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

Mizzou crushes South Carolina State Monday, 102-51

Jabari Brown, playing in his first game since Nov. 17, 2011 when he was a freshman at Oregon, scored 12 points and No. 12 Missouri beat South Carolina State 102-51 on Monday night.

Brown, 6-foot-5, 205-pound guard, became eligible at the end of the first semester. He entered the game with 16:01 left in the first half. After a missed 3-pointer, he assisted on a fast-break layup by Negus Webster-Chan. He scored his first points on two free throws with 9:35 remaining.

Phil Pressey’s jumper 17 seconds into the game gave Missouri (9-1) the lead for good. An 18-2 run midway through the first half gave the Tigers a 31-11 lead with 5:58 left.

Matthew Hezekiah led South Carolina State (4-7) with 14 points.

Despite not playing for nine days, the Tigers scored 49 points in the first half, representing the team’s best this season.

Missouri had been shooting 39.6 percent in the first half for the season before its 18-for-33 performance Monday.

The team did better in the second half, adding 53 points on 23-of-39 shooting, helping Missouri reach the 100-point mark for the first time since Dec. 15, 2011.

Earnest Ross led the Tigers with 16 points and Alex Oriakhi grabbed 11 rebounds. Laurence Bowers’ 11 points gave him 1,001 for his career, becoming the 44th Missouri player to reach the 1,000-point plateau.

South Carolina State, picked to finish last in the preseason Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference preseason poll, is already one win shy of matching its total of last season, when it finished 5-26 overall and 0-16 in conference.

Despite having a minus-7.2 rebounding margin against its last seven opponents, all of them from non-BCS conferences, the Bulldogs hung in there on the glass in the first half, getting outrebounded 23-19 by the third-ranked rebounding team in the country. But Missouri expanded the margin in the second half, outrebounding the Bulldogs 25-15.

Missouri plays No. 10 Illinois on Saturday in St. Louis in the teams’ annual Braggin’ Rights Game, having won the last three.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western, St. Joseph CC to host NCAA golf regional

Another NCAA Championship is coming to St. Joseph.  Missouri Western State University has been selected as the host institution for the 2013 NCAA Division II Women’s Golf Super Regional Three Championship to be held at St. Joseph Country Club May 5-7.

“We are thrilled that the NCAA has chosen our institution and our community to host another championship,” Director of Athletics Kurt McGuffin said.  “Our community has proven that they know what it takes to be a great host and for this championship, St. Joseph Country Club will be a remarkable venue and a great test of golf for the student-athletes.”

Nine teams and four individuals (49 players total), will compete in a 54 hole stroke play format with the low three teams and three individuals not on an advancing team qualifying for the NCAA Division II Women’s Golf National Championship at LPGA International Golf Club in Daytona Beach, Florida May 15-18.

Super Region Three is made up of 36 teams who compete in the Mid-American Intercollegiate Athletics Association, Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference, the Great American Conference and teams playing independent of conference affiliation.

This event adds to the number of the many prestigious events that have been held at St. Joseph Country Club over the past 100+ years.  This past year the club hosted the Missouri Golf Association Senior Amateur Championship and has been the site of the Missouri Amateur Championship most recently in 2009.  The course layout for the Super Regional will stretch right at 6,000 yards with par being played at 71.

“This is a great opportunity for St. Joseph C. C. to host the Women’s Regional,” said Mike Habermehl Head Golf Professional at the club.  “The course, which was built on this site in 1911 and designed by A.W. Tillinghast has stood the test of time.  We look forward to hosting these fine players.”

Other 2013 Super Regional sites include:

Super Regional One: Joliet Country Club, Romeoville, Illinois; Host: Lewis University
Super Regional Two: Lone Palm Golf Club, Lakeland, Florida; Host: Florida Southern College
Super Regional Four: Tiara Rado Golf Course, Grand Junction, Colorado; Colorado Mesa University

This will be the 15th NCAA Regional or National Championship hosted by MWSU and the third NCAA Golf Regional held at St. Joseph Country Club which also hosted the 1997 & 2005 Men’s Golf Super Regionals.

Anyone interested in volunteering at the championship may contact Griffon Athletics at 816-271-5904 or via e-mail at esely@missouriwestern.edu

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri football promotes Henson and Hill

University of Missouri Head Football Coach Gary Pinkel announced promotions for a pair of staff members on the offensive side of the ball.  Josh Henson has been named offensive coordinator, and Andy Hill has been named associate head coach, and will now coach quarterbacks.

Henson, 37, has been Mizzou’s co-offensive line coach since joining the MU staff from LSU prior to the 2009 season.  Six of his offensive line pupils at MU have won all-star honors nine times in his tenure, including the most recent being true freshman guard Evan Boehm, who was named a 1st-Team Freshman All-American by College Football News following the recently completed season.  Mizzou’s offensive line helped pave the way to a conference team rushing title in 2011 (ranking 9th nationally), and also to a final national rank of 12th in total offense (475.54 ypg).

Hill, 50, just finished his 17th season on the Tiger sideline.  Hill has a long-standing track record of coaching and recruiting success at Mizzou, and he’s helped develop three 1st-Team All-Americans in the past five seasons – WR Jeremy Maclin, WR Danario Alexander and TE Michael Egnew.  He has been part of Gary Pinkel’s staff for all 12 seasons at Mizzou, after serving for five seasons (1996-2000) on former Coach Larry Smith’s staff.

“I’m excited for both Josh and Andy, and for our team,” said Pinkel.  “They are both deserving of these opportunities and I’m confident that they are going to do great things to move our program forward.  Josh has been a key part of our system for four years and he will bring his own style to how we will operate.  Andy is an outstanding teacher of the game.  His experience and knowledge of our complex passing game, as well as his energy and drive, will translate well, and will give him a unique perspective that he’ll bring to the quarterback position group.”

Henson spent four years prior to MU at LSU, where he coached tight ends and was recruiting coordinator for four classes which ranked among the top 10 in the nation, from 2005-08.  Prior to that, he held the same role at Oklahoma State, his alma mater, from 2001-04.  A native of Tuttle, Okla., Henson was an offensive lineman for the Cowboys (1993-97), and earned his degree from OSU in 1998.

Henson was part of staffs at both Oklahoma State and LSU which produced record-setting passing offenses and included NFL first-round draft pick receivers Rashaun Woods (2004), Dwayne Bowe (2007) and Buster Davis (2007).

“I’m so grateful to Coach Pinkel for the opportunity to take this next step,” Henson said.  “We have a tradition at Mizzou of having a lot of success offensively, and I look forward to rolling up our sleeves as an offensive staff and getting us going.  We have a lot of talented young men who are anxious to get out there and show what they can do.  I’m excited to get to work,” he said.

Hill, a Trenton, Mo. native, played receiver for Mizzou from 1980-84, and he earned his degree from MU in 1985.

“This is a great opportunity and I’m really eager for the chance to branch out in this new role,” said Hill.  “We have a really gifted group of quarterbacks that I’ll get to work with and I’m excited to dig in and get to work.  Mizzou is such an important place to me and to my family.  Not many people in this business get to coach at their alma mater for as long as I have, and I’m grateful to have that chance,” he said.

Details of the new contracts for Henson and Hill are being finalized, and will be available upon completion.  Pinkel said that a search for a receivers coach is underway, with no timetable set for that hiring.

— MU Sports Information —

Bearcats lose second straight in Hawaii as rally falls short vs. Harding

A last second three-point attempt at the buzzer fell off the mark as Northwest Missouri State fell for the second straight night 68-66 to Harding University in men’s basketball action at the Hawaii Classic.

The Bearcats fell to 8-2 dropping their second straight game after eight straight wins to start the season. Harding improved to 7-2 on the year as the Bisons snapped a two game skid.

DeAngelo Hailey was fouled with three seconds left on a put-back of a Dillon Starzl jumper that fell off the rim. Hailey missed the first free-throw as he also missed his second attempt intentionally to give the Bearcats the rebound.

A final second three-point shot from Matt Wallace missed the mark as the Bisons handed the Bearcats their second loss in two nights.

Harding led by as many as 14 points in the first half and took a 46-37 lead into intermission.

Hailey twice pulled the Bearcats within two points in the second half. Northwest inched as close as 67-66 with just 16 seconds after a Hailey jumper and were then forced to foul as Harding hit one free-throw pushing the final score to 68-66. The senior from Detroit kept the Bearcats close in the second half leading all players with 24 points and adding eight rebounds.

The Bearcats forced 20 Harding turnovers and recorded eight steals, however a cold night from the field gave the Bisons the narrow victory. Northwest shot just 28 percent in the second half as Harding hit 13 three-pointers in the game.

Northwest will enjoy a two-week Christmas break before returning to league play. A Jan. 3 matchup at Missouri Southern followed by a nationally televised game at Pittsburg State on Jan. 5 will kick off 2013 for the Bearcats.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Kansas City gets shut out at Oakland, 15-0

The defense dominated, the running game clicked and the Oakland Raiders finally ended up on the winning end for the first time in seven weeks.

If only the Raiders could play the Kansas City Chiefs more often.

Sebastian Janikowski kicked five field goals, Darren McFadden rushed for 110 yards and the Raiders shut out Kansas City for the second time ever, beating the Chiefs 15-0 on Sunday.

”It’s extremely hard to shut anybody out. It doesn’t matter who they are. That’s an accomplishment that we take great pride in,” Raiders coach Dennis Allen said. ”I think it’s huge. Our guys needed something where they get a little bit of confidence.”

The Raiders (4-10) overwhelmed the undermanned Chiefs (2-12) to snap a six-game losing streak. Sandwiched around those losses are two wins over Kansas City, a rare bright spot in this disappointing season in Oakland.

There has been little to cheer for this season for the Chiefs, who have lost 10 of 11 games and are tied for the second most losses in franchise history behind a 2-14 mark in 2008. Kansas City’s only win since September came the day after linebacker Javon Belcher killed his girlfriend before committing suicide at the team’s practice facility.

”Offensively we couldn’t get much done at all,” coach Romeo Crennel said. ”Couldn’t run the ball, couldn’t throw the ball, got into the red zone and couldn’t get any points. Defensively we tried to hang in there but we missed too many tackles and on third down we were unable to get off the field and allowed them to keep drives alive and end up with field goals.”

About the only bright spot from this loss is it kept Kansas City in the running for the No. 1 overall draft pick. The Chiefs and Jaguars are tied with the worst record in the NFL with two weeks remaining.

This matchup between two old AFL rivals lacked the meaning many of the past meetings had with both teams entering the game with at least 10 losses for the first time ever.

The quality of play matched the poor records for much of the day as the Chiefs took nearly 40 minutes to earn their initial first down of the game and the Raiders failed to reach the end zone.

But strong running by McFadden and Mike Goodson giving the Raiders a season-high 203 yards rushing, Carson Palmer playing turnover-free for the first time since September and the Raiders dominating defensively, Oakland came out on top.

”It just feels great to be able to go out there and run the ball the way we did,” McFadden said. ”We did a great job running and the offensive line did a great job. Just a good all-around game for us.”

The Raiders held Jamaal Charles to 10 yards rushing on nine carries, giving him 14 yards on 14 carries in two games against Oakland this season. Brady Quinn was 18 for 32 for 136 yards and an interception as he missed injured receiver Dwayne Bowe.

Kansas City’s best play was a 42-yard run by Charles that got called back by a holding penalty on guard Joe Asamoah.

”That was kind of how the day went,” Quinn said. ”We’d have a big play like that and a penalty. A guy wide open and a dropped ball or I wouldn’t be able to have time to throw it. We just weren’t able to sustain any sort of consistency the entire day.”

The Chiefs finally got a first down with just more than five minutes remaining in the third quarter when Dexter McCluster fought for 8 yards on a catch on third-and-6. Two penalties by Oakland gave Kansas City 42 yards and helped set up Kansas City with first-and-goal from the 9. But the drive stalled when Charles was tackled at the 8 by Matt Giordano after a short catch on fourth down.

Kansas City also failed to capitalize on a fumble by McFadden that Justin Houston recovered at the Oakland 18. An offensive pass interference and four straight incompletions by Quinn gave the ball back to the Raiders and helped seal the shutout.

The last time the Raiders recorded a shutout came in the 2002 regular season finale when they beat Kansas City 24-0. That was also the only other time they shutout the Chiefs in this long rivalry.

”We had a rough season, and it was our last home game, so we wanted to go out there and prove to our fans that we’re still playing with heart and passion, we’re still giving it everything we’ve got,” safety Tyvon Branch said. ”So this was one of those games, it was like a fan appreciation game.”

The fans even got to see third quarterback Terrelle Pryor for the first time all season. He entered to cheers on the first series of the second quarter. The former Ohio State star player handed off on his first two plays and threw an incompletion on third down before Palmer returned to the game.

”It’s a steppingstone, a step,” Pryor said. ”I enjoyed the four plays or whatever it was. It’s a stepping stone, and I was excited to get in there at least.”

— Associated Press —

No. 10 Northwest falls to St. Edward’s for first loss of season

The 10th-ranked Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team could not overcome a slow start as they dropped their first game of the 2012-13 season, 59-50, to St. Edward’s in the opening game of the Hawaii Classic.

It was a cold shooting night for both squads as both teams fell below 40 percent from the field on the night. The loss dropped Northwest to 8-1 on the season as St. Edward’s benefited from a hot start to improve to 7-6 on the year.

The Hilltoppers jumped out to an 8-0 lead before the Bearcats would get on the board at the 15:59 mark of the first period. A Dillon Starzl jumper started a 9-2 run pulling Northwest within a point; however the Bearcats were not able to completely close the gap trailing 34-22 at halftime.

Northwest continued to chip away at the St. Edward’s lead in the second half but could not pull closer than five points. The Bearcats twice drew the game within two scores after a Starzl lay-in with 7:06 left in the game made it 51-46.

The Hilltoppers answered on a three-pointer by James Stukes to make it 54-46, as Northwest would not get any closer the rest of the night.

Open looks would be hard to come by down the stretch for both teams as they combined for just nine points in the last five minutes of the game.

St. Edward’s was the first team to outrebound the Bearcats since a season opening win against Graceland, 40-34.

The Bearcats also struggled for the first time this season behind the three-point line, shooting just 18 percent on 3-of16 from behind the arc.

Starzl was the only Bearcat to score in double figures finishing with 17 points and seven rebounds.

The Hilltoppers’ Shimeek Johnson led all players with 18 points and pulled in four rebounds.

The Bearcats return to action tomorrow as they take on Harding University. Tip from Hawaii is set for 10 p.m. CST.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

No. 9 Jayhawks roll to big win over Belmont

Andrew White III figures he will get some more playing time for No. 9 Kansas if he starts performing to the same level as Ben McLemore and Travis Releford.

He showed on Saturday night that he can hit the outside shot like them.

Now he just needs to throw down some dunks.

The freshman forward came off the bench to score 15 points, McLemore and Releford had 17 each, and the Jayhawks rolled to an 89-60 victory over Belmont, their 27th straight home win.

White had only played a few meaningful minutes this season, instead getting on the court when games were mostly out of reach. But he made a layup early, hit an opener jumper before halftime and wound up making three 3-pointers and going 6 of 8 from the field.

”I’ve been working in practice every game, working against these two guys,” White said, flanked by McLemore and Releford. ”Trying to improve the best I can. It’s good to have a good scoring game, but there’s a lot of room to improve.”

There’s a thought that should make future opponents cringe.

The Jayhawks (8-1) used suffocating defense, especially on the perimeter, and peerless transition offense early in the second half to put away the Bruins (6-3), a mid-major darling that’s been to the NCAA tournament five of the past seven years.

Kansas shot better than 50 percent from the field and was 10 of 21 from the 3-point line.

”I think we’re getting better,” said Kansas coach Bill Self, who will be without reserve forward Justin Wesley for the next three weeks after he broke a finger in practice.

”I don’t think we’re terrific by any means,” Self said, ”but I think we’re getting better.”

Trevor Noack scored a career-high 19 points for the Bruins, but he couldn’t overcome their lousy outside shooting by himself. Belmont was just 8 of 38 from beyond the arc.

”Look, their defense was so much better that it affected our shooting numbers, and ours was so poor it affected theirs in the other direction,” Belmont coach Rick Byrd said. ”We were trying to hang in the first half and they kept making shots.”

Leading scorer Ian Clark, who had been averaging 19.4 points, was held to five on 2-for-9 shooting. The senior guard was 1 for 7 from the arc, where he had been shooting at a 58.7-percent clip, and committed five of the Bruins’ 17 turnovers.

”It was a pretty solid beatdown from beginning to end,” Byrd said.

Not entirely: The Jayhawks labored through much of the first half.

They opened a 23-12 lead on a nice feed from Naadir Tharpe to Withey, but the Bruins – who have lost 16 straight against Top 25 opponents – whittled the lead to single digits.

That’s when McLemore started putting on a show.

After beginning his one-man act with an easy basket, the freshman raced to the other end of the court and rejected the Bruins’ Kerron Johnson. Back on offense, McLemore set up White for a basket that extended the Jayhawks’ lead to 36-23 late in the half.

”We’re not a selfish team,” Releford said. ”If I have the ball, I’m penetrating and looking for Ben, or Elijah (Johnson) has the ball – it goes like that throughout the team.”

McLemore’s biggest highlight came as the first half expired.

Johnson had pushed the ball up court, cut to the right of the lane and dropped off a pass for him running down the left side. McLemore leaped up and dunked over Belmont’s Blake Jenkins, getting fouled in the process and hanging on the rim an extra second for emphasis.

While the officials reviewed the play to make sure time was still on the clock, both teams went to the locker room. That left McLemore standing awkwardly on the court by himself to take the free throw – which, of course, he made – for a 44-28 lead at the break.

”It was kind of weird,” McLemore said. ”I felt like there was a lot of pressure on me.”

McLemore kicked off the second half with another 3-pointer, and Kevin Young’s put-back finished off a 12-2 run that allowed the Jayhawks to start having some fun.

At one point down the stretch, White hit a 3-pointer from the wing, a turnover by Belmont led to a run-out and another 3-pointer by White, and yet another turnover led to yet another fastbreak that Releford finished with a reverse jam.

”It was a lot of fun. I’d rather watch Ben do a breakaway dunk,” Releford said with a smile. ”That wasn’t one of my better dunks. I don’t think I got up as high as I could.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas State loses in Seattle to No. 14 Gonzaga

Anytime he got the chance, Kelly Olynyk’s intent was to dunk.

That’s a significant change from a couple of years ago when Gonzaga’s 7-footer was content to hang around the perimeter and shoot from the outside rather than imposing his size down low.

”He’s a smart player, one that can hurt you in a lot of different ways passing, driving and scoring,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. ”I think that’s probably the biggest thing – he went from a guy who loved to just play out there on the perimeter to a guy who is 7-feet tall and can use those skills down low.”

Olynyk dominated inside with 20 points and No. 14 Gonzaga rebounded from its first loss of the season with an impressive 68-52 win over Kansas State on Saturday night.

Making their annual trip to Seattle, Olynyk and the Bulldogs (10-1) controlled the interior and wore down the Wildcats in the second half. Olynyk’s highlight was a rattling, one-handed slam with about 9 minutes left that drew a technical foul for screaming, but also gave the Bulldogs a 14-point lead.

That was one of four dunks from Gonzaga’s rapidly improving center that helped the Bulldogs outscore Kansas State 38-12 in the paint.

”I just had that mentality today to dunk everything,” Olynyk said.

Gary Bell Jr. added 11 points for Gonzaga, which played before its extensive fan base in the Puget Sound region for the 10th straight year and improved to 6-4 in the event. It was a chance for the Bulldogs to erase the disappointment of their last outing a week earlier when defensive lapses and a red-hot Brandon Paul keyed Illinois’ 85-74 victory that snapped the best start to a season in Gonzaga history.

There was no lingering hangover from the loss. Olynyk made 10 of 13 shots, falling just short of matching his career high of 22 points when he fouled out with 4:56 left. Even more impressive for Gonzaga was its domination inside without getting a big game from Elias Harris, who finished with 10 points and seven rebounds.

While the balance Gonzaga had offensively, with seven players scoring at least five points, was extremely important, defense was the focus most of the week after the Bulldogs allowed too many open looks against Illinois.

”I didn’t think we were going to go undefeated this year playing the schedule we have but we needed to get back to who we are on the defensive end,” Few said. ”We were there tonight. I’m not going to make any proclamations, but we got back to getting our feet under us and guarding the way we need to guard to be successful.”

Angel Rodriguez led Kansas State (7-2) with 14 points, but leading scorer Rodney McGruder had a miserable night. McGruder didn’t score for the first 30 minutes and finished with four points.

McGruder, who came in averaging 12.9 points, shot 1 for 9 from the floor.

”That’s about as good a defense I’ve seen a Gonzaga team play,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. ”They locked in on Rodney. We probably didn’t screen as well as we need to do to help him get open, but he’s also got to shoot open shots when he has opportunities.”

After using Guy Landry Edi on McGruder for most of the first half, the Bulldogs stuck Mike Hart on the Wildcats’ scoring leader to start the second half. He was immediately flustered, committing turnovers on Kansas State’s first two possessions, and Gonzaga started the half on a 9-0 run to take a 36-26 lead with 16:28 left.

Kansas State briefly stemmed the run, but Edi’s 3-pointer with 12 minutes left pushed the lead to a dozen and Olynyk’s dunk that drew the technical capped another 11-2 spurt by the Bulldogs.

The 3-point shooting that kept Kansas State hanging around in the first half disappeared during the final 20 minutes. The Wildcats shot 1 of 6 on 3-point attempts in the second half. Rodriguez had only two points after the break and Gonzaga’s lead reached 21 in the final minutes.

Gonzaga plays one more non-conference game before Christmas, then closes out the year with games against Baylor and at Oklahoma State before starting West Coast Conference play.

”Guys responded. They responded to this crowd, to playing over here,” Few said. ”It means a lot to a lot of them to play good over here.”

— Associated Press —

Chiefs place Dwayne Bowe on Injured Reserve

The Kansas City Chiefs put wide receiver Dwayne Bowe on injured reserve Saturday night, ending his season and potentially his up-and-down career in Kansas City.

The Chiefs’ leading receiver already had been ruled out of Sunday’s game at Oakland after hurting his ribs while delivering a block in last weekend’s game at Cleveland. Bowe underwent a series of MRI exams and other tests this week to determine the extent of the injury.

“Well, one of the things that Bowe presents is he presents some dependability to our offense, playmaking ability,” Chiefs coach Romeo Crennel said earlier this week.

“We all kind of depend on him a little bit. So now with him being out, what we’re going have to do is, we’re going to have to rely on those other guys to step up and be able to make some plays for us so that we can generate some offense.”

Bowe has 59 catches for 801 yards and three of the Chiefs’ eight TD grabs this season.

“Everybody’s got to do a better job, collectively,” offensive coordinator Brian Daboll said. “Dwayne was a big part of the passing game, obviously. Everybody else is going to have to chip in and make sure they’re doing their jobs really well.”

Bowe was playing this season on a $9.5 million deal as the team’s franchise player, and it’s possible the two sides could agree on a new deal or the Chiefs could franchise him again.

Bowe wasn’t happy about getting the tag last season, though. He refused to sign his tender until well into training camp, forcing him to play catch-up at the start of the year.

The former first-round draft pick rarely speaks to the media, but said a few weeks ago that he wouldn’t mind finishing his career in Kansas City. There were reports in previous weeks that he was unhappy with the Chiefs and wanted to become a free agent.

With Bowe ruled out, the Chiefs head into Sunday’s game against the Raiders and their final two games against Indianapolis and at Denver with precious few down-field options.

Wide receiver Steve Breaston has been inactive more than he’s played in recent weeks, and the Chiefs’ next-leading receivers after Bowe are running back Jamaal Charles and former running back Dexter McCluster, who are more adept at catching short-yardage passes.

Bowe had his best season in 2010, when he was voted to the Pro Bowl after catching 72 passes for 1,162 yards and a league-high 15 touchdowns. He had 81 catches for 1,159 yards last season, and has caught 415 passes for 5,728 yards and 39 touchdowns in his six-year career.

“Any time you lose a guy like Dwayne Bowe, it’s going to hurt you,” Chiefs quarterback Brady Quinn said. “He’s a special player. He really is.”

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File