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Six Griffons break records during first day of Graduate Classic at Nebraska

LINCOLN, Neb. – Missouri Western track and field athletes broke six program records and set a new one on the first day of competition at the Graduate Classic hosted by the University of Nebraska.

Megan Gillen broke the school record in the 800m, finishing 5th with a 2:24.70. Claire Reedy finished sixth (2:25.36) and Alison Nutt (2:29.11) was eighth in the 800m. After Nate Jelinek (2:04.43) broke the men’s 800m record in the first heat, Chris Stanley (2:01.34) broke it again in the second, finishing eighth. Phil Thompson broke his long jump record (6.45m/21-02.00), finishing 16th. Mariah Smith set the mark in the women’s 1,000m with a 16th place finish (3:37.31). Jordan Garr improved on his school record weight throw to finish 17th (13.63m/44-08.75). Christian Arbuthnot improved on the MWSU men’s 3,000m record, finishing 13th with an 8:58.51. Peyton Moore (9.93) advanced to the next round in the women’s 60m hurdles.

Competition continues Saturday with more events and finals for some events that completed heats and qualifying on Friday.

For complete results from Friday’s action and startlists for Saturday’s competition, click here.

— MWSU Athletics —

Huskers lose at Penn State in OT 76-74

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Tony Carr has had some nice second-half efforts lately. Penn State’s top shooter saved most of his best stuff for overtime on Friday.

Carr scored nine of his 17 points, including a game-winning long jumper with three seconds left in overtime, and Penn State beat Nebraska 76-74 and secure Pat Chambers’ 100th win as Penn State’s coach on Friday night.

Lamar Stevens scored 26 points and Mike Watkins added 20 and grabbed 15 rebounds for the Nittany Lions (13-6, 3-3 Big Ten), who led by as many as 16 in the second half.

But it was Carr, who notched 18 of 28 in the second half at Indiana on Tuesday, who wrestled control back with tough makes through crowds of defenders in the final five minutes.

“Tony had the guts to come out and hit some big shots for us when he didn’t have the best shooting night,” Chambers said.

When Carr was working to find his shot, Stevens was taking over in a fashion that’s become typical for him of late. The hybrid forward entered the game averaging 22 points over the last three.

He quickly kept at it with 10 of Penn State’s first 19 points and Penn State closed out the first half on a 21-9 run and led 33-24. Nebraska made just five of its final 14 field goals in that span and finished the first half 9-for-32 from the floor.

“You can’t just get blasted in the first half like that,” Nebraska coach Tim Miles said. “We have to be more prepared to battle with a guy who’s a warrior like that because he just attacks the rim.”

Glynn Watson Jr. and Isaac Copeland scored 21 points apiece while Isaiah Roby and Anton Gill scored 12 and 10, respectively, for the Cornhuskers (12-7, 3-3).

Shep Garner made a 3-pointer to give Penn State its largest lead at 42-26 just over two minutes into the second half.

But the Huskers fought back from there and switched to a press look to slow Penn State’s offense.

They put together a 39-23 run that included back-to-back 3-pointers from Copeland and Watson that made it a two-point game with 3:28 to play. They combined for four free throws and Watson hit the final shot of regulation moments later to send it to overtime 65-65.

THE BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: The Cornhuskers were on a good stretch with five wins in six tries before Friday’s game. Runs like that could come more often if they shoot better. Nebraska entered the Bryce Jordan Center shooting just 43 percent from the floor and 36 percent from 3-point range for the season.

Penn State: All three of Penn State’s conference losses have come by six or fewer points and although they played a poor-shooting team in this one, the Nittany Lions have enough talent committed to playing defense to keep even good offenses at bay. Whether they can outscore those teams, or hold on to big leads, remains to be seen.

NO REAVES

Penn State was again without its top defender as Josh Reaves sat out a second straight game for academic reasons. Reaves leads the team and is 15th nationally with 2.47 steals per game. He’s chipped in 10.8 points per game, too.

AWAITING WORD ON TSHIMANGA

Nebraska was without starting center Jordy Tshimanga, who did not make the trip to Penn State as he mulls whether to transfer. Multiple outlets reported Tshimanga’s frustration with the way his season has unfolded.

The 6-foot-11 sophomore started all 18 games previously and was averaging 3.5 points and 5.1 rebounds over 15.2 minutes per game.

Miles said he couldn’t offer an update yet on Tshimanga’s status.

“I won’t know until I get home,” he said.

UP NEXT

Nebraska hosts Illinois (10-8, 0-5) on Monday.

Penn State hosts Minnesota (13-5, 2-3) on Monday.

— Associated Press —

Kansas football coach David Beatty announces coaching staff changes

LAWRENCE, Kan. – Kansas football head coach David Beaty announced Friday the promotion of Justin Johnson to an on-field assistant coaching position, where he will work on the offensive side of the ball. Johnson, who joined the KU staff in the spring of 2016, spent the past two seasons as an offensive analyst for the Jayhawks and will fill the newly created 10th assistant coaching position.

“Justin is known around our building as ‘Juice’-because energy is something he definitely brings to the table,” said Beaty. “He is well-versed in not only how we want to run our program, but also the nuances to how we want to run our offense. He has worked hard during his time at KU to establish himself as a mentor with our players and that will help him greatly as he moves into his new role.

“Juice has a knack for building relationships,” added Beaty. “Because of his skill in that area, he will also play a vital role for us in recruiting in his elevated position.”

Additionally, Beaty announced that special teams coordinator Joe DeForest and offensive line coach Zach Yenser will no longer be members of the Jayhawk staff moving forward.

“We have mutually agreed to part ways as Joe and Zach will step away from our program and pursue other opportunities,” said Beaty. “I appreciate the hard work they both put in during their time with us and wish the best for them and their families moving forward.”

Johnson previously worked under Beaty at Texas A&M, serving as an offensive graduate assistant for the Aggies in 2013, while Beaty was the wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator.

A Houston alum, Johnson worked at his alma mater in 2012 in an offensive quality control position. In that role, he assisted all offensive coaches with administrative duties.

Johnson was a four-year letterwinner at UH from 2008 to 2011. As a senior, he helped lead the Cougars to a record-setting 13-1 overall mark and a dominating win against No. 23 Penn State during the TicketCity Bowl.

The Richardson, Texas, native finished second on the team with 1,229 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns on 87 receptions on the way to earning All-Conference USA First-Team accolades.

Johnson was a versatile student-athlete during his collegiate playing days with the Cougars, competing on special teams and as a running back at various times. During his career, he competed in three bowl games and two Conference USA Championship games. Off the field, Johnson was a member of Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) and was selected to participate in and graduated from UH’s Athletics Leadership Academy. He was awarded the UH Committed Cougar Award twice.

— KU Athletics —

No. 12 Missouri women roll to road win at Vanderbilt

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Jordan Chavis scored a career-high 18 points on 6-of-8 shooting from 3-point range and No. 12 Missouri defeated Vanderbilt 81-70 on Thursday night.

Amber Smith also scored 18 points for the Tigers (15-2, 3-1 Southeastern Conference), who had no letdown after defeating No. 4 South Carolina on Sunday.

Smith had back-to-back 3-pointers to start a 16-2 run and her 10th point of the run made it 18-7 with 2:49 to play in the first quarter. Chavis had three 3-pointers in a 14-1 run in the second quarter before the Commodores closed with a 15-3 surge to trail 48-37 at the half.

Jordan Frericks had eight points in a 16-0 run midway through the third quarter that helped Missouri get to a 25-point lead entering the fourth quarter. The lead was 28 when Chavis’ last 3 opened the scoring but Vandy followed with an 11-0 run and closed the game with a 10-0 run.

Cierra Walker scored 17 points for the Commodores (4-14, 0-4), who have lost eight of nine. Erin Whalen added 15 points.

Missouri did its damage with just five points from Sophie Cunningham, who averages 18.8 and shoots better than 50 percent from 3-point range, second in the nation. She was 1 of 6 from behind the arc.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou uses big second half to rally past Georgia 68-56

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Jontay Porter had 15 points and 10 rebounds in his first career start, and Missouri overcame a sluggish start to defeat Georgia 68-56 on Wednesday night.

Georgia cut a second half, 10-point deficit to two on Rayshaun Hammonds’ 3-pointer, but the Tigers went on a 7-0 run thanks to 3-pointers from Kassius Robertson and Kevin Puryear with six minutes left, and Missouri (12-4, 2-1 Southeastern Conference) widened its lead to 15 before sealing the victory.

Robertson added 15 points for the Tigers. Jeremiah Tilmon and Jordan Geist chipped in 10 points apiece and Puryear finished with nine.

William Jackson III and Tyree Crump each had 10 points to lead Georgia (11-4, 2-2).

Missouri shot 2 of 8 and Georgia 3 for 7 in the first five minutes. The Bulldogs hung on to a 7-4 early lead off a 3-pointer from Jackson.

Stagnant play continued for both teams, though Georgia held the lead through halftime. It took the Tigers 11 minutes to make a jump shot, as Robertson drilled a corner 3 that tied the game at 11.

The Bulldogs were only shooting 30 percent midway through the first half. With less than three minutes left before intermission, the teams were a combined for 12-of-49 shooting from the field.

An entirely different Missouri team showed up in the second half.

First, the Tigers started scoring. Two dunks from Tilmon tied the game, and an up-and-under layup from Porter gave Missouri the lead.

Then, the Tigers shut down Georgia with a 13-2 run to open the second half, and Porter held Georgia’s 6-foot-8 forward, Yante Maten, to 1 of 5 field goals midway through the second half. Maten finished with nine points.

BIG PICTURE

Georgia: Georgia showed its shooting could hang on in the SEC in the first half, but as soon as Missouri increased the tempo, the Bulldogs ran dry and ceased to compete.

Missouri: The Tigers showed an epic second-half turnaround, scoring 48 points against the Bulldogs, who lead the SEC in scoring defense and field goal defense. Now all Missouri needs to do is find that scoring in the first half.

UP NEXT

Georgia hosts South Carolina on Saturday.

Missouri travels to face Arkansas on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State hangs on to defeat Oklahoma State 86-82

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Barry Brown wanted to get right back in the gym after Kansas State’s loss to Texas Tech over the weekend, but coach Bruce Weber told him NCAA rules limited how much the team could practice.

So, Brown organized his own workout.

He gathered the whole team Sunday without any of their coaches, running up and down the floor in an otherwise empty gym. It was a reset for a team with NCAA Tournament expectations that had just lost its third-leading scorer, Kamau Stokes, for quite a while with a foot injury.

“That,” Weber said, “just showed great leadership on his part.”

So did Brown’s performance Wednesday night.

He poured in a career-high 38 points, picked up six steals and held in check Oklahoma State star Jeffrey Carroll in an 86-82 victory that should provide the Wildcats some positive momentum.

“We jumped on Barry’s back,” Weber said, “and he played a special game.”

Cartier Diarra started in place of Stokes and had a career-high 17 points for the Wildcats (12-4, 2-2 Big 12), while Xavier Sneed added 11 points and 12 rebounds.

“My mindset was for everyone to pick it up a bit, turn it up a notch,” Brown said. “We did that.”

Brandon Averette scored 22 points and Jeffrey Carroll had 20 for the Cowboys (11-5, 1-3), who led late in the second half before the Wildcats went on a game-changing run to take a 74-62 lead.

The Cowboys kept fighting, and Averette’s 3-point play with 40 seconds left got them within 81-76. But Dean Wade answered with two free throws and, after Carroll scored at the other end, Brown tacked on the second of two more foul shots to put the game away.

“To be honest, that was a pretty gutless performance by my team. I’ve never been more disappointed than I am today,” Cowboys coach Mike Boynton said. “Our fans deserve better. They’ll get better.”

The Wildcats played with the lead most of the way, even pushing their advantage to 27-18 late in the first half, before the Cowboys took a spurt of momentum into halftime.

Carroll provided the spark with a 3-point play and a couple more free throws.

Kansas State regained the lead early in the second half, but neither team was able to shake free until the Wildcats strung together five solid possessions beginning with six minutes to go.

Little-used guard Brian Patrick began the run with a 3-pointer to break a 58-all tie. Wade made four quick free throws. Sneed added a pair of his own. And a 3-pointer by Diarra from right in front of his own bench ignited a sparse but vocal home crowd.

Sneed’s turnaround jumper out of a timeout pushed the Wildcats’ lead to 72-62, their biggest of the game to that point, and Weber’s team held on the rest of the way.

“We played lifeless,” Boynton said. “People talk about atmosphere, whether the students are here, the energy. It was nothing to do with it. When you’re an athlete you go out and play with a sense of pride. We didn’t do that today.”

BIG PICTURE

Oklahoma State had won three out of four games decided by two possessions or less. But even though they kept the pressure on the Wildcats by scoring down the stretch, they were unable to make up enough ground for back-to-back wins at Bramlage Coliseum.

Kansas State showed impressive poise whenever the Cowboys made a run, and again in the closing minutes, when they kept making shots to stay alive. Brown and Co. answered with a parade of free throws that kept the Cowboys from ever feeling as if they would make it all the way back.

INJURY UPHEAVEL

The Wildcats could be without Stokes for a while after he hurt his foot in a loss to Texas Tech last weekend. Diarra started in his place, and fellow freshman Mike McGuirl made his college debut in the first half. McGuirl missed the first 12 games this season with an injury.

SPEAKING OF INJURIES

Cowboys guard Tavarius Shine, their second-leading scorer at 11.8 points per game, did not play while nursing a sprained wrist. Shine got hurt in their win over Iowa State.

UP NEXT

Oklahoma State returns home to face Texas on Saturday.

Kansas State hits Interstate 70 to play No. 12 Kansas on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State falls at Evansville for second straight MVC loss

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — Dru Smith scored 15 points, Ryan Taylor added 13 and Evansville turned back Missouri State 64-55 on Wednesday night.

K.J. Riley had 11 points for the Purple Aces (12-6, 2-3 Missouri Valley Conference) and Dainiu Chatkevicius had 10 points and 11 rebounds.

Alize Johnson led the Bears (13-5, 3-2) with 16 points and 14 rebounds and Jarrid Rhodes and Reggie Scurry had 10 points each.

Evansville scored the first six points and led wire-to-wire. The Purple Aces led by as many as 11 points in the first half before settling for a 31-24 advantage at the break. Ronnie Rousseau III scored all nine of his points in less than five minutes as part of a 13-6 burst that helped the Bears cut an 11-point deficit down to four with 8 1/2 minutes to go.

Missouri State’s last 3 baskets were 3-pointers, Johnson making it a three-point game with 1:12 to go. But the Bears missed their last five shots and the Purple Aces were 6 of 8 from the line in the last minute, wrapping up a 14 of 20 second half while the Bears were just 2 of 2.

The series is now tied at 34, dating to 1959 when Evansville beat MSU in the championship game of the NCAA Division II Tournament.

— Associated Press —

K-State women rally to defeat Iowa State

AMES, Iowa – Kansas State fought through an offensive dryspell in the third quarter to dominate Iowa State in the fourth quarter and pocket a 67-60 win at Hilton Coliseum. The win was the 525th of head coach Jeff Mittie’s coaching career.

Kansas State (10-6, 2-3 Big 12) had four players in double figures led by junior Kayla Goth with 16 points and seven assists. Sophomore forward Peyton Williams finished with her fourth double-double this season, as she carded 15 points, 11 rebounds and a career-high five blocks.

Senior forward Kaylee Page tallied her third career double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds. Freshman Rachel Ranke added 14 points, including a 4-of-8 effort from beyond the arc.

Iowa State (7-9, 1-4) was paced by Bride Kennedy Hopoate with 17 points, while Bridget Carleton finished with 16 points and 11 rebounds.

Kansas State finished the night shooting 35.0 percent (21-of-60) from the floor including a 9-of-13 performance in the fourth quarter. Iowa State shot 35.5 percent (22-of-62) from the field. The Wildcats had the advantage at the foul line, as they went 17-of-20.

The first quarter featured four ties and three lead changes, as Iowa State held a 19-18 lead at the end of the quarter. The Cyclones were 5-of-10 from 3-point range in the opening frame, but Goth knocked down a step back three-pointer to beat the buzzer to end the quarter.

The teams continued to exchange the lead in the second quarter, as K-State held the largest lead of the frame at three, 24-21. Both teams were held to 4-of-14 shooting in the quarter, but the Wildcats outscored Iowa State in the frame to tie the game at 30 at halftime.

The Wildcats were paced in the first half by junior Kali Jones. Jones came off the bench to contribute career-highs of eight points and seven rebounds, including four on the offensive glass.

K-State went through an offensive drought in the third quarter, as the Wildcats were 1-of-16 (.063) from the field and were forced into three turnovers during the entirety of the third stanza. Iowa State used a 10-0 run to pull in front, 40-32, with 3:13 to play. The Wildcats clawed back with six points in the final 1:45 of the quarter to trail, 45-38, entering the fourth.

The Wildcats closed the gap to open the fourth quarter. Ranke converted a pair of quick trigger 3-pointers to pull K-State to within one, 47-46, with 6:49 left in regulation and force an Iowa State timeout.

K-State continued to roll in the fourth quarter, as Ranke knocked down her third 3-pointer of the quarter to start a 12-4 run as K-State took a 58-53 lead with 3:41 remaining. Goth added four points, while Page buried her third 3-pointer of the night to cap the run.

The Wildcats were able to hold Iowa State at arm’s length in the final 2:10, as Goth converted a jumper to give K-State a 60-56 lead. After a defensive stop, Goth then finished an old fashioned three-point play with 1:28 to push the Wildcats in front 63-56. Overall, K-State outscored Iowa State, 29-25, in the fourth quarter. The 29 points tied the season-high for a quarter.

Kansas State returns to Bramlage Coliseum for a two-game home stand, as the Wildcats host (20/22) Oklahoma State on Saturday at 1 p.m.

— K-State Athletics —

Kansas women lose at home to No. 15 West Virginia

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Naomi Davenport hit four 3-pointers and finished with 22 points and Teana Muldrow had 19 points, nine rebounds, two blocks and two steals to help the No. 15 West Virginia women defeat Kansas 74-54 on Wednesday night.

Katrina Pardee added 15 points and senior Chania Ray had 12 points and a season-high tying 10 assists for West Virginia (15-2, 3-2 Big 12). The Mountaineers have won five in a row against Kansas (11-5, 2-3).

Davenport hit two 3s, while Muldrow and Pardee scored five points apiece, during a 16-1 run that gave West Virginia a 52-33 lead with four minutes left in the third quarter. Kylee Kopatich sandwiched a 3-point play and a layup around two free throws by Tyler Johnson as the Jayhawks scored the first seven fourth-quarter points to trim their deficit to 55-44. Muldrow had nine points from there as the Mountaineers pulled away.

Kopatich had 17 points and Austin Richardson scored 10 on 4-of-16 shooting for Kansas. The Jayhawks shot just 35 percent (19 of 54) from the field, including 3 of 12 from 3-point range.

West Virginia scored 24 points off 17 Kansas turnovers.

— Associated Press —

Newman’s career night leads No. 12 Kansas past Iowa State

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Malik Newman started the game for Kansas on the bench.

He was on the floor when it mattered.

The on-again, off-again starter finally broke out for a career-high 27 points, and Svi Mykhailiuk added 23 to help the No. 12 Jayhawks beat pesky Iowa State 83-78 on Tuesday night.

“I mean, it was a good one. I can say that,” said Newman, the heralded Mississippi State transfer whose first season playing for the Jayhawks has been a rollercoaster with more downs than ups.

“I mean, it feels good,” Newman said of his performance. “Coach has been putting pressure on me to go out and be aggressive, play my game and be myself. I tried to do that.”

They sure needed him to do that.

Devonte Graham added 11 points for the Jayhawks (13-3, 3-1 Big 12), most of those coming in crunch time, when he shook off a 1-for-11 start from the field to knock down three big jumpers.

The game was tied 73-all with 3 1/2 minutes left, but Newman blocked Donovan Jackson’s shot to create a run-out for Kansas at the other end. Iowa State proceeded to turn it over on its next three possessions, and the Jayhawks converted two of them into easy baskets to put the game away.

It was the Jayhawks’ 12th win over Iowa State in their last 13 tries at Allen Fieldhouse.

Lindell Wigginton had 27 points and Jackson scored 20 for the Cyclones (9-6, 0-4), whose four straight losses — including back-to-back overtime defeats — have come on the heels of nine straight wins.

Cameron Lard added 15 points and 10 rebounds, though he also committed seven of the Cyclones’ 17 turnovers, and Nick Weiler-Babb contributed 13 points, 10 boards and eight assists.

“The difference in the game was turnovers, live-ball turnovers,” Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said. “When you break it down, live-ball turnovers are what really killed us, that and transition defense.”

The Cyclones didn’t have to worry about transition D in the first half.

The Jayhawks spent it settling for long, contested 3-pointers — they shot 24 of them and had just 10 attempts from inside the arc, drawing the ire of coach Bill Self.

“We were over-reliant,” he said. “I mean, 15 of our first 19 shots were 3s, from what I was told, and we weren’t smart enough to play to their weakness.”

Kansas also kept breaking down on defense, particularly when Wigginton had the ball in his hands.

The high-scoring freshman guard from Canada had 16 points in the first half, and they came from just about everywhere. He knocked down a 3-pointer, got to the foul line and was money on pull-up jumpers, his ability to knock down the 15-footer causing the Jayhawks fits.

It was one of those jumpers that gave the Cyclones their first lead early in the second half.

“My teammates are always confident in me,” Wigginton said, “telling me to attack.”

Udoka Azubuike responded with a dunk for the Jayhawks, though, and Newman converted a three-point play to start their first big run. Newman turned a turnover into a dunk, and another turnover turned into a fast-break dunk by Lagerald Vick to make it 49-42 and prompt a Cyclones timeout.

Iowa State kept answering every time the Jayhawks went on another run, but it was Newman’s breakout performance and Graham’s poise down the stretch that yielded one run too many.

“We just (weren’t) on cue,” Jackson said. “We’ve got a real good team, but down the stretch we just have to add the extra five minutes, like Coach has been preaching to us. And it’ll come.”

STATS AND STREAKS

Kansas was 5 of 13 from the foul line. … Graham also had nine assists and four steals. … The Cyclones had a 44-34 advantage in rebounds. … Wigginton played all 40 minutes. … Iowa State got two points in 36 minutes from its bench.

BIG PICTURE

Iowa State squandered a soft start to league play in losses to Kansas State, Texas and Oklahoma State, but could have made up for it by beating Kansas. Instead, the Cyclones showed they’re good enough to compete but not quite good enough to win just yet.

Kansas was coming off a tough road win over TCU, and for a while it appeared the Jayhawks had taken Iowa State lightly. They came up with crucial stops on defense in the closing minutes to prevent the upset, but also showed the same cracks that have been evident all season.

UP NEXT

Iowa State returns home to face Baylor on Saturday.

Kansas plays rival Kansas State on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

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