We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Royals have nine players on provisional rosters for 2013 World Baseball Classic

World Baseball Classic, Inc. today announced provisional rosters for the 2013 World Baseball Classic, which will be held from March 2 – 19.  Nine players from the Royals organization were named to the provisional squads, including six players on Kansas City’s 40-man roster.

The selections are as follows:  Left-handed pitchers Bruce Chen (China) and Tim Collins (United States), right-handed pitchers Kelvin Herrera (Dominican Republic), Luis Mendoza (Mexico) and J.C. Sulbaran (The Netherlands), catcher Salvador Perez (Venezuela), infielders Irving Falu (Puerto Rico) and Miguel Tejada (Dominican Republic), and outfielder Paulo Orlando (Brazil).

Chen, Collins, Falu, Herrera, Mendoza and Perez played for Kansas City in 2012.  Tejada is a non-roster invitee to 2013 spring training, while Orlando and Sulbaran are both on the Double-A Northwest Arkansas roster.  Chen will become the first Major Leaguer to represent China in the event.

— Royals Media Relations —

Griffons struggle late and lose to Lindenwood

Wednesday night’s game against Lindenwood was highlighted by four big dunks, but Missouri Western failed to keep the momentum late in the game, and the Lions escaped MWSU Fieldhouse with a 78-69 victory.

Lindenwood took a 30-27 lead into halftime after both teams played tough. Tyler Ressel was 3-for-3 from the field with a total of nine points to pace the Lions, and the Griffons were led by Reed Mells’ nine points. Kalvin Balque stepped off the bench and knocked down a 3-pointer with less than a minute to play in the half to cut the Lions’ 6-point lead in half.

In the first half, Lindenwood was 11-for-16 from the free-throw line, and Missouri Western shot 100 percent, going 6-for-6.

In the second half, both teams stayed close and settled at 39-39. The Griffons took a slim 1-point lead minutes later as Dylan Frantz came off the bench a made a 3-pointer to take the 51-50 lead with 10 minutes, 35 seconds to play.

After the Lions took a 59-56 lead, Alfreeman Flowers made another spectacular dunk going under the hoop and around for the jam. Balque grabbed a steal and went coast-to-coast on a flying dunk that marked the score 63-62 in favor of the Lions.

Still, the Griffons couldn’t capitalize, and Lindenwood finished the night on a 12-4 run in the final 5 minutes to win 78-69.

Alex Bazzell led the Lions with 20 points, going 15-for-16 from the free-throw line to help his team. Cedric Clinkscales had 12 points and six boards to lead the Griffons in both categories. Alex Tuluka-Mfumupembe had 10 points and four rebounds, going 4-for-5 in the game.

Missouri Western next plays Emporia State at Emporia, Kan., Saturday at 3:30 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats lose second straight as they get upset by Lincoln at home

During the course of a long basketball season, a team will have a poor performance and lose a game that causes people across the conference to scratch their heads.

Hopefully, Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team had its only head-scratching loss.

On Wednesday evening at Bearcat Arena, Northwest lost 70-65 to a Lincoln squad that picked up only its third victory in 17 games and was sitting at the very bottom of the MIAA.

“If we haven’t hit rock bottom then I don’t know what rock bottom feels like,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “This is as bad as it gets.

“Lincoln played great. They slowed the tempo. They controlled the game. They played good. They made free throws down the stretch. You have to credit them, too.”

It was the second loss in a row for Northwest, which fell to 11-4 overall and 4-2 in the MIAA.

The Bearcats have two days to figure out what has gone wrong the last two games. Northwest returns to action late Saturday afternoon in its first-ever game at Central Oklahoma. Northwest must rediscover the formula that saw it win games at Missouri Southern and Pittsburg State earlier this month.

“We need to focus and look ourselves in the mirror and get back to the basics,” senior Alex Sullivan said. “Our coaches stress this a lot that we need to stay with our identity and work with our strength. We have to guard the ball better.”

The Bearcats never found an offensive rhythm against Lincoln. That was never more evident than the first six minutes of the second half.

Northwest trailed by nine at halftime, but held Lincoln scoreless in the opening 5 minutes, 50 seconds of the second half.

In that period, Northwest scored just two field goals and trimmed four points off its deficit. The Bearcats had many more opportunities to score, but a few turnovers and a missed layup contributed to their offensive malaise.

“They zoned us again,” McCollum said. “We got wide open shots from the start. They weren’t even close to contesting them. You miss a couple of shots and you get a little gun shy and then all of a sudden we can’t hit any. On top of that, when you can’t score, your energy depletes and that’s kind of the story of the game. They outplayed us.”

When Lincoln finally scored in the second half for a 37-30 lead, Northwest was in danger of losing.

Lincoln regained the hot touch it had in the first half and pushed its advantage to 48-37.

The Bearcats lacked the offensive firepower to threaten Lincoln until the final 90 seconds when Northwest closed to 60-56 with 51 seconds left. The Blue Tigers made enough free throws to prevent a miracle comeback by Northwest.

Amazingly, Northwest had one last chance after a three-pointer by DeAngelo Hailey with 17 seconds left made it 68-65.

Lincoln quickly turned the ball over, showing why it has won so few games. Northwest had a chance to tie with 13 seconds left, but Hailey’s three-point attempt was blocked.

The Blue Tigers got the ball back, was fouled and made two free throws to ice the game.

“If we played with as much energy the whole game as we did in the last minute and a half, we will be fine,” Sullivan said.

It made sense that Lincoln was the first team out at halftime. The Blue Tigers were anxious to continue playing after putting together perhaps their best basketball of the season.

Lincoln went into halftime ahead 35-26. The Blue Tigers made six three-pointers and led most of the first half.

The Bearcats held a slim 6-5 lead when Lincoln got hot and built an 18-12 advantage that grew to 30-18.

Northwest put together a spurt and closed to 30-25. Usually, that is the breaking point for Lincoln. But in the first half, the Blue Tigers answered the challenge and outscored Northwest 5-1 in the closing minutes.

The one bright spot for Northwest was freshman guard Lyle Harris, who came off the bench late in the second half and scored 10 points in 3 minutes, making all four of his field goal attempts.

“He played great,” McCollum said. “He brings a different dynamic. He is a powerful driver. Maybe that’s what we needed.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Western women outlast Lindenwood for third straight win

The Missouri Western women’s basketball team picked up their third straight victory escaping with a 65-59 victory over the Lindenwood Lions. Despite struggling from the free throw line all game long the Griffons were able to make 7-of-9 down the stretch improving to 12-3 overall and 5-2 in MIAA play.

In a half which saw 27 combined turnovers the Lady Lions and the Griffons were able to play to a 23-23 tie at the half. The Griffons started strong building a 12-4 lead with 13:04 to play in the half. Dever led the way scoring six points with five coming in the first two minutes of the half.

The rest of the half belonged to the Lady Lions forcing the Griffons into 14 first half turnovers. The finished the half on a 19-11 run with Marissa Lehnig leading the way with seven points making 3-of-4 free throws.

The Griffons shot just 27.3-percent (9-33) from the field and 3-of-10 from long range. The Griffons outrebounded the Lady Lions 25-18 with KC Clouser and Heather Howard both collecting seven.

The Griffons came out of the locker room on fire creating turnovers and hitting shots building their largest lead of the game at 37-25 after a three pointer by Sharniece Lewis.

The Lady Lions once again stayed poised using a 10-0 run to tie the score at 40 with 10:11 to play after Caroline Bourlioux nailed to free throws. Once again the Griffons went on a run 7-0 claiming 47-40 lead but were unable to hang on to it as Linendwood stormed back taking a 55-54 lead after Bourlioux hit two more free throws with 1:30 to play.

Down the stretch the Griffons held the Lady Lions to just four points as the Griffons dumped in 11 claiming the six point victory. Lindenwood falls to 4-10 overall and 1-5 in MIAA play with the loss.

Howard collected her ninth double-double of the season scoring 15 points and snaring 13 rebounds while Lanicia Lawrence, Sharniece Lewis and JaQuitta Dever finished with 13, 13 and 10 respectively. Clouser finished with a career high 11 rebounds.

Despite shooting just 35.4-percent (23-65) from the field they forced 28 turnovers and had 13 steals. Dever finished with five steals while Lawrence pitched in four. Missouri Western also had 10 assists with Dever leading the way with four. The Griffons also had 15 more rebounds than the Lady Lions with 24 coming on the offensive end of the floor.

The Lady Lions had four players in double digits led by Sarah Schnieders with 16.

The Griffons return to action on Sunday, January 20 when they travel to Emporia, Kan. to take on the Emporia State Hornets. Game time is set for 3:30 pm from White Auditorium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri bounces back and rolls past Georgia

Missouri’s second game without Laurence Bowers went a lot better than the first.

Alex Oriakhi had 13 points on 5-for-5 shooting, eight rebounds and four blocks without the 6-foot-9 Bowers as an inside complement to help the 17th-ranked Tigers rebound from their biggest loss of the season with a 79-62 victory over Georgia on Wednesday night.

“I knew it was a game where I had to demand the ball and post up strong,” Oriakhi said. “I knew I had an advantage inside and my teammates did a great job of finding me, and when they missed shots I did my best to clean it up.”

Coach Frank Haith said he wasn’t sure if Bowers, who leads Missouri with a 16.8-point average and is second with 6.9 rebounds, would be ready Saturday at No. 10 Florida. Bowers has a sprained right knee.

“Oh, he’s doing great, he’s actually doing really well,” Haith said. “We got some really good news at how it’s coming along. I still don’t know that he’ll play Saturday, but we’re really pleased with his progress thus far.”

Even with Bowers in street clothes at the end of the bench, Georgia had its hands full.

“In some ways, it makes them more difficult to defend when he’s not in the game,” coach Mark Fox said. “I know he’s a terrific player, but he doesn’t shoot the 3 quite as much as some of these other guys.”

Earnest Ross scored 15 points while surviving two spills for the Tigers (13-3, 2-1 SEC), who were held to a season-low 49 points in a 15-point loss at Mississippi on Saturday. Missouri is 10-0 at home this season and 26-1 at the Mizzou Arena in two seasons under Haith.

Vincent Williams had a career-best 23 points on 7-for-10 shooting for Georgia (6-10, 0-3), nine more than his previous best after entering with a 4.1-point average. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, the Bulldogs’ lone player averaging in double figures, added 15 points.

“Vincent’s really the only player who’s been in our program for the three-and-a-half years I’ve been there,” Fox said. “And he knows what we’re supposed to do, how we’re supposed to function.”

Ross was held to three points at Mississippi while missing six of seven shots, Oriakhi had four points and six rebounds and Missouri was 2 for 18 from 3-point range. The Tigers were 9 for 22 against Georgia, getting three apiece from Ross and Jabari Brown, who added 15 points.

“Coach always talks about `How do you handle adversity, how do you play when things don’t go your way?” Oriakhi said. “I think it was a great test and we’ll have to build off this.”

Ross missed the last 2:52 of the first half after injuring his left leg. Then he landed hard on his back after getting fouled under the basket with just under 6 minutes to go, making one of two free throws not long before limping to the bench for good.

“Earnest is OK,” Haith said. “Earnest played great, he was very aggressive and all over the court. He’s an energy guy.”

Georgia is in a stretch of three Top 25 opponents in five games that started with a 33-point loss at Florida Jan. 9 and ends with Florida, now No. 10, at home on Jan. 23. The Bulldogs have lost three straight but shot 46 percent.

“I see us heading pretty far, we’ll be fine,” Williams said. “Just a tough start, we’ll be fine.”

Haith juggled his lineup, with forwards Tony Criswell and Stefan Jankovic each getting their first start in place of Ross and Keion Bell. Jankovic scored Missouri’s first five points but lasted just 4 minutes in the half after drawing three fouls, the last just 37 seconds after re-entering.

“Stefan, he puts his hands on everybody,” Haith said. “Those are easy fouls for the referees when you do that.”

Bell got a lot of work at point guard in relief of Pressey, who had five points and six assists in 30 minutes, and had 14 points and four assists.

Ross scored a career-high 30 points for Auburn against Georgia on Feb. 5, 2011.

The Tigers hit five 3-pointers and twice led by 14 points in the first half, but were outscored 8-2 over the last 3 1/2 minutes as Georgia shaved the gap to eight points at the break.

Six players were whistled for at least two fouls in the first half, four from Missouri.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women defeat Blue Tigers to stop losing skid

Disregard the first four minutes of the game when Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team gave up 10 straight points to Lincoln University.

Northwest entered Bearcat Arena Wednesday evening desperate for a win to snap a three-game losing streak.  In the second half, the Bearcats played with a hunger that left Lincoln starving for points.

The combination of a tenacious defense and efficient offense in the second half led Northwest to an impressive 77-60 victory. Northwest improved to 9-5 overall and 3-3 in the MIAA.

“It was really nice, especially at home. We had a pretty good crowd tonight,” said sophomore Ashleigh Nelson. “We played with confidence.”

If the Bearcats continue to play the way they did in the second half against Lincoln, they will give teams in the MIAA plenty of trouble.

“We wanted to win this game,” Northwest coach Mark Kellogg said. “It was a game at home and a very winnable game. But we knew we needed to play well.”

The offensive onslaught began when freshman Tember Schechinger scored early in the second half to give Northwest a 31-30. It was part of a 6-0 run that turned a 30-29 deficit into a 35-30 lead.

Northwest never trailed again and the best was yet to come.

“We know we will find an open player if we keep passing the ball around,” Schechinger said. “We do a good job of finding an open player.”

Leading 35-32, the Bearcats clicked in every phase. They scored the next 15 points for a commanding 50-32 advantage. Every player on the court contributed to the run.

“I liked our defensive effort,” Kellogg said. “Some of it, they just missed some easy baskets, but we limited them to one shot, finally. We thought we could beat them in transition.”

The Bearcats shared the basketball, helped each other on defense and played the gritty brand of basketball necessary to win in the MIAA.

Sophomore center Maggie Marnin was getting great passes for easy buckets inside. Nelson continued her hot shooting, knocking down a couple of three-pointers during the spurt.

The play of Marnin and Nelson only scratches the surface of how well the Bearcats played in the second half.

Schechinger and Meridee Scott led Northwest in scoring with 15 points, Annie Mathews added 12 and Nelson had 10.

“We are best when we are sharing the basketball,” Kellogg said. “We had 18 assists, which was good.”

The way the Bearcats played for much of the second half was in direct contrast with how they played the first 4 minutes when they fell behind 10-0.

“We allowed them to drive to the basket and we were taking some shots we didn’t need to take,” Kellogg said. “We needed to settle in and we finally started making some shots.

“It’s a lot more fun to play defense when you are making some shots.”

Northwest quickly broke through the fog and scored the next 10 points and then stayed close to Lincoln the rest of the half.

“We call it weathering the storm,” Kellogg said.

The Bearcats went into halftime trailing only 28-27.

The signs of a strong of a second half were there. Schechinger made four of six shots and Marnin was two for three from the field.

The key for the Bearcats now is to continue what they started in the second half against Lincoln and take it on the road for their game at Central Oklahoma on Saturday.
“We definitely have to work really hard in the gym and have it carry over to the game,” Nelson said. “We play our best when we practice well.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

K-State extends win streak to seven with victory at TCU

Rodney McGruder scored 21 points and No. 16 Kansas State stretched its winning streak to seven games with a 67-54 victory at Big 12 newcomer TCU on Wednesday night.

The Wildcats (14-2, 3-0 Big 12) got off to a slow start before taking control with a 19-4 run midway through the first half.

McGruder’s layup with 11 minutes left in the first half tied the game at 10, after Kansas State had fallen behind 10-5. The Wildcats led for good when McGruder had a defensive rebound and turned that into a fastbreak 3-pointer by Will Spradling. A floater by McGruder stretched the lead to 24-14.

Adrick McKinney had 18 points and nine rebounds for TCU (9-8, 0-4).

When the Horned Frogs cut the gap to five points with a chance to get closer before halftime, they started making mistakes.

Connell Crossland had a steal and passed to Kyan Anderson, but TCU’s top scorer missed a layup after getting himself in an awkward position under the rim. Martavious Irvin then hit a 3-pointer for Kansas State. Anderson had a turnover that led to a 3 by McGruder.

When TCU freshman Clyde Smith III was called for a 10-second violation, unable to get the ball past midcourt while being defended by Irving, McGruder drove for a high bank shot and a 34-21 lead that matched Kansas State’s biggest of the half.

TCU got the first basket after halftime when Devonta Abron scored, but McGruder responded with a 3-pointer and Spradling hit another from long range.

While McGruder finished 9-of-15 shooting with three 3-pointers and was the only K-State player in double figures, three others scored eight points. One of those was Jordan Henriquez, who had 10 rebounds.

Anderson had 10 points on 4-of-11 shooting for TCU

The Wildcats are two wins shy of matching the 16-2 mark they had three seasons ago that is their best start over the past 25 years. They have won their last five conference road games, dating to last season.

Kansas State and TCU played for the first time since a 1999 NIT game the Horned Frogs won. They had played five times previously, TCU winning that NIT game and another in the 1968 NCAA tournament while the Wildcats had won all three regular-season meetings.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs announce coaching staff additions

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday two additions to Head Coach Andy Reid’s 2013 coaching staff.

Kansas City named Andy Heck the team’s offensive line coach and Kevin O’Dea the club’s assistant special teams coach.

“We are pleased to announce the addition of two more good football coaches to our staff. With Andy and Kevin we have added two experienced leaders to the group,” Reid said. “We are close to having the full staff in place which will allow us the opportunity to all get ready for the 2013 season.”

Andy Heck (Offensive Line) – Heck enters his first season with the Chiefs as the team’s offensive line coach. He is beginning his 22nd overall season in the NFL and his 10th season as an NFL assistant coach. Heck joins the Chiefs after a nine-year stint with the Jacksonville Jaguars (2004-12). He spent the past seven seasons as Jacksonville’s offensive line coach (2006-12) after serving as assistant offensive line coach (2005) and originally joining the Jaguars staff as the offensive assistant/assistant offensive line coach (2004). Prior to joining Jacksonville, Heck served three seasons on the University of Virginia coaching staff, first as a graduate assistant (2001-02) and then as tight ends coach (2003). Before joining the collegiate coaching ranks, Heck played offensive line for 12 seasons in the NFL. He Played for Washington (1999-2000), Chicago (1994-98) and Seattle (1989-93). Heck was drafted with the 15th overall pick of the 1989 NFL Draft by the Seattle Seahawks. A 1989 graduate of Notre Dame, he was a first-team All-America selection that co-captained the Fighting Irish to the 1988 national championship with an undefeated 12-0 record. He played tight end for three seasons at Notre Dame before moving to tackle for his final season.

Kevin O’Dea (Assistant Special Teams) – O’Dea begins his first season with Kansas City as the Chiefs assistant special teams coach. He spent four years in the same role for the Chicago Bears in two different stints with the club (2006-07 and 2011-12). Between his two stops in Chicago he served as special teams coordinator for the New York Jets (2008-09). Prior to his first tour in Chicago, O’Dea served as special teams coach for Arizona (2004-05), special teams assistant for Detroit (2002-03), offensive/defensive assistant for Tampa Bay (1996-01),  and defensive/special teams assistant for San Diego (1994-95). He served as assistant strength/defensive line/linebackers coach at Penn State (1992-93) after starting there as a graduate assistant (1991). He was a graduate assistant at Virginia (1989-90) and had one year stints at Cornell (1987) and his alma mater, Lock Haven University (1986). A native of Williamsport, Pa., O’Dea played wide receiver and defensive back at Lock Haven (1984-85).

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Kansas’ McLemore named to Sporting News Mid-Season All-America team

Kansas redshirt freshman Ben McLemore has been named to the Sporting News Mid-Season All-America First Team it was announced Tuesday.

McLemore is joined on the first team by Oklahoma State freshman Marcus Smart, Michigan sophomore Trey Burke, Creighton junior Doug McDermott and Duke senior Mason Plumlee.

A 6-foot-5, guard from St. Louis, McLemore ranks second in the Big 12 in scoring at 16.4 points per game and with an 87.7 free throw percentage. He has five games of 20 points or more including 22 in KU’s victory at Ohio State (Dec. 22) and 33 in Kansas’ overtime win against Iowa State on Jan. 9. His 33-point effort is the most scored by a Big 12 player this season and the most by a Kansas freshman since All-American Danny Manning scored 35 against Oklahoma State in 1985.

Sporting News reporter Mike DeCourcy wrote this about McLemore: “It has taken some prompting to get McLemore to understand how important he is to the offense. The nature of the KU system does not put the ball in his hands a ton, so he has to look to score when he gets it. He has gone through eight games with single-digit shot attempts, which is a lot for a player who clearly is his team’s best scorer. He has made the difference when necessary, though: in a tough road game at Ohio State, in a closer-than imagined overtime home win over Iowa State.”

On Monday, McLemore was named the Big 12 Player of the Week for his performance against Iowa State. He became the first player this season to earn both Big 12 Player and Rookie of the Week accolades.

No. 4/4 Kansas continues Big 12 action and will play at Texas Saturday, Jan. 19, at 1 p.m. (Central) on CBS.

— KU Sports Information —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File