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McCarthy’s 67 leads MWSU men’s golf to third place finish in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS – A four month winter break didn’t slow down the Missouri Western men’s golf team as it finished with a 594 and third place finish at the Winona State Invitational. Patrick McCarthy tied a career-low with a 67 and was 5-under-par in the final round to finish tied for second.

McCarthy was 1-under-par 143 in the two rounds at Stallion Mountain Golf Club. Tom Buffington added a second career top-10 finish with a three-over-par 147 performance. Kevin Kim dropped a stroke off of his first round total to finish 15th at 5-over-par 149. Lucas Horseman shot a 155 and Jacob Majeske carded a 159.

Missouri Western recorded its fourth top-five finish in six tournaments this season. Rocky Mountain College won the team title with a 578. RMC’s Michael Tait took individual honors with a 10-under-par 134.

MWSU returns to action on Thursday, March 29 at the Upper Iowa Invitational in Waterloo, Iowa.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State women’s tennis defeats Missouri Western 7-2

ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s tennis team (8-6) fell to rival Northwest Missouri (3-5) 7-2 Tuesday at Genesis Health Club.

Joanna Abreu Roman and Karolina Ström earned the first Missouri Western in No. 1 doubles 8-5. Abreu Roman and Ström now have 10 wins on the season in the No. 1 doubles position. The duo’s win also allowed MWSU to cut the Bearcat lead to 2-1 heading into singles action.

NWMSU claimed the first two singles matches but Sophia Aguilera got the Griffons on the board again with a straight set victory 6-4, 6-2 at No. 4 singles. It is Aguilera’s eighth win of the season and fifth victory in the last six matches.

RESULTS
Singles
1. Teruel,Tania (NWMSU) def. Strom,Karolina (MWSU) 6-2, 6-1
2. Recuenco,Irene (NWMSU) def. Abreu Roman,Joanna (MWSU) 7-5, 4-6, 10-4
3. Ferrando,Marta (NWMSU) def. Salmaso,Federica (MWSU) 6-4, 6-4
4. Aguilera,Sofia (MWSU) def. Lovig,Tess (NWMSU) 6-4, 6-2
5. Rinderknech,Julie (NWMSU) def. Dent,Emilee (MWSU) 6-1, 6-0
6. Grozdanovic,Sara (NWMSU) def. Yeacker,Katherine (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0

Doubles
1. Abreu Roman,Joanna/Strom,Karolina (MWSU) def. Grozdanovic,Sara/Souza,Luiza (NWMSU) 8-5
2. Recuenco,Irene/Teruel,Tania (NWMSU) def. Aguilera,Sofia/Yeacker,Katherine (MWSU) 8-0
3. Ferrando,Marta/Lovig,Tess (NWMSU) def. Dent,Emilee/Salmaso,Federica (MWSU) 8-2

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou women earn No. 5 seed in Lexington Region, open with Florida Gulf Coast

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball is headed back to the NCAA Tournament, earning a No. 5 seed in the Lexington Region. Mizzou clinched its third consecutive berth to the Big Dance for the first time since 1984-86.

No. 5 Mizzou (24-7) will face No. 12 Florida Gulf Coast (30-4) on Saturday, March 17, in Stanford, California. Tipoff is set for 2:30 p.m. CT on ESPN2. The winner will take on either No. 4 Stanford or No. 13 Gonzaga in the Second Round on Monday, March 19.

Mizzou’s No. 5 seed is the program’s highest ever in a 64-team NCAA Tournament and the highest since the Tigers secured a No. 4 seed in the 32-team 1984 NCAA Tournament. The Tigers are searching for victories in three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances for the first time in program history.

Mizzou’s selection in this season’s Big Dance is the 12th program history and the third under head coach Robin Pingeton. The Tigers have six all-time NCAA Tournament wins, with five of those coming by single digits, including Mizzou’s 66-64 triumph over South Florida last season.

Mizzou enters the NCAA Tournament having won 24 games, the most victories in a season since 1983-84. Pingeton’s squad has cemented three consecutive campaigns with at least 22 wins for the first time since 1982-85.

The Tigers face off with Florida Gulf Coast for the first time in program history. Mizzou is 1-4 all-time vs. Stanford and 0-0 all-time vs. Gonzaga.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Missouri Western softball loses two at No. 11 Texas A&M-Commerce

COMMERCE, Texas – Back on the road two days after playing in Jefferson City, Missouri, the Missouri Western softball team lost both games of a doubleheader at No. 11 Texas A&M-Commerce 10-2 and 12-1.

The Griffon fall to 6-15 this season, while Commerce is now 19-3.

Despite out-hitting the No. 11-ranked team in the nation in game one, the Griffons fell 10-2 in five innings. Missouri Western had six hits in the game to Texas A&M-Commerce’s five and weren’t charged with an error in the first game, but 10 walks and four hit batters by pitchers Kenzie Hilzer (4-7) and Kaili Hinds helped the home team to a lopsided victory.

Shelby Uhl went 2-for-3 in game one with an RBI. Rebekah Mueller hit her fifth home run of the season and went 2-for-2 with two runs scored. Lonnie Groves also went 2-for-2 in game one.

A six-run second inning in game two propelled Texas A&M-Commerce to a 12-1, five-inning victory. Missouri Western managed two hits and committed four errors in the game.

UP NEXT
The Griffons stay in the Lone Star state with a doubleheader at Texas Woman’s University on Tuesday at 11 a.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest’s Pitts named Central Region Player of the Year

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University senior Justin Pitts has been named the 2017-18 Conference Commissioner’s Association (D2CCA) Central Region Player of the Year for the second straight season. He was also named to the All-Central Region first team for the third straight year. Pitts is now eligible for D2CCA All-America honors which will be voted upon later this season.

The three-time MIAA Player of the Year is the all time leading scorer in program history with 2,459 points in 124 career games (19.8 ppg). He also set Northwest career records with 575 assists, 887 made field goals and 1,681 field goals attempted

2017-18 D2 Conference Commissioner’s Men’s Basketball All-Central Region
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Justin Pitts, Northwest Missouri State

FIRST TEAM
*! Justin Pitts, Northwest Missouri State University
Jhonathan Dunn, Southern Nazarene
#Tyler Rudolph, Minot State
Harrison Cleary, Minnesota Crookston
CJ Carr, Missouri Southern State

SECOND TEAM
Trey Lansman, Nebraska-Kearney
Ryan Bruggeman, Southwest Minnesota State
#Brady Skeens, Washburn University
#Gage Davis, St. Cloud State
Ian Smith, Northern State

* – Two-Time D2CCA Region Player of the Year
# – Two-time D2CCA All-Region
! – Three-time D2CCA All-Region

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU men’s golf in third after day one in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS – The Missouri Western men’s golf team shot an opening round 300 on Monday and is tied for third place at the Winona State Invitational at Stallion Mountain Golf Club. It is the first tournament of the spring season for MWSU.

Tom Buffington led Missouri Western in the first round with a 1-over-par 73 and is tied for eighth place. Kevin Kim carded a 3-over-par 75 and sits in 17thplace. Patrick McCarthy and Lucas Horseman are tied for 21st after both shooting a 4-over-par 76. Jacob Majeske rounded out the MWSU scorecard with 5-over-par 77.

The Griffons tee off in the final round Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. CST.

— MWSU Athletics —

Chiefs release Tamba Hali and Ron Parker

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs have released one of their career sack leaders, Tamba Hali, and veteran stalwart of their secondary, Ron Parker, moves designed to help Kansas City get younger on defense and have some financial freedom for the start of free agency.

The Chiefs parted ways with longtime linebacker Hali on Monday. The move was hardly a surprise given his decreased production.

Safety Parker, who had missed just one game over the past four seasons and provided some stability when Eric Berry was injured last season, also was waived.

Hali was due a base salary of $5,750,000 this season with a salary cap hit of more than $9 million, and his release will only cost them about $1.7 million in dead money. Parker’s release saves about $5.3 million against the salary cap.

“I thank the greatest fans in the world #ChiefsKingdom for 12 incredible years,” Hali posted on Twitter. “I also want to thank the @Chiefs organization for believing in me from the beginning. All the support during my career in Kansas City has been overwhelming and KC will always be special to me.”

The Chiefs were strapped for cash heading into the offseason, necessitating moves on several fronts. They’ve already voided the contract of linebacker Derrick Johnson, their career tackles leader, to save about $8 million, and released cornerback Darrelle Revis to save $4.5 million.

They’ll save some more when the new league year begins Wednesday. That’s when the trade of Alex Smith, which his salary cap number of $17 million, to the Redskins for cornerback Kendall Fuller and a draft pick, becomes official. The Chiefs will also save a bit of money when their trade of cornerback Marcus Peters to the Rams for two more draft picks becomes official.

The Chiefs only rolled over about $2.6 million in salary cap space from last season, so freeing up space to address their leaky defense — and perhaps help new quarterback Patrick Mahomes II with some offensive weapons — was of paramount importance for new general manager Brett Veach.

“You look at every situation and every position group and if it makes sense from a structural standpoint, a schematic standpoint and also a cap standpoint,” Veach said during last week’s scouting combine in Indianapolis. “And it really is just the schematic standpoint and the cap standpoint along with the age, and if you get all those things pointing in the right direction, you go that route.”

Make no mistake: The Chiefs had aged considerably on defense the past couple of years, especially in the linebacker corps, where Johnson and Hali had been the foundation for years.

Hali was the 20th overall pick in the 2006 draft out of Penn State, started every game as a rookie and never really looked back. He became a fan-favorite and went to five consecutive Pro Bowls beginning with the 2011 season, when he had 12 sacks and forced four fumbles.

He combined to add 20 more sacks over the next couple seasons, but the decline soon began for the 34-year-old pass rusher. He started just two of 16 games during the 2016 season, when knee pain caught up to him, and only appeared in five games last season after beginning the year on the PUP list.

When asked in January what his plans were for the future, Hali acknowledged he was “leaning more toward” retirement but wanted to leave the door open to returning for another season.

He has plenty of interests away from football, including a hip-hop recording company.

“Tamba has been a tremendous ambassador for our organization, both on and off the playing field,” Chiefs owner Clark Hunt said. “His incredible work ethic and passion for the game helped make him one of the most successful pass rushers in franchise history. Tamba will always be a part of the Chiefs family, and we sincerely appreciate his contributions to the Chiefs and the Kansas City community over the last 12 seasons.”

The 30-year-old Parker should have plenty of suitors in free agency. He made 279 tackles, seven sacks and picked off nine passes after finally getting his break with Kansas City.

“It was great playing in front of the fans in Arrowhead and with some of the best teammates,” he said on Twitter. “Now it’s time for me to move on. I look forward to this new journey and chapter.”

Parker’s age combined with his cost for next season ultimately forced his release.

“It’s kind of today’s world in the NFL,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said during the combine, when asked about their desire to get younger. “Guys change teams and move. We think we have some good young players and feel comfortable with them.”

— Associated Press —

Nebraska women make NCAA Tournament as a No. 10 seed

The Nebraska women’s basketball team earned its 14th NCAA Tournament bid in school history, as the Huskers claimed a No. 10 seed in the 64-team field announced during the NCAA Tournament Selection Show on ESPN Monday night.

Nebraska, which produced one of the nation’s top turnarounds under second-year coach Amy Williams in 2017-18, will face No. 7 seed Arizona State at the Erwin Center in Austin, Texas on Saturday, March 17, at 2:30 p.m. (CT). The game will be televised by ESPN2, while a radio call of the game will be provided by the Husker Sports Network.

Texas (26-6, 15-3 Big 12) earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament and will take on No. 15 seed Maine (23-9, 13-3 America East) in Saturday’s second game at Austin. The Longhorns advanced to the Big 12 Championship Game, while the Black Bears earned the America East automatic bid by winning the tournament title. That game is scheduled for a 5 p.m. (CT) tip on ESPN2. The winners of the two first-round games will meet in Monday’s second round.

The winner of the four-team bracket in Austin will advance to the Kansas City Regional, March 23-25.

Nebraska heads into the NCAA Tournament with a 21-10 record after earning the No. 3 seed in the Big Ten Tournament with an 11-5 conference mark. The Huskers also advanced to the Big Ten semifinals.

Nebraska’s 21 wins mark a 14-game improvement in the win column over last year’s 7-22 overall record, when the Huskers tied for last in the Big Ten Conference. The improvement is the largest increase by any team in 2018 NCAA Tournament field and tied for the biggest jump in Division I with fellow Big Ten partner Rutgers. Nebraska produced an eight-game improvement in league play (3-13, 2016-17).

Williams earned 2018 Big Ten Conference Coach-of-the-Year honors from the league coaches and media and is one of 10 semifinalists for the Werner Ladder Naismith National Coach-of-the-Year award.

The Huskers, who earned their first NCAA bid since facing Syracuse in the 2015 first round at Columbia, S.C., are led on the court by second-team All-Big Ten point guard Hannah Whitish. The 5-9 sophomore from Barneveld, Wis., leads Nebraska in scoring (12.6 ppg), assists (4.8 apg) and steals (1.3 spg).

Inside, freshman Kate Cain has made a major impact at both ends of the court for the Big Red. The 6-5 center from Middletown, N.Y., adds 10.1 points per game while leading Nebraska in rebounding (7.1 rpg) and blocked shots (3.2 bpg). Cain’s Big Ten-leading 100 blocks have smashed Nebraska’s single-season school record and rank her among the top-five shot-blockers in the nation this season. She was the only freshman or sophomore to earn a spot on the five-player Big Ten All-Defensive Team and she was also one of five conference newcomers on the Big Ten All-Freshman Team.

With Cain in the middle and a commitment to defense for the entire Nebraska team, the Huskers improved by 13 points defensively from a year ago, allowing just 63.3 points per game this season. The Huskers led the Big Ten in both field goal percentage defense (.371) and three-point field goal percentage defense (.302) in 2017-18. Despite losing their starting front line, the Huskers were also six points per game better on the offensive end this season.

Nebraska’s game against the Sun Devils (21-12, 10-8 Pac-12) will be the eighth all-time meeting between the Huskers and Arizona State. Nebraska owns a 4-3 edge in the all-time series, including a 62-58 win over the Sun Devils in the last meeting between the two teams at the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln on Dec. 28, 2008.

It will be the first-ever meeting between Nebraska and Arizona State in the postseason, and the only previous neutral site meeting between the schools came in the first match-up, a 71-69 Husker win at the California Invitational on Nov. 29, 1979.

Nebraska’s only other NCAA Tournament appearance in the state of Texas was a successful one. In 2013, the sixth-seeded Huskers went to College Station, Texas and defeated 11th-seeded Chattanooga (73-59) before knocking off third-seeded Texas A&M (74-63) at Reed Arena to advance to the second NCAA Sweet Sixteen in Husker history.

Nebraska’s point guard on that 2013 squad was All-American and WNBA first-round draft pick Lindsey Moore, who also led the Huskers to their first-ever NCAA Sweet Sixteen as a freshman in 2010. Moore is now a graduate assistant at Arizona State.

Nebraska Coach Amy (Gusso) Williams will be leading her second school to an NCAA Division I Tournament, after also helping two Nebraska teams to the NCAA Tournament as a student-athlete.

Williams was a sophomore guard on a 1996 Husker team that earned a trip to the first round. She was a senior on Nebraska’s 1998 NCAA Tournament squad that advanced to the second round with a win over New Mexico in Norfolk, Va.

As a second-year Division I head coach at South Dakota, Williams led the Coyotes to the NCAA Tournament in 2014, before falling to Stanford in the first round.

— NU Athletics —

KU’s Devonte’ Graham named First Team All-American by USBWA

LAWRENCE, Kan. – Kansas senior Devonte’ Graham has been named 2018 All-America First Team by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association (USBWA), the organization announced Monday.

The USBWA is among the outlets used for the official NCAA consensus All-America team and Graham is 2-for-2 on consensus All-America first teams as he was named to The Sporting News squad last week. Joining Graham on USBWA All-America First Team is Jalen Brunson (Villanova), Deandre Ayton (Arizona), Marvin Bagley III (Duke) and Trae Young (Oklahoma). There were two teams selected by the more than 900 members of the USBWA with the second team being Keita Bates-Diop (Ohio State), Trevon Bluiett (Xavier), Miles Bridges (Michigan State), Keenan Evans (Texas Tech) and Jock Landale (Saint Mary’s).

This is the second-straight year a Kansas player has earned USBWA All-America First Team honors. Jayhawk Frank Mason III earned the distinction last year and later received the Oscar Robertson Trophy recognizing the national player of the year by the USBWA.

In the past week, Graham has been named the Big 12 Player of the Year, All-Big 12 First Team, one of five finalists for the Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award and All-America First Team by The Sporting News, NCAA.com and the USBWA. On the court, he also earned Big 12 Championship All-Tournament Team honors after averaging 14.3 points and 10.0 assists in guiding Kansas to the tourney title.

On every national player of year watch list, Graham is the only player in NCAA Division I this season averaging 17.0-plus pts, 7.0-plus assists, 1.6-plus steals and fewer than 3.0 turnovers per game. Graham is third nationally, second in the Big 12, in assists per game at 7.5. The Raleigh, North Carolina, guard leads the Big 12 in assist-to-turnover ratio at 2.7. Graham is scoring 17.3 points per game, which is third in the conference and he is sixth in free throw percentage (83.4), fourth in 3-point field goals made (2.9), seventh in 3-point field goal percentage (41.2) and fifth in steals (1.6).

On Feb. 26, Graham was named the Big 12 Player of the Week for the second time this season after guiding No. 6 Kansas (27-7, 13-5) to two victories that propelled the Jayhawks to their NCAA-record 14th consecutive, 18th Big 12 and NCAA-leading 61st regular-season conference title.

This season, Graham is logging 37.6 minutes per game this year, which ranks as the fifth highest average in a single season at KU. His 98 3-pointers made are fifth on the KU season list as last week he passed his own season high mark of 94 set in 2016-17. Graham’s 254 assists this season are second on the KU list.

Kansas enters the 2018 NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 seed and will face No. 16 seed Penn (24-8, 12-2 Ivy League) on Thursday, March 15, at 1 p.m. (Central) at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita, Kansas.

— KU Athletics —

Griffons defeat Washburn 12-3 to complete three-game sweep

ST. JOSEPH – A seven run seventh inning propelled the Missouri Western baseball team past Washburn Sunday at the Griffon Spring Sports Complex 12-3. MWSU completes the three-game sweep of the Ichabods and they’ve now won five consecutive games. The Griffons are now 10-9 this season and 3-3 in the MIAA.

Washburn tagged three runs in the second inning to open an early lead before MWSU cut the deficit to one with runs in the fourth and sixth innings. The Griffons started a huge seventh inning with a Brooks Day double followed by back-to-back bunt singles to load the bases. Will Jibas gave Missouri Western the lead on a sac fly and Casey Danley’s two-run triple added insurance. MWSU added runs with the next three batters to continue to pull away from the Ichabods.

Nate Hunter came out of the bullpen and picked up his second win of the series. Hunter tossed 3 2/3 innings and allowed just two hits.

NOTABLES
– Six different Griffon recorded two or more hits in the win

– Missouri Western pitchers combined for seven strikeouts and just one earned run

– Casey Danley and Nick Schranck combined for seven RBIs, five hits and three runs scored

– Nolan Meyer was 2-for-4 at the plate with two RBIs and a run scored

– Danley and Meyer both tripled in the seventh inning

– 12 runs is the most scored by MWSU since Feb. 4 when it won 13-7 at Harding University

UP NEXT
Missouri Western travels to Southwest Baptist in Bolivar, Missouri for a three-game series beginning on Friday, March 16.

— MWSU Athletics —

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