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

Benedictine women come up short against No. 14 MidAmerica Nazarene

BCFor the second straight conference game, the Benedictine Women’s Basketball team took to the floor against an opponent ranked inside the NAIA Div. I Top 25 Coaches’ Poll on Saturday as they hosted No. 14 MNU.

After knocking off No. 21 Baker University on Thursday, the Benedictine (11-6, 4-1 Heart) upset bid against No. 14 MNU (12-4, 5-0 Heart) fell short as  the Pioneers held off a last-second push by the Ravens to earn a 59-57 win.

With the win, the Pioneers remain the only unbeaten team in Heart play as the Ravens fall back a game in the standings but remain a half game up in second place over Culver-Stockton and Evangel who sit a half game back of Benedictine at 3-1.

Benedictine outscored MNU 29-28 in the second half and had a chance to push the game in to overtime as Jackie Ziesel took the ball to the hoop inside the final three seconds of the game only to draw contact but no foul as time expired.

The Ravens led early on by as much as six points before the Pioneers started to heat up offensively to lead by as much as eight points before settling for a 31-28 lead at halftime.

Ali Taff and Ziesel scored on back-to-back possessions for the Ravens out of the half to give Benedictine back to the lead.

After battling through the games second tie and three lead changes, the Pioneers were able to pull ahead of the Ravens over the middle third of the second half but could never pull ahead by more than two possessions.

Jayde Reid pulled Benedictine with one point at 48-47 but that would be all the closer the Ravens could get down the stretch as the Pioneers did just enough to hold off the Ravens upset bid.

Reid finished with a game-high 19 points to lead three Ravens in double figures. Ziesel added 12 points while Rutledge scored 11.

Benedictine was able to score 14 points off 18 MNU turnovers to finish the game with a 14-9 advantage in points off turnovers.

The Ravens hit the road on Thursday for a 5:30 p.m. game in Lamoni, Iowa, against Graceland University.

— BC Sports Information —

No. 12 Kansas continues dominance over Texas Tech

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas coach Bill Self made a deal with Devonte’ Graham: Prove in practice that he was ready to go after a nagging toe injury and the freshman guard would play against Texas Tech.

“I guess I practiced pretty good,” Graham said. “Let me play.”

Graham returned after for the first time in a month to provide a lift to the No. 12 Jayhawks, pitching in six assists and six rebounds in an 86-54 victory over the Red Raiders.

“He’s dead tired. His conditioning isn’t there at all, but it will be in a week,” Self said. “But you can tell, at least I can, regardless of if he’s scoring or not, we’re a totally different team … doing some things we don’t do nearly as well when he’s not with us.”

Perry Ellis broke out of a shooting slump by scoring a game-high 15 points for Kansas. Kelly Oubre Jr. added 14, Cliff Alexander had 12 and Frank Mason III 10 to help the Jayhawks (13-2, 2-0 Big 12) improve to 15-0 against the Red Raiders (10-6, 0-3) at Allen Fieldhouse.

Kansas has won 16 straight overall at the Phog.

Justin Jamison had a career-high 12 points off the bench for the Red Raiders, who have lost five of their last six after a 9-1 start. The last three of those games, which began league play, have been to teams ranked in the Top 25 in Texas, West Virginia and the Jayhawks.

“We just weren’t able to execute,” Texas Tech forward Zach Smith said.

Saturday’s game was basically over by halftime. And it wasn’t always pretty.

Texas Tech’s woebegone offense managed two field goals in the first 15-plus minutes, and finished with five by the break. The teams combined for 16 turnovers, including three straight by the Red Raiders during one insufferable stretch. The officials called 26 fouls, parading the teams to the free throw line 32 times over the first 20 minutes.

Relying on its frenzied man-to-man defense, Kansas forged a 10-point lead midway through the first half, then stretched the advantage to 38-17 with about 4 minutes to go.

Thanks to the abundance of fouls, eleven players took the floor in the first half for the Jayhawks. Among them was Graham, who had not played since the Georgetown game on Dec. 10 because of his severe turf toe. Moments after checking in, he lobbed a perfect pass to Alexander that his fellow freshman flushed for an alley-oop jam.

Perhaps inspired by the play, Wayne Selden hit Alexander for another alley-oop dunk.

“They’re a very talented team,” Red Raiders coach Tubby Smith said, poring quietly over the final box score. “Most talented team we’ve played so far.”

Free throws kept a miserable half for Texas Tech from being downright embarrassing.

The Red Raiders were 12 of 19 from the foul line — good numbers for a full game, let alone 20 minutes. That included a series of free throws in the final few minutes, when backup Landen Lucas went on a fouling binge that drew Self’s wrath.

There wasn’t much for him to be upset with after that.

Kansas scored the first 11 points of the second half, hitting five of its first six shots — one of them a reverse jam by Oubre — and cruised the rest of the way.

“Everybody played well,” Self said. “The starters were good, but I thought our bench was solid, too. I thought everybody played well.”

INJURY WOES

The Red Raiders played without Alex Foster, who has a concussion, and fellow forward Justin Gray, who has tendinitis. Smith said that Gray, a freshman averaging 7.1 points, will be shut down for at least a week. “See how it goes,” he said.

GOING DEEP

Ellis went 3 for 3 from beyond the arc. The junior forward had been just 5 for 19 on 3s this season. “Just keep shooting and you’ll get through it,” Ellis said.

TIP-INS

Texas Tech: Leading scorer Devaugntah Williams was held to three points on 1-for-6 shooting. … The Red Raiders have not beaten a Top 15 team on the road since 2007.

Kansas: Mason has been in double-figures scoring in 12 straight games. … Christian Garrett, a senior, scored his first career points in the final minutes. … Graham had six assists.

UP NEXT

Texas Tech: Heads down Interstate 70 to play Kansas State on Wednesday night.

Kansas: Welcomes Oklahoma State to Allen Fieldhouse on Tuesday night.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State stuns No. 16 Oklahoma in Norman

riggertKStateNORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Marcus Foster made perhaps the biggest shot of his Kansas State career, then followed it with a bigger one a few minutes later.

His floater forced overtime, then he drained a 3-pointer with 4 seconds left in the extra period for the winner as the Wildcats beat No. 16 Oklahoma 66-63 on Saturday night.

Foster said he enjoyed playing the role of childhood hero Kobe Bryant. It was the sophomore’s first game winner since his senior year of high school.

“Growing up, all I did was watch Kobe,” he said. “I watched Kobe in his prime, and he was still making game winners and big shots, so it’s something I always imagined myself doing at the college level.”

On the floater in regulation, the 6-foot-3 Foster had to get the shot over Oklahoma’s 6-8 Ryan Spangler.

“It definitely felt good when it left my hand,” he said. “As soon as I seen it go over Spangler’s hands, it felt good. I knew it was going in.”

In overtime, it was just a matter of using proper fundamentals.

“I was confident with the three,” he said. “As soon as I got my feet set … I knew it was going in.”

Oklahoma’s TaShawn Thomas missed a 3-pointer that could have forced a second overtime as time expired.

Stephen Hurt scored a season-high 15 points, Foster scored 14 and Thomas Gipson added 10 for the Wildcats (9-7, 2-1 Big 12), who have rebounded after a sluggish start.

“It’s a big-time win,” Foster said. “Oklahoma’s a very good team — in my eyes, one of the best teams in the conference — so this is a really big win for us, especially being away.”

Buddy Hield scored a career-high 31 points for Oklahoma (11-4, 2-1). He made a layup with 28 seconds remaining in overtime to tie the score before Foster’s shot. Thomas had 14 points and 11 rebounds and Spangler had nine points and nine rebounds for the Sooners, who were coming off back-to-back double-digit wins over ranked opponents Baylor and Texas.

Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said his team let its guard down.

“That’s human nature,” he said. “That’s what we were talking about all week: Are we good enough, mature enough, to handle a couple good ball games and take care of business, and we weren’t. Credit Kansas State for that.”

Kansas State held Oklahoma to 40 percent shooting. Hield made 11 of 20 shots for the Sooners, but the rest of the team made just 12 of 37.

Foster’s layup with 35 seconds to play snapped a scoreless run of more than 5 minutes for Kansas State and cut Oklahoma’s lead to 55-53. Spangler missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with 33 seconds left, leaving Kansas State in the game. Foster’s floater with 6 seconds left forced overtime. Oklahoma could have won at the end of regulation, but Jordan Woodard’s 3-pointer rattled out as time expired.

Hield scored 13 of Oklahoma’s first 15 points and had 20 points at halftime, but his teammates were cold, and Kansas State led 31-30 at the break.

A jumper by Hurt put Kansas State up 39-34, and a 3-pointer by Justin Edwards pushed the Wildcats’ lead to eight early in the second half.

Oklahoma inched back into the game as foul trouble ramped up for the Wildcats. A steal and dunk by Spangler gave the Sooners a 46-45 lead with just over 8 minutes to play and brought the crowd back into the game, and it was close the rest of the way.

TIP-INS

Kansas State: The Wildcats had 20 assists on 30 baskets. … Kansas State made just three free throws, but two were critical ones in overtime. … The Wildcats made 54 percent of their shots in the first half while Oklahoma shot just 33 percent.

Oklahoma: Kruger was Big 8 player of the year for Kansas State in 1973 and 1974 and later coached there. … Oklahoma had just four assists. … Woodard and Isaiah Cousins combined to shoot 2-for-15 from the field.

QUOTE OF THE NIGHT

Foster on his struggles before getting hot late in regulation: “I was struggling at that time, so I was just trying to concentrate on knowing that my next shot was going to go in.”

STAR POWER

Hield made 5 of 9 3-pointers and had five rebounds and three steals. The preseason all-conference pick entered the game averaging 15.8 points per game.

“He was big time tonight,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said.

UP NEXT

Kansas State: plays host to Texas Tech on Wednesday.

Oklahoma: at West Virginia on Tuesday.

— Associated Press —

Griffons rally and hang on to defeat Emporia State

MWSUBig shots down the stretch paid off for the Missouri Western men’s basketball team in a 54-50 win over Emporia State Thursday night. The win moves the team’s overall record to 7-6 and 3-3 in MIAA play.

After Emporia State grabbed a five-point lead with 11:49 to go, Cortrez Colbert sank a three to tie the game at 36. Colbert erased a three-point ESU lead with 8:59 left with another big shot to tie the game at 39 and he gave MWSU the lead back, 42-39 when he made yet another three with 7:33 to go. Missouri Western would stretch its lead to five before Emporia State climbed back to tie it at 46 with 4:30 left. Then it was Cole Clearman’s turn. The freshman drilled a three with 1:50 left that gave the Griffons the lead for good.

Colbert finished with 22 points. It’s the fourth time in the last five games that the senior has eclipsed 20 points. Clearman added 13 on 3-of-5 shooting from behind the arc. The Griffons shot 56 percent in the second half after shooting just 29 percent from the field in the first frame. MWSU was 10-18 from behind the arc in the second half.

Missouri Western stays in the fieldhouse with the second of three in a row at home when Pittsburg State visits Saturday at 3:30 PM.  The game will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here at StJosephPost.com.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats roll past Nebraska-Kearney for sixth straight win

NWMSUMARYVILLE, Mo. – Nebraska-Kearney did a superior job of taking away the three-pointer from Northwest Missouri State Thursday evening at Bearcat Arena.

Northwest knocked down its first three-pointer of the game 4 minutes into the second half. It was clear Northwest was not going to come close to matching the 12 three-pointers it made Monday at Northeastern State or the 17 it drained Saturday at Central Oklahoma.

It simply did not matter. Northwest put on a masterful display of scoring in the paint in its 80-48 victory over the Lopers.

“That started to work pretty well for us,” Northwest senior forward Grant Cozad said of all the layups. “You can ask Justin Pitts. He found all the holes there. He was dissecting them.

“He got past them and if they guarded him or double teamed him, he threw it up and we went and got it. It seemed to be working pretty good for us.”

Northwest heads into Saturday’s afternoon game at home against Washburn with a 12-2 overall record and 5-1 in the MIAA. Nebraska-Kearney dropped to 8-5 and 4-3.

The fact that the Lopers are a good team with a good record is what made the performance by Northwest Thursday evening so outstanding.

When sophomore Zach Schneider made the first three-pointer of the game for the Bearcats, it gave them a 53-30 lead with 16:03 left.

Northwest built its huge league on tenacious defense, pinpoint passing and dazzling layups.

“It was very good because people who scout us won’t just focus on our three-pointers,” Pitts said. “Now they will focus on our drives.”

It was another total team effort. By the time senior Matt Wallace hit a jumper in the paint with 13:50 left, Northwest held a 62-33 lead. The game was over except for the remaining time on the clock.

Pitts led Northwest with 19 points, Wallace scored 14, Cozad and Brett Dougherty each had 13.

Cozad, who is in his fifth season with Northwest, has been on some very good teams with some of the best players in the MIAA like DeShaun Cooper and Dillon Starzl. Last year’s team went 24-9 and reached the regional finals. The 2012-13 team went 22-9 and the 2011-12 team finished 22-7.

Cozad, though, is sensing something special is happening with the current edition of the Bearcats.

Of course, he was careful in how he worded his answer because he is good friends with his former teammates. He respected the way they played at Northwest. His response perfectly characterizes this year’s team. They are respectful to each other and respectful to the game by the way they play it.

“I have seen a lot of good players here,” Cozad said. “Obviously, Cooper, but as a team, as a cohesive unit, I would say this might be the best team I have been on. We all understand each other. We are around each other all the time. We hang out together off the court, too.

“No offense to the teams in past years. This team is fun to play with. This is my last year. I am going to enjoy it. It is going to be a fun ride.”

In the first half, Northwest put up only four three-pointers and missed all of them, but went into half time with a commanding 41-25 lead.

The Bearcats proved that they are much more than a mad-bombing team. They can score in the paint. They did it almost at will against a frontline that was 6-7, 6-7, 6-6.

The layup drill Northwest put on in the first half was a thing a beauty. The conductor of this first-half masterpiece was Pitts.

Early in the first half, Pitts slithered his way inside and then slipped a pass to Cozad who finished with a couple of layups that pushed Northwest lead to 15-6.

“They make my job so easy,” Cozad said. “You have Zach and Conner who can shoot it lights out. You can’t double them. You have Pitts, who can go by anybody. It is all about patience.”

Several minutes later, Pitts found freshman Brett Dougherty for a bucket in the paint that gave Northwest a 23-11.

Nearly every player on the court got in on this spectacular layup drill. Crooker had a couple of nice drives into the paint for baskets. Wallace and sophomore Anthony Wood also participated.

But it was the magical moves of Pitts in the latter half of the first half that stole the show. Pitts, standing, 5-9, was fearless driving to the basket and finishing against players nearly a foot taller than him.

“It comes from practice and our scout teams we practice against,” Pitts said.

Northwest played equally well on the defensive end, making it hard for the Lopers too put together much of a run even though they had capable scorers on the outside and inside.

The Bearcats held Nebraska-Kearney to 38 percent from the field while shooting 63 percent in the first half.

— David Boyce, Northwest Athletics —

No. 11 Ravens get road win at Baker to even HAAC record

BCBALDWIN CITY – The No. 11-ranked Benedictine Men’s Basketball team held Baker University to just 17 points over the first twenty minutes of action on Thursday night en route to a 15-point win.

Benedictine (13-3, 2-2 Heart) used a 10 field goal effort in the first half to build a 10-point lead over Baker (7-7, 1-3 Heart) as they earned a 60-45 win.

Benedictine was able to empy their bench against Baker as 11 players saw at least 10 minutes of game action.

Defensively, the Ravens held the Wildcats to 6 of 30 from the floor in the first half while converting on 10 of 26 offensively.

Baker actually led early on 9-3 before Benedictine started to connect offensively.

The Ravens used a 10-0 run that erased their early deficit and allowed Benedictine to pull ahead by four midway through the first half.

After leading by double figures at the break, Benedictine’s lead was trimmed to six points at Baker started the second half on a 8-0 run.

Benedictine answered with a 16-6 run that pushed their advantage to 16 points as they eventually pulled ahead by as much as 19 en route to the win.

John Harris Jr., led the Ravens in scoring with 13 points while Jake Schannuth added 12 points. Schannuth knocked in 4 of 5 from beyond the 3-point arc while Harris Jr., converted on 5 of 9 from the floor.

Jallen Messersmith added nine points while picking up three blocks defensively.

The Ravens host the MNU Pioneers at 4 p.m. Saturday in the Ralph Nolan Gymnasium.

— BC Sports Information —

Western women fall short of upset against No. 1 Emporia, 57-56

MWSUThe Missouri Western women’s basketball team suffered its fourth consecutive loss Thursday night inside the MWSU Fieldhouse, as they rallied from a 16-point second half deficit but fell short against No. 1 Emporia State, 57-56.

Western falls to 6-6 this season and they’re 1-5 in the MIAA.

Despite the Griffons starting the second half 0-14, they managed to pull within one of the Lady Hornets with 1.2 seconds left in the game after Sarafina Handy hit a contested three-pointer. MWSU trailed by 14 with five minutes remaining, then outscored Emporia State 16-7 over the final five minutes. It was too little too late though as Emporia State successfully inbounded the ball and let the clock run out.

Missouri Western was led by LaQuinta Jefferson’s 19 points with Handy chipping in 11. The Griffons shot 31 percent from the field for the game, shooting 35 percent in the first half and 28 percent in the second half.

The Griffons return to the fieldhouse Saturday as they host No. 5 Pittsburg State at 1:30 PM.  The game will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri wins SEC opener in OT against LSU

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri finally broke through.

After losing to Illinois and Oklahoma State by a combined five points last month, the Tigers knocked off LSU 74-67 on Thursday in the Southeastern Conference opener for both teams.

“We had been so close a couple of times that it’s great to see these guys be able to realize the fruits of their labor,” coach Kim Anderson said. “It was a great game.”

Johnathan Williams III scored 21 points — his eighth consecutive game leading the team in scoring — and grabbed 10 rebounds. Keith Shamburger added 10 points, including four on free throws in the final minute of overtime.

The Tigers (7-7, 1-0) improved to 1-5 against teams from the five major conferences after scoring the final nine points of the game — the last seven on free throws — after LSU opened overtime with two of its own by Tim Quarterman.

Quarterman finished with 19 points while Keith Hornsby added 17 for LSU (11-3, 0-1), which had its eight-game winning streak snapped.

“I didn’t think we were as poised as we needed to be,” coach Johnny Jones said. “We turned the ball over. We weren’t as good as we needed to be with the basketball. I thought we tried to rush or force some things tonight.”

The game featured 14 lead changes and seven ties, including one in the final minute of regulation. Hornsby’s 3-pointer with 10 seconds left knotted the game at 65 before Wes Clark’s miss at the other end sent the game to overtime.

Despite trailing for more than 24 minutes, Missouri used a 14-2 run to gain a 60-56 lead with 3:33 remaining.

“We’ve been there before,” Keanau Post said. “I think this time, our mindset was, `We’re going to get it this time.’ So I think we went out there confident and ready to get the win, and we did that.”

Both teams struggled early, combining for 5-of-21 shooting in the first seven minutes. LSU found its way first, using an 11-0 run to take a 17-6 lead with10:46 remaining in the first half. The teams then traded runs to a 30-27 halftime lead for LSU.

LSU entered the matchup with an advantage in the post with Jarell Martin and Jordan Mickey together averaging 34.5 points this season, but the two encountered foul trouble early in the first half.

When asked about the impact of the absence of the two forwards in the final minutes before halftime, Jones said the team had lost its rhythm even when Martin and Mickey were playing.

The Tigers averaged 41.8 points from the paint before playing Missouri, but only managed 24 on Thursday. Martin finished with nine points — all in the second half — while Mickey added nine and grabbed 17 rebounds.

Post provided a spark off the bench with 12 points for Missouri. The 6-foot-10 senior and former junior college All-American had just 20 points in 10 games before contributing a combined 19 in his last two.

“He’s coming out of his shell a little bit more now, and it’s starting to show,” Williams said.

TIP-INS

LSU: The Tigers finished with 19 turnovers after entering the night ranked last in the SEC with 15.2 per game.

Missouri: Junior Deuce Bello missed his third consecutive game while suspended for academic reasons, while freshman Montaque Gill-Caesar sat out with a back injury stemming from a flagrant foul committed by Illinois on Dec. 20. … Wes Clark scored 13 points.

UP NEXT

LSU hosts Georgia on Saturday.

Missouri plays at Auburn on Saturday.

QUOTE OF THE NIGHT

“We started 1-0,” Wes Clark said of Missouri’s conference record. “So we don’t have any losses. We’re just looking to keep going with that. Take it one game at a time.”

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File