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Missouri’s Pressey named SEC Player of the Week

Missouri’s Phil Pressey was named the Southeastern Conference Player of the Week on Monday after pouring in a career high 26 points to lead the Tigers to a thrilling 66-64 win over Bucknell.

The Preseason SEC Player of the Year, Pressey currently ranks among the nation’s Top 10 in assists per game (7.2) and fueled Missouri’s offense on Saturday, hitting 10-of-22 shots, including a perfect 3-of-3 shooting from three-point range in the second half.

Pressey also dished five assists and is now tied with Atlanta Hawks Head Coach Larry Drew for third on the school’s career assists list with 433.

The Dallas native is the second Tiger to earn SEC Player of the Week honors from the league office. Laurence Bowers won the award on Dec. 24 after leading Missouri to a Bud Light Braggin’ Rights win over Illinois.

Pressey leads the SEC in assists per game and ranks second on the club in scoring (13.8 ppg). He is averaging 22.5 points and 12.0 assists over his last two games.

Mizzou returns to action on Tuesday against Alabama in the 2013 SEC opener. The game is scheduled to tip at 6 p.m. CT on ESPN. Limited tickets are available.

— MU Sports Information —

No. 12 Mizzou barely holds off Bucknell

Earlier in the season, Frank Haith acknowledged that Missouri’s offense ran through Laurence Bowers.

Not anymore.

For the third consecutive game, Phil Pressey dictated the pace in the second half and put the 12th-ranked Tigers in position to win. Unlike its last game, a 3-point overtime loss at UCLA, Missouri scored down the stretch Saturday and managed to edge Bucknell 66-64.

Pressey scored a career-high 26 points, mostly thanks to a career-best 10 made field goals. He singlehandedly kept the Tigers in the game during a 90-second stretch late in the second half by scoring seven consecutive points.

”He’s a terrific player,” Haith said. ”Phil will tell you he’s all about just getting better and learning. You love a kid like that, he has that kind of attitude. I don’t think surprise is the word that I would use about Phil. Those special players, when you have one, he’s one of those guys that can do a lot of different things on the court to help you win basketball games other than score.”

But Pressey’s performance almost went for naught.

The 5-foot-11 point guard clanked the front-end of a 1-and-1 leading 64-63 with 10.3 seconds remaining. Bucknell’s Mike Muscala then bailed the Tigers out by stepping on the baseline with 4.1 left on the clock after catching a pass from Ryan Hill.

Earnest Ross made two free throws for the Tigers (11-2), but a foul by Jabari Brown put Muscala on the line for a final attempt to tie the game with 1.9 remaining. After making the first free throw, Missouri’s Stefan Jankovic grabbed the rebound on the second to end the game.

The game contrasted with Missouri’s performance at UCLA, when the Tigers shot 50 percent in the first half but only scored two points in the final five minutes of regulation. On Saturday, the team struggled to 34.4 percent shooting in the first half but made 51.6 percent from the floor after the break.

”I think that we’re a pretty good team, and pretty good teams learn from games like that, against UCLA,” Laurence Bowers said. ”We didn’t execute down the stretch, and we wanted to make sure that we didn’t have any of those same type of plays this game.”

Muscala led the Bison (13-3) with 25 points and 14 rebounds for his 10th double-double of the season. Cameron Ayers added 13 points and Bryson Johnson scored 11.

Bison coach Dave Paulsen said the close finish was disappointing, even though it provided a lot of lessons as the team enters Patriot League play.

”I think if you come to Missouri and you hold them to 66 points, if you said that going into the game I would have signed up for that,” Paulsen said. ”We just needed to be able to convert a few more plays.”

Bucknell, which entered the day among the nation’s leaders in wins, became the first team this season to outrebound the Tigers, who lead the country in rebounds per game (47.4).

Nevertheless, the Tigers managed to keep the halftime deficit to 28-24 thanks to a plus-6 rebounding margin. Haith admitted his team was impatient early on, evident by the Tigers’ guards combining for six turnovers and zero assists in the first half, one game removed from Pressey’s school-record 19 assists.

Needing a spark, Haith called on Jankovic to start the second half having only played two minutes thus far. The freshman delivered, scoring a 3-pointer and a dunk in the first minute to set the tone for the remainder of the game.

”Just felt like he could give us some offense,” Haith said. ”And I liked the way he looked at the end of the half.”

Bowers scored 16 points and added eight rebounds, reaching double figures in points for eight consecutive games, a personal best, leaving Louisville as the only game this season in which he failed to do so. During this stretch, he has shot 57.1 percent from the field (64-of-112).

”Laurence is a guy I think we can do a lot with,” Haith said. ”I still think he’s a valuable guy in terms of what we can do offensively in terms of what we can do through him.

The win capped the seventh season in a row for Missouri without a home loss to a nonconference opponent. The Tigers have won 73 consecutive such games.

Now entering Southeastern Conference play for the first time, Haith says he ”loves” where his team is at.

”You see some young teams that I think that will start to play better once we get into league play,” Haith said. ”And that’s my focus in telling our team, that we’ve got to be ready to play every time we lace them up.”

— Associated Press —

Mizzou blows late lead and falls at UCLA in OT

Shabazz Muhammad hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with 1:01 left in overtime to help UCLA upset No. 7 Missouri 97-94 on Friday night and extend the Bruins’ winning streak to five games.

Travis Wear, who finished with a career-high 22 points, added a jumper with 12 seconds remaining to close out the Bruins’ first win over a top-10 nonconference opponent since 2007.

Phil Pressey missed a 3-pointer with 5 seconds to go before Laurence Bowers grabbed the rebound and missed a 3-pointer in front of the Tigers’ bench as time expired.

Muhammad tied his career high with 27 points, David Wear scored 16, Jordan Adams had 12 and Larry Drew II added 12 assists for the Bruins (10-3). They came in 0-2 against ranked opponents this season after losing to Georgetown and San Diego State.

Pressey finished with 19 points and a career-high 19 of Missouri’s 21 assists, including all 12 of his team’s in the first half. Keion Bell and Bowers had 17 points each, Earnest Ross added 16 and Jabari Brown had 14 for the Tigers (10-2). They were playing their first true road game of the season but had a vocal group of fans on hand at Pauley Pavilion.

The Tigers made a season-high 12 3-pointers, including four by Brown. As the nation’s top rebounding team, they controlled the boards, 50-36.

Adams’ layup tied the game at 88 with 11 seconds to go in regulation. The Bruins were forced to foul, and Adams grabbed Pressey and flung him to the ground with 4 seconds left. Pressey lay briefly before getting up.

After a timeout, Brown’s jumper missed and Travis Wear came up with a block when Bell went for the offensive rebound as regulation expired.

The team’s traded runs in the second half, with the Bruins ending on an 11-2 spurt to force overtime. Missouri preceded that burst with 12 straight points of its own to turn a three-point deficit into an 86-77 lead, its largest since midway through the opening half. Pressey scored the first five, Bell stole the ball and dunked on the fast break, and Bowers capped it with a three-point play.

Tied 47-all at the break, the Bruins opened the second half on a 16-7 run to go up 63-54. Missouri fought back from the perimeter, hitting four 3-pointers to close to 77-74.

The Bruins’ hadn’t beaten such a highly ranked nonconference opponent since Nov. 20, 2007, when they defeated No. 10 Michigan State.

The game was another thrilling chapter in the teams’ history. The Bruins beat the Tigers 75-74 in the second round of the 1995 NCAA tournament when Tyus Edney banked in the winning shot at the buzzer after a full-court dash with 4.8 seconds to play. UCLA went on to win its record 11th national championship. Edney is now the school’s director of basketball operations.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou continues to have braggin’ rights over Illinois

After a long wait, Jabari Brown is finally feeling like part of the Missouri basketball program.

Making his first start of the season, Brown had 18 points and seven rebounds Saturday to lead the 12th-ranked Tigers to an 82-73 win over No. 10 Illinois in the annual Braggin’ Rights game.

Laurence Bowers paced Missouri (10-1) with 23 points and 10 rebounds, while Alex Oriakhi added 13 points and a game-high 14 rebounds. Phil Pressey had 12 points and 11 assists to help the Tigers win their fourth straight in the 32-year-old series.

Brown, a transfer from Oregon, became eligible after the first semester and made his initial appearance Monday in a 102-51 win over South Carolina State.

A blue-chip recruit, he made the most of his first starting assignment Saturday.

”It was fun. I’m part of the family now,” he said.

Brown anxiously watched from the sidelines as the Tigers rolled out to an 8-1 record without him. After becoming eligible, he has worked hard to make up for lost time.

”I wanted to prove I could play right away and fit in any way I can,” Brown said. ”I spent a lot of time practicing and getting used to things and the way they play here.

”Now, I’m finally feeling comfortable.”

Brandon Paul led Illinois (12-1) with 23 points. Tyler Griffey scored 14, Joseph Bertrand had 13 and Nnanna Egwu 12 for the Illini.

Missouri used a 9-0 run late in the game to take the lead for good at 70-64. The Tigers held a 58-35 edge on the boards and outscored Illinois 44-24 in the paint.

Illinois, which leads the overall series 20-12, won nine meetings in a row from 2000-08 before Missouri began its winning streak.

Brown triggered a key 9-0 spurt that erased a three-point deficit and put the Tigers ahead 70-64. He had four points and two rebounds during the 2:31 span.

Brown scored from close range off a perfect pass from Earnest Ross to increase the lead to 68-64. Pressey added a short jumper seconds later to complete the run.

Oriakhi, who had his fourth double-double of the season, was impressed with Brown’s effort.

”He’s unbelievable. He did a little bit of everything tonight,” Oriakhi said. ”I can’t believe he’s fit in so fast. He’s one of us now.”

Brown played in two games at Oregon last season before deciding to transfer. He watched last season’s Braggin’ Rights game from his home in Oakland and was intrigued by the atmosphere, which annually features a sellout crowd with the fans divided equally between the schools.

”I had visited (Missouri) and really hadn’t made a decision, but I thought, if I choose (Missouri), that’s going to be a fun game to play in,” Brown said.

Missouri coach Frank Haith was more than pleased with the performance of his new addition. He immediately moved Brown into the starting lineup after a 12-point performance against South Carolina State, in which Brown excelled defensively.

”It was all about our balance,” Haith said. ”And he can do a lot of things.”

The physical game against Illinois featured 19 lead changes, 35 fouls and 43 free throws.

”They’ve got a lot of depth and they’ve got size,” Illinois first-year coach John Groce said. ”They’re good now. They’ve got a chance to get even better moving forward.”

The Tigers scored 12 of the final 16 points in the first half to take a 41-35 lead into the break. Illinois reeled off eight unanswered points midway through the second half to go up 51-50 on a driving layup by Tracy Abrams. The Illini took their biggest lead of the second half, 64-61, on a baseline jumper by Egwu with 6:43 remaining.

But the Missouri defense took over from there, forcing seven successive Illinois misses. Brown, Ross, Tony Criswell and Pressey chipped in with key baskets.

Illinois managed only three field goals in the final 3:29.

— Associated Press —

MU’s Pressey named to Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award watch list

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced today the watch list of candidates for the 2013 Bob Cousy Collegiate Point Guard of the Year Award and Missouri junior and 2012 finalist Phil Pressey is once again on that list.

Pressey has been one of college basketball’s top point guards since joining the program in 2010 and is on pace to become Mizzou’s career leader in both assists and steals.

Pressey leads the Southeastern Conference in assists this season at 5.8 per game and has helped the Tigers to a No. 12 national ranking early in his junior season.

Pressey is the lone returning player from Missouri’s 30-5 campaign a year ago and has the club off to a quick 9-1 start leading into Saturday’s Bud Light Braggin’ Rights Game against No. 10 Illinois at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis. Game time is slated for 5 p.m.

— MU Sports Information —

Missouri announces 2012 Athletics Hall of Fame class

Five outstanding former student-athletes have been selected for induction into the University of Missouri Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame.  They will represent the 23rd induction class since the inception of the Hall in 1990.

The class will be formally inducted Friday, February 1st, 2013 in an evening banquet and celebration to be held at the Courtyard by Marriott in Columbia.  A reception will begin at 6 p.m., followed by the induction dinner at 7 p.m.  Fans are welcome to attend if interested, and tickets for the event can be purchased by calling Lorraine Rodriguez of the Tiger Scholarship Fund at 573-882-0710.  The next day, when the Mizzou men’s basketball team takes on Vanderbilt, the group will be recognized at halftime of the game.

Here is a look at this year’s inductees, with more extensive biographical information to follow:

CLASS OF 2012

Ian Kinsler – Baseball (2003) [Native of Tucson, Ariz.]

Played only one year at Mizzou, but was instrumental in helping lead the resurgence of MU’s baseball program;

Christi Myers – Volleyball/Track & Field (1999-2003) [Native of Raytown, Mo.]

Mizzou’s first-ever AVCA volleyball All-American, who also was a three-time All-Big 12 high jumper;

Justin Smith – Football (1998-2000) [Native of Holts Summit, Mo.]

Mid-Missouri native became one of the top defensive players to ever wear the Tiger uniform, and he’s since gone onto a stellar NFL career;

James Taylor – Football (1975-77) [Native of Peoria, Ill.]

One of the most feared and punishing offensive linemen of his time who was a 1st-Team All-Big Eight selection in 1977, and who was a 2nd-round NFL Draft Pick in 1978;

Helen Wilson – Tennis (1980-82) [Native of Miami, Fla.]

The first-ever tennis inductee into MU’s Hall of Fame, she was one of the top singles and doubles players ever for the Tigers;

Here’s a more extensive look at this year’s class:

Ian Kinsler – Baseball (2003)

Although he played only one season at Mizzou, Tiger Head Coach Tim Jamieson credits him with being a key figure in helping turn the program around, as he was instrumental in leading Mizzou back to the NCAA Tournament in 2003, after a six-year drought.  That 2003 NCAA appearance started a string of seven-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances for the Tiger program.  After transferring to Mizzou from Arizona State and junior college, Kinsler batted .335 for Mizzou in 2003, and was third on the team with six home runs and 45 RBI.  He also went 16-of-17 in stolen bases during the season, and was named 2nd-Team All-Big 12 for his efforts.

Of course, most people know Kinsler for his outstanding professional baseball career.  After being drafted by the Texas Rangers in 2003, Kinsler made the big league squad in 2006, and promptly won the Rangers’ Rookie of the Year award for hitting .286 with 14 homers and 55 RBI.  He has since made three American League All-Star teams (2008, 2010, 2012), and hit a career-best .319 in 2008, while he followed that with a career-high 31 homers and 86 RBI in 2009.

Christi Myers – Volleyball/Track & Field (1999-03)

Was one of the central figures in the establishment of Mizzou’s volleyball program as one of national prominence, as she became MU’s first-ever AVCA All-American, attaining 3rd-Team status in 2002.  She still stands as Mizzou’s career record holder in blocks (454) and she is third alltime at MU in hitting percentage (.322) and fourth in kills (1,476).

But volleyball wasn’t Myers’ only athletic avocation, as she also doubled as a high jumper for the Tiger Track & Field team.  She was quite successful, too, becoming only the third female in Mizzou history to clear the six-foot mark, and she was a three-time All-Big 12 performer, highlighted by placing second in 2001 and third in 2002.

Justin Smith – Football (1998-2000)

Perhaps the most well-known name among this year’s inductees, “Smitty” wreaked havoc on opposing teams’ offenses in a three-year career under former Coach Larry Smith which saw him establish himself as one of the top defensive linemen in Mizzou history.  Smith won 1st-Team All-American honors as a junior in 2000, before bypassing his final year of eligibility and entering the 2001 NFL Draft.  He was drafted fourth overall by Cincinnati, tying him for the highest draft pick ever in Mizzou history.

At Mizzou, Smith won Big 12 Defensive Freshman of the Year honors in 1998 when he totaled 86 tackles, a team-best 13 tackles for loss and 3.5 sacks, while making 11 starts as a true freshman.  He also received freshman All-American honors from several national outlets.  As a sophomore, Smith was a 1st-Team All-Big 12 selection in 1999 when he made 92 tackles, 16 tackles for loss and eight sacks.  He followed with a monster junior season which included 97 tackles and school-record tackles for loss (24) and sacks (11) totals.  He won 1st-Team All-American honors and was a unanimous 1st-Team all-conference selection.

Smith has since gone on to an outstanding pro career, and he is currently playing for the San Francisco 49ers (alongside fellow Mizzou Tiger Aldon Smith), where he earned All-Pro honors in 2011.  He was selected to three-consecutive Pro Bowls (2009-11), and he came in second in balloting for the NFL Defensive Player of the Year Award in 2011 after his outstanding season.  Previously, he broke the Cincinnati Bengals’ rookie sacks record in 2001, when he had 8.5 sacks.  Perhaps most impressively, Smith has not missed a single game in his NFL career, and has started 182 consecutive games, which ranks as 5th-best currently in the league.

James Taylor – Football (1975-77)

James Taylor came to Mizzou from Peoria, Ill., and he developed into one of MU’s most feared and punishing offensive linemen of his time.  He was a major factor in helping Mizzou to some of its biggest wins in history, including a 20-7 win at 2nd-ranked Alabama in 1975, a 46-25 win at 8th-ranked USC in 1976, a 22-21 win at 2nd-ranked Ohio State in 1976 and a 34-24 win at 3rd-ranked Nebraska in 1976.

Taylor won 1st-Team All-Big Eight Conference honors for his stellar play as a senior in 1977, and was selected to play in the prestigious Blue and Gray Classic, as well as the Senior Bowl, in 1978.  He went on to become a 2nd-round pick in the 1978 NFL Draft by the New Orleans Saints, and he had a solid professional playing career.  Taylor was a starter for the Saints, and played in 57 games overall for the franchise, from 1978-81.

Helen Wilson – Women’s Tennis (1980-82)

One of the top individual talents in Mizzou women’s tennis history, who played in the early days of the program, which began officially as a varsity sport for the 1974-75 season.  Wilson becomes the first women’s tennis player to be inducted into the Mizzou Athletics Hall of Fame.  She was the team’s top player for two seasons, and was the No. 2 singles player as a freshman.  Mizzou dropped women’s tennis as a varsity sport prior to her senior year, which forced her to transfer to Oklahoma, where she finished up her degree work and played for one year.

Even with that, Wilson still considers Mizzou to be her alma mater, and she has been very involved with the Tiger tennis program.  She currently resides in the Kansas City area and is the Director of Tennis at the Kansas City Country Club.

Despite having a junior season cut short by injury, in a little more than just two full seasons, Wilson still stands fifth on the alltime career singles wins list at Mizzou, with a career record of 73-34.  She went 31-13 as a freshman, when she helped guide the Tigers to a 17-10-1 team record and a fourth-place finish at the Big Eight Championships.  Wilson placed third at the subsequent Region VI Championship tournament, and that qualified for nationals.  She followed that with a 32-13 record as a sophomore, earning All-Region honors in 1981.  Her 32 wins that year rank as the 3rd-most in MU single-season history.  Also a standout doubles player, Wilson had a doubles career mark of 51-22, and that stands as the 9th-most career doubles wins in MU history.

The Hall’s constitution and bylaws express its purpose – “…to recognize and honor those individuals who have made exceptional contributions to the achievements and prestige of the University of Missouri in the field of athletics, and who have continued to demonstrate in their lives, the values imparted by intercollegiate athletics.”

The current class will up the membership to 186 individuals and four teams in the Hall of Fame.  Inductees are honored in a display located in the main entrance at Mizzou Arena.

Nominations are accepted year-round by sending support material to: Chad Moller, Director of Athletic Media Relations, Mizzou Athletics, P.O. Box 677, Hearnes Center, Columbia, Mo. 65205.

— MU Sports Information —

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 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 —

Missouri basketball announces future series with Arizona

The University of Missouri and the University of Arizona announced a two-year agreement for a home-and-home college basketball series starting at the McKale Center in the 2015-16 season.

As part of the agreement Mizzou will travel to Tucson, Ariz., for a game on Sunday, Dec. 13, 2015, and Arizona will face the Tigers at Mizzou Arena on Saturday, Dec. 10, 2016.

“This is a great series and will generate the type of national exposure fans and programs want early in the college basketball season,” Head Coach Frank Haith said. “I have so much respect for Sean (Miller) and the Arizona program and when you get two national brands playing in on-campus settings it’s great for all of college basketball.”

Missouri and Arizona have twice met on the hardwood. The most recent meeting was March 26, 1994, in the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament in Los Angeles, Calif. Arizona won that game, 92-72. The first meeting was a 76-73 Mizzou win on Dec. 29, 1984, in Honolulu, Hawaii, in the Hawaii Pacific Invitational.

Missouri will play at least two Pac-12 schools this season. The Tigers topped Stanford, 78-70, in the opening round of the 2012 Battle 4 Atlantis and will travel to UCLA on Dec. 28, 2012, to begin a home-and-home series with the Bruins. UCLA will return the game to Mizzou Arena next season.

— MU Sports Information —

Mizzou uses big second half to defeat Tennessee State

Stefan Jankovic hasn’t started this season and only played four minutes in the Tigers’ three games leading up to Tennessee State on Saturday.

And while he didn’t leave the bench in the first half, he showed what he could do with 16 minutes in the second half.

Jankovic, a freshman from Mississauga, Ontario, dunked off a missed jumper by Laurence Bowers with 14:18 remaining, the first two of his season-high 14 points in the game.

That highlighted a 14-3 Missouri run to start the second half, which propelled the 12th-ranked Tigers to a 68-38 win over Tennessee State.

”He was huge,” senior forward Alex Oriakhi said of Jankovic. ”When he came into the game, I said, ‘We need your energy.’ And that’s exactly what he gave us.”

Jankovic says practice allows him to be ready to enter a game off the bench, no matter how long he’s been sitting.

”That’s my game sometimes. I find myself in practice trying my hardest, so when the game comes – I’m going up against guys like Alex and Laurence (Bowers) in practice – I’m ready.”

Bowers scored 18 points and had 10 rebounds and Oriakhi added 15 points and 10 rebounds for Missouri (8-1), which defeated its second consecutive Ohio Valley Conference team following a 81-65 win Tuesday over Southeast Missouri State.

Both teams failed to make a basket for several-minute stretches in the first half, combining for 18 turnovers and 34.6 percent shooting from the field.

But Missouri regrouped during the break and went on a 14-3 run to start the second half.

Phil Pressey’s 3-pointer and Negus Webster-Chan’s fast-break layup within a 20-second stretch gave Missouri a 32-22 lead with 15:16 remaining.

Missouri led by at least nine the rest of the way, gradually extending its lead following an M.J. Rhett free throw that cut the deficit to 32-23 with 15:07 left.

Missouri coach Frank Haith said Saturday’s 23-point first half was the result of poor execution.

”We want to get off to good starts,” Haith said. ”We’ve had some games where we’ve gotten off to good starts and we didn’t finish well. So it’s just a matter of putting together 40 minutes.”

Robert Covington scored 12 points and Jordan Cyphers added 11 points for Tennessee State (4-6), which entered the matchup having won three consecutive games.

After making four of its first six shots from the field Saturday, Tennessee State made only 11 of its next 57 attempts.

It was a similar struggle from 3-point range, as Tennessee State started 3 of 5, but finished 6 of 24.

”We reverted back to our old ways, taking too many 3’s,” coach Travis Williams said. ”I felt we settled for too many 3’s. We normally would make certain shots and we didn’t make those shots tonight.”

Tennessee State, which was picked to finish second in the conference’s East Division, has played eight of its first 10 games on the road.

Bowers and Oriakhi combined for all of Missouri’s 23 points in the first half except for an Earnest Ross free throw with 4:01 remaining.

The Tigers endured stretches of 5:54 and 4:49 without scoring a basket in the first half and turned the ball over 11 times, yet managed to shoot 40 percent from the field to take a three-point lead at halftime.

Missouri also outrebounded Tennessee State 52-27 for the game and made 15 of 19 free throws. Tennessee State only attempted five, all in the second half, and made two.

Bowers is averaging 22.3 points in his past three games. Before scoring 26 in Tuesday, his career high was 23.

”He’s been real consistent,” Haith said. ”And he’s been our go-to guy thus far this season. But I do think we have a number of guys who can score. Guys who just have to continue to get comfortable.”

No one exemplifies being more comfortable than Oriakhi, who earned his third double-double of the season, one better than all of last season at Connecticut.

The 6-foot-9, 255-pound forward says Haith’s confidence in him has allowed his offensive game to grow.

Missouri extended its home winning streak against nonconference opponents to 71 games dating to the 2005-06 opener.

The team has nine days off before likely adding highly touted transfer Jabari Brown to its lineup. Brown, who played at Oregon, joined the Tigers after the first semester of last season.

”He will not start, I can tell you that,” Haith said. ”But he’ll get some court time.”

— Associated Press —

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