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Benedictine loses in double OT to Pikeville in NAIA Sweet 16

The Benedictine men’s basketball team had its season come to an end Friday night in the Sweet 16 of the NAIA National Tournament. The Ravens lost in double overtime to Pikeville (KY) 83-79 inside Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City.

BC struggled in the first half as they shot just 27.6 percent (8-29) and fell behind 33-22. Pikeville extended its lead to as many as 15 points early in the second half before Benedictine outscored the Bears 42-31 after halftime and they rallied to force overtime.

The Ravens jumped out to a six point lead with 2:34 left in the first overtime, but Pikeville came back to tie the game and they sent it to another OT.

BC took a 78-76 lead in the second overtime with 1:54 left, but the Bears went on a 6-0 run and the Ravens weren’t able to come back.

Colby Nickels led Benedictine with 20 points, while Thomas O’Connor and Eric Krus added 14.

The Ravens end their season 31-4, while Pikeville is 25-8 and they’ll play Carroll (MT) at 7:30 Saturday in the NAIA Quarterfinals.

Griffon baseball loses series opener at Lindenwood 9-3

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Five runs in the eighth inning turned a tight, back-and-forth game into a 9-3 win for Lindenwood (13-14, 7-6) in the first of three games for the Missouri Western baseball team (10-10, 8-5) in St. Charles this weekend.

After the Griffons had tied the game three different times, Lindenwood took advantage of a couple walks and an error and did some work themselves in putting the game away with the five-run eighth.

NOTABLES

  • It looked like it might be a home run derby early with Fahd Shakeel leading off the game with a solo homer to left on the first pitch of the game
  • Lindenwood answered with a two-out solo shot in the bottom of the first
  • The Lions took their first lead of the game on an RBI triple in the second
  • Shakeel tied the game in the third with his second hit and RBI of the game, a single up the middle
  • Jordan Jackson’s pinch-hit, RBI-single in the sixth tied the game at three before Lindenwood answered again in the bottom of the sixth to take a 4-3 lead
  • The first six Lions reached in the bottom of the eighth, giving Lindenwood an 8-3 lead
  • A double play put the Griffs one out from ending the inning, but an error allowed the fifth run of the inning to score before Kyle Heckenbach – the fourth pitcher for MWSU in the inning – got his one batter to ground out
  • Shakeel went 2-for-4 with a walk. He drove in two and scored one
  • Casey Danley was also 2-for-4 with a run scored
  • Jacob Purl took the loss, giving up four runs, three earned, on six hits with six strikeouts and three walks through six innings

UP NEXT
Game two of the series comes Saturday at 3 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Bearcat baseball loses at No. 10 Missouri Southern 7-6

JOPLIN, Missouri – Northwest Missouri State held the No. 10-ranked Missouri Southern Lions to three hits but could not overcome 13 walks in a 7-6 loss on Friday night.

Missouri Southern broke a scoreless tie in the fifth, scoring three runs. The Lions drew five walks during the inning while not recording a hit.

Northwest got on the scoreboard in the bottom of the sixth, plating two. Sophomore infielder Peter Carlson ignited the Bearcats’ bats, hitting a double to left field. Carlson scored when senior outfielder Derek Hussey slapped a single down the right field line and then advanced to second base on the throw. Hussey scored on an error during senior catcher Alixon Herrera’s at bat.

Missouri Southern answered in the top of the seventh, scoring four more and took a commanding 7-2 lead over the Bearcats.

Both teams came up scoreless in the eighth and the game entered the ninth inning favoring the Lions. Northwest pitching held Missouri Southern scoreless in the top of ninth and the Bearcats needed to make up five runs to extend the contest or six to win game one of the three-game series.

In the ninth, Northwest scored four runs on two hits and left two stranded in the game one loss to the Lions.

Six Northwest pitchers saw the mound during the game including sophomore Max Spitzmiller, freshman Gibson Brown, junior Ethan Griswold, freshman Max Ross, senior Jarret Cronin and sophomore Aaron Easley. Northwest pitching walked 13 Missouri Southern batters during the game, ultimately the deciding factor for the Lions.

Northwest falls to 10-13 overall and 6-7 in MIAA play.

The Bearcats will be back in action against Missouri Southern Saturday with first pitch scheduled for noon. The original start time was moved up due to expected rain later in the day.

NOTES: Herrera extended his hitting streak to four games…junior first baseman Conner Quick and Herrera extend their team-leading on-base streaks to seven games apiece

— Northwest Athletics —

Mizzou women make late free throw, beat Drake 77-76 in OT

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Just moments after the worst foul of her career, Drake’s Becca Hittner got her chance for redemption.

Hittner’s wide-open jumper as time expired instead clanked off the back of the rim, a cruel reminder that for every March buzzer-beater there’s a potential game winner that ends in anguish.

Jordan Roundtree hit a free throw after being fouled with 1.1 seconds left in overtime and seventh-seeded Missouri held off Drake 77-76 on Friday to advance to the NCAA Tournament’s round of 32 for the third time in four years.

“March is March,” Robin Pingeton said.

Sophie Cunningham scored 21 points and Cierra Porter had 18 for the Tigers (24-10), who can advance to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2001 with a win over second-seeded and host Iowa on Sunday.

The Tigers found Amber Smith open underneath for a 76-74 lead on a jumper with 20.8 seconds left, but Maddy Dean pulled Drake even at the line

Hittner then hit Roundtree’s shooting hand while she was attempting a desperation 3 after Missouri got caught trying to drain the clock. Roundtree missed the first free throw, hit the second and missed the third.

Had Hittner not committed that foul, Missouri would’ve been forced to go to a second overtime without Cunningham or Porter — both of whom had fouled out.

“The refs called it,” Hittner said. “I still got a good look at the end.”

It was a great look, in fact.

Drake got the rebound after Roundtree’s last miss and after two timeouts, miraculously got Hittner — a 40 percent shooter from beyond the arc — a wide-open look at the top of the key.

It bounced off the back of the iron.

“It looked good,” Cunningham said of Hittner’s shot. “Thankfully she missed it.”

Drake and Missouri each hit their first two 3s to start overtime, but Hittner’s 3 with 1:38 left gave the Bulldogs a 73-72 lead. Cunningham’s free throws put Missouri back on top with 53 seconds to go, but Drake’s Sara Rhine tied it the next time down the floor.

Hittner had 19 and Rhine chipped in with 18 points for Drake (27-7), which bowed out of the NCAA Tournament for the third year in a row.

“This one is really painful,” Drake coach Jennie Baranczyk said. “This is a tough one. It’s a really tough one.”

THE BIG PICTURE

MISSOURI: Cunningham, Porter and fellow senior starter Lauren Aldridge will get one more chance to advance in the NCAA Tournament against an Iowa team that played one of its worst games of the season on Friday. Missouri shouldn’t expect the Hawkeyes to repeat such a dreadful performance though. “I love these kids to death,” Cunningham said of her senior trio.

DRAKE: The Bulldogs were given an at-large bid after getting upset by Missouri State in the Valley final. They can argue about being under-seeded despite being ranked 21st before that defeat, but at some point Drake has to come through and win an NCAA Tournament game. The Bulldogs were within an inch of doing so at the overtime buzzer though.

THE NUMBERS

The game was tied 14 times and the lead changed hands 12 times. …The teams combined for 35 turnovers. …Drake was 12 of 26 on 3s. Hittner led the way, hitting 4 of 8 attempts beyond the arc. …Missouri made the most of its offensive rebounds, outscoring Drake by 10 on second-chance points.

SHE SAID IT

“Are you guys stressed out too?” Cunningham joked to open the post-game press conference.

— Associated Press —

K-State gets upset by No. 13 seed UC Irvine in first round

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — When it comes to college basketball in California, UC Irvine is low on the totem pole.

Now the program that sometimes feels like a little brother to Pac-12 powers like UCLA and USC is the only school from the state still standing in the NCAA Tournament after pulling off a stunner .

The 13th-seeded Anteaters got back-to-back 3-pointers from Evan Leonard on Friday to spark the deciding run in a 70-64 upset of No. 4 seed Kansas State, the first tournament win in school history.

“Well, little brother has been in the weight room, getting better, getting ready for a chance like this,” coach Russell Turner said. “So I’m really happy for these players to be able to work so hard for something everybody can see and then accomplish it. But I’m also really excited for the fans of our program who also seem to have endured feeling like little brothers.

“You know, we need to stick our chests out a little bit right now.”

UC Irvine (31-5) had lost its only previous tournament game, 57-55 to Louisville in 2015. But the Anteaters got a longer stay this time after taking control of the game with a 12-0 run midway through the second half and then holding off the regular season co-champions of the Big 12 to earn their 17th straight victory.

Leonard and Max Hazzard each scored 19 points to send UC Irvine (31-5) into the second round of the South Region for a matchup against Oregon.

“We’ve had three goals all year, and that was to win the regular season championship, the tournament championship and advance in the NCAA Tournament,” Hazzard said. “And that doesn’t just mean one game. We have another game on Sunday, and we’re planning to put ourselves in position to win again, and hopefully we can do that and play into next weekend.”

One year after making a run to the Elite Eight, the fourth-seeded Wildcats (25-9) had a short stay in the tournament as they struggled to decipher the Anteaters’ zone defense and missed star forward Dean Wade, who was sidelined by a foot injury. Kamau Stokes led Kansas State with 18 points.

Despite that, Kansas State led by four points midway through the second half before the two long shots from Leonard turned the tide. Robert Cartwright added another 3-pointer and Leonard made three free throws after being fouled on a 3-pointer to make it 59-51.

The Wildcats cut the deficit to two points, before Hazzard hit a corner 3 with 1:25 to play to make it 66-61 and then struck a pose to the delight of the Anteaters fans who made the trip up from Orange County.

“I just play with a lot of passion and a lot of joy,” Hazzard said. “The stage doesn’t get much bigger than this.”

Cartier Diarra hit a 3 for Kansas State off a tip pass from Xavier Sneed and the Wildcats had a chance to tie or take the lead, but Barry Brown Jr. threw a pass away with 38.8 seconds to play.

“We wanted to do something really special,” Brown said. “We did something special in our regular season, and we wanted to kind of carry that momentum over to this tournament, and just didn’t execute, didn’t hit some shots, didn’t guard the right way we should have.”

The Anteaters then sealed the game at the foul line.

BIG PICTURE

UC Irvine: Despite getting blown out early last season at Kansas State, the Anteaters were confident coming into this game thanks to 30 wins and the long winning streak. They used two big runs to stay close in the first half and forced the Wildcats into 11 straight misses to end the half. Hazzard’s buzzer-beater tied the game at 30 at the break.

Kansas State: Wade’s injury had a big impact on the Wildcats, but they managed the long tournament run last year with him mostly as a spectator because of an injury. What hurt more was an off-night from leading scorer Brown. He played only 5:45 in the first half after committing two quick fouls and didn’t make his first basket until early in the second half. He finished with five points on 2-for-9 shooting.

DRAWING CONTACT

Stokes drew fouls on 3-point shots three times in the game for the Wildcats. He drew two in the first half against Eyassu Worku, drawing the ire of Turner. Stokes then drew another in the second half against Robert Cartwright that had Turner complaining to the official instead. Stokes made seven of the nine free throws on those fouls.

Stokes then committed a foul on a UC Irvine 3-pointer, sending Leonard to the line for three shots late in the first half.

UP NEXT

UC Irvine advances to play Oregon.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western softball falls at home to No. 17 Augustana 10-2

ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western softball  team (16-13) couldn’t make it four-straight win on Friday, falling 10-2 to No. 17 Augustana (19-4) in five innings in the fifth game of the Hy-Vee Classic.

Fresh off of ending No. 2 Central Oklahoma’s 20-game winning streak, Augustana jumped on the Griffs early with three runs in the first. The Griffons got their first hit and runs of the game in the third.

NOTABLES

  • The first six Augustana batters reached base before the Griffons were able to record an out
  • Kenzie Hilzer got the start, but faced four batters before Kaili Hinds replaced her in the first
  • With two out in the third, Brea Blanton got MWSU its first run of the game, sparking a mini-rally that saw the Griffons score two in the inning
  • Morgan Frost doubled in Blanton, her fourth double in the last four games
  • Gabi Carter then drove Frost in with a single before Winona State got out of the inning
  • MWSU used three of its four pitchers, none going more than Hinds’ three innings
  • Hilzer took the loss and dropped to 3-6 on the season

UP NEXT

  • The Griffons host No. 22 Winona State (14-3) at 11 a.m. on Saturday

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest softball suffers 5-3 loss to Winona State

ST. JOSEPH, Missouri – Olivia Daugherty blasted a three-run homer in the bottom of the seventh, but it wasn’t enough as Winona State hung on for a 5-3 triumph over the Northwest Missouri State softball team on Friday at the Hy-Vee Classic.

Winona State scored a pair of runs in the opening inning and led 2-0 before the Bearcats came to bat. The Bearcats limited the damage to only two runs as they got out of the jam by getting a ground out with the bases loaded.

Winona State scored two more in the top of the fifth and one in the seventh, holding the Bearcats scoreless until the bottom of the seventh inning.

Karli Allen was hit by a pitch to start the seventh and she moved to third when Jacee Winn singled to shortstop. Daugherty followed with her three-run homer to left field to cut the lead to 5-3. Kaitlyn Weis singled with two outs for her second hit of the game bringing the typing run to the plate in the form of Erin Keeney. But Keeney struck out swinging to end the contest.

Up next for the Bearcats is a doubleheader against Missouri S&T in Rolla, Missouri, on Wednesday beginning at noon.

— Northwest Athletics —

Kansas State women get blown out by Michigan in NCAA Tournament opener

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Michigan’s start to the NCAA Tournament was more thorough than coach Kim Barnes Arico expected.

Which is saying something for someone who has yet to lose an opener.

Naz Hillmon scored 17 points off the bench, Nicole Munger and Kayla Robbins each added 13 and the eighth-seeded Wolverines shot a season-high 56 percent to run away from No. 9 seed Kansas State 84-54 on Friday.

Michigan’s 17-5 surge over 5:10 in the second quarter provided a 43-28 halftime lead that expanded to as many as 37 late in the fourth. The Wolverines (22-11) owned rebounding 50-19 — including a 33-13 gap defensively — and paint scoring 52-26 while holding the Wildcats (21-12) to 36 percent shooting.

Michigan’s bench also outscored K-State 38-9. Barnes Arico had to get her mind around the Wolverines’ dominance against just about every defense K-State threw at them.

“We were locked into the scout (report),” said Barnes Arico, who is 8-0 in openers on the Division I and II levels. “We know they switch things up defensively and we knew it was something we don’t typically face. We have a couple of days to prepare for it, and I thought our kids did a tremendous job of coming out, moving the basketball, finding the open person and making extra passes.”

Not surprisingly, Hillmon provided the spark that helped earn her selection by media as Big Ten Freshman of the Year. The 6-foot-2 forward was strong on both ends as she made 8 of 10 from the field and grabbed 10 rebounds in 21 minutes.

That was key in helping Michigan achieve its second-highest board total this season.

“We don’t want any team to get second-chance points,” Hillmon said, referring to Michigan’s 17-4 advantage in that category. We know how that can affect the game, so we were trying to lock in on offensive and defensive rebounds.”

Munger and Robbins combined to make 11 of 18 shots while Deja Church added 12 points and a team-high seven assists.

Michigan shot well and hit 16 of 26 after halftime on the way to winning its 10th in 12 contests.

“Today, we just stayed focused,” Church said. “Whether we were up 10 (points), 20, we really didn’t think about it. We just looked at the score (as) 0-0 and kept pushing.”

Christianna Carr had 21 points and Rachel Ranke 11 for Kansas State, which committed 17 turnovers leading to 26 Michigan points. The Wildcats’ rebounding total marked a season low.

“They just whooped us on the glass for second and third chances, which was a problem,” Wildcats coach Jeff Mittie said. “Not very competitive on the glass today.”

Michigan will face top-seeded Louisville in Sunday’s second round. The Cardinals routed No. 16 seed Robert Morris 69-34 in the first game.

MILESTONE

Needing 11 points to become Michigan’s 28th player to surpass 1,000 career points, Munger had 12 at the break behind 5-of-10 shooting with two of the Wolverines’ five 3s on 13 attempts. “This has been the most fun year I’ve had playing basketball, and that’s just really exciting,” she said. “We’re really close as a team, that’s what makes it a lot of fun. That’s all that matters.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State: The Wildcats’ perimeter game got them with 26-23 in the second and on the verge of reclaiming the lead. The Big 12 school never got closer and struggled to contend with Michigan’s size, especially inside.

Michigan: The Wolverines have done a lot right down the stretch, and it paid off big with a dominant beginning to the NCAA Tournament. They seemed to get better as the game progressed and had many contributors as 10 of 14 players scored at least a point. They also dished out at least 20 assists for the fourth time in six games.

— Associated Press —

MWSU tennis loses to Emporia State

ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s tennis team (8-7, 0-2 MIAA) suffered a 5-2 defeat to Emporia State (6-3, 3-1 MIAA) in its second effort at a conference win this spring. After taking the doubles point to start the match, the Hornets took four of the six matches in singles on their way to a 5-2 win.

Karolina Ström and Joanna Abreu Roman gave Missouri Western its lone win in the doubles. The pair now moves to 13-2 in duals doubles this season. Ström and Abreu Roman have been particularly impressive on the number one doubles courts, going 10-1 in those matches.

Ström picked up another win on the number one court for the Griffons in the singles. The junior improves to 8-2 in her last 10 matches after her 7-5, 6-2 victory on Friday.

Federica Salmaso was the other Griffon to earn a win in singles. After dropping the first set by a score of 6-4, Salmaso stormed back to win 6-2 in the second set, and then 10-7 in the third. Salmaso’s win was the closest match of the afternoon, as no other matchups went three sets.

Missouri Western Tennis will face a tough task in its next match when the team hosts No. 8 Washburn (11-1, 3-0 MIAA) on March 24.

MWSU VS. ESU
SINGLES
Karolina Ström (MWSU) def. Camila Ramos (ESU) 7-5, 6-2
Jessic Purdy (ESU) def. Mireia Birosta (MWSU) 6-1, 6-0
Viktoria Mackova (ESU) def. Joanna Abreu Roman (MWSU) 6-1, 6-2
Cyrielle Peyroche (ESU) def. Ciarra Gilmore (MWSU) 6-3, 6-1
Federica Salmaso (MWSU) def. Silvana Caceres (ESU) 4-6, 6-2, 10-7
Karen Santiago (ESU) def. Bojana Vuksan (MWSU) 6-1, 6-0

DOUBLES
Peyroche/Purdy (ESU) def. Birosta/Gilmore (MWSU) 6-2
Abreu Roman/Strom (MWSU) def. Mackova/Santiago (ESU) 7-5
Caceres/Ramos (ESU) def. Salmaso/Vuksan (MWSU) 6-3

— MWSU Athletics —

Kan. woman admits role in killing cousin’s ex, setting body on fire

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A woman has been convicted of helping to kill her cousin’s ex-boyfriend whose body was found inside a burning home near Lawrence.

Towell photo Douglas County

38-year-old Christina Towell, of Leavenworth, pleaded no contest Thursday to felony first-degree murder in the November 2017 death of 34-year-old Joel Wales. Other charges, including burglary and arson, were dropped as part of the plea. Her cousin, Tria Evans, was convicted earlier of murder and other charges.

Evans and Wales had a child together and a history of domestic disputes. Prosecutors say text messages show that Towell and Evans plotted the death for more than a month and that Towell drove Evans to the scene.

Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson described the killing in a statement as “heinous and calculated.”

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