Yes, but if it is bad sportsmanship - can I start issuing bodyslams to their players?
Having lived in both western and eastern Ks, i have to say that western kansas is barren. However, the belief that eastern kansas is superior is more a matter of priorities and perception. If you like having something to do other than farm, than yeah, eastern kansas is better. However, if you like being able to leave your doors unlocked and not having to home school your kids due to the fear of sending your kids to public school, then western kansas is better. Either way, stereotypes are bad. No, i'm not from Smith Center.
I got to talking to a guy from Humboldt, Kansas. Their team is 10-0 and in the Kansas Class 1A-2A playoffs. If they win their next game, they'll likely have to face Smith Center. Thing is, Humboldt suits up 19 kids this year. I'm not sure how many kids are out for football in Smith Center, but reports I've heard indicate SC's two top running backs are out for the season due to knee injuries. The SC coach is kind of a legend in Kansas football. He pulled his starters after that 72 point first quarter (six of the touchdowns came from Plainville fumbles and a pass interception). SC attempted only two passes the whole game, one of them for a touchdown. Word is that SC fans are worried their players aren't getting enough game experience for the playoffs. Their punter hasn't kicked the ball all season. For the geographically-challenged, Smith Center isn't "western" Kansas, but in the north-central part of the state, butt up against Nebraska. As for a Mercy Rule, it only applies in Kansas in 8-man games, however once a team is ahead by 49 points in 11-man games, they don't stop the clock.
Well they were finally scored on: Smith Center 44 St. Francis 6 I had forgotten about Smith Center thanks for reminding me. Kids, coaches and towns with such positive attitudes deserve the publicity. Now then about "desolate" Hawkguy moved out of western Kansas, but then his nickname suggests a KU influence which calls his sanity into question. :) I happen to like the plains. I enjoyed growing up in the tall grass prairie of eastern Kansas, living on the savanna of Africa and now living in the short grass prairie and sandhills of Nebraska. I-70 is desolate but the prairie is not. And nothing is as desolate as the concrete wilderness in large urban centers.