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Jayhawks upset by Baylor in Big 12 semifinals

Baylor heard all the pundits clamoring for one more Kansas-Missouri matchup, this time in the Big 12 tournament title game. It didn’t matter that those teams needed to win in the semifinals. The tantalizing rematch seemed to be fate.

“You never want to get disrespected,” the Bears’ Quincy Acy said, “so we came in with the mindset this week to win every game.”

They’re 2 for 2 so far.

Sharpshooter Brady Heslip hit a pair of 3-pointers to keep No. 3 Kansas at bay, and Perry Jones III finished with 18 points in an 81-72 upset of the Jayhawks on Friday night.

It will be the 12th-ranked Bears who will face No. 5 Missouri or Texas for their first championship.

“This was a night we grew up,” Baylor coach Scott Drew said.

Quincy Miller added 13 points and eight rebounds, and Pierre Jackson had 11 points and seven assists for the Bears (27-6), who lost to the Tigers in their only previous Big 12 title game.

“We were just more focused, and we’re playing as a team,” Jackson said. “Once we’re all clicking like that, we’re hard to beat. We know what time of year it is.”

Tyshawn Taylor had 20 points for Kansas (26-6), which used a big second-half charge to briefly take the lead. But the Bears hung tough down the stretch, and Heslip’s two 3-pointers — one with 2:03 remaining, the other with 1:12 left — allowed them to hang on.

No team from Texas has ever won the Big 12 tournament.

Baylor will get another chance.

“They beat us. Make no mistake about that,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.

The last time the Jayhawks lost to Baylor was in the quarterfinals of the 2009 conference tournament, when they were also the top seed. Now they’ll spend the rest of the weekend waiting for their seeding in the NCAA tournament, where many expected them to receive a No. 1 spot.

Thomas Robinson finished with 15 points and nine rebounds for Kansas. Elijah Johnson added 15 points but was 1 of 6 from beyond the arc, while Jeff Withey added 11 points.

“The thing that was most disappointing to me is we played a style that is just good enough to get your butt beat,” Self said. “Average energy, we let them pass wherever they want to, we never dictated defensively, crappy traps on the post, not paying attention to the scouting report.”

That about covers it.

Baylor took a 15-8 in the opening minutes and, with the exception of a couple flurries by the Jayhawks, managed to hold the advantage all the way to halftime.

Jones looked as if he never left the Sprint Center after his epic 31-point outing against Kansas State in the quarterfinals. He had 10 points and five boards by halftime, once going way up for an alley-oop jam off a pass from Jackson that seemed headed for the cheap seats.

“They’re a great team,” Jones said. “When they get on runs it’s hard to stop them. Just trying to get rebounds and defend against second-chance points.”

The Jayhawks trailed 43-35 when the teams hit the locker room, and they were fortunate it was that close. Robinson, the Big 12 player of the year, was held to five points and one rebound in 13 minutes, forced to spend the final five on the bench because of foul trouble.

The Bears kept building on the lead in the second half, going ahead 53-40 on Acy’s basket with 16:32 left. Little did they know it would be their last one for a while.

Taylor started the Jayhawks on an 18-3 push with an easy basket, and after Acy blew a dunk, Robinson scored underneath. Kansas started to get into transition, where it’s at its best, and Taylor eventually rattled in another 3 to get the Jayhawks within one with 12:52 to go.

The senior guard shrugged his shoulders on his way back to defense, the Sprint Center coming alive with the crowd heavily favoring the school about a 30-minute drive from Kansas City.

“We started playing how we played,” Taylor said. “We started defending a little bit.”

Withey’s three-point play and a basket by Robinson gave Kansas a 58-56 lead, its first since midway through the first half, but it wound up being short-lived.

Baylor scored the next nine points, four of them coming on Jones’ first buckets of the second half, and still led 65-60 on a pair of foul shots by A.J. Walton with 6:08 left.

Taylor and Robinson managed to get to the foul line for Kansas, but Heslip’s 3-pointer with 2:03 left gave Baylor a 70-64 advantage, and his next 3 with 1:12 go made it 73-66.

Except for a small contingent of Baylor fans, the arena was quiet the rest of the way.

“Very pleased with our guys from the standpoint we’ve been successful against Kansas before in spurts, and then they’d have a spurt and we couldn’t answer the run,” Drew said. “When they made a run tonight, I was really pleased with the character of our guys.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest softball takes two from Lincoln

The Northwest Missouri State softball team played almost near perfect as they shutout the Lincoln Blue Tigers in a MIAA opening double header Friday winning 8-0 and 4-0 at Bearcat Field.

Northwest got back the .500 mark moving to 8-8 on the year and 2-0 in league play with the sweep. Lincoln fell to 4-12 on the year and 0-2 in conference play as Friday was the conference opener for both teams.

Game One – Box Score

The Bearcats got a solid outing in game one from Jenna Creger, who won her third game with a complete game shutout. Creger only allowed two hits and walked none while striking out four as she got the run support needed to end the game via run rule in the fifth inning.

Northwest jumped out to an early lead after a pair of lead off singles brought Kayli Schurman to the plate. Schurman would reach on an outfield error, but picked up her ninth RBI of the season in process.

Just two batters later Angela Wright singled giving Northwest an early 2-0 lead.

After adding a run in the third and fourth innings the Bearcats would put the game in the books in the fifth inning.

Aggressive base running from Anastaszia Roseberry after a single would set up a Josie Van Houten RBI on her third hit of the game. Kristen Uthe would add three RBIs on a one out double ending the game by run rule.

Game two – Box Score

The Northwest pitching staff continued the afternoon with its second shutout to close out the double header as Morgan Brunmeier toed the rubber. Brunmeier scattered nine hits over the complete game shutout, but only walked one and struck out four.

The Bearcats played solid all afternoon as they did not commit an error in either game.

At the plate, Northwest again got on the board early after a pair of wild pitches allowed Jordan Ereth and Van Houten to score taking a 2-0 in the bottom of the first.

In the third Northwest would get its only earned run of the game on an Uthe single that scored Ereth.

The Bearcats would pick up their fourth run when Van Houten scored on a throwing error after Schurman struck out swinging, but reached on the catcher’s miscue.

Northwest returns to the diamond Saturday for a non-conference double header with future MIAA foe Lindenwood. First pitch from Bearcat Field is set for 12 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Chiefs name Steven Smith as assistant offensive line coach

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Friday that the team has hired Steven Smith to serve as the club’s assistant offensive line coach.

Smith joins the Chiefs after serving as the run game coordinator/offensive line coach at Tennessee State in 2011. He also served a two-year stint (2009-10) as the offensive coordinator/offensive line coach at Albany State after two years (2007-08) as the run game coordinator/offensive line coach at Delta State.

Smith completed offseason coaching internships with the Cleveland Browns (2011), Miami Dolphins (2008), Dallas Cowboys (2003-06) and New Orleans Saints (2002). He also coached the offensive line with the Rhein Fire (2006) and the running backs with the Frankfurt Galaxy (2005) of NFL Europe. He played fullback at Southern Illinois (1995-98), where he earned a degree in Pre-Medicine/University Studies. Smith later spent two years (1999-00) in a medical preparation program at Northern Illinois.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Savannah expected to hire Chad Smith as new football coach

Savannah High School will likely have a new head football coach next week as Savage defensive coordinator Chad Smith is expected to be named the new man in charge of Savannah’s program Tuesday.

The search committee in charge of hiring the next football coach will recommend Smith’s name to the school board and they will vote on it during a meeting Tuesday.

Smith has been Savannah’s defensive coordinator the past five years after holding the same position at Benton for three seasons.

This will be his first head coaching position and he takes over for Mark Cole, who resigned in January after the most successful season in Savage history.

Savannah finished 12-2 and lost to eventual state champion Webb City in the state semifinals.

English, Mizzou roll past Oklahoma State in Big 12 Quarters

They know they’ll never win a Big 12 regular-season championship. A one-point overtime loss at Kansas last month settled that.

So as the No. 5 Missouri Tigers head out the door to the Southeastern Conference, they’re chasing the Big 12 tournament title as a way of waving a not-so-fond farewell to Big 12 brethren resentful of the way they helped turn the conference upside down.

Thursday night, Oklahoma State paid the price.

Kim English scored 21 of his 27 points in the first 20 minutes and set in motion the Tigers’ 88-70 thrashing in the Big 12 quarterfinals.

“We want this as bad as we wanted the Big 12,” said English, who’s been engaging Kansas coach Bill Self and Kansas fans in verbal back-and-fourth jousting this week. “That’s why our loss (at Kansas) hurt so bad. It was the Big 12 championship game. We just want to win a championship. It’s not a chip on our shoulder.”

English led a 26-5 first-half run, Marcus Denmon added 24 points and Phil Pressey had 12 assists, one short of a school record for the Tigers (28-4).

Many fans are hoping for a showdown with archrival and No. 3 Kansas in the title game Saturday.

“We are in Kansas City, Missouri,” said Denmon, a KC native. “This is home for me. Missouri fans come out well, too.”

The Tigers outrebounded the Cowboys (15-18) 40-20.

“We were slow motion,” Oklahoma State coach Travis Ford said. “They were fast motion.”

The game-seizing run in the first half, Ford said, started with Missouri’s defense.

“Their defense was just stifling. They played with such great energy. We were tired. I could see it. They’re a veteran, experienced, physically tough basketball team. They might not be the tallest team, but they are a physical team. We’re just the opposite. We’re young. And they were playing to their strengths. Their defense led to offense.”

English had 21 of his points in the rapid-fire first half that ended with Missouri on top 49-24. Denmon, a two-time All-Big 12 guard, had 17 points in the second half.

Keiton Page had 22 points for Oklahoma State, and Brian Williams had 21.

“We fought adversity against one of the best teams in America that was playing great,” Ford said. “When they’re playing to their strength, there are not many teams better in this country.”

It was 6-all when English drilled a long 3-pointer and set the rout in motion as the Tiger overwhelmed one of the four teams that beat them in the regular season. English had 10 points in a 15-0 spree to stake the Tigers to a 21-6 lead.

With 3:08 left in the half, English had 21 points and had personally outscored the Cowboys, who trailed 41-17 after English grabbed Matt Pressey’s pass and dropped it through the net for his ninth field goal. Phil Pressey at that point had eight assists and five steals in just 6 minutes.

Denmon, a two-time All-Big 12 guard, scored 13 straight points for the Tigers in the second half, getting a three-point play and then knocking in 3-point shots on each of the next two possessions to make it 70-41.

After Cezar Guerrero scored for the outclassed Cowboys, Denmon soared high to flush down a teammate’s miss and then, after an Oklahoma State miss, made it 74-43 with his ninth basket.

But then Page, the Cowboys’ career 3-point leader, hit two 3s and ignited a 17-3 counter punch by the Cowboys. Another 3-pointer from Page was followed by baskets from Marek Soucek and Guerrero, slicing it to 77-60 and prompting Missouri to call a timeout with 6:11 to go.

Thousands of fans, even some dressed in Kansas blue and Missouri gold, gave Page a standing ovation when he was removed from the game with 48 seconds to go.

By the end of the lopsided first half, Tigers fans were just leaning back and laughing. Andrew Jones, a tight end attending school on a football scholarship, drew a roar when he sank a free throw to make it 45-18. The 6-foot-5 senior had scored only four points all year after answering coach Frank Haith’s call for a big body to bang around and lend depth to a thin front line. Jones added another free throw with 40 seconds left.

Michael Dixon had 13 points for Missouri, which shot 66.7 percent in the first half and 59 percent for the game.

“Our intensity level was very high,” Haith said. “These guys fought hard.”

— Associated Press —

Johnson leads Kansas to easy win over Texas A&M

When Elijah Johnson headed home over the weekend for the funeral of an uncle, the junior guard for No. 3 Kansas had steeled himself to support his family through a difficult time.

It seemed all anybody wanted to talk to him about was basketball.

“Everybody was supposed to be sad,” Johnson said. “I just realized where I’m at. It’s another reality check. I think that played into me. I couldn’t wait to get back to school.”

He couldn’t wait for the Big 12 tournament, either.

Johnson hit five 3-pointers and scored a career-high 26 points Thursday, complementing yet another strong performance by Thomas Robinson and helping the Jayhawks to an 83-66 rout of Texas A&M as they pursue a third straight tournament title.

“I just needed to get a little love from my family, honestly,” Johnson said. “When I went home for a little bit, I think it just gave me a little something going into March.”

Robinson finished with 19 points and 10 rebounds, and all-Big 12 guard Tyshawn Taylor added 16 points for Kansas (27-5), which will play Baylor (No. 11 ESPN/USA Today, No. 12 AP) on Friday.

The Bears advanced to the semifinals with an 82-74 victory over Kansas State.

“They’re so talented, it’s a joke,” said coach Bill Self, whose team knocked off the Bears in both their regular-season games. “It’ll be an interesting next 24 hours to get ready.”

Texas A&M (14-18) showed glimpses of what could have been had the Aggies had their full measure of players this season. Injuries derailed a season that began with massive expectations and ended with a whimper in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 tournament.

Khris Middleton finished with 24 points for the Aggies, but he didn’t get a whole lot of help. Leading scorer Elston Turner was held to eight points on 3-of-11 shooting.

“I’ve been here for three years and never lost this many games,” Middleton said.

The Aggies, who beat Oklahoma in the opening round, simply couldn’t contain Johnson, who also knocked down a couple 3s just after whistles that didn’t count.

The sharpshooter set his previous career high of 23 points early in the year against UCLA, before spending several months struggling with his shot.

“Those are the shots that he usually takes; those are the shots that he practices every day,” Taylor said. “He just hit them today.”

The Jayhawks have won nine straight overall, including a thrilling overtime victory against Missouri. They improved to 15-1 in their opening game at the Big 12 tournament, and are 14-2 in quarterfinal match-ups, their last loss coming to Baylor in the 2009 quarterfinals.

The same team they’ll face Friday night.

“All I know is we play Baylor tomorrow,” Robinson said. “That’s about it.”

Early on, it didn’t look like things would be nearly so easy for top-seeded Kansas against the No. 9 seed Aggies, who were coming off a victory about 16 hours earlier.

Texas A&M clamped down on Robinson in the post and flustered Taylor in the backcourt while inching out to an early advantage. Middleton provided the offense for the Aggies, scoring 14 of his points in the first half as Texas A&M established a 21-17 lead.

Middleton’s basket with 8:48 left wound up being the high point for the Aggies.

Robinson got on track with a basket inside to start the Jayhawks on a 13-0 run, ultimately giving them the lead for good. Johnson knocked down a pair of 3s during the spurt, and Taylor’s signature floater in the lane with 4:19 left gave Kansas a 30-21 advantage.

Middleton stemmed the tide with a three-point play, but it was only a speed bump for the Jayhawks, who pushed the lead to 38-24 on Taylor’s back-to-back 3-pointers.

They scored on 10 of their first 11 possessions of the second half to put the game away.

Johnson started the clinching run with a jumper in the opening seconds, and after Withey made one of two free throws, Robinson knocked down a 3 from the top of the key — the bruising forward improved his career mark to 5 of 12 from beyond the arc.

The lead eventually swelled to more than 20 when Robinson made the first of two free throws, stole the ball after missing the second, and made one of two on his next trip to the line.

Robinson even knocked down another 3 with 5:04 remaining, the first time in his three-year career at Kansas that he’s made more than one in a game.

Kansas cruised the final 12 minutes to a comfortable win.

“They demand so much help with Thomas Robinson and Jeff Withey that we left some guys open on the perimeter, and when they make 10 3s and Robinson hits two 3s, they’re a very difficult team to beat for anybody,” Aggies coach Billy Kennedy said. “Kansas was very good today.”

The Jayhawks, who met Texas A&M in the semifinals two of the past four years, improved to 20-1 against the Aggies in the final meeting as members of the same league.

The Aggies head off to the Southeastern Conference beginning next season.

“You kind of reap what you sow,” Kennedy said. “We had some definition at the end of the season we didn’t have three or four weeks ago, or a month and a half ago.”

— Associated Press —

K-State falls to Baylor in Big 12 Tournament Quarterfinals

Perry Jones III scored a career-high 31 points, hitting 11 of 14 shots, and powered Baylor (No. 11 ESPN/USA Today, No. 12 AP) past Kansas State 82-74 Thursday in the Big 12 tournament.

The 6-foot-11 Jones, whose season was a bit of a disappointment after being the coaches’ preseason pick as conference player of the year, also had 11 rebounds for his eighth double-double for the fourth-seeded Bears (26-6).

The tournament’s opening game was a sharp contrast to last year for Jones, who was suspended by the NCAA just hours before the team was to leave for Kansas City and wound up sitting out the first five games of this season as well.

Brady Heslip had 15 points and Pierre Jackson added 13 points and eight assists for Baylor, which shot a sizzling 57 percent while debuting bright, fluorescent yellow uniforms.

Jordan Henriquez, often left unattended in the middle of Baylor’s zone defense, scored a career-high 22 points for Kansas State (21-10), which had split with Baylor in the regular season.

Jones had 20 points on 8-for-8 shooting as the Bears took a 9-point halftime lead. For the game, he was 7 for 9 from the foul line and also had two blocks. His first miss was an attempt at a driving layup in the opening minutes of the second half. His second miss was on a shot that was blocked.

Just as the Bears were heading to the tournament last year, the NCAA suspended Jones because of a mortgage loan his mother had accepted two years earlier. The school vigorously contested the ruling, but it stood.

Jones scored 11 points in a row during one stretch in the first half as the Bears (26-6) slowly took charge of the Kansas State team that had beaten them by one point on Feb. 18.

The closest Kansas State came in the second half was five points, when Rodney McGruder sank a pair of free throws to make it 53-48. But then A.J. Walton scored and Jackson drove in for a layup and a 57-48 lead went to 62-50 a few minutes later when Quincy Acy stole the ball at midcourt, drove in for a layup and sank a foul shot when McGruder fouled him.

In the take-charge run in the first half, Jones canned a 3-pointer to put the Bears on top 16-15, then followed that with a tap-in and a three-point play.

Martavious Irving, in the meantime, was on a seven-point run for the Wildcats. Irving’s 3-pointer sliced Baylor’s six-point lead in half, then Jones, with a nifty feed from Jackson, connected for Baylor.

Henriquez’s three-point play pulled Kansas State even at 27-all, then Heslip drove in for a layup, drew a foul and sank the free throw and followed that with a 3-point bucket.

Jackson’s left-handed floater in the final seconds sent the Bears into halftime with their biggest lead, 45-36.

McGruder had 14 points for Kansas State and Angel Rodriguez had 12.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western’s Koch named 2nd Team All-Region

Missouri Western senior women’s basketball player Jessica Koch has been named to the Daktronics All-South Central Region second team as it was announced Wednesday afternoon. Koch was voted to the all-MIAA first team earlier this year and is one of three MIAA players who made the teams.

Koch is first in the MIAA and fourth in the nation scoring 22.0 points per game. She broke the all-time scoring record which was 1,750 points by Lisa Hughes. Koch now has 1,776 in her career. She also holds records for free throws made with 394. She is second in free throws attempted (524), field goals made (615) and field goals attempted (1,391). She is third in assists with 387 and sixth in three point field goals made with 152.

Daktornics All-South Central Region Team

First Team
*Satoria Bell, guard, senior, Newman (Philadelphia, Pa.)
Shelby Adamson, senior, guard, Tarleton State (Rockwall, Texas)
Sabelle Diata, senior, forward, Cameron (Dakar, Senegal)
Mack Lankford, sophomore, guard, Abilene Christian (Weatherford, Texas)
Eboni Williams, senior, guard, Washburn (Hagerstown, Md.)

Second Team
Joni Unruh, senior, guard, West Texas A&M (Amarillo, Texas)
Jessica Koch, senior, forward, Missouri Western (Kansas City, Mo.)
Savannah Carver, senior, guard, Midwestern State (Amarillo, Texas)
Roselis Silva, junior, guard, Arkansas Tech (Caracas, Venezuela)
Lizzy Jeronimus, freshman, forward, Pittsburg State (Lenexa, Kan.)

* – South Central Region player of the year

Griffon tennis team loses MIAA opener to Washburn

The Missouri Western tennis team fell in it’s MIAA opener on Wednesday evening falling 9-0 against the Lady Blues of Washburn. Western falls to 2-4 overall and 0-1 in MIAA action.

Western won just 11 games in the six singles matches and four in the three doubles matches. Ceara Boldridge was the only Griffon to win at least one game in each set falling 6-1 and 6-2 against Morgan Rainey of Washburn. Erin Ward won three games in the second set of her match falling 6-0, 6-3 against Jamie Blackim.

On the doubles side Boldridge and Kayla Dysart fell 8-2 in No. 1 doubles while Erin Ward and Alecia Jenkins fell 8-2 in doubles competition.

With the victory the Lady Blues improve to 3-2 on the year and 1-0 in MIAA play.

Western returns to action on Thursday, March 22 when they hit the road for the first time this season. Western will take on Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Mo. at 3:30 pm.

Washburn 9, Missouri Western 0

Mar 07, 2012 at St. Joseph, Mo. (Tennis and Swim Club)

Singles competition
1. O’Neill,Sophie (WU) def. Kerr,Nicole (MWSU) 6-2, 6-0
2. Rainey,Morgan (WU) def. Boldridge,Ceara (MWSU) 6-1, 6-2
3. Zitsch,Whitley (WU) def. Dysart,Kayla (MWSU) 6-0, 6-1
4. Blackim,Jamie (WU) def. Ward,Erin (MWSU) 6-0, 6-3
5. Castillo,Alyssa (WU) def. Jenkins,Alecia (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0
6. McKee,Kristin (WU) def. Field,Katie (MWSU) 6-0, 6-2

Doubles competition
1. Blackim,Jamie/Zitsch,Whitley (WU) def. Boldridge,Ceara/Dysart,Kayla (MWSU) 8-2
2. O’Neill,Sophie/Castillo,Alyssa (WU) def. Kerr,Nicole/Field,Katie (MWSU) 8-0
3. Rainey,Morgan/Doole,Annie (WU) def. Ward,Erin/Jenkins,Alecia (MWSU) 8-2

Washburn 3-2, 1-0 MIAA
Missouri Western 2-4, 0-1 MIAA

— MWSU Sports Information —

Christian’s basketball teams advance to Class 1 Quarterfinals

The St. Joseph Christian basketball teams each won their Class 1 sectional game at the MWSU Fieldhouse to advance to the quarterfinals Saturday afternoon.

The Christian girls rallied to defeat Southwest Livingston, 44-38, while the Lions won the boys game over Braymer, 53-36.

Both teams will play Jefferson in their quarterfinal matchups that is hosted by Bishop LeBlond Saturday.

In the girls game, St. Joe Christian used an 8-0 run to end the third quarter to tie the game at 32 and they outscored Southwest Livingston 12-6 in the fourth to win the game.

Danielle Beard led the Lions with 15 points and eight rebounds, while Courtlin Osborn added 11 points.

In the boys game, Christian fell behind 7-3 after the first quarter, but they ended the first half on a 16-4 run and led 24-20 at halftime.

Braymer never got closer than three points the rest of the way and the Lions outscored the Bobcats 14-3 in the fourth to pull away.

Forrest Hicks had 26 points and eight rebounds for Christian, while Jordan Morrison added 10 points.

Both St. Joseph Christian teams improved to 22-6 this season.

The Christian/Jefferson quarterfinal doubleheader will take place at Bishop LeBlond Saturday as the girls tip off at 1:00 p.m. and the boys will start around 2:45 p.m.

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