson. T—2:56. A—16,505 (31,042).

BLUE JAYS 6, INDIANS 5

Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.

WEDNESDAY’S GAMES Cleveland at Oakland, 2:35 p.m. L.A. Angels at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.

Miami 3, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 11, L.A. Dodgers 1 Chi. Cubs 9, Colorado 2

Toronto Travis 2b Carrera lf Encarnacion 1b Smoak 1b Martin c Tulowitzki dh Saunders rf Upton cf Barney 3b Goins ss Totals

AB 5 5 5 0 5 4 4 4 4 4 40

R H BI BB SO 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 6 14 6 1 9

Avg. .298 .250 .268 .218 .246 .257 .265 .206 .261 .182

Cleveland Santana dh Kipnis 2b Lindor ss Napoli 1b Ramirez 3b Chisenhall rf Naquin cf Almonte lf Gimenez c a-Davis ph Perez c Totals

AB 3 4 4 3 4 4 4 3 2 1 0 32

R H BI BB SO 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 2 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 6 5 1 9

Avg. .242 .291 .312 .261 .311 .298 .311 .286 .214 .265 .103

Toronto 023 010 000 — 6 14 2 Cleveland 000 500 000 — 5 6 0 a-struck out for Gimenez in the 7th. E—Travis (7), Goins (5). LOB—Toronto 8, Cleveland 2. 2B—Tulowitzki (12), Goins (9), Chisenhall (20). HR—Martin (14), off Tomlin; Upton (18), off Tomlin; Encarnacion (35), off Tomlin; Chisenhall (8), off Sanchez. RBIs—Travis 2 (37), Encarnacion (101), Martin (51), Upton 2 (52), Napoli (87), Ramirez (55), Chisenhall 3 (48). SF—Napoli. Runners left in scoring position—Toronto 3 (Carrera, Tulowitzki, Upton); Cleveland 1 (Naquin). RISP—Toronto 1 for 7; Cleveland 3 for 4. GIDP—Saunders, Napoli, Gimenez. DP—Toronto 2 (Goins, Encarnacion), (Travis, Goins, Encarnacion); Cleveland 1 (Otero, Lindor, Napoli). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sanchez 4 4 5 4 1 5 77 2.99 Biagini W, 4-2 2 1 0 0 0 1 25 1.97 Benoit H, 13 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 0.00 Grilli H, 15 1 1 0 0 0 1 11 1.57 Osuna S, 28-31 1 0 0 0 0 1 17 2.13 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tomlin L, 11-7 41⁄3 9 6 6 1 5 85 4.39 Otero 12⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 18 1.39 Shaw 1 2 0 0 0 1 15 3.46 McAllister 1 1 0 0 0 2 23 4.42 Manship 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 3.03 Inherited runners-scored—Otero 1-0. Umpires—Home, Greg Gibson; First, Ramon De Jesus; Second, Dana DeMuth; Third, Mike Estabrook. T—3:00. A—33,604 (38,000).

TODAY’S GAMES L.A. Dodgers (J. Urias, 3-2, 4.41) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani, 7-1, 3.10) ......12:10 p.m. Miami (Urena, 1-4, 6.80) at Pittsburgh (Vogelsong, 2-2, 3.20) ...................12:35 p.m. St. Louis (Leake, 8-9, 4.78) at Philadelphia (Velasquez, 8-5, 4.14) .............12:35 p.m. Washington (G. Gonzalez, 8-9, 4.28) at Atlanta (Jo. De La Cruz, 0-6, 3.72)........12:35 p.m. Chi. Cubs (Hammel, 13-5, 2.75) at Colorado (J. De La Rosa, 7-7, 5.29) ........3:10 p.m. Arizona (Shipley, 2-2, 4.30) at San Diego (Perdomo, 5-7, 6.68) ....................3:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard, 10-7, 2.76) at San Fran. (Samardzija, 10-8, 4.24) .7:05 p.m.

MONDAY’S GAMES L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.

Colorado at Milwaukee, 6:20 p.m. Chi. Cubs at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.

TUESDAY’S GAMES Colorado at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. Chi. Cubs at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

WEDNESDAY’S GAMES Colorado at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m. Chi. Cubs at San Diego, 2:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

THURSDAY’S GAMES N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.

Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

INTERLEAGUE FRIDAY’S RESULT Seattle 7, Milwaukee 6

SATURDAY’S RESULT Seattle 8, Milwaukee 2

TODAY’S GAME Milwaukee (Garza, 4-5, 4.87) at Seattle (Miranda, 1-0, 5.79)........................3:10 p.m.

MONDAY’S GAMES Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.

Washington at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.

TUESDAY’S GAMES Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Chi. White Sox, 7:10 p.m.

WEDNESDAY’S GAMES Houston at Pittsburgh, 11:35 a.m. Baltimore at Washington, 6:05 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Chi. White Sox, 7:10 p.m.

THURSDAY’S GAMES Baltimore at Washington, 6:05 p.m.

FRIDAY’S GAME Oakland at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.

1

Kansas City at Miami, 6:10 p.m.

ROYALS 10, TWINS 0

Oakland Semien ss Smolinski cf Valencia dh Davis lf Healy 3b Vogt c Eibner rf Alonso 1b Pinder 2b Totals

AB 4 3 4 3 4 4 3 4 4 33

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 2 6 2 3 9

Avg. .238 .269 .302 .257 .256 .269 .158 .253 .000

Chicago Anderson ss Eaton cf Abreu 1b Cabrera lf Frazier 3b Morneau dh Coats rf Navarro c Sanchez 2b Totals

AB 4 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 34

R H BI BB SO 0 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 6 10 6 1 8

Avg. .269 .276 .283 .295 .207 .276 .189 .211 .132

Oakland 000 000 002 — 2 6 0 Chicago 122 100 00x — 6 10 0 LOB—Oakland 7, Chicago 5. 2B—Abreu (28), Cabrera (29). HR—Valencia (15), off Jones; Abreu (15), off Detwiler. RBIs—Valencia (44), Eibner (13), Anderson (18), Abreu (66), Cabrera 2 (56), Coats (3), Sanchez (3). Runners left in scoring position—Oakland 1 (Pinder); Chicago 3 (Eaton, Frazier, Navarro). RISP—Oakland 1 for 4; Chicago 5 for 10. Runners moved up—Coats. GIDP—Davis. DP—Chicago 1 (Anderson, Sanchez, Abreu). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Detwiler L, 1-2 4 10 6 6 1 2 81 5.94 Coulombe 2 0 0 0 0 3 23 4.50 Smith 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 3.00 Axford 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 4.68 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sale W, 15-6 8 3 0 0 3 8 120 3.15 1 ⁄3 3 2 2 0 0 14 2.54 Jones 2 Rbrtsn S, 31-37 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 12 3.88 Inherited runners-scored—Robertson 2-0. Umpires—Home, Sam Holbrook; First, Gerry Davis; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Carlos Torres. T—2:33. A—21,178 (40,615).

ASTROS 12, ORIOLES 2 Houston Springer rf Bregman 3b-2b Altuve 2b White 3b Correa ss Gattis dh Reed 1b Hernandez cf Castro c Kemp lf Totals

AB R H BI BB SO 4 3 3 2 2 1 6 1 3 3 0 1 4 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 1 1 1 0 5 1 2 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 2 1 2 1 0 0 3 0 4 2 2 4 1 0 5 1 1 0 0 1 39 12 14 11 10 4

Avg. .266 .238 .366 .209 .270 .243 .180 .280 .213 .243

Baltimore Jones cf Reimold cf Kim lf Machado 3b Pearce 2b Trumbo rf Davis 1b a-Pena ph-c Schoop 2b Flaherty 3b-p Alvarez dh-3b Hardy ss Joseph c-1b Totals

AB 4 1 4 3 1 4 2 1 3 1 4 3 4 35

Avg. .274 .227 .321 .303 .294 .255 .224 .212 .284 .219 .260 .278 .193

R H BI BB SO 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 7 2 2 9

Houston 222 022 002 — 12 14 0 Baltimore 000 100 010 — 2 7 1 a-flied out for Davis in the 8th. E—Alvarez (4). LOB—Houston 11, Baltimore 8. 2B—Springer (24), Bregman (7), Altuve (36), Gattis (17), Castro (14), Machado (36). HR—Bregman (3), off Tillman; Springer (25), off Despaigne; Castro (9), off Flaherty; Davis (29), off Fiers; Pearce (11), off Peacock. RBIs—Springer 2 (72), Bregman 3 (13), Altuve (81), Correa (84), Castro 4 (29), Davis (67), Pearce (30). Runners left in scoring position—Houston 7 (Springer, Correa, Gattis, Reed 2, Kemp 2); Baltimore 2 (Schoop, Reimold). RISP—Houston 4 for 17; Baltimore 0 for 4. Runners moved up—Kemp, Castro. GIDP—Correa, Hernandez, Kemp. DP—Baltimore 3 (Hardy, Schoop, Davis), (Schoop, Hardy, Davis), (Hardy, Pearce, Davis). Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Fiers W, 9-6 7 5 1 1 1 7 104 4.48 Peacock 1 1 1 1 0 1 14 4.50 Sipp 1 1 0 0 1 1 21 5.35 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tillman L, 15-5 2 6 6 6 5 0 67 3.76 Despaigne 3 5 4 4 2 2 71 5.60 Hart 1 0 0 0 1 2 19 0.00 Givens 1 0 0 0 1 0 17 3.00 Brach 1 0 0 0 1 0 11 1.59 Flaherty 1 3 2 2 0 0 19 18.00 Tillman pitched to 4 batters in the 3rd. Despaigne pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored—Despaigne 3-1, Hart 2-1. HBP—Tillman (Gattis). WP—Fiers. PB—Castro (12). Umpires—Home, Dale Scott; First, Lance Barrett; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, Dan Iassogna. T—3:21. A—39,373 (45,971).

A.L. LEADERS INTERLEAGUE

(Through Saturday) G

MARINERS 8, BREWERS 2 Milwaukee Villar 3b Gennett 2b Braun lf Perez 1b Carter dh Nieuwenhuis rf Broxton cf Arcia ss Maldonado c Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 4 3 33

R H BI BB SO 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 2 7 2 1 10

Avg. .300 .266 .319 .283 .222 .211 .244 .156 .203

Seattle Aoki lf Smith rf O’Malley rf Cano 2b Cruz dh Seager 3b Lind 1b Zunino c Martin cf Marte ss Totals

AB 5 4 0 4 4 2 4 4 3 4 34

R H BI BB SO 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 3 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 8 12 7 3 2

Avg. .265 .258 .253 .293 .285 .288 .235 .282 .243 .260

Milwaukee 000 000 020 — 2 7 1 Seattle 001 010 24x — 8 12 0 E—Gennett (9). LOB—Milwaukee 6, Seattle 5. 2B—Gennett (21), Braun (20), Carter (23), Aoki 2 (16), Cano (29), Cruz (20), Lind (12), Zunino (5). HR—Zunino (8), off Peralta; Martin (14), off Peralta. RBIs—Braun (68), Perez (41), Aoki 2 (16), Lind (49), Zunino 3 (18), Martin (38). SB—Villar (48), Martin (15). Runners left in scoring position—Milwaukee 3 (Perez 2, Arcia); Seattle 2 (Cano, Zunino). RISP—Milwaukee 2 for 11; Seattle 3 for 12. Runners moved up—Braun, Villar, Marte. LIDP—Smith. FIDP—Gennett. GIDP—Smith, Lind. DP—Milwaukee 3 (Perez, Arcia), (Peralta, Arcia, Perez), (Perez, Arcia, Boyer); Seattle 1 (Hernandez, Cano, Aoki). Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Peralta L, 5-9 6 8 4 4 2 1 98 6.00 Boyer 1 2 3 3 1 0 25 3.74 Scahill 1 2 1 1 0 1 18 4.50 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Herndez W, 8-4 8 7 2 2 1 8 109 3.26 Cishek 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 3.33 Peralta pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Boyer pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Scahill 2-2. HBP—Hernandez (Carter). WP—Hernandez. Umpires—Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Jim Joyce; Second, Chad Fairchild; Third, James Hoye. T—2:53. A—29,170 (47,476).

AB

R

H

Pct.

Altuve, HOU 122 484 89 177 .366 Ortiz, BOS 113 402 60 129 .321 Escobar, LAA 110 438 58 140 .320 Betts, BOS 119 516 98 163 .316 Bogaerts, BOS 118 496 87 155 .312 Lindor, CLE 120 471 82 147 .312 Ramirez, CLE 113 415 68 129 .311 Trout, LAA 122 425 94 131 .308 Pedroia, BOS 118 479 80 147 .307 Cabrera, DET 121 456 66 139 .305 HOME RUNS: Trumbo, BAL, 36; Encarnacion, TOR, 35; Cruz, SEA, 31; Davis, OAK, 31; Frazier, CHW, 31; Davis, BAL, 29; Napoli, CLE, 29; Ortiz, BOS, 29; 6 tied, 28. RBIs: Encarnacion, TOR, 101; Ortiz, BOS, 97; Pujols, LAA, 96; Betts, BOS, 89; Trumbo, BAL, 89; Napoli, CLE, 87; Correa, HOU, 84; Altuve, HOU, 81; Donaldson, TOR, 80; Seager, SEA, 80. SLUGGING PERCENTAGE: Ortiz, BOS, .637; Altuve, HOU, .581; Betts, BOS, .564; Machado, BAL, .556; Donaldson, TOR, .556; Encarnacion, TOR, .556; Longoria, TB, .549; Trout, LAA, .546; Cruz, SEA, .544; Cabrera, DET, .537. ON-BASE PERCENTAGE: Altuve, HOU, .429; Trout, LAA, .426; Ortiz, BOS, .413; Donaldson, TOR, .399; Cabrera, DET, .379; Mauer, MIN, .377; Cruz, SEA, .371; Pedroia, BOS, .371; Escobar, LAA, .368; Bogaerts, BOS, .366. DOUBLES: Ortiz, BOS, 38; Altuve, HOU, 36; Machado, BAL, 36; Betts, BOS, 34; Longoria, TB, 31; Ramirez, CLE, 31; Schoop, BAL, 31; Seager, SEA, 31; Cabrera, CHW, 29; Cano, SEA, 29; Correa, HOU, 29; Pedroia, BOS, 29. TRIPLES: Eaton, CHW, 7; Andrus, TEX, 6; Bradley Jr., BOS, 6; Beckham, TB, 5; Betts, BOS, 5; Donaldson, TOR, 5; Dozier, MIN, 5; Ellsbury, New YorkY, 5; Gardner, New YorkY, 5; Miller, TB, 5; Naquin, CLE, 5. ERA: Fulmer, DET, 2.58; Duffy, Kansas City, 2.73; Hamels, TEX, 2.80; Quintana, CHW, 2.85; Sanchez, TOR, 2.99; Wright, BOS, 3.01; Happ, TOR, 3.05; Kluber, CLE, 3.15; Sale, CHW, 3.15; Estrada, TOR, 3.20. WON-LOST: Happ, TOR, 17-3; Porcello, BOS, 17-3; Tillman, BAL, 15-5; Sale, CHW, 15-6; Iwakuma, SEA, 14-8; Hamels, TEX, 13-4; Wright, BOS, 13-5; Kluber, CLE, 13-8; Sanchez, TOR, 12-2; Verlander, DET, 12-7. SAVES: Britton, BAL, 37; Rodriguez, DET, 34; Robertson, CHW, 31; Colome, TB, 28; Osuna, TOR, 28; Dyson, TEX, 27; Cishek, SEA, 25; Madson, OAK, 25; Allen, CLE, 23; Kimbrel, BOS, 22. STRIKEOUTS: Archer, TB, 186; Verlander, DET, 176; Price, BOS, 171; Sale, CHW, 165; Kluber, CLE, 163; Hamels, TEX, 159; Pineda, New YorkY, 154; Kennedy, Kansas City, 145; Duffy, Kansas City, 143; McHugh, HOU, 137; Porcello, BOS, 137; Tanaka, New YorkY, 137.

Minnesota Dozier 2b Polanco ss Mauer dh b-Sano ph-dh Plouffe 1b Rosario cf E.Escobar 3b Grossman lf Suzuki c Santana rf Totals

AB 4 3 3 1 4 3 3 3 3 3 30

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 0 0 6

Avg. .266 .306 .277 .244 .251 .274 .264 .259 .282 .247

Kansas City Orlando cf Cuthbert 3b Cain rf Hosmer 1b Morales dh Perez c a-Butera ph-c Gordon lf Burns lf A.Escobar ss Mondesi ss Colon 2b Totals

AB R H BI BB SO 5 1 1 0 0 1 5 1 2 1 0 1 4 1 3 3 0 0 5 1 2 1 0 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 4 1 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 0 0 39 10 17 10 2 2

Avg. .316 .296 .289 .274 .244 .257 .274 .227 .125 .261 .211 .244

Minnesota 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 Kansas City 003 141 10x — 10 17 0 a-flied out for Perez in the 8th. b-grounded out for Mauer in the 9th. LOB—Minnesota 4, Kansas City 8. 2B—Cuthbert (21), Cain 2 (17), Gordon (12), A.Escobar (16), Colon (5). HR—Gordon (12), off Santiago; Perez (17), off Santiago; Gordon (13), off Santiago. RBIs—Cuthbert (40), Cain 3 (51), Hosmer (72), Perez 2 (54), Gordon 2 (26), Colon (10). SF—Cain. Runners left in scoring position—Minnesota 1 (Suzuki); Kansas City 4 (Cuthbert, Morales, Perez 2). RISP—Minnesota 0 for 2; Kansas City 5 for 12. Runners moved up—Hosmer. GIDP—Suzuki, Hosmer. DP—Minnesota 1 (Dozier, Polanco, Plouffe); Kansas City 1 (A.Escobar, Colon, Hosmer). Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Santiago L, 10-8 42⁄3 11 8 8 0 2 80 10.90 Mejia 21⁄3 5 2 2 1 0 42 7.71 Chargois 1 1 0 0 1 0 13 8.53 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kennedy W, 8-9 8 4 0 0 0 6 111 3.58 Flynn 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 2.72 HBP—Kennedy (Polanco). WP—Santiago. Umpires—Home, Stu Scheurwater; First, Bill Miller; Second, Todd Tichenor; Third, Brian Knight. T—2:31. A—29,268 (37,903).

RED SOX 3, TIGERS 2 Boston Pedroia 2b Bogaerts ss Ortiz dh Betts rf Ramirez 1b Bradley Jr. cf Hill 3b Benintendi lf Holaday c Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 4 3 4 34

R H BI BB SO 1 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 1 3 8 2 2 10

Avg. .307 .313 .321 .316 .280 .278 .220 .309 .150

Detroit Kinsler 2b Aybar ss Cabrera 1b V.Martinez dh J.Martinez rf Upton lf McGehee 3b McCann c 1-Presley pr Saltalamacchia c Romine cf a-Collins ph-cf Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 0 0 2 1 32

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 6 2 2 7

Avg. .281 .133 .305 .297 .317 .228 .264 .209 .200 .198 .213 .216

Boston 001 020 000 — 3 8 0 Detroit 001 000 100 — 2 6 0 a-struck out for Romine in the 8th. 1-ran for McCann in the 8th. LOB—Boston 6, Detroit 5. 2B—Bogaerts (26), Upton (21). HR—Ortiz (29), off Norris; McCann (10), off Pomeranz; J.Martinez (18), off Hembree. RBIs—Ortiz 2 (97), J.Martinez (48), McCann (39). Runners left in scoring position—Boston 2 (Ramirez, Bradley Jr.); Detroit 3 (Cabrera, McGehee, Romine). RISP—Boston 2 for 5; Detroit 0 for 5. Runners moved up—Betts, McCann. GIDP—Betts, McCann. DP—Boston 1 (Bogaerts, Pedroia, Ramirez); Detroit 1 (Aybar, Kinsler, Cabrera). Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pmranz W, 10-9 5 4 1 1 0 3 51 4.23 Hembree H, 5 11⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 11 2.50 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 7 2.35 Ziegler H, 3 2 Barnes H, 11 ⁄3 0 0 0 2 1 16 3.49 1 Kimbrel S, 22-24 1 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 21 3.12 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Norris L, 1-2 5 8 3 3 2 4 84 3.81 A.Wilson 2 0 0 0 0 2 30 2.89 Greene 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 4.47 J.Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 4.47 Inherited runners-scored—Kimbrel 2-0. Umpires—Home, Brian O’Nora; First, Tripp Gibson; Second, Scott Barry; Third, Jerry Layne. T—2:36. A—37,886 (41,681).

YANKEES 5, ANGELS 1 New York Gardner lf Ellsbury cf Sanchez c Gregorius ss Castro 2b McCann dh Judge rf Austin 1b Torreyes 3b Totals

AB 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 4 4 36

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 2 2 2 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 5 8 5 1 7

Avg. .259 .265 .379 .285 .259 .234 .308 .150 .256

Los Angeles Calhoun rf Trout cf Pujols dh Marte 3b Simmons ss Cron 1b Bandy c Buss lf Petit 2b Totals

AB 2 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 30

R H BI BB SO 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 4 1 2 7

Avg. .271 .308 .249 .244 .269 .274 .261 .259 .266

New York 300 002 000 — 5 8 0 Los Angeles 000 000 001 — 1 4 1 E—Simmons (10). LOB—New York 5, Los Angeles 5. 2B—Castro (22), Torreyes (3). HR—Sanchez (6), off Nolasco; Pujols (23), off Betances. RBIs—Sanchez (12), McCann 2 (48), Judge 2 (6), Pujols (96). SB—McCann (1). Runners left in scoring position—New York 3 (Gardner 2, Judge); Los Angeles 2 (Trout 2). RISP—New York 2 for 4; Los Angeles 0 for 2. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cessa W, 3-0 6 3 0 0 1 5 85 4.01 Clippard 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.00 Layne 1 0 0 0 1 1 16 3.38 Betances 1 1 1 1 0 1 15 2.31 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nolasco L, 4-11 61⁄3 7 5 5 0 5 110 5.70 2 Alvarez ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 8 3.75 Ramirez 1 0 0 0 0 2 18 3.54 Valdez 1 1 0 0 1 0 19 4.91 Cessa pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Clippard 1-0. HBP—Cessa (Trout). WP—Layne. Umpires—Home, Andy Fletcher; First, Joe West; Second, Kerwin Danley; Third, Nic Lentz. T—2:51. A—44,129 (43,250).


Sports Extra

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

SUMMER OLYMPICS

NATIONAL LEAGUE METS 9, GIANTS 5

MARLINS 3, PIRATES 1

New York Reyes 3b Cabrera ss Cespedes lf Walker 2b Flores 1b d’Arnaud c Ruggiano cf De Aza rf Colon p Smoker p c-Bruce ph Robles p Reed p Totals

AB 4 4 5 4 5 5 3 4 3 0 0 0 0 37

R H BI BB SO 2 1 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 1 2 3 3 0 0 2 2 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 13 9 4 9

Avg. .277 .257 .293 .281 .258 .255 .429 .192 .068 --.177 .000 ---

San Francisco Span cf Pagan lf Blanco lf Belt 1b Posey c Crawford ss Pence rf Nunez 3b Panik 2b Moore p a-Gillaspie ph Peavy p b-Adrianza ph Smith p d-Brown ph Gearrin p Totals

AB 5 2 3 4 4 2 3 4 4 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 35

R H BI BB SO Avg. 1 2 1 0 1 .274 0 1 0 0 0 .299 0 1 0 0 1 .228 1 1 0 1 1 .278 0 0 0 0 1 .289 1 1 0 2 1 .276 1 2 0 1 0 .280 0 1 2 0 1 .250 1 1 1 0 0 .245 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 1 0 0 .260 0 0 0 0 0 .185 0 1 0 0 0 .360 0 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 0 .255 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 5 11 5 4 6

New York 102 004 101 — 9 13 0 San Francisco 001 010 030 — 5 11 0 a-grounded out for Moore in the 5th. b-singled for Peavy in the 7th. c-walked for Smoker in the 8th. d-flied out for Smith in the 8th. LOB—New York 6, San Francisco 7. 2B—Reyes (6), Cespedes (19), Walker (9), Span (19), Crawford (22), Nunez (20). 3B—Panik (6). HR—Cespedes (23), off Moore; De Aza (4), off Peavy; Cespedes (24), off Peavy; Span (7), off Colon. RBIs—Cabrera (34), Cespedes 3 (62), Flores (36), Ruggiano (6), De Aza 3 (13), Span (42), Nunez 2 (56), Panik (44), Gillaspie (20). SB—Reyes (5). SF—Cabrera. Runners left in scoring position—New York 3 (Reyes, d’Arnaud 2); San Francisco 2 (Posey, Brown). RISP—New York 5 for 9; San Francisco 2 for 10. Runners moved up—Gillaspie, Panik. LIDP—Belt. GIDP—Cespedes, Nunez, Panik. DP—New York 3 (Cabrera, Flores), (Walker, Cabrera, Flores), (Flores, Cabrera); San Francisco 2 (Panik, Crawford, Belt), (Nunez, Panik, Belt). New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Colon W, 11-7 61⁄3 9 2 2 1 5 103 3.36 2 Smoker ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 10 9.00 1 ⁄3 0 2 2 2 0 16 4.03 Robles Reed 12⁄3 2 1 1 1 0 22 1.99 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Moore L, 7-10 5 5 3 3 3 3 92 4.70 Peavy 2 5 5 5 0 4 48 5.55 Smith 1 1 0 0 1 1 17 9.53 Gearrin 1 2 1 1 0 1 10 4.46 Inherited runners-scored—Smoker 1-0, Reed 2-2. WP—Moore. T—3:21. A—41,125 (41,915).

CUBS 9, ROCKIES 2 Chicago Fowler cf Bryant 3b Rizzo 1b Zobrist 2b-rf Russell ss Soler rf Baez 2b Montero c Szczur lf Montgomery p Cahill p Totals

AB 4 5 5 5 3 4 1 5 5 2 1 40

R H BI BB SO 2 2 0 1 2 2 2 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 3 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 3 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 15 9 3 8

Avg. .284 .300 .294 .279 .246 .240 .278 .197 .295 .000 .125

Colorado Dahl cf LeMahieu 2b Arenado 3b Gonzalez rf Raburn 1b Hundley c Parra lf Adames ss Hoffman p Rusin p a-Descalso ph Qualls p McGee p Totals

AB 3 3 4 4 3 4 4 3 1 1 1 0 0 31

R H BI BB SO 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 2 3 9

Avg. .337 .341 .275 .319 .223 .248 .254 .193 .000 .179 .281 -----

Chicago 000 430 101 — 9 15 0 Colorado 000 011 000 — 2 5 2 a-grounded out for Rusin in the 7th. E—Raburn (2), Hoffman (1). LOB—Chicago 8, Colorado 5. 2B—Zobrist (26). HR—Bryant (31), off Hoffman; Zobrist (14), off McGee; Hundley (6), off Montgomery. RBIs—Bryant 4 (83), Zobrist 2 (62), Montero 3 (24), LeMahieu (48), Hundley (33). SB—Dahl (1). S—Cahill. Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 4 (Bryant, Montero, Szczur 2); Colorado 2 (Gonzalez, Descalso). RISP—Chicago 5 for 13; Colorado 0 for 4. Runners moved up—LeMahieu, Arenado. FIDP—LeMahieu. GIDP—Rizzo, Zobrist. DP—Chicago 1 (Fowler, Russell); Colorado 2 (Raburn, Adames, Hoffman), (Adames, LeMahieu, Raburn). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Montgomery 41⁄3 1 1 1 2 5 60 2.77 Cahill W, 3-3 42⁄3 4 1 1 1 4 69 2.66 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hoffman L, 0-1 4 7 7 6 1 2 77 13.50 Rusin 3 6 1 1 1 3 59 3.95 Qualls 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 5.40 McGee 1 2 1 1 1 1 31 5.06 Hoffman pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. T—3:05. A—48,113 (50,398).

DIAMONDBACKS 2, PADRES 1 Arizona Segura ss-2b Gosselin 2b Barrett p Hathaway p Hudson p Burgos p Goldschmidt 1b Weeks lf Bourn cf Tomas rf Castillo c Haniger cf-lf Drury 3b Ray p a-Owings ph-ss Totals

AB 4 3 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 4 3 4 3 2 1 30

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 0 4 6

Avg. .318 .275 --------.300 .247 .254 .266 .272 .350 .252 .205 .282

San Diego Ramirez ss Myers 1b Solarte 3b Schimpf 2b Bethancourt rf Norris c Kivlehan lf Richard p Dominguez p b-Wallace ph c-Rosales ph Morrow p Jankowski cf Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 4 1 0 0 1 0 2 31

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 3 1 3 15

Avg. .240 .268 .285 .229 .234 .186 .500 .000 --.194 .205 --.259

Arizona 000 011 000 — 2 4 1 San Diego 000 010 000 — 1 3 4 a-flied out for Ray in the 8th. b-pinch hit for Dominguez in the 8th. c-doubled for Wallace in the 8th. E—Weeks (3), Solarte (9), Kivlehan (1), Richard 2 (4). LOB—Arizona 5, San Diego 6. 2B—Rosales (10). HR—Kivlehan (1), off Ray. RBIs—Kivlehan (1). Runners left in scoring position—Arizona 2 (Haniger 2); San Diego 3 (Solarte 2, Bethancourt). RISP—Arizona 0 for 6; San Diego 0 for 4. Runners moved up—Drury. GIDP—Tomas 2, Drury 2. DP—San Diego 4 (Schimpf, Ramirez, Myers), (Schimpf, Myers), (Ramirez, Schimpf, Myers), (Ramirez, Schimpf, Myers). Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ray W, 7-11 7 1 1 1 1 13 105 4.31 Barrett 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 4.23 Hathaway 0 1 0 0 1 0 12 6.23 Hudson H, 16 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 6.20 Burgos S, 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 2 18 3.07 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Richard L, 0-3 6 2 2 0 3 5 92 2.19 Dominguez 2 0 0 0 1 0 20 4.87 Morrow 1 2 0 0 0 1 11 0.00 Barrett pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Hathaway pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Hathaway 1-0, Hudson 3-0. WP—Richard. T—2:52. A—32,599 (42,302).

MEDALS TABLE

PHILLIES 4, CARDINALS 2

Miami Gordon 2b Prado 3b Yelich lf Ozuna cf Realmuto c Suzuki rf Scruggs 1b Dunn p Barraclough p Rodney p Rojas ss-1b Phelps p b-Andino ph Hechavarria ss Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 33

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 6 2 0 2

Avg. .281 .323 .314 .277 .311 .312 .333 --.000 --.263 .200 .273 .247

Pittsburgh Harrison 2b Marte lf Hughes p McCutchen cf Polanco rf-lf Freese 3b Jaso 1b c-Bell ph-1b Cervelli c Mercer ss Kuhl p a-Frazier ph Locke p d-Joyce ph-rf Totals

AB 4 4 0 4 4 4 1 1 2 3 1 1 0 1 30

R H BI BB SO 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 1 2 14

Avg. .278 .313 .000 .244 .271 .279 .256 .667 .277 .264 .091 .338 .100 .266

Miami 001 200 000 — 3 6 0 Pittsburgh 000 000 010 — 1 4 1 a-struck out for Kuhl in the 6th. b-out on fielder’s choice for Phelps in the 7th. c-flied out for Jaso in the 7th. d-struck out for Locke in the 8th. E—McCutchen (2). LOB—Miami 3, Pittsburgh 4. 2B—Suzuki (12), Harrison (19), Mercer (16). HR—Scruggs (1), off Kuhl. RBIs—Scruggs 2 (2), Harrison (49). Runners left in scoring position—Pittsburgh 2 (McCutchen, Mercer). RISP—Miami 1 for 4; Pittsburgh 1 for 5. Runners moved up—Marte. GIDP—Yelich, Marte. DP—Miami 1 (Phelps, Rojas, Scruggs); Pittsburgh 1 (Kuhl, Mercer, Jaso). Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Phelps W, 7-6 6 2 0 0 2 9 96 2.28 Dunn H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 2.83 Barrclgh H, 25 1 2 1 1 0 1 21 3.02 Rodney S, 23-25 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 4.63 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kuhl L, 3-1 6 5 3 2 0 0 75 3.62 Locke 2 1 0 0 0 0 20 5.38 Hughes 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 3.54 Umpires—Home, Ron Kulpa; First, Chris Conroy; Second, Jerry Meals; Third, Paul Nauert. T—2:30. A—37,828 (38,362).

St. Louis Hazelbaker lf Piscotty rf Carpenter 2b Moss 1b Molina c Peralta 3b Gyorko ss Grichuk cf Weaver p Broxton p a-Garcia ph Duke p Tuivailala p Totals

AB 4 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 2 0 1 0 0 33

R H BI BB SO 1 1 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 2 1 11

Avg. .249 .274 .288 .262 .283 .246 .243 .229 .667 --.233 -----

Philadelphia Hernandez 2b Herrera cf Joseph 1b Franco 3b Rupp c Altherr lf Galvis ss Bourjos rf Hellickson p Neris p Gomez p Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 0 0 34

R H BI BB SO 2 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 11 4 0 10

Avg. .298 .280 .254 .251 .277 .241 .235 .253 .146 -----

St. Louis 002 000 000 — 2 9 0 Philadelphia 200 011 00x — 4 11 0 a-struck out for Broxton in the 7th. LOB—St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 6. 2B—Piscotty (29), Carpenter (27), Hernandez (12), Franco (18). HR—Hazelbaker (10), off Hellickson; Hernandez (4), off Weaver; Altherr (4), off Broxton. RBIs—Hazelbaker 2 (24), Hernandez (30), Franco (72), Rupp (43), Altherr (16). Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis 2 (Moss 2); Philadelphia 1 (Herrera). RISP—St. Louis 0 for 3; Philadelphia 2 for 6. Runners moved up—Herrera. GIDP—Piscotty, Gyorko 2, Hellickson. DP—St. Louis 1 (Weaver, Peralta, Carpenter); Philadelphia 3 (Galvis, Hernandez, Joseph), (Galvis, Hernandez, Joseph), (Hernandez, Galvis, Joseph). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Weaver L, 0-1 5 9 3 3 0 6 96 5.00 Broxton 1 1 1 1 0 2 15 4.70 Duke 1 1 0 0 0 1 11 1.08 Tuivailala 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 6.75 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hllcksn W, 10-7 7 7 2 2 1 8 100 3.60 Neris H, 26 1 1 0 0 0 3 16 2.24 Gomez S, 33-37 1 1 0 0 0 0 18 2.96 Umpires—Home, D.J. Reyburn; First, Tony Randazzo; Second, Pat Hoberg; Third, Bill Welke. T—2:56. A—32,288 (43,651).

NATIONALS 11, BRAVES 9 REDS 11, DODGERS 1 Los Angeles Kendrick lf Hernandez 2b Gonzalez 1b Blanton p Howell p d-Seager ph Turner 3b Segedin rf Pederson cf Ellis c Taylor ss Anderson p Dayton p Fields p a-Reddick ph Liberatore p Grandal 1b Totals

AB 3 3 3 0 0 1 4 4 4 3 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 30

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3 1 3 10

Avg. .273 .192 .297 --.000 .314 .277 .286 .249 .194 .218 .000 .000 .000 .161 --.231

Cincinnati Hamilton cf Peraza ss Votto 1b Renda 2b Duvall lf Phillips 2b Diaz p c-Holt ph Smith p Schebler rf Suarez 3b Cabrera c Finnegan p b-De Jesus ph-1b Totals

AB R H BI BB SO 4 1 1 1 1 0 5 2 3 3 0 0 3 1 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 5 2 2 4 0 1 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 2 2 0 0 4 0 3 0 1 0 5 0 1 0 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 40 11 18 11 4 3

Avg. .265 .269 .307 .208 .244 .285 --.214 .250 .191 .249 .248 .122 .242

Los Angeles 000 000 001 — 1 3 0 Cincinnati 410 210 03x — 11 18 0 a-struck out for Fields in the 6th. b-singled for Finnegan in the 7th. c-lined out for Diaz in the 8th. d-singled for Howell in the 9th. LOB—Los Angeles 5, Cincinnati 9. 2B—Turner (28), Suarez (17), Finnegan (2), Renda (1). HR—Duvall (28), off Anderson; Peraza (2), off Dayton; Schebler (4), off Howell. RBIs—Segedin (9), Hamilton (16), Peraza 3 (11), Votto (68), Duvall 4 (80), Schebler 2 (16). SB—Hamilton (53). CS—Peraza (2). Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 1 (Pederson); Cincinnati 3 (Peraza 2, Cabrera). RISP—Los Angeles 0 for 2; Cincinnati 7 for 12. Runners moved up—Segedin, Hamilton. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Anderson L, 0-2 3 9 6 6 2 1 59 24.75 Dayton 1 1 1 1 0 0 20 3.27 Fields 1 3 1 1 1 1 29 4.32 Liberatore 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 1.53 Blanton 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.47 Howell 1 4 3 3 0 1 19 4.01 Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Finnegan W, 8-9 7 1 0 0 2 8 96 4.32 Diaz 1 0 0 0 1 1 17 3.20 Smith 1 2 1 1 0 1 13 4.34 Anderson pitched to 1 batter in the 4th. WP—Anderson. Umpires—Home, CB Bucknor; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, Fieldin Culbreth; Third, Manny Gonzalez. T—2:53. A—29,735 (42,319).

N.L. LEADERS (Through Saturday)

G

AB

R

Washington Turner cf Werth lf Murphy 2b Harper rf Ramos c Rendon 3b Zimmerman 1b Difo ss Scherzer p Treinen p Belisle p Kelley p c-Heisey ph Glover p Melancon p Totals

AB R H BI BB SO 5 1 1 3 0 2 4 1 1 0 1 2 4 1 3 1 1 0 4 1 2 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 1 5 3 4 1 0 0 4 2 3 2 0 0 5 1 1 1 0 2 4 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 11 17 11 3 9

Avg. .319 .253 .348 .244 .324 .273 .229 .310 .182 --.000 --.207 -----

Atlanta Inciarte cf Garcia 3b Freeman 1b Kemp lf Markakis rf Flowers c Peterson 2b d’Arnaud ss Jenkins p Weber p a-Beckham ph Vizcaino p b-Francoeur ph Ramirez p d-Recker ph Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 5 4 5 5 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 40

Avg. .271 .265 .287 .242 .268 .254 .250 .255 .000 .000 .212 --.252 --.289

R H BI BB SO 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 1 0 2 2 1 0 2 1 2 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 12 8 5 7

Washington 010 800 101 — 11 17 1 Atlanta 030 000 123 — 9 12 0 a-popped out for Weber in the 7th. b-singled for Vizcaino in the 8th. c-struck out for Kelley in the 9th. d-popped out for Ramirez in the 9th. E—Difo (2). LOB—Washington 7, Atlanta 9. 2B—Rendon (30), Inciarte 2 (16), Garcia (20), Flowers (10), Peterson (10). HR—Zimmerman (13), off Jenkins; Murphy (23), off Jenkins; Turner (4), off Jenkins. RBIs—Turner 3 (20), Murphy (88), Harper (65), Rendon (57), Zimmerman 2 (40), Difo (5), Scherzer 2 (7), Inciarte (21), Garcia 2 (41), Peterson (21), d’Arnaud 3 (18), Francoeur (33). SB—Harper (16). SF—Zimmerman. Runners left in scoring position—Washington 1 (Ramos); Atlanta 5 (Garcia, Freeman, Kemp, Markakis 2). RISP—Washington 7 for 12; Atlanta 6 for 15. Runners moved up—Zimmerman, Difo, Garcia, Kemp. GIDP—Ramos, Scherzer. DP—Atlanta 2 (Peterson, d’Arnaud, Freeman), (d’Arnaud, Peterson, Freeman). Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Schrzer W, 13-7 61⁄3 6 4 4 3 6 101 3.05 2 Treinen ⁄3 0 0 0 1 1 12 1.94 1 Belisle ⁄3 3 2 0 0 0 13 2.06 2 Kelley H, 10 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 4 2.56 2 Glover ⁄3 2 3 3 1 0 17 5.79 Mlncon S, 36-39 1⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 7 0.96 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jenkins L, 2-4 31⁄3 8 9 9 2 3 76 6.20 Weber 32⁄3 8 1 1 0 3 49 6.27 Vizcaino 1 0 0 0 1 1 19 3.65 Ramirez 1 1 1 0 0 2 16 5.14 Inherited runners-scored—Treinen 1-1, Kelley 3-1, Melancon 2-2, Weber 1-1. WP—Treinen. PB—Ramos (8), Flowers (5). Umpires—Home, Phil Cuzzi; First, Adam Hamari; Second, Tom Hallion; Third, Dan Bellino. T—3:26. A—42,421 (49,586).

GOLF H

Pct.

Murphy, WAS 114 431 74 150 .348 LeMahieu, COL 115 431 81 147 .341 Ramos, WAS 103 377 53 122 .324 Prado, MIA 117 464 58 150 .323 Blackmon, COL 109 439 84 141 .321 Gonzalez, COL 113 436 73 139 .319 Braun, MIL 101 383 62 122 .319 Segura, ARI 117 490 75 156 .318 Seager, LAD 118 474 80 149 .314 Yelich, MIA 117 443 64 139 .314 HOME RUNS: Bryant, CHC, 31; Arenado, COL, 30; Carter, MIL, 28; Duvall, CIN, 28; Bruce, New YorkM, 27; Story, COL, 27; Rizzo, CHC, 25; Stanton, MIA, 25; Tomas, ARI, 25; Cespedes, New YorkM, 24; Freeman, ATL, 24; Kemp, ATL, 24; Lamb, ARI, 24. RBIs: Arenado, COL, 98; Murphy, WAS, 88; Rizzo, CHC, 87; Bruce, New YorkM, 86; Bryant, CHC, 83; Duvall, CIN, 80; Gonzalez, COL, 80; Kemp, ATL, 77; Russell, CHC, 76; Lamb, ARI, 75. STOLEN BASES: Hamilton, CIN, 53; Villar, MIL, 48; Marte, PIT, 41; Segura, ARI, 27; Jankowski, San Diego, 26; Perez, MIL, 23; Myers, San Diego, 21; Goldschmidt, ARI, 19; Herrera, PHI, 19; Broxton, MIL, 17. SLUGGING PERCENTAGE: Murphy, WAS, .613; Bryant, CHC, .568; Story, COL, .567; Cespedes, New YorkM, .566; Rizzo, CHC, .562; Gonzalez, COL, .557; Braun, MIL, .554; Lamb, ARI, .542; Blackmon, COL, .540; Freeman, ATL, .539. ON-BASE PERCENTAGE: Votto, CIN, .433; Goldschmidt, ARI, .423; LeMahieu, COL, .413; Carpenter, STL, .404; Fowler, CHC, .395; Rizzo, CHC, .395; Bryant, CHC, .393; Belt, San Francisco, .391; Murphy, WAS, .391; Zobrist, CHC, .386. ERA: Hendricks, CHC, 2.16; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 2.25; deGrom, New YorkM, 2.73; Hammel, CHC, 2.75; Arrieta, CHC, 2.75; Syndergaard, New YorkM, 2.76; Lester, CHC, 2.86; Roark, WAS, 2.87; Teheran, ATL, 2.90; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.90. WON-LOST: Strasburg, WAS, 15-4; Arrieta, CHC, 15-5; Cueto, San Francisco, 14-3; Lester, CHC, 13-4; Hammel, CHC, 13-5; Roark, WAS, 13-6; Scherzer, WAS, 13-7; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 12-7; Fernandez, MIA, 12-7; Maeda, Los AngelesD, 12-7.

2

PGA TOUR — WYNDHAM CHAMPIONSHIP In Greensboro, N.C. Sedgefield CC, par 70 Third round (top 25 and ties) S. Woo Kim .......................................68-60-64—192 R. Cabrera Bello ................................63-68-65—196 L. Donald ..........................................65-68-64—197 J. Furyk .............................................66-64-67—197 K. Na.................................................63-67-67—197 G. McDowell......................................68-66-64—198 B. Horschel .......................................66-68-64—198 B. Snedeker.......................................65-68-65—198 H. Matsuyama...................................66-64-68—198 S. Langley .........................................67-70-62—199 D.A. Points........................................70-66-63—199 J. Wagner..........................................66-68-65—199 B. Haas .............................................66-68-65—199 T. Wilkinson ......................................69-67-64—200 B. Cauley ..........................................67-69-64—200 J. Kelly ..............................................67-68-65—200 K. Stanley .........................................69-65-66—200 P. Reed .............................................66-71-64—201 S. O’Hair ...........................................69-68-64—201 D. Pride.............................................66-70-65—201 A. Prugh ...........................................69-66-66—201 C. Percy ............................................71-64-66—201 S. Pinckney .......................................67-67-67—201 P. Malnati .........................................65-69-67—201 B. Barber ..........................................67-70-65—202 A. Hadwin .........................................69-67-66—202 S. Stefani ..........................................66-70-66—202 L. Lee................................................68-66-68—202 R. Fowler ..........................................67-67-68—202 R. Henley ..........................................67-67-68—202 R. Streb ............................................67-67-68—202 B. Stegmaier .....................................66-67-69—202 Notables K. Bradley .........................................70-67-66—203 J. Dufner...........................................70-67-66—203 A. Landry ..........................................66-67-70—203 L. Glover ...........................................69-61-73—203 S. Cink ..............................................70-66-68—204 S. Lowry............................................70-65-70—205 B. Weekley ........................................70-66-70—206 C. Stroud ..........................................69-67-73—209

(294 of 306 medal events) G United States 43 China 26 Britain 27 Russia 17 Germany 17 Japan 12 France 9 Australia 8 Italy 8 Canada 4 South Korea 9 Netherlands 8 Brazil 6 New Zealand 4 Kazakhstan 3 Hungary 8 Azerbaijan 1 Spain 7 Denmark 1 Kenya 5 Jamaica 6 Cuba 5 Sweden 2 Ukraine 2 Poland 2 Croatia 5 South Africa 2 Uzbekistan 2 Belarus 1 Czech Republic 1 Colombia 3 Iran 3 Turkey 1 North Korea 2 Serbia 2 Georgia 2 Ethiopia 1 Greece 3 Belgium 2 Switzerland 2 Thailand 2 Malaysia 0 Mexico 0 Argentina 3 Slovakia 2 Armenia 1 Slovenia 1 Romania 1 Lithuania 0 Norway 0 Indonesia 1 Taiwan 1 Venezuela 0 Egypt 0 Tunisia 0 Bahrain 1 Vietnam 1 Bahamas 1 Independent 1 Ivory Coast 1 Algeria 0 Ireland 0 Bulgaria 0 India 0 Mongolia 0 Israel 0 Fiji 1 Jordan 1 Kosovo 1 Puerto Rico 1 Singapore 1 Tajikistan 1 Burundi 0 Grenada 0 Niger 0 Philippines 0 Qatar 0 Austria 0 Dominican Republic 0 Estonia 0 Finland 0 Kyrgyzstan 0 Moldova 0 Morocco 0 Nigeria 0 Portugal 0 Trinidad & Tobago 0 UAE 0

S 37 18 22 17 10 8 17 11 11 3 3 6 6 9 5 3 4 3 6 6 3 2 6 5 3 3 6 2 4 1 2 1 3 3 3 1 1 1 2 2 2 4 3 1 2 3 2 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

B 36 26 17 19 14 21 14 10 7 15 9 4 6 5 9 4 10 4 7 1 2 4 3 4 6 2 2 5 4 7 3 4 4 2 2 4 5 2 2 2 2 1 2 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 0 2 2 3 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Total 116 70 66 53 41 41 40 29 26 22 21 18 18 18 17 15 15 14 14 12 11 11 11 11 11 10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

SATURDAY’S MEDALISTS (All race distances in meters) ATHLETICS Men’s 1,500 GOLD—Matthew Centrowitz, U.S. SILVER—Taoufik Makhloufi, Algeria. BRONZE—Nicholas Willis, New Zealand. Men’s 5,000 GOLD—Mohamed Farah, Britain. SILVER—Hagos Gebrhiwet, Ethiopia. BRONZE—Bernard Lagat, U.S. Men’s 4x400 relay GOLD—U.S. (Arman Hall, Tony McQuay, Gil Roberts, Lashawn Merritt, p-Kyle Clemons, p-David Verburg). SILVER—Jamaica (Peter Matthews, Nathon Allen, Fitzroy Dunkley, Javon Francis, p-Rusheen McDonald). BRONZE—Bahamas (Alonzo Russell, Michael Mathieu, Steven Gardiner, Chris Brown, p-Stephen Newbold). Men’s Javelin Throw GOLD—Thomas Rohler, Germany. SILVER—Julius Yego, Kenya. BRONZE—Keshorn Walcott, Trinidad & Tobago. Women’s 800 GOLD—Caster Semenya, South Africa. SILVER—Francine Niyonsaba, Burundi. BRONZE—Margaret Nyairera Wambui, Kenya. Women’s 4x400 relay GOLD—U.S. (Courtney Okolo, Natasha Hastings, Phyllis Francis, Allyson Felix, p-Taylor Ellis-Watson, p-Francena McCorory) SILVER—Jamaica (Stephenie Ann McPherson, Anneisha McLaughlin-Whilby, Shericka Jackson, Novlene Williams-Mills, p-Christine Day, p-Chrisann Gordon) BRONZE—Britain (Eilidh Doyle, Anyika Onuora, Emily Diamond, Christine Ohuruogu, p-Kelly Massey) Women’s High Jump GOLD—Ruth Beitia, Spain. SILVER—Mirela Demireva, Bulgaria. BRONZE—Blanka Vlasic, Croatia. BOXING Men’s Bantam (56kg) GOLD—Robeisy Ramirez, Cuba. SILVER—Shakur Stevenson, U.S. BRONZE—Murodjon Akhmadaliev, Uzbekistan. BRONZE—Vladimir Nikitin, Russia. Men’s Middle (75kg) GOLD—Arlen Lopez, Cuba. SILVER—Bektemir Melikuziev, Uzbekistan. BRONZE—Kamran Shakhsuvarly, Azerbaijan. BRONZE—Misael Uziel Rodriguez, Mexico.

Women’s Fly (51kg) GOLD—Nicola Adams, Britain. SILVER—Sarah Ourahmoune, France. BRONZE—Cancan Ren, China. BRONZE—Ingrit Lorena Valencia Victoria, Colombia. CANOE-KAYAK Men’s kayak single (K1) 200 GOLD—Liam Heath, Britain. SILVER—Maxime Beaumont, France. BRONZE—Saul Craviotto, Spain. BRONZE—Ronald Rauhe, Germany. Men’s canoe double (C-2) 1,000 GOLD—Germany (Sebastian Brendel, Jan Vandrey) SILVER—Brazil (Erlon de Souza Silva, Isaquias Queiroz dos Santos) BRONZE—Ukraine (Dmytro Ianchuk, Taras Mishchuk) Men’s K-4 1,000 GOLD—Germany (Max Rendschmidt, Tom Liebscher, Max Hoff, Marcus Gross). SILVER—Slovakia (Denis Mysak, Erik Vlcek, Juraj Tarr, Tibor Linka). BRONZE—Czech Republic (Daniel Havel, Lukas Trefil, Josef Dostal, Jan Sterba). Men’s canoe double (C-2) 1,000 GOLD—Germany (Sebastian Brendel, Jan Vandrey). SILVER—Brazil (Erlon de Souza Silva, Isaquias Queiroz dos Santos). BRONZE—Ukraine (Dmytro Ianchuk, Taras Mishchuk). Women’s kayak four (K-4) 500 GOLD—Hungary (Gabriella Szabo, Danuta Kozak, Tamara Csipes, Krisztina Fazekas-Zur). SILVER—Germany (Sabrina Hering, Franziska Weber, Steffi Kriegerstein, Tina Dietze). BRONZE—Belarus (Marharyta Makhneva, Nadzeya Liapeshka, Volha Khudzenka, Maryna Litvinchuk). GYMNASTICS – RHYTHMIC Women’s individual all-around GOLD—Margarita Mamun, Russia. SILVER—Yana Kudryavtseva, Russia. BRONZE—Ganna Rizatdinova, Ukraine. MEN’S BADMINTON SINGLES GOLD—Long Chen, China. SILVER—Chong Wei Lee, Malaysia. BRONZE—Viktor Axelsen, Denmark. BRONZE—Viktor Axelsen, Denmark. MEN’S DIVING 10m platform GOLD—Aisen Chen, China. SILVER—German Sanchez, Mexico. BRONZE—David Boudia, U.S. MEN’S SOCCER GOLD—Brazil. SILVER—Germany. BRONZE—Nigeria. MEN’S WATER POLO GOLD—Serbia (Gojko Pijetlovic, Dusan Mandic, Zivko Gocic, Sava Randelovic, Milos Cuk, Dusko Pijetlovic, Slobodan Nikic, Milan Aleksic, Nikola Jaksic, Filip Filipovic, Andrija Prlainovic, Stefan Mitrovic, Branislav Mitrovic). SILVER—Croatia (Josip Pavic, Damir Buric, Antonio Petkovic, Luka Loncar, Maro Jokovic, Luka Bukic, Marko Macan, Andro Buslje, Sandro Sukno, Ivan Krapic, Andelo Setka, Javier Garcia Gadea, Marko Bijac). BRONZE—Italy (Stefano Tempesti, Francesco di Fulvio, Niccolo’ Gitto, Pietro Figlioli, Andrea Fondelli, Alessandro Velotto, Alessandro Nora, Valentino Gallo, Christian Presciutti, Michael Alexandre Bodegas, Matteo Aicardi, Nicholas Presciutti, Marco del Lungo). MODERN PENTATHLON Men’s individual GOLD—Alexander Lesun, Russia. SILVER—Pavlo Tymoshchenko, Ukraine. BRONZE—Ismael Marcelo Hernandez Uscanga, Mexico. TAEKWONDO Men +80kg GOLD—Radik Isaev, Azerbaijan SILVER—Abdoulrazak Issoufou Alfaga, Niger BRONZE—Cha Dongmin, South Korea BRONZE—Maicon Siqueira, Brazil. Women +67kg GOLD—Shuyin Zheng, China. SILVER—Maria del Rosario Espinoza, Mexico. BRONZE—Jackie Galloway, U.S. BRONZE—Bianca Walkden, Britain. WOMEN’S BASKETBALL GOLD—U.S. (Lindsay Whalen, Seimone Augustus, Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Angel McCoughtry, Breanna Stewart, Tamika Catchings, Elena Delle Donne, Diana Taurasi, Sylvia Fowles, Tina Charles, Brittney Griner). SILVER—Spain (Leticia Romero, Laura Nicholls, Silvia Dominguez, Alba Torrens, Laia Palau, Marta Xargay, Leonor Rodriguez, Lucila Pascua, Anna Cruz, Laura Quevedo, Laura Gil, Astou Ndour). BRONZE—Serbia (Tamara Radocaj, Sonja Petrovic, Sasa Cado, Sara Krnjic, Nevena Jovanovic, Jelena Milovanovic, Dajana Butulija, Aleksandra Crvendakic, Dragana Stankovic, Milica Dabovic, Ana Dabovic, Danielle Page). WOMEN’S CYCLING Mountain bike cross-country GOLD—Jenny Rissveds, Sweden. SILVER—Maja Wloszczowska, Poland. BRONZE—Catharine Pendrel, Canada. WOMEN’S GOLF Individual stroke play GOLD—Inbee Park, South Korea. SILVER—Lydia Ko, New Zealand. BRONZE—Shanshan Feng, China. WOMEN’S TEAM HANDBALL GOLD—Russia (Anna Sedoykina, Polina Kuznetsova, Daria Dmitrieva, Anna Sen, Olga Akopian, Anna Vyakhireva, Marina Sudakova, Vladlena Bobrovnikova, Victoria Zhilinskayte, Ekaterina Marennikova, Irina Bliznova, Ekaterina Ilina, Mayya Petrova, Tatiana Erokhina, Viktoriia Kalinina). SILVER—France (Laura Glauser, Camille Ayglon Saurina, Allison Pineau, Laurisa Landre, Grace Zaadi Deuna, Marie Prouvensier, Amandine Leynaud, Manon Houette, Siraba Dembele, Chloe Bulleux, Tamara Horacek, Beatrice Edwige, Estelle NzeMinko, Gnonsiane Niombla, Alexandra Lacrabere). BRONZE—Norway (Kari Aalvik Grimsbo, Mari Molid, Emilie Hegh Arntzen, Veronica Kristiansen, Ida Alstad, Heidi Loke, Nora Mork, Stine Bredal Oftedal, Marit Malm Frafjord, Katrine Lunde, Linn-Kristin Riegelhuth Koren, Amanda Kurtovic, Camilla Herrem, Sanna Solberg). WOMEN’S TRIATHLON GOLD—Gwen Jorgensen, U.S. SILVER—Nicola Spirig Hug, Switzerland. BRONZE—Vicky Holland, Britain. WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL BRONZE—U.S. (Alisha Glass, Kayla Banwarth, Courtney Thompson, Rachael Adams, Carli Lloyd, Jordan Larson-Burbach, Kelly Murphy, Christa Harmotto Dietzen, Kimberly Hill, Foluke Akinradewo, Kelsey Robinson, Karsta Lowe). WRESTLING (FREESTYLE) Men’s 86 kg GOLD—Abdulrashid Sadulaev, Russia. SILVER—Selim Yasar, Turkey. BRONZE—Sharif Sharifov, Azerbaijan. BRONZE—J’den Michael Tbory Cox, U.S. Men’s 125 kg GOLD—Taha Akgul, Turkey. SILVER—Komeil Nemat Ghasemi, Iran. BRONZE—Ibrahim Saidau, Belarus. BRONZE—Geno Petriashvili, Georgia.


Sports Extra

SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016

3

NFL PRESEASON AMERICAN CONFERENCE East

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

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New England Buffalo Miami N.Y. Jets

Thursday's games Philadelphia 17, Pittsburgh 0 Cincinnati 30, Detroit 14 Atlanta 24, Cleveland 13 New England 23, Chicago 22 Green Bay 20, Oakland 12 Minnesota 18, Seattle 11

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Friday's games Washington 22, N.Y. Jets 18 Dallas 41, Miami 14 San Diego 19, Arizona 3 Saturday's games Carolina 26, Tennessee 16 Buffalo 21, N.Y. Giants 0 Baltimore 19, Indianapolis 18

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Tampa Bay 27, Jacksonville 21 Houston 16, New Orleans 9 San Francisco 31, Denver 24 Los Angeles 21, Kansas City 20 Aug. 25 Atlanta at Miami, 7 p.m. Dallas at Seattle, 9 p.m.

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Aug. 26 New England at Carolina, 6:30 p.m. Buffalo at Washington, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Green Bay at San Francisco, 9 p.m. Aug. 27 Kansas City at Chicago, 12 p.m.

Detroit at Baltimore, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Indianapolis, 6 p.m. N.Y. Giants at N.Y. Jets, 6:30 p.m. Tennessee at Oakland, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at Denver, 8 p.m. Aug. 28 San Diego at Minnesota, 12 p.m. Arizona at Houston, 3 p.m. Cincinnati at Jacksonville, 7 p.m.

SATURDAY’S SUMMARIES PANTHERS 26, TITANS 16

BUCCANEERS 27, JAGUARS 21

49ERS 31, BRONCOS 24

TEXANS 16, SAINTS 9

RAVENS 19, COLTS 18

RAMS 21, CHIEFS 20

Carolina 10 3 6 7 — 26 Tennessee 0 7 3 6 — 16 First Quarter Car—Ginn 61 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 12:59. Car—FG Gano 41, :24. Second Quarter Ten—Douglas 23 pass from Mariota (Succop kick), 11:00. Car—FG Gano 23, :08. Third Quarter Ten—FG Succop 48, 10:09. Car—Norwood 8 pass from Anderson (kick failed), 4:54. Fourth Quarter Car—Simmons 6 pass from J.Webb (Gano kick), 6:05. Ten—Ellis 9 pass from Tanney (pass failed), 2:00. A—60,802. Car Ten First downs 17 20 Total Net Yards 393 330 Rushes-yards 21-53 24-96 Passing 340 234 Punt Returns 2-16 3-26 Kickoff Returns 4-55 5-63 Interceptions Ret. 2-8 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-37-0 26-34-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-11 Punts 5-42.6 3-49.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 8-65 6-40 Time of Possession 28:01 31:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Carolina, Wegher 8-24, Artis-Payne 3-10, Stewart 3-10, Tolbert 2-6, Simmons 1-3, Newton 2-2, J.Webb 2-minus 2. Tennessee, Henry 5-31, Cobb 6-27, Murray 5-20, Mariota 2-13, Tanney 1-8, Walker 1-7, Sankey 2-2, Cassel 1-minus 1, Sharpe 1-minus 11. PASSING—Carolina, Newton 8-12-0162, Anderson 12-20-0-118, J.Webb 5-5-0-60. Tennessee, Mariota 9-10-1-104, Cassel 5-7-1-38, Tanney 12-17-0-103. RECEIVING—Carolina, Lucas 3-39, D.Byrd 3-36, Norwood 3-31, Benjamin 2-29, Artis-Payne 2-24, Funchess 2-19, L.Byrd 2-18, Brown 2-16, Ginn 1-61, Whittaker 1-36, Deaver 1-15, Simmons 1-6, Stewart 1-6, Hill 1-4. Tennessee, Sharpe 6-68, Hunter 4-54, McBride 4-23, Douglas 3-39, Supernaw 3-22, Ellis 2-17, Walker 1-9, Sankey 1-6, Matthews 1-6, Cobb 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Tampa Bay 0 17 0 10 — 27 Jacksonville 7 7 0 7 — 21 First Quarter Jac—Yeldon 14 pass from Bortles (J.Myers kick), 4:59. Second Quarter TB—M.Evans 4 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), 12:20. Jac—Hurns 24 pass from Bortles (J.Myers kick), 6:21. TB—James 5 pass from Glennon (Aguayo kick), :28. TB—FG Aguayo 28, :05. Fourth Quarter TB—S.Johnson 1 run (Aguayo kick), 15:00. Jac—J.Johnson 79 interception return (Ficken kick), 9:24. TB—FG Aguayo 34, 1:32. A—59,782. TB Jac First downs 28 12 Total Net Yards 377 209 Rushes-yards 44-158 21-79 Passing 219 130 Punt Returns 3-49 3-5 Kickoff Returns 1-31 3-63 Interceptions Ret. 4-55 2-79 Comp-Att-Int 19-39-2 13-32-4 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 1-8 Punts 4-43.8 6-49.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 8-68 13-121 Time of Possession 36:14 23:46 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Tampa Bay, Barber 11-40, S.Johnson 7-27, Sims 5-20, Reedy 2-18, James 6-17, Hansbrough 7-17, Winston 2-15, Shepard 1-6, Griffin 3-minus 2. Jacksonville, Ivory 6-25, Yeldon 2-15, Banyard 4-14, D.Robinson 3-13, Grant 5-9, Bortles 1-3. PASSING—Tampa Bay, Winston 3-10-128, Glennon 11-19-0-120, Griffin 5-10-1-78. Jacksonville, Bortles 8-11-085, Henne 4-10-2-33, B.Allen 0-3-1-0, Wittek 1-8-1-20. RECEIVING—Tampa Bay, SeferianJenkins 3-36, Krause 2-50, S.Johnson 2-28, Spencer 2-27, M.Evans 2-18, James 2-11, Dye 1-20, Reedy 1-12, Cross 1-12, Barber 1-10, Hansbrough 1-4, Vitale 1-minus 2. Jacksonville, A.Robinson 4-34, Hurns 2-29, Grant 1-20, Jacobs 1-16, Yeldon 1-14, Benn 1-9, Lee 1-8, Walters 1-5, Greene 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Tampa Bay, Aguayo 32, Aguayo 49.

San Francisco 0 17 0 14 — 31 Denver 7 3 7 7 — 24 First Quarter Den—C.Anderson 19 run (McManus kick), 9:54. Second Quarter SF—Reid 42 interception return (Dawson kick), 15:00. SF—Hyde 4 run (Dawson kick), 11:21. Den—FG McManus 40, 6:55. SF—FG Dawson 28, 2:48. Third Quarter Den—Phillips 8 pass from P.Lynch (McManus kick), 1:48. Fourth Quarter SF—Ponder 22 run (Lunsford kick), 10:15. SF—D.Anderson 30 pass from Ponder (Lunsford kick), 6:27. Den—Neal 4 pass from P.Lynch (McManus kick), 2:00. A—75,422. SF Den First downs 19 31 Total Net Yards 400 406 Rushes-yards 36-184 25-124 Passing 216 282 Punt Returns 2-minus 4-7 Kickoff Returns 2-32 6-125 Interceptions Ret. 2-54 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 19-24-0 35-57-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-5 6-26 Punts 5-44.2 6-37.7 Fumbles-Lost 5-0 3-0 Penalties-Yards 5-45 8-45 Time of Possession 25:19 34:41 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—San Francisco, K.Taylor 10-47, D.Harris 7-46, Hyde 6-28, M.Davis 5-26, Ponder 2-21, Driskel 2-9, Gaskins 4-7. Denver, Booker 9-36, C.Anderson 6-30, Bibbs 3-23, Hillman 3-21, P.Lynch 3-13, Sanchez 1-1. PASSING—San Francisco, Gabbert 6-9-0-69, Driskel 6-7-0-66, Ponder 7-8-0-86. Denver, Siemian 10-14-1-75, Sanchez 10-17-0-120, P.Lynch 15-26-1113. RECEIVING—San Francisco, McDonald 3-38, White 2-30, Celek 2-14, Simpson 2-10, Burbridge 2-7, M.Davis 2-1, Cajuste 1-40, D.Anderson 1-30, Treggs 1-25, Hamm 1-23, K.Taylor 1-2, D.Harris 1-1. Denver, Green 4-57, Norwood 4-30, J.Taylor 3-36, Krieger Coble 3-30, Sanders 3-24, Neal 3-21, Frazier 3-15, Latimer 2-29, Posey 2-19, Phillips 2-17, Addison 2-13, D.Thomas 1-10, Booker 1-7, Raymond 1-0, C.Anderson 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

New Orleans 0 0 3 6 — 9 Houston 7 6 0 3 — 16 First Quarter Hou—Fuller 19 pass from Osweiler (Novak kick), 10:03. Second Quarter Hou—FG Novak 49, 14:47. Hou—FG Novak 46, :03. Third Quarter NO—FG Barth 33, 3:26. Fourth Quarter NO—FG Forbath 37, 11:18. NO—FG Forbath 27, 10:10. Hou—FG Novak 36, 1:58. A—71,517. NO Hou First downs 19 16 Total Net Yards 260 275 Rushes-yards 26-82 24-59 Passing 178 216 Punt Returns 3-15 4-20 Kickoff Returns 3-56 4-93 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 2-6 Comp-Att-Int 23-42-2 23-35-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-19 4-37 Punts 6-44.5 6-44.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 5-44 7-73 Time of Possession 29:50 30:10 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, McCown 3-25, Lasco 12-24, Grayson 1-16, Ingram 7-11, Kuhn 1-3, Spiller 2-3. Houston, Hunt 6-20, L.Miller 6-16, Hilliard 7-11, Prosch 2-6, Ervin 2-5, Savage 1-1. PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 5-8-1-29, McCown 14-19-0-118, Grayson 4-15-150. Houston, Osweiler 12-19-1-124, Savage 7-12-0-75, Weeden 4-4-0-54. RECEIVING—New Orleans, Coleman 6-47, Spiller 3-16, T.Lewis 2-25, Manhertz 2-23, R.Harris 2-17, Fleener 2-12, Lampman 1-19, J.Williams 1-17, Cadet 1-9, Hill 1-7, M.Thomas 1-5, Ingram 1-0. Houston, Fuller 4-73, B.Miller 3-34, Strong 3-25, Mumphery 2-22, Anderson 2-21, Lenz 1-18, Denham 1-13, Grimes 1-9, R.Griffin 1-9, Prosch 1-9, Hopkins 1-8, Shorts 1-5, L.Miller 1-4, Fiedorowicz 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Baltimore 0 14 0 5 — 19 Indianapolis 3 3 6 6 — 18 First Quarter Ind—FG Vinatieri 24, 5:37. Second Quarter Bal—Aiken 14 pass from Mallett (Tucker kick), 12:19. Ind—FG Vinatieri 40, 1:54. Bal—J.Butler 12 pass from Jo.Johnson (Tucker kick), :38. Third Quarter Ind—T.Smith 1 pass from Tolzien (pass failed), 8:34. Fourth Quarter Bal—FG Lutz 21, 8:40. Ind—T.Williams 7 pass from Morris (pass intercepted), 12:58. Bal—Levine two-point interception return, 12:58. A—65,327. Bal Ind First downs 16 23 Total Net Yards 251 326 Rushes-yards 30-120 23-93 Passing 131 233 Punt Returns 1-21 4-43 Kickoff Returns 5-94 4-112 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-30-1 28-37-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-0 2-11 Punts 6-47.5 3-54.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 11-91 9-101 Time of Possession 26:47 33:13 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Baltimore, Jo.Johnson 5-40, West 9-33, Dixon 7-22, J.Allen 4-14, Forsett 5-11. Indianapolis, Morris 1-26, Todman 5-22, Turbin 7-18, Luck 2-12, Ferguson 5-6, T.Williams 1-5, Gore 1-5, Tolzien 1-minus 1. PASSING—Baltimore, Mallett 6-8-0-47, Jo.Johnson 11-16-0-72, Je.Johnson 1-6-1-12. Indianapolis, Luck 8-8-0-71, Tolzien 13-18-0-107, Morris 7-11-0-66. RECEIVING—Baltimore, J.Butler 4-35, C.Moore 3-20, West 2-18, D.Brown 2-15, Gillmore 2-14, J.Allen 2-0, Aiken 1-14, Dixon 1-12, Campanaro 1-3. Indianapolis, Rogers 5-31, Dorsett 3-37, Swoope 3-36, Moncrief 2-25, Bray 2-22, T.Smith 2-18, Ferguson 2-13, T.Williams 2-13, D.Allen 2-10, Coffman 2-10, McKay 1-18, Turbin 1-7, Todman 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Indianapolis, Vinatieri 47, McAfee 62.

Kansas City 7 13 0 0 — 20 Los Angeles 7 7 0 7 — 21 First Quarter KC—Ware 2 run (Santos kick), 7:50. LA—Gurley 3 run (Zuerlein kick), 5:18. Second Quarter LA—P.Cooper 11 pass from Keenum (Zuerlein kick), 13:44. KC—Maclin 20 pass from A.Smith (Santos kick), 10:13. KC—FG Santos 32, 7:59. KC—FG Santos 19, :05. Fourth Quarter LA—M.Brown 10 pass from Goff (Bertolet kick), 10:35. A—80,782. KC LA First downs 24 16 Total Net Yards 390 264 Rushes-yards 23-82 29-139 Passing 308 125 Punt Returns 3-18 2-minus Kickoff Returns 2-55 4-75 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 32-43-0 12-17-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-20 2-10 Punts 3-46.7 5-47.4 Fumbles-Lost 3-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 9-109 9-44 Time of Possession 36:30 23:30 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Kansas City, Ware 10-37, Reaves 6-32, A.Smith 3-11, K.Davis 3-2, A.Murray 1-0. Los Angeles, M.Brown 12-68, B.Cunningham 4-38, Gurley 4-20, Magee 6-16, Goff 3-minus 3. PASSING—Kansas City, A.Smith 9-12-0137, Foles 18-22-0-133, A.Murray 5-9-0-58. Los Angeles, Keenum 4-5-0-53, Goff 8-12-0-82. RECEIVING—Kansas City, Ware 4-24, Conley 3-66, Maclin 3-48, Kelce 3-24, Reaves 3-14, K.Davis 3-12, Ty.Hill 2-26, Streater 2-16, A.Wilson 2-13, D.Thomas 2-13, Hammond 1-30, D.Robinson 1-15, D.Harris 1-9, Travis 1-9, D.Brown 1-9. Los Angeles, Quick 2-27, Britt 2-27, M.Brown 2-17, Hemingway 1-26, Kendricks 1-15, P.Cooper 1-11, J.Cunningham 1-7, McRoberts 1-6, Marquez 1-minus 1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Kansas City, Santos 43.

Interceptions Ret. 1-0 2-5 Comp-Att-Int 8-25-2 21-35-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-22 3-11 Punts 8-48.0 8-43.6 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 2-1 Penalties-Yards 10-70 7-73 Time of Possession 20:15 39:45 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New York, Rainey 2-70, An.Williams 6-15, Jennings 4-10, Perkins 3-5, Nassib 3-3, Vereen 1-minus 1. Buffalo, Wilder 11-31, J.Williams 8-17, Herron 4-13, Gronkowski 2-7, Gillislee 1-6, T.Taylor 1-2, Manuel 1-1, McCoy 5-0, Bush 1-minus 1, C.Jones 2-minus 2, Goodwin 1-minus 4.

PASSING—New York, Manning 4-9-0-44, Nassib 2-12-0-25, L.Thomas 2-4-2-17. Buffalo, T.Taylor 7-10-0-132, Manuel 8-13-0-69, C.Jones 6-12-1-83. RECEIVING—New York, Tye 2-14, Beckham 1-22, Maye 1-17, Boone 1-11, King 1-8, J.Adams 1-8, Powe 1-6. Buffalo, McCoy 4-58, Powell 3-46, Goodwin 3-36, Little 3-35, J.Williams 2-11, Clay 1-59, D.Lewis 1-21, Gragg 1-14, O’Leary 1-4, Herron 1-0, Felton 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS—New York, Obarski 27. Buffalo, Gay 37.

FRIDAY’S SUMMARIES COWBOYS 41, DOLPHINS 14

REDSKINS 22, JETS 18

CHARGERS 19, CARDINALS 3

Miami 0 14 0 0 — 14 Dallas 7 20 14 0 — 41 First Quarter Dal—A.Morris 15 run (Bailey kick), 6:11. Second Quarter Dal—Bryant 28 pass from Prescott (Bailey kick), 14:23. Mia—Stills 13 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 10:46. Dal—Prescott 20 run (Bailey kick), 6:42. Mia—Stills 3 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 2:52. Dal—FG Bailey 51, 1:19. Dal—FG Bailey 24, :22. Third Quarter Dal—Butler 1 pass from Prescott (Bailey kick), 11:46. Dal—Prescott 1 run (Bailey kick), 6:11. A—82,862. Mia Dal First downs 19 24 Total Net Yards 314 433 Rushes-yards 29-120 34-170 Passing 194 263 Punt Returns 4-24 4-52 Kickoff Returns 2-49 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-30-0 17-24-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-23 0-0 Punts 5-40.0 4-41.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 10-79 12-113 Time of Possession 30:09 29:51 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Miami, Pead 4-48, Dan.Thomas 7-30, Ajayi 6-19, Tannehill 2-16, M.Moore 1-9, Dysert 2-2, D.Williams 4-2, Doughty 1-minus 1, Foster 2-minus 5. Dallas, A.Morris 13-85, Jackson 14-43, Prescott 3-28, K.Smith 3-13, Showers 1-1. PASSING—Miami, Tannehill 12-20-0162, M.Moore 1-1-0-4, Doughty 2-3-0-7, Dysert 3-6-0-44. Dallas, Romo 4-5-0-49, Prescott 12-15-0-199, Showers 1-4-0-15. RECEIVING—Miami, Landry 4-33, Stills 3-71, D.Jones 2-36, Parker 2-16, Hazel 2-14, Sims 2-11, Pead 1-30, Cameron 1-5, D.Williams 1-1. Dallas, Butler 3-74, Bryant 2-46, Swaim 2-29, Witten 2-24, Beasley 2-21, Whitehead 1-18, Jackson 1-15, A.Morris 1-15, T.Williams 1-12, Escobar 1-8, A.Jones 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

N.Y. Jets 0 2 7 9 — 18 Washington 0 14 0 8 — 22 Second Quarter NYJ—safety, 7:17. Was—R.Ross 3 pass from McCoy (Hopkins kick), 4:15. Was—R.Ross 39 pass from McCoy (Hopkins kick), 2:19. Third Quarter NYJ—Z.Sudfeld 19 pass from Petty (Folk kick), 3:09. Fourth Quarter NYJ—FG Ros.Martin 40, 12:20. NYJ—Anderson 42 pass from Petty (kick failed), 3:56. Was—K.Thompson 18 pass from N.Sudfeld (K.Thompson pass from N.Sudfeld), :29. A—53,437. NYJ Was First downs 18 20 Total Net Yards 349 326 Rushes-yards 9-35 31-101 Passing 314 225 Punt Returns 4-14 5-12 Kickoff Returns 1-15 1-17 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 1-10 Comp-Att-Int 26-48-1 23-36-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-10 2-11 Punts 6-48.2 7-47.7 Fumbles-Lost 4-2 3-0 Penalties-Yards 6-47 10-65 Time of Possession 24:10 35:50 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New York, Powell 3-23, Bohanon 4-10, Howsare 1-2, Petty 1-0. Washington, M.Jones 7-31, K.Marshall 10-26, C.Thompson 4-18, McCoy 4-11, Kelley 3-8, Brown 2-7, N.Sudfeld 1-0. PASSING—New York, Fitzpatrick 4-9-0-35, G.Smith 6-13-1-47, Petty 16-26-0-242. Washington, McCoy 13-16-1-159, N.Sudfeld 10-20-0-77. RECEIVING—New York, Anderson 6-131, J.Marshall 4-37, Peake 4-32, Z.Sudfeld 3-39, Amaro 2-11, J.Ross 1-18, K.Davis 1-14, Decker 1-13, Bostick 1-13, Howsare 1-8, B.Marshall 1-5, Bohanon 1-3. Washington, R.Ross 4-58, Grant 4-43, Crowder 3-38, Showers 3-26, Brown 2-7, M.Harris 1-19, K.Thompson 1-18, Thorpe 1-17, Stewart 1-9, Paulsen 1-3, Paul 1-1, K.Marshall 1-minus 3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

Arizona 0 0 0 3 — 3 San Diego 10 6 3 0 — 19 First Quarter SD—Flowers 25 interception return (Lambo kick), 9:02. SD—FG Lambo 20, :25. Second Quarter SD—FG Lambo 33, 7:49. SD—FG Lambo 48, :24. Third Quarter SD—FG Lambo 50, 10:25. Fourth Quarter Ari—FG Catanzaro 52, 4:48. A—46,524. Ari SD First downs 12 15 Total Net Yards 209 285 Rushes-yards 21-63 27-46 Passing 146 239 Punt Returns 2-15 4-7 Kickoff Returns 2-45 1-20 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-86 Comp-Att-Int 16-30-2 20-33-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 1-3 Punts 5-47.8 4-54.5 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-25 8-50 Time of Possession 27:25 32:35 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Arizona, K.Williams 2-19, Taylor 3-10, Penny 3-8, Barkley 1-7, C.Johnson 4-7, Ellington 3-6, D.Johnson 3-5, Stanton 2-1. San Diego, Gordon 6-18, Oliver 5-17, Smith 8-13, Woodhead 3-5, Clemens 1-0, Bercovici 3-minus 2, Benjamin 1-minus 5. PASSING—Arizona, Palmer 4-8-1-37, Stanton 2-7-1-32, Barkley 10-15-0-85. San Diego, Clemens 11-20-0-134, Bercovici 9-13-0-108. RECEIVING—Arizona, J.Shipley 3-18, Jar.Brown 2-40, Momah 2-30, Taylor 2-15, Hubert 1-15, Fells 1-14, G.Christian 1-11, C.Johnson 1-9, D.Johnson 1-3, Floyd 1-2, Brooks 1-minus 3. San Diego, D.Williams 4-55, Ty.Williams 4-47, K.Allen 2-41, Reaves 2-22, J.Jones 2-21, Oliver 1-19, Benjamin 1-11, Burse 1-9, T.Allen 1-7, Henry 1-7, Weiser 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Arizona, Catanzaro 48.

BILLS 21, GIANTS 0 N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 0 — 0 Buffalo 0 21 0 0 — 21 Second Quarter Buf—McCoy 13 pass from T.Taylor (Gay kick), 12:52. Buf—J.Williams 1 run (kick failed), 4:54. Buf—Little 19 pass from Manuel (D.Lewis pass from Manuel), :18. A—66,432. NYG Buf First downs 7 21 Total Net Yards 166 343 Rushes-yards 19-102 37-70 Passing 64 273 Punt Returns 5-54 5-26 Kickoff Returns 2-21 0-0

REGULAR SEASON SCHEDULE (x-subject to change)

WEEK ONE Thursday, Sept. 8 Carolina at Denver, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 11 Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 12 p.m. Buffalo at Baltimore, 12 p.m. Chicago at Houston, 12 p.m. Green Bay at Jacksonville, 12 p.m. San Diego at Kansas City, 12 p.m. Oakland at New Orleans, 12 p.m. Cincinnati at N.Y. Jets, 12 p.m. Cleveland at Philadelphia, 12 p.m. Minnesota at Tennessee, 12 p.m. Miami at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. Detroit at Indianapolis, 3:25 p.m. New England at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 12 Pittsburgh at Washington, 6:10 p.m. Los Angeles at San Francisco, 9:20 p.m.

WEEK TWO Thursday, Sept. 15 N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18 San Francisco at Carolina, 12 p.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 12 p.m. Tennessee at Detroit, 12 p.m. Kansas City at Houston, 12 p.m. Miami at New England, 12 p.m. New Orleans at N.Y. Giants, 12 p.m. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 12 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 12 p.m. Tampa Bay at Arizona, 3:05 p.m. Seattle at Los Angeles, 3:05 p.m. Indianapolis at Denver, 3:25 p.m. Atlanta at Oakland, 3:25 p.m. Jacksonville at San Diego, 3:25 p.m. Green Bay at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 19 Philadelphia at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.

WEEK THREE

WEEK FIVE

Thursday, Sept. 22 Houston at New England, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 25 Arizona at Buffalo, 12 p.m. Minnesota at Carolina, 12 p.m. Denver at Cincinnati, 12 p.m. Detroit at Green Bay, 12 p.m. Baltimore at Jacksonville, 12 p.m. Cleveland at Miami, 12 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 12 p.m. Oakland at Tennessee, 12 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. Los Angeles at Tampa Bay, 3:05 p.m. San Diego at Indianapolis, 3:25 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Kansas City, 3:25 p.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 3:25 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 26 Atlanta at New Orleans, 7:30 p.m.

Byes: Jacksonville, Kansas City, New Orleans, Seattle Thursday, Oct. 6 Arizona at San Francisco, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9 Washington at Baltimore, 12 p.m. New England at Cleveland, 12 p.m. Philadelphia at Detroit, 12 p.m. Chicago at Indianapolis, 12 p.m. Tennessee at Miami, 12 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 12 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh, 12 p.m. Atlanta at Denver, 3:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. Buffalo at Los Angeles, 3:25 p.m. San Diego at Oakland, 3:25 p.m. x-N.Y. Giants at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 10 Tampa Bay at Carolina, 7:30 p.m.

WEEK FOUR

WEEK SIX

Byes: Green Bay, Philadelphia Thursday, Sept. 29 Miami at Cincinnati 5:25 p.m., 1:35 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 2 Indianapolis vs. Jacksonville at London, 8:30 a.m. Carolina at Atlanta, 12 p.m. Oakland at Baltimore, 12 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 12 p.m. Tennessee at Houston, 12 p.m. Buffalo at New England, 12 p.m. Seattle at N.Y. Jets, 12 p.m. Cleveland at Washington, 12 p.m. Denver at Tampa Bay, 3:05 p.m. Los Angeles at Arizona, 3:25 p.m. New Orleans at San Diego, 3:25 p.m. Dallas at San Francisco, 3:25 p.m. Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 3 N.Y. Giants at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m.

Byes: Minnesota, Tampa Bay Thursday, Oct. 13 Denver at San Diego, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16 San Francisco at Buffalo, 12 p.m. Jacksonville at Chicago, 12 p.m. Los Angeles at Detroit, 12 p.m. Pittsburgh at Miami, 12 p.m. Cincinnati at New England, 12 p.m. Carolina at New Orleans, 12 p.m. Baltimore at N.Y. Giants, 12 p.m. Cleveland at Tennessee, 12 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 12 p.m. Kansas City at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Dallas at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m. Atlanta at Seattle, 3:25 p.m. x-Indianapolis at Houston, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17 N.Y. Jets at Arizona, 7:30 p.m.


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SUNDAY AUGUST 21 2016 KANSAS.COM

12D

Outdoors WILSON’S SNIPE

Audubon.org

Gallinago delicata Unlike the mythical creatures of midnight practical jokes, snipe really do exist in Kansas. While a few are around now, thousands of the 10inch birds will migrate into the state over the next several months. They’ll stop to feed up on worms and other invertebrates probed from mud and muck with their long bills. Perfect snipe habitat is shallow water in dense vegetation. Flood smartweed patches at places like Cheyenne Bottoms or the McPherson Valley Wetlands often hold the birds. Roadside ditches holding water or flooded grasslands can, too. Snipe are one of only a few species of shorebirds that can be hunted in Kansas. Flushing from the dense, flooded vegetation is one of the challenges. Most who’ve hunted snipe agree they have the most erratic flight of any gamebird in Kansas, suddenly changing direction for no apparent reason.

SOLUNAR TABLE This table lists top fishing times and days for the coming week. For best results, begin fishing one hour before and continue one hour after the times given. Times apply to all time zones (bold indicates best days). Sunday

2:20 a.

2:45 p.

Monday

3:10 a. 3:40 p.

Tuesday

4:05 a.

MICHAEL PEARCE The Wichita Eagle

Megan Hilbish prepares to fire a practice shot at the shooting range on her family’s farm.

On target at national event Megan Hilbish, a 20-year-old Emporia State University student, scored well at a big national rifle competition, proving what men can do, many women can do better.

4:35 p.

Wed.

5 a.m. 5:30 p.

Thurs.

5:55 a.

6:25 p.

Friday

6:50 a.

7:20 p.

Saturday

7:50 a. 8:20 p.

Next Sun.

8:45 a.

9:15 p.

Source: U.S. Naval Observatory data

CALENDAR Archery Sunday — 3-D Shoot, Ninnescah Bowhunters, 7-8 a.m.111th S. & 215th W., Clearwater. Call 316-706-5846. Sunday — 3-D Shoot, Ninnescah Valley Archers, 835 Country Club Road, Pratt, 9 a.m. Call 620-770-0517. Next Sunday — 3-D Shoot, Southern Kansas Bowhunters, Anthony City Lake, 8-10 a.m. trickle start. Call 620-8245833. Sept. 11 — 3-D Shoot/Year End Raffle and Feed, Southfork Archers, Byron Walker Wildlife Area, 8-10 a.m. trickle start. Call 620-532-6745. Sept. 17-18 — 3-D Shoot, Ninnescah Bowhunters, 7-8 a.m.111th S. & 215th W., Clearwater. Call 316-706-5846. Sept. 25 — 3-D Shoot/hog roast, Ninnescah Valley Archers, 835 Country Club Road, Pratt, 10 a.m. Call 620-770-0517. General Oct. 20 — Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism commission meeting, Liberal. Hunting Below is the basic listing of hunting seasons. Please check regulations for boundary, limits and permit requirements at www.ksoutdoors.com. Year-around — Rabbit season. Through Feb. 28 — Squirrel season. Sept. 1-Nov. 29 — Dove season. Sept. 3-11 — Youth/disabled deer season. Sept. 10-25 — Low plains early teal season. Sept. 12-Sept. 25 — Muzzleloader deer season. Sept. 12-Dec. 31 — Archery deer season. Sept. 15-Oct. 15 — Early greater prairie chicken season. Oct. 1-Nov. 29 — Fall turkey season. (First segment) Oct. 8-Dec. 4 — Low plains early zone duck season. (First segment) Oct. 8-9 — Pre-rut whitetail antlerless deer season. Oct. 29-Jan. 1 — Low plains late zone duck season. (First segment) Oct. 29-Jan. 1 — Canada goose season. (First segment) Oct. 29-Jan. 1 — White-fronted goose season. (First segment) Oct. 29-Jan. 1 — Light goose season. (First segment) Nov. 9-Jan. 5 — Sandhill crane season. Nov. 12-Jan. 31 — Pheasant season. Nov. 12-Jan. 31 — Pheasant season Nov. 12-Jan. 1 — Southeast zone duck season. (First segment) Nov. 19-Jan. 31 — Greater prairie chicken season. Nov. 30-Dec. 11 — Firearms deer season. Nov. 30-Feb. 28 — Exotic (Eurasian collared) dove season.

MICHAEL PEARCE The Wichita Eagle

BY MICHAEL PEARCE

Megan Hilbish brought home a variety of awards and medals from the NRA Smallbore Rifle National Championship last month in Indiana. The best was scoring second in an event with about 200 men and women.

mpearce@wichitaeagle.com LYON COUNTY

Last month, about 400 of America’s best shooters gathered for a national championship. Many were men who’d shot competitively for 40 or more years. For decades they’d used the world’s best gear, and had trained on specialized ranges with professional coaches. Megan Hilbish was a full head shorter, and several decades younger, than most. The 20-yearold farm girl had done most of her practicing by herself at a crude range behind the family barn. But by the end of the 10-day National Rifle Association Smallbore Rifle national championship in Indiana, the Emporia State senior proved it doesn’t take the highest budget, or testosterone, to succeed in target shooting. Hilbish finished second place in her category of about 200 of those shooters, made up largely of men. She was the best collegiate shooter at the event, beating members of some of America’s top college shooting teams. She earned a spot on a prestigious women’s shooting team that can represent America in shoots with foreign nations. “I really feel good about my shooting, to do as well as I did, with what I have,” said Hilbish, who is studying criminal and political studies with law school aspirations. “I only have so much time I can devote to serious shooting.” She certainly impressed many. “Megan just set the

MICHAEL PEARCE The Wichita Eagle

Megan Hilbish, an Emporia State student, has established herself as one of the top rifle shooters in America. Much of her skills have been developed on a range behind the family's barn.

stage to establish herself as one of the top (young) shooters in the country,” said H.Q. Moody, NRA national rifle manager. “She did pretty (danged) good.” Moody was complimentary of Hilbish’s shooting due to her age, experience and equipment. She got no special compliments for her gender. “In our sport men and women shoot equally,” he said. “We don’t have a women’s class. They don’t need it. We’ve had a lot of competitions where women win.” Moody said the only person to top Hilbish last month was another woman, Ruby Gomes, from Rhode Island. Last year, the first year

there was no gender seperation for the NRA championships, Moody said two of the top championships were won by women. Raised in rural Kansas, with parents that are hunters, Hilbish was 7 when she began competing with air rifles in the local 4H shooting sports program. She moved up to the .22 rifle, with a cartridge about as big as a cold capsule, when she was about 14. She did well. She won Kansas Junior Olympic championships six times. She competed at Junior Olympic nationals three years. This was her fourth trip to the NRA national shoot. “I’m sure that experience, competing at that level, really did me a lot of good,” she said. So did

hundreds of hours of practicing in Kansas. Unlike many at the event Hilbish’s college has no organized shooting team with a trained coach. There’s not a regulation target range near Emporia. The nearest is in Topeka, about an hour away. That’s a drive she can’t make as often as she’d like. “I still have to find a way to practice almost every day so that means I spend a lot of time shooting at my parent’s farm, the best I could,” she said. She practices two to four hours many days of the week, firing down a mowed 50-yard path through farm equipment and old vehicles far past their prime. Old refrigerators filled with recycled rubber mulch safely stop the bullets. She’s shot in brutal cold and some of this summer’s 100-plus degree days. She’s practiced late at night, when jobs and studies had eaten up most of the daylight. “When I can’t shoot outside, I’d go to the basement and practice with an air rifle,.” said Hilbish. At the national championship, she shot hundreds of .22 rounds at targets from 50 to 100 yards from, kneeling, standing and prone positions. She also shot with traditional open sights and with a telescopic scope on her rifle. The targets had

bull’s-eyes the size of a pencil eraser that she hit more than 99 percent of the time some days. As well as shooting second-best among all civilian shooters at the event, and winning the collegiate title, she ranked fifth when civilian and military shooters were combined. Her gun looks nothing like the standard .22 rifle millions of young shooters have grown up with. Hers weighs a tad less than 14 pounds with a barrel that looks as long as a pool cue. Beverly Hilbish, her mother, estimates the rifle is worth around $7,500 and is customized to her daughter’s size, skills and shooting preferences. Her shooting attire includes special jackets, pants and gloves designed to help her fire with consistency. The great gear all helped, but she credits several other components of her shooting. She said the hectic lifestyle of working, classes, practice and helping with youth events helped her handle the pressure of the event. So did her hours of practicing through the heat of a Kansas summer. “It was like in the 80s (in Indiana) and all these people were complaining and complaining about the heat,” she said. “It felt pretty cool and comfortable to me, I just shot and didn’t worry about it.” Hilbish hopes to keep shooting, competitively through law school and beyond. Hunting and recreational shooting with her family will always be important. Her ultimate goal is to shoot at the Olympics. Moody said that’s a possibility. He also compared Hilbish to probably the greatest Kansas target shooter of all time. In some ways Hilbish reminds him of Margaret Murdock, a Topeka shooter who Moody said “... set the world afire in the (1976) Olympics.” At the Montreal games, she became the first female shooter to get a medal (silver) in a shooting sport and later was the first woman to win an open world target shooting championship. “She’s always kind of been my idol,” said Hilbish. “She did some amazing things.”



Sunday, August 21, 2016

Page 2

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POOL CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 to the appropriate level. Water should fall just below the skimmer opening. Many pools do not need to be completely drained for the winter.

Alkalinity should be 80 to 125 ppm for plaster/gunite pools and 125 to 150 ppm for other pool types. Test the level of available chlorine, and super-chlorinate the pool to maintain a sanitation level of at least 4 ppm. Once the pool cover is on, the amount of chlorine that escapes due to sunlight and evaporation will decrease. An algaecide may be used, if desired, as well. In very cold climates, a pool-water antifreeze may be necessary. Check with your pool supply retailer for more information.

• Shut off the filter pump, heater and any other equipment. Let all water drain out and allow equipment to dry before storing them away. Follow the manufacturer’s directions for lubrication and covering. Install freeze plugs if you choose to use them. • Adjust electricity settings. Turn off the circuit to outdoor outlets that feed the pool equipment, testing to make sure the power is off.

• Run the filter. Run the filter at least 24 hours before disassembling the filter for the season. This will help circulate any chemicals added through the water.

• Put accessories away. Remove any ladders, diving boards, slides, external drain lines, and other

• Drain the pool’s water

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I:F->-C >C C >-CF C 42 4G = ? 1 2- F= = > 4170 C H-C+ F==J "4= C+-> F2 0- G 0 FJ -> *42 ! +-> > 2> C-42 0 = 2 + 7440 7440 +4F> ) = * = *= 2-C /-C + 2 C= G =C-2 A+ = H44 + > "= >+ 7 -2C C+=4F*+4FC 2 H =7 C-2* 1 -2 (44= " 1-0J =441 (44=-2* 1 -2 (= 1>C= >C &2->+ >1C HAH C = 2 14= ! >7 -4F> 1 >C = >F-C H 0/4FC > 1 2C *4=* 4F> H C = G- H>! & 2 1 8 ( 2 8 888 & 2 8-. .88 888

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C- F04F>0J 1 -2C -2 = 2 + H-C+ 2 H =44" 2 H 2 H >- -2* 2 H H-2 4H> >7=-2/0 = >J>C 1 4=2 = 04C = J "4= J4F C4 14G =-*+C -2! & 21- 1 ( 8 888

=1 -2G-C-2* 0 * 2 -2 C+-> *4=* 4F> 56 >C4=J H-C+ 1 -2 (44= " 1-0J =441 +F* 1 >C = >F-C H-C+ 7=-G C C+ 0- = =J > 2> C-42 0 &2->+ > 1 2C = =441 H-2 =441! & 22(- .%2 88

= C+C /-2* = 2 + H-C+ 00 C+ 00> 2 H+->C0 > 4170 C H-C+ *4=* 4F> *= 2-C /-C + 2 + =C+ =441 &2->+ > 1 2C > = 2 /J = H-C+ 4FC 44= &= 70 >4 1F + 14= ! & 28--2 2 888

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CF22-2* >C C H-C+ -==-* C " =1 0 2 E 4FC F-0 -2*> *4=* 4F> 5 4H2 = =- / = 2 + H-C+ F2 =441 4$ 2 14= ! & 8..- 2 88 888

2 4774=CF2-CJ C4 4H2 C+ G =J &2 >C -2 >-*2 = %>1 2>+-78 2 >C C F>C41 F-0C J 42J = ==4 H 7-2* - H> ' = * = ? -= 70 >8 & 22.1% 2 2 8 888

= C+C /-2*0J FC-"F0 >C42 5 6 >C4=J H-C+ 7FCC-2* *= 2 4FC 44= 2C =C -2-2* = ) = * = 4$ +F* 1 >C = >F-C ! F>C > ! & 8.( . ( %88 888

2 I 7C-42 0 = 2 + 4= C -2 F2 ==-2* *44 C >C H -C>8 440 HA7440 +4F> ) = + C * = * H+ C<> 42 J4F= H->+ 0->C; C -> + = ! &1-- 8 ( 2% 888

CF22-2* 7 C-4 +41 HA7=-G C 4F=CJ = H-C+ H C =" 00 *4=* 4F> *= 2-C /-C + 2 &2->+ >1C 4$ 2 > = 2 >C42 7 C-4 I:F->-C 2C =C -2 => = 1 41 ! & 8 1 ( 2 8 888

11 F0 C 7 C-4 +41 H-C+ 1 K-2* *40" 4F=> G- H> 4170 C H-C+ 4174>-C / 0F>+ 0 2 > 7-2* -C + 2 H-C+ 4=- 2 4F2C => 04% = 1 -2 (44= >1C 0 F2 =J +44/F7> *= C >C4= * >7 ! & 2(- 1 2 2 888

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CF22-2* = 2 + >-CF C 42 7=-G C 04C 4170 C H-C+ 4FC 44= /-C + 2 C= G =C-2 7 C-4> +4C CF *4=* 4F> H44 H4=/ 2 F-0C,-2> 1 - =441 = J C4 *4 2 H-= "4= >C = 4 >J>C 18 & 28 %( ( (- 888

FIF=-4F> G C-42 0-G-2* -2 C+ -CJ 4170 C H-C+ 7 24= 1- H C = G- H> = C+C /-2*0J *4=* 4F> &2->+ > CC 2C-42 C4 C -0 C G =J CF=2! F==J "4= C+-> 1 *2-& 2C 1 >C =7- -> *42 ! & 2( 2 ( 8%% 888

= 2 2 H H-C+ 00 C+ + = C = 4" 40 4170 C H-C+ 00 =- / IC =-4= 2 H 0 2 > 7-2* 2 H =44" 2 H *= 2-C /-C + 2 2 H (44=-2* C+=4F*+4FC 2 >4 1F + 14= C+ 2 H 2 0->C! & (1-1 %% 88

2 E 5AE H44 = > C+-> 1 >C = = 2 + H-C+ -= 0 =-G H 0 41 > J4F +41 8 4= >-*2 F>-2* C+ >C 4" G =JC+-2* C+=4F*+4FC >-170J I 7C-42 0! 00 4 J! & (- .( %- 88

=1 -2G-C-2* = 2 + H-C+ 7 24= 1- H C = G- H> "=41 G =J H-2, 4H *4=* 4F> /-C + 2 H-C+ 7=4" >>-42 0 *= 770- 2 > + =C+ =441 1 -2 (44= 4$ H 0/4FC &2->+ > 1 2C 7440 H C =" 00! & 28%2 % 888

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+-> "4=1 = 14 0 +41 4 >C> 2 2 04> >F2 =441 2C =C -2 => = 1 *= 2-C /-C + 2 >7 -4F> =441> &2->+ > 1 2C 2 /> C4 C+ C= > 42 7=-G C F0, ,> 04C! & 8 11 2 888

= C+C /-2*0J FC-"F0 = 2 + H-C+ 0- = =J *= 2-C /-C + 2 HAH C = H 0/4FC > 1 2C HA1 - 2 I = -> 2 H C = G- H>! &1- %( -%% 888

4F= = 1 +41 H -C> -2 C+-> > 2> C-42 0 = 2 + H-C+ H C = G- H> *= 2-C /-C + 2 >70-C =441 70 2 H 0/4FC G- H4FC > 1 2C 2 *= C /J = ! & (% .. -(% %88

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F>C41 F-0C = 2 + >-CF C 42 )8' = > 4170 C H-C+ *= 2-C /-C + 2 + =C+ =441 >7 -4F> =441> F>C41 -2 C=J > = 2 1 >C = >F-C &2->+ > 1 2C C4 1 2J 00> H+->C0 > C4 0->C! & 22 -- %88

-G 0-/ J4F = 42 G C-42 G =J J -2 C+-> > 2> C-42 0 = 2 + H-C+ 7 24= 1- H C = G- H> 47 2 (44= 70 2 *= 2-C /-C + 2 >70-C =441> H 0/4FC > 1 2C H-C+ H C = 2 4G = /8 & (. (. - 888

4=* 4F> 0-/ 2 H "4=1 = 14 0 +41 H-C+ *= 2-C /-C + 2 *= C 47 2 (44= 70 2 " F04F> H 0/4FC > 1 2C H-C+ > " =441! 4H! & 22 8 888

CF22-2* 00 >C42 5 6 >C4=J 42 4=2 = 04C H-C+ = 2 2 H /-C + 2 0 =* H-2 4H> C+=4F*+4FC 2 H 2 >4 1F + 14= ! & (.8( 1% %88

CF22-2* 5 6 >C4=J H-C+ >4 1F + >7 42 7=-G C F0, ,> 04C H-C+ 0F>+ 0 2 > 7-2* H-= "4= >C = 4 >J>C 1 *4=* 4F> *= 2-C /-C + 2 HA 7 2C=J 1 -2 (= 1 >C = *= C 2C =C -2-2* 04H = 0 G 0 7=-G C /J = ! & 22 (% 888

11 F0 C CH4 >C4=J C+ C -> = J "4= J4F C4 14G =-*+C -2C4 H IC =-4= 7 -2C *= 2-C /-C + 2 D 2 H > >0 C =44" 4", & F-0C,-2> 1 >C = HA+-> 2 + = = >>-2*A C+> 2 14= ! & ( .2 % 888

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CF22-2* 7 C-4 C+ C -> 14G -2 = J 4170 C H-C+ 2 H -= 42 -C-42-2* 2 H =44" 2 H * = * 44=> 2 H 7 =C- 0 =-G H J 4=- 2 4F2C => -2 /-C + 2 >70-C =441 70 2 &2->+ >1C! & 2(1.( 2% 888

I:F->-C CH4 >C4=J H-C+ 0F>+ 0 2 > 7-2* F7 C *= 2-C /-C + 2 1 -2 (44= 4$ 04% = >7 -4F> =441> 1 >C = >F-C H-C+ 7=-G C C+, =441 &2->+ > 1 2C = =441 H-C+ H C = 2 7=-G C 7 C-4 = ! & 21( . 2 888

4F H-00 04G 41-2* +41 C4 C+-> " F04F> = 2 + C C+ 2 4" 7=-G C F0, ,> 04C H-C+ 170 >C4= * >7 2 *= C F-0C,-2> C+=4F*+4FC8 70-C =441 70 2! & 22- 2 888

= C+C /-2*0J FC-"F0 CH4 >C4=J H-C+ 7 24= 1- H C = G- H> + = , H44 (44=> 0-*+C =-*+C /-C + 2 H-C+ H 0/,-2 7 2C=J *= C F-0C,-2> > " =441 &2->+ > 1 2C 1 -2 (44= 4$ 7=-G C 1 >C = >F-C ! & 2( .. 2 %88

C- F04F>0J 1 -2C -2 5 6 >C4=J H-C+ E 1 >C => 47 2 (44= 70 2 >F2 =441 2 H0J = 14 0 *= 2-C /-C + 2 &2->+ > 1 2C 170 >C4= * 2 7440! & 21 2. 2 %88

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CF22-2* = 2 + H-C+ 00 C+ 00> 2 H+->C0 > H+- + -2 0F > +F* +4 J =441 C+ C = =441 >F==4F2 >4F2 2 >4 1F + 14= ! & (8 - 1% 888

G 7=4F0 F-0C 5 6 >C4=J 42 2 4G =>-K F0, ,> 04C H-C+ 2 H =7 C-2* 2 H *= 2-C -2 /-C + 2 2 H + C 2 -= 2 "= >+ 2 FC= 0 7 -2C8 & ( 8. 1- 88

F>C41 42 4H2 = = 2 + -2 C+ -= 0 > +440 ->, C=- C H-C+ DL I )L C * = D = CC * = *= 2-C &2->+ >1C8 11 F0 C ! & 8 %( 1.% %88

H >41 ' D C+ +41 42 7=-G C 04C H-C+ C= >8 = 2-C /-C + 2 2 C+> + = , H44 (44=> 0/4FC > 1 2C8 1F>C > ! & 222.% 1.1 888

-/ 2 H >40- =- / = 2 + H-C+ ' > *4=* 4F> &2->+ > 1 2C H-C+ "F00 /-C + 2 2 H 0/4FC C4 C+ 7 C-4 4G = / 2 7 C-4 = >! =F0J 1F>C > 8 & 2(% 2 1 8 888

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=41 C+ + C =-G H J C4 C+ + C 7440 2 00 =- / = 2 + H-C+ 2 H /-C + 2 2 04G 0J 4=8

F>C H -C-2* "4= J4F! 1 K-2* 0 2 > 7-2*! & ( (2( 12% 88

4G =-*+C -2C4 C+-> > 2> C-42 0 E >C4=J 42 + 0" = 4=2 = 04C H-C+ *= 2-C /-C + 2 + =C+ =441 &2->+ > 1 2C 2 7=-G C /J = H-C+ -2*=4F2 7440! & (%-18 12 %88

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F04F> E >C4=J H-C+ *4=* 4F> H C = 2 *40" 4F=> G- H> E /> + =C+ =441 &2->+ > , 1 2C +F* 1 >C = >F-C H-C+ 7=-G C C+ 4$ ! & 22 1 2% 888

2> C-42 0 5 6 >C4=J >-CF C 42 014>C + 0" 2 = H44 04C 4170 C H-C+ F7 C *= 2-C /-C + 2 1 -2 (44= " 1-0J =441 G F0C -0-2*> 04% = 2 7=-G C /J = ! & (-%.8 2 8 888

+ =1-2* F 4= >-CF C 42 E 04C> 4170 C HA" 2 J = E = * = E 1 >C = =441 = > F7 C *= 2-C /-C + 2 = &2->+ + = H44 > 2 H 04 > 4" + = C =8 & 22%- 2 % 8

7 C = 2 + 4# => 70 2CJ 4" >7 2 C >C "F0 &2->+ > H-C+ G F0C -0-2*> F7 C C+=441> *4=* 4F> *= 2-C /-C + 2 &2->+ > 1 2C 2 7=-G C /J = ! & (%2 2 2.2 88

11 F0 C = 2 + H-C+ 2 H = >- -2* 2 H = =44" 2 H = 2 FC= 0 C+=4F*+4FC 0-*+C 2 =-*+C /-C + 2 &2->+ G- H4FC > 1 2C / " 2 /J >7=-2/0 = 2 H 00! & 2(8 28% %88

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4G =-*+C -2C4 C+-> > 2> C-42 0 E >C4=J 4170 C H-C+ + = H44 (44=> 1 -2 (44= " 1-0J =441 1 >C = >F-C H-C+ 7=-G C C+=441 2 H 770- 2 > -2 /-C + 2 >7=-2/0 = >J>C 1 " 2 /J = & 2( (. 2 % 88

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F04F> +41 C+ C -> = J "4= J4F C4 14G =-*+C -2C4 2 +-> = 2 + 42 0 =* " 2 04C -> = J "4= J4F= " CF= > 2 H = =7 C-2* 2 H = =44" 2 H = H C = + C = >7 - 0 C4F + >8 *= C FJ 42 C+-> D =441 2 H = 2 FC-"F0 /-C + 2 H-C+ 2 H = ->0 2 8 D C+ 00 =- / +41 8 & 222(2 (. 888 & 22 (.% %88

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=0-2* = 2 + H-C+ + = H44 > 4G =>-K E = * = * 0 =* H-2 4H> 2 >7 -4F> =441> 1 -2 (44= 0 F2 =J 2 " 2 /J = 8 & 21 1( (22 888

17 0J H 00 1 -2C -2 D 58' C+ = 2 +8 7 2 42 7C 0-G-2*8 2 J = 8 H 1 + 2-, 0>8 H2 J 5 " 1-0J >-2 -C H > F-0C -2 53')! & 21 8 ((- 88

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4H 1 -2C 2 2 0-G-2* -2 "=- 2 0J 4,47 C14>7+ = H-C+ 7=-G C 2C= 2 G 0 C 7 =/-2* +F* -2-2* =441 H-C+ F-0C,-2> >7 -4F> 0-G-2* =441 /-C + 2 HAE 7 2C=- > 2 C8 + =0 > -2 C>8 4H! & 28 (2 - %88

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Sunday, August 21, 2016

Page 6

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LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME? THE KEY MAY BE RIGHT IN YOUR HANDS! The Wichita Eagle Classifieds can help you find the right home... at the right price!

CLASSIFIEDS 316.262.SELL


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