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Missouri remains fifth in latest BCS standings

riggertMizzouAuburn (fourth) and Missouri (fifth) are behind Ohio State and could make an interesting case for being in title game if they can win out and become SEC champions with just one loss. But the Buckeyes (.9200 BCS average) have a good-sized lead on both the Auburn Tigers (.8326) and Missouri Tigers (.8077).

Ohio State is third in each poll, followed by Clemson. Auburn is fifth and Missouri is sixth. The Buckeyes are also third in the computer ratings.

“They’re not going to pass Ohio State,” Palm said of Auburn and Missouri. “The coaches in particular are not going to allow an undefeated to not play for the title. They understand how hard it is to finish unbeaten. It hasn’t happened yet in the BCS and there is no reason to think it would this year.”

No. 1 Alabama (11-0) plays Auburn on Saturday, with the winner advancing to the Southeastern Conference championship game as the SEC West winner. Missouri or South Carolina will represent the East, depending on whether the Tigers beat Texas A&M at home.

No. 2 Florida State (11-0) plays struggling rival Florida at home Saturday and then moves on to the Atlantic Coast Conference championship game, where Duke, Virginia Tech, Miami or Georgia Tech will be the opponent.

Ohio State (11-0) finishes its regular season against rival Michigan at the Big House on Saturday, and then plays Michigan State in the Big Ten championship game. The Buckeyes have won a school-record 23 straight games. If they remain unbeaten the worst they can do is a trip to the Rose Bowl for the first time since the 2009 season.

— Associated Press —

Griffons use hot shooting to defeat Saint Mary, 96-77

MWSUHot shooting led the Missouri Western men’s basketball team to a 96-77 victory over the St. Mary’s (Kan.) Spires in non-conference action. The Griffons made 56.9-percent (37-65) of its shots with 10 three’s. Five Griffons scored in double figures led by Dzenan Mrkaljevic with 16 on 6-of-11 shooting. He scored 11 of his points in the second half. MWSU improves to 5-3 on the season and will return to action on Saturday, December 7 with the MIAA opener against Fort Hays State in the fieldhouse. Game time is set for 3:30 pm.

Western closed the half on 12-6 run capped by a Ryan Devers three as time expired giving the Griffons a 49-43 lead heading into the locker room. Devers finished the half with five points and seven assists.

MWSU shot the lights out in the opening period making 60.6-percent (20-33) of their field goals and 5-of-6 free throws. Missouri Western had 28 points in the paint and 10 points off seven St. Mary’s turnovers. Dareon Jones led the Griffons with 10 points off the bench as eight different players scored in the frame for Missouri Western.

The Spires also shot the ball well making 54.5-percent (18-33) of their field goals with four three’s. Sterling Roaf led the way with 12 points on 6-of-8 shooting while Grant Greenberg finished with 10.

Missouri Western dominated the second half opening up an 18 point lead at 75-57 with 11:21 to play after a layup by Cedric Clinkscales. The Griffons continued the uptempo play taking their largest leaf of the game at 21 after a Wes Mitter three with 1:35 to play. Mitter had six points on two three’s late in the contest.

Western had 20 assists with Devers finishing with seven while Adarius Fulton and Cortrez Colbert had four. The Griffons also ahd 16 points on 12 Spire turnovers. Colbert and Jones finished with 14 points while Clinkscales and Devers had 11 points apiece. Mrkaljevic finished with a team high six reboiunds.

The Spires fall to 4-3 with the loss as they were led by Torren Dowdy with 18 points and eight rebounds. Greenberg finished with 15 points while Sterling Roaf and Jerry Sipple finished with 12 and 11 respectively.

— MWSU Sports Information —

No. 2 Bearcats overcome slow start to roll past Minnesota Duluth

NWMSUAll through the season, Northwest Missouri State offensive players talked about the importance of the first drive in the second half.

The most important drive of the third quarter for the Bearcats so far this season occurred on a sunny Saturday afternoon in front of 4,514 fans at Bearcat Stadium in the second round of the NCAA Division II playoffs against Minnesota Duluth.

Northwest held a 10-point lead when it received the kickoff. The Bearcats went 70 yards in six plays and scored on an 18-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Trevor Adams to junior wide receiver Reuben Thomas. Thomas finished with 154 yards on eight receptions.

“That was big,” Adams said. “It solidified our lead. But you have to give it to our defense. They played well all game long. It was a good team win for us.”

The Bearcats wound up scoring three touchdowns in the third quarter on the way to a 45-21 victory.

Northwest, 12-0, advances to the quarterfinals and will play at home next Saturday against St. Cloud. The Bearcats also avenged a 2010 loss to Minnesota Duluth in the semifinals.

“We remember,” said Northwest senior linebacker Eric Reimer. “That conference has taken it to us the last few years. Last year Mankato beat us. We wanted to come out here and play a good game.”

When Northwest took a 17-0 lead, Minnesota Duluth needed to do something it was only able to accomplish once in the first half and that was to put together a drive.

The Bearcats stuffed the Bulldogs again and forced a punt.

Adams, who started slowly, was hitting his receivers between the numbers in the third quarter. He did it in impressive fashion in the next drive that once again started at the 30.

On this occasion, the Bearcats needed just three plays to go 70 yards. The 38-second drive was capped on a beautiful 50-yard spiral to junior wide receiver Jason Jozaites. It gave Northwest a 24-0 lead with 9:29 left in the third quarter.

“It was fun,” said Adams, who tossed four touchdowns and completed 16-of-24 passes for 277 yards.

“Our offensive line played great. I praise God for the way we were able to come out and play.”

A little later, Adams concluded his third quarter, touchdown hat trick with a 3-yard touchdown pass to senior wide receiver Clint Utter for a 31-0 lead.

“We finally felt comfortable,” said Utter, who caught two touchdown passes. “We had weird little things that kept happening in the first half. We were shooting ourselves in the foot. Once we calmed down and found that rhythm, we had during the season, from then on it was normal.”

The Bulldogs scored 14 points in the first 3 minutes of the fourth quarter, but they were too far behind to erase a 31-point deficit. But they made the game a bit too interesting when they scored a touchdown with 6:32 left, making it 31-21.

“Our defense was huge,” Utter said. “They kept us in the game. Duluth’s defense was doing it, too.

“Our defense played out of their minds. They came out physical and once we started scoring, it helped them out.”

The brick-wall defense by Northwest gave the offense most of the first half to get on track. And when the Bearcats started rolling with the ball, they scored quick.

Northwest scored 10 points in the final 2:11 left in the second quarter and went into halftime with a 10-0 lead.

On defense, Northwest did an amazing job keeping the Bulldogs off the scoreboard.

Late in the first quarter, after Hunter Malberg picked off his second pass, Minnesota Duluth had the ball at the Northwest’s 14. Three plays later, the Bulldogs were still on the 14 and had to settle for a 32-yard field goal attempt.

“That was huge. It kept us in the game,” Reimer said. “They score there and that is a big turning point in the game.”

The Bulldogs missed and that planted a seed for a decision late in the second quarter. Defense by both teams dominated the first quarter. Each team mustered just one first down in the opening quarter.

Midway through the second quarter, the Bulldogs grabbed the momentum when they completed a 24-yard pass on a fake punt from their 20.

Minnesota Duluth took advantage of a somewhat dazed Northwest team and marched to Northwest 3 and had first and goal. They managed just one yard in the next three plays.

Instead of settling for a field goal that was the length of an extra point, the Bulldogs went for it and got a yard, leaving them two yards short of the end zone.

“That was awesome,” Reimer said. “It kept the momentum on our side. It helped our offense, giving them more possessions. We were playing as a unit. It was a lot of fun.”

Northwest started at its 2. Back-up quarterback Brady Bolles made his first appearance and on the first play, he ran for 26 yards. Bolles’ run loosened up the passing game. The Bearcats drove to the 5 and on fourth and 5, they decided to kick a 25-yard field goal, which Simon Mathiesen made with 2:11 left in the second quarter.

“Our defense was playing great all game,” Bolles said. “We were putting them on a short porch and they kept getting stops. We knew the defense was going to keep rolling. We needed to get our game going. We got a field goal and kept going.”

The Bearcats went back to what they do best and stopped Minnesota Duluth in three plays and forced a punt.

A good return plus a personal foul penalty put the ball on the Bulldogs’ 35. Adams returned to quarterback and it took him three plays to put the ball in the end zone. The lone touchdown in the first half was an 11-yard strike to Utter with 42 seconds left until halftime.

“The way Brady came in and helped change momentum was huge,” Adams said. “Our defense played great the whole game. Brady came in and ran and switched things up.

“It got me going, too. I’m so glad he came in and did that. From there we were able to do some good things.”

— Northwest Sports Information —

No. 5 Mizzou takes down Texas A&M to win SEC East title

MUCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Henry Josey watched helplessly from the sideline last fall, rehabbing from a serious knee injury, while Missouri was getting pushed around in its first SEC season.

The senior running back’s legs produced the go-ahead score in a win that put the fifth-ranked Tigers in the SEC championship game.

”Those guys were 5 yards away from me before I could even get close to them,” Josey said of his breakaway 57-yard run that helped Missouri wrap up the SEC East with a 28-21 victory over No. 19 Texas A&M on Saturday night. ”A big hole opened up and I took it.”

Missouri (11-1, 7-1 SEC) advances to the conference championship game against Auburn – a matchup of schools very lightly regarded before the season. Missouri has made a six-win improvement from its initial SEC season and fourth-ranked Auburn (11-1, 7-1) has topped last year’s total by eight after stunning No. 1 Alabama.

”This tells everybody in the whole United States that Mizzou’s the real deal,” said wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham, who caught seven passes for 93 yards and a touchdown. ”Last year was just last year.

”It’s not about that, it’s just about what we’re capable of doing and what we’re going to do and how we did it.”

Missouri beat its fourth ranked opponent and reached 11 wins for the third time in school history, twice under Pinkel. Another win matches the school record set in 2007.

Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel was held in check for the second straight week, throwing one touchdown pass and rushing for 21 yards on 11 carries. He was 24 for 35 for 195 yards.

”In the second half, we all calmed down and we communicated,” linebacker Kentrell Brothers said. ”We were all on the same page and got it done.”

Coach Kevin Sumlin didn’t make Manziel available for the post-game. Reports have indicated Manziel, a redshirt sophomore, is close to making a decision whether to enter the NFL draft next April.

”He’s had better performances, he’s had worse performances,” Sumlin said. ”There’s pressure on him to perform at a high level all the time.”

Sumlin discounted a report Manziel, also held to one TD pass last week in a loss at LSU, has been hampered by a thumb injury

”If he wasn’t healthy enough to play, he wouldn’t have played,” Sumlin said.

The Aggies (8-4, 4-4) have lost consecutive games for the first time under coach Kevin Sumlin, who the school said earlier in the day agreed in principle on a new six-year contract that could keep him on the job through 2019. He’s 19-6.

Thousands of fans among a sellout crowd of 62,197 – nearly all of them clad in black, stormed the field after the game ended. The field wasn’t cleared for at least 20 minutes.

Missouri had been 11-44 under Pinkel when trailing at the half. Pinkel has 101 wins in 13 seasons at Missouri, tied for Don Faurot for most in school history.

Texas A&M has one of the worst defenses against the run in the nation, allowing 221 yards per game. Missouri totaled 225 yards with a 5.1-yard average, but until Josey’s breakaway run, the Aggies had done a nice job

Starting from its 34, Missouri’s decisive string began innocently with a 4-yard carry by Josey and a 5-yard carry by quarterback James Franklin. Josey busted free up the middle on third-and-1.

”What a great play,” coach Gary Pinkel said. ”What a great kid.”

Texas A&M never threatened the rest of the game and has lost four of the last five in the series. The exception was a showcase for Manziel, who threw for three touchdowns and ran for two scores in a 59-29 rout last year that was a 35-point rout by halftime.

Tra Carson broke two tackles on a 31-yard scoring run that was also the first touchdown allowed by Missouri in the first quarter in six games. Derel Walker’s 32-yard reception made it 14-7 late in the half.

Walker’s score came just 1:10 after Franklin’s 38-yard touchdown pass to L’Damian Washington. Manziel rolled out to buy time and Michael Sam tackled him a beat too late.

Early in the second quarter, Missouri failed to capitalize on a lost fumble by punt returner De’Vante Harris at the A&M 36. Backup Maty Mauk got his usual early series at quarterback and Missouri lost a yard on three plays before punting.

— Associated Press —

Western women fall to Missouri S&T for second straight loss

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women couldn’t complete the second half comeback falling 77-72 against Missouri S&T in the final game of the Doubletree/Houlihans Thanksgiving Classic. Sharniece Lewis finished with a career high 22 points making six three point shots. The Griffons fall to 4-2 on the season.

The first half belonged to the Miners as they built a nine point lead at 25-16 midway through the first half when Jaaron Kassanavoid finished a three point play at the 9:25 mark of the frame. From there the Griffons could only cut the lead to five at the half at 38-33.

In the half the Griffons made just 12-of-36 shots and 6-of-13 free throws. Ariana Novak led the way with eight points while Sharniece Lewis had seven points. Tiffanie Abrams led the way on the boards with seven rebounds.

The Miners made 15-of-32 shots and 5-of-8 free throws. They were led by Kassanavoid and Toni Knar with nine points apiece. Kylie Cooper finished with six rebounds.

In the second half the Griffons used a 12-2 run capped by a Sharniece Lewis three pointer giving the Griffons a 59-55 lead with 8:54 to play in the game. Jallisa Lewis gave the Griffons their first lead of the game on a free throw with 9:28 to play. The Griffons took its largest lead of the game at 71-66 when Sharniece Lewis hit another three with 4:02 to play but the rest of the game belonged to the Miners as they outscored the Griffons 11-1 picking up the five point victory.

Novak and Quenisha Locket finished with 17 and 10 points respectively while Abrams finished with eight boards. MWSU made just 10-of-22 free throws and 10-of-31 three pointers in the contest.

The Miners improve to 4-2 on the season as they had four players in double figures. Kylie Cooper and Knar each had 16 in the game.

The Griffons return to action next on Saturday, December 7 in their MIAA opener. They will host the Fort Hays State Tigers at 1:30 pm in the fieldhouse.

Doubletree Houlihan’s All-Tournament Team
Bethanie Funderburk (Drury)
Kylie Williamson (Drury)
Amy Philamlee (Union)
Shariece Lewis (Missouri Western)
Toni Knar (Missouri S&T)

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas State routs KU for fifth straight season, 31-10

KSULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — After the way that Kansas State ran the ball a week ago, Bill Snyder decided to make every effort to prove that the Wildcats were still a ground-and-pound kind of team.

No better opponent to ground and pound than its closest rival.

John Hubert ran for a career-high 220 yards, Jake Waters accounted for three touchdowns and the Wildcats beat turnover-prone Kansas 31-10 on Saturday for their fifth straight win in the series.

”I just got through with John, and I told him how proud I was,” Snyder said. ”Sometimes he gets caught dancing a bit, but today he didn’t’ do that. He kept his pad level low and ran hard.”

Unlike last week, when the senior running back had 17 yards in a loss to Oklahoma.

”Last week we didn’t rush the ball as well as we should of,” Hubert said, ”so we wanted to come out and prove we’re still a hard-nosed team. We came out and got the job done.”

Hubert also had a touchdown run for the Wildcats (7-5, 5-4), who will become the fourth school in Big 12 history to start 2-4 and reach a bowl game when it learns its destination in the coming weeks. The most likely bet is the Holiday Bowl, where Snyder has never lost.

Meanwhile, Kansas (3-9, 1-8) stumbles into the offseason with its fifth straight losing record and few signs that coach Charlie Weis had made much progress in two years in charge.

Jake Heaps threw for 138 yards with three interceptions, while Montell Cozart also threw a pick. The Jayhawks also fumbled twice for a season-high six turnovers.

”When you turn it over 100 times the chance you have to come back in a game like that just goes out the window,” said Weis, who only allowed two players – seniors Dexter Linton and Gavin Howard – to speak to reporters after the game.

Waters finished with 160 yards passing, including touchdown throws to Zach Trujillo and Glenn Gronkowski. Waters also ran for a TD while playing almost the entire way, even in a stiff breeze, as run-first quarterback Daniel Sams watched from the Kansas State sideline.

Dante Barnett had two interceptions and recovered a fumble for the Wildcats, while Dylan Schellenberg had a pick and also recovered a fumble while playing for injured safety Ty Zimmerman.

James Sims had 22 carries for 82 yards in his final game for Kansas. Last week, the senior became the first player in school history with back-to-back 1,000-yard rushing seasons.

”He’s probably one of the better running backs to ever come through, and because the team hasn’t won many games he’ll be underappreciated,” Weis said. ”I feel bad for him.”

The 112th edition of the Sunflower Showdown went very much like the last four editions.

Kansas State needed just three plays to get on the board first. Waters found Trujillo down the seam on an option-pass, and the big tight end rumbled untouched 35 yards for the touchdown.

After the Wildcats forced a punt, it took four more plays to score again. This time, it was Hubert finding a crease and running nearly untouched 21 yards for the score.

Kansas State made it 21-0 moments later when Waters hit his big fullback, Gronkowski, on a 29-yard catch-and-run that closely resembled Trujillo’s touchdown catch.

If there was any electricity in Memorial Stadium, it was gone by that point.

Heaps, took over for the ineffective Cozart, finally got Kansas going when he threw an 11-yard TD pass to Jimmay Mundine on fourth-and-2 in the second quarter. Then the Jayhawks took advantage of a fumble on the ensuing kickoff to tack on a short field goal.

Still, Kansas couldn’t overcome its abundance of miscues.

Heaps delivered a perfect pass to Mundine in the third quarter that the tight end bobbled into the air and Barnett picked off. Five plays later, Waters fooled the entire Kansas defense by running around the right side for another touchdown and a 28-10 lead.

”Turnovers are part of the game,” Weis said. ”It was just how they all packaged together.”

The Jayhawks were on the march again when Heaps threw a jump ball toward the end zone that Barnett intercepted again. Heaps was picked off one final time by Dorrian Roberts, and Ian Patterson knocked through a 31-yard field goal to put the game away.

”We wanted to finish this season off with a win,” Waters said. ”We didn’t play as well as we could have, which is disappointing, but if you can get the win, you have to take it.”

— Associated Press —

No. 2 Jayhawks bounce back, hold off UTEP

KUPARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) — Of the six halves Kansas played on its three-game trip to the Bahamas, Jayhawks coach Bill Self thought only one of them was any good.

The other five, he thought, were ”crappy.”

That’s the bad news. The good news is his team got two wins anyway.

Perry Ellis scored 15 of his 19 points in the second half, Wayne Selden Jr. scored 14 and No. 2 Kansas survived a stiff challenge before beating Texas-El Paso 67-63 on Saturday night in the third-place game at the Battle 4 Atlantis.

Joel Embiid came off the bench to add nine points, seven blocked shots – all in the second half, and the most in a game by a Kansas reserve since at least 1995 – and six rebounds.

”We have a long ways to go to become a good basketball team,” Self said. ”And that’s not all bad, either. We rarely have great teams in November. But we’re not as good as we were 17, 18 days ago. So that’s a little frustrating that we’ve gone backwards. We didn’t play well at all over here.”

Naadir Tharpe added 11 for the Jayhawks (6-1), who never trailed. The Jayhawks won despite Andrew Wiggins being held to six points, nearly 10 below the freshman’s season average.

McKenzie Moore scored 15 for UTEP (4-4), including three free throws with 6.8 seconds remaining to get the Miners within three. Justin Crosgile scored 14 points and Vince Hunter added 10 the Miners, who held Kansas to 39 percent shooting.

”Let me just say that we got beat by a fine team tonight,” UTEP coach Tim Floyd said. ”And they’re going to do a lot of things, I think, in the NCAA tournament this year.”

It was the second straight night where Kansas saw a big early lead, 11-2 against Villanova and 15-2 against UTEP, evaporate and the game turn into a struggle.

The finish was frantic, with UTEP scoring 13 points in just over a minute and carving away most of a late 14-point Jayhawk lead, but Kansas had enough.

Barely, but enough.

And if UTEP had been better from the line, it might have been a different story – the Miners missed 10 of 24 tries from the stripe.

”I was real pleased with the effort,” Floyd said.

Kansas led by 15 in the second half, and after a series of UTEP rallies, the Jayhawks were still up by 14 following Ellis’ jumper from the right wing with 2:21 left.

It was 59-45 at that point. It was 18-8 UTEP the rest of the way, a far cry from how the Miners started the night.

On UTEP’s first possession, Floyd – who isn’t exactly shy about going against convention, with his box-and-one and triangle-and-two defenses on display often in the Bahamas – did something hardly ever seen anymore, especially at the start of games.

He stalled, though said afterward that it wasn’t a true stall, just a set with hopes of creating 3-on-2 mismatches or open drives.

Think the old North Carolina ”four corners,” or something akin to it, anyway. That’s what the Miners did in the opening minutes, running an average of 30.1 seconds off the 35-second shot clock on their first nine possessions. Simple logic, really – the fewer possessions Kansas had, the fewer chances it would have to score.

It only sort of worked.

After 5 1/2 minutes, Kansas had only two points.

In that same span, the Miners had zero points.

”It was different … but I thought we adjusted well,” Ellis said.

The Miners missed their first six shots and didn’t get on the board until 12:35 remained in the half, a drive by C.J. Cooper snapping an 0 for 6 start by UTEP and cutting Kansas’ lead to 7-2. By the time UTEP scored again, Kansas had already pushed the lead out to 15-2, running off eight straight. And along the way, UTEP ditched the ploy and just started playing.

That’s when it became a game, for really the first time. UTEP went on an 18-11 spurt, getting within 26-20 late in the half. Wiggins – who had been scoreless until then – scored six straight to give Kansas a 12-point lead with 1:30 left, and Selden’s acrobatic drive gave the Jayhawks a 34-25 lead at the break.

But UTEP hung around, all the way to the end.

”We didn’t want to leave here without getting better for the rest of the season,” Hunter said. ”I believe we did. I believe we got better, playing the No. 2 team in the country.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest women earn second win as they defeat College of St. Mary

NWMSUThe Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team rebounded from a loss last Sunday with a 70-57 victory over the College of St. Mary Saturday at home.

The Bearcats came out to a 10-2 lead early in the first half. CSM was able to battle back has there were seven lead changes before halftime.

The Flames outscored Northwest in the paint 12 to 8 as they held a slim four point leading heading into halftime, 33-29.

CSM came out in the second half holding onto a 40-35 lead before the Bearcats went on a 16-2 run that spanned seven minutes and put them up 51-42.

Northwest never looked back as the offense clicked down the stretch and the Bearcats came away with a 70-57 win.

Ariel Easton led all scorers with 19 points and added five rebounds, four assists and three steals. Ashleigh Nelson added 14 points as she was a perfect 7 for 7 from the free throw line.

Shelby Mustain was able to grab her second double-double of the season with 12 points and 10 rebounds as she earned her first career start.

The Bearcats move their season record to 2-4 with the victory and will take on Pittsburg State Thursday to open up MIAA play. Tip-off at Bearcat Arena is scheduled for 5:30 pm.

Missouri Western women suffer first loss as they fall to No. 16 Drury, 71-60

MWSUFor the first time this season the Missouri Western women’s basketball team came up on the short end in a 71-60 loss against the 16th ranked Drury Panthers in the Doubletree/Houlihans Thanksgiving Classic. The big difference in the game was that the Griffons made just 11-of-28 free throws to the Panthers 37-of-56. The Griffons fall to 4-1 with the loss and will take on the Missouri S&T Miners tomorrow (Nov. 30) at 7:45 pm.

Western led just once in the game which was at 4-1 after an Ariana Novak laypu with 16:06 to play in the game. The Panthers took the lead at the 14:18 mark when Sanayika Shields hit a jumper with 14:18 to play in the first frame. The game was close until the 9:04 mark when the Panthers closed the half on a 22-10 run expanding its lead to 14 at 41-27 at the half.

The Griffons did have 18 points in the paint at the half but 19 first half fouls helped the Panthers make 21-of-30 free throws. The Griffons shot just 10-of-32 from the field and 7-of-16 from the free throw line. Denise White had eight points while Tiara Hall had six rebounds.

The Panthers were led by Bethanie Funderburk and Shields with 10 points apiece while Kylie Williamson had seven rebounds.

Missouri Western was able to cut the lead to six at the 10:08 mark of the second half on a JaQuitta Dever layup making the score 51-45. From there the Panthers outscored the Griffons by five to pick up the 11 point victory. Drury improves to 5-0 with the victory.

The Griffons dominated the points in the paint outscoring the Panthers 42-20 but gave up 19 second chance points on 16 DU offensive rebounds. Western shot just 36.4-percent (24-66) from the field and 9.1-percent (1-11) from long range. Ten Griffons scored with White leading the way with 10. Hall finished with nine points and 12 rebounds.

Drury also struggled shooting making just 16-of-48 (33.3%) form the field and 18.2-percent (2-11) from long range. The Panthers had three players score in double figures with Funderburk finishing with 21 points making 9-of-11 free throws. Williamson had a game high 13 rebounds.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats blow 15-point lead and lose at No. 4 Drury

NWMSUThe Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team fell to Drury University, 74-72, on Friday afternoon at the O’Reilly Event Center in Springfield, Mo. Drury, who was ranked No. 4 in the nation, was the NCAA Champion during the 2012-13 season. Northwest moves to 4-3 on the season while Drury remains perfect on the season at 4-0. The game was part of the Comfort Inn/Drury Thanksgiving Classic.

Northwest was led by Dillon Starzl who had a game-high 23 points on 9-of-12shooting. DeShaun Cooper had 13 points and was a perfect 3-for-3 from behind the arc. Cooper, Conner Crooker and Matt Wallace all had a team-best three assists. Crooker scored 10 points.

As a team, Northwest shot 50 percent from the field (26-for-52), forced 13 turnovers and had 10 steals. Drury shot just 54.8% from the line (17-for-31) but outrebounded the Bearcats, 31-30.

After falling behind early in the first half, 12-6, the Bearcats battled back, going on a 23-7 run to take a 29-19 lead with 6:36 left. With time winding down, Cooper recorded a steal and found Bryston Williams who hit a three astime expired, giving Northwest a 44-33 advantage.

The lead for Northwest would grow to as many as 15 midway through the second half, 61-46, with 10:46 remaining. But Drury would take the lead with a 26-10 run. With 1:03 left in the contest, Drury’s leading scorer Kameron Bundy hit a jumper to give the Panthers’ a 72-71 lead. After a Northwest turnover, Bundy hit another shot with 25 seconds left to push the lead to three, 74-71. After Northwest got the ball back, Drury fouled Cooper but he was only able to convert one foul shot down the stretch as the Panthers held on for the victory.

Northwest will face Truman State tomorrow afternoon at 1 p.m. on the final day of the tournament.

— Northwest Sports Information —

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