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Chiefs sign running backs West, Ware to contract extensions

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs signed Charcandrick West to a three-year extension and fellow running back Spencer Ware to a two-year extension Thursday, solidifying their backfield alongside Jamaal Charles.

West and Spencer proved to be a potent change-of-pace duo when Charles went down with a season-ending ACL injury last season. Charles is expected to be ready for the start of the upcoming season, but locking up West and Ware will help take some of the load off the two-time All-Pro.

It also makes running back Knile Davis a potential trade piece.

The quick, elusive West started nine games and ran for 634 yards and four touchdowns last season, while the more physical Ware started two games and ran for 403 yards and six touchdowns.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks’ Bill Self named AP National Coach of the Year

riggertKUHOUSTON – One day after being named the national coach of the year by his peers, Kansas’ Bill Self earned the same honor by the national media as he was selected the 2015-16 Associated Press Coach of the Year, the AP announced Thursday.

Self received his AP Coach of the Year trophy in a ceremony at NRG Stadium, site of the Final Four in Houston. At the same time, the AP also announced its national player of the year, that being Denzel Valentine of Michigan State. Voted on by the panel of media who vote on the weekly Associated Press poll, this is the second time Self has earned the AP accolade, also earning the distinction following the 2008-09 season.

The AP honor is the fourth organization to name Self its 2015-16 national coach of the year as the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) named him Wednesday and the USA Today and Bleacher Report did the same earlier this month.

Under Self, No. 1 Kansas (33-5, 15-3) won its 12th-straight, 16th Big 12 and NCAA-leading 59th overall regular season title in 2015-16. Kansas also won the Big 12 Postseason Championship, the 2015 Maui Invitational in 2015-16 and advanced to the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight for the sixth time in his 13 seasons at KU.

Kansas’ 33 wins marked the ninth time in school history the Jayhawks have won 33 or more games, including five seasons under Self. Its 12-straight conference titles rank second all-time in NCAA history trailing only UCLA’s 13-straight from 1967-79 under multiple coaches.

Kansas finished No. 1 in the 2015-16 Associated Press poll and holds that spot in the latest USA Today Coaches’ poll released March 14. KU was ranked No. 1 five times by AP and four times by the coaches in 2015-16. Kansas has been ranked seventh or higher in every poll this season.

The Jayhawks posted two winning streaks of 13 games or more in 2015-16: 13 from Nov. 23-Jan. 9, and 17 from Jan. 30-March 26. Additionally, Kansas went 12-4 against nationally-ranked teams in 2015-16, including 4-1 versus top-10 teams. The 12 wins against ranked foes are the most in a season in KU history.

Kansas holds the No. 1 RPI and No. 1 toughest schedule (through games of 3/27), while the Big 12 Conference has the No. 1 RPI among all leagues, in 2015-16.

In 13 seasons at Kansas, Self is 385-83 (82.3 percent) for an average of 29.6 wins per year. Overall, Self is 592-188 (76.0 percent) in 23 seasons as a head coach which has included stints at Oral Roberts (1994-97), Tulsa (1998-2000) and Illinois (2001-03) before coming to Kansas in 2004.

— KU Athletics —

Former LeBlond coach Steve Vertin to be inducted into MBCA Hall of Fame

BishopLeBlond2St. Joseph, Mo. – The Missouri Basketball Coaches Association (MBCA) announced that longtime Missouri and Nebraska high school basketball coach Steve Vertin will be inducted into the MBCA Hall of Fame on Saturday, April 16 in Springfield Missouri.

Vertin was the 2008 St. Joseph Sports Inc., coach of the year, and finished his 13-year LeBlond coaching tenure in 2012 with a 198-126 record. He led the Eagles to three district titles, including a fourth-place Class 2A finish in 2002 and a Class 3 quarterfinal appearance in 2008 where the Eagles lost to Hogan Prep. Vertin’s teams were known for stingy defense running a patented 1-3-1 zone. He has served as an assistant basketball coach at Benton and Savannah High Schools the past four years.

Vertin’s coaching career spans nearly 45 seasons, including successful stints at three Nebraska High Schools prior to arriving at LeBlond. He teaches social studies and is the dean of students at Bishop LeBlond. Vertin is one of 12 inductees this year.

— Bishop LeBlond Press Release —

Missouri Western moves into the NFCA Top 25 softball poll at No. 22

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western softball team is back in the top 25 as the Griffons (26-10, 11-3) sit at No. 22 in the latest edition of the NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll.

The Griffons began the season at No. 16 in the preseason poll, but dropped out after a 2-2 opening weekend. Missouri Western is 16-4 in its last 20 games, including a doubleheader split at then No. 16 Northwest Missouri State on Tuesday. The run has also included a doubleheader sweep of then No. 12 Central Oklahoma, a doubleheader sweep at 2015 MIAA Champion Central Missouri and win over current No. 17 Winona State.

Missouri Western is now the only MIAA school ranked in the top-25. Northwest Missouri dropped out this week, but is still receiving votes along with MIAA leading Pittsburg State. The Griffons are in second place in the conference standings. This weekend the team hosts Fort Hays State (13-20, 7-9) on Saturday and Nebraska-Kearney (14-20, 5-11) on Sunday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Scheel officially introduced as Northwest women’s basketball coach

NWMSUBy David Boyce, Northwest Athletics

MARYVILLE, Mo. – During workouts and conditioning this spring and summer, sophomore Tanya Meyer and freshman Macy Williams realize there will be moments they will be tired and need a break.

But they will look back on games like their next to last one in which they lost 69-63 to Emporia State, and know if they could have made one more play, dove for and retrieved one more loose ball, perhaps the outcome would have been different.

“What if we didn’t take one of those possessions off, how many of those close games we could have won if we would have worked much harder and hustled harder to a loose ball,” Meyer said. “During the offseason, as we are working out, we know we have to push ourselves that much harder than we have in the past.”

The desire to get better comes from new head coach Buck Scheel, who officially became Northwest Missouri State’s eighth women’s basketball coach on March 22.

In his introductory press conference Tuesday at the Student Union, Scheel, who has been guiding the Bearcats since mid December, stressed that individual improvement from each player will lead to a better a team.

“A lot of that will start with the returners. We have to commit to more individual improvement first,” Scheel said. “I feel when you really commit yourself individually to bettering your talents, then that can come together as a team.”

Scheel has the personality and the demeanor to get the players to push themselves to get better. Athletic director Mel Tjeerdsma saw that when Scheel moved from assistant coach to interim head coach in December.

The Bearcats had just lost by 46 points at Central Missouri. The season was off to a rough start, and it became obvious that many of the players were not having fun playing basketball and even though that still had pride in representing Northwest.

The first game Scheel coached, Northwest nearly pulled off an upset at Missouri Southern, losing by five points.

And in the final two road games before Christmas break, the Bearcats suffered just a two-point loss and a four-point loss.

“He created an atmosphere of respect,” Tjeerdsma said. “The players became a lot more productive, and most important, they enjoyed the game.”

In order to get better, you have to enjoy the game because the process of improving to be competitive in one of the toughest conferences in NCAA Division II is going to be difficult.

There will be many days when muscles ache. Players need to have respect for the coach to push through those tough days when workouts are extremely difficult.

Scheel developed that with his players in his three months as the interim head coach.

“I think we really progressed as a team since he took over last season,” Williams said. “I am really excited to see what we can do next season. He got some really good traits out of us that we probably didn’t know we had. I think he is really going to expand on that.

“I think the biggest thing is taking that drive we had from those close games. We had conditioning this morning and that was the thing that went through my head, we let so many close games slip away.”

Scheel saw how the players responded to his coaching and that caused him to want to be their head coach even more.

“Having two close games right before break told me that I really think I can get this team to buy into each other, buy into me and we can go out and compete,” Scheel said.

“After those two games and after the Christmas break, I had time to sit down and take it all in and it pushed me even more to try to get this team on the right track.”

Meyer recognizes that workouts will be hard. Northwest has missed the MIAA Tournament the last two seasons. The Bearcats want to do more than just make the tournament.

“He will push us to our limits and probably past them to see what we have because he knows we have a lot of potential,” Meyer said.

Indeed. Despite losing three important seniors in Tember Schechinger, Shelby Mustain and Taylor Shull, Northwest has a number of young players who showed flashes that they can compete with the best in the MIAA.

Over the next few weeks, Scheel will be searching for an assistant coach and several recruits to replace the departing seniors.

But the success of next season will depend on how much time and effort the returning players put in during the offseason to get better. Scheel is confident he has a group of players willing to do it.

“I will continue to drive these student-athletes to be successful academically, athletically and socially during their time in the Northwest women’s basketball program,” Scheel said. “I am excited to work with the returning players and the recruits that will be added later on.

“I look forward to building a program that will provide a source of energy, excitement and pride for the Northwest community.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Kansas’ Brannen Greene declares for 2016 NBA Draft

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. – Following a three-year college career, Kansas men’s basketball guard Brannen Greene has declared for the 2016 NBA Draft and will be leaving KU, Greene and head coach Bill Self announced Wednesday.

“Brannen has elected to declare for the NBA draft with the intent of hiring an agent at some point,” Self said. “I certainly understand Brannen making this decision. We wish him nothing but the very best. He has an NBA skill that I think will translate very well to the next level. We appreciate his efforts during his time at Kansas.”

Greene added, “After talking with my family, weighing the options, and talking with the coaching staff, I feel like it is the best decision for me moving forward to take my talents to play professionally.

“I want to thank my teammates for all the great times we had and all the battles we went through together. I want to thank the coaches for taking the time to work with me throughout my three years. I definitely want to thank the fans. Running out to 16,000 every night, that won’t be replaced at all in any way. I want to thank the fans and everybody I met across the campus for their support.”

A 6-foot-7 Juliette, Georgia native, Greene shot 49.2 percent from 3-point range in 2015-16. He scored a season-high 18 points on 6-of-6 shooting, 5-of-5 from 3-point range, in the season opener against Northern Colorado. A 3-point specialist, Greene had eight games this season where he made multiple treys for the Jayhawks. Of his 44 field goals made, 31 were from 3-point range for 70.5 percent. Greene averaged 5.4 points and 2.1 rebounds per game while pulling down four or more boards 10 times his junior season.

“Brannen is talented and very competitive,” Self said. “This combination should allow him to play professionally for many years to come.”

Greene played in 93 games while at Kansas with three starts. He scored a career-high 19 points in Kansas’ win at Georgetown on Dec. 10, 2014, which included a 5-for-5 effort from beyond the arc. For his career, Greene shot 42.2 percent from 3-point range (81-192) and 87.2 percent from the free throw line (102-117). Included were consecutive free throws made streaks of 21 his sophomore season and 20 in 2015-16.

“It was definitely a big-time high for me when I hit a three in Allen Fieldhouse,” Greene said. “Just to see how the crowd reacted and I had a signature three fingers to the head and everybody ran with that. It was fun being in the Fieldhouse. It gave me a ton of energy every time I played there as it did all of my teammates.”

While at Kansas, Greene won three Big 12 regular-season titles (2014, 2015, 2016), one Big 12 Championship (2016) and advanced to the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight in 2015-16. Additionally, he was part of two undefeated seasons in games played in Allen Fieldhouse going 45-1 in the venue.

— KU Athletics —

Kansas City loses final game in Surprise to Rangers

riggertRoyalsSURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — Cole Hamels pitched five solid innings in his final spring start, and the Texas Rangers beat the Kansas City Royals 5-1 on Wednesday.

Hamels, who is slated to start on opening day Monday against Seattle, allowed one run and two hits. The left-hander struck out five and walked none.

“What I was trying to accomplish in spring, I feel pretty good and confident what I was able to do especially today,” Hamels said. “It was getting that four-seam fastball in the bottom half of the zone and get the groundouts. I wanted to establish early contact. It’s nice to at least have some quick innings.”

Royals starter Ian Kennedy was led off the field by trainer Nick Kenney while making warmup tosses in the fourth inning. The preliminary diagnosis was left hamstring tightness.

Kennedy, who signed a $70 million, five-year contract in January, was on the disabled list last April with the San Diego Padres with a left hamstring injury.

“It’s slight. We were just being more precaution than anything right now,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He felt some tightness and a little bit of cramping in his leg. We said let’s get him out and see where we are the next day or two, but we don’t think it’s very serious. He caught a spike the inning before and felt it a little bit.”

Delino DeShields tripled twice and scored two runs for Texas.

“If it’s in the gap or down the line, just automatically I’m thinking triples,” he said. I’m just an aggressive runner. I don’t want to pull up at second base. I want to be on third base.”

STARTING TIME

Royals: Kennedy allowed two runs and three hits. He struck out four and walked none.

The right-hander, who struck out the side in the third, is penciled in to start the second game of the season on Tuesday against the Mets, but that could be in jeopardy with the tight hamstring.

“We’re going to wait and see how it feels tomorrow and the next day,” Yost said. “But as of right now (he’ll start). We’re going to see where he’s at. We’ve got 48 hours to make a decision if we want to adjust (Yordano) Ventura’s load or Chris Young’s.”

Ventura is scheduled to start the final exhibition game Saturday and pitch the third game of the season, April 8 against the Twins.

Kennedy said it is not as bad as the hamstring injury that put him on the disabled list last year.

“Last time, I would feel it when I walked,” Kennedy said. “This time, I don’t. It’s not even close to how I did it before. But it’s not right to push it in my last spring training game.”

Rangers: Hamels, who lowered his ERA from 10.38 to 5.79, threw 73 pitches in three innings in his previous start against the Padres. He was much more efficient against the Royals, throwing 61 pitches.

“When you get into the season, you need to have confidence you can throw certain pitches at certain times, how to get guys out and everything kinda changes when the season (begins),” Hamels said. “When the game is really on the line, you have a little bit more adrenaline, things just kind of completely flip. You just have to stay under control, just be confident in what you have and what you’re going to go out there with.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: OF Jarrod Dyson (strained oblique) will travel with the club to Kansas City to complete his rehab. He is hitting in the cages and remains optimistic he could be activated in mid-April.

Rangers: OF Josh Hamilton (left knee soreness) has had no setbacks, but the club adjusted his timetable to return from May 1 to closer to mid-May. Hamilton will go back to Texas for the opening series before returning to Arizona to rev up his baseball activities.

UP NEXT

Royals: After an off day Thursday, the Royals will use RHP Chien-Ming Wang on Friday against the Diamondbacks at Chase Field.

Rangers: RHP Colby Lewis will start Friday against the Indians in Arlington. The Rangers are off Thursday.

— Associated Press —

Wacha goes five scoreless innings in Cards’ win over Marlins

riggertCardinalsJUPITER, Fla. (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals employed the same formula they used to win 100 games last season — good starting pitching, enough timely hitting and Trevor Rosenthal closing out the game — to defeat the Miami Marlins 3-0 on Wednesday in both teams’ final game at the spring training complex they share.

Michael Wacha ended a tough spring with by far his best outing, tossing five shutout innings of two-hit ball.

“This was definitely a step in the right direction,” said Wacha, who went 17-7 with a 3.38 ERA last year. “I know how important it is to build off today, but everything felt in sync and ready to go.”

Rosenthal struck out two as part of a perfect ninth to record his first save of the spring.

Matt Holliday smacked a two-run double into the left-center field gap off Edwin Jackson with two outs in the fifth, giving St. Louis a 3-0 lead. Holiday has a single, double, home run and walk over his last five plate appearances.

The Cardinals opened the scoring in the fourth with Yadier Molina’s first RBI of the spring, a two-out single punched off the glove of diving Marlins second baseman Dee Gordon and into right field.

The run came off Marlins closer A.J. Ramos, who allowed two hits, walked two more batters and tossed a wild pitch before being lifted for reliever Cody Ege with two outs and the bases loaded.

“He was a little erratic with control, but for the most part the hits he gave up were something you can’t really control,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said.

WALDEN WORRIES

St. Louis reliever Jordan Walden didn’t pass his final test of the spring. After working a scoreless sixth inning, Walden returned to the dugout and informed manager Mike Matheny that the shoulder soreness that plagued him late in spring and forced him to miss most of last season was once again present. “Something didn’t feel right and we’re going to have to get him looked at again, so it doesn’t look like he’s going to be able to make our (opening day) roster,” Matheny said. A Walden absence opens a spot for Rule 5 selection Matt Bowman to start the season in the Cardinals’ bullpen.

DODGERS’ ROTATION SET

Mattingly announced that Adam Conley will start the third game of the season, Tom Koehler the fourth and Jarred Cosart the fifth.

STARTING TIME

Cardinals: Wacha entered the game having allowed eight earned runs in 12 2/3 innings. He was dialed in on Wednesday, throwing 35 of 55 pitches for strikes.

Marlins: Destined for Miami’s bullpen, David Phelps made the most of what could be his final start of the year, working three perfect innings while striking out six.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: Catcher Brayan Pena dealt with some minor ailments during the spring, but is physically ready to begin the season. “Pena came in great today and could have started,” Matheny said.

Marlins: Aside from losing reliever Carter Capps to a season-ending elbow injury, Miami’s trainer’s room has been reasonably quiet.

“We’re, knock on wood, fairly healthy walking out of here so our injury report hasn’t been stacking up every day or anything like that — it’s been pretty minimal,” Mattingly said.

UP NEXT:

Cardinals: St. Louis heads to Tampa to play the New York Yankees on Thursday in the Cardinals’ final Grapefruit League game. Mike Leake gets the ball for the Cardinals against Michael Pineda.

Marlins: Miami is off on Thursday. Jose Fernandez will make his final spring start on Friday when the Marlins begin a two-game exhibition series at Marlins Park against the Yankees.

— Associated Press —

Griffons upset No. 10 Emporia State for sixth straight win

riggertMissouriWesternEMPORIA, Kan. – The Missouri Western baseball team stayed hot Tuesday, clinching the season series with Emporia State with an 8-1 win over the No. 10 Hornets.

Missouri Western (20-8, 12-5) won its sixth straight and 14th in the last 16 with 11 hits and solid pitching. Weston Caindec picked up the win, going six innings and holding Emporia State (21-7, 13-4) to one run in six innings of work. The Griffons jumped out to a 3-0 lead after three before Caindec allowed his first run in the fourth. His offense picked him up with two more in the sixth.

Western held a 7-1 lead when Conner Schwienebart entered in the bottom of the seventh. He limited the Hornets to one hit in two innings of relief. Preston Bailey was perfect in the ninth, retiring the side in order with one strikeout.

Jeremy Alvarado went 2-4 at the plate with two RBIs, a home run and two runs scored. Ozzie Rodriguez was 2-3 with a pair of RBIs, two runs scored and a home run. David Glaude and Landon Mason also had two-hit game for Missouri Western.

The win moved the Griffons into sole possession of third place in the MIAA standings and gave Missouri Western two wins already over second place Emporia State. The two teams will complete the three-game series of Tuesday games on Apr. 6 in St. Joseph. Before that, Missouri Western hosts Lindenwood (11-13, 5-11) for three games this weekend beginning on Friday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Bearcats snap four-game skid with victory over UNK

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University baseball team picked up a 6-1 MIAA victory over Nebraska-Kearney on Tuesday at Bearcat Field in Maryville, Mo.

Northwest improved to 14-13 overall while Nebraska-Kearney falls to 12-14. Both teams now have identical 9-8 MIAA records.

James Holler had four RBI, going 3-for-4 with three doubles. He scored two runs and was also hit by a pitch.

Anthony Caenepeel struck out a career-high 13 batters in 8.0 innings. His only two walks of the game came in the ninth inning. He allowed just one run on six hits.

The Bearcats will host Pittsburg State in a three game series starting on Friday, April 1, at 3 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

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