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Northwest men defeat Upper Iowa in opener of Bearcats Classic

Opening day of the Bearcats Classic brought a win for the Northwest Missouri State men over Upper Iowa 59-52.

The Bearcats jumped out to a 10-3 lead early and continued to fight off several Upper Iowa rallies. Seven points would be the biggest lead Northwest would have in the first half.

Alex Sullivan came away from the first half looking good going 3-for-3 from the field and totaling eight points and four rebounds.

Upper Iowa came back within four points of the Bearcats, but Northwest never gave up the lead.

The Bearcats pulled away in the final minutes of the game to clinch their fourth victory of the season.

DeAngelo Hailey led the way with 13 points and four rebounds and was a perfect 4-for-4 from the free throw line.

Dillon Starzl also finished with double digits points with 12 and led the Bearcats with six rebounds.

Northwest will put their perfect record up against Southwest Minnesota State (2-3) to cap off the Bearcat Classic Sunday with a 3 p.m. tip-off.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

NWMSU women cruise past Texas Woman’s University

The Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team led from start to finish Saturday as they knocked off Texas Women’s University 63-40 to open play at the Colorado Christian Tournament.

The Bearcats continued their hot start to the season under first-year Head Coach Mark Kellogg and moved to 4-1 on the season with the win. Texas Women’s fell to 2-3 on the season as Northwest will take on host Colorado Christian Sunday to close out tournament play at 3 p.m.

Tember Schechinger hit a lay-up just 36 seconds into the game as Northwest never looked back. The Bearcats built an 8-0 lead before TWU scored its first points nearly four minutes into the game.

Northwest shot 55 percent from the field in the first half before cooling off in the second period shooting only 25 percent.

Post players, Annie Mathews and Maggie Marnin were solid for the Bearcats as Mathews led all players with 14 points. Marnin chipped in 13 points and eight rebounds in the win.

The Bearcats also forced 33 turnovers on 23 steals.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest Missouri promotes Phelps to head volleyball coach

After serving this past season as interim head coach at Northwest Missouri State, Amy Phelps has been promoted to Head Coach of the Bearcat volleyball team.

“I’m very excited for this opportunity and would like to thank President Jasinski and Wren Baker for having the confidence in me to continue as head coach,” Phelps said. “We have tremendous student-athletes and a solid nucleus to build around. I want to continue building on the momentum Coach (Jessica) Rinehart started during her time here.”

Phelps will be formally introduced to the media as the 11th Head Coach for Northwest volleyball Tuesday, Nov. 27 during Northwest’s regularly scheduled media luncheon at noon.

“I am thrilled Amy Phelps has agreed to serve as the next Head Coach of the Northwest volleyball team,” Baker said. “I was impressed with the way she led the program this year after the resignation of Jessica Rinehart and have no doubt that she can build off that momentum for next season. I am confident that she is bringing in the right student-athletes and is the best choice to lead the Bearcat program into the future.”

As interim head coach, Phelps guided the Bearcats to a 15-17 overall mark and 9-9 record in the MIAA. After spending the entire 2011 season as an assistant under Rinehart, Phelps was named interim head coach July 12.

Phelps, 33, inherited a young team that included only three seniors, three juniors, seven sophomores and six freshmen. She led Northwest to a sixth place finish and a berth in the MIAA Postseason Tournament where they fell to nationally ranked Central Missouri in the first round.

Northwest jumped out to a 5-0 MIAA record for the first time in over a decade and started the first two months of the 2012 season at 9-6 overall. Two Bearcats earned All-MIAA honors in her first season, as senior Tori Beckman earned first-team honors and sophomore Brooke Bartosh was named to the third-team. In addition, Beckman set a single season record for digs with 716.

“We made strides in the right direction,” Phelps added. “The MIAA is one of the toughest conferences in the nation and we want to be in the top four and compete for conference championships.”

Phelps, a native of Holden, Mo., began her first stint at Northwest in 2003 as a graduate assistant under Lori Slight. She received her masters from Northwest in the spring of 2005 with a degree in physical education and an emphasis in sports administration.

Prior to returning to Northwest, Phelps spent six seasons at Alaska-Fairbanks as an assistant coach. She was elevated to associate head coach in 2007. During that stretch, she helped coach 10 All-Conference honorees in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference and 31 GNAC Academic All-Conference student-athletes. Under Phelps the Nanooks also earned one GNAC Newcomer of the Year and one GNAC Freshman of the Year.

Her coaching career began in 2001 at her alma mater, Graceland University, where she assisted with both the men’s and women’s teams. In 2002 the Lady Jackets were Region V finalists and qualified for the NAIA National Championships.

During her time as a player, Phelps earned first-team all-conference and all-region honors and was named honorable mention NAIA All-America as well as NAIA All-America Scholar-Athlete. Serving as a co-captain, her team claimed both the regular season and postseason titles in the Heart of America Conference as a senior.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcats open playoffs with shutout of Harding

Jordan Simmons could only stand and watch from the Northwest Missouri State sideline, his broken left arm in a brace.

Teammate James Franklin would join him a little later, taking a helmet to the back on the first play from scrimmage, retreating to the locker room and reappearing on crutches.

Minus their best all-purpose back and their leading rusher, the Bearcats not only didn’t break Saturday. They thrived. Onetime walk-on Billy Creason stepped in with the second 100-yard rushing game of his career, Trevor Adams threw for two touchdowns and Northwest’s defense kept the nation’s fifth-best rushing attack out of the end zone in a 35-0 win in the first round of the NCAA’s Division II playoffs.

“It was,” Adams said, “a really good job of guys stepping up and taking care of business.”

The Bearcats (10-2) are part of the playoffs for the ninth time in as many years, the longest current streak in Division II, and now have reached the second round a ninth consecutive time. That’s the second-longest streak in D-II history; Grand Valley State made it at least that far in 10 consecutive years from 2001-10 – the first three under Brian Kelly, who went on to coach at Central Michigan, then at Cincinnati and now is the architect of Notre Dame’s perfect season.

Northwest will hit the road next Saturday to unbeaten Minnesota State Mankato, the top-seeded team in the NCAA’s Super Region 3. Kickoff is slated for noon in Mankato, Minn.

“I love coaching a game like that. Our kids love playing games like that,” Northwest coach Adam Dorrel said of the matchup. “We have absolutely nothing to lose … and we’re going to approach the game like that, and we’re going to play like that on Saturday.”

He said indications from Northwest’s medical personnel are that both Simmons and Franklin, who’s injury wasn’t specified, should be able to play at Mankato, though Simmons’ forearm break required the insertion of six screws during his Wednesday surgery. He was hurt during practice a day earlier.

Franklin, who’d run for 12 TDs and turned in the Bearcats’ only 100-yard performance prior to postseason, picked up 11 yards on his only carry against Harding. He stayed in the game for one more play – a pass incompletion thrown his way – and then pulled himself from the lineup.

It was a tough afternoon in Bearcat Stadium for running backs all-around. Harding lost its first-string fullback, Romo Westbrook, to an ankle injury on the Bisons’ first play from scrimmage and second-stringer D’Nico Jackson-Best to another ankle injury a little before halftime. That forced the move of Bisons quarterback Kelvin Martin, a former backup fullback, to fullback in the second half.

Their triple-option Flexbone picked up 304 yards on the ground, the most the Bearcats have allowed this season, but managed only a little more than four yards a carry and 126 of those yards in the second half. Their passing game, meanwhile, netted minus-four yards and surrendered a couple of interceptions.

“The best team won today,” Harding coach Ronnie Huckeba said, but added in respect to the injuries, “I think we’re closer than that score indicated.”

Northwest had the depth to deal with its losses. And it had the diversification.

Creason ran for 34 of the 70 yards that the Bearcats covered on their opening possession, including a final, fourth-and-goal dive for a touchdown that gave them a quick and important lead. Adams’ 14-yard scoring pass to John Hinchey made it 14-0 early in the second quarter. And another fill-in running back, junior Kohlman Adema-Schulte rumbled six yards off tackle just before halftime for his first TD of the season and the second of his career.

Creason finished with 113 yards rushing, becoming the first back to crack 100 against Harding this season. The Bisons (9-2) had allowed teams an average of just a little more than 88 yards in their previous 10 games.

Adema-Schulte added 22 rushing yards.

“I think they expected to play a little bit today but not as much as they did, and they played really, really well,” Dorrel said. “Anytime you can do that, I think it’s just special. I think it says a lot about the character of the kid.”

Simmons’ injury earlier in the week had put Creason, in particular, on notice. The fifth-year junior from Grain Valley, Mo., was Northwest’s third-leading rusher as a freshman walk-on but he’d been slowed by injuries the past two seasons.

He has played in all 12 games this season, and has rushed for 377 yards.

“I was pretty nervous because I haven’t gotten that much PT (playing time) in a while at running back,” Creason said. “…But once I got settled down, I got really comfortable. And it was awesome.”

It was more of a struggle for Harding’s stricken offense – a lot of it because of the Northwest defense, some of it the Bisons’ own doing.

They threatened to immediately answer Creason’s early touchdown, driving 72 yards to the Northwest 6, but Martin – still at quarterback – fumbled the ball away. A failed fake field goal in the second quarter lost three yards. An illegal formation penalty wiped out a 55-yard TD run near the end of the half.

Behind sophomore backup quarterback Keenan Kellett, the Bisons reached the Northwest 32 in the fourth quarter. But a personal foul penalty set them back, and a gadget-play pass by running back Donatella Luckett was intercepted by the Bearcats’ Brandon Dixon.

Nate DeJong intercepted Kellett just two minutes later, the senior safety’s seventh pick in eight games, setting up 26-yard pass from Adams to Tyler Shaw that made it 28-0.

Backup quarterback Brady Bolles got Northwest Missouri State’s final score on a four-yard run with a little less than three minutes left, capping an eight-play, 63-yard drive.

Adams and Shaw also were instrumental in covering for the missing running backs, connecting on five passes for 24, 19, 35, 15 and 26 yards. Adams finished 17-for-25 for 212 yards and the two TDs. Team-wide, it was an impressive performance of an unsettling week – a one-point, MIAA-deciding loss to arch rival Missouri Western the previous Saturday, then Simmons’ broken arm on the practice field.

“We’ve got great kids. We’ve got a lot of character kids. And anytime you’ve got high-character kids, they always put a lot of confidence in you that they’re going to come through for you,” Dorrel said. “We talk about stuff like that in our program year-round, about the next man up and you never know when your opportunity is going to arise to be a starter.”

Beyond that, he pointed out, “our philosophy is we tend to play a lot more people early in the season than other programs do for a situation like that. We weren’t putting Billy in there with no playing time, meaningful playing time. We weren’t putting Kohlman in there (like that). Those guys had played at Arrowhead (vs. Pittsburg State). They’d played against Washburn. They played against Western. They’d played in big games.”

They now have at least one more.

The Bearcats, seeded fourth of the six Region 3 teams that reached the playoffs, are going after their ninth quarterfinal berth in nine years. That would make a little history, tying the longest such streak ever in Division II (Grand Valley State from 2001-09). And it would be the second longest streak in any NCAA division, from I-AA through Division III.

Mount Union has piled up 20 straight quarterfinal appearances dating to 1992, and has reached at least the semifinals in each of the past 17 years. The Purple Raiders, who routed Christopher Newport University 72-14 Saturday, take an 11-0 record D-III’s second round vs. Johns Hopkins next weekend.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest men pull away late and defeat William Jewell

A solid second half from Alex Sullivan helped the Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team take a 75-56 win over William Jewell Saturday night at the 21st Annual Hillyard Tipoff Classic.

Northwest improved to 3-0 on the season and won both games at the Hillyard Classic for the second straight season. William Jewell fell to 1-2 on the season after knocking off Missouri Western 76-60 Friday night behind 10 three-pointers.

Saturday night however, was all Northwest.

Sullivan scored 14 second half points and finished 4-of-9 from behind the three-point arc to pace Northwest in the win. The senior guard finished with a game-high 22 points.

After taking a 27-23 lead at half time Northwest would never trail in the second half. The Bearcats outrebounded William Jewell 46-32 and also got 20 second chance points compared to only 12 for the Cardinals.

DeAngelo Hailey added 20 points for Northwest and pulled in six rebounds. Hailey and Sullivan combined for 42 points in the non-conference win while Kyle Schlake grabbed a game-high 12 rebounds.

The Bearcats continued a hot streak from behind the three-point line shooting 44 percent on 8-of-18 shooting.

Northwest returns to action after the Thanksgiving break as they host the Bearcat Classic Nov. 24 and 25. The Bearcats open with Upper Iowa on Saturday before closing out the tournament against Southwest Minnesota. Action for the Bearcats starts each day at 3 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

NWMSU women suffer first loss as they fall to Jewell

The important lesson Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team can learn from its 59-55 loss to William Jewell is the value of each possession.

Turnovers led to Northwest’s first loss of the season Saturday evening at Bearcat Arena.

Despite miscues in the second half, Northwest managed to build its biggest lead at 54-45 with less than 7 minutes left.

Northwest appeared to be in control, but the Bearcats kept giving the ball away without putting up a shot.

William Jewell finally took advantage, scoring the next nine points and tied the game at 54-54 with 1:20 left.

A minute later, Northwest finally scored again on a free throw by Monique Stevens that gave the Bearcats a slim 55-54 lead with 21 seconds left.

The dagger came 14 seconds later when Jessie Wheeler made her third three-pointer of the game. It gave William Jewell only its third lead of the game and the first since midway in the second half.

Northwest called timeout and then turned the ball over on the in-bound play, which sealed the victory for Jewell.

The Bearcats, though, still had a few bright moments. Meridee Scott played well offensively, making six of nine shots for 14 points. Ashleigh Nelson also had a solid game off the bench. She scored 12 points and had several nifty passes.

Northwest just could not overcome the 25 turnovers.

The first half was almost identical to the second half.

Northwest led all but two possessions in the first half, but needed a three-pointer by Ashley Thayer in the closing seconds to take a 23-21 lead into halftime.

After building an early 10-3 lead on the strength of Scott’s outside shooting, Northwest struggled much of the first half against William Jewell’s full-court press.

Slowly, Jewell inched closer and in the final minute, took a 21-20 lead on two free throws by Holly Switzer.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcat men pull away in second half to defeat Rockhurst

Junior Dillon Starzl poured in 20 points to lead Northwest Missouri State to a 55-38 victory over Rockhurst Friday night in non-conference men’s basketball action at the 21st Annual Hillyard Tipoff Classic.

Starzl hit a jumper at the 3:37 mark of the first half to pull the Bearcats even at 19-19 in a back-and-forth first half. The junior would extend the Bearcat lead after hitting a pair of free throws as Northwest took a 21-19 lead in the break.

Northwest (2-0) continued to find success inside as they outscored the Hawks 26-14 in the paint. The Bearcat defense was again in full force as they pressed the Hawks into 16 turnovers and held them to just 14-of-47 shooting on the night.

Alex Sullivan continued his hot start draining back-to-back three-pointers to open the second half and sparking Northwest to an early 10 point lead. Sullivan finished with eight points in the win.

The Bearcats would pull away when DeAngelo Hailey hit his third trey of the night with 7:51 left in the game, putting Northwest up 46-32. Northwest would score 10 of the game’s final 15 points to close out the win. Hailey finished the night with nine points.

Northwest finished the night 5-of-9 from behind the three-point line with all five coming in the second half.

The Bearcats close out the Hillyard Classic Saturday night as they take on William Jewell at 5:30 p.m. Last year Northwest took a 49-37 win against the Cardinals at the Classic.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest women roll to easy win against Southwest Minnesota

The Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team opened up the Winstead-Reeves Classic with a 93-46 victory over Southwest Minnesota State Friday night.

The Bearcats opened the game with a 7-0 run and never relinquished the lead.

Ashleigh Nelson led all scorers at the half with 18 points. Nelson was 6 for 8 from behind the arc and was held scoreless in the second period.

Northwest shot 52.6 percent from the floor as they went into halftime with a 53-21 lead.

The Bearcats didn’t let up in the second half as they added 40 points and held Southwest Minnesota State to only 25 points of their own.

In all, the Bearcats had five players in double figures in points.

Annie Mathews and Maggie Marnin both finished the game with double doubles. Mathews had 10 points and 11 rebounds as Marnin posted 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Northwest shot 50 percent as a team from the field. The Bearcats took advantage of free throws hitting 14-of-17 against the Mustangs.

Head Coach Mark Kellogg and his Bearcats picked up their third win of the 2012 season to move to 3-0.

Northwest takes on William Jewell in the final game of the Winstead-Reeves Classic Saturday with tip-off scheduled for 7:00 PM. William Jewell beat Missouri Valley in the Classic opener.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

NWMSU’ Beckman & Bartosh earn All-MIAA honors

Northwest Missouri State volleyball players Tori Beckman and Brooke Bartosh slid their way into the All-MIAA lineups announced by the league office today.

Northwest libero Beckman paved her way onto the First Team after setting the single season record at Northwest for digs (716) and moving into fourth on Northwest’s all-time list for digs (1,488). In her last game against Central Missouri, she made a notable exit on the season with 24 digs, leaving her at an average of 6.08 digs per set on the season and ranking her among the nation’s leaders.

Right-side hitter Brooke Bartosh represents Northwest on the Third Team lineup. Bartosh led the Bearcats with 361 kills on the season and ranked eighth in the MIAA for kills.

Truman’s ride-side hitter Abby Heise snagged the Freshman of the Year spot while Nebraska-Kearney Head Coach Rick Squieres was named Coach of the Year. Jessica Fey of Washburn earned Player of the Year accolades.

The lady Bearcats fell in first round of the MIAA tournament against Central Missouri, wrapping the season up with a 15-17 overall record and 9-9 mark in league play.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest basketball teams sign three players to NLI

The Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team announced the addition of Brett Dougherty for the 2013-14 season Thursday at the early signing period.

Dougherty helped lead Papillion-La Vista High School to a 23-4 mark last season and a trip to the Nebraska High School Final Four earning all-tournament team honors. As a junior he averaged 13.5 points per game and 8.2 rebounds per game to earn all-state and all-metro honors.

“Brett is a great addition for us,” fourth-year Head Coach Ben McCollum said. “He had a tremendous junior season and helped lead his high school team to a Final Four appearance. We were very impressed with him this summer on the AAU circuit and he is primed for a great senior year at Papillion-La Vista under Coach Ryan.

Brett fits the mold of quality and high character kids that we like in our program. His athleticism, toughness, & feel for the game will make him a solid player in our program for years to come.”

Northwest is 1-0 on the young season and coming off a MIAA Championship and NCAA tournament appearance. The Bearcats head to the Hillyard Classic Friday and Saturday in St. Joseph.

Head Coach Mark Kellogg inked two basketball players at the early signing period for the 2013-14 season, the first-year Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball coach announced Thursday.

Ashley Guenther, from Independence, Mo., and Morgan Dittberner, from Louisville, Neb., announced intents to sign with the Bearcat women’s basketball team.

“We tried to put pieces together that complement each other, our current team and our future,” Kellogg said. “In this class we have the size, speed and athleticism that will give us the needed depth to compete for championships. This signing class is the epitome of a student-athlete, they are unbelievable people and their work ethic and self-motivation will serve our program well both on and off the court. Both are young ladies mature beyond their years.”

Guenther was an all-conference forward at Truman High as a junior earning all-district and all-area honors. The 5-11 Guenther averaged 10 points per game and five rebounds helping her team to a 21-5 mark.

“Ashley is a versatile player who really understands how to play basketball,” Kellogg said. “She is aggressive and vocal and she’s incredibly passionate about the sport. Athletically, Ashley brings us size and the ability to score in a variety of ways. Her gift, though, is her mobility on the court. We also see her as being a good defender due to her athleticism and length.

She will flourish in our up-tempo style of play and has the ability to score inside and out. Her motor just never stops. She will really shine in our system and be a vital part of this programs rise to success.”

Ditteberner enters her senior year at Louisville High School after averaging 12 points per game as the teams scoring leader and setting school records in three-pointers in a season and blocks in a game. The 6-0 forward has been all-conference and two-time all-state selection. She has also been an all-conference and all-state volleyball player at LHS.

“Morgan is a kid that everybody calls a pure shooter, but what she really is an unassuming scorer,” commented Kellogg. “She’s a better passer and creator than anybody gives her credit. She is a smooth, scoring wing who can really shoot the basketball and just knows how to play the game.

She has a great feel on the court for what is going on around her. Her frame allows her to score in a myriad of ways. And though her accuracy beyond the arc is what defenders will have to take away, she can beat you with her strength and versatility inside the paint as well. Morgan is incredibly passionate about the game of basketball and a relentless competitor. She will have a great career here at Northwest.”

The two signings are the first at the early period for Kellogg who has helped guide the Bearcats to a 2-0 start.

“We feel so good about these two athletes,” Kellogg said. “Each brings not only an intense competitive desire to our program but an intense passion for Northwest Missouri State University as well. They’re a special duo.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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