By David Boyce, Northwest Athletics
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The math was elementary in Northwest Missouri State’s 61-53 victory over Nebraska-Kearney Sunday afternoon the championship game of the MIAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Municipal Auditorium.
All five players on the court for the Bearcats posed a danger to score.
“At this point I don’t even notice it because we do it in our sleep and in practice every day,” said Northwest junior Zach Schneider, who scored 11 points. “I go back and watch film and it is awesome the way we share the ball. It is tough to stop us when we do that.”
In contrast, Nebraska-Kearney had one player and when he picked up his fourth foul with 11:35 left, the Lopers were done. By the time Connor Beranek returned with just over 6 minutes left, Northwest held a 48-34 lead.
No way were the Lopers going to make up that ground against the best team in the MIAA.
“This means a lot,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “Our kids have won a lot, but we haven’t won this. We needed to win in a tournament setting where it is three days, handling everybody’s runs and everybody’s best shots. We played three really good teams. I’m very proud of our team.”
It was the first conference tournament title for Northwest since the 2007-08 season when Hunter Henry scored 12 points and grabbed nine rebounds.
Showing that Northwest family spirit, Henry, who is now a teacher at his alma mater Shawnee Mission West, was in attendance to watch the Bearcats win their 15th straight game. Northwest heads into the Central Regional as one of the hottest teams in NCAA Division II.
“Anytime you can come into this building and win three games in three days, it is a huge accomplishment,” Henry said. “It is awesome to see Ben and Andy (Peterson) and some of the players I played with.
“This is one of the best Bearcat teams I have seen. Obviously, Justin Pitts was outstanding and Zach Schneider can shoot the ball. But they just guard so well. They keep you in front. They don’t foul you. They are really disciplined. It is good to see that group of guys have success.”
McCollum said players like Henry and others before him are the ones who started it.
“Culture never graduates,” McCollum said. “Our kids have embraced that and embraced the past and the history of the program and want to carry on that tradition.”
The victories have come in bunches because on the court the Bearcats are a tight-knit family. During the 15-game winning streak, each one of the starters has had a couple of games where they were the offensive star.
On Sunday, it was sophomore point guard Justin Pitts, who scored 20 points and consistently got other teammates involved.
“He is definitely the best player in Division II,” said Northwest sophomore Chris-Ebou Ndow. “It is great having him on the team. If he wants to, he could get 40 if he wanted to. He is an unselfish player. He wants to get assists, too and he does that every game.”
One example of it came early in the second half when Pitts found D’Vante Mosby cutting to the basket. Mosby converted the layup and gave Northwest a 38-26 lead.
“It is great, especially in today’s day and age,” McCollum said about his team sharing the basketball. “Kids today just don’t do that, they don’t necessarily want each other to do well. Our kids genuinely want each other to do well. They want the team succeed.”
The Bearcats increased their lead to 40-26 on a basket by junior Anthony Woods. Beranek responded with two straight baskets but then he picked up his fourth foul with the Lopers trailing 40-30.
“He is one of the top players in conference,” Schneider said. “He was conference player of the year last year. Chris and Anthony did an unreal job on him. But it was definitely big when he picked up his fourth foul.”
Over the next 7 minutes, Northwest maintained a 10 to 12 point lead. And when Nebraska-Kearney finally cut its deficit to nine, Schneider hit a three-pointer that increased the Bearcats’ lead to 53-41 with 2:23 left.
The Lopers were in scramble mode and closed to 56-51 with about a minute left. Pitts was fouled and he made both free throws for a seven-point lead.
In the end, Beranek won the battle of game-high scorer with 31 points, but Northwest won the game because Pitts, Schneider, Ndow, Conner Crooker and Brett Dougherty were all scoring threats. Stop one and four others will step up the Bearcats.
“This is a special group of guys,” Ndow said. “I wouldn’t ask for any other teammates. We are so together on and off the court. I love being a part of it.”
In the first half, Northwest made Nebraska-Kearney work hard for every basket and was efficient on offense and that added up to a 32-22 lead.
The Bearcats never trailed in the first half, taking a 6-1 lead on two baskets by Crooker and one by Pitts. Northwest maintained at least a three-point lead the rest of the half.
After Nebraska-Kearney closed to 10-7, the Bearcats went on a 8-2 run for an 18-9. Three different players scored the eight points for Northwest. The Bearcats slowly extended their lead to 32-20 late in the first half. For the half, Northwest shot 55.6 percent from the field, going 15 for 27.
— Northwest Athletics —