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Missouri Western women hammer Evangel for third straight win

MWSUThe Missouri Western women’s basketball team outscored Evangel by 25 points in the second half Friday night as they cruised to a 75-41 win in Griffons’ opener of the inaugural Holiday Inn Express Classic at the MWSU Fieldhouse.

Western took a nine-point lead to the break after shooting 38.5 percent from the field in the first. Missouri Western shot 69.6 percent from the field in the second half and 51 percent for the game. The Griffon defense held Evangel to 36 percent from the field for the game. MWSU finished the night with 15 steals and forced 26 Crusader turnovers.

LaQuinta Jefferson led the team with 20 points and Sarafina Handy chipped in 16. Tiara Hall led the team with six rebounds.

Missouri Western improves to 4-1 this season and they’ve now won three consecutive games.  The Griffons will take on Maryville University at 5 p.m. on Saturday to close out the classic. Maryville defeated Lyon College, 71-56 Friday night. Saturday’s game will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Mizzou wins second straight SEC East title with victory over Arkansas

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — After three quarters smothered by Arkansas, Missouri found a way out. It’s been that way most of the year, simply finding ways to get the job done.

“I just think it got contagious,” coach Gary Pinkel said after finally emerging from a rowdy locker room celebrating the 21-14 victory Friday over Arkansas that sent the No. 17 Tigers to the SEC championship game for the second straight season.

“You win games like that, a lot of players are making plays,”

Marcus Murphy scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 12-yard run with 4:38 remaining and Markus Golden recovered a fumble to seal it.

“It don’t get no better than that, man,” Golden said. “It’s a great feeling.”

Missouri (10-2, 7-1, No. 17 AP) tied it at 14 early in the fourth quarter with a 98-yard drive capped by Jimmie Hunt’s 4-yard TD reception and a reverse pass by receiver Bud Sasser to Darius White for the 2-point conversion.

“It worked awesome,” Pinkel said. “When these things work, it’s a great call.”

Arkansas (6-6, 2-6) was driving for the tie when Kentrell Brothers stripped Alex Collins and Golden recovered with 2:13 to go at the Missouri 35 to thwart Arkansas’ bid to tie it.

The game got a bit contentious even before the opening kickoff. Arkansas players accused Missouri players of refusing to shake hands.

“I think this is a nice start to the rivalry,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. “I don’t know what happened. I just know there was a couple things there at the end of the coin toss.”

Golden said Missouri players shook hands before the coin toss and didn’t think it necessary to repeat such pleasantries.

The Razorbacks had won two straight, both shutouts against ranked teams while outscoring Mississippi and LSU 47-0.

“I think we might have worn down in the fourth quarter,” Bielema said. “My guess is we’ll be very, very energized and very, very excited bowl team to take somewhere.”

Brandon Allen, who was 13 for 30 for 133 yards and two touchdowns, played through a hip injury.

“In the last couple drives he asked me, `Hey, are you still good?” Allen said about Bielema. “I told him I was fine, I wanted to stay in. It was my decision to stay in.”

A sellout crowd of 71,168 stuck around for the fourth quarter surge by the Tigers that kept Georgia out of the Southeastern Conference title game on Dec. 7 in Atlanta. The Bulldogs (9-2, 6-2) would have won the East by virtue of a blowout victory against Missouri earlier in the season.

Fans mobbed the field after Maty Mauk’s kneel down ended it while stadium personnel took down the goal posts to prevent fans from toting them off to a nearby tavern. Ray Charles’ “Georgia on My Mind” played while the stadium slowly emptied.

It’s the fifth division title in eight seasons for Missouri (two in the SEC and three in the Big 12), which also reached 10 victories for the fifth time in 14 seasons under Pinkel.

“One of the great traits they have is that when things get tough, they get tougher,” Pinkel said. “I can’t tell you how proud I am of these guys.”

Arkansas led 14-3 in the second quarter. Jonathan Williams had a 23-yard scoring catch, Dan Skipper blocked a field goal and punter Sam Irwin-Hill ran for a first down and pinned Missouri at the 2 early the fourth.

Missouri had one interception and could have easily had two more turnovers in the second quarter. Trey Flowers stripped Mauk on a sack and Taiwan Johnson recovered at the Tigers 19 with 1:16 to go, but officials ruled after video review that Mauk’s arm had been going forward with the ball and the Tigers had enough time for Andrew Baggett’s 51-yard field goal to end the half.

The schools exchanged turnovers on consecutive plays near midfield in the second, Golden’s forced fumble on Williams followed by D.J. Dean’s interception on a tipped pass for Arkansas. Missouri avoided another turnover when Murphy muffed a fair catch but recovered the fumbled punt.

Arkansas held opponents scoreless for nine straight quarters and a total of 148 minutes, 58 seconds before Baggett’s career-long 52-yard field early in the second to cut the gap to 7-3. Flowers’ 12-yard sack on third down pushed the Tigers back before Baggett beat his previous best by 8 yards.

Baggett missed two extra-point kicks last week in a victory at Tennessee.

“It was nice to see him bounce back and that the players had reached down to pick him up,” Pinkel said. “I told him before the game, ‘I believe in you.'”

Williams had an easy trip to the end zone on a 23-yard touchdown reception that capped the Razorbacks’ opening drive.

— Associated Press —

Griffon men lose to East Central in Drury Classic opener

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western men’s basketball team lost to East Central (OK) 73-59 Friday afternoon in their first game of the Doubletree Hotle/Houlihans Drury Thanksgiving Classic in Springfield.

The Griffons struggled early as they fell behind 26-6 and trailed 39-19 at halftime. Missouri Western was held to 22% shooting, while East Central hit on 52% of its shots including 12-16 free throws.

MWSU was able to cut the deficit to single digits in the second half with less than five minutes to go with a Kevin Thomas layup but couldn’t overcome the Tigers hot shooting.

Missouri Western was led by Cortrez Colbert with 19 points and six rebounds on the day. Forward’s Kevin Thomas scored 12 points and Seth Bonifas chipped in seven points.

East Central has five players score at least eight points. They were able to hit five three-pointers on the day and convert on 30-42 free throw attempts to seal the victory.

The Griffons will return to the court Saturday at 3 p.m. to take on #4 Drury. The game will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

— MWSU Sports Information —

No. 11 KU defeats Tennessee to advance to Orlando Classic title

riggertKULAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — Perry Ellis and Cliff Alexander helped Kansas pull away late in a victory over Tennessee.

Ellis scored 24 points, Cliff Alexander added 16 and No. 11 Kansas beat Tennessee 82-67 Friday in an Orlando Classic semifinal.

“The big thing is we got stops,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.

Frank Mason III had 11 points and seven assists for Kansas (4-1).

Tennessee (2-2) got 16 points from Josh Richardson, while Kevin Punter finished with 14.

After Tennessee’s Armani Moore tied it with two free throws, Alexander’s 3-point play keyed a 7-0 stretch as Kansas went ahead 69-62 with five minutes left.

“He’s starting to get it,” Self said of Alexander.

Ellis’ 3-point play made it 74-64 with two minutes to go.

“They’re tough,” Tennessee coach Donnie Tyndall said of Kansas. “They’re talented. They’re well coached. They have great depth.”

Alexander had consecutive dunks to give Kansas a 53-40 lead 4 minutes into the second half. Mason set up both with nifty passes.

The Volunteers, as they had throughout the game, battled back to 54-53 with 12 minutes to play as Detrick Mostella made a pair of 3s and Richardson had a layup following a Kansas turnover.

“We took some positives out of the game, but we’re disappointed we didn’t win the game,” Tyndall said.

Mostella had 13 points.

Dominic Woodson had two in-close baskets for Tennessee, while Kansas’ Brannen Greene connected on a long-range jumper just before the shot clock expired as the Jayhawks kept a narrow lead through the midpoint of the second half.

Perry had 11 points to help Kansas grab a 40-33 halftime lead.

A wild final few minutes saw Tennessee pull to 35-31 after Punter made a layup and two free throws after a flagrant foul call. Richardson had a basket on the ensuing possession.

“They got out to some runs, but I’m happy that we stayed composed,” Ellis said. “We fought back after those runs and I felt like that’s what we needed.”

Kansas responded by getting a 3 by Svi Mykhailiuk and Devonte Graham’s slam.

Graham, coming back from a shoulder injury, had two points and one rebound in seven minutes.

TIP-INS

Kansas: The Jayhawks reached the semifinals by beating Rhode Island 76-60 Thursday. … Kansas is 34-6 in in-season tournament games under Self. … The Jayhawks are 4-1 or better for the 10th time in Self’s 12 years at the school.

Tennessee: The Volunteers topped Santa Clara 64-57 in their tourney opener Thursday. … Tennessee was called for 28 fouls. The Volunteers entered averaging 26.3, second-most in the country.

CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARDS

Kansas outrebounded Tennessee 44-22 and had 18 on the offensive end. … Ellis had 13 of the Jayhawks’ rebounds.

BALL CONTROL

The Jayhawks won the assist battle 17-8 but turned the ball over 16 times. Tennessee had 10 turnovers.

UP NEXT

Kansas will face No. 20 Michigan State in Sunday’s championship game.

Tennessee will play Marquette in Sunday’s third-place game.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska rallies past Iowa in OT 37-34

NebraskariggertIOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Nebraska found itself down 17 points and staring at a devastating third straight loss.

Tommy Armstrong Jr. led the Huskers on one of the best comebacks in school history — and took some heat off of embattled coach Bo Pelini.

Kenny Bell caught a 9-yard touchdown pass in overtime and Nebraska rallied to beat Iowa 37-34 on Friday, snapping a two-game losing streak.

Tommy Armstrong Jr. had four TD passes for the Cornhuskers (9-3, 5-3 Big Ten), who trailed by as much as 24-7 before storming back in the second half.

Nebraska tied the school record for its largest road comeback.

“That is one of the gutsiest performances from a quarterback that I’ve seen in a long time,” said Pelini, whose job status was again a hot topic this week, of Armstrong. “There isn’t anybody who competes harder than he does.”

Armstrong’s impressive effort came during one of the wackier Big Ten games in recent memory.

Iowa scored a touchdown on offense, defense and special teams and still couldn’t hold off the Huskers.

Jordan Canzeri caught a 5-yard touchdown pass with 1:49 left in regulation to put Iowa ahead 31-28. But Drew Brown’s 20-yard field goal with 8 seconds left forced overtime.

Armstrong threw TD passes to Taariq Allen and Bell, and De’Mornay Pierson-El’s 80-yard punt return for a touchdown put Nebraska ahead 28-24 with 12:06 left in the fourth.

Jake Rudock had 230 yards and two TD passes for Iowa (7-5, 4-4). The Hawkeyes closed the regular season with back-to-back home losses and will head to its bowl game without a single win over an FBS team above .500.

“We had our opportunities. No question about it,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “The two things that really cost us were turnovers and then errors, misgivings in the special teams area.”

Iowa seemed poised to blow out the Huskers early in the second half, jumping ahead 24-7.

It reality, the game was just getting interesting.

Nebraska responded behind Armstrong, who brought the Huskers back within 24-21 on a 34-yard TD pass to Allen and a 32-yarder to Bell early in the fourth quarter.

Pierson-El had been stopped by Iowa punter Dillon Kidd on his previous return. But he blew past Kidd and the rest of the Hawkeyes to give Nebraska the improbable lead with three TDs in less than 5 minutes.

“Once they kicked it to me again, I was like, `Seriously?’ Thanksgiving was the other day and that is what I’m thankful for,” Pierson-El said. “I said to Coach the other day that if they give me one I’m going to be thankful for it.”

Rudock answered right back though, finding Canzeri alone in the flat for the touchdown.

Armstrong wasn’t done either, finding Brandon Reilly for a crucial 35-yard completion to set up the game-tying kick.

Marshall Koehn hit a 25-yard field goal in overtime, briefly giving Iowa a 34-31 lead.

Bell’s game-winning catch by the pylon was reviewed, but the call on the field was upheld.

Ameer Abdullah had 106 yards rushing and Bell caught two TD passes for Nebraska.

“I’ve been around a long time and coached a lot of years and I don’t know if I’ve ever been more proud of a group of guys,” said Pelini, who has led Nebraska to at least nine wins in each of his six seasons as coach.

The Hawkeyes dominated the first half, and John Lowdermilk took an interception back 17 yards for a touchdown. But they only led 10-7, largely because of four turnovers.

But Rudock caught Nebraska in a cornerback blitz early in the third quarter and hit Tevaun Smith, who raced 37 yards to put the Hawkeyes up 17-7.

Nebraska Punter Sam Foltz then dropped a snap. He recovered in time to get the punt off, but it ricocheted off lineman Zach Hannon’s back. Drew Ott happily scooped up the loose ball, giving Iowa a 24-7 point lead with 8:45 left in the third quarter.

But the Hawkeyes couldn’t hold the lead. They wound up finishing fourth in the Big Ten West, a division many thought it could win this season.

Mark Weisman had 82 yards rushing for Iowa.

“We lost five games. Each one is a different story,” Ferentz said. “There’s no way to predict this in August.”

— Associated Press —

Ellis’ 17 points help No. 11 Kansas beat Rhode Island at Orlando

riggertKULAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — Perry Ellis and the Kansas Jayhawks took control early against Rhode Island.

Ellis scored 17 points and No. 11 Kansas beat Rhode Island 76-60 on Thursday in the opening round of the Orlando Classic.

“I think Perry is playing with more aggression without question,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.

Ellis had 11 points in the opening 20 minutes to help Kansas cruise to a 43-25 halftime lead. The Jayhawks went ahead 31-11 with just over 6 minutes before intermission on Ellis’ rebound slam.

“I just tried to keep attacking, that’s what coach is consistently telling me,” Ellis said.

Frank Mason III added 12 points for Kansas (3-1), which has a pair of victories since a 72-40 loss to No. 1 Kentucky on Nov. 18.

E.C. Matthews scored 20 points for Rhode Island (3-1), which was coming off a 66-62 overtime victory over then-No. 21 Nebraska on Saturday. Gilvydas Biruta had 16 points and seven rebounds.

“It was a lesson learned,” said Matthews, who was 6 of 18 from the field.

Ellis picked up his fourth foul with 11 minutes to play and Kansas up 52-38. A 3-point play by Cliff Alexander 3 minutes later gave the Jayhawks a 59-41 advantage.

“My teammates had my back,” said Ellis, who was on the bench for 7 minutes. “That’s what counts.”

Kansas held Rhode Island to 25.9 percent (7 for 27) shooting during the opening half. The Jayhawks shot 46.9 percent (15 for 32) from the floor in the half.

“The way they shot it in the first half I think was a little demoralizing because our game plan was to try to make them make perimeter shots,” Rhode Island coach Dan Hurley said.

Jayhawks guard Devonte Graham returned and had 10 points after sitting out Monday’s 87-60 victory over Rider with a sprained shoulder. He appeared to get shaken up midway through the second half and went to the bench, but was back in with 4 minutes left.

TIP-INS

Kansas: The Jayhawks are 3-1 or better for the 11th time in Self’s 12 seasons at the school. .. Self is 3-0 against Rhode Island, with two of wins coming at Kansas.

Rhode Island: The Rams are 13-92 against ranked opponents. … Rhode Island’s victory over Nebraska stopped a 22-game skid against Top-25 teams, dating back to a 70-63 victory over No. 25 Utah on Dec. 2, 1988. … The Rams are 1-3 against Kansas. The lone win was an 80-75 victory in the 1998 NCAA tournament, a season that Rhode Island reached the final eight.

IN-CLOSE SCORING

Kansas outscored Rhode Island 30-14 in the paint, including 14-0 during the first half. The Jayhawks also won the rebound battle 40-31.

HELPING HAND

Kansas got 33 points off the bench, compared to Rhode Island’s 14.

UP NEXT

Kansas will face Tennessee in the semifinals Friday. Tennessee beat Santa Clara 64-57 Thursday.

Rhode Island will play Santa Clara in the consolation round Friday.

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s Rottinghaus named to AVCA All-Central Reigon first team

MWSUMissouri Western senior Erica Rottinghaus has been selected to the American Volleyball Coaches Association All-Central Region first team.

The senior, outside hitter led the Griffons with 396 kills for a 3.6 average per set and ranked fifth in the MIAA in kills per set average. The Seneca, Kansas native was second on the team with 438.5 points and third with 59 total blocks. She was also second on the team with 279 digs.

It’s the fourth postseason honor for Rottinghaus. She has also been named first team All-MIAA, CoSIDA Academic All-District first team and also was also an MIAA Scholar Athlete Award recipient as well as being named to the MIAA Academic Honor Roll.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri finishes trip to Maui with win over Chaminade

riggertMizzouLAHAINA, Hawaii (AP) — Missouri lost its first two games in Maui, lost a starter early to injury and fought foul trouble.

Even with all that adversity, no way were the Tigers going to head home without a victory.

Namon Wright scored 21 points, Montaque Gill-Caesar added 18 and Missouri beat Chaminade 74-60 Wednesday in the seventh-place game of the Maui Invitational.

“Our mentality coming in today was that we’re not going to leave Hawaii without a W, and I think we responded really well,” Gill-Caesar said.

Missouri (3-3) had two disappointing losses to open the tournament, but jumped on Chaminade (2-3) early, building a 10-point halftime lead behind Wright.

The Silverswords made a run in the second half, but Gill-Caesar stuffed any hope of a comeback by scoring 16 points and hitting four 3-pointers in the second half.

The Tigers did it with forward Johnathan Williams III playing just seven minutes because of a sore knee and with starting guards Keith Shamburger and Wes Clark going a combined 0 for 13 from the field.

“It wasn’t very pretty, but I thought we played well enough to win,” Missouri coach Kim Anderson said. “On the third day, to be able to come and get a win is important.”

Chaminade didn’t get a win, but that’s not what this tournament is about for the Silverswords. To pull off another upset would be great, but the experience of playing big-name programs — one few Division II programs get on a consistent basis — will only help Chaminade down the line.

Lee Bailey led the Silverswords with 22 points and Kuany Kuany added 14.

“Our goal coming in, obviously we’d love to win a game, win a couple games and stuff like that,” Chaminade coach Eric Bovaird said. “But the thing I talked to these guys about is we have the best opportunity in Division II to play against good competition to make us better.”

The Tigers were hoping to salvage something from their trip to paradise.

Missouri kept up with No. 3 Arizona in its opener before fading down the stretch and never really had a chance against Purdue on the second day.

The Tigers lost those two games by a combined 40 points and losing to the Division II Silverswords would have made it a disastrous trip.

Chaminade had pulled off upsets in this position before.

The host Silverswords are regulars in the seventh-place game with such strong fields in the Maui Invitational and have occasionally caught teams down or off-guard on the final day. Their lists of conquests include Texas, Oklahoma and Villanova through the years.

Chaminade struggled to open this year’s tournament, buried on the glass in a loss to Pittsburgh and by Chase Fischer’s wave of 3-pointers (10 in all) in a loss to BYU.

Missouri tried to make sure the Silverswords never stood a chance at the upset.

Using their depth to overwhelm the smaller Silverswords, the Tigers scored the game’s first nine points and built a 38-28 halftime lead.

Chaminade had trouble with Missouri’s length and athleticism, hitting 9 of 31 shots in the first half. The Silverswords also had a hard time finding Wright, who made all three of his 3-point attempts while scoring 12 points in the first half.

Missouri extended the lead to 15 in the first six minutes of the second half, but Chaminade went on a 7-0 run to pull within 52-46.

The upset suddenly seemed a possibility and the small-but-vocal group of Chaminade fans inside the Lahaina Civic Center started screaming and stomping the bleachers.

Gill-Caesar put an end to those thoughts, hitting three 3-pointers to push Missouri’s lead to 63-51.

“This tournament always helps just energy-wise and battle test us before we hit the conference play,” Bailey said.

TIP-INS

Chaminade: The Silverswords were good from the free-throw line, making 13 of 17, but not so good from the 3-point arc, going 9 for 28.

Missouri: The Tigers outscored Chaminade 38-9 in bench points. … Clark went 0 for 7, Shamburger 0 for 6.

UP NEXT

Missouri hosts Southeast Missouri State on Dec. 2.

Chaminade opens its Pacific West Conference schedule at home against Hawaii-Hilo on Dec. 4.

FRESHMAN REBOUND

Gill-Caesar scored 13 points to lead the Tigers against Arizona before all but disappearing against Purdue (two points, 1-of-6 shooting). The talented freshman was back to being assertive against Chaminade, hitting 5 of 11 shots, including 4 of 8 from the 3-point arc.

— Associated Press —

K-State gets clobbered by Pitt in Maui third-place game

riggertKStateLAHAINA, Hawaii (AP) — Pittsburgh opened the Maui Invitational by winning a game it was supposed to and lost in embarrassing fashion in the semifinals.

The Panthers closed out their trip to paradise by playing their best game of the season.

James Robinson had 14 points and six assists, and Pittsburgh was sharp at both ends to beat Kansas State 70-47 Wednesday in the third-place game of the Maui Invitational.

“That’s a very good team, Kansas State, that we beat and we beat it the way we wanted to do it as far as defense, execution on the offensive end and smart play throughout,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said.

Inconsistent to start the season, Pittsburgh (4-2) pulled it all together against the Wildcats, working the ball around for good shots inside and out, while limiting Kansas State’s chances at the other end.

The Panthers shot 55 percent and made 8 of 15 3-pointers after a lackluster shooting performance against No. 15 San Diego State in the semifinals.

Ryan Luther and Michael Young had 13 points apiece for Pitt.

Pittsburgh was solid at the defensive end, too, holding Kansas State (3-3) to 32 percent shooting, including 2 of 13 on 3-pointers.

The Panthers were particularly good against Marcus Foster, preventing K-State’s dynamic guard from getting loose for open shots. He had seven points on 3-of-9 shooting.

Thomas Gipson led Kansas State with 13 points and six rebounds.

“We had to share the ball better,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “When we move the ball and get it to open people, we’re a better team.”

The Wildcats held their composure down the stretch in the Maui opener against Purdue and were right with No. 3 Arizona in the semifinals, losing a hard-fought game 72-68.

Pittsburgh rolled over Chaminade in its opener behind a dominating performance on the glass, but couldn’t keep up when the intensity rose in the semifinals, losing 74-57 to No. 15 San Diego State.

The Panthers were manhandled in that game by the big, strong Aztecs, unable to do much at either end of the floor.

Pittsburgh held its ground better against another physical team in the third-place game, refusing to get pushed around by K-State’s beefy big men, Gipson and Stephen Hurt.

The Panthers led 30-27 at halftime and locked the Wildcats down to open the second half, holding them without a field goal — 0-for-5 shooting, two turnovers — over the first five minutes.

“First five minutes of the second half, we just couldn’t seem to get over the hump,” Weber said. “We just didn’t make the right read, the right play.”

Pitt pushed the lead to 41-30 on Luther’s straightaway 3-pointer and kept hounding the Wildcats into missed shots to maintain its cushion.

The Panthers held Kansas State to 23 percent shooting in the second half while making 15 of 23 shots at the other end.

Not a bad way to end a road trip, especially after being humiliated the day before.

“We came out and played really, really hard on defense,” Young said. “We paid attention to detail and got the job done.”

TIP-INS

Pittsburgh: The Panthers were outrebounded for the first time in the tournament. Kansas State had a 32-22 edge, including 14 offensive boards. … Pitt had a 28-10 advantage off the bench.

Kansas State: The Wildcats went 1 for 6 from 3-point range in the second half. … Nino Williams had the only blocked shot of the game by either team.

UP NEXT

Pittsburgh plays at Indiana on Tuesday.

Kansas State faces Nebraska-Omaha on Tuesday in Knoxville, Tennessee.

FOSTER’S NIGHT

Foster averaged 22 points and hit 16 of 28 shots in K-State’s first two games in Maui. He went 1 of 4 from 3-point range after a 6-for-9 performance against Arizona.

— Associated Press —

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