I looked back at the discussion and here is how I'd divide the races. SEK stands alone, clearly, and the rest are separated by population. I felt it was important to separate suburbs from stand-alone towns, and I added Haysville because I felt south Wichita suburbs were underrepresented. The order within each division is my personal rankings; where my experience was limited I went with the most persuasive board opinion.
SEK Division
Galena 3,085
Girard 2,789
Baxter Springs 4,238
Chetopa 1,125
Parsons 10,500
"Big" City Division
Topeka 233,870
KCK 145,786
Less Big Division
Leavenworth 35,251
Junction City 23,353
Liberal 20,525
Emporia 24,916
Garden City 26,658
Dodge City 27,340
Hutchinson 42,080
Suburb Division
Lansing 11,265
Haysville 10,826
Mid Size Division
El Dorado 13,021
Ark City 12,415
Small Town Division
Horton (pop 1,776)
Larned (pop 4,054)
St Mary's (pop 2,627)
Osawatomie (pop 4,447)
Oakley (pop 2,045)
Wellsville (pop 1,857)
Village Division
Westmoreland (pop 778)
Nickerson (pop 1,070)
Burlingame (pop 934)
Very interesting approach. It reminds me of a developing tournament bracket. Is that where we're headed, Reboulet? If so, it's a bit unbalanced in numbers, so who will get the crucial first round byes?
Haysville easily wins the Sedgwick county title.
This town has been repeatedly hit by tornados but just won't die.
The majority of the houses are tiny post WWII spec homes and most have dead cars in the yard or out in the street by the curb.
They had a doctor and his wife goto Federal prison for running a pill mill, and they've lost a Dairy Queen too.
Just recently somebody threw a dead body in the ditch across from the high school.
People from this town pause and wait for your laughable response when they tell you they're from there.
If this place wasn't so close to Wichita it would hands down win the title