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Bearcats use big second half to rally past UNK

riggertNorthwestNorthwest Missouri State used a huge second half Wednesday night as the Bearcats claimed a 68-50 win over Nebraska-Kearney in MIAA men’s basketball action.

The Bearcats improved to 18-8 overall and 11-6 in the MIAA moving closer to a first round bye in next week’s MIAA Tournament. The Lopers fell to 7-17 and 4-13 in league play as Northwest sweeps the season series.

Both teams struggled in the first half as UNK found a 26-24 lead at intermission. However, the Bearcats stormed out of the locker room to run away from the Lopers in the second half to the 18 point victory.

A 15-3 run by the Bearcats to start the second half helped Northwest open a 10 point lead that grew to as many 19.

One week removed from tying the Northwest record for three-pointers, Alex Sullivan was quite from behind the arc by the seniors’ standards. Sullivan finished 3-of-8 from behind the arc but Northwest hit nine three-pointers as a team to pick up the slack.

DeAngelo Hailey led Northwest with 15 points as the senior also knocked down three three-pointers. The senior added six rebounds in the win.

Northwest also took advantage of 15 UNK miscues with 25 points off turnovers compared to the Lopers four.

Tyler Shields of UNK led all players with 20 points and added seven rebounds.

The Bearcats can clinch a first round bye on Saturday with a win over Truman State. Northwest will also honor its two seniors Saturday with tip off scheduled for 3:30 p.m. from Bearcat Arena.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western women lose at Fort Hays State

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s basketball team shot just 30-percent (10-30) and got out rebounded 29-14 in the first half falling 73-56 on the road Wednesday evening against the 17th ranked Fort Hays State Tigers. The Griffons have lost six straight road games and sit at 14-11 overall and 7-10 in MIAA play.

The two teams played the first four minutes to a 6-6 tie but a 23-8 run over the next ten minutes by the Tigers gave them a 29-14 lead after two Keriann Shaw free throws. The Griffons battled back using a 10-0 run capped by a Denise White free throw cutting the lead to 29-24 with 3:04 to play. The Tigers closed the half on their own 10-0 run claiming the 39-24 halftime lead.

The Griffons were led by JaQuitta Dever in the first half with 10 points making 4-of-9 free throws. MWSU had just six turnovers but made only 1-of-10 long range shots. The Tigers had 10 second chance points with Kate Lehman leading the way with 15 points and eight rebounds.

The Tigers extended its 15 point halftime lead to 20 early in the second half. The Griffons cut the lead to 14 after two Alicia Bell free throws with 13:04 to play but did not get any closer falling for fifth time in six games.

Griffon seniors Heather Howard and Bell scored 12 and 11 points respectively while the Griffons made just 22-of-63 field goals in the game.

The Tigers improve to 19-6 overall and 11-6 in MIAA play. Katelyn Edwards and Lehman led the way with 23 and 20 points respectively. Lehman also had 11 rebounds and four blocked shots.

The Griffons close out the regular season on Saturday, March 2 with a game against Southwest Baptist in St. Joseph, Mo. Tip time is set for 1:30 pm from the MWSU Fieldhouse. The Griffons will honor five seniors (Brittany Griswold, K.C. Clouser, Kallie Schoonover, Heather Howard and Alicia Bell) before the game as they will be playing their final regular season home game of their careers.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest women cruise past Nebraska-Kearney

riggertNorthwestThe Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team locked down defensively on Nebraska-Kearney sealing a 71-52 victory Wednesday night.

The Bearcats jumped back above the .500 mark to 13-12 on the season and 7-10 in league play. UNK fell to 6-18 overall and 3-14, as Northwest sweeps the season series with the Lopers.

Maggie Marnin tied a season-high 19 points and added 10 rebounds for her third double-double of the season to pace the Bearcats. Marnin also added four blocks as the Bearcat defense stymied the Lopers most of the night.

Northwest enjoyed a 38-30 halftime lead and used an 8-2 run to build a 46-32 lead in the first five minutes of the second half.

Monique Stevens hit a three-pointer from the wing, but Nicole Arp matched her from downtown to keep the Bearcat lead under 10 with 9:40 left to play. However, the Bearcats would continue to work the favorable post matchups with Marnin scoring the next six points of the game helping Northwest push its lead back to 15 at 57-42.

The Bearcats shot 57 percent from the field and outscored UNK 48-30 in the paint. Northwest continued to switch defenses in the second half keeping the Lopers guessing which was evident by their 37 percent shooting on the night.

After snapping a five-game losing streak the Bearcats have now won their last two games heading into Saturday’s regular season finale against Truman State. The Bulldogs currently sit fourth in the league standings while Northwest will likely be on the road in their MIAA Tournament first round game.

Northwest will also honor two seniors as tip off from Bearcat Arena is set for 3:30 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Chiefs trade with San Francisco for QB Alex Smith

ChiefsAlex Smith quietly stayed behind the scenes after losing his job and watched from the sideline as San Francisco returned to the Super Bowl for the first time in 18 years. Yet the No. 1 overall draft pick from 2005 did make one thing known: The veteran quarterback still considers himself a starter.

And he hoped to get that chance again. Now, he appears to have it.

The Kansas City Chiefs have agreed to acquire Smith from the 49ers in the first major acquisition since Andy Reid took over as the team’s new coach in early January, a person with knowledge of the trade told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal cannot become official until March 12, when the NFL’s new business year begins. Another person familiar with the swap said the 49ers will get a second-round pick in April’s draft, No. 34 overall, and a conditional pick in the 2014 draft.

After spending his first eight up-and-down years with the 49ers, Smith will get a welcome new start. The Chiefs will get the proven play-caller they hope can help turn things around under a new coach much the way Smith did under Jim Harbaugh in San Francisco.

“You never know when your opportunity’s going to come,” Smith said late in the season. “The good ones are ready when they do come.”

The Chiefs have gone this route before, acquiring Joe Montana from the 49ers nearly 20 years ago, in April 1993, after he won four Super Bowls but gave way to Steve Young — San Francisco’s quarterback of the future.

Not so different from Smith’s situation last season behind second-year QB Colin Kaepernick.

Moving Smith was hardly unexpected. He realized it once Kaepernick emerged as a capable starter over the season’s final two months, and Smith all but said goodbye with his first pro team when he played briefly in the regular-season finale against Arizona to cheers of “Let’s Go, Alex!” and “Alex! Alex!” from the Candlestick Park crowd.

With Smith now headed for Kansas City, Matt Cassel is likely headed out of town. And Reid will enter his first draft as Chiefs coach in April no longer needing to search for a quarterback.

The Chiefs’ problems at quarterback are the single biggest reason they went 2-14 last season and secured the No. 1 pick in the draft for the first time in franchise history.

It’s been a long-running problem for a franchise that has tried Steve Bono and Elvis Grbac (two more one-time 49ers), and more recently Damon Huard, Tyler Thigpen and Tyler Palko at quarterback. And then there’s Cassel.

He was acquired by recently fired general manager Scott Pioli, and has two years left on a $63 million, six-year deal. He will likely be cut once Smith is acquired.

Cassel was benched last season in favor of Brady Quinn, who also is a free agent after going 1-7 as the starter.

If Smith can bring the steady form that defined his last two years, the Chiefs might be able to establish a much-needed consistency under center. They also found themselves a team-first player who led the 49ers through workouts during the 2011 lockout.

Under the three-year contract he signed last March, Smith is guaranteed $8.5 million in base salary for the 2013 season.

Smith thrived under 49ers coach and former NFL quarterback Harbaugh in one-plus season as the starter. Then, just like that, it all changed after he sustained a concussion.

Last week at the NFL combine, Harbaugh praised Smith and reiterated just how strong San Francisco was with Colin Kaepernick as the starter and someone with Smith’s credentials at backup.

Yet everyone knew it was likely the 49ers would do their best to improve Smith’s situation considering all he did for the franchise for nearly the past decade.

“Alex is really playing the best football of his career the last two years,” Harbaugh said. “We think we got the best quarterback situation in the National Football League, feel strongly about that. Again, that’ll be a process that plays out. Alex Smith continuing to be a 49er or if a trade occurs in the next weeks or months. Those are the two possibilities, most likely possibilities.”

Smith acknowledged when he lost the job to Kaepernick back in November that he had done nothing wrong but get hurt. Not only had he completed 26 of his previous 28 passes — 18 of 19 for 232 yards and three touchdowns without an interception and a 157.1 passer rating in a Monday Night Football win at Arizona on Oct. 29 — Smith had just earned NFC Offensive Player of the Week honors after that victory in the desert.

He then sustained a concussion in the second quarter of a 24-24 tie against St. Louis on Nov. 11 — saying later he threw a touchdown pass with blurry vision. Smith sat out the next game as Kaepernick dazzled in his debut as an NFL starter, beating the Bears handily at home on Monday Night Football.

After that, Harbaugh vowed to stick with the “hot hand,” as he regularly put it, while complicating matters by still referring to Smith as a starter.

Smith’s most poignant response to the situation was, “I feel like the only thing I did to lose my job was get a concussion.”

Kaepernick led the 49ers to the NFC championship and a 34-31 loss to Baltimore in the Super Bowl in his second season. Now the 49ers are looking for his backup.

The 28-year-old Smith struggled for most of his career in San Francisco, plagued as much by coaching and constant coordinator changes as by his own indecisiveness. But when Harbaugh became coach in January 2011, Smith blossomed under the former QB’s guidance. He was among the league leaders in passer rating (104.1) with a 70.2 completion percentage when he got hurt last season.

Fox Sports first reported the deal Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

NWMSU’s Shaw selected for Indoor Track & Field National Championships

riggertNorthwestNorthwest Missouri State senior Tyler Shaw will be the lone representative of Bearcat track and field at the 2013 NCAA Division II Indoor Track and Field National Championships next month.

Shaw returns to the national championship meet in the 60-meter hurdles after sitting out the 2012 indoor season. The senior set a Northwest school record in the 60-meter hurdles at the Concordia Invitational in 2011 (8.04) and proceeded to break his own record (7.97) in grand fashion at the 2011 National Championships in Albuquerque, N.M.

The St. Louis native raced to a season best time of 8.01 Feb. 15 at the Nebraska Tune-Up to hold the 14th best time in NCAA Division II. Shaw will try to claim his first national championship after a runner-up finish in 2009, a sixth place finish in 2010 and a fourth place finish in 2011.

The Bearcats had eight individuals on the men’s side earn provisional marks as Shaw was the only Bearcat to earn the nod. The Northwest women also had four individuals and two relay teams earn provisional marks, however no women were selected for the 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 —

KU’s McLemore & Withey named to top 30 list for Naismith Award

riggertKUKansas’ Ben McLemore and Jeff Withey have been named to the list of top 30 candidates for the 2013 Naismith Men’s College Player of the Year award presented by AT&T, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Tuesday.

Duke (Seth Curry, Mason Plumlee) and Indiana (Victor Oladipo, Cody Zeller) join Kansas with two candidates each on the top 30 list.

McLemore leads No. 6/5 Kansas (24-4) in scoring at 15.9 points per game, which tops all Big 12 freshmen in scoring and ranks third overall in the conference. The Jan. 14 Big 12 Player of the Week and two-time conference Rookie of the Week, McLemore leads the league in free throw percentage (88.0) and is third in the Big 12 in three-point field goal percentage (42.3). The St. Louis, Mo., redshirt freshman guard is listed on the USBWA Wayman Tisdale National Freshman of the Year Award Midseason list and has a team-high 52 three-pointers made.

A senior center from San Diego, Calif., on Monday Withey was named the Big 12 Player of the Week for the second straight week and third time in 2012-13. He leads Kansas in rebounding (8.5 rpg) and has 11 double-doubles this season, including four in his last five games. Withey is tops in the league in blocked shots at 3.8 per game, which ranks third nationally. Withey, who averages 13.5 points per outing, is Kansas’ and the Big 12’s all-time blocked shots leader with 272.

The top 30 candidates were selected by the Atlanta Tipoff Club’s Board of Selectors, which based its criteria on player performances to this point in the 2013 men’s college basketball season. In late March, the Naismith Trophy voting academy will narrow down the list to four finalists. The Naismith Men’s College Player of the Year presented by AT&T will be awarded on April 7, 2013 in Atlanta.

— KU Sports Information —

Johnson leads Jayhawks to comeback win at Iowa State

KUElijah Johnson scored a career-high 39 points – 12 in overtime – and No. 6 Kansas rallied to beat Iowa State 108-96 on Monday night for coach Bill Self’s 500th career win.

Travis Releford added 19 points for the Jayhawks (24-4, 12-3 Big 12), who snapped Iowa State’s 22-game home winning streak and kept pace with No. 13 Kansas State atop the Big 12.

Johnson made two free throws with 4.9 seconds left in regulation to tie the game at 90-all. He and Releford buried 3s to put Kansas ahead 100-92 with 2:03 left, and Johnson drilled a 30-footer with 54 seconds left.

Korie Lucious scored 23 points and Tyrus McGee had 22 for the Cyclones (19-9, 9-6), who dropped their third overtime game in Big 12 play – and their second straight at the hands of the Jayhawks.

After the game a handful of those in the student section hurled small plastic megaphones at the Jayhawks as they ran back to their locker room.

For all the talk concerning Self’s quest for win No. 500, this game seemed destined to hinge upon whether Iowa State, one of the nation’s best offenses, could score enough on the stingy Jayhawks, the nation’s leader in field goal percentage defense entering play.

As it turned out, both teams had little trouble making shots until overtime.

That’s when the Cyclones lost their touch.

Freshman Georges Niang beat the shot clock with a 3, Iowa State’s 17th of the game, to give the Cyclones an 87-82 lead with 44.5 seconds left. But Johnson answered, and the Jayhawks went 6 of 7 from the field in overtime while Iowa State went 1 of 9.

For Iowa State, this loss was painfully similar to the one in Lawrence on Jan. 9.

Ben McLemore banked in a late 3 to force overtime of a game the Cyclones had controlled throughout. The Jayhawks prevailed, and though the Cyclones bounced back they certainly didn’t forget their lost night in Lawrence.

But with March just around the corner, Iowa State and the rest of the league is chasing the Jayhawks – again.

Though Kansas and K-State are tied for first, the Jayhawks hold the tiebreaker because they beat the rival Wildcats twice. Kansas’ remaining regular season schedule; Texas Tech and West Virginia at home, struggling Baylor on the road, doesn’t appear to be all that daunting as the Jayhawks go for at least a share of its ninth straight Big 12 title.

Self, who began his head coaching career at Oral Roberts, is 293-57 at Kansas. He tied former Temple legend John Chaney by reaching 500 victories in his first 662 games.

His milestone night got off to an interesting start, though

Self was called for a rare technical foul for arguing a call less than 3 minutes into the game – much to the delight of a raucous, sellout crowd decked out in bright gold.

— Associated Press —

Northwest baseball splits doubleheader at Lindenwood

riggertNorthwestThe Northwest Missouri State baseball team split a double-header to end its series Monday as Lindenwood took game one 7-4 and the Bearcats grabbed game two 5-4.

The Lions scored in the top of the first and held the lead until the bottom of the third inning when Northwest had three runners cross the plate. Cam Bedard drove in Brandon Huske and Alex Singleton with a double in the gap. Eric McGlauflin hit a sac fly later in the inning to score Ryan Abernathy and putting the Bearcats up, 3-1.

Lindenwood put up six runs in the final two innings to pull ahead for good. Eric Swain hit into a fielder’s choice that scored Huske in the bottom of the ninth inning to make the final score 7-4.

The tough loss went to Ryker Fox who moves to 0-3 on the season as he went seven innings giving up only three hits and four earned runs.

Marcus Garrett picked up his first win of the 2013 season after going five strong innings giving up four hits, and two earned runs while striking out five.

Northwest’s offense got off to a quick start as they added four runs in the bottom of the first inning. Back-to-back walks issued to Huske and Swain followed by an RBI single off the bat of McGlauflin started the Bearcat rally.

Bedard doubled in two more runs in the inning to go up 3-0 before Charlie Krueger knocked in Bedard for the final run of the first inning.

The Lions answered with one run in the second inning but in the bottom of the second, Alex Singleton had a base hit to bring in Krueger to get the run back and keep the lead at 5-1.

The Bearcats were able to stave off a late inning rally from the Lions as Nathanial Horton snagged his first save on the season. Chase Anderson also put in a good performance in middle relief, as he went three innings with two strikeouts and gave up one earned run.

Northwest moves to 2-9 on the season and 2-6 in MIAA play and will play host to Central Oklahoma (2-3, 2-3) Saturday at Bearcat field. The games are schedule for a double header on Saturday with a noon start time. The third and final game of the series will also begin at noon on Sunday.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Kansas State uses big second half to blow out Texas Tech

KSUWith three games remaining in the regular season, Kansas State continued to close in on an elusive conference title.

The 13th-ranked Wildcats last won a regular season league title in 1977, but thanks to unprecedented success under first-year coach Bruce Weber and an uncharacteristic three-game losing streak by rival Kansas, Kansas State is tied with the sixth-ranked Jayhawks for first place in the Big 12.

Monday night’s 75-55 victory over Texas Tech kept the Wildcats’ hopes alive.

Now Kansas State has to keep its foot on the gas pedal.

”March is here,” Weber said. ”Next game is in March, and you want to be playing your best basketball. I hope they stay humble and they stay hungry. We’ve got to keep improving because in a couple weeks from now, you lose, it’s over.”

Thomas Gipson scored 20 points, Angel Rodriguez added 16, and the Wildcats (23-5, 12-3 Big 12) got their 12th conference win for the first time in 40 years.

Dusty Hannahs scored 14 points for the Red Raiders (9-17, 2-13) and Jaye Crockett added 13.

The Wildcats did not take control until the second half, when reserve Nino Williams jump-started the offense with 11 straight points.

”That’s been one of our keys to our team,” Weber said. ”Every day, it seems like it’s somebody else that steps up. It’s hard to stop every guy that we have.

”I’ve said since the beginning, we have eight starters, and all of them can be very, very productive.”

With Texas Tech leading 44-42, Williams got the lead with a three-point play. He scored again after the Wildcats forced a shot-clock violation. He cashed in under the basket after a turnover. The Red Raiders tried to cool off Williams by using a 30-second timeout, but he promptly drained a jumper, giving Kansas State a 51-44 lead – the Wildcats’ largest of the half to that point – with 11:50 to play.

Moments later, he snagged an offensive rebound, scored again, and then grabbed a defensive rebound.

Williams’ scoring burst started the rest of his team, which continued the one-sidedness with a scalding 24-6 run. Kansas State led 66-50 with less than 4 minutes to play.

”Sometimes you miss shots, sometimes you make them, and I just looked to crash the boards,” Williams said.

Kansas State opened the game with a 12-4 run that was capped by consecutive dunks by Rodney McGruder.

After that solid start, the Wildcats got sloppy, and the Red Raiders took advantage.

”I thought we had a chance to play well against them,” Texas Tech interim coach Chris Walker said. ”If we made a couple layups . we make a couple free throws, I think we go up five in the first half, and it may be a different game.”

The Red Raiders climbed within 15-12 as four Kansas State players committed a turnover each in a 4-minute spurt.

”One of the worst things that happened, we went up 12-4, and then we were a little giddy, we lost a little bit of focus, and to their credit they came right at us,” Weber said.

A 3-pointer by Ty Nurse gave the Red Raiders their first lead of the game with 1:53 to play in the half but a buzzer-beater from the baseline by McGruder gave the Wildcats a 31-30 lead.

Kansas State forward Jordan Henriquez, usually a starter, did not attend the game because he was traveling to New York for his grandmother’s funeral. Gipson started in his place.

”We needed somebody to step up since JO’s not here, and I just made the effort to step up and play harder than I normally play, just made an effort to do it on offense and defense,” Gipson said.

The seniors – of whom Henriquez is one – lead all classes in Kansas State history with 97 victories.

”I hope we keep adding onto that to where they get great distance and maybe no one ever catches them,” Weber said. ”They’ve done well. They’ve stayed focused. We can’t look too far ahead. It’s one at a time.”

— Associated Press —

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