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K-State’s four-game win streak snapped with loss to Oklahoma

KSUMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Bob Stoops ran away from the tub filled with ice water just about as quickly and effectively as the Sooners’ Brennan Clay ran through the Kansas State defense on Saturday.

Who’d want to celebrate a milestone win by getting soaked on a frigid afternoon?

Clay ran for a career-high 200 yards and two touchdowns to pace the Sooners, and Trevor Knight filled in admirably at quarterback as No. 22 Oklahoma handled the Wildcats 41-31 to give Stoops his 158th victory and break a tie with coach Barry Switzer for the most in school history.

”I don’t look at anything at all individual,” Stoops said. ”I don’t have time to look at (the record). It’s something that, down the road, I’ll look back.”

Stoops insisted that the signature win didn’t feel any different coming against his former mentor, Kansas State coach Bill Snyder. Stoops was one of Snyder’s defensive assistants from 1989-95, and was instrumental in helping to turn around the wayward program.

”Bob’s never been one about whatever honors he’s won or been a part of,” said Mike Stoops, his younger brother and the Sooners’ defensive coordinator. ”I think with our whole team, it’s just not a big deal, even though I know he takes great pride in doing this.”

Freshman Trevor Knight, filling in for the injured Blake Bell, threw for 171 yards and accounted for two TDs for the Sooners (9-2, 6-2 Big 12), who found themselves in a shootout with a Kansas State offense that almost entirely abandoned the run.

Tyler Lockett was the beneficiary of it. The junior had 12 catches for a school-record 278 yards and three touchdowns, and finished with a school-record 440 yards of total offense.

”They challenged us to throw the ball and our receivers stepped up big,” said Jake Waters, who threw for 348 yards and accounted for four TDs. ”Tyler proved he’s one of the best in the nation so that made me look a lot better, too. You’ve got to give a lot of credit to Tyler.”

Waters didn’t look so good when he was picked off by the Sooners’ Zack Sanchez in the fourth quarter. Sanchez returned it 74 yards for a touchdown, putting the game out of reach.

It also ended a four-game winning streak for Kansas State (6-5, 4-4).

”This was a collective loss. Take your pick,” Snyder said. ”Oklahoma played very well. They were the better team and played better and coached better. They did everything better.”

The Sooners struck first when Knight hit Sterling Shepard from 12 yards out on third-and-goal in the first quarter, but that was about the last pass that Oklahoma called in the first half.

At one point, Stoops called for runs on 17 of 18 plays, including all 14 on a 98-yard TD drive. Clay and Knight did most of the work, with Knight fooling defensive end Ryan Mueller on a fake handoff and running untouched the final 8 yards for a 14-0 lead.

While the Sooners were pounding the ball, Kansas State abandoned the run.

Waters and Lockett took advantage of blown coverage to hook up for the first time for a 48-yard scoring strike early in the second quarter. When the Wildcats got the ball back, Waters found his favorite target with a perfectly thrown 30-yard TD pass in the corner of the end zone.

Oklahoma answered on the ground with Clay scooting to his right, sticking his foot in the turf and turning up field, racing past the secondary for a 69-yard touchdown run.

It took all of one play – a 90-yard pitch-and-catch from Waters to Lockett – for the Wildcats to make it 21-all. The TD catch also allowed Lockett to match the school record for a single game.

Michael Hunnicutt’s field goal in the final seconds gave Oklahoma a 24-21 halftime lead.

As entertaining as the first half was for offensive savants, the third quarter turned into a sluggish affair. Both teams muddled their way to field goals on time-consuming drives.

The Sooners finally seized control when they pinned Kansas State at the 3-yard line. The Wildcats went three-and-out, and Mark Krause’s punt into the wind went nowhere. Jalen Saunders caught it on the run and returned it to the 3, where Clay ran it in on the next play.

Oklahoma put the game out of reach moments later, when Sanchez picked off Waters and returned it up the sideline for a touchdown. The Sooners’ sideline erupted as he crossed the goal line to make it 41-24 with just over 11 minutes left in the game.

Waters added a TD run for Kansas State in the closing minutes for the final margin.

”We had our chances and we let it slip,” Waters said. ”That kind of proves that we’re almost there, but we’re not quite there yet. We still have a lot of room to improve.”

— Associated Press —

Tigers pull away from Gardner-Webb for 72-63 victory

MUCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Johnathan Williams III grabbed a career-high 17 rebounds and Earnest Ross scored 17 points to lead Missouri past Gardner-Webb 72-63 on Saturday.

Missouri (4-0) only led by two points at halftime and foul troubles hampered its effort to pull away from the Runnin’ Bulldogs, who were picked to finish second in the South Division of the Big South.

The Tigers won their 76th consecutive game at home against a nonconference opponent and their 21st in a row overall at Mizzou Arena.

Naji Hibbert and Jerome Hill both scored 17 points for Gardner-Webb (2-3).

Missouri led 31-29 at the break but amassed 10 fouls in the first 7:47 of the second half. Officials whistled Jabari Brown for a technical with 14:53 remaining after he missed a fastbreak layup and got tangled with a handful of Gardner-Webb players underneath the basket.

The Tigers’ bench then received a technical after complaining that no infraction was called against Jordan Clarkson on a missed layup with 11:14 on the clock. Hibbert converted one of the two ensuing free throws to narrow the Runnin’ Bulldogs’ deficit to 48-45.

Missouri answered with a 14-0 run capped by a 3-point play by Williams with 7:24 remaining to give the team some breathing room the rest of the game. Playing in only his fourth career game, Williams’ putback dunk created the loudest applause of the night from the 6,738 in attendance.

A 6-foot-9-inch freshman from Memphis, Tenn., Williams became the first freshman to start a season opener for the Tigers since 2004. He scored seven points on 3-of-10 shooting Saturday, but his rebounding helped Missouri take a 46-29 advantage on the boards and a 46-18 lead in scoring from the paint.

Hibbert, a transfer from Texas A&M, has scored 52 points for Gardner-Webb in his last three games after averaging 3.7 points per game in three seasons with the Aggies. He faced the Tigers five times when the schools met as members of the Big 12.

Missouri scored its first 26 points from the paint before Ross converted the first of two free throws with 2:34 remaining in the opening half. Tony Criswell and Torren Jones added another three combined points from the charity stripe to complete the Tigers’ scoring for the opening 20 minutes.

Gardner-Webb scored its first six points from inside the lane but only two of its next 23 came from the paint. The Runnin’ Bulldogs used an early 10-0 run to lead 14-10 just 7:20 into the game, but that would be their biggest lead of the afternoon.

The game marked the opening of the Las Vegas Invitational for both teams, who had never faced each other prior to Saturday. Although the matchup had no impact on the outcome of the tournament, both schools will travel to Nevada for games on Thanksgiving.

— Associated Press —

Kansas gets blanked at Iowa State, 34-0

KUAMES, Iowa (AP) — Freshman Grant Rohach passed for a season-best 300 yards and two touchdowns and Iowa State beat Kansas 34-0 on a frigid Saturday night for its first Big 12 victory.

James White and Shontrelle Johnson each ran for a touchdown and Cole Netten kicked two field goals for the Cyclones (2-9, 1-7), who broke a seven-game losing streak at home and sent Kansas to its 24th straight road loss.

Just one week after breaking a 27-game conference losing streak, the Jayhawks (3-8, 1-7) failed to capitalize on some early scoring opportunities and never got much going in the second half, either.

Rohach, who had not thrown a touchdown pass in his five previous games, finished 15 of 20 with one interception and scoring throws of 58 yards to Aaron Wimberly and 15 yards to Quenton Bundrage.

It was the coldest game in Jack Trice Stadium history – 8 degrees at kickoff and 3 by the start of the second half – and the field was frozen and slick. But it didn’t bother the Cyclones, who amassed a season-high 502 yards and recorded their first shutout since beating Northern Iowa 27-0 on Sept. 25, 2010.

Iowa State had not blanked a conference opponent since a 41-0 victory over Baylor in 2001.

Kansas’ James Sims rushed for 114 yards in 21 carries to run his season total to 1,028 and become the first Jayhawk player with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons.

But freshman quarterback Montell Cozart was ineffective in his second start, completing just 4 of 12 passes for 20 yards and one interception. He was replaced in the third quarter by previous starter Jake Heaps.

Iowa State led 10-0 at halftime and put the game away with 17 third-quarter points.

Netten kicked a 21-yard field goal and Iowa State got the ball back at the Kansas 38 after a short punt. Six plays later, Rohach hit Bundrage on the right sideline and the sophomore wideout broke a tackle and fought his way into the end zone.

After a Kansas three-and-out, Rohach completed passes of 18 yards to Justin Coleman and 42 yards to Bundrage before White burst up the middle on a 5-yard touchdown run to make it 27-0, a safe cushion on a night like this.

Johnson added to it with a 23-yard TD run early in the fourth quarter.

Iowa State, which has struggled to get its offense going early in games, struck on its second possession.

Wimberly slipped behind the defense and no one was near him when he caught Rohach’s pass and turned it into a 58-yard touchdown, the longest play of Rohach’s young career. Netten added a 22-yard field goal to make it 10-0.

Kansas had nothing to show for three drives into Iowa State territory in the opening half.

ISU’s Nigel Tribune stopped receiver Christian Matthews well short of a first down on fourth-and-4 at the Cyclone 26 on the Jayhawks’ first possession. Later, two nifty runs by Cozart got the Jayhawks to the ISU 13, where a horde of tacklers stuffed Sims for no gain on fourth-and-1.

Late in the half, the Jayhawks reached the 37, only to be frustrated by a holding penalty and Jansen Watson’s interception of Cozart’s heave to the end zone.

The coldest game at Jack Trice Stadium previously was a 17-14 loss to Colorado on Nov. 23, 1991, when it was 17 at kickoff and blowing snow obliterated the yard lines and numbers.

This season also had the warmest game in stadium history. It was 92 when the Cyclones opened the season against Northern Iowa on Aug. 31.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women roll past Kansas Wesleyan for Smith’s first win

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team topped Kansas Wesleyan Friday, 88-55, as head coach Michael Smith earns his first win at the helm of the Bearcats.

It was a tightly contested game early  in the first half. Wesleyan led 26-23 with under seven minutes to play before the Bearcats went on a scoring spree.

Northwest went on to score 21 unanswered points to end the half as they took a commanding 44-26 lead.

The Bearcats shot 65 percent from the floor in the first half and were led by Ashleigh Nelson who posted 12 points and two assists.

Northwest opened the second half with an 8-2 run and didn’t look back as they rolled to an 88-55 victory.

“It’s a great feeling to get that first win,” said Coach Smith. “Our team has put in a lot of practice hours and to know their hard work is paying off is nice.”

The Bearcats had five players finish with double-digit point totals. Ariel Easton finished with 23 points, three assists and one steal.

Annie Mathews earned her first double-double of the season with 11 rebounds and 10 points.

Northwest will hit the road and take on Pittsburg State Sunday for a nonconference contest. Tip-off is scheduled for 2 p.m.

— Northwest Sports Information —

No. 2 Kansas flys past Towson Friday, 88-58

KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Every time that Towson missed a shot, it seemed as if somebody from Kansas was there to corral the rebound, throw an outlet pass and start the Jayhawks on the fast break.

Usually it ended up with a dunk.

Andrew Wiggins and the high-flying Jayhawks put together a highlight reel in the first half Friday night, rolling to a big lead over the overmatched Tigers. The nation’s No. 2 team cruised in the second half to an 88-58 win in its opening game of the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament.

”When we’re playing our game, no one can stop us,” said Wiggins, the star freshman who led the Jayhawks (4-0) with 16 points. ”When we play in the flow of the game, no one can stop us. We have too many tools to use. When we’re playing like we did today, nobody can stop us.”

Andrew White III finished with 13 points, Wayne Selden added 12 and Perry Ellis had 10 for the Jayhawks, who used a 22-2 run to take a 49-16 lead by halftime. From there, they might as well have started to look ahead to their game against Wake Forest in the Bahamas on Thanksgiving Day.

The Jayhawks are scheduled for three games in the rest of the Battle 4 Atlantis.

”Hopefully this will be a good stretch for us to start putting some stuff together,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. ”We’re making steps in the right direction.”

Jerrelle Benimon had 21 points and 10 rebounds to lead Towson (3-2), the favorite in the Colonial Athletic Association. Rafriel Guthrie scored 15 points off the bench.

”They’re deep, they’re athletic, and unfortunately for us, they were locked in,” Towson coach Pat Skerry said with a shake of his head. ”If there’s a better team in the country, I’d like to find out who they are, and I certainly don’t want to play them.”

After stumbling a bit out of the gate, the uber-athletic Jayhawks reeled off 11 straight points to seize control. Six of the points came on rim-rattling dunks, two of those by Tarik Black.

Towson quickly became rattled and started to settle for a cacophony of quick 3-pointers, ill-advised shots in the paint and tightly contested jumpers. All of its misses only served to fuel the Kansas fast break, which piled up 22 points in the first 20 minutes.

”All of them run,” Benimon said. ”They just get up and down.”

The Tigers were still within 27-14 with 7:42 left in the half, but they only managed one field goal from there as Kansas used a 22-2 finishing flurry to blow the game open. Wiggins scored nine of his 14 first-half points during the run, and was involved in both of the highlights.

The first came after a miss by the Tigers’ Timajh Parker-Rivera. The ball ended up with Frank Mason, whose pretty one-bounce, cross-court pass to Wiggins resulted in an easy dunk.

The second highlight came after Mike Burwell missed and Mason again got the ball in the open court. He fed it to fellow freshman Conner Frankamp who, rather than take a mildly contested layup, added one extra pass like a seasoned veteran that Wiggins slammed with two hands.

By the time White was fouled in transition and made the second of two free throws with 1.4 seconds left on the clock, the Jayhawks had built their huge halftime advantage.

Kansas wound up shooting 69 percent from the field over the opening 20 minutes, had a 23-11 advantage on the boards and outscored the smaller Tigers 26-10 in the paint.

Towson shot 20.7 percent from the field and missed all 10 of its 3-point tries.

The Jayhawks didn’t slow down much in the second half, racing up and down the court like it was a YMCA pickup game. Black had another big dunk during one stretch, Frankamp curled in a 3 and Kansas coasted to its 66th consecutive non-conference win at Allen Fieldhouse.

The Jayhawks won’t return to the friendly confines of the Phog for close to a month. After the Bahamas, they visit Colorado and Florida along with playing New Mexico at Sprint Center in Kansas City, Mo. They return home to play Georgetown on Dec. 21.

”I think potentially we could be one of the better teams, no question,” Self said. ”I think by the end if our young kids get better, we have a chance to be in the conversation. … There’s a lot of nice teams out there but certainly when we play with energy we can be one of the better ones.”

— Associated Press —

Ten Griffon volleyball players earn MIAA academic honors

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team placed 10 players on the MIAA Academic Honor Roll which was released by the MIAA office Friday (Nov. 22) afternoon. Amanda Boender and Sarah Faubel wer two of 18 volleyball players in the MIAA who received the MIAA Scholar Athlete Awards.

To achieve honor roll status, a student-athlete must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 and have at least two terms of attendance at the certifying member institution, excluding summer terms.

Of the 95 MIAA student-athletes who received MIAA Academic Honor honors 18 of them have earned the MIAA Scholar Athlete Award, which is given to those who have a cumulative grade point average of 3.50, have at least two terms of attendance at the certifying member institution, excluding summer terms, and, if competing in a championship sport of the MIAA, earn All-MIAA honors.

Newcomers and MIAA Academic Excellence Awards will be given out following the end of the 2013-14 school year.

MIAA Academic Honor Award
Erin Backhuus
Amanda Boender
Jordan Chohon
Brooke Cousino
Sarah Faubel
Meredith McCormick
Lindsey Partridge
Holly Pollock
Kelly Scannell
Jessie Thorup

MIAA Scholar Athlete
Amanda Boender
Sarah Faubel

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas State drops second straight as they get drilled by Georgetown

KSUSAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera had 25 points to lead four Georgetown starters in double-figures as the Hoyas overwhelmed Kansas State in a 90-63 victory on Friday at the Puerto Rico Tip-Off.

Jabril Trawick added 16 points for the Hoyas (2-2).

Georgetown coach John Thompson III didn’t hold his tongue in critiquing his team’s dismal second-half performance in its opening-game loss to Northeastern on Thursday.

The Hoyas responded by playing much more fluidly in their offensive sets and by limiting their mistakes. They led by as many as 29 and shot 63 percent from the field for the game with 19 assists.

Kansas State (2-3) fell in a 10-0 hole early and never could sting together a meaningful run. Thomas Gipson led the Wildcats with 18 points. In his third game back after from injury Gipson got more involved, but again was stunted early because of foul trouble.

Georgetown was the much livelier team out of the opening tip and led by 17 at the half.

K-State picked things up in the final 20 minutes, but its efforts were too late as the Georgetown pushed its lead above 20 with just under 12 minutes to play.

Coming off a lackluster shooting performance down the stretch in the Northeastern loss, the Hoyas were a lot more fluid in the first half Friday against the Wildcats.

The Hoyas pushed the pace early, forcing 10 K-State turnovers in the opening 20 minutes. Georgetown also spread the ball around in the half court, shooting 63 percent and racking up 11 assists on its 17 field goals.

The Wildcats connected on just 8 of 24 attempts from the field in the half and had only two assists.

— Associated Press —

Stefan Jankovic to transfer from Missouri

Missouri Basketball vs Missouri Southern - November 4, 2012 Photo by Ben WaltonUniversity of Missouri sophomore forward Stefan Jankovic announced on Friday that he will transfer out of the program.

Jankovic (6-foot-11, 242 pounds) expressed an interest in more playing time as his reason for the transfer.

“First and foremost, Stefan was a great representative of our program during his time at Mizzou and we wish him and his family all the best as his collegiate career moves forward,” Head Coach Frank Haith said. “Stef wants a larger role in his next opportunity and I will do everything I can to help him land in a great situation.”

A 6-foot-11 forward, Jankovic played in 28 games during his Tiger career, averaging 3.1 points and 1.6 rebounds. He played in all three Tiger games this year, averaging 3.3 points in 8.7 minutes a contest.

“I want to thank everyone at Missouri, my teammates, the coaching staff, the administration and the fans,” Jankovic said. “This was a tough decision for me, and Missouri will always hold a special place in my heart, but this was about having the opportunity to find a better fit where I could play a larger role on the court. I am looking forward to my next opportunity and want to wish everyone at Mizzou all the best this year.”

Missouri returns to action on Saturday vs. Gardner-Webb at 2:30 p.m.

— MU Sports Information —

Cardinals trade Freese to Angels in four-player deal

CardsFormer World Series MVP David Freese was traded by his hometown St. Louis Cardinals to the Los Angeles Angels in a four-player deal Friday that reunites Albert Pujols with a pair of ex-teammates.

In a conference call with media, Freese said he got a welcoming text from Pujols and responded with a reference to the 2011 World Series: “Remember what we did the last time we played together? Let’s go try to do that again.”

Freese didn’t think his drop-off in production last season had anything to do with the pressure of being the “hometown kid.”

“Obviously, I’m a little sad closing this chapter, but I’m extremely pumped about joining the Angels,” Freese said. “If it was going to go down, I wanted it to happen on a team like the Angels.”

St. Louis obtained a new starting center fielder in Peter Bourjos, plus outfield prospect Randal Grichuk. The Cardinals also sent reliever Fernando Salas to the Angels.

“Overall, we just felt this was a very compelling deal to make,” Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said.

Freese’s departure did not come as a surprise.

“I definitely would look myself in the mirror and say, ‘Where am I going to be in March?'” Freese said. “I was ready to go anywhere. I’m excited to get this going.”

The 30-year-old was the MVP of the 2011 NL championship series and the World Series, setting a major league record with 21 postseason RBIs and hitting a game-ending, 11th-inning home run in Game 6.

Freese injured his back chasing a foul ball into the stands during spring training this year and never hit stride. He hit only .179 in this year’s postseason, going 3-for-19 (.158) with no RBIs in the six-game loss to Boston in the World Series.

“David, growing up in St. Louis, this could not have been the easiest place to play,” Mozeliak said. “I do think he may be looking forward to a fresh start. This was not an easy year for him.”

Freese batted .262 with nine homers and 60 RBIs, a letdown from career bests of 20 homers, 79 RBIs and a .293 average the previous year. Freese made $3.15 million and is eligible for salary arbitration.

“He knows how to drive in the important runs,” Angels general manager Jerry Dipoto said. “That’s something that really fits in our lineup.”

The Angels were a match because they need a third baseman and Freese didn’t figure as the long-term solution at third for St. Louis. The Cardinals will move second baseman Matt Carpenter to third, opening a position for former top draft pick Kolten Wong.

Wong batted just .153 in 32 games last fall and was picked off first base to end Game 4 of the World Series against the Red Sox. Mozeliak said that was just a “snapshot” of Wong, who batted .303 with 20 steals in 21 chances at Triple-A Memphis.

“It gives Wong a clear shot,” Mozeliak said. “I think he’s going to hit.”

Pujols also played on the 2011 title team before signing a $240 million, 10-year deal with the Angels. Bourjos said Pujols called him just before the start of a teleconference with St. Louis media and Bourjos planned to call back later, adding, “I’m going to pick his brain a little bit more, but I can’t wait.”

The trade adds about $4 million to the payroll of the Angels, who have yet to add starting pitching. Jason Vargas left this week for a $32 million, four-year contract with Kansas City.

The Angels haven’t had an accomplished third baseman since Chone Figgins left after the 2009 — their last postseason appearance. Their outfield next season is likely to be Josh Hamiliton in left, Trout in center and Kole Calhoun in right.

Coming off their second World Series appearance in three years, the Cardinals have shed more than $45 million in payroll with Chris Carpenter, Carlos Beltran, Jake Westbrook, Rafael Furcal and Edward Mujica also off the books.

The 28-year-old Salas had 24 saves in 2011, but did not have a major role in the bullpen the last two years and spent part of 2013 in the minors. He was 0-3 with a 4.50 ERA in 27 games last year.

The 26-year-old Bourjos, who bumps Jon Jay to the bench, was supposed to be the Angels’ everyday center fielder last year after Los Angeles allowed Torii Hunter to leave and traded Kendrys Morales. Trout was moved to left to accommodate Bourjos, who is a better fielder.

“We did juggle some things around to make sure he got an opportunity, and it didn’t play out the way we hoped or the way he hoped,” Dipoto said.

Bourjos missed May with a hamstring strain, then broke his right wrist when he was hit by a pitch in Houston on June 29. He played just 55 games, said he was “getting real close” to full strength.

A career .251 hitter with speed, Bourjos stole 41 bases in 54 attempts and was among AL leaders with 11 triples, 17 bunt hits and 38 infield hits in 2011.

Allen Craig will move to right field next year, making room for slugger Matt Adams at first base, with Matt Holliday in left field. Top prospect Oscar Taveras is expected to make the team but without the pressure of starting in center field.

The 22-year-old Grichuk was the 24th overall selection in the 2009 amateur draft, one ahead of Mike Trout, and starred at Double-A Arkansas last season. Dipoto said Grichuk likely would have begun next season at the Triple-A level.

“There’s still some growing he needs to do at the plate, but Randal has the upside to play at the major league level,” Dipoto said. “I hope he ends up a major league player.”

Grichuk had 57 extra-base hits, including a team-leading 22 homers that ranked sixth in the Texas League. He batted leadoff the majority of the time and made two errors in the outfield, playing center and right field. Grichuk has a .284 average with 61 homers and 259 RBIs in 433 minor league games.

— Associated Press —

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