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No. 8 Kansas routs Texas Tech 73-51

riggertKULUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — Wayne Selden Jr. scored 16 points and No. 8 Kansas shot well from 3-point range, beating Texas Tech 73-51 on Tuesday night.

The Jayhawks (20-4, 9-2 Big 12) hit 11 of 20 on 3s, with Selden going 4 of 7. Kansas reached the 20-win mark for the 26th straight season.

Kansas sped up play in the second half and the Red Raiders couldn’t keep pace. Perry Ellis scored 14 points, and Frank Mason III, Brannen Greene and Cliff Alexander each added 10 in the win.

Norense Odiase scored 13 points and Devaughtah Williams added 11 for the Red Raiders (12-13, 2-10).

Kansas, which lost 67-62 at Oklahoma State on Saturday, came out after halftime with more zip on its passes. That allowed them to get open for more 3-pointers and they hit six after the break.

Ellis, a junior, needs three more points to reach 1,000 for his career. He left the game in the second half just shy of becoming the 56th Kansas player in program history to get to the milestone.

TIP-INS:

Kansas: The Jayhawks were coming off their second Big 12 road loss of the season, which ended their five-game winning streak.

Texas Tech: The Red Raiders have beaten a Top 10 Kansas team in Lubbock three times in the past 10 seasons. Texas Tech won in double overtime in 2005 when the Jayhawks were No. 2 and again in 2007 when Kansas was No. 5 — both under Bob Knight. In 2009, No. 9 Kansas fell to Pat Knight’s Red Raiders.

UP NEXT:

Kansas plays host to No. 16 Baylor on Saturday.

Texas Tech travels to Texas on Saturday night.

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s Saladino named MIAA Pitcher of the Week

MWSUIt didn’t take Shyanne Saladino long to make an impact on the Missouri Western softball team. The junior transfer has been named the MIAA/AstroTurf Pitcher of the Week after her first action in a Griffon uniform.

Saladino went 2-0 over the weekend in Arkansas without giving up a run. The Davenport, Iowa native went the distance in both of her starts, pitching 12 innings, while allowing 10 hits and striking out five batters. She pitched seven innings in the Griffons 2-0 win over Henderson State on Saturday and needed only five on Sunday as MWSU scored 14 in a win over Arkansas-Monticello.

Saladino was a first team NFCA All-American and second team NJCAA All-American at Kirkwood Community College, where she went 25-2 with a 1.28 ERA.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri State comes up short at Evansville

riggertMissouriStateEVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — D.J. Balentine scored 20 points and Evansville pulled away in the second half to beat Missouri State 73-66 on Tuesday.

Adam Wing added 17 points and the Purple Aces (17-8, 7-6 Missouri Valley Conference) snapped a three-game losing streak.

Balentine is tied for 25th in the nation in scoring and has notched double figures in all but two of Evansville’s games this season

Evansville led early but Shawn Roundtree put Missouri State up 24-22 with a layup. Wing hit two free throws to tie it at 30 at halftime.

The lead traded hands seven times until Jaylon Moore tied it at 51 with a free throw, sparking an 11-2 Evansville run, then Balentine hit back-to-back buckets and the Purple Aces pulled away 65-57 with 3:27 left.

Camyn Boone led Missouri State (9-16, 3-10) with a career-high 21 points, Chris Hendrix scored 13 and Gavin Thurman 12.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska loses at home to No. 5 Wisconsin

NebraskariggertLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Sam Dekker matched his career high with 21 points, and No. 5 Wisconsin built a big lead early and then held off Nebraska’s late comeback bid for a 65-55 victory on Tuesday night.

The Badgers (22-2, 10-1 Big Ten) won their seventh straight game and extended their lead in the Big Ten to three games over the four teams tied for second place. The Cornhuskers (13-11, 5-7) lost for the fourth time in five games.

Wisconsin has its best 24-game record in program history and best 11-game record in Big Ten play since the 1913-14 squad went unbeaten.

Frank Kaminsky added 13 points and 12 rebounds and Bronson Koenig had 13 points for the Badgers.

Terran Petteway had 16 of his 21 points in the second half for Nebraska, and Shavon Shields finished with 12 points.

The Badgers were up 15 points in the last four minutes before Nebraska made one last run. Tai Webster’s three-point play and his layup after a turnover made it 52-42, and it was 58-53 with a minute left after Petteway converted a three-point play and made a 3-pointer.

Wisconsin went the last 4:53 without a field goal and was just 6 of 17 from the field in the second half. But the Badgers, who shot 39 percent for the game, made 24 of 31 free throws and 15 of their last 18 to improve their road record to 10-1.

The Badgers, who beat the Huskers 70-55 in Madison last month, swept the season series and avenged a 77-68 loss in Lincoln in last season’s final regular-season game. Last year’s upset of the then-No. 9 Badgers in Lincoln, played before an amped sellout crowd, clinched the Huskers’ first NCAA tournament berth since 1998.

Nebraska has looked like anything but an NCAA team this season and struggled again early Tuesday. Wisconsin had its first double-digit lead less than seven minutes into the game and led 27-13 at half. It was the second straight game Nebraska managed only 13 first-half points.

The Badgers had things going their way from the start. Leslee Smith blocked Kaminsky’s 3-point try from the top of the key after the tipoff. The ball came right back to Kaminsky, who fed Dekker for an easy basket.

Wisconsin shot just 42 percent and was 1 of 6 on 3-pointers in the first half, but that was enough to take control against a Nebraska team that shot 21.4 percent (6 of 28) in the first half and went scoreless for more than seven minutes.

Petteway, who scored 20 of his 27 points in the first half of the January loss at Wisconsin, had just five points on 2-of-11 shooting in the first 20 minutes.

TIP-INS

Wisconsin: The Badgers clinched a winning Big Ten record for the 15th straight year. … Wisconsin is 6-1 against Nebraska since the Huskers joined the Big Ten in 2010.

Nebraska: World lightweight boxing champion Terence “Bud” Crawford of Omaha gave a motivational speech to the Huskers this week and was introduced in the first half to big applause. Ex-Husker stars Will Shields (Pro Football Hall of Fame) and Alex Gordon (Kansas City Royals Gold Glove left fielder) also were in the crowd. … Shields made his 75th consecutive start. … The first 2,500 fans received the new state quarter, the Homestead Quarter, as part of a bank promotion.

UP NEXT

Wisconsin: hosts Illinois on Sunday.

Nebraska: visits Purdue on Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Lafayette boys roll to easy win over Benton 75-48

LafayetteThe Lafayette boys’ basketball team led wire-to-wire Monday night against their crosstown rivals as they rolled to a 75-48 victory over Benton inside Lafayette High School.

The No. 1 The Fighting Irish have now won five consecutive games as they improve to 16-4 and 4-0 in the MEC.  Benton had its five-game win streak snapped as they’re now 12-8 and 2-2 in league play.

Lafayette built a quick nine-point first quarter lead before leading 18-12 after one.  The lead grew to as many as 13 in the first half before taking a 36-25 lead to the locker room.

The Cardinals never got closer than nine points in the second half and Lafayette outscored Benton 22-10 in the fourth quarter to blow the game wide open.

Freshman Diego Bernard led the Fighting Irish with 15 points, while Chester Goudeau added 14 and Caleb Bennett scored 12 points.

Fabian Smith and Saxton Thuston each had 15 points to lead Benton.

Lafayette is on the road Friday when they travel to Bishop LeBlond, while the Cardinals travel to Maryville Friday.

Elsewhere Monday night, the Central girls suffered their sixth consecutive loss as they fell at Ruskin, 43-42.  The Indians drop to 5-14 and 1-5 in the Suburban League.

Cardinals sign OF Jon Jay to two-year contract

riggertCardinalsThe St. Louis Cardinals announced Monday that they have reached agreement with outfielder Jon Jay on a two-year contract through 2016 and have thus avoided a salary arbitration hearing that was scheduled for next week.  Jay was the last of the Cardinals arbitration-eligible players who were unsigned.

Drafted by the Cardinals in 2006, the left-handed hitting Jay owns a .295 career batting average over the past five seasons (2010-14), ranking 8th among all Major League outfielders in that time span.  The 30-year old Miami native had a team-best .303 batting mark in 2014, falling just 34 plate appearances shy of qualifying among the league batting leaders.  He continued his solid hitting by batting .483 during the postseason, the 2nd-highest single-season postseason batting average in MLB history.

In 2012, Jay became just the third Cardinals outfielder to play errorless ball over an entire season and he leads all Cardinals fly-chasers with his .995 fielding pct. since 2010.   He posted a franchise-record 245-game errorless streak by an outfielder from Aug. 25, 2011 to July 29, 2013.

Jay, who debuted with St. Louis in 2010, was a member of the Cardinals 2011 World Championship team, collecting a key hit and scoring the tying run in the 10th inning of their memorable World Series Game 6 comeback.

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Griffon baseball loses series finale at Harding

riggertMissouriWesternSEARCY, Ark. – The Missouri Western baseball team dropped the final game of their three-games series against Harding, losing 2-1 on a walk-off home run.

The Bison’s Alan Copeland made his only hit count on the day as he hit a walk-off two-run homerun in the bottom of the ninth inning to propel his team to victory.

The Griffons strong point was their pitching to limit the Bison to just eight hits. Banks Born pitched five strong innings and only allowed four hits.

Both teams offensively were kept silent until late in the game when Missouri Western scored the first run of the game.

In the top of the eighth inning, Ryan Degner led off the Griffons with a single to right center and Orencio Fisher reached on a fielder’s choice. David Glaude eventually loaded the bases after being hit by a pitch. The Griffon’s Mitch Thorman batted in the first run of the game on a fielder’s choice, allowing Degner to score from third.

The Griffons fall to 3-4 overall this season and will be back in action against MIAA foe #6 Emporia State on Friday, February 20.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western softball splits on final day in Arkansas

riggertMissouriWesternARKADELPHIA, Ark. – The Missouri Western softball team’s bats played Jekyll and Hide in a split on day two at the Henderson State/Ouachita Baptist Ronnie Hawkins Memorial. Missouri Western plated 14 in a win against Arkansas-Monticello but mustered just one hit in an 8-0 loss to co-host Ouachita Baptist. The team now sits at 3-2 on the season.

Game 1: MWSU 14, Arkansas-Monticello 0 (5 innings)

The Griffons used a 12-run fourth inning to power themselves to a 14-0 win in five innings over Arkansas Monticello Sunday morning.

In their highest offensive output of the season, Missouri Western used just two home runs in the 14-run barrage. Coming into the game, MWSU had scored all but one run via the long ball, but in this one, the Griffons relied on two singles and a wild pitch to get things going.

An RBI single by Paige Shifflett in the first got the scoring going. Missouri Western added another in the first when Sydney Washington scored on a wild pitch. Shifflett drove in two more on a single to open the scoring in the fourth. Then MWSU got back to their 2015 ways. Kailey Green brought Washington and Shifflett in with a three-run shot to center in the fourth. One batter later, Shelbie Atwell cranked her first round tripper of the year to right center. The Griffons added five more in the inning on a pair of two RBI singles from Green and Tiffany Gillaspy and Morgan Rathmann scored on an error.

Green finished with a five RBI game, all coming in the fourth as she went 3-5. Gillaspy also had a three hit day, going 3-4 with three runs scored and two RBIs. As a team, the Griffons had 16 hits and 12 RBIs. Shyanne Saladino picked up her second win of the season, going all five innings and allowing four hits, while walking two and striking out three.

Game 2: Ouachita Baptist 8, MWSU 0 (6 innings)

The Griffon bats struggled to wake up while Ouachita Baptist found the plate often in an 8-0 loss for MWSU.

Ouachita Baptist scored one in the first, added two in the second then jumped out to a 7-0 lead after a four-run fourth. Taylor Schaben replaced Janie Smith in the circle after OBU’s first two runs in the fourth. Smith went three innings and was charged with seven earned runs on 10 hits. Schaben was effective in her first pitching action of the season, going two and two thirds and striking out one, while allowing one unearned run.

At the plate, Missouri Western mustered just one hit and entered the seventh with one. Macy Nantz retired the first 11 Griffons she faced before Sydney Wasington singled in the fourth.

Missouri Western returns to The Natural State next weekend for six games in three days in the UAM 8-State Classic to be played in Bentonville, Arkansas.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Former KU men’s basketball player and legendary coach Dean Smith dies

KUFormer Kansas men’s basketball player and college coaching legend Dean Smith died Feb. 7 at his home in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, the University of North Carolina announced Saturday. Smith was 83 years old.

A native of Emporia, Kansas, Smith competed at Kansas from 1949-53 and was a part of the Jayhawks’ NCAA national championship team in 1952, under the guidance of head coach Dr. Forrest “Phog” Allen. Smith and the Jayhawks were national runners-up in 1953.

“There have been a lot of pillars in our profession over time,” current Kansas head coach Bill Self said. “Of course, we can think of one every day here in Dr. Allen, at Oklahoma State there is Mr. Iba, there’s been Pete Newell, Bob Knight, Coach K (Mike Krzyzewski) – all have been huge pillars in our profession, but one of the most classy and innovative coaches that our sport has ever known was Coach Dean Smith. Coach Smith was a Kansan, growing up in Topeka, and part of the 1952 national championship team at Kansas. He carries great weight around here now and all the way back to his days here as a lot of his teammates are still here in town and think the world of him.

“Of course, I was connected with Coach (Larry) Brown, but from reading and hearing what everyone talks about what a great coach he is – but they talk more about what a great impact he had on their lives as a man and as a mentor,” Self continued. “It’s a huge loss to not only our basketball world, not only to the college game, not only to the fans that follow it but to society in general. Because he was an innovator and certainly set an example for people to follow not just as players, but for the people that he touched directly and indirectly. It’s a sad day.”

As a student-athlete at Kansas, Smith knew he would become a coach someday. KU All-American Clyde Lovellette said he would work closely with then-assistant coach Dick Harp on scouting Jayhawk opponents to contribute prepping the team for upcoming games.

“I thought of Dean as a man who wanted to know how to coach basketball,” Lovellette said. “As a player, he would take the team we were going to play and run the plays against us. He was very involved in the structure and the play the other teams to use us to combat what they were going to throw against us. He was a statistician. (Former Kansas head coach) Dick Harp and Dean worked very close together. Dick felt very comfortable about turning the other team against us. Dean was a great ball player. He really enjoyed basketball and I knew down the road that Dean was going to do well.”

Lovellette – and the rest of the country – certainly learned that to be true. After graduation from KU, Smith served as an assistant coach at Kansas under Allen for the 1953-54 season. He later went on to coach North Carolina basketball from 1961-97, winning two NCAA national championships, in 1982 and 1993, and the 1971 NIT title. When he retired, he was the winningest coach in college basketball history compiling an 879-254 record. His 879 victories while at UNC rank fourth on the NCAA Division I all-time list.

“I can remember Dean not only being on that 1952 national championship team, but my relationship with him goes back even further than that when he played high school basketball at Topeka High,” Hall of Fame radio broadcaster Max Falkenstien said. “I even broadcasted some of those games, so Dean and I have a long-standing relationship. He many times told me that, ‘My dad has a recording of you broadcasting my games at Topeka High and I’m going to give it to you. He received that because you made me sound so good.’ Dean had a great career, everybody knows that, but he had a strong feeling for Kansas despite of the fact that he spent over 40 years at North Carolina. I think he still realized that this is where his roots were from.”

Smith took North Carolina to 23 consecutive NCAA Tournaments and 11 Final Fours. His Tar Heels won 13 Atlantic Coast Conference championships and won either the ACC regular-season race or the postseason conference tournament 20 out of 27 years. He coached 32 all-conference players and 26 All-Americans while at UNC.

Smith was the coach of the 1976 U.S. Olympic squad that won the gold medal in Montreal, Canada, and was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1983. He is also a member of the FIBA Hall of Fame, the Kansas Athletics Hall of Fame, the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame, the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame and the College Basketball Hall of Fame. Smith was in the inaugural class of the College Basketball Hall of Fame inducted in 2006.

In Nov. 2013, Smith received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama. The honor dates back to an executive order from former President John F. Kennedy establishing the award. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the nation’s highest civilian honor.

— KU Sports Information —

Griffons upset MIAA co-leaders Lindenwood 67-58

MWSUST. JOSEPH, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team snapped a two-game skid, knocking off MIAA co-leading Lindenwood, 67-58 Saturday in the fieldhouse.

MWSU built a 29-22 lead going to halftime on 42 percent shooting from the field. The Griffons would extend the lead to as many as 16 in the second half but had to hold off a comeback effort by Lindenwood. The Lions hit several key-three pointers in the second frame but MWSU answered each time to pull off the win and complete the first Men’s/Women’s sweep for MWSU since Dec. 18 against Northeastern State.

The Griffons were paced by Cortrez Colbert’s 23 points. Colbert added six rebounds. Cole Clearman finished with 13 points and five boards and Dareon Jones scored 11. Missouri Western held Lindenwood to 35 percent from the field. The Lions entered shooting 50 percent. MWSU was strong on the glass, outrebounding Lindenwood 40-31.

Missouri Western moved to 10-11 on the year and 6-8 in MIAA play. The take a week off before traveling to Missouri Southern on Feb. 14.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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