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Mizzou women defeat Ole Miss on Sunday 72-58

riggertMizzouColumbia, Mo. – The Missouri women’s basketball team took down Ole Miss on  Sunday, defeating the Rebels 72-58.  The Tigers move to 14-12 overall and 4-9 in SEC play. Several Tigers stood out in the game with three finishing in double figures, led by Morgan Eye who tallied 16 points and five rebounds.

Mizzou came out hot in the first half, scoring off the opening tip. The Tigers knocked down a bucket by sophomore Jordan Frericks followed by a three-pointer by sophomore Sierra Michaelis. The Tigers used a 10-0 run over a two-minute span in the first half to stretch their lead to 21-7. Mizzou found scoring from eight different players and were led by junior Maddie Stock and junior Michelle Hudyn with eight points, respectively.

The Mizzou defense held the Rebels to a 28.9 field goal percentage and forced six Ole Miss turnovers. Mizzou went into the locker room leading the Rebels, 38-25.

Stretching the lead to 18 points, the Tigers were firing on all cylinders in the second half. Mizzou continued to beat Ole Miss’s pressure on defense and distribute the ball well. The Tigers ended the game with 14 assists on 26 field goals. Despite Ole Miss’ 27 offensive rebounds in the game, the Tigers were able to hold the Rebels to just 15 second chance points, stifling any addition shots the Rebels could take.

Senior Morgan Eye continued on her quest to the NCAA statistical leader in three-pointers made, knocking down two treys and going 4-for-4 from the line, amassing a team-high 16 points. Sierra Michaelis was again an offensive weapon for Mizzou scoring another 15 points and grabbing seven rebounds. Junior Michelle Hudyn had a career-high 10 points in the contest and added another seven rebounds for the Tigers.

Mizzou found 32 of their 72 points in the paint and shot the ball efficiently throughout the game, ending the contest a 54.2 field goal percentage.

The Tigers are on the road for the next two games. They travel to Vanderbilt for a contest against the Commodores next Sunday (Feb. 22) at 1:00 p.m. and then go to Texas A&M on Feb. 26 for a 7:00 p.m. game.

— MU Sports Information —

Nebraska falls at Purdue for third straight loss

NebraskariggertWEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — For Purdue, Sunday’s first seven minutes comprised all the makings of what could have been a frustrating and unexpected home loss.

The Boilermakers made only one of their first eight field goal attempts and one of their first six free throws but trailed Nebraska only 8-3 in Mackey Arena when it really could have been much worse.

With Vince Edwards scoring 15 points and Kendall Stephens adding 12, Purdue finally got untracked and pulled away to a 66-54 Big Ten Conference victory.

Purdue (17-9, 9-4) pulled back into a second-place tie with 19th-ranked Maryland, each three games in the loss column behind No. 5 Wisconsin. The Boilermakers beat Nebraska (13-12, 5-8) for the fifth consecutive time in West Lafayette. Purdue improved to 6-1 in Big Ten home games, losing only to Maryland on Jan. 10.

“It has been a good lesson for our guys to hang in there when shots haven’t been going down,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “Sometimes when you struggle from the perimeter, it affects other parts of the game. For the most part in the last month, when we have struggled shooting the ball, we have hung in there.”

Nebraska coach Tim Miles acknowledged what might have been had his team not followed a good start with a 3-of-16 shooting drought.

“We make our first three buckets, and then we go on a long dry spell,” Miles said. “I was sitting there at halftime thinking that we had played good defense and they had missed 19 shots.”

At that point, Nebraska trailed 26-20, and Purdue had weathered the storm.

Purdue used a 10-2 run that began with 14:54 remaining to take a 48-32 lead with 12:19 to go. That burst included a three-point play from Edwards and a 3-pointer from Stephens.

After Nebraska countered with a 7-0 run, Stephens sank his fourth 3-pointer to give the Boilermakers a 51-39 advantage with 10:11 to go.

Isaac Haas and Rapheal Davis had layups that pushed the Purdue lead to 55-39 with 9:18 to go.

Nebraska closed within seven points with less than five minutes, but Dakota Mathias’ 3-pointer with 1:51 iced it for Purdue at 64-51. The freshman guard added 10 points.

“My teammates did a good job finding me when I really wanted to complement our big men,” said Edwards, who made 6 of 10 shots. “Most of the time, our big men were being doubled inside. Our bigs draw a lot of attention, so that can create opportunities. We had to knock down open shots, and we made those shots.”

Edwards, Stephens and Mathias were a collective 8 of 14 from 3-point range on a day when 7-footers Haas and A.J. Hammons were only a combined 3 of 9 from the field and 7 of 15 from the free-throw line for 13 points. Hammons had 12 rebounds, and Haas had four.

“Making those 3-point shots was huge,” said Stephens, who was 4 of 7 from beyond the arc. “They were really trapping Isaac and A.J. quickly.”

Purdue finished 8 of 21 from 3-point range, outscored Nebraska 18-7 from the free throw line and outrebounded the Cornhuskers 44-29.

Shavon Shields led the Cornhuskers with 19, and Terran Petteway added 13.

The Boilermakers took their first lead at 13-12 on a Davis layup at the 8:06 mark.

TIP-INS

Nebraska: The Cornhuskers have lost five of their last six. … Nebraska made its first three field-goal attempts on Sunday, then made only six of its final 26 opening-half shots. … Terran Petteway or Shavon Shields has led Nebraska’s scoring in 24 of 25 games this season.

Purdue: The Boilermakers have won six of seven, losing only at Minnesota. … In conference games, Purdue and Ohio State are the only teams to rank among the top four in field-goal percentage and field-goal percentage defense. … Purdue’s 17th victory is its most since the 2011-2012 team finished 22-13.

STAT LINES

Purdue had 18 offensive rebounds — 10 more than Nebraska — and enjoyed a 23-7 advantage in second chance points. … The Boilermakers got 19 points from their non-starters, 11 more than the Cornhuskers. … Four Purdue players — Hammons, Davis, Octeus and Edwards — combined for 32 rebounds. Nebraska finished with 29.

STAR POWER

Nebraska’s Petteway, who entered averaging a team-best 18.9 points, was held to 13 on 5-of-12 shooting, including only 1 of 6 from 3-point range. He also was guilty of four turnovers.

UP NEXT

Nebraska visits Maryland on Thursday night.

Purdue visits Indiana on Thursday night.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State loses at home to No. 13 Northern Iowa

riggertMissouriStateSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Four days after a season-high performance from 3-point range, Northern Iowa did it again.

Seth Tuttle scored 22 points and the No. 13 Panthers matched their season-high with 12 3-pointers to beat Missouri State 68-57 on Sunday. They also hit 12 3s against Illinois State on Wednesday.

Jeremy Morgan and Deon Mitchell each added 11 points for Northern Iowa (24-2, 13-1 Missouri Valley Conference). Camyn Boone had 14 points and six rebounds to lead Missouri State (9-17, 3-11 MVC).

A strong first-half was the difference for Northern Iowa. The Panthers shot 57 percent from the field (16 of 28) in the first-half, including nine of 14 from behind the arc. Northern Iowa had 14 assists and led 42-20 by halftime.

“We’re getting some pretty good looks,” Northern Iowa coach Ben Jacobson said. “We’ve got guys that are finding themselves with some really good looks. My message to the guys is that you’re going to go out and play really aggressive, and the guys are doing a good job.”

Tuttle made 10 of 12 shots on Sunday, including the first eight he took. He added four rebounds and three assists in 27 minutes.

“Seth is so unselfish and he’s got such a good feel that, no matter how he’s going to get defended . he makes everything work,” Jacobson said. “He could take more shots, but he doesn’t because he wants our team to have good offense. He wants our team to do well.”

The victory stretched Northern Iowa’s win streak to 13-games — the fifth-longest current streak in the nation. Missouri State lost for the 10th time in its last 11 games.

“We ran into a buzzsaw,” Missouri State coach Paul Lusk said. “I thought they came out and … stole our energy and stole our spirit and that’s what good teams do. We just didn’t have any answers. When they shoot it like that, they’re one of the best teams in the country.”

Tuttle scored 10 points in the first six minutes as Northern Iowa blitzed to a 16-4 lead. The Panthers made six of their first eight shots, including four of five from 3-point range.

The Panthers’ lead grew to 16 on a 3-pointer by Nate Buss midway through the half, prompting Missouri State coach Paul Lusk to burn his second timeout. It didn’t help. Back-to-back treys from Jeremy Morgan and Wyatt Lohaus stretched the Northern Iowa lead to 35-13 with 6:08 remaining. Seven different Panthers made 3’s in the first-half.

“We’ve been playing pretty good on the road,” Mitchell said. “Getting off to a good start, especially on the road today, is something that helps us.”

Missouri State rallied in the second half, closing the game on an 11-2 run that made the final margin closer than the game actually was. Despite his team’s lackluster finish, Jacobson wasn’t concerned.

“That’s more on me and what I’m talking about as opposed to what (our guys) are doing,” Jacobson said. “I thought the guys played great all the way through.”

TIP-INS:

Northern Iowa: With the win, Jacobson became the eighth coach in the history of the Missouri Valley Conference to reach 100 league victories. Henry Iba (1934-57) owns the most coaching wins in the conference with 187.

Missouri State: After competing with only seven scholarship players in their last two games due to injuries, the Bears were back to nine scholarship players in uniform on Sunday. Dorrian Williams (concussion) and Christian Kirk (precautionary/health) returned to action.

UP NEXT

Northern Iowa: visits Loyola on Wednesday.

Missouri State: hosts Indiana State on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Griffons can’t hold late lead as they fall short at Missouri Southern

MWSUJoplin, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team came close to a redemption win in Joplin, but ultimately fell short in an 83-77 loss at Missouri Southern.

The Griffons erased a six-point halftime deficit to take a 73-71 lead with 4:29 to go. Missouri Southern would outscore the Griffons 12-6 over the final four minutes. Free throws by Missouri Southern down the stretch proved to be the difference with the Lions finishing 31-44 from the line while the Griffons went 22-30.

The Griffons finished shooting 42 percent from the field, 28 percent from three-point range and 73.3 percent from the free throw line. Cortrez Colbert led all scorers with 17 points and six rebounds. Kevin Thomas finished with a double-double, scoring 12 and pulling down 14 rebounds. Currie Byrd had 11 points and Hans Thun added 10.

Missouri Western sits at 10-12 overall and 6-9 in MIAA play as they return home to face Lincoln this Wednesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri’s rally comes up short against Mississippi State

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Mississippi State coach Rick Ray said Saturday he doesn’t care how his team wins on the road, just so long as it does. Still, he would like the Bulldogs to play better when holding a lead.

“I thought we got a little lackadaisical out there and lost some discipline, but fortunately we were able to hang on for the win,” he said after his team held off Missouri, 77-74.

After generating an 11-point halftime lead, the Bulldogs (12-13, 5-7 Southeastern Conference) converted all six of their free throws in the final minute to edge the Tigers, who lost their 11th consecutive game since winning their SEC opener against LSU on Jan. 8.

Roquez Johnson and Craig Sword both finished with 22 points to pace Mississippi State, which ended a two-game losing streak and won its third league game on the road.

Johnathan Williams III finished with a career-high 27 points for Missouri (7-18, 1-11), while Keith Shamburger added 15 and Ryan Rosburg a season-high 12.

“You’ve heard it before,” Tigers coach Kim Anderson said. “We got close, and we just couldn’t finish the deal.”

Despite Missouri scoring the first five points of the game, the Bulldogs seized control in the first half, using a 21-5 run to grab a 33-16 lead with 7:21 remaining before halftime. The Tigers answered with seven points of their own, but trailed 40-29 entering the break.

Missouri came to life in the second half, using a 13-4 run to narrow its deficit to 46-42 five minutes in. When Keanau Post drained a layup with 4:29 remaining to give the Tigers a 64-63 advantage — the team’s first lead in nearly 32 minutes — an elated crowd of 8,278 jumped to its feet, hoping for an end to the school’s longest losing streak in 48 years.

It wasn’t meant to be, though, as Johnson answered with a traditional three-point play off an offensive rebound to give the Bulldogs the lead for good despite the pressurized final 60 seconds.

“Everyone was all excited,” Rosburg said. “That’s just the way it is. One possession can change everything. If they don’t get that and we build a lead, then who knows what happens.”

TIP-INS

Mississippi State: The Bulldogs combined to shoot 31 of 91 (34.1 percent) in their previous two games, but finished 23 of 41 (56.1 percent) Saturday, moving to 9-1 when shooting 45 percent or better in a game.

Missouri: The Tigers honored this year’s inductees to the school’s Athletics Hall of Fame at halftime, including current NFL players Chase Coffman, Chase Daniel and Jeremy Maclin. . Missouri finished 26 of 59 (44.1 percent) overall from the field.

TIGER TRANSACTIONS

Missouri received a bit of a boost from the return of freshmen guards Montaque Gill-Caesar and Namon Wright, both of whom were suspended two games stemming from undisclosed violations of team rules. The duo entered the day combining for 15.1 points per game, and together scored eight on Saturday.

Missouri was still limited to nine scholarship players, though, as sophomore guard Wes Clark watched from the bench while wearing a sling to protect a dislocated right elbow incurred at South Carolina on Tuesday. He will miss the remainder of the season.

Freshman guard Tramaine Isabell, meanwhile, missed his fifth consecutive game after coach Kim Anderson described his behavior as “unacceptable” last month.

FREE THROWS

Mississippi State finished 26 for 33 at the line, while Missouri converted just 14 of 21 attempts.

“Any time you’re in a tight ballgame, you’ve got to score when the clock is stopped,” Ray said.

UP NEXT

Mississippi State returns home to face rival Mississippi on Thursday.

Missouri hits the road to play Arkansas on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western women have three-game win streak snapped by Southern

MWSUJOPLIN, Mo. – The Missouri Western women’s basketball team had its three-game winning streak snapped in an 81-69 loss at Missouri Southern Saturday.

The Griffons led by four with four minutes to go in the first half, but a 10-0 run to close the half by the Lions put MWSU down 37-31 at the half. Missouri Southern stretched their lead to 15 on an 8-0 run lead to open the second half and never looked back.

Both teams made 21 field goals but 35 of 42 shooting from the free throw line by Missouri Southern proved to be the difference. MWSU shot 42 percent from the field, 20 percent from three-point range and 72.7 percent at the free throw line.

LaQuinta Jefferson scored 27 with Miliakere Koyamainavure adding 13 with 10 rebounds. Sarafina Handy ended the game with 10 points but was limited to 16 minutes due to foul trouble.

The Griffons return home with an 11-10 record, 6-9 in MIAA play when they host Lincoln this Wednesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Foster’s late three helps Kansas State upset No. 17 Oklahoma

riggertKStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Marcus Foster made a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 3.4 seconds left and scored 14 points in his return from a three-game suspension to lead Kansas State past No. 17 Oklahoma 59-56 on Saturday night.

It was the second time this season that Foster hit a late 3 against the Sooners (17-8, 8-5 Big 12).

Buddy Hield had 14 points to pace Oklahoma but was held to his lowest point total since Jan. 5 against Baylor.

The Sooners matched their scoring low for the season set in a 69-56 loss to Wisconsin in the Bahamas.

Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger, a former Kansas State All-American, fell to 5-7 against his alma mater.

Kansas State (13-13, 6-7) established its late lead with only three field goals in the final 9 minutes. Free throw shooting was crucial as the Wildcats went 8 for 10 down the stretch and finished 28 of 36 for the game.

— Associated Press —

Oubre, Ellis lead No. 8 Kansas past No. 16 Baylor

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Bill Self never has to worry about Perry Ellis speaking out of turn.

Even now, midway through his junior season, the Kansas forward rarely strings together more than a few words at a time. He talks in short, clipped sentences. He deflects attention, even when he has just joined the 1,000-point club at a school drenched in basketball tradition.

So after pouring in 18 points to reach the scoring milestone Saturday, and helping the eighth-ranked Jayhawks to a 74-64 victory over No. 16 Baylor, it was no surprise that Ellis didn’t have a whole lot to offer eager reporters or in front of television cameras.

“It’s a great accomplishment,” he said simply. “I’m just blessed.”

Leave it to Self to lavish the praise.

“I’ve coached him for three years and he leaves me wanting more, but I haven’t thought that of late,” Self said. “I think he’s playing closer to his ceiling now than he has.”

Ellis had plenty of help on Saturday. Kelly Oubre also had 18 points and Wayne Selden Jr. had 15, helping the Jayhawks (21-4, 10-2 Big 12) dig out of a 13-point first-half hole.

The win was their 21st straight at Allen Fieldhouse, and ensured the 10-time champs would have no worse than a two-game lead in the conference race with six games to go.

“You don’t get easies (against them),” Baylor coach Scott Drew said. “You have to beat them.”

Kansas was clinging to a 57-55 lead after the Bears’ Rico Gathers made two foul shots with about 6 minutes left. But Ellis scored a couple of baskets around a midrange jumper from Landen Lucas, who had nine points off the bench, and the Jayhawks began to pull away.

Oubre’s 3 from the top of the key, his fourth of the game, made it 67-59 with 1:59 left.

Gathers led the Bears (18-7, 6-6) with 18 points and eight rebounds, despite playing with four fouls late in the game. Kenny Chery followed his 25-point performance in the teams’ first meeting in Waco with 17 points, and Taurean Prince had 14 points off the bench.

Despite their long losing streak in Lawrence, the Bears looked unperturbed early on by the roaring sellout crowd stuffed inside the Jayhawks’ old barn. They launched an 18-6 run to open the game, beat Kansas to every loose ball and at one point had a 12-2 edge on the glass.

The Jayhawks finally hit their stride from behind the arc, hitting three straight 3s — perhaps to the chagrin of Bill Self, who called a period of hot outside shooting by his team “fools gold” after a recent victory. Baylor’s lead had been trimmed to 33-27 by halftime.

The Jayhawks kept up the pressure early in the second half, scoring right away on an alley-oop dunk by Wayne Selden. They finally took the lead for the first time when Oubre followed up his own missed 3 with a bucket at the rim to make it 36-35 with 17:13 remaining.

Baylor regained the lead a few minutes later, but the trio of Ellis, Oubre and Selden took over down the stretch, allowing Kansas to celebrate their forward’s personal achievement.

Even if everybody else would have to talk about it.

“Perry and I, we talk about everything imaginable — a lot of current issues, world peace, a lot of things that Perry and I have similar interests in,” Self said sarcastically. “But truthfully speaking, he has become more vocal, which doesn’t mean he’s vocal. But he’s much more comfortable in his own skin. He’s a much more confident player.”

FEELING ILL

Drew has been ill lately, and could barely croak out a sentence in his own right at his postgame news conference. “The officials love it,” he said. “They can’t hear me.”

HONORING SMITH

Kansas played a special video in memory of Dean Smith, who died last Saturday at his home in North Carolina. The longtime Tar Heels coach grew up in nearby Topeka and was part of the Jayhawks’ national title team in 1952. He later served as an assistant at Kansas under Phog Allen.

TIP-INS

Baylor: The Bears fell to 3-15 against Kansas under Drew. … Baylor wound up with a 33-32 edge on the boards. … The Bears allowed the Jayhawks to shoot 29 free throws.

Kansas: Frank Mason’s streak of 21 straight games scoring in double figures ended Saturday. He finished with five points and eight assists. … Among former players who returned during the NBA’s All-Star break were Ben McLemore, Nick Collison and Joel Embiid.

UP NEXT:

Baylor heads to Lubbock to face Texas Tech on Tuesday night.

Kansas visits No. 21 West Virginia on Monday night.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western softball goes 2-0 on first day of 8-State Classic

riggertMissouriWesternBENTONVILLE, Ark. – The Missouri Western softball team outscored their opponents 10-3 on the way to a 2-0 day to open the 8-State Classic in Bentonville, Arkansas Friday. Sydney Washington reached base all seven times she came to the plate and finished the day, 5-7.

Game 1: MWSU 3, Truman State 2

The Griffons stole five bases in a 3-2 win over Truman State, Friday, to open the 8-State Classic.

The Griffons got off to a great start, scoring a run two batters into the game, with the first three batters reaching base. Morgan Rathmann led off with a single and scored when Tiffany Gillaspy doubled to left. Shyanne Saladino struck out the first two batters she faced in the first but then surrendered a solo home run to tie the game at one. Saladino recovered, striking out her third in the inning after the home run. The newcomer got the win, moving to 3-0 on the season. She allowed five hits, all in the first four innings and struck out six.

Missouri Western added another in the third. Sydney Washington tripled and scored two batters later when Kailey Green drove her in. The Griffons scored what proved to be the winning run in the fifth. Rathmann led off the inning with a single, stole second and third and came home on a Washington single. Rathmann and Washington each had two hits.

Game 2: MWSU 7, Quincy 1

The Griffons scored three quick runs in the first with five of the first six batters reaching, on the way to a 7-1 win in game two over Quincy.

Morgan Rathmann led off the game with a single. Tiffany Gillaspy followed with a single of her own, then Sydney Washington added a third straight single to bring Rathmann home. Washington would bring Rathmann home again in the second for the team’s fourth run. They added two more in the third when Rathmann drove Katie Klosterman and Emilie Laliberte home with a single. MWSU’s final run of the game came in the fourth when Washington led off the inning with a solo homer.

Washington finished the game with three hits and three RBI, reaching base all four times. Gillaspy added three hits and a run scored and Rathmann had two hits with two runs scored. Janie Smith picked up her second win of the season, going the distance and allowing just three hits and one run, while striking out 10.

Missouri Western takes a 5-2 record into day two at the 8-State Classic. They’ll take on Minnesota-Duluth at 1 p.m. and Southern Arkansas at 3 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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