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Northwest Missouri State women upset No. 25 Truman State

NWMSUJan. 1, 2011 was the last time the Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team defeated a top 25 opponent at home until Saturday when #25 Truman State fell to the Bearcats 72-65.

Alexis Boeh and Ashley Thayer were honored before the game against the Bulldogs as the lone seniors that were playing their final game at Bearcat Arena.

A 4-4 tie that last 6:20 in the first was an early indication that this was going to be a hard fought game.

Maggie Marnin led the way for the Bearcats in the first half with eight points in eight minutes. Northwest went into halftime with a 32-26 lead.

The Bearcats went on an 11-1 run in the second half that last 4:50 and gave them a 57-49 lead they were able to hold onto down the stretch to give them the 72-65 victory.

Alexis Boeh left it all on the court in her final home game as she finished with 11 points, two rounds and one blocked shot. Tember Schechinger was 5-7 from the floor and finished with 16 points, five rebounds and got three steals.

The Bearcats will travel to Joplin, Mo. Tuesday to take on the #8 seed Missouri Southern Lions in the first round of the MIAA tournament. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. at the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center with the winner moving on to play the #1 seed in Kansas City, Mo.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

McLemore scores 36 as KU crushes West Virginia

KUBy shattering Danny Manning’s Kansas freshman record with 36 points on Saturday, Ben McLemore did more than propel the sixth-ranked Jayhawks to a 91-65 romp over West Virginia.

He also took Bill Self back to his own college days.

The Kansas coach was a senior guard at Oklahoma State when Manning lit up the Cowboys for 35 points on March 2, 1985 in an 88-79 Jayhawks victory, a school record which stood exactly 28 years.

”I was in that game,” Self said with a grin. ”I played the back line of a 2-3 zone. I think he got like 20 on me. But not all 35.”

What Manning lacked that day was a teammate like Jeff Withey, who complemented McLemore with 14 points, 10 rebounds and nine blocks, falling one block shy of a triple-double as Kansas (25-4, 13-3 Big 12) took a half-game lead over Kansas State in its quest for a ninth straight Big 12 championship. The 13th-ranked Wildcats played later Saturday at Baylor.

”I was one block away (from a triple-double) and I felt pretty good about that,” said Withey, who pushed his school and conference record to 281 blocks. ”Nine is a lot, and I did a lot of work for that. As long as we get the win, I’m usually happy.”

McLemore, a 6-foot-5 redshirt freshman, went to the bench with a little more than 5 minutes left after hitting 12 of 15 shots from the field, including 5 of 6 from beyond the 3-point arc. He had seven rebounds and four assists.

Elijah Johnson, one game after scoring 39 points at Iowa State, had 12 points and 10 assists for the Jayhawks.

”I just want to thank my teammates, especially Elijah, for creating things for me and helping me get my shots open,” said McLemore, who got the record with his fifth 3-pointer. ”Elijah is a great player because he can see when I get on a roll and he wants to keep feeding me.”

”Ben was remarkable tonight,” Self said. ”Elijah was good. Jeff was great. Everybody else was solid. That’s about as efficient offensively as we’ve been all year.”

The Jayhawks shot 57 percent for the game.

While being so active on both ends of the court, Withey did not pick up his first foul until a little more than 5 minutes remained in the game.

”He is the best shot-blocker in the country,” West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said.

Terry Henderson had 20 points for the Mountaineers (13-16, 6-10), including 6 of 9 from 3-point range. Dominique Rutledge had 14 of his 17 points in the second half in West Virginia’s first visit to venerable Allen Field House, where Self now stands 162-8 with one home to go in his 10th season as Kansas head coach.

”We’re not good enough to get down 10 or 12 or 14 to a team as good as they are and be able to come back,” Huggins said. ”We have to keep the game within reach and it’s hard to do that when we commit unforced errors.”

McLemore scored 19 points in a back-and-forth first half which Naadir Tharp brought to an end with a long 3-pointer just seconds ahead of the buzzer for a 45-31 Kansas lead.

”We could have guarded him a little better. We didn’t guard him very well,” Huggins said.

The Mountaineers had a hot hand early and led by as many as six points while Kansas was groping to find its shot.

As soon as they located it, the Jayhawks quickly seized control with an 18-5 run, fueled by McLemore’s two 3-pointers and three blocks by the 7-foot Withey, who had a 3-inch height advantage over West Virginia’s Deniz Kilicli.

Withey had a triple-double earlier this season against San Jose State with 16 points, 12 rebounds and 12 blocks.

The Jayhawks host Texas Tech on Monday night then finish the regular season at Baylor.

”We know we have to win the rest of our games to win the conference (championship). And in order to get into our groove in the tournament,” Withey said.

— Associated Press —

Benedictine women fall to Central Methodist in HAAC Semifinals

riggertBenedictine3For the first time this season, the No. 12 Benedictine women’s basketball team found themselve in an overtime game.

After trailing by six points at the break, Benedictine (27-5) outscored Central Methodist University (25-6) 36-30 in the second half to force overtime only to have CMU drop 19 points in the overtime period to earn the upset Benedictine 78-70 in the HAAC Postseason Tournament semifinals.

CMU limited Benedictine to just eight field goals in the first half while converting 11 field goals themselves.

In the second half, Benedictine hit 13 field goals and went 6 of 10 from beyond the arc to force overtime.

CMU hit 12 free throws in the overtime period outscoring Benedictine 19-11 to earn a trip to the HAAC Postseason Tournament championship game on Tuesday against top-seeded and No. 9-ranked MNU.

Benedictine finished with four players in double figures while CMU finished with five in double figures.

Kyra Williams led all scorers with 19 points for CMU while Benedictine’s top scorer was Justice Payne with 17.

Benedictine now waits for the results of Tuesday’s championship game between CMU and MNU. Should MNU win the tournament title, Benedictine would get the second automatic berth in the NAIA Div. I National Tournament as the second-place regular season team. If CMU upsets MNU for the second automatic berth, Benedictine would earn an at-large bid.

— BC Sports Information —

K-State survives at Baylor on McGruder’s three at the buzzer

KSURodney McGruder was surprised that Kansas State was even getting the chance at another shot in regulation.

It was quick, and it worked.

McGruder made a 3-pointer at the buzzer for a 64-61 victory Saturday night that kept the 13th-ranked Wildcats in a tie for the Big 12 lead.

They unexpectedly got the ball back with a second remaining following Baylor’s failed desperation inbound pass.

”I was thinking of something different. But that goes for being fortunate,” McGruder said of a game that seemed headed for overtime. ”It worked out in our favor. That’s all I can say.”

Kansas State (24-5, 13-3 Big 12) had already missed one potential tiebreaking shot when Shane Southwell missed badly on a shot that went out of bounds with 1 second left.

Instead of settling for overtime, the Bears (17-12, 8-8) brought seldom-used Jacob Neubert off the bench to try a length-of-the-court inbound pass.

But Neubert’s baseball-style pass went out of bounds without being touched. So the Wildcats got the ball under their own basket without any time running off the clock.

The Wildcats called timeout and set up the play. Angel Rodriguez inbounded the ball to McGruder, who worked around defenders to get open on the right wing a couple of feet beyond the 3-point line. He swished the shot.

”We didn’t do a very good job on the possession before that. We really didn’t get a good look,” Wildcats coach Bruce Weber. ”(Southwell) was probably our last option on that one and I probably should have called timeout. … We didn’t have a quick hitter on shot clocks and we just call in ‘quick.’ The kids said, ‘Let’s run it.’ We’ve run it once this year. Rodney read it perfectly. Great pass by Angel.”

McGruder finished with 18 points for the Wildcats, who won their fifth straight game and ninth in 10 to maintain a share of the Big 12 lead with sixth-ranked Kansas with two regular season games left. The Jayhawks got their 13th league victory earlier Saturday, 91-65 over West Virginia.

Pierre Jackson had 18 points and seven assists for Baylor, which has lost seven of its past 10 games.

”I don’t remember losing on a buzzer-beater – ever. So I don’t know how to react to it,” Jackson said.

Cory Jefferson had 14 points while Isaiah Austin, the Bears’ 7-foot-1 freshman standout, had 11 points and 12 rebounds for his 10th double-double this season.

”It was a great game and a terrible ending for the Baylor Bears,” coach Scott Drew said. ”With one second, it’s hard not to try to win the game. Jacob has done a great job of making that pass. Isaiah has come down with it, Cory has come down with it, Quincy Acy has come down with it. So it would be tough not to try it from underneath out of bounds. … The plan was for (Isaiah) to catch it and lay it in, and we storm the court.”

The celebration instead belonged to the Wildcats, who mobbed McGruder at midcourt.

The Bears have a quick turnaround, with a game Monday night at Texas. They close the regular season at home next Saturday against Kansas.

Baylor had its first lead in the second half when Jefferson got a bounce pass from Brady Heslip and made a layup while being fouled by Southwell with 3:58 left. After the media timeout that immediately followed, Jefferson made the free throw to put the Bears up 56-54.

Southwell then had a shot blocked by Austin, but the ball went out of bounds, and Rodriguez hit a 3-pointer to put the Wildcats back ahead. Jackson missed a layup that was grabbed by Jordan Henriquez, who had a dunk at the other end with 2:48 left for a 59-56 lead.

Rodriguez had a bad pass that Jackson came up with, before driving, being fouled and making the second free throw. Jackson had another chance after a miss by Rodriguez, driving all the way and being fouled McGruder. Those two free throws tied the game at 59 with 1:23 left.

McGruder made a jumper with 1:03 left, but Jackson was fouled again by McGruder on a drive and again made both free throws with 35 seconds left.

Kansas State brought the ball up the court and made a few passes before Weber called timeout with 7.7 seconds left. But Southwell missed.

The Wildcats have regular-season games left at home against TCU and at Oklahoma State. They are 9-0 against teams from Texas, including a 20-point win at home over Baylor two weeks earlier.

Down 34-33 at the half, Kansas State opened the second half with a quick 7-0 spurt. Southwell had a jumper and McGruder made a floater before a three-point play when he made a dunk while being fouled and added the free throw. The Wildcats then led until Jefferson’s three-point play.

Baylor wore its special neon yellow uniforms unveiled earlier this week by Adidas, including camouflage-patterned shorts in the same bright color. The Bears were one of six teams to get special uniforms for anticipated tournament appearances.

On top of that Saturday, Baylor gave out 10,000 T-shirts to the fans in the highlighter color, brightening up the Ferrell Center.

Until the gloomy finish.

— Associated Press —

Northwest’s Tyler Shaw earns All-Region honors

riggertNorthwestNorthwest Missouri State track and field senior Tyler Shaw added to his lengthy honors Thursday earning All-Region accolades announced by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) for the 2013 indoor season.

Shaw earned his fourth trip to the NCAA Division II Indoor Track and Field Championships in the 60-meter hurdles earlier this week. The St. Louis native will be searching for his first national championship in the event after a runner-up finish in 2009, a sixth place finish in 2010 and a fourth place finish in 2011.

A total of 1,061 student-athletes have earned a total of 1,574 USTFCCCA All-Region honors. The USTFCCCA regions for track & field match those used for NCAA Cross Country Championships.

The championships will be held March 7-9 in Birmingham, Ala. at the Birmingham CrossPlex as part of the 2013 NCAA Division II National Championships Festival.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bell, Brown lead Missouri to road win at South Carolina

MUKeion Bell scored 24 points and Jabari Brown added 23 to lead Missouri to a 90-68 win over South Carolina on Thursday night.

Missouri shot 69.6 percent (32 of 46) for the game, and plenty of those baskets were easy. The Tigers (20-8, 9-6 Southeastern) had 10 dunks and 46 points in the paint to pick up just their second win on the road this season. Missouri shot just nine 3-pointers, making six of them.

After shooting 67 percent (16 of 24) in the first half, the Tigers (20-8, 9-6 Southeastern Conference) made 12 of their first 13 shots from the field in the second half to go on a 31-13 run that ballooned a seven-point halftime lead into a 76-51 margin.

For most of the game, Missouri flirted with its best shooting night ever, 75.4 percent against Hawaii Loa in December of 1989. But the Tigers missed four of their last six shots to fall off the pace.

Damien Leonard came off the bench to lead South Carolina (13-15, 3-12) with 20 points. The Gamecocks have lost seven of their last eight games.

Missouri remains fifth in the SEC, just a game behind fourth place and a double bye in the conference tournament. With the victory, the Tigers reached 20 wins for the fifth straight year.

Bell missed the first game between the teams in January, where the Tigers shot 20 percent in the first half and had to come back from 13 points down for a 71-65 win. He was the difference in this one, shooting 8-of-12 and even adding four assists.

Alex Oriakhi scored 18 points, making all six of his shots and all six of his free throws. Phil Pressley didn’t attempt a single shot, but had nine assists, two over his SEC-leading average of seven a game.

Williams and Brian Richardson each added 10 points for South Carolina.

Missouri started the game hitting its first six shots and barely cooled off the rest of the half. But South Carolina always had a run to keep it close. The Gamecocks made seven of their 12 3-pointers in the opening half. South Carolina’s reserves scored 28 points, led by Brenton Williams’ 10 points.

Williams’ jumper with 2:35 left in the first half cut Missouri’s lead to 39-36. But the Tigers got dunks on each of their next three possessions and led 45-38 at halftime.

— Associated Press —

Benedictine women cruise past Evangel into HAAC semifinals

riggertBenedictine3The NAIA Div. I No. 12 Benedictine women’s basketball team earned a convincing HAAC Postseason Tournament Quarterfinal win over Evangel University on Thursday night.

Benedictine (27-4) the No. 2 seed in the tournament, started out slow against the No. 7 Crusaders, but then used a 50 percent shooting effort in the second half to put away Evangel (7-18) 75-57.

Evangel took away the 3-point shot for Benedictine all game long, limiting the Ravens to just 3 of 15 from beyond the arc.

Benedictine earn its third win of the season over Evangel with a strong effort off the bench as the Ravens outscored the Crusaders 32-10 off the bench.

The Ravens finished with two players in double figures, led by guard Justic Payne (Jr., Stillwater, Okla.) with 17 points. Post Liz Stinson (Sr., Stilwell, Kan.) added 13 points to round out the Ravens top scorers.

Evangel was led by the game-high 21 points of Emily Akins. Sierra McSpadden added 16 points.

Benedictine advances to host a HAAC Postseason Tournament Semifinal at 7 p.m. Saturday against No. 3 seed Central Methodist University.

— BC Sports Information —

Griffons struggle at Fort Hays and drop fourth straight game

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western men’s basketball team fell for the sixth time in its last seven games which includes its fourth straight Wednesday evening falling 73-57 against the Fort Hays State Tigers. The Griffons made just six field goals in the first half falling to 9-16 overall and 5-12 in MIAA play.

MWSU scored just 13 points in the first twelve and a half minutes of the game getting down 29-13. The rest of the half they outscored the Tigers 11-4 going into halftime down 34-23. The Tigers dominated the points in the paint outscoring the Griffons 18-6 and scored eight points off nine Missouri Western turnovers.

The Griffon made its first three point shot of the game and then proceeded to go 0-11 the rest of the half. The did shoot free throws well making 10-of-12 in the frame. Reed Mells led the way in the half for the Griffons scoring nine points.

The Tigers were led by Dwayne Brunson scoring 12 points and snaring six rebounds. FHSU made 14-of-28 field goals in the half and had 10 assists.

The Griffons cut the Tiger lead to nine at 45-36 after two Adarius Fulton free throws with 12:53 to play in the game. The rest of game was all Tigers as they outscored the Griffons 28-21 on their way to the season sweep over MWSU.

The Griffons shot better in the second half making 11-of-24 field goals and making five three point shots. Eight different Griffons scored in the game with Mells leading the way with 15 points.

The Tigers improve to 18-7 overall and 12-5 in MIAA play. Brunson dumped in 20 points while Ben Congiusta, Lance Russell and Craig Nicholson pitched in 15, 11 and 10 respectively. Congiusta also pitched in eight assists.

The Griffons will close out the regular season on Saturday, March 2 against Southwest Baptist in St. Joseph, Mo. Game time is scheduled for 3:30 pm from the MWSU Fieldhouse. The Griffons will honor two seniors (Dylan Frantz and Alex Tuluka-Mfumupembe) before the game. It will also be the last home game that MWSU coach Tom Smith will coach in his career.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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