Sunday, February 1, 2026
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Cougars’ season comes to crashing end, Cloud County pulls off the upset 84-81

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barton cc

It was the matchup the Barton Community College men’s basketball team didn’t want to see in the opening round of the Region VI playoffs but it was the hand dealt by the scheduling gods.  Having defeated Cloud County Community College 78-69 on Wednesday, the Cougars were faced again with having to defeat the Thunderbirds as the season stood in the balance.  Barton took a nine point lead into the locker room but a Cloud County 11-2 run in the first three moments changed momentum eventually leading to the Cougars season coming to a halt.   Finishing the regular season receiving votes in the national poll, Barton concludes the 2014-15 campaign at 24-8 after a 10-4 second place finish in the Jayhawk West standings.  Cloud County, who finished last in the West at 3-13, improves to 17-14 earning a Region VI quarterfinal match against eleventh seeded Dodge City Community College at 1:00 p.m. Thursday.

Similar to Wednesday night’s game, both teams started off the game struggling to score.  Barton built a nine point lead midway through the first half with Cloud responding to draw within five with 6:30 to play.  Consecutive treys by Tyrone Acuff and Kenny Enoch sandwiched a pair of Ridell Camidge free throws pushed the lead out to nine.  Camidge struck back with another trey but Khalil Gracey answered with his own trey as the Cougars would go to the locker room with the nine point lead.

Demonte Ojinnaka buried a trey to begin the second frame with Camidge connecting on his second of the game while adding two free throws keying an 11-2 run to tie it up at 37 at the 17:05 mark.  Consecutive hoops by Tyron Hamby and Damarco White put the Cougars back out by four but Devon Thomas connected on his first of two second half treys to draw back to within one.

Camidge, who would go 4-of-5 from beyond the arc in the second half, knocked down consecutive treys giving Cloud its first lead since the twelve minute of the first half and oddly occurring at exactly the twelve minute mark of the second half.

The excitement picked up the next five minutes as the teams battled back and forth until Kenny Enoch’s trey gave Barton its last lead of the night 61-60 with 7:38 to play.

Another Camidge trey, four points coming from Jesse Patrick, and a Creighton Brinker three pointer set off a 10-1 run opening up an eight point Thunderbird lead with 5:34 to play.

The Cougars battled back behind five points from Acuff and three from Jalin Barnes to close the gap to two with 2:29 to play.  Thirty seconds later Ojinnaka buried the last of his three treys leading a Thunderbirds’ 10-of-15 effort behind the arc in the second half plus free throws by Camidge and Thomas extended the lead out to nine with 1:06 to play.

For the next twenty seconds it was a free throw exchange until Tyron Hamby buried a trey with thirty-six seconds cutting the deficit to six.  Following Brinker’s 1-of-2 trip from the charity stripe, Barton came up empty but got a big defensive stop setting up Walker’s old-fashioned three-point play drawing Barton to with four with twenty-six seconds.

Sending the T-birds to the line, Camidge missed the first but made the second pushing the lead back out to five.  Hamby then grabbed a big offensive rebound off Gracey’s missed three pointer, was fouled, then went to the line sinking both and suddenly the Cougars only trailed by three with eight seconds to play.

Needing another defensive stop, Camidge gave Barton life by plowing over the Cougars’ Christian Smith on the inbound giving Barton possession under their hoop with 8.7 ticks on the clock.

Following a Barton timeout, the Cougars inbound pass was kicked out to the corner finding Smith for a good look at the game tying three in front of the Barton bench.  As fate would play out, the Smith trey did everything but go in leaving a mad scramble for the ball as time wound out and thus ending the Cougars’ season.

Posting his second straight double-double, Ahmad Walker led four Cougars in double-digits to wind up his Barton career.  The sophomore transfer dropped twenty-seven points and grabbed thirteen rebounds for his eleventh double-double of the season while also leading Barton with six assists.  Tyrone Acuff finished with fourteen points while fellow freshman Tyrone Hamby came off the bench to score twelve.  Kenny Enoch, who tied a school record nine three-pointers in Wednesday’s victory over the Thunderbirds, finished with ten points on 2-of-7 behind the arc.

Ridell Camidge’s 6-of-12 behind the arc and twenty-six points led three Thunderbirds in double-digits.  Devon Thomas added nineteen points dishing out a team high eight dimes to go along with four steals.  Demonte Ojinnaka added twelve points to complete the trio’s fifty-seven combined points and 11-of-22 behind the arc.

A Cowboy’s Faith: Inquisitive Innocence Of Children

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Frank J Buchman
Frank Buchman

By Frank J. Buchman

 

“How many of you have a horse?”

 

Maybe a half-dozen raised their hands.

 

“How many like to read?”

 

Four times as many arms up

 

“How many want to be a cowgirl or a cowboy?”

 

About 40 arms excitedly lifted into the air. That was all of the legs-crossed children on the floor.

 

It was the weekly gathering of preschoolers and Kindergarteners at the Silver Lake Library, where we were talking about cowboys.

 

All eyes popped as the old cowboy in typical attire touched off with scarf around collar of red snap-shirt, and century-old spurs on boots, still a tinge of barnyard on one heel, shuffled to the front.

 

Kickoff was debut reading of our first “children’s book.”  Written in a jiffy, but revised concisely upon advice of a little cowboy’s mom, “Frankie Gets A Horse,” didn’t seem to appeal to the already-getting-fidgety listeners as much as to the writer-reader. Guess that’s not our calling either.

 

A couple dozen pictures of our horses from the past five decades kept attention for a bit, and got a few hands raised with questions, actually more statements, such as a couple: “I have a horse, too.” The pictures of us and our son standing on horses’ backs drew comments, as well.

 

When we talked about our spurs, and passed around another pair, along with trophy stirrups, and our bridle, bought new 53 years ago, attentiveness brightened.

 

BB Jake the Practice Steer, made specifically for the program in red sawhorse fashion, with fiberglass horned bovine head, rope tail, and BB brand on right hip, attracted immediate attention.

 

Attempting to demonstrate our lariat, we threw, and missed Jake, dropped our chin, and shrugged. But, second loop catch drew vivid children applause, and reprieve. Smiles abounded as youngsters examined the rope, personally.

 

Sack full of past summer’s horseshow ribbons, one for each, made all the cowboy’s friends.

 

Everyone identified our Bible when we showed it, and joined seemingly faithful in prayer. Librarian even said the cowboy might be invited back, if we talked about our hat.

 

Reminds us of Job 35:2: “Children are perfectly innocent before God.”  Thus, Deuteronomy 4:9: “Lest the things your eyes have seen, depart from your heart and teach them to the children.”  Because, First John 4:6: “Children listen, perceive, recognize, understand by observation, and experience we share.”

 

+++ALLELUIA+++

Towanda Circle wrestler takes 6th at State Tournament

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Austin King of Towanda Circle placed 6th in the 4A Wrestling State Tournament last weekend. Austin entered the tournament with a 33-7 record and won his 1st round match by fall. He lost his 2nd round match and moved to the consolation bracket winning 2 matches to make the consolation semi-finals.

Newton High’s Logan Treaster wins State

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Newton sophomore Logan Treaster won the 5A 113-pound wrestling State Championship with a 1-0 decision over Conner Ward of Shawnee-Mill Valley.

Big first half propels Barton women to first round playoff victory over Northwest Technical

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Scoring fifty-one first half points Saturday night at the Barton Gym, the Barton Community College women’s basketball team fought off a Northwest Kansas Technical College second half rally to cruise to an 88-66 victory.  Barton, the fourth seed out of the Jayhawk West, improves to 19-10 on the season advancing to Wednesday’s Region VI Quarterfinals while Northwest Tech ends the season at 7-22.  The Lady Cougars will take on the top seed out of the Jayhawk East, the 23-8 Coffeyville Community College Red Ravens at 1:00 p.m. at Wichita’s Koch Arena.  The winner will advance to Friday’s semifinals against the winner of Seward County Community College and Cowley College.

Having trailed by two at halftime but going on to defeat the Lady Mavericks by forty back in November in Goodland, it didn’t take Barton long to get going this time around.  Trailing 8-7 at the 16:45 mark, Barton scored eighteen unanswered to build a 25-8 lead in just a matter of four minutes.  Behind nineteen first half points from Phikala Anthony and the all-around play of Indiah Cauley‘s eleven points, seven rebounds, and six assists the Lady Cougars took the lead out to nineteen before going into the break with a 51-36 lead.

Northwest wasn’t about to go away easily as the Lady Mavericks’ 14-4 run in the second frame’s opening five minutes cut the deficit to 55-50.  A 7-2 run started by Anthony with a Katrina Roenfeldt trey capped by a Cauley jumper pushed the lead back out to ten.  Northwest drew back to within eight a couple times but an 11-1 Lady Cougar run key by six straight by Cauley midway through the half put the game away.

Matching her career high for the second straight game, Anthony lead four Lady Cougars in scoring with twenty-nine points including a perfect 7-of-7 from the free throw stripe.  Just missing a triple double, Cauley scored nineteen points and dished out a career high ten assists to go along with leading the Lady Cougars’ 47-18 rebound advantage with eight boards.  Dominique Baker had a solid all-around floor game with eleven points and three assists as the 5’4″ point guard also grabbed seven rebounds with four coming on the offensive glass.  Roenfeldt rounded out the double digit scoring with ten points and six rebounds while dishing out four dimes and sharing the team lead with Baker in steals with two each.

Leticia Rodriguez led three Lady Mavericks with eighteen points on 7-of-14 from the field.  Nyachiang Bile, who knocked down 4-of-9 behind the arc, scored seventeen while Shambray Budd added ten points and shared team high rebound honors with Kali Zimmerman with four.