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Newman’s career high lifts Kansas past Oklahoma State

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas had just been battered by Oklahoma State for the second time this season, a humiliating loss in Stillwater that sent the Jayhawks into the Big 12 Tournament rubbing their bruised egos.

Then the Cowboys raced out to a 10-point lead in their quarterfinal matchup.

Rather than fold, though, the ninth-ranked Jayhawks showed the kind of toughness they’ve been missing much of this season. Malik Newman scored a career-high 30 points, their backup big men made up for the absence of injured center Udoka Azubuike, and coach Bill Self’s squad pulled away in the second half for an 82-68 victory over the Cowboys on Thursday.

“This team is easy to nitpick with because when we’re good, it’s magnified in ways because we can shoot and move the ball, and when we’re bad it’s magnified because we don’t do the things in grind-it-out games that a lot of teams do,” Self said. “Sometimes I think we get a little spoiled on what our expectations are, but I’m real proud of them. I think they competed hard for the most part.”

Svi Mykhailiuk added 13 points and Devonte Graham had 10 points, four rebounds and nine assists for the No. 1 seed Jayhawks (25-7), who were swept by the Cowboys (19-14) in the regular season. But they rose to the occasion when it mattered, setting up a date with Kansas State on Friday.

The Wildcats beat TCU in an overtime thriller earlier Thursday.

“We just wanted to come out, be aggressive and play tough,” Newman said, “because we haven’t played tough against those guys. We wanted to execute, have fun and be tough.”

Jeffrey Carroll scored 17 points and Kendall Smith had 14 for the No. 8 seed Cowboys, who can only hope their opening-round win over Oklahoma solidified their spot in the NCAA Tournament.

“We’re a tournament team. We’ve proven that all season long,” Smith said. “Especially to see the kind of basketball we’re playing right now, I definitely think we should get in.”

Azubuike sprained the MCL in his left knee in practice Tuesday, causing him to miss the entire weekend. The Jayhawks hope to have him back for the NCAA Tournament next week.

Mitch Lightfoot and Silvio De Sousa combined for 14 points and 14 rebounds in his place.

“We showed we can play without Doke,” Mykhailiuk said. “We can still win.”

Oklahoma State threatened to run the Jayhawks out of the building early on, just as it did in an 82-64 rout in Stillwater on Saturday. Yakuba Sima took advantage of the inside space where Azubuike usually roams, and Carroll’s 3-point barrage gave Oklahoma State an early 10-point lead.

That’s when the Jayhawks finally caught fire, going on an 18-4 charge to turn things around. It was Newman leading the way with a trio of 3-pointers, part of his 20 first-half points.

He kept the hot hand going early in the second half, scoring seven points during another big run — this one 14-0 — that made it 66-50 and forced Cowboys coach Mike Boynton to call timeout.

Boynton said after his team’s rough-and-tumble win over the Sooners that he didn’t buy into the notion that beating a team three times was any more difficult than beating it once. But Boynton didn’t address the challenge that comes with winning two games in fewer than 24 hours.

With 15 minutes left against Kansas, the Cowboys’ legs looked shot.

The Jayhawks’ game-breaking run coincided with a scoreless drought for Oklahoma State that went on for more than 7 1/2 minutes. At one point midway through the half, the Cowboys were 4 for 17 from the floor and had made more turnovers (five) than field goals.

Oklahoma State made a couple of late runs, but he Jayhawks were never in danger of letting their lead slip, locking up at least 25 wins for an NCAA-record 13th consecutive season.

“I won’t say fatigue wasn’t a factor,” Boynton said, “but we knew that coming in. We put ourselves in that scenario and Kansas earned the right to have the extra day of rest.”

BIG PICTURE

Oklahoma State had a 53-27 rebounding advantage against Oklahoma. But the Cowboys only had a 36-33 edge against Kansas, even with Azubuike out with the knee injury.

Kansas set a school record for 3-pointers in a season (319) when Lagerald Vick knocked one down with 3:49 to go. The Jayhawks have relied on the outside shot all year, but it came in handy with their biggest post presence sitting on the bench.

UP NEXT

Oklahoma State waits anxiously to hear its name called on Selection Sunday.

Kansas tries to beat the Wildcats for the third time this season.

— Associated Press —

K-State survives TCU 66-64 in OT in Big 12 quarterfinals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas State could have crumbled when TCU’s Desmond Bane knocked down a desperation 3-pointer to force overtime in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday.

Or when Vlad Brodziansky gave the Horned Frogs the lead in the extra session.

Instead, the Wildcats kept their poise, turned to their stingy and consistent defense, and leaned on star guard Barry Brown to convert the go-ahead lay-up with 11.2 seconds to go. And when the Horned Frogs’ Alex Robinson missed two free throws at the other end, Kansas State had a 66-64 victory that not only meant a semifinal berth but also may have locked up an NCAA Tournament bid.

“It was tough for us, but it was nothing we’ve ever been through before,” Brown said of Bane’s clutch 3. “We play overtime all the time in practice. It was something we were prepared for.”

The Horned Frogs actually had the ball with the game tied at 64 and 34.5 seconds to go. But when Robinson’s pass was deflected out of bounds, a video review showed Brodziansky touched it last, and the officials reversed their original call and gave Kansas State the ball.

Brown’s driving layup gave the Wildcats the lead, and Robinson tried to answer with his own layup with 1.3 seconds to go. But when he was fouled by Makol Mawien, the Horned Frog’s guard — a 60-percent foul shooter — missed the first of two free throws, forcing him to also miss the second.

Kansas State corralled the rebound to seal the overtime win.

“Hopefully that solidifies our chance to be in the NCAA Tournament. Now they’ve got to want more,” Wildcats coach Bruce Weber said. “Go get to the finals and see what happens.”

Mawien finished with 16 points, and Xavier Sneed and Dean Wade scored 12 apiece for the fourth-seeded Wildcats (22-10), who advanced to play Kansas in Friday night’s semis.

Kenrich Williams led the Horned Frogs (21-11) with 20 points. Robinson contributed 16 points on 6-for-15 shooting, and he finished with seven turnovers — none more costly than the last.

“They’re a really sound defensive team,” said Robinson, whose Horned Frogs were held to fewer than 70 points by the Wildcats in all three meetings this season. “Just a really good defensive team.”

The teams couldn’t have played a more even first half, swapping the lead seven times with seven ties and ending 30-all at the break. Both were 2 of 8 from beyond the arc, the Wildcats shot 48 percent from the field and the Horned Frogs shot 52, and neither team made a free throw.

Hardly a surprise, given the teams split in the regular-season with each winning at home.

TCU finally put together the first big run in the opening minutes of the second half. Robinson started it with a free throw and ended it with a jumper, and Williams added five points during the 11-0 spurt, which gave the Horned Frogs a 43-34 lead with 14 1/2 minutes to go.

Kansas State clawed right back thanks to a series of Horned Frogs miscues. At one point, Robinson turned it over three times in a span of four possessions, then blew a wide open layup in transition.

Cartier Diarra scored at the other end for Kansas State, knotting the game 53-all.

Kansas State kept the momentum going, edging ahead 59-56 when the Horned Frogs’ J.D. Miller was called for basket interference with 52.3 seconds left. But after Williams missed at the other end for TCU, coach Jamie Dixon elected to play defense rather than foul the Wildcats.

Brown’s long 3-pointer missed with eight seconds left, and that gave Bane enough time — by a fraction of a second — to hit his only basket of the game and force overtime.

It wound up simply prolonging an important victory for the Wildcats.

“Two NCAA Tournament teams playing in March,” Dixon said. “We played good. I thought we could have played better. We played hard, but I don’t think we finished it off as well as we could have.”

BIG PICTURE

TCU had never lost to the Wildcats in the postseason, beating them in the NCAA, NIT and Big 12 tournaments over the years. It also ended a streak of three straight conference tournaments in which the Horned Frogs had won at least one game.

Kansas State won four of six to finish the regular season, and now should feel comfortable about an at-large bid for the NCAA Tournament despite its pillow-soft non-conference schedule.

QUOTABLE

“We just knew it was going to be a grind-out game the whole game. Wouldn’t expect it not to go into overtime, I guess you could say.” — Kansas State forward Dean Wade.

UP NEXT

TCU heads back to Fort Worth, Texas, to wait out Selection Sunday.

Kansas State tries to beat Kansas for the first time this season in the Big 12 semifinals.

— Associated Press —

Michael Porter Jr. to return for Missouri at SEC Tournament

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Missouri standout Michael Porter Jr. will return to play at the Southeastern Conference Tournament on Thursday — his first time in a game since the season opener.

Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin announced the move Wednesday, one day before the fifth-seeded Tigers (20-11) play either Georgia or Vanderbilt in the second round of the tournament.

The 6-foot-10 Porter, the top prep prospect in the country last season, has been out since playing only two minutes in the Tigers’ season-opening win over Iowa State. He underwent surgery in November and was expected to miss the rest of the season.

After being cleared to practice almost two weeks ago, Porter showed enough progress that both he and Martin felt comfortable putting the forward into a game.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks’ Udoka Azubuike injures knee, out for Big 12 tournament

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas forward Udoka Azubuike sprained his left knee during a scrimmage this week, ruling him out of the Big 12 Tournament and putting his availability for the NCAA Tournament in question.

Jayhawks coach Bill Self said after a scrimmage at the Sprint Center that Azubuike sprained his medial collateral ligament near the end of Tuesday’s practice. Azubuike was going for a rebound and a collision occurred under the basket, leaving the 7-footer with a “Grade 1” sprain.

“We did an MRI as soon as practice was over,” Self said Wednesday. “It’s similar to an ankle or whatnot, there’s obviously a ligament that’s sprained or stretched and right now it’s too loose to put him out there, but these are injuries, I’ve been told, the healing process begins quickly.”

The ninth-ranked Jayhawks (24-7) open the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday against the Oklahoma-Oklahoma State winner, and Self said his sophomore big man won’t be examined by doctors until Sunday.

That means backup forward Mitch Lightfoot will start in the post, and freshman Silvio De Sousa — who became eligible a couple months ago — will be forced to play more meaningful minutes.

“Silvio is going to have to play at least Mitch’s minutes, and Mitch is going to have to play Doke’s minutes,” Self said. “I wish it had happened two days ago, we could have practiced playing five guards, but we’ll have to deal with what we have.”

Azubuike, who is averaging 13.7 points and 7.1 rebounds, missed most of last season with a wrist injury. And his latest injury, which Self called a “freak accident,” merely continues a rough streak of absences for crucial players by the time the Big 12 and NCAA tournament rolls around.

Last season, star freshman Josh Jackson was suspended for the Big 12 tourney opener for a series of off-the-court incidents, and the Jayhawks promptly lost to TCU in their quarterfinal matchup.

Big man Joel Embiid missed the Big 12 and NCAA tournaments three years ago because of a back injury. Fellow big man Cliff Alexander missed all of March the following season due to an investigation into impermissible benefits. And another big man, Cheick Diallo, needed stitches after taking an elbow to his mouth and wound up sitting out a game in the Big 12 Tournament in 2016.

Azubuike’s injury is nearly identical to a sprained MCL that Perry Ellis sustained a few years ago, causing the Jayhawks’ forward to miss just over a week prior to the Big 12 Tournament.

The Jayhawks are the No. 1 seed for the league tournament after winning the regular-season crown for a record 14th consecutive year. But they are hardly the clear-cut favorite in Kansas City, and the injury to Azubuike may not even make them the favorite in their opener.

They’ll either face national player-of-the-year candidate Trae Young and Oklahoma, which split with the Jayhawks in the regular season, or Oklahoma State, which swept them quite easily.

Asked whether the Jayhawks will be able to cope without their big man, Big 12 player of the year Devonte Graham replied: “We’re going to have to be. We don’t have a choice.”

“I just feel bad for him, last year having the injury,” Graham said. “Just terrible timing.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest baseball loses at William Jewell 6-5

The Northwest Missouri State University baseball team fell to William Jewell, 6-5, on Wednesday in Liberty, Mo.

The Bearcats are now 8-8 overall while the Cardinals improve to 4-6.

Mondesi Gutierrez finished the day 4-for-4, with a double, two runs scored and two RBIs.

Key Northwest Statistics
– Northwest scored twice in the third and three times in the fourth. The Cardinals scored once in second, three times in the third, once in the fourth and once in the bottom of the tenth.
– The Bearcats had five runs on 10 hits with two errors. William Jewell had six runs on 10 hits with one error.
– Hudson Bilodeau went 2-for-5 with two RBIs.
– Luke Hassman was 1-for-4 and drew a walk.
– Jay Hrdlicka and Matt Schingel were both 1-for-4 and each scored a run.
– Aaron Barratt went 1-for-3, with an RBI and a double.
– Kevin Handzlik drew a walk and scored a run.
– Joe Funkhouser started the game and went 3.2 innings. He allowed seven hits and three earned runs. He struck out two and walked three.
– Jimmy McElwain pitched 1.1 innings of scoreless relief. He did not allow a hit, did not walk anyone and struck out three batters.
– Hondo Pearcy allowed two hits in 2.2 innings of work. He allowed zero runs, struck out one and walked two.

Key Northwest Innings
– Schingel and Gutierrez singled back-to-back to start the inning. Barratt had a sacrifice bunt to the pitcher to advance Gutierrez to second. After an out, Bilodeau singled up the middle to score Schingel and Gutierrez.

– In the fourth, Hassman singled to left field to lead off. Handzlik walked and Hrdlicka to right field to load the bases. A double play wiped out a pair of Bearcat runners, but Gutierrez’s single up the middle drove in Hrdlicka and Handzlik. The next batter Barratt, doubled down the left field line to score Gutierrez to give Northwest the lead, 5-4.

Up Next
– Northwest will take on Northeastern State on Friday, March 9, at 2 p.m. in Maryville, Mo, for the team’s home opener.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri Western tennis finishes Florida trip with win over St. Cloud State

ORLANDO, Fla. – Griffon tennis (8-4) bounced back to finish their Florida road trip with an 8-1 win over St. Cloud State (2-9). Missouri Western won two of its three matches in Orlando.

The match started off with singles play and MWSU wasted little time in taking control of the match. The Griffons won five of the six singles matches before winning all three doubles matches.

Karolina Ström claimed her 10th consecutive win of the season with a straight set victory at No. 1 singles. Katherine Yeacker clinched the match with a hard fought three-set victory at No. 6 singles.

In doubles action, MWSU dominated all three matches as no match was closer than five points.

RESULTS
Singles
1. Strom,Karolina (MWSU) def. DosSantos, Fernanda (SCSU) 6-1, 6-2
2. Portz,Alexie (SCSU) def. Vuksan,Bojana (MWSU) 6-0,0-2 (retired due to injury)
3. Abreu Roman,Joanna (MWSU) def. Nierenhausen,Melissa (SCSU) 6-1, 6-0
4. Salmaso,Federica (MWSU) def. Fitzpatrick,Samantha (SCSU) 6-3, 6-2
5. Aguilera,Sofia (MWSU) def. White, Anna Marie (SCSU) 6-2, 6-0
6. Yeacker,Katherine (MWSU) def. Kopff,Sommer (SCSU) 6-7, 7-6, 11-9

Doubles
1. Abreu Roman,Joanna/Strom,Karolina (MWSU) def. Portz,Alexie/DosSantos, Fernanda (SCSU) 8-2
2. Dent,Emilee/Salmaso,Federica (MWSU) def. Fitzpatrick,Samantha/Hanegraaf,Emma (SCSU) 8-3
3. Aguilera,Sofia/Yeacker,Katherine (MWSU) def. Scheck,Abby/White, Anna Marie (SCSU) 8-1

UP NEXT
Missouri Western begins MIAA conference matches with a trip to Washburn on Saturday, March 10. First serve in Topeka, Kansas is scheduled for 1 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Nebraska, Missouri State to take part in 2018 Hall of Fame Classic in KC

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (March 6, 2018) – The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) announced that Nebraska will join Texas Tech, USC and Missouri State in the championship rounds of the 2018 Hall of Fame Classic Nov. 19-20 at the Sprint Center in Kansas City.

The Hall of Fame Classic will be the culminating event of college basketball’s Hall of Fame Weekend, which also includes the 13th annual induction ceremony for the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame. That event will take place on Sunday, Nov. 18, at the Arvest Bank Theatre at the Midland in Kansas City.

The semifinal rounds will be held on Monday, Nov. 19. The finals will take place the following day, Tuesday, Nov. 20, beginning with the consolation game, followed by the championship game. All four contests will be aired on an ESPN network.

Select tickets for the championship round games at Sprint Center will be available beginning Tuesday, March 6th at 10 am CT through www.axs.com, www.halloffameweekend.com, or by phone at 1-888-929-7849, and will remain on sale through the end of March. Additional tickets will be available beginning on Saturday, August 4th at 10:00am CT via the same ticket outlets, including at the Sprint Center Box Office.

The Huskers enter the postseason with a 22-10 record, including a 13-5 mark in the Big Ten to finish fourth in the conference in 2017-18. All-Big Ten performers James Palmer Jr. and Isaac Copeland Jr., lead three Huskers who average double figures on the season. Palmer is among the Big Ten leaders in scoring at 17.3 points per game, while Copeland averages 12.9 points and a team-high 6.2 rebounds per game.

“Our program is excited to play in the 2018 Hall of Fame Classic,” Nebraska Coach Tim Miles said. “When building our non-conference schedule, we look for opportunities to play high-quality games, as well as provide a great experience for our team. With USC, Texas Tech and Missouri State in the 2018 field, the Hall of Fame Classic will provide us an important early-season test. Many of our fans remember annually going to Kansas City for the conference tournament, and the Hall of Fame Classic gives our fans a chance to enjoy a great city and cheer on the Huskers in an outstanding tournament close to home.”

The complete bracket, including matchups and television times for the 2018 Hall of Fame Classic, will be announced at a later date.

— NU Athletics —

Buck Scheel resigns as women’s basketball coach at Northwest Missouri State

MARYVILLE, Mo.- Northwest Missouri State University Director of Athletics Mel Tjeerdsma has accepted the resignation of Women’s Basketball Head Coach Buck Scheel.

“I would like to thank Coach Scheel for his commitment to Bearcat athletics and for his effort to rebuild our women’s basketball program,” said Tjeerdsma. “I wish him the best in the next step of his career.”

Scheel arrived at Northwest as an assistant coach prior to the start of the 2013-14 season. He was named interim head coach during the 2015-16 season, coaching the team’s final 18 games. On March 22, 2016, he was named the eighth head coach in Northwest history.

Heather Howard, who has served as assistant coach of the women’s basketball program for the last two seasons, has been appointed as interim head coach. She will oversee all women’s basketball operations until a full-time replacement is named.

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU tennis falls to Saginaw Valley State in Orlando

ORLANDO, Fla. – Griffon tennis (7-4) had its three-match win streak snapped Monday morning in Orlando against Saginaw Valley State (11-6), 7-2.

Saginaw Valley State opened by winning all three doubles matches. The Griffons got on the board with wins at No. 2 singles by Karolina Ström and No. 4 singles by Frederica Salmaso. Ström’s ninth’ consecutive win came 6-4, 2-6, 12-10.

Joanna Abreu Roman lost 6-4, 2-6, 12-10 at No. 3 singles, suffering her first loss of the season. Bojana Vuksan battled at No. 1 singles, before falling 4-6, 6-4, 10-4.

RESULTS
Singles
1. Shea Donahue (SVSU) def. Bojana Vuksan (MWSU) 4-6, 6-4, 10-4
2. Karolina Strom (MWSU def. Maddie Miller (SVSU) 6-4, 2-6, 12-10
3. Joanne Gao (SVSU) def. Joanna Abreu Roman (MWSU) 6-4, 2-6, 12-10
4. Frederica Salmaso (MWSU) def. Taylor McLaughlin (SVSU) 6-2, 2-6, 10-7
5. Danielle Slonac (SVSU) def. Sofia Aguilera (MWSU) 6-1, 6-3
6. Nikkita Hill (SVSU) def. Emilee Dent (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0

Doubles
1. Donahue/Miller (SVSU) def. Augilera/Vuksan (MWSU) 8-0
2. Gao/McLaughlin (SVSU) def. Abreu Roman/Strom (MWSU) 8-5
3. Hill/Slonac (SVSU) def. Dent/Salmaso (MWSU) 8-3

UP NEXT
The Griffons play their third and final match in Orlando, Tuesday, March 6 against St. Cloud State at 8 a.m. local time.

Jayhawks’ Graham named Cousy Award finalist

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – Kansas senior Devonte’ Graham has been named one of five finalists for the 2018 Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced Monday. Graham is vying to become the second Jayhawk to win the honor as Frank Mason III was the 2017 recipient.

A national committee of top college basketball personnel including media members, head coaches, sports information directors and Hall of Famers narrowed the original watch list of 20 players down to 10 candidates and now to just five finalists. This month, the five finalists will be presented to Mr. Cousy and the Hall of Fame’s selection committee.

The five finalists for the 2018 Bob Cousy Award are Graham, Joel Barry II (North Carolina), Trae Young (Oklahoma), Jalen Brunson (Villanova), and Jevon Carter (West Virginia).

On every national player of year watch list, Graham is the only player in NCAA Division I this season averaging 17.0-plus pts, 7.0-plus assists, 1.6-plus steals and fewer than 3.0 turnovers per game. Graham is sixth nationally, second in the Big 12, in assists per game at 7.2. The Raleigh, North Carolina, guard is scoring 17.6 points per game, which is second in the conference. Graham is third in the league in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.7), sixth in free throw percentage (82.6), fourth in 3-point field goals made (3.0), sixth in 3-point field goal percentage (42.3) and fifth in steals (1.6).

Graham was the unanimous selection for Big 12 Player of the Year and an All-Big 12 First Team selection after guiding Kansas (24-7, 13-5) to its NCAA-record 14th consecutive, 18th Big 12 and NCAA-leading 61st regular-season conference title.

This season, Graham is logging 37.4 minutes per game this year, which ranks as the fifth highest average in a single season at KU. His 93 3-pointers made are sixth on the KU season list and his 224 assists are eighth.

Historically, in Kansas’ last game Graham became the 15th player in KU history to score 1,600 points. He currently sits 15th with 1,620 points. Graham is the third player in school history to tally 1,600 points, 550 assists and 180 steals in a career. KU All-Americans Darnell Valentine and Kirk Hinrich are the only other Jayhawks to hit those numbers. Graham is second on the KU career 3-point field goals made list, currently at 279, ninth in assists at 574 and ninth in steals at 186.

The winner of the 2018 Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award will be determined by a combination of fan votes and input from the Basketball Hall of Fame’s selection committee. Fans are encouraged to visit www.HoophallAwards.com to cast their votes March 2-23.

The winner of the 2018 Bob Cousy Award will be honored at ESPN’s College Basketball Awards presented by Wendy’s in downtown Los Angeles on Friday, April 6, 2018. Additional awards being presented include the Jerry West Shooting Guard Award, the Julius Erving Small Forward Award, the Karl Malone Power Forward Award and the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center Award.

Previous winners of the Bob Cousy Award include Mason (2018), Tyler Ulis, Kentucky (2016), Delon Wright, Utah (2015), Shabazz Napier, Connecticut (2014), Trey Burke, Michigan (2013), Kendall Marshall, North Carolina (2012), Kemba Walker, Connecticut (2011), Greivis Vasquez, Maryland (2010), Ty Lawson, North Carolina (2009), DJ Augustin, Texas (2008), Acie Law, Texas A & M (2007), Dee Brown, Illinois (2006), Raymond Felton, North Carolina (2005) and Jameer Nelson, St. Joseph’s (2004).

2018 Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award Finalists
Joel Berry II, North Carolina
Jalen Brunson, Villanova
Jevon Carter, West Virginia
DEVONTE’ GRAHAM, KANSAS
Trae Young, Oklahoma

— KU Athletics —

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