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Northwest Missouri State men cruise past Graceland

Northwest Missouri State got off to a 20 point lead and never looked back as the Bearcats finished their first undefeated non-conference schedule for the first time since the 2003-04 season, with a 90-60 win over Graceland on Sunday afternoon at Bearcat Arena.

The Bearcats also improved to 9-0 on the year for the first time since the 03-04 season where Northwest rattled off 13 straight wins to start the year. Graceland fell to 6-7 on the year and has lost its last four games.

Northwest jumped out early on the Yellowjackets and never trailed as they built a 23-4 lead in the first 10 minutes of the game. The Bearcats extended their lead to 50-18 at the half, but would have to withstand a feverish Graceland rally to start the second half.

Graceland pulled within 13 points just under the 9 minute mark in the game, but Dillon Starzl knocked down the next four points to jump start the Bearcat rally. Starzl barely missed a double-double with 10 points and nine rebounds in the win.

The Northwest defense would lock down in the final 8 minutes to build the Bearcat lead back to 25 after Justin Clark intercepted a Yellowjacket pass and pushed ahead to DeShaun Cooper for the easy lay-in. Cooper was 1 of 6 Bearcats to finish in double figures with 10 points.

DeAngelo Hailey came off the bench for the Bearcats to score 17 points and led all players and added nine rebounds.

Northwest dominated the smaller Yellowjackets inside posting 32 points in the paint and holding Graceland to only 14.

The Bearcats return to MIAA action on Saturday as they travel to 10th-ranked Fort Hays State in a battle for first-place. Tip from Hays, Kan. is scheduled for 4 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest women lose at UNO in overtime

The Northwest Missouri State Bearcat women’s basketball team dropped its fifth straight game Saturday, but it took an overtime effort from Nebraska-Omaha to claim the 72-70 victory inside Sapp Fieldhouse in non-conference women’s basketball action.

The Bearcats fell to 2-8 on the year while the Mavericks, who made the move to NCAA Division I status over the summer, improved to 7-3 overall. Northwest will return to MIAA action next Saturday as they travel to Fort Hays State.

UNO took a slim 36-35 lead in the half, but the Bearcats would rally to force the extra period at 64-64. Shelly Martin scored 10 second half points to help push Northwest even with UNO at the end of regulation.

Northwest would jump out to an early lead in overtime as Martin knocked down a pair of free throws. It was Martin’s only trip to the line as she finished with a team-high 19 points.

The Mavericks would also knock down their free throw shots tying the game for the 10th-time of the afternoon, but a jumper from Tara Roach would give Northwest a two-point lead again with 1:31 left. However, the Mavericks drilled back-to-back three-pointers with under 1 minute to play to take a four-point lead, 72-68.

Abby Henry then got two solid looks at the basket to pull Northwest back within a score, but each shot fell off the mark. Henry would close the gap to 72-70, as she knocked down a jumper at the buzzer. Henry closed the day with 16 points.

Both teams shot under 40 percent on the afternoon, but it was a 43 percent shooting effort from UNO behind the three-point line that helped the Mavs overcome 27 turnovers. The Bearcat defense was extremely active recording 17 steals as well.

UNO had three players’ record double-doubles as Paige Frauendorfer finished with 18 points and 14 rebounds.

Jamie Nash led all players with a game high 21 points for the Mavs.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Field events pace Bearcats in first competition

A pair of Northwest Missouri State men 800 meter runners finished in the top five, along with Will Haer’s runner-up finish in the pole vault, highlighted the opening weekend at the Cyclone Holiday Preview.

Taylor Overmiller and Derek Roberts finished second and third in the 800m run for Northwest, behind Truman State’s Matthew Shaefer. Overmiller was neck-and-neck with Shaefer who took first-place with a time of 1:57.57, while Overmiller was just behind with a time of 1:57.89. Roberts was also just seconds behind at 2:00.79.

Haer finished second in the pole vault behind Northern Iowa’s Daniel Gooris with a vault of 4.55m. Gooris recorded a first-place vault at 5.05m.

The Bearcat women vaulters matched the men with a runner-up finish of their own as Megan Elder took a narrow second-place finish behind Jenna Wexter of Northern Iowa. Elder finished just .55m behind Wexter with a 3.25m mark as Wexter’s recorded a first-place mark of 3.80m.

Kendra Martiny also finished in the top five with a fourth-place finish in the pole vault with a mark of 3.15m.

Samantha Fender also earned a top five finish with a 5.31m mark in the long jump. Jennifer Zweifel of Truman State took home first-place with a jump of 5.63m.

A pair of Bearcats competing in the pentathlon recorded top 10 finishes as Chloe Wichman finished sixth and Jessica Hugo came in ninth.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcats survive against Pittsburg in OT

Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team needed to put in a little extra work to remain undefeated.

Two clutch free throws by junior Bryston Williams with 7.5 seconds left in overtime plus some stellar defense propelled the Bearcats to a thrilling 73-70 overtime victory over Pittsburg State Wednesday evening Bearcat Arena.

“The game is kind of in your hands,” said Williams, who finished with a game-high 22 points. “You can give a little spread on the score. I just thought about practice and tried to knock them down.”

Williams was sensational at the line, making 17 of 18 and that mirrored his teammates. Northwest went 30 for 32 from the charity strip and needed just about every one of them.

Simply put, both teams put on a fantastic display of old-fashioned basketball in front of 1,106 fans.

Northwest and Pitt played hard on defense, shared the basketball on offense and didn’t do any unnecessary talking after important baskets.

“It was exactly like that,” said Northwest junior DeeShaun Cooper. “It was nothing but love out there. It was the game of basketball, and we came out here to play.”

The victory lifted Northwest to 8-0 overall and 3-0 in the MIAA. Pitt dropped to 5-4 and 1-2.

“This was our first overtime game and we came together and overcame,” said Cooper, who finished with 15 points. “We needed this to see how much we could come together.”

For a while, it appeared Northwest was going to take care of business in regulation. The Bearcats scored the last four points in the first half to grab a two-point halftime lead.

Northwest started the second half on fire, scoring the first nine points for a 39-28 lead.

Pitt remained poised. They kept working the ball around until it got good shots. They slowly chipped away and eventually tied the game 49-49 with 6:08 left.

Williams played strong throughout the second half and kept driving to the basket and getting fouled. With 2:53 left, Williams dropped two more free throws to give the Bearcats 58-55 lead.

“I got to the free throw line a couple of times so I tried to keep doing it and help my team out as much as I could,” Williams said.

Northwest held a 60-58 lead in the closing seconds when Pitt grabbed an offensive rebound and scored on a short jumper by Eric Ray with 2 seconds left in regulation.

Cooper tried a desperation half-court shot that hit off the front rim. The game went into overtime.

“We were able to sustain that blow when the guy hit that last second two-pointer to send it to overtime,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “We were able to come out in overtime and regain our composure and regain our momentum and win the game says a lot about our character.

“In the MIAA, as everybody knows, you got to have talent, but everybody has talent. It’s about who can handle adversity and who can handle another team’s run and who can get big stops when you need to. We’ve been able to do that in our first three conference games.”

Overtime started well for Northwest. Justin Clark hit a three-pointer. The Bearcats quickly built a 65-60 lead and then hit their free throws to prevent Pitt from tying or going ahead.

“A game like this,” said Williams, “helps us build on crucial times when we really need each other.”

A significant reason Northwest entered Wednesday’s game without a loss is because a player off the bench steps in and delivers.

In the first half against Pitt, freshman guard Matt Wallace was that player. He knocked both his field goal attempts and both free throws for seven points.

Wallace’s contributions gave the Bearcats a slim 30-28 lead at halftime.

Northwest scored the first four points of the game and then had trouble scoring. The minor drought allowed Pitt to build a 14-9 lead.

The Bearcats tied the game at 14-14 and then saw Pitt score the next seven points for a 21-14 lead. Northwest fought back to within one at 21-20.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest women fall to unbeaten Pitt State

Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team started the second half the same as the first: slow.

It cost the Bearcats dearly as they faced a 19-point deficit 4 minutes into the second half against undefeated Pittsburg State.

But the circumstance the Bearcats faced Wednesday evening at Bearcat Arena failed to crush their spirit.

Despite an 84-63 loss, Northwest put together several spurts that energized the team and the crowd.

Shelly Martin, who got hot, started one of the runs. She helped the Bearcats close to 56-47 with 11:30 left in the game.

Northwest, though, had trouble getting closer because of an outside-inside game by Pitt. On this occasion it was the inside scoring of Larissa Richards that increased the Gorillas’ lead to 58-47.

A three-pointer by Brooke Conley gave Pitt a 63-50 a little later.

The Bearcats, though, had another run in them. This time it came from freshman Annie Mathews, who had back-to-back inside buckets that dropped Northwest’s deficit to eight at 65-57.

“In the last three games we’ve been so close, a point when we were down six or seven and they would hit one big shot and we would put our heads down,” Martin said.

“Once we figure out how to overcome that, we will be pretty tough to beat.”

Over the next couple of minutes, Northwest stayed within eight to 10 points. But another long three-pointer by Pitt guard Drew Roberts late in the second half but the brakes on a comeback. Her trey gave the Gorillas a 70-59 lead.

“I hated to give away those layups the last 4 minutes,” Northwest coach Gene Steinmeyer said. “We just could not get a stop. We ran out of gas the last 4 minutes and it left a bad taste in everybody’s mouth.”

In improving to 9-0 overall and 3-0 in the MIAA, Pitt knocked down 10 three-pointers in 20 attempts.

“They might be the best of the three conference teams we’ve played,” Steinmeyer said. “They have a legitimate right to say they are the best in the MIAA right now. I’m not going to say they are, but if they are not, they are pretty close.”

The loss dropped Northwest to 2-7 and 0-3. Once again, Northwest showed it has the potential to win games in the MIAA once it puts all the pieces together.

“We are getting better at staying together as a team,” said freshman Ashleigh Nelson, who finished with six points and five rebounds. “Those last 4 minutes really killed us. If we could have just gotten it down to six points, I think we could have won.”

Senior Abby Henry led the way for the Bearcats, scoring 22 points, and Martin chipped in 11.

In the first half, Northwest gave up the first nine points and that was the worst thing that could happen to the Bearcats. It caused Northwest to play catch-up against an offense that was raining in three-pointers at a 50-percent rate and making easy layups.

Despite the uphill climb, the Bearcats clawed away, inching to 11-6. But that’s when the Gorillas scored consecutive field goals for a 15-6 advantage.

When it appeared Northwest gained some momentum on a high-arching three-pointer by Nelson, the Bearcats saw Pitt come right back with a three-pointer by Roberts.

Nearly every time Northwest made a charge, Pitt put a quick stop to the run with a three-pointer, some of which were close to NBA range.

The halftime stat sheet showed the Gorillas went six for 12 from beyond the arc, but it seemed 12-for-12. The treys helped Pitt take a 41-26 lead into halftime.

One bright spot for Northwest was the play of Henry, who has been hampered this fall with a sore thumb. Henry was four for eight from the field and scored 12 points in the first half.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

NWMSU’s Adams earns 2nd Team Academic All-America

Sophomore quarterback Trevor Adams was honored Wednesday not only for helping lead Northwest Missouri State to the NCAA National Quarterfinals, but for his work in the classroom as he was named Second Team Academic All-America by the College Sports Information Directors of America.

Adams started the season as the Bearcats backup quarterback, but was thrust into the starting role when senior Blake Christopher went down with multiple injuries. Adams was one of only four players on either the first- or second-teams to hold a 4.00 GPA. He is majoring in biology.

The Odessa, Texas, native started eight games for the Bearcats including three road playoffs starts. The sophomore threw for 2,202 yards and 21 touchdowns on the year. He completed 61 percent of his passes and was ranked all season among the top 10 in the nation in passing efficiency.

The Capital One Division II Academic All-America program is being financially supported by the NCAA Division II national governance structure to assist CoSIDA with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2011-12 D-II Academic All-America teams program.

Four members of the 2011 Capital One Academic All-America Division II Football first team and eight members of the second team represent teams that qualified for the NCAA Division II Football Championship.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcats get blown out in second half as they fall at Pitt State

After overcoming a number of odds the magic ran out for the 10th-ranked Northwest Missouri State Bearcats as they fell 41-16 to 7th-ranked Pittsburg State in a NCAA National Quarterfinal game Saturday at Carnie Smith Stadium.

The Bearcats incredible run ends at 11-3 and snaps their streak of seven straight national semifinal appearances. Pittsburg State improved to 11-1 on the year and advance to next week’s semifinal against Delta State.

After trading possessions to start the second half Zac Dickey found John Brown down the sideline for the first of three touchdowns. He then raced 78-yards for the score giving PSU a 17-10 lead. Brown caught six passes for 174 yards with two touchdown catches over 40-yards that sparked the Gorillas.

“I have to tip my hat to Pittsburg State,” said first-year head coach Adam Dorrel. “They are playing great football and have two outstanding young men in Dickey and Brown.

“We never gave up and I’m proud of our team. The way our team battled, not just today, but all season says a lot about their character. We just ran into a really good football team today and give them credit on making plays when they needed to.”

The Bearcats raced out to a 10-0 lead as a non-stop rain soaked the turf. James Franklin scored on the Bearcats first series as he spun his way into the end zone on a seven play 64-yard drive that eclipsed 2:39. Franklin would be held to just 43 yards on the ground after rushing for over 100-yards in his two previous playoff games.

Northwest would put together another solid drive over 3 minutes after holding PSU to a three-and-out. Todd Adolf nailed a 22-yard field goal to close out the first quarter, as the Gorillas would then score 34 unanswered points and build a 24-point lead.

PSU’s defense shut down the Northwest rushing attack that ignited two second-half comeback wins.

Despite Jordan Simmons’ 97 yards on the ground the Bearcats would only manage 145 total yards rushing.

The wet conditions also limited the Bearcat passing attack as Trevor Adams was 5-of-16 for 58 yards.

Looking for a spark senior Blake Christopher took over and was also kept in check going 6-for-11 for 94 yards. Christopher did engineer a brief rally, hooking up with Franklin for the Bearcats only TD through the air, but a pair of interceptions closed the door on the Bearcats’ season.

Much like the first meeting Dickey hurt the Bearcat defense with his feet and his arm. The senior quarterback rushed for 148 yards and threw for 266. He also added three touchdowns, all of which were to Brown.

“John Brown is a great football player,” said senior cornerback Derrick Thomas. “We were in position and had a game plan for him, but great players make great plays and that’s what he did. We won’t hang our heads though. I’m proud to be a Bearcat and this is was a special season.”

Northwest had three turnovers in last week’s win at Midwestern State, but could not overcome the turnovers this week. The Bearcats 297 yards of total offense was their lowest output of the season.

Northwest closes their season failing to avenge a regular season loss for the first time since 2004 marking the last trip to the national semifinal round for the Gorillas.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest women lose to No. 16 Washburn

Abby Henry scored 18 points but it wasn’t enough as Northwest Missouri State was defeated by No. 16 Washburn 71-53 Saturday night inside Bearcat Arena.

Annie Matthews had 12 points and seven rebounds for the Bearcats (2-6, 0-2 MIAA) while Shelly Martin chipped in with eight points.

Washburn (8-2, 1-0 MIAA) used their size to their advantage as they out-rebounded the Bearcats 46-32 in the win.

The Bearcats jumped out to an early 4-0 lead but that would be the only lead of the game for Northwest as the No. 16 Lady Blues charged back to take a 16-7 lead at the 13:52 mark.  Washburn ended the first half on an 11-to-2 run.

The No. 16 Lady Blues stayed in control of the game throughout the second half.  The closest Northwest would get was within 12 points of Washburn.

Washburn was led by Cassie Lambardino who scored 18 points while Stevi Schultz and Ebonie Williams chipped in 13 and 15 points respectively.

As a team, Northwest shot 32.1 percent from the field while the Lady Blues shot 44.3 percent.  The Bearcats converted on 9 of 16 free throws for the game and shot 47.1 from three-point range.

Up Next:  Northwest continues MIAA action Wednesday, Dec. 7 when they host the Pisstburg State Gorillas.  Tip-off from Bearcat Arena is scheduled for 5:35 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcats stay unbeaten with win over Emporia State

At the start of the second half, Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team came out and slapped the floor.

The gesture harkens back to a time when the Bearcats were known for their gritty defense and deep runs into postseason play.

But on Wednesday night at Bearcat Arena in the MIAA opener, Northwest saw Emporia State get on a blistering hot streak to start the second half.

“It didn’t work out too well,” said Northwest junior Justin Clark said.

The one-point halftime lead quickly turned into a seven-point deficit.

The Bearcats, though, never panicked. They displayed the winning traits in their 68-63 victory over Emporia State they will make them a formidable opponent throughout conference.

“Part of it is that first conference game and believing you can win, and now I think we believe a little bit more,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said.

In improving to 6-0 overall, the Bearcats played together, did the dirty work of grabbing key offensive rebounds to pull out a close game down the stretch.

“Knowing we are a team got us through,” Clark said. “Everybody helped.”

It truly was an all-around team effort. Perhaps last year or two years ago, Northwest might not have known how to respond when an 18-17 halftime lead turned into a 27-20 deficit a few minutes into the second half.

“In the second half, we just couldn’t stop them,” McCollum said. “We are going to have to improve some things and guard the ball a little better.”

Part of it was some great offensive plays by Emporia State. The other part was Northwest didn’t play as well on the defensive end as it did in the first half when it limited the Hornets to 24 percent shooting.

“We weren’t fundamentally sound,” Clark said.

But Northwest quickly got on track and closed to 41-40 on a three-pointer by Alex Sullivan. It has only field goal attempt of the game.
With about 9 minutes left, Northwest took its first lead since the opening of the second half on two free throws by Sullivan that made it 42-41.

Emporia State regained the lead on a three-pointer by Derrell Conner and held it for about 3 minutes.

The Bearcats forged a 51-51 tie on a three-point play by Dillon Starzl.

In the final 6 minutes, Northwest made all the key plays to seal the victory. It started with a steal and dunk by Clark that gave the Bearcats a 52-50.

“A dunk,” said Clark, “can be a game-changing play. I felt good everybody fed off that.”

Down the stretch, Northwest played smart, tenacious basketball. It started on the boards.

The first key offensive rebound came with 2:13 left. Kyle Haake, who finished with a team-high 12 points, grabbed the board, was fouled and made two free throws that gave Northwest a 61-56 lead.

A minute later, Sullivan did the exact same thing and made both free throws that gave the Bearcats a 63-58 lead.

“Those were huge,” McCollum said. “Our objective in the game was to increase possessions. We were able to do that and I think that was a key to our success.”

Northwest did everything right in the final 3 minutes. The Bearcats made nine of 10 free throws in the closing minutes to keep Emporia State two possessions away from tying.

“We have so many players on the floor and on the bench that gives us so much energy that we feed off of each other,” Sullivan said. “We encourage each other.”

In the first half, Northwest went nearly 5 minutes before it scored its first points. The Bearcats shot 28 percent from the field in the first 20 minutes and scored just 18 points in the first half.

“I think the nerves got to us a little in the first half,” McCollum said. “I felt like we were getting open shots, but we couldn’t step up and knock them down.”

Despite their struggles on offense, the Bearcats still went into halftime ahead 18-17.

Northwest showed that solid defense can overcome poor offense for a period of time.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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