For a few months last fall and winter, Kansas guards Ochai Agbaji, Devon Dotson and Marcus Garrett staged a regular competition that led to the 2019-20 Jayhawks becoming one of the best takeaway teams of the Bill Self era.
Those three Jayhawks pushed each other, and their teammates, to swipe 237 steals in 31 games, good for 7.65 steals per game, the most by a Kansas team since the 2010-11 season.
What’s ...
Bishop Seabury Academy’s athletic teams are officially joining a conference.
Beginning in the fall of 2021, Seabury will compete in the newly formed Kaw Valley Conference, the school announced this week.
The KVC will include five other schools — Heritage Christian Academy in Olathe, KC Christian in Prairie Village, Cair Paravel Latin School in Topeka, Maranatha Academy in Shawnee and Bishop Ward in ...
I’ve long been a believer that baseball, in the world we currently live in, is in need of a tweak or two that brings a little excitement and urgency to the ballpark.
And it appears as if Major League Baseball is on the brink of delivering that. At least temporarily.
No, the decision to turn the 2020 season into a 60-game sprint — officially agreed upon Tuesday — will not be the same as starting batters ...
Kansas basketball coach Bill Self will tell you that no one knows at present day exactly what the 2020-21 college basketball season will look like.
But given that the KU coach has always had a hint of optimist in him, he’ll also tell you that he feels confident that there will be a season.
On a special episode of his “Hawk Talk” radio show Tuesday night, Self explained his outlook for his 18th season ...
While waiting for the 2020 college football season to kick off, three veteran football writers at ESPN recently drafted their favorite college seasons in history — and Kansas was a factor in two of them.
Naturally, one of those mentions on the [15-season draft][1] by Bill Connelly, Ivan Maisel and Mark Schlabach is the 2007 season, in which the Jayhawks earned an Orange Bowl victory. The other one was ...
The Kansas football program made the latest cut for three-star wide receiver Keon Coleman — and if he becomes a Jayhawk, he might play at Allen Fieldhouse as well as on the football field.
The 6-foot-4, 188-pound playmaker from Opelousas Catholic in Louisiana announced his final three on Twitter early Monday afternoon: KU, Oklahoma and South Carolina. Coleman dropped Florida State, Michigan State and ...