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Bearcats move up to No. 18 in latest NABC Top 25 poll

With just one week before the ever-important NCAA Regional Rankings debut, the Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team continues to climb in the National Association of Basketball Coaches Top 25 poll released Tuesday.

The Bearcats jump to No. 18 in this week’s edition of the poll after picking up a 78-74 win at Pittsburg State on Saturday afternoon. With the win over the Gorillas, Northwest improved to 17-3 overall and 11-3 in conference play and clinched a spot in the MIAA Postseason Tournament, the first under head coach Ben McCollum.

The NABC Top 25 poll is made up of votes from coaches around the country and does not affect standing in the NCAA tournament. The first NCAA Regional Rankings come out Wednesday, Feb. 15, as the top eight teams in the rankings earn a spot in their respective regional tournament.

The top five teams all remained the same in the poll, led by No. 1 Bellarmine (Ky.) and followed by West Liberty (W. Va.) at No. 2. Winona State (Minn.) moved up to No. 3, as did Colorado School of Mines to No. 4 while Tarleton State (Texas) fell from No. 3 to No. 5.

Also cracking the NABC Top 25 is MIAA member Central Missouri at No. 25 while Missouri Southern sits one spot behind the Bearcats at No. 19.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

K-State cruises past Texas Tech Tuesday, 65-46

Shane Southwell scored 13 points to lead Kansas State to a 65-46 victory against Texas Tech on Tuesday night.

Will Spradling and Rodney McGruder had 10 points each for the Wildcats (17-6, 6-5 Big 12).

Luke Adams, a 5-foot-9-freshman, scored 15 points for the Red Raiders (7-16, 0-11).

Offense was a challenge for both teams, especially in the first half. Kansas State shot 6 of 26 (23.1 percent) in the half but led 31-17 at the break. Midway through the first half, there was a stretch of more than five minutes where neither team scored.

Texas Tech went 8 minutes, 24 seconds without a field goal in the first half and did not make its first basket of the second half until Jaye Crockett sank a baseline jumper with 10:11 remaining.

The Red Raiders cut the lead to 50-40 with 2:53 remaining after an 18-3 run that featured three Adams 3-pointers, but Kansas State regrouped and pulled away.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western’s upset bid comes up short at No. 13 Arkansas Tech

The Missouri Western women’s road struggles continued Monday night in Russellville, Ark., falling 81-75 against the 13th ranked Golden Suns of Arkansas Tech. Jessica Koch continued her solid play dumping in 31 points on 13-of-21 shooting as the Griffons fall to 6-15 overall.

The first half was a close battle as neither team led by more than six points. There were five lead changes and seven ties in the frame as the Griffons hung in with the high powered Golden Suns. The Griffons went into the locker room down 36-33.

Western came out of the locker room determined scoring eight of the first 11 points taking a two point lead at 41-39 after two Abby Stone free throws. Western continued to play well going up by four after an Alicia Bell three with 13:59 to play.

The next minute and ten seconds belonged to Arkansas Tech as three consecutive three’s, two by Katie Horsman and a Lindsey Root free throw gave the Golden Suns a six point lead with 12:49 to play. ATU stretched their lead to eight after Horsman nailed another three with just under 12 minutes to play.

Western answered the bell cutting the lead to two just four minutes later after a Koch free throw. The Golden Suns opened up a seven point lead with just under three minutes to play but once again Western used a 6-0 run cutting the Golden Sun’s lead to 76-75 with 2:09 to play.

The Griffons did not score the rest of the game as the Golden Suns took the six point victory. Arkansas Tech improves to 15-3 with the victory shooting 47.5-percent (28-59) from the floor and sinking 17-of-22 free throws. Natalia Santos finished with 25 points and 14 rebounds while Horsman dumped in 23 points making 6-of-8 long range shots. Jessica Watherford also finished with a double double scoring 10 points and snaring 10 rebounds.

Western made 30-of-73 field goals and 8-of-24 long range shots. Western struggled from the line making 7-of-13 free throws and got outrebounded 43 to 38. Bell and Ashley Curry finished with 14 and 11 points respectively. Koch and Bell recorded nine rebounds apiece.

Western returns to action on Saturday, February 11 when they take on the Northwest Missouri State Bearcats in Maryville, Mo. Game time is set for 1:30 pm in Bearcat Arena.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri hangs on for road win at Oklahoma

Sandwiched between an emotionally charged victory against archrival Kansas and a top 10 showdown with first place on the line, Missouri faced a test of its collective focus.

The Tigers got a passing grade — barely.

Marcus Denmon scored 25 points, Ricardo Ratliffe added 15 points and 10 rebounds and No. 4 Mizzou claimed first place in the Big 12 by edging Oklahoma 71-68 on Monday night.

“We understand that this game was just as important as the last one,” Denmon said. “Pretty much, we have a veteran group and we just wanted to make sure everybody came out and understood how important this game would be for us to play after a big win like the one at home against Kansas.”

Coach Frank Haith required his players to report to a hotel by 2 a.m. after their late-night victory against the then-No. 8 Jayhawks, trying to temper the celebration and get a head start on a road game less than 48 hours later against an opponent they had beaten by 38 points earlier this season.

Asked whether it was the right move, Denmon and Ratliffe looked at each other and didn’t say a word.

Finally, Denmon answered and got a pat on the back from his first-year coach.

“Whether I wanted to go to the hotel or not, I understood,” Denmon said. “I understood that it was a good decision by Coach and it seems like it helped us.”

The Tigers host Baylor on Saturday.

Oklahoma (13-10, 3-8) still had the ball with a chance to tie with 5 seconds left. Romero Osby was fouled with 2.5 seconds left and missed both free throws, and Steven Pledger missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer when the offensive rebound was tapped back to him.

Pledger slumped to the ground and put his hands over his face after his potential tying shot clanged off the rim to end the game. He stayed on the floor until two Missouri players and teammate Barry Honore came over to lift him up.

“It was perfect. The play was designed to miss the free throw and get the tip-out and we actually got the tip-out,” said Pledger, who led Oklahoma with 22 points.

“It was on line. It felt good when it left my hand. It didn’t go in.”

Sam Grooms had a career-high 17 points and matched his career-best with 10 assists, and Andrew Fitzgerald scored 12 points for the Sooners.

Michael Dixon chipped in 13 points for Missouri.

The Tigers (22-2, 9-2) moved a half-game ahead of No. 6 Baylor and Kansas (No. 10 ESPN/USA Today, No. 7 AP) in the standings. Those teams meet Wednesday night for a chance to pull even with Missouri, and the Tigers host the Bears on Saturday.

This one was nothing like Oklahoma’s previous meeting with Missouri, won 87-49 by the Tigers on their home court. Missouri held a 15-rebound advantage in that one but Oklahoma came out ahead 36-22 on the boards on Monday.

The Tigers made up for it by holding a 28-12 scoring edge the paint and getting the only 10 fast-break points of the game.

“There’s no question you had to fight against all of that — the emotional win and then you have a game at your place where you just played incredible and they didn’t play their best game,” Haith said.

“So, you get a false sense. You worry about that false sense of what it’s going to be like when they get here.”

In Norman, they found a half-full Lloyd Noble Center and a student section with dozens of empty seats that had newspapers draped over the backs that the occupants would usually hold up during pregame introductions.

It still got loud when the Sooners pulled within 66-64 after Pledger’s 3-pointer from the left side with 3:33 to play.

Denmon followed with a jumper from the right side with 2 seconds left on the shot clock before Grooms and Pledger both went 1 for 2 at the free throw line to get Oklahoma back within two.

Kim English then hit a 3-pointer from the right side off Phil Pressey’s seventh assist to provide what proved to be the game-winner with 53.6 seconds left.

Fitzgerald hit two free throws for Oklahoma with 41.6 seconds remaining and Dixon missed on a drive to the basket to give the Sooners their last chance with 5 seconds left.

“We never let them take the lead, and that was a sign of a good team,” Haith said. “I think once they made runs, we executed when we needed to make a shot.”

Oklahoma connected on its first six shots, and eight of 10 to get out to a 17-12 lead before Missouri surged back with seven straight points to take its first lead. The Sooners had an answer a few minutes later, getting two jumpers from Fitzgerald and a 3 by Pledger to go back up 29-23 with 5:27 left before halftime.

At that point, it didn’t seem like the hotel strategy was working.

“I felt like we came with energy,” Denmon said, “but it has to be on both ends.”

As hot as Oklahoma started from the field, it was equally cold at the foul line — missing all seven of its free throws in the first half.

The Tigers finally took charge, scoring the final six points of the first half and the first six of the second to build a 42-33 lead after Denmon’s three free throws.

Dixon’s jumper from the right side of the key gave Missouri a momentary 10-point lead before Pledger hit consecutive 3-pointers to get the crowd involved. Oklahoma got within 55-52 after Grooms’ jumper from the right wing with 12 minutes left before coming up empty on three possessions with the chance to tie it.

“You want to win at this point in time,” Grooms said. “We just have certain plays and certain mishaps on the court that don’t allow us to do that right now. … When we’re ready to do it, we’ll do it. It’s up to us at the end of the day.”

— Associated Press —

Chiefs officially hire Daboll as offensive coordinator

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the team has hired Brian Daboll to serve as the club’s offensive coordinator.

“Brian is a fine football coach and offensive mind,” said Head Coach Romeo Crennel. “I worked with him when he was a young coach in New England and I am proud of the way his career has developed. We had a very thorough process for this position and it was clear to me that Brian was the right choice. He was coveted by multiple teams and I am glad he will be joining our staff.”

Daboll joins the Chiefs after one season (2011) in Miami where he held the same position for the Dolphins. In 2011, the Dolphins offense had both a 1,000-yard rusher and a 1,000-yard receiver for the first time in franchise history. RB Reggie Bush picked up 1,086 yards on 216 carries and had five 100-yard rushing performances. WR Brandon Marshall caught a team-high 81 passes for 1,214 yards and recorded five 100-yard receiving days en route to a Pro Bowl appearance on the AFC squad. QB Matt Moore finished fifth in the AFC and 12th in the NFL with an 87.1 passer rating. Under Daboll, the Miami offense committed only 39 penalties in 2011, tying for the third best mark in the NFL.

“This is a great opportunity,” Daboll said. “After meeting with Romeo, it was clear to me Kansas City was a good fit. I have a lot of respect for Romeo and a strong appreciation for the Kansas City Chiefs franchise. Romeo and I have similar ideas on the direction of the program and we have a good core group of players to get started with. I’m ready to get in as soon as possible and start working to be a part of something special.”

Prior to joining the Miami coaching staff, Daboll spent two seasons (2009-10) as offensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns. The Browns offense saw dramatic improvement in the second half of the season in Daboll’s first year in Cleveland. The Browns saw increased production in points scored (11.1 points per game), total yards (78.2 yards per game), rushing yards (67.1 yards per game), Red Zone efficiency (20.8%), third-down efficiency (14.7%), turnovers (1.9 fewer per game) and time of possession (3:21 more per game) over the final eight games.

Before joining Cleveland, Daboll spent two seasons (2007-08) as quarterbacks coach with the N.Y. Jets. While with the Jets, he helped QB Brett Favre pick up the Jets offense after the quarterback came out of retirement. In his one season under Daboll, Favre garnered a Pro Bowl berth for the AFC squad and ranked fifth in the NFL in completion percentage (65.7).

Daboll spent seven seasons (2000-06) as an assistant coach with the New England Patriots, first as a defensive assistant (2000-01) before taking over as wide receivers coach (2002-06). With the Patriots, Daboll earned three Super Bowl rings working alongside Chiefs Head Coach Romeo Crennel and General Manager Scott Pioli. During his tenure in New England, he helped WR Deion Branch earn Super Bowl XXXIX MVP honors in the Patriots’ win against Philadelphia following the 2004 season. Branch became the first wide receiver to win that honor since San Francisco’s Jerry Rice in Super Bowl XXIII after the 1988 season.

A native of Buffalo, N.Y., Daboll began his coaching career as a restricted volunteer at the College of William & Mary (1997) before serving two seasons (1998-99) as a graduate assistant at Michigan State University. Daboll was a two-year starter at safety at the University of Rochester.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

KU’s Robinson named to Wooden midseason watch list

Kansas junior forward Thomas Robinson was named to the 2012 midseason watch list for the Oscar Robertson Trophy it was announced Monday morning.

Robinson is currently the only player in the Big 12 averaging a double-double on the season with 18 points and 12 rebounds per game. His 16 double-doubles are the most in the Big 12 and rank second nationally. He has scored 20 or more points eight times this season to lead KU. Versus North Dakota (12/31) he recorded the first 30-point, 20-rebound performance by a Jayhawk since Feb. 13, 1961 by Wayne Hightower.

The U.S. Basketball Writers Association has selected 20 outstanding players for its 2012 Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List. Members of the association’s board of directors chose the players to be included on the list as contenders for the Oscar Robertson Trophy, to be presented to the national player of the year by its namesake in New Orleans at the USBWA’s College Basketball Awards Breakfast on March 30.

Earlier this season, Robinson was named the Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week for the week of Dec. 12, while also earning Big 12 Player of the Week honors three times this season.

Last season Marcus Morris was one of 10 finalists for the prestigious award. If Robinson is selected as a finalist, it will mark the third-straight year KU has had a finalist for the trophy.

— KU Sports Information —

Missouri State finalizes 2012 football schedule

Missouri State University has finalized its 2012 football schedule, an 11-game slate that will feature five home games, trips to two FBS opponents and a new league opponent.

Seventh-year head coach Terry Allen and the Division I FCS Bears begin the season with road games at Kansas State on Sept. 1 and Louisville on Sept. 8. The Bears are 0-2 all-time against the Big XII Wildcats, a team coming off a 10-3 campaign and Cotton Bowl appearance. This will be the first meeting between the Bears and Louisville. The Big East Cardinals were 7-6 in 2011 and made an appearance in the Belk Bowl.

Allen’s squad will play its home opener on Sept. 15 against Ohio Valley Conference power Murray State. The Bears are 1-6 all-time against the Racers who are coming off a 7-4 campaign.

The two-game home stand continues on Sept. 22 with a Family Weekend battle against rival Southern Illinois in the Missouri Valley Football Conference opener for both teams. The Bears are 17-17 all-time against the Salukis.

Missouri State closes out the month of September at South Dakota State on Sept. 29. The Jackrabbits were 5-6 overall and 4-4 in the MVFC last season to tie for fourth place. MSU is seeking its first-ever win against SDSU after four previous meetings.

October begins with a road game at Indiana State on Oct. 6. The Sycamores will be looking for a solid homecoming outing after a 6-5 season in which they were 4-4 in conference action. The Bears lead ISU 16-10 overall with the teams splitting the last six meetings.

MSU returns to Plaster Field on Oct. 16 for their first-ever matchup with MVFC newcomer South Dakota. The Coyotes were 6-5 in 2011 and will make The Valley a 10-team league for the first time. The USD game will be the centerpiece of Showcase weekend at Missouri State.

On Oct. 20, Missouri State will continue conference play at Illinois State. The Redbirds were 7-4 last season, narrowly missing an FCS playoff bid and finishing 5-3 (third place) in the conference. MSU is 14-17-1 all-time against ISU.

Conference play returns to Springfield on Oct. 27 for a homecoming challenge from Western Illinois. The Bears have won three in a row from the Leathernecks in a series that is now tied 15-15-1. WIU was 2-9 last season and finished 1-7 in the MVFC to finish in ninth place.

The Bears will celebrate Senior Day in style on Nov. 3 with a visit from the defending Division I champions of North Dakota State. The Bison capped a 14-1 season with their first FCS title in 2011. NDSU shared the Valley regular-season title with Northern Iowa last year with identical 7-1 conference marks. The Bears are 2-2 all-time against the Bison with wins in two of the last three meetings against the defending national champs.

After a week off, the 2012 regular season will conclude at Northern Iowa on Nov. 17. Missouri State is 5-27 all-time against the Panthers and will look to end a six-game losing streak to UNI, which was an FCS playoff qualifier in 2011 and finished 10-3 overall.

All of the 2012 home games are slated to begin at 1 p.m. at Plaster Field, which has been the home of the Bears since 1941.

— MSU Sports Information —

Griffon comeback falls short at Missouri Southern

Faced with a big deficit, the Missouri Western men did what they’ve done all season.

They fought back.

But despite a valiant comeback effort, the Griffons fell short in Joplin Saturday, falling to Missouri Southern 85-69.

Southern shot an amazing 60% from the field, including an unreal 77% in the first half to take a 50-32 lead to halftime.

But the Griffons regrouped and chipped away, using a 25-8 run, and cut the lead to 58-55 at the 11:09 mark of the 2nd half.

The Griffons could get no closer as Southern pulled away in the end

James Harris led four Griffons in double figures with a career high 28 points (8-18 fg).  Lavonte Douglas had 14 points and 12 rebounds, while TJ Johnson and Justin Reid added 10.

“I can’t say enough about our guys’ effort tonight,” said Coach Mike Nicholson. “they never quit and I thanked them in the lockerroom for that.”

“They deserve to be rewarded with wins.”

Nicholson, Western’s long-time assistant, made his head-coaching debut Saturday on a “one night only” basis.   Long-time head coach Tom Smith was absent to attend his induction ceremony into the Valparaiso University Athletics Hall of Fame

Western falls to 7-14 overall, and 2-14 in the MIAA, while Southern improves 18-5 and 10-5 in the conference.

Western beat Southern December 7th in St. Joseph when the Lions were ranked #1 in the nation.

The Griffons continue their road trip Thursday, when they make the 45 minute drive north to Maryville to take on Northwest Missouri State.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats clinch postseason birth with win at Pittsburg

For the first time under head coach Ben McCollum the Northwest Missouri State Bearcats have earned a berth in the MIAA Postseason Tournament after a 78-74 win over Pittsburg State Saturday afternoon from John Lance Arena.

The Bearcats (17-3, 11-3 MIAA) held off a gritty Gorilla squad with late free throws. It is the first time in three season the Bearcats will return to the MIAA Tournament as they finished a regular season sweep of Pittsburg State (12-10, 8-7 MIAA).

With 3:17 left in the game DeAngleo Hailey knocked down three free throws pushing Northwest ahead for the fourth time at 64-62. His first free throw knotted the game for the eighth time of the day before his final two gave the Bearcats the lead for good.

After a missed Gorilla jumper at the other end, Hailey knocked down a three-pointer pushing the Northwest lead to 67-62 with just under three minutes to play. Hailey hit four three-pointers in the game and went 5-for-5 at the free throw line to finish with 17 points.

In the final minute junior guard, DeShaun Cooper, hit five of his final six free throws to ice the game. Cooper had a game-high 19 points and finished 11-of-13 on the night at the charity stripe.

After picking up an overtime win in the first meeting at Bearcat Arena, the second half turned into a physical battle. Both teams combined to shoot 66 free throws in the game as Northwest shot 78 percent on the night.

Northwest also connected on 10-of-24 three-pointers in the win as Justin Clark also hit four three-pointers. Clark and Jake Reinders each finished in double figures with 15 and 10 points respectively.

The Bearcats return home as they host Lincoln on Wednesday night at Bearcat Arena. Four of the Bearcats final six games are at Bearcat Arena to close out the season.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

No. 4 Mizzou scores last 11 points to rally past No. 8 KU

After a bunch of off-target games, Marcus Denmon couldn’t miss. Especially at the finish.

The senior guard converted a 3-point play and hit two 3-pointers in the final 2:05, the last for the go-ahead points, and No. 4 Missouri scored the game’s final 11 points to rally past No. 8 Kansas 74-71 in Game 1 of what could be the schools’ final Border Showdown on Saturday night.

“Marcus made three huge shots,” said teammate Kim English, who added 18 points. “They were huge plays. Kansas didn’t let up at all.”

Denmon scored 29 points, two off his career best, and ended a long-range shooting slump with a career-best six 3-pointers in nine attempts.

“Marcus worked his tail off all week,” coach Frank Haith said.

The go-ahead 3-pointer came with 56 seconds to go for a one-point lead. Michael Dixon added a pair of free throws with 9.8 seconds left after an offensive foul on Tyshawn Taylor and Kansas’ Elijah Johnson missed badly on a shot to tie it at the buzzer.

“The most important thing I remember hearing was Kimmie saying, ‘We’re going to win this game,’ ” Denmon said. “I understood how much it meant to him to say that. We’re the senior leaders and I felt we had to come out and execute.”

Missouri (21-2, 8-2 Big 12) beat Kansas for only the second time in the last 12 meetings, and the Tigers’ impending departure for the SEC added spice to the final conference meeting in Columbia, Mo.

Thomas Robinson had 25 points and 13 rebounds for Kansas (18-5, 8-2), but the closing minutes were anguish for coach Bill Self. The Jayhawks were scoreless the final 3:20 after Taylor dunked for a 71-63 lead.

“We let up on the gas and they hit shots. Big shots,” said Robinson, his voice choked with emotion. “We blew that game. I still give them credit for making shots.”

Other miscues: Robinson was called for an offensive foul with 1:42 to go and with Missouri up by one, Taylor missed two free throws with 41 seconds to go.

“We obviously made some really bad plays late, really bad plays,” Self said. “They’ve still got to make shots, but they had a guy that was unbelievable.”

Missouri is 13-0 at home, and this was the closest call by far for a team that has usually dominated. The previous smallest margin was 11 points over Texas last month.

Haith beat Kansas in his first try, although it was Missouri’s first in the series since 2009 and only the second in the last 12 overall. Self fell to 17-4 against Missouri.

“It was just a great atmosphere,” Haith said. “It was a memorable game. A classic.”

The rematch is Feb. 25 in Lawrence, Kan. It could also be the final meeting between the schools for a while with bad feelings from Missouri’s decision to leave for the SEC.

“I will say this: So much has been made about the hatred and that stuff,” Self said. “Hey, this is hard for me to say to Missouri people, but I thought tonight that was about as classy an atmosphere as there is. I hope it’ll be the same way when they come over to our place. I’m sure it will be.”

Haith had the team stay at a hotel Saturday night, saying, “I can imagine what Columbia is going to be like tonight.”

Denmon had been just 5 for 31 from 3-point range the previous five games, and was held to six points on 3 for 12 overall shooting in a one-point victory at Texas on Monday, and had been spending extra time in the gym working on the shot. He hit all three 3-point attempts in a 16-point first half, helping Missouri take a 39-34 lead.

The border matchup prompted plenty of extra adrenaline, some of it provided by a pumped-up sound system. Missouri mascot Truman the Tiger descended from the ceiling via cable, a nod to the every-night tradition at the old Hearnes Center, and prep-game festivities featured fireworks that left an acrid stench hovering over the court much of the first half.

Fans began camping out Wednesday night to get a spot for ESPN’s GameDay, and at least 1,000 students were poised to charge for favorable seating when the gates opened 1½ hours before tipoff. Fans on one half of the arena stayed on their feet throughout the game, as opposed to taking their seat after Missouri’s first basket.

“That was the loudest I’d ever heard them,” English said. “I was just so proud and excited.”

There was little out-of-line behavior, other than a fan heaving what appeared to be a rolled-up T-shirt onto the court after Ricardo Ratliffe was whistled for his fourth foul with 6:22 to go.

— Associated Press —

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