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No. 7 Kansas upset by Oklahoma State; lose 3 at home for 1st time since 1998-99

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kendall Smith knocked down a 3-pointer from the wing in the first half, silencing a buzzing sellout crowd of Kansas fans. The Oklahoma State guard instinctively put his finger to his lips in the universal sign for “shush.”

Smith silenced them again when it mattered most.

The senior backup scored 24 points, including the clinching free throws in the final seconds, and the Cowboys held on to beat the Jayhawks 84-79 on Saturday for a rare win in Allen Fieldhouse.

“Just one of those, you know, you play college basketball and when you’re done you say, `I was in Allen Fieldhouse one time and I hit a shot and silenced the crowd,” Smith said afterward.

Cameron McGriff added 20 points and Jeffrey Carroll had 15 for the Cowboys (14-9, 4-6 Big 12), who built an 18-point first-half lead and dominated the boards in ending their three-game losing streak.

It was the third loss for the Jayhawks (18-5, 7-3) in the Phog this season, their most since the 1998-99 season. It was also their second home loss in league play.

“This is as tough an environment you can play in college basketball,” Smith said. “I think we had a full team effort, topo to bottom. Everybody came in and gave us something.”

Devonte Graham gave the Jayhawks a chance when his two foul shots drew them within 82-79 with 14.2 seconds to go. But after they squandered several seconds trying to foul Smith, the guard capped his big performance by knocking down two free throws to put the game away.

“We’ve been in a lot of these games, really competitive,” said Cowboys coach Mike Boynton, whose team won without injured guard Tavarius Shine. “Really proud of my kids for showing the kind of fight and competitive spirit. Got a locker room full of guys that always respond.”

Udoka Azubuike had 20 points and Graham and Svi Mykhailiuk scored 17 apiece for Kansas, which was celebrating 120 years of basketball by welcoming back dozens of former players and coaches.

They didn’t have much to cheer about on a sunny Saturday morning.

A nip-and-tuck start gave way to complete first-half dominance by the Cowboys, who at one point had more second-chance points (18) than the Jayhawks had total (16).

One of the nation’s most prolific 3-point shooting teams, the Jayhawks were relegated to dumping the ball to Azubuike in the post. And the big fella was unable to keep up with Oklahoma State’s own 3-point barrage, which at one point stretched the lead to 18 points late in the half.

Kansas coach Bill Self, who typically stalks the sideline, instead sat glumly as his team followed a 3-for-15 start from the field with three consecutive turnovers.

The Jayhawks’ 46-33 halftime deficit matched their biggest of the season.

“Right from the jump,” Self said, “they were so much quicker and more competitive.”

Kansas dug into its disadvantage early in the second half, quickly trimming the lead to seven points on Newman’s flurry of baskets. But for the next 10 minutes, the Cowboys matched the Jayhawks shot-for-shot, answering each attempt at starting a run with a crucial rebound or big basket.

The Cowboys still clung to a 78-71 lead after Newman missed a foul shot with about two minutes left, and Smith scored twice as the Jayhawks were trying to foul him to keep a comfortable lead.

Kansas finally got the game to one possession, only for Smith to hit the clinching foul shots.

“It’s very frustrating,” said Graham, who has been hobbled the last week by a knee injury. “We’re way better on the road than we have been at home. We have to find a way to come out and crush teams the way they came out and stepped on our throats today.”

120 YEARS OF HOOPS

The Jayhawks recognized the birth of its basketball program during a halftime ceremony, highlighted by the 30th anniversary of their 1988 title team. There was also a reunion banquet Saturday night with more than 400 players, staff and coaches from every era expected to attend.

BIG PICTURE

Oklahoma State had a 41-28 advantage on the glass, which produced a 26-7 advantage in second-chance points. That kind of hustle infuriated Self and proved too much for Kansas to overcome.

Kansas’ shooting went wayward as the Cowboys mixed zone and man-to-man defenses. The Jayhawks were 8 of 22 from beyond the 3-point arc, and several of those makes were in desperation time.

UP NEXT

Oklahoma State returns home against Baylor on Tuesday night.

Kansas continues its homestand Tuesday night against TCU.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State gets hammered at No. 15 West Virginia

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — Even with several players recuperating from the flu bug, West Virginia’s defense can still frustrate the tar out of opponents.

One game after allowing the most points in a Big 12 game since joining the league in 2012, No. 15 West Virginia overwhelmed Kansas State with its pressure, and the Mountaineers ended a three-game losing streak with an 89-51 victory Saturday.

“We’re still `Press Virginia,” Mountaineers guard James “Beetle” Bolden said. “We’ve just got to come and play with the same energy every single night.”

West Virginia (17-6, 6-5 Big 12) got a rare win after holding a double-digit lead over the past month. The Mountaineers have had such leads in five of its last seven games but have won just twice.

The illnesses took a toll on the Mountaineers in the past week and coach Bob Huggins was concerned about having enough available bodies to execute any type of defense Saturday, especially after a 93-77 loss Wednesday at Iowa State.

Five players have been sick, and guards Daxter Miles Jr. and Bolden required hospital trips. Bolden recovered enough to make his first career start in Miles’ place, while Miles saw his first action of any kind in a week.

The Wildcats (16-7, 5-5) never led, were held to their lowest scoring output of the season and had more turnovers (15) than field goals (14).

“Our pressure really was pretty good,” Huggins said. “We kind of backed it off at the end — I was just trying to save people’s legs.”

Knowing West Virginia’s recent tendencies to relinquish big leads, especially in the second half, Kansas State coach Bruce Weber thought his team had a chance down 39-30 at halftime.

“But they just kept pushing it and we got a little frustrated, couldn’t make some shots and it was like a snowball going down the hill and we couldn’t stop it,” Weber said.

Forward Sagaba Konate, who led West Virginia with 19 points and nine rebounds, took advantage of the Big 12’s worst rebounding team. Over a 1:15 stretch late in the game, the 6-foot-8 sophomore scored off a rebound, made two free throws and threw down a dunk as part of a 13-0 run.

Bolden added 13 points, Teddy Allen had 12 points off the bench and Wes Harris had 10 for West Virginia.

Dean Wade scored 17 points and Xavier Sneed had 16 for Kansas State.

BIG PICTURE

West Virginia: The Mountaineers shot 61 percent (14 of 23) from the floor after halftime in beating Kansas State for the eighth time in their last nine meetings. They didn’t look like the stumbling squad that struggled to a 3-5 record in January after rising to the No. 2 ranking in the AP Top 25 on Jan. 8.

Kansas State: The Wildcats made one basket over a 13-minute stretch spanning both halves, allowing West Virginia to take command. Kansas State has lost two straight after winning four in a row.

STRUGGLING BROWN

Kansas State leading scorer Barry Brown was held to just one point after scoring nine against No. 7 Kansas on Monday. Over his last two games Brown is 4 of 19 from the floor.

“He lost a little bit of confidence,” Weber said. “No one works harder than he does. I think he’ll come back. I don’t have any doubt about that.”

POLL IMPLICATIONS

West Virginia will likely fall several spots after the double-digit loss at Iowa State.

STOKES RETURNS

Kansas State point guard Kamau Stokes had two points in 10 minutes in his return from a six-game absence with a broken foot.

UP NEXT

Kansas State: Plays at Texas on Wednesday

West Virginia: Looks for its first regular-season sweep of Oklahoma after beating the Sooners 89-76 on Jan. 6 in Morgantown. The game at No. 12 Oklahoma is Monday night.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State women fall at home to Lindenwood

– The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to Lindenwood University, 84-56, on Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Mo.

– Northwest falls to 3-18 overall and 2-11 in MIAA play. The Lions improve to 12-11 overall and 4-10 in conference action.

– Tanya Meyer had 16 points and nine rebounds to lead the Bearcats.

Key Northwest Statistics
– Northwest forced 13 Lindenwood turnovers and scored 16 points off those mistakes.

– The Bearcats outscored the Lions, 27-23, in the third quarter.

– Northwest grabbed 11 offensive rebounds and finished with 16 second chance points.

– The Bearcats were 6-for-7 at the charity stripe.

– Mallory McAndrews hit five three pointers and finished with 15 points and two steals.

– Jaelyn Haggard and Macy Williams each had a game-high four assists.

– Kaylani Maiava had eight points with five rebounds, a block and a steal.

– Mallory McConkey had five rebounds, four points and an assist.

Up Next
– Northwest will head to Emporia State on Wednesday, Feb. 7, for a 5:30 p.m. tipoff against the Hornets.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri State struggles at Loyola-Chicago

CHICAGO (AP) — Clayton Custer matched his season high with 23 points to lead six players in double figures and Loyola-Chicago took control early and coasted to a 97-75 victory over Missouri State on Saturday.

Custer made 9 of 11 shots, including all seven of his attempts inside the 3-point arc, and handed out six assists for the Ramblers (19-5, 9-3 Missouri Valley Conference). Marques Townes totaled 14 points, six rebounds and four assists, while Cameron Krutwig added 13 points and seven boards. Aundre Jackson scored 12 off the bench on 5-of-6 shooting and Donte Ingram and Ben Richardson both scored 11 for Loyola-Chicago, which shot 61 percent from the floor and buried half its 20 3-pointers. The Ramblers are off to their best start in MVC play since the 1986-87 season.

Freshman Mustafa Lawrence made 5 of 9 from 3-point range and scored a career-high 19 points for the Bears (15-10, 5-7). J.T. Miller tossed in 15 points, while Alize Johnson chipped in with 14 points, nine rebounds and five assists. Missouri State dropped its fifth straight game.

— Associated Press —

Griffons use big second half to defeat Lindenwood, snap nine-game skid

ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team beat Lindenwood 63-51 at the MWSU Fieldhouse Thursday to snap their nine-game losing streak.

The Griffons improve to 4-15 this season and 2-10 in the MIAA. The Lions fall to 14-8 and 6-7 in league play.

MWSU shook off a cold-first half by scoring 43 points in the second half. Trey Brown knocked down a jumper at the 16:17 minute mark in the second half to spark a 16-2 run. Brown’s jumper also gave Missouri Western the only lead it would need to pull away.

Lavon Hightower scored 13 of his game-high 15 points in the second half. The Griffons shot 75 percent from the field and 50 percent from the three-point line in the second half.

MWSU shot a season-high 53.3 percent from the field in the win. It is the second straight game that the Griffons were over 50 percent from the field. Defensively, Missouri Western held Lindenwood to 30 percent from the three-point arc and 40 percent from the field.

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western had a 25-6 run in almost 12 minutes, the run started with 1:20 left in the first half

– MWSU outscored Lindenwood 43-29 in the second half after being outscored 22-20 in the first half

– The Griffons outrebounded the Lions 32-23 in the victory

– Lavon Hightower shot 50 percent from the field, three-point line and free-throw line and had a game-high nine rebounds

– Three Griffons scored in double-figures

UP NEXT
Missouri Western stays at home on Saturday, Feb. 3 against Lincoln University. Tip-off is set for 4 p.m. in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 6 Bearcats roll to 76-43 win against Lincoln

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Oh, there was a chance that Northwest Missouri State’s men’s basketball team could have blown an 18-point halftime lead Thursday evening against Lincoln University, a blue moon chance.

After all, the rare blue moon that occurred a couple of days ago, is actually going to happen again in March. If blue moons happened that often, the saying once in a blue moon would have never become a common saying.

Northwest made sure there wasn’t going to be a blue moon occurrence at Bearcat Arena. Northwest was playing too well to have major collapse in the second half. The Bearcats beat Lincoln 76-43 and improved to 18-2 overall and 10-2 in the MIAA.

“It was important to play well in the second half,” said Northwest senior Chris-Ebou Ndow, who finished with 18 points and eight rebounds. “We have a tendency when we have a big lead to relax. We can’t afford that no matter who we are playing. The tournament is right around the corner. We can’t afford to have any slippage at any point in the game.”

By the way, Ndow said he has heard the blue moon saying, but didn’t know what it meant.

“I’m from Norway,” he said.

Freshman Ryan Hawkins knew what once in a blue moon means, but Northwest coach Ben McCollum said he didn’t.

“I know what a red moon means,” McCollum said.

Well, in the first half, the Bearcats were red hot at times.

In building a 45-27 halftime lead, the Bearcats started on fire from three-point range. And in the final 7 minutes of the first half, Northwest played its trademark team basketball and that significantly diminished Lincoln’s slim hopes of pulling off an upset.

Senior Justin Pitts, who finished with 20 points, started off blazing hot. He knocked down two long three-pointers that quickly wiped out Northwest’s only deficit of 5-0. After Pitts’ bombs, Ndow drained a three-pointer, making it 9-5.

The Bearcats’ first five field goals were three-pointers. Northwest then showed Lincoln it can score in the paint. The inside basket came on a thunderous dunk by Ndow that gave the Bearcats a 17-7 lead.

A blowout looked imminent. The Blue Tigers had other ideas. They do have blue in their nickname. Lincoln closed to 23-18, and that was when freshman Ryan Hawkins stabbed the Blue Tigers with a three-point dagger. It signaled that Hawkins was on his game.

From that point on, Northwest played some beautiful team basketball. One play came with the Bearcats up 26-21. Hawkins, cutting to the basket, received a pass from senior Brett Dougherty. Hawkins made a reverse layup.

On the next possession, Hawkins was behind the three-point arc when he received a pass from Pitts. Hawkins drilled a three-pointer, increasing Northwest’s lead to 31-21.

“It is nice being on a team where everybody is unselfish,” said Hawkins, who finished with 13 points and eight rebounds. “We have so many guys who can score the ball so there is no way they can key on five different people. They have to pick and chose and we exploit the mismatches.”

Northwest started to pull away in the final 4 minutes. A NBA-range, rainbow three-pointer by Pitts gave Northwest a 36-25 lead. Hawkins followed with a three-pointer off an assist from Pitts. Next was Ndow who benefitted from a Pitts pass. His two-point field goal increased Northwest’s lead to 41-25. Pitts concluded the 10-0 run with two free throws, making it 43-25.

“We just paid attention to the details,” Ndow said. “We came ready to play, but we didn’t pay attention to the details and the small things in the scouting report. After a timeout, coach told us we weren’t necessarily playing bad; we just had to do the little things to get ourselves on a run. We were able to do that with five minutes left.”

Simply put, the Bearcats gave a clinic on team basketball. Twelve of their 15 field goals came on assists. It was a big reason Northwest shot 50 percent from the field in the first half.

“I think our team shares the ball as good as anybody in the country,” McCollum said. “The thing we get a lot that goes unnoticed is what I call the hockey assist, the pass before the pass that leads to a basket. Our guys share the ball so much. A hockey assist to me is just as important as the statistic assist. I think sometimes assists can be selfish as well because you are trying to gather assists. Our guys it is just an extra pass. They do it naturally. They don’t pay attention to assists at all.”

Pitts and Hawkins led the way in the first half. Pitts went six for nine from the field for 18 points and Hawkins was four for five and had 11 points.

Northwest never allowed Lincoln back in the game in the second half. There was no drama, only a demonstration of how to play with a big lead.

The Bearcats will look to increase their winning streak to four Saturday when they take on Lindenwood at 3:30 p.m. at Bearcat Arena.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri Western’s rally comes up short against Lindenwood women

ST. JOSEPH – The Griffon women’s basketball team couldn’t close the final gap Thursday night in a 63-55 loss to Lindenwood.

Missouri Western (10-11, 3-9 MIAA) cut the Lindenwood (11-11, 3-10 MIAA) lead to two with 2:48 to play, but couldn’t find a way to capture its first lead of the game.

The Griffons were within a single possession for much of the second half after a 25-11 run through the end of the second quarter and much of the third quarter got the Griffons within one.

Lindenwood made a 7-0 run — all on free throws — to pull away after MWSU had cut the lead to two. Lindenwood reached its largest lead of the game, 31-16 with 2:37 left in the first half before a 9-0 run by the Griffons sparked the 25-11 spurt.

NOTABLES
– Cera Ledbetter recorded her second double-double of the season with 14 points and a team-high 10 rebounds

– Melia Richardson led Missouri Western with 18 points

– The Griffons shot 38 percent (18-47) with Lindenwood shooting 41 percent (18-44)

– Missouri Western shot 69.6 percent at the free throw line and were outscored by seven at the line

– Nine Griffons played in the game, the most since Jan. 15

– Lindenwood became the first team to eclipse 60 points against the Griffons since Southwest Baptist on Jan. 15

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Lincoln (3-18, 0-13) on Saturday, Feb. 3 at 2 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 15 Missouri women edged at home by No. 2 Mississippi State 57-53

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Victoria Vivians made a go-ahead jumper with four seconds left and No. 2 Mississippi State continued its perfect season with a 57-53 road victory against No. 15 Missouri on Thursday night.

The Bulldogs and Tigers played a tight fourth quarter. Missouri’s Sophie Cunningham tied the game at 53 with nine seconds left with a 3-pointer.

Vivians then hit her shot to make it 55-53. After an offensive foul on Jordan Frericks, Teaira McCowan hit two free throws to seal the game for Mississippi State (23-0, 9-0 Southeastern Conference).

Blair Schaefer led the Bulldogs with a season-high 20 points, but Mississippi State struggled shooting the ball all night. However, the Bulldogs’ defense held Missouri (17-6, 5-4) to just 32 percent from the field in the second half.

McCowan finished with 17 points and 17 rebounds. Vivians added 15 points. Schaefer, McCowan and Vivians accounted for 52 of the Bulldogs’ 57 points, and Mississippi State shot just 31 percent from the field.

Missouri shot 48 percent in the first half, and posted a 25-16 rebounding edge at the break as well.

The game marked Mississippi State’s closest win in conference play. The Bulldogs had previously defeated each conference opponent by double digits.

BIG PICTURE:

Mississippi State: The Bulldogs barely escaped a tough Missouri team, but they remain perfect at 23-0. Mississippi State’s victory marked its second top-15 road win in the last four games. The Bulldogs defeated No. 6 Tennessee on Jan. 21.

Missouri: The Tigers came close to an impressive upset, but they’ve now lost three in a row after being on the cusp of reaching the top 10. The stretch, coming against three top-25 teams, has placed Missouri in the middle of the pack in the conference standings.

UP NEXT:

Mississippi State returns home Monday to face No. 7 South Carolina, which was blown out Thursday night by No. 1 Connecticut.

Missouri hosts Florida Monday.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State women hold off Lincoln for second straight win

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Fresh off its first conference victory of the season, Northwest Missouri State’s women’s basketball team was determined to start a winning streak. Clinging to a one-point lead in the final two minutes, the Bearcats showed grit down the stretch.

And when junior Mallory McAndrews knocked down two free throws with 10 seconds remaining to give Northwest a three-point lead, the confident Bearcats knew they had the necessary cushion for a 61-60 victory over Lincoln University Thursday evening at Bearcat Arena.

“I am honestly proud of this team,” said freshman point guard Jaelyn Haggard, who finished with 11 points. “We are definitely improving. I see a lot of success coming in our future.”

The Bearcats want to keep rolling when they return to action 1:30 p.m. Saturday at home against Lindenwood. Northwest, Missouri Western, Lindenwood and Lincoln are all battling for the final two spots in the MIAA Tournament.

“We were able to build on the last win we had against Mo. West, and hopefully that will keep the energy going on Saturday,” said senior Tanya Meyer, who finished with 27 points and 13 rebounds.

“We want to compete with Lindenwood on Saturday. We are all fighting for the last two spots. Getting this win going into Saturday was big momentum boost for us.”

Northwest appeared to be in control midway through the fourth quarter Meyer hit a three-pointer followed by a two-point bucket by her that pushed the lead to 56-47 for the Bearcats.

In a move of desperation, Lincoln went to a full-court press and it worked. The Blue Tigers created numerous turnovers and turned them into points. Lincoln scored the next 11 and took a 58-56 lead with 3:35 left in the game.

Twenty seconds later, Northwest tied the game on two free throws by Meyer. Neither team could muster any offense in the final 3 minutes.

But Northwest regained the lead with 1:52 left on a three throw by junior Kaylani Maiava.

In the final 90 seconds, Northwest needed to play strong defense as the Blue Tigers had numerous opportunities to go ahead. One of those opportunities came with 28 seconds left. Northwest was clinging to a 59-58 lead. The Bearcats caused Lincoln to take a tough, contested shot in the paint.

The Blue Tigers missed. Maiava grabbed the rebound with 22 seconds left.

“We responded really well with good stops defensively,” Northwest coach Buck Scheel said. “The ball pressure is going to come against us. We just have to get better handling it and continue to go.”

An over-and-back call against Northwest with 20 seconds left forced the Bearcats to play defense one more time with a slim one-point lead.

And the Bearcats succeeded again, getting a steal with 14 seconds left. Four seconds later, McAndrews dropped in the game-winning free throws.

“I thought it was really important that we got stops on defense,” Haggard said. “It was really crucial, especially at the end of the game. The score was so close. Just to be able to come down on defense and hold them to shooting deep threes was really important for us.”

A hot start by Meyer, coupled with some clutching shooting in the second quarter, sent Northwest into halftime with a 37-28 lead.

Meyer scored the first seven points of the game, staking the Bearcats to a nice early lead. When Lincoln closed to 9-6, Northwest quickly regained command on consecutive three-pointers from McAndrews and Meyer.

The Blue Tigers chipped away again and trailed 20-16 after the first quarter. Lincoln tied the game at 22-22 early in the second quarter.

Northwest didn’t allow Lincoln to take a lead. The Bearcats built their lead to five on a basket by Haggard. A few minutes later, Haggard drilled a three-pointer, increasing Northwest’s lead to 33-24. The Bearcats maintained their nine-point advantage the rest of the second quarter.

Meyer led the way for Northwest in the first half, scoring 17 points and pulling down eight rebounds. Haggard added eight points as the Bearcats shot 47 percent from the field.

— Northwest Athletics —

Mizzou snaps three-game skid with road win at Alabama

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Kassius Robertson scored 22 points to help Missouri snap a three-game losing streak with a 69-60 victory over Alabama on Wednesday night.

Jontay Porter overcame foul trouble to score 13 points for the Tigers (14-8, 4-5 Southeastern Conference). Fresh from a win over No. 12 Oklahoma, the Crimson Tide (14-8, 5-4) fell behind by double digits in the first half and had an abysmal shooting performance after the break.

Missouri’s Jeremiah Tilmon scored 12 points and made all six shots before fouling out with more than five minutes left. Robertson had four assists and made 4 of 8 3-pointers.

Collin Sexton scored 23 points for Alabama despite a 7-of-16 shooting performance. Dazon Ingram was the only other Tide player in double digits with 10 points.

Alabama hit just 6 of 27 field goals in the second half (22.2 percent) after dropping more than 50 percent in the first.

Porter’s 3-pointer with 4:59 left pushed Missouri’s lead to 65-56. Alabama made enough defensive stops to produce a comeback, but couldn’t cash in with baskets on the other end. The Tide missed seven straight attempts down the stretch.

Alabama had whittled a 12-point Missouri lead down to 35-33 over the final five minutes of the opening half. Sexton’s 3-pointer at the buzzer sent the Tide heading to the locker room in a better mood. The Tigers went seven minutes without a field goal extending into the second half.

BIG PICTURE

Missouri: Got a big win after three straight double digit losses. Had four players with two fouls apiece before halftime, and Porter picked up his fourth with 17:12 left.

Alabama: Blew a chance to move into a four-way tie for second in the SEC. Had won five of six games to start looking like a strong NCAA Tournament candidate, but had a rare poor performance at Coleman Coliseum. The Tide had been 4-0 at home in SEC games.

UP NEXT

Missouri hosts No. 21 Kentucky Saturday.

Alabama visits No. 23 Florida Saturday afternoon and plays four of its next six games on the road.

— Associated Press —

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