We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Mizzou lets another halftime lead slip away in 71-66 loss at Georgia

riggertMissouriATHENS, Ga. (AP) — A tussle between assistant coaches that took place as the first half ended Saturday appeared to be a big factor in Georgia’s strong second-half performance as the Bulldogs defeated Missouri 71-66 in Southeastern Conference play.

Georgia trailed the Tigers 26-20 at halftime, but had runs of 11-2 and 12-0 to outscore Missouri by 11 points in the final 20 minutes.

Neither Georgia coach Mark Fox nor Missouri coach Kim Anderson had a lot to say about the brief scuffle under the Missouri basket, although Anderson said the Bulldogs’ fans played a key role in Georgia’s resurgence.

“I didn’t see what started it and I tried to get in and . calm people down,” Anderson said. “In the second half, we knew they’d make a run, which they did. I’m sure the run was fueled by what happened at the end of the first half. The crowd was great, but we withstood it and fought back. It tells me a lot about these guys.”

All Fox would offer was praise for the crowd of 8,600 at Stegeman Coliseum.

“Guys got tied up with the ball, but until I see the tape I won’t (say anything),” he said. “. Our crowd certainly lifted our team today.”

Yante Maten scored 17 points and pulled down nine rebounds to lead the Bulldogs (10-5, 2-1), who also got 16 points and four assists from J.J. Frazier, 12 points and five rebounds from Pape Diatta, and 11 points and six rebounds from Juwan Parker.

“There was a lot of energy in the building, on our team, the coaching staff, everywhere,” Maten said. “It wasn’t hard to really find energy to play the game. Sometimes you got to get yourself riled up, but everybody was really riled up at that point during the second half.”

Frazier, who averages 16 points a game for Georgia, tallied 14 points in the second half.

Terrence Phillips scored 20 points, Jordan Barnett had 15, and K.J. Walton added 13 for Missouri (5-9, 0-2).

Georgia made 21 of 46 field goals (46 percent) while the Tigers made 25 of 72 shot attempts (35 percent), and won the rebound battle 44-35, the 12th time in 15 games the Bulldogs have owned the glass this season.

Georgia won for the fifth time in its last seven games. Missouri has lost six straight and six in a row to Georgia. Their last victory over the Bulldogs came on Jan. 15, 2013, when they won 79-62 in Columbia.

Georgia’s disappointing first half included 12 turnovers (which Missouri turned into 14 points) but the Bulldogs — especially Frazier — came out energized for the final 20 minutes. Frazier blamed himself for Georgia’s 67-61 loss on Wednesday against South Carolina and took only two shots in the first half.

“I took care of the ball better,” said Frazier, who had four turnovers against South Carolina but only two against Missouri. “I don’t really care about how many shots I make or miss, but I have to be able to get our team in position to make plays, and if I turn the ball over that’s less possessions for my teammates to possibly score or make a play. Against South Carolina I turned the ball over at crucial times and that’s what hurt us.”

Georgia scored first in the game at the 18:50 mark on a free throw by Maten and the Bulldogs didn’t regain the lead until the 17:33 mark of the second half when Frazier connected on two free throws to go ahead 29-28.

Missouri fought back and took a 52-51 advantage with 7:20 remaining on a free throw by Walton, but the Bulldogs outscored the Tigers 20-41 in the final minutes of play as Diatta hit three free throws in the final seconds to ice the game.

BIG PICTURE

Georgia: The Bulldogs bounced back from their six-point SEC loss to South Carolina earlier in the week to post a 2-1 mark in the conference.

Missouri: the Tigers’ woes away from home continue as Missouri is 1/3 at neutral sites and 0-1 on the road.

SEEING DOUBLE

With 17 points, Yante Maten posted his 14th double-figure scoring outing of the season and the 49th of his career. J.J. Frazier had his 13th double-digit game of the season and 58th of his career, and Derek Ogbeide recorded 11 rebounds, the third time this season he’s had double-figure rebounds.

OH, MY PAPE

Georgia’s Pape Diatta came off the bench to post a career-high 12 points and 27 minutes on Saturday. His previous best scoring performance was nine points, which came on Nov. 25 in a 77-59 victory over Gardner-Webb.

SHOOTING THREES

Georgia and Missouri teamed to toss up 49 3-pointers on Saturday. The Bulldogs made 2 of 13 trey attempts while the Tigers made six of 36 3-point tries.

“We can’t shoot 36 3s,” Missouri coach Kim Anderson said. “I thought at times we settled a little bit. Both of us were playing a lot of zone and there were a lot of open shots. They didn’t make very many 3s either.”

BAD START, BETTER FINISH

With 20 first-half points, Georgia turned in a season low for offense in the first 20 minutes. The previous low was 27 points against Georgia Tech on Dec. 20. But the Bulldogs came back with 51 second-half points, their second-best performance after collecting 53 points on Dec. 29 at Auburn.

BENCH BATTLE

Led in no small part by Terrence Phillips’ 20 points off the bench, Missouri’s substitutes scored 22 points to Georgia’s 20. Frankie Hughes added two points for the Tigers while Georgia’s subs were paced by Pape Diatta’s 12 points. Turtle Jackson and Houston Kessler added three points each for the Bulldogs.

UP NEXT

The Bulldogs’ two-game home stand comes to an end, with Georgia on the road Wednesday at Ole Miss and on Saturday at No. 24 Florida.

The Tigers will host Auburn Tuesday before back-to-back road games at Arkansas (Jan. 14) and Alabama (Jan. 18).

— Associated Press —

Mason, Graham lead No. 3 Kansas past Texas Tech

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Frank Mason III scored 26 points, Devonte Graham added a season-high 20 and No. 3 Kansas used a big second-half run to put away Texas Tech, 85-68 on Saturday night.

Josh Jackson had 17 points and Mason provided the spark for a 12-0 run that turned a five-point game into a rout, allowing the Jayhawks to remain perfect in 17 tries against Texas Tech at home.

The Jayhawks (14-1, 3-0 Big 12) also pushed their home winning streak to a nation-leading 51 games.

Aaron Ross and Zach Smith had 17 points each as the Red Raiders (12-3, 1-2) lost their 15th straight to the Jayhawks overall. Keenan Evans scored 15.

Texas Tech gave Kansas a tussle until a frustrating final minute of the first half.

It was 30-27 and the Red Raiders had the ball when Jackson picked off a pass and took it coast-to-coast for a dunk. Then, Mason intercepted a pass and went the other way, only to get fouled on the way to the rim. A pushing match ensued and Anthony Livingston was called for a technical foul.

By the time Mason made three of four foul shots, and Landen Lucas scored at the buzzer, a five-point trip down the floor had given the Jayhawks a 37-27 advantage at the break.

Texas Tech, one of the best perimeter shooting teams in the league, tried to fight its way back by hitting just about everything from beyond the arc in the second half.

Kansas countered with a parade of free throws.

It was two foul shots by Mason with the Jayhawks leading 60-55 and eight minutes to go that started the game-deciding 12-0 run. Mason added another basket and a 3-pointer, and Lucas flushed an alley-oop dunk, as the Jayhawks coasted from there to program win No. 2,200.

WHAT A RUSH

Three-time All-Big 12 guard Brandon Rush will have his jersey retired by the Jayhawks at halftime of their game against TCU on Feb. 22. Rush led the program to three league titles and the 2008 national championship before embarking on an NBA career that included the 2015 crown with Golden State.

TRANSFER DECIDES

Arizona State guard Sam Cunliffe announced Saturday he’ll transfer to Kansas. The former four-star prospect averaged 9.5 points while starting 10 games for the Sun Devils this season. He expects to arrive in Lawrence next week and can be eligible for the second semester next season.

BIG PICTURE

The lack of an inside presence for Texas Tech proved to be the difference. When the Red Raiders went cold from outside the arc in the second half, the Jayhawks were able to keep pounding away in the paint.

Kansas coach Bill Self said earlier in the week this was the “poorest” defensive team he’s ever had in Lawrence. Well, the Jayhawks kept the Red Raiders in check at the end.

UP NEXT

Texas Tech hosts Kansas State on Tuesday night.

Kansas visits Oklahoma on Tuesday night.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State uses hot first half to upend Oklahoma 75-64

riggertKansasStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State came close to upsetting in-state rival Kansas earlier this week. That anger and frustration of not pulling off the upset was used as fuel to push the Wildcats into Saturday’s matchup with Oklahoma.

Wesley Iwundu led a balanced attack with 16 points and Kansas State used a strong first half to defeat the Sooners 75-64.

Barry Brown added 14 points, Kamau Stokes 13, Dean Wade 12 and D.J. Johnson 10 for the Wildcats (13-2, 2-1 Big 12).

“I thought they were great,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “I told them to come out angry, I said guard the heck out of them, push and share the ball.”

Kansas State started out fast, opening a 14-3 lead and building it to 43-27 at the half on 54 percent shooting (15 of 28) as Stokes scored 13 and Wade 10. The pair combined to go 5 of 6 on 3-pointers.

“I thought Kansas State opened the ballgame well, they obviously played sharp and set the tone.” Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger, a former player at coach at K-State, said.

The Sooners, who shot 38 percent in the first half, shot 68 percent (15 of 22) in the second, got within six midway through the half but could get no closer.

“We just tried to fight, compete and come back. We tried to do whatever it takes to do that,” Oklahoma’s Rashard Odomes said.

Kameron McGusty came off the bench to score 20 points for Oklahoma (6-8, 0-3), which lost its sixth straight.

Although the Sooners are in the middle of a lengthy losing streak, they remain optimistic about breaking through and getting that elusive conference win.

“Each game we come out confident,” Odomes said. “I feel like we have confident players that are working to try and get it done. Game after game we try to improve.”

BIG PICTURE

Oklahoma: The loss is the fifth-straight in Manhattan, dating back to 2012.

Kansas State: The win was the 250th in Bramlage Coliseum.

STAT OF THE NIGHT

Oklahoma’s turnovers quickly became Kansas State points as the Wildcats scored 18 points off of Oklahoma miscues. Oklahoma also turned Kansas State points into double digit scores as they cashed in 13 points off of Kansas State turnovers.

UP NEXT

Oklahoma: The Sooners host No.3 ranked Kansas on Tuesday.

Kansas State: The Wildcats are at Texas Tech on Tuesday.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women suffer eighth straight loss as they fall to No. 6 Pitt State

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State’s women’s basketball team gave up the first 10 points to Pittsburg State and that was too many against the sixth-ranked team in the country.

The Bearcats spent the rest of the game trying to erase the early, 10-point deficit and never quite made it, falling 80-54 Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena.

“That wasn’t the team I coached last Thursday and it wasn’t the team I coached in practice yesterday. But it was the team at shoot around this morning,” Northwest coach Buck Scheel said. “We were very low energy and not dialed in, and that is unacceptable.

“After we played a tough game and really competed on Thursday night, we come in Saturday against a team like Pitt State and had nothing to lose, but you can’t just walk out on the floor.”

Once again, there were several bright spots for Northwest in its comeback attempt in the first half. A three-pointer by Macy Williams midway through the first quarter closed the gap to 10-6.

Later in the first quarter, Arbrie Benson made several drives for layups. Her last one in the first quarter made it 15-10 and prompted Pitt State coach Lane Lord to call timeout.

In the second quarter, Carlie Wilhelmi got hot, making three field goals in a 2-minute span. Her third one sliced a double-digit deficit back to single digits at 27-18.

Unfortunately, Northwest gave up the last six points in the second quarter and went into halftime trailing 35-20.

Even though Pitt State extended its lead in the second half, Northwest kept battling. Williams made aggressive drives to the basket and scored 18 points in the second half. She finished with 23.

“Tonight, I thought Macy Williams was the only one out there for the majority of the game that didn’t want to lose,” Scheel said. “You could just tell by how aggressive she was being. “She was out there ready to fight.”

Junior Caitlin Sudduth had her best half in a Bearcat uniform, scoring six points.

Pitt State, though, was too strong in the paint. Every time Northwest generated some momentum, the Gorillas came down and scored a layup.

“You got to be able to make those adjustments, and handle adversity,” Scheel said. “We have some kids who handle adversity well, and we have some kids who don’t handle adversity well.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri State falls at home to Southern Illinois

riggertMSUSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Mike Rodriguez scored 22 points and Southern Illinois pulled away over the final 10 minutes for a 75-67 victory over Missouri State on Saturday for its third straight win.

Rodriguez hit 7 of 8 shots and all three of his 3-pointers. Thik Bol finished with 11 points and nine rebounds, while Sean O’Brien and Sean Lloyd each added 10 points for the Salukis (10-7, 3-1 Missouri Valley).

Missouri State (11-6, 2-2) outshot Southern Illinois 49-42 percent, but the Salukis hit two 3-pointers and held a 10-point advantage at the foul line (20-10).

A Jarred Dixon 3 for the Bears cut the Southern Illinois lead to 48-46 with 9:24 left. But the Salukis responded by scoring seven of the next nine to regain some breathing room. A Rodriguez layup with 1:42 left made it 68-56, and the Bears were finally put to rest.

Dixon and Dequon Miller each scored 15 points for Missouri State.

— Associated Press —

Freshman helps No. 25 Kansas State women beat Texas Tech

riggertKansasStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Freshman Eternati Willock scored nine of her season-high 13 points in the first half when No. 25 Kansas State took a 10-point lead and the Wildcats beat Texas Tech 68-54 on Saturday night.

Willock was 5-of-11 shooting with eight rebounds in 26 minutes off the bench. Kindred Wesemann added 11 points with Peyton Williams, Kaylee Page and Breanna Lewis adding 10 each, along with 11 rebounds from Lewis.

Page gave Kansas State a 23-20 lead with a layup and 3-pointer in the second quarter and the Wildcats finished the half on a seven-point run. The lead fluctuated between seven and 10 points until the Wildcats used a 5-0 spurt for a 13-point edge with 6 1/2 minutes left, a double-figure lead they would extend to 16 in the final minute.

Arella Guirantes scored 10 points to lead the Lady Raiders (10-5, 2-2).

— Associated Press —

Royals trade Jarrod Dyson to Seattle for RHP Nathan Karns

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals were interested in Seattle right-hander Nathan Karns going back to the winter meetings, but the Mariners were reluctant to give up a power arm under club control through 2020.

That changed on Friday.

After the Mariners traded outfielder Seth Smith to the Baltimore Orioles for veteran right-hander Yovani Gallardo, the idea of shipping Karns away became a bit more palatable. So, the Royals and Mariners were able to reach a deal that sent him to Kansas City for outfielder Jarrod Dyson.

Kansas City got the starting rotation help is so desperately needed.

The Mariners got the speed they sought on the base paths.

“As so often times is the case, once teams know there is a mutual interest in a player — in their case Jarrod, in our case Nate — we just stayed in touch and the timing was right,” Royals general manager Dayton Moore said. “The deal was obviously attractive for us.”

Kansas City has been trying to acquire help for the starting rotation, its biggest weakness most of last year. Stalwart right-hander Edinson Volquez departed in free agency and aging right-hander Chris Young struggled so mightily last season he was busted to the bullpen.

That could be the final destination for Karns, too. But the power right-hander will at least get a shot at the rotation, where the 29-year-old made 15 starts and finished 6-2 with a 5.15 ERA last season.

He missed the final two months with a back strain that landed him on the disabled list in late July, but Moore said Mariners GM Jerry Dipoto and the Royals’ own training staff believe he’s fully recovered.

“He’s been working out this offseason with no restrictions,” Moore said. “Our scouts have done their due diligence. We’re comfortable. We’ve been in touch with where he’s been doing part of his physical therapy down in Dallas, I believe, and we’re comfortable with where he is.”

Meanwhile, the addition of Dyson gives Seattle one of the quickest outfields in baseball.

Dipoto said he envisions Dyson in left field, Leonys Martin in center field and Mitch Haniger in right field, with Ben Gamel and Guillermo Heredia competing for playing time. But Dipoto was excited about the potential run protection and flexibility that Seattle’s outfield will have this season.

“We feel we now have five legitimate center fielders,” he said.

Dyson, a former 50th-round draft pick, became a fan-favorite in Kansas City thanks primarily to his speed on the bases. He hit .278 while stealing 30 bases a year ago.

“We’ve had many conversations about Dyson specifically,” Dipoto said, “and what a good fit he was for our team. He’s an elite-level defender. He’s dynamic on the bases, a fearless base stealer. And the combination of Jarrod Dyson, Leonys Martin and Jean Segura hitting somewhere between the bottom and top of your lineup really creates a three-player dynamic on the bases for us that is probably different than the Mariners have had in a long time and perhaps most different than most teams in our league.”

Dyson became more expendable following the trade of closer Wade Davis to the Chicago Cubs for young outfielder Jorge Soler. Davis and Dyson are eligible for free agency after the season along with outfielder Lorenzo Cain, first baseman Eric Hosmer, third baseman Mike Moustakas, shortstop Alcides Escobar and left-hander Danny Duffy.

“What we need to do is continue to add players we control beyond 2017,” Moore said. “Pitching, as we know, is so important. Power pitching is hard to get. Power pitchers you can control is very hard to acquire, as well.”

Dipoto said Dyson solidifies the Mariners’ lineup, though more moves could happen with pitching.

“We would still like to add,” he said. “We still have the capacity to be creative in looking to add. There will be some limitations there but we’re still open to finding ways to get better if possible.”

— Associated Press —

Griffons stay winless in MIAA play with home loss to Pitt State

mwsuST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team is now the only winless team in the MIAA as they lost to Pittsburg State 70-53 Thursday inside the MWSU Fieldhouse.  The Griffons fall to 4-10 and they’re 0-5 in league play.

NOTABLES
– MWSU was able to cut the PSU lead to seven at the half but would not get any closer.

– The Griffons found life at the 14 minute mark in the second half, cutting the Gorilla lead from 20 to 11 with a 9-0 run.

– 53 points scored snaps Missouri Western’s three game streak of scoring 76 points or more in a game.

– Pittsburg State’s 30 made field goals ties the season high given up by MWSU this season.

– The Gorillas were just three of nine from the free-throw line, both season lows for a Missouri Western opponent.

TOP PERFORMERS
– Seth Bonifas tied a career high with 14 points, going five of eight from the field.

– Joe Hamilton grabbed seven rebounds, tying his season best.

– Jonathon Mesmacque went two of two from the three-point arc, his best percentage of the season.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western (4-10, 0-5) hosts Missouri Southern (10-4, 4-1) on Jan. 7 at 4 p.m. in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats roll past Southern in battle of top two MIAA teams

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

MARYVLLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State’s men’s basketball team took sole possession of first place in the MIAA with an efficient, yet beautiful brand of basketball Thursday evening at Bearcat Arena.

Tied at 4-0 in conference with Missouri Southern, the Bearcats bolted to an 18-point halftime lead and methodically increased it to 26 with 8 minutes left on the way to an impressive 90-68 victory.

Northwest, ranked No. 1 in the NABC top 25, improved to 13-0 overall and 5-0 in the MIAA. Southern dropped to 10-4 and 4-1.

“It is unbelievable,” said junior Xavier Kurth. “At the beginning of the season it is what we strive for to be first in the country. To be first place in conference right now is huge for us.”

The Bearcats played without starting guard Anthony Woods who was nursing an injury. It didn’t matter. Kurth replaced Woods in the lineup and turned in career-highs in points with 15 and rebounds with 13.

In all, five Bearcats scored in double figures, led by Justin Pitts’ 24 points.

Kurth exemplified the strength of Northwest. The Bearcats are a team that plays together regardless of who is on the court.

“He was awesome,” Northwest associate head coach Austin Meyer said. “The job he did defensively and his rebounding was huge. He made solid plays. We are happy for him. With Woods out, this was his chance to shine, and he was awesome tonight.”

Another example of that team trait occurred early in the second half when freshman forward Ryan Welty picked up his fourth foul. Welty scored 11 points in the first half and has quickly become a key component in the Bearcats’ attack.

When Welty left the game, Northwest’s lead had slipped to 52-38 and the offense was a just a little off. Instead of relying on the outside shot, the Bearcats started making cuts to the basket. Kurth scored a couple of layups to increase the lead to 58-40. Pitts followed with a layup to make it 60-40.

“A lot of what coach Mac (Ben McCollum) preaches is don’t do anything outside yourself,” Kurth said. “Do you, but do you a little bit better then you have before. That is what I tried to focus on tonight.”

Northwest kept attacking the basket and making layups, which prevented Southern from cutting into the lead.

“We knew they were going to deny our passes the whole game,” Meyer said. “We knew every pass was going to be tough. Anytime we make a pass, shorten the pass and take care of it. It kind of turned into a drive game and that was the plan.”

For the game, the Bearcats shot 55 percent from the field and showed one of the top teams in the MIAA that they can score just as easily inside as they can outside.

“We had some really good practices coming into this game,” Welty said. “We knew they were going to pressure us. We did a really good job of handling their pressure. Our defense was unbelievable. Chris-Ebou Ndow did a really great job on their point guard. It was a team effort.”

The Bearcats put together offensive stretches in the first half to build a 50-32 halftime lead that were simply scintillating. Northwest quickly raced to a 16-7 lead thanks to some daring drives to the baskets for layups from Pitts.

“Justin set the tempo early with all those easy baskets,” Meyer said. “We knew that was going to be available.”

The action really became fun to watch after the initial burst.

Welty dropped in a three-pointer to make it 19-10. Welty is currently making three-pointers appear as easy as layups. His first trey Thursday night gave him a MIAA-record 16 of straight made three-pointers.

“It is just a record, but I don’t really care about the record,” said Welty, who finished with 13 points. “I am here to win games and win national championships. That is all that matters to me.”

Meyer, who was once the standard bearer for three-point shooting at Northwest, is able to appreciate what Welty has already accomplished.

“It is unbelievable,” Meyer said. “We knew he was a shooter. He works at it.”

D’Vonte Mosby followed Welty’s three-pointer with a traditional three-point play grew Northwest’s lead to 22-10. Northwest added four more points to increase its lead to 26-10.

A little later in the first half, Northwest put together a play that truly demonstrated its unselfish play. Pitts drove by his man, passed to junior forward Brett Dougherty inside who then kicked it to Welty on the wing. Welty drained the three-pointer to make it 36-22.

The Bearcats went 20 for 34 from the field for 59 percent. They only had two turnovers while creating 10 turnovers for Southern.

— Northwest Athletics —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File