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Missouri Western women snap two-game skid with 72-52 win over Quincy

ST. JOSEPH – Griffon women’s basketball (10-3) snapped a two-game losing streak with a convincing 72-52 win over Quincy (3-8) on Saturday afternoon in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

The win was Rob Edmisson’s 99th as head coach at Missouri Western. The Griffons led for 38 minutes of the game and never trailed.

NOTABLES
– Edmisson moved to 99-53 in his sixth season at Missouri Western

– Melia Richardson led the Griffons with 15 points and tied for the team lead with five assists

– Dossou Ndiaye had a career-high five assists, all in the first half, to go with her 12 points

– KeShara Scott just missed a double-double with a team-high nine rebounds and 12 points

– The Griffons shot 55 percent from the field in the second half and 46 percent in the game

– MWSU out-rebounded Quincy 37-21

– Missouri Western scored 21 points off 21 Quincy turnovers

UP NEXT
Missouri Western returns to MIAA play, Wednesday, Jan. 3 when the team travels to Pittsburg State (9-4). The Gorillas lost a non-conference game in overtime at Emporia State on Saturday.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats stay unbeaten with big win over Sampson

The Northwest Missouri State University men’s basketball team defeated Simpson College on Saturday, 85-53, at Bearcat Arena, in Maryville, Mo.

Northwest improves to 12-0 on the season in the team’s final non-conference game. The game was played as an exhibition for Simpson who is 5-6 on the season.

Five different Bearcats scored in double figures as Northwest shot 62.7 percent from the field.

The win pushes the Bearcats’ home winning streak to 43 games and the overall win streak to 23 victories.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats hit 17 three pointers and outrebounded the storm 32-20. Northwest forced 15 Simpson College turnovers and had five blocked shots.
– The game featured just seven fouls and the teams combined to shoot 12 free throws.
– Ryan Welty hit six three pointers to finish with 18 points and four rebounds. He added three steals.
– Ryan Hawkins tied a career high with 11 points. He hit a pair of three pointers, grabbed four rebounds, had a steal, a block and added an assist.
– Brett Dougherty went a perfect 6-for-6 from the field, finishing with 14 points. He tied a career-high with six assists and grabbed three rebounds.
– Justin Pitts finished with 13 points and five assists. He hit three three-pointers and added a steal.
– Joey Whittus had 13 points, connecting three times from beyond the arc. He added two assists, a block, a steal and a rebound.
– Chris-Ebou Ndow had a game-high eight rebounds with nine points, one assist and one steal.

Key Northwest Sequences
– Down by two with seven minutes to go in the first half, Northwest went on a 10-0 run to take a lead it would never relinquish. Welty hit a three off a feed from Pitts. Dougherty and Witthus hit back-to-back layups and Welty closed the run with another long range bomb off a pass from Kurth, giving Northwest a 30-22 lead with 4:44 to play.

– With 17:45 left in the second half, Northwest put together another run, this time stringing together a 15-0 stretch. Dougherty hit a layup to make it 45-31. Pitts and Dougherty hit back-to-back three pointers. After Dougherty hit a pair from the line, Welty connected on his fourth three-pointer of the game to make it 56-31. With 14:08 left to play, Dougherty hit another layup to cap the 15-point run.

Up Next
– MIAA play resumes on Thursday, Jan. 4, as Northwest travels to Joplin, Mo., to take on Missouri Southern at 7:30 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

No. 11 Kansas open Big 12 play with 92-86 win at Texas

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Kansas players saw Mohamed Bamba, Texas’ long-armed shot blocker, stationed near the basket and figured there were easier ways to score than to challenge him.

So the 11th-ranked Jayhawks shot 3-pointers, converting 17 of 35, and defeated Texas 92-86 on Friday night in the Big 12 opener for both teams. They made 11 3-pointers in the second half.

“We definitely weren’t getting any layups with him down there,” Kansas guard Devonte’ Graham said.

Graham had 23 points and eight assists, converting six 3-point baskets.

Lagerald Vick scored 21, making a career-best five 3s. Svi Myhailiuk added 20 points, hitting five 3-pointers.

Sophomore center Udoka Azubuike had 13 points and career-best 13 rebounds for Kansas (11-2, 1-0 Big 12).

Kansas has won 13 of its last 14 games against Texas, including eight in a row. The Jayhawks won a conference opener for the 27th straight season.

Bamba, a 6-foot-11 freshman with a 7-9 wingspan, led Texas (9-4, 0-1) with 22 points, 15 rebounds and eight blocks, all season bests.

“The guy could have blocked the sun,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “We shot the heck out of the ball. We needed to, though. I told them before the game we were going to shoot 35 3s.”

Dylan Osetkowski scored 15 of his 17 points in the second half for Texas. Matt Coleman scored 17 for Texas.

Kansas could not pull away despite making seven 3-point baskets in the first 9 minutes of the second half and leading by 13. They had another three-point play — a dunk and free throw — by Azubuike during that stretch.

“I just thought there was a few stretches in the game when we didn’t have the defensive energy that we needed to stop a team like Kansas during those runs,” Texas coach Shaka Smart said.

Osetkowski, after missing six of seven shots from the field in the first half, scored 10 points during the first 9 minutes of the second half to help Texas stay within reach. Coleman and Eric Davis Jr. also helped with 12 points apiece in the second half.

Graham made four-3-pointers in the first half, including one with a minute remaining to give Kansas a 37-34 lead.

Before Friday, Texas limited opponents to 28.2 percent on 3-pointers, 11th best in the country.

“They got a few open looks, they knocked down a couple with hands in their face,” Coleman said. “I give them a lot of credit, a lot of respect. It was almost like playing the (Golden State) Warriors.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas: Self’s thin seven-man rotation could expand if freshman Silvio De Sousa has his eligibility approved by the NCAA. De Sousa, a 6-9 forward, arrived in Lawrence this week and practiced with the team after recently graduating from IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida. Self told reporters the NCAA must vet “amateurism stuff,” as it routinely does with incoming athletes. Self hopes to have De Sousa available soon. Kansas is still awaiting resolution in the case of freshman forward Billy Preston, a five-star recruit who has yet to appear in a game while the school and the NCAA investigate the financial situation with a car he drove during the fall semester.

Texas: Guard Andrew Jones, the Longhorns’ leading scorer and by far their most accurate 3-point shooter, returned after missing four games with hairline fracture of the right wrist. Jones, who started the first eight games before his injury, served as a reserve scored five points in 9 minutes.

“He didn’t quite have his wind the way he did before he got hurt,” Smart said.

NOT THEIR BEST NIGHT, ACTUALLY

The 17 3-pointers Kansas made were not even a season high. The Jayhawks hit 19 of 36 against Texas Southern. They average 11 3-point baskets a game with 42.2 percent accuracy, 13th-best in the nation.

SMART T’d UP

Smart said he was surprised to receive a technical foul with 3:43 remaining. Kansas led by 12 at the time.

Asked if he received an explanation from the official, Smart said, “Just that I deserved it. I’m not allowed to comment on that stuff. I’m disappointed.”

UP NEXT

Kansas hosts No. 22 Texas Tech on Tuesday night. The Jayhawks have won 16 straight against Tech, the last one by a single point in Lubbock.

Texas is at Iowa State on Monday night. The Longhorns have lost six straight in Ames, last winning in 2010.

— Associated Press —

Wade drops 34, K-State pounds Iowa State 91-75

AMES, Iowa (AP) — If junior Dean Wade can shoot anywhere near as well as he did on Friday night, Kansas State just might have a chance in the Big 12 after all.

Wade poured in a career-high 34 points, Kamau Stokes added 23 and Kansas State opened conference play by pounding Iowa State 91-75 for its first win in Ames since 2011.

Barry Brown Jr. had 21 points for the Wildcats (11-2, 1-0 Big 12), who shot 13 of 26 from 3-point range to snap Iowa State’s nine-game winning streak.

It was all keyed by the 6-foot-10 Wade, who was 6 of 8 on 3s and 13 of 16 overall.

“Once you hit one, you feel a little bit more confident in the second one and so on and so forth,” Wade said. “Coaches keep telling me to shoot it…so I was taking their advice and shooting it.”

After a blistering first half that saw K-State jump ahead 53-50, the Wildcats put away the Cyclones (9-3, 0-1) by tightening up their defense — while Iowa State slacked off on that end.

Iowa State missed 10 of its first 11 shots in the second half, and Kansas State — picked just eighth in the preseason league poll — jumped ahead by 12 on a Xavier Sneed 3.

Wade’s 3, his sixth of the night, made it 75-60 with just fewer than 10 minutes to go. He also grabbed eight boards for the Wildcats, who had dropped their previous four meetings against the Cyclones.

“If you’re going to win road games, you have to have someone step up and be special,” K-State coach Bruce Weber said of Wade. “He was in that zone.”

Lindell Wigginton scored 23 points in his Big 12 debut to lead Iowa State, which committed 13 turnovers and shot just 23 percent in the second half after hitting 68 percent of its shots in the opening frame.

“Disappointing, unacceptable performance,” Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said. “Our youth and inexperienced showed too.”

THE BIG PICTURE

Kansas State: Given how brutal the Big 12 figures to be in 2018, opening with a road win — even against rebuilding Iowa State — is big for the Wildcats. And although Wade likely won’t shoot as well as he did on Friday in the future, having a big man that can stretch defenses should continue to open things up for K-State’s talented backcourt. “Dean is a threat every night, and teams are going to have to key on him,” Brown said.

Iowa State: The Cyclones can’t expect to play defense like they did on Friday night and win much in the Big 12. That’s often an issue for teams relying on as many youngsters as Iowa State is.

WHAT A HALF!

The first half produced some gaudy numbers, including six lead changes and eight ties. Iowa State shot 17 of 25 from the field and yet still trailed by three. Stokes and Wade combined for 39 points in the first 20 minutes on 13-of-18 shooting, and Wigginton scored 15 points while hitting all five of his shots.

NOTES

Solomon Young scored 16 points, Nick Weiler-Babb had 14 with seven rebounds and Cameron Lard scored 13 points with nine rebounds. …Wade’s previous career best was 25 points in a win over Oral Roberts in late November. …Iowa State’s last loss was a 74-58 home defeat to Milwaukee — a result that felt eerily similar to this one. …K-State closed the game by outscoring the Cyclones 58-36.

HE SAID IT

“We didn’t bring a lot of energy. We didn’t buy in on the defensive end and we were just going one-on-one on offense,” Wigginton said about Iowa State’s sluggish start to the second half

UP NEXT

The Cyclones hosts Texas on New Year’s Day.

Kansas State opens its Big 12 home schedule against West Virginia on Jan. 1.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska survives scare from Stetson

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A week ago, Tanner Borchardt fulfilled the walk-on’s dream, receiving a Nebraska basketball scholarship. Friday night, Borchardt came off the bench to score a career-high 8 points and grab 10 rebounds in 12 second-half minutes and the Huskers pulled away from Stetson late to take a 71-62 win.

“In my mind, the underdogs won tonight, said Nebraska coach Tim Miles. If you look at this game and you look at the way Stetson played, they outplayed us…We were lucky enough to have an underdog in Tanner Borchardt, who came out and really did some great things in a short amount of time that I thought helped steady us, give us a little bit of a lead and a shot of confidence.”

Nebraska guard Evan Taylor was more direct about the contributions of Borchardt, a junior who had a total of 12 points and 25 rebounds in his career before Friday.

“T is probably the reason we won the game,” Taylor said. “We’ve been seeing him work since the summer, we know he’s capable of this. I’m happy for him. Tonight is his night. He’s the man. He’s the reason we won the game.”

Nebraska (10-5) trailed just once in the game, after Stetson’s Luke Doyle hit a 3-pointer on the opening possession of the second half. But the Huskers couldn’t shake the Hatters, who tied the game three times in the final minutes, the last at 48 on Doyle’s 3-pointer with 9:15 left.

Stetson (7-8) then went scoreless for more than 5 minutes and Nebraska went on a 10-point run that began with a steal and a layup by Taylor and ended with a pair of James Palmer, Jr. free throws that put Nebraska up 58-48 with 4:25 left.

The Hatters cut the lead to six twice but final-minute dunks by Taylor and Palmer sealed the win for Nebraska.

Borchardt sparked the sluggish Huskers in the second half, including a block that led to Palmer’s free throws. He said he didn’t expect to have that kind of impact on the game, but was prepared when his number was called.

“Whatever coach wants of me, I’m going to go in there and do,” Borchardt said. “He told me coming out at halftime he was going to use me off the bench, so I just had to stay ready. It’s all those reps on scout team getting me ready for this moment.”

Both teams struggled from the floor in the first half, Nebraska shooting just 24 percent against the Hatters’ swarming zone defense and Stetson shot 33 percent. The Hatters hit 36 percent of their shots in the second half while Nebraska improved to 44 percent.

“Defensively they did a good job,” Stetson coach Corey Williams. “Their length, at times, bothered us. I just think we could’ve finished some plays at the basket. I thought we had some open shots that went in and came out. If they would’ve went in, then maybe it’s a different ballgame. They certainly stepped up and made big plays. Make more baskets, get to the free-throw line more, that would’ve helped.”

Isaac Copeland and Palmer each scored 13 for Nebraska but were a combined 8 of 32 from the field. Anton Gill had 12 points for Nebraska and Taylor had 10 points.

Divine Myles had 17 points for Stetson. Abayomi Iyiola had 15 points and Doyle had 12 points.

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: Friday’s win gives Nebraska nine victories over non-conference opponents, matching the highest total in six seasons.

Stetson: Friday’s game was just the 13th game for Stetson against a Big Ten opponent. The Hatters are now 1-12 against the Big Ten. The only Stetson victory was a 58-56 win at Purdue on Nov. 24, 1990

QUOTABLE.

Miles on the players reaction to Borchardt during the game. “It’s a true celebration on the bench. They were telling me, `Coach we’ve got to run a play for Tanner so he gets his double-double.’ I said `We’ve got to win the game. Tanner can go tip one in and get his double-double.’ He almost did that…They’re looking out for him like that. I’m clueless out there. They have the information. I don’t know if they have their phones on or its one the scoreboard. Maybe they count better than I do.”

Miles on Nebraska’s poor shooting: “Three of our top guys go 8 for 35,” Miles said. “That’s a tough night. I thought we still defended all right.”

UP NEXT

Nebraska: The Huskers travel to Evanston, Illinois, Tuesday to resume Big Ten play against Northwestern. Nebraska is 1-1 in the Big Ten this season.

Stetson: The Hatters host Florida National Tuesday before beginning Atlantic Sun conference play on Jan. 6 at Florida Gulf Coast.

— Associated Press —

K-State women get clobbered by No. 6 Baylor 88-58

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kalani Brown scored 20 points on 7-of-10 shooting to lead No. 6 Baylor to an 88-58 victory over Kansas State on Thursday night in the Big 12 opener for both teams.

Baylor (10-1, 1-0 Big 12) led 8-0 2:05 into the game, a run that included a technical foul on Kansas State coach Jeff Mittie.

The Lady Bears hammered the Wildcats (8-3, 0-1) in the paint, scoring 48 points inside, a number of which came off second-chance opportunities.

Kansas State’s Kayla Goth led all scorers with 22 points on 8-of-20 shooting from the field.

BIG PICTURE

This was the Big 12 Conference opener for both teams and while the first quarter appeared to see Baylor dominating, the Wildcats made the game quite respectable well into the second half. The game against Kansas State marked the Lady Bears first in 10 days and the rust was apparent, even after the hot first quarter start. Meanwhile, this marks the first game in what appears to be a long stretch for the Wildcats as they will face three more ranked opponents, two on the road and hosting No. 8 Texas.

UP NEXT

BAYLOR: The Lady Bears host Texas Tech on Dec. 31.

KANSAS STATE: The Wildcats travel to Oklahoma State on Dec. 31.

— Associated Press —

KU women lose Big 12 opener at Iowa State

AMES, Iowa. – Kansas women’s basketball went into one of the toughest environments in the Big 12 Conference and overcame a seven-point deficit and forced overtime before Iowa State edged the Jayhawks, 71-69, on Thursday night inside Hilton Coliseum.

Once owning a six-point lead early on in the final quarter, Kansas (9-3, 0-1 Big 12) had to fight to extend the game beyond regulation with a contested 3-point basket from junior guard Kylee Kopatich. Although chances were there, the Jayhawks couldn’t complete a second comeback effort against the Cyclones (7-5, 1-0 Big 12) in overtime and dropped their first Big 12 matchup of the season.

Kansas was led by a trio of juniors who each netted double digits. Junior guard Christalah Lyons had a team-best 19 points, while adding six assists and four rebounds in 45 minutes of play. Lyons’ 19 points marks her eleventh double-figure scoring effort in 12 games. Kopatich earned her first double-double of the 2017-18 season, scoring 15 points and 11 rebounds. She also played in all 45 minutes of the extended game. Junior guard Austin Richardson rounded out KU’s trio with 13 points and six rebounds.

Iowa State’s junior guard Bridget Carleton led all scorers with 30 points and nine rebounds, falling just shy of a double-double. Junior forward Bride Kennedy-Hopoate concluded Iowa State’s double-digit scorers with 15 points and six rebounds.

The Cyclones were the first on the board with a Carleton 3-pointer in the opening seconds of the game. Senior guard Emily Durr added two free throws to give ISU an early 5-0 lead, but the Jayhawks settled into a rhythm and netted the next four points with layups from junior guard Brianna Osorio and Richardson to put KU within one.

Iowa State went on a 6-0 run to take an 11-4 lead midway through the first quarter, but Kansas answered with six-straight points, including a pair of free throws from Lyons and a four-straight points from Kopatich to stay within one.

The Cyclones connected on their next two 3-pointers to take back a seven-point lead, but Kansas outscored the Cyclones 7-1 in the final minute of the quarter with a pair of layups from Lyons, freshman center Bailey Helgren and a 3-point basket from Richardson. The Jayhawks trailed 18-17 after the first 10 minutes of the game.

Carleton began the second quarter in the same fashion as the first, netting a 3-pointer in the first 20 seconds of the period. Following Carleton’s long-range bucket, Lyons added three points of her own. The Dallas, Texas native converted a steal into a layup and connected on one of her two free throws to keep Kansas within one early on in the second period.

Kennedy-Hopotae netted the next four points for the Cyclones with a layup and a pair of baskets from the charity stripe to give Iowa State a 25-20 lead. The Jayhawks outscored ISU 11-4 in the final seven minutes of the half, to give Kansas a 31-29 lead going into the locker room.

Iowa State and Kansas traded off buckets throughout the opening four minutes of the second half with neither team leading by more than two points. Following a three-minute scoring drought for both teams, Lyons and Kopatich netted back-to-back layups to extend the Jayhawks lead, 48-42.

After shooting 1-of-7 from the field, freshman forward Madison Wise knocked in a jumper for the Cyclones and completed the 3-point play with a free throw. Kennedy-Hopotae added a layup to put Iowa State within one. Richardson scored two more points for the Jayhawks, but another jumper from ISU’s Wise would keep the Cyclones within one, 50-49.

The Jayhawks started the final 10 minutes with five-straight points featuring baskets from redshirt-sophomore center Tyler Johnson and a long-range shot from Richardson to extend the Kansas lead to six. The Cyclones continued to fight back outscoring Kansas 7-2 following the Jayhawks’ 5-0 start to the quarter.

Johnson and Lyons each netted buckets following the Cyclones’ run, but Carleton scored six unasnwered points with a pair of layups and two free throws to give Iowa State a three-point lead with 19 seconds remaining. The Cyclones couldn’t hold onto the lead, as Kopatich sent the game into overtime with a game-tying contested 3-pointer with 10 seconds remaining in regulation.

Iowa State took an early 67-64 lead in overtime after Carleton completed a 3-point play the old-fashioned way. Osorio knocked in a free throw to keep Kansas within a possession, but back-to-back layups from Carleton extended ISU’s lead to six with two and a half minutes remaining.

Lyons added four points for the Jayhawks to cut the lead to two, but neither team was able to score in the final two minutes. After nabbing a steal, Kopatich wasn’t able to convert another clutch 3-pointer, as the Jayhawks fell, 71-69.

UP NEXT
The Jayhawks face TCU for a New Year’s Eve matchup on Sunday, Dec. 31 at 2 p.m. inside Allen Fieldhouse.

— KU Athletics —

Nebraska women fall at home to No. 12 Ohio State

Lincoln – Nebraska held No. 12 Ohio State to its second-lowest point total of the season, but the Huskers could not muster enough offense to knock off the defending Big Ten champion Buckeyes in a 73-61 loss at Pinnacle Bank Arena on Thursday.

The Huskers slipped to 9-5 on the season and 0-1 in the Big Ten, while Ohio State improved to 12-2 and 1-0 in the conference.

All-American Kelsey Mitchell led the Buckeyes with 25 points, one under her season average, while Linnae Harper added 14 points, including a pair of big buckets midway through the fourth quarter. Sierra Calhoun was the only other Buckeye in double figures with 13 points, as Nebraska held the nation’s highest scoring offense nearly 19 points under its season average. Prior to the game, only No. 14 Duke, who held OSU to 60, had kept the Buckeyes from scoring at least 83 points in a game.

Nebraska got 14 points, six rebounds and a career-high-matching four assists from junior forward Maddie Simon, while freshman center Kate Cain contributed 14 points, eight rebounds and a pair of blocks. Those two Huskers combined to hit 12-of-21 shots from the field, including 2-of-4 threes by Simon. Unfortunately, the rest of the Huskers combined to go just 12-for-35.

Sophomore point guard Hannah Whitish gave the Huskers three players in double figures with 12 points, five rebounds and four assists on 3-of-8 shooting from the field.

Freshman guard Taylor Kissinger also made a significant contribution with eight points in her return after missing the past six games with a knee injury. Kissinger, who entered the game as Nebraska’s leading scorer after scoring 14.0 points per game through her first seven contests as a starter, played 15 minutes off the bench. Her three-pointer with three minutes left in the game cut Ohio State’s lead to eight points at 67-59.

Whitish got a pair of free throws with 1:21 left to keep the margin at eight points, but a bucket by Mitchell with a minute left pushed the Buckeye lead back to double digits in the final minute.

Nebraska kept the Buckeyes within striking distance despite falling behind by 18 points late in the third quarter. The Buckeyes kept that 18-point margin early in the fourth at 60-42, before the Big Red battled back.

Senior guard Emily Wood sparked the rally with a three-pointer, before Jasmine Cincore and Whitish hit back-to-back shots to trim the OSU margin to 60-49 with 7:18 left and force the second timeout in 1:05 by Ohio State.

Harper then made two big plays to quickly push the margin back to 15 points, before Cain, Simon and Whitish fueled a 7-0 Husker run in 1:15 to cut the margin to 64-56 with 5:00 left in the game.

As a team, Nebraska hit 41.1 percent (23-56) of its shots, including 51.9 percent (14-27) in the second half. The Huskers were 4-for-9 from three-point range in the second half after going just 2-for-12 from long range in the first 20 minutes. Nebraska hit 9-of-14 free throws for the game, including 5-of-6 in the second half. Nebraska outrebounded Ohio State, 39-36, but lost the turnover battle, 23-15.

The Buckeyes hit 42.9 percent (27-63) of their shots, including 34.8 percent (8-23) of their three-pointers, and connected on 11-of-14 free throws (.786).

Ohio State used a 14-1 surge early in the first quarter to jump out to a 17-5 lead after Nebraska led 4-3 in the opening moments. But the Huskers turned down the tempo and held the high-scoring Buckeyes to just two field goals in the final 4:50 of the quarter, outscoring OSU 10-5 to trim the margin to 22-15 at the end of the quarter.

The Huskers scored on their opening possession of the second quarter to cut the Buckeye lead to 22-17, but then went more than four minutes without scoring. However, the Big Red continued to defend and trailed just 27-21 after an Eliely layup with 4:54 left in the half.

Mitchell, who had 13 first-half points, scored OSU’s final four points of the half to give the Buckeyes a 34-24 halftime lead. The 34 points tied for the third-fewest points scored in an opening half this season by Ohio State.

As a team, the Huskers hit just 31 percent (9-29) of their first-half shots, including 16.7 percent (2-12) from three-point range. Nebraska went 4-of-8 at the free throw line and was outrebounded, 22-21, in the half. Cain led the Huskers with seven points and five rebounds, while Kissinger added five points off the bench.

The Big Red held Ohio State to just 36.7 percent (11-30) shooting, including 4-of-12 threes (.333). The Buckeyes went 8-of-10 at the line and won the first-half turnover battle, 11-8. Harper had eight points and six boards for the Buckeyes to support Mitchell’s 13 points.

The Huskers open a three-game Big Ten road swing by traveling to Minneapolis to take on Minnesota New Year’s Eve. Tip-off between the Big Red and the Golden Gophers is set for 2 p.m.

— NU Athletics —

Mizzou loses Texas Bowl to Longhorns 33-16

HOUSTON (AP) — Freshman running back Daniel Young had 64 yards receiving with a touchdown and added 48 yards on the ground to help Texas beat Missouri 33-16 in the Texas Bowl on Wednesday night.

The Longhorns (7-6), in a bowl for the first time since 2014, bounced back from a loss to Texas Tech in their regular-season finale to finish with their first winning record since going 8-5 in Mack Brown’s final season in 2013.

Shane Buechele and Sam Ehlinger split time at quarterback for Texas, and both players threw a touchdown pass. The defense helped out, too, with Anthony Wheeler scoring a TD on a fumble return in the first half and Davante Davis grabbing an interception with about three minutes left in the fourth quarter.

Armanti Foreman dashed 18 yards for a touchdown on the ensuing drive to extend the lead to 33-16 and put the game out of reach.

Drew Lock passed for 269 yards and a touchdown, but also threw an interception and lost a fumble in the loss, which snapped a six-game winning streak for the Tigers. Lock led the nation during the regular season with a Southeastern Conference-record 43 touchdown passes and he had thrown three or more in eight straight games.

Buechele connected with Young on a 22-yard touchdown pass to put Texas up 7-0 early in the first quarter. Ehlinger found John Burt for a 7-yard score later in the first to push the lead to 14-0.

The Tigers (7-6) got within 14-7 when Ish Witter ran 4 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter. But Witter fumbled later in the period and Wheeler scooped it up and rumbled 38 yards for a touchdown to leave Texas up 21-7 at halftime.

Lock threw a 79-yard touchdown pass to Johnathon Johnson on the first play of the second half, but the 2-point conversion failed, leaving the Tigers down 21-13.

They cut the margin to 21-16 with a 28-yard field goal by Tucker McCann with about three minutes left in the third quarter, but weren’t able to move the ball much after that.

The Longhorns went up 23-16 when a bad snap sailed over Lock’s head and rolled out of the back of the end zone for a safety near the end of the third quarter.

Texas used a 41-yard field goal early in the fourth to make it 26-16 with about 12 minutes left.

Ehlinger was 11 of 15 for 112 yards, and Buechele finished 6 of 14 for 55 yards.

THE TAKEAWAY

Texas: Coach Tom Herman’s first season with the Longhorns was somewhat of a disappointment, but his team’s performance against Missouri should give fans hope that the program is back on the right track.

Missouri: Texas found a way to stymie Missouri’s potent offense after the Tigers scored 45 or more points in each of their previous six games, a school record.

UP NEXT

Texas: Herman appears to have two improving quarterbacks in Buechele and Ehlinger, but to develop more consistency next season the coach might need to pick one as his starter and stick with him.

Missouri: Lock will have to decide if he’ll declare for the NFL draft or return for his senior season. With offensive coordinator Josh Heupel leaving to coach Central Florida, Lock’s decision could hinge on his feelings about the new offensive coordinator.

— Associated Press —

K-State uses big second half to defeat UCLA in Cactus Bowl

PHOENIX (AP) — Alex Delton ran for 158 yards and accounted for four touchdowns, leading Kansas State to a 35-17 Cactus Bowl victory over UCLA on Tuesday night in what could be the final game of coach Bill Snyder’s career.

Delton replaced Skylar Thompson late in the first quarter and scored on runs of 68 yards, 3 yards and 1 yard. Alex Barnes added 117 yards and a touchdown for the Wildcats, who rushed for 345 yards.

Kansas State (8-5) struggled in the first half against UCLA’s potent offense, but shut down the Bruins in the second to give Snyder his 210th — and possibly final — win with the Wildcats.

UCLA (6-7) played without top NFL prospect Josh Rosen, who’s recovering from a concussion, and built a 10-point halftime lead without its star quarterback.

The Bruins’ offensive success didn’t carry over into the second half and their defense had a hard time containing Delton, saddling interim coach Jedd Fisch with a loss in his last game before Chip Kelly takes over the program.

Snyder turned around one of the nation’s worst programs after taking over in the Little Apple in 1989. He returned from a three-year retirement in 2008 and led the Wildcats to eight straight bowl appearances.

Snyder has not decided whether he will return for a 27th season or retire again to spend time with his family.

The 78-year-old coach made a quarterback change in the first quarter of the Cactus Bowl, replacing Thompson after an interception. Delton had an immediate impact with his legs, bursting through a hole in the middle, making a tackler miss and racing 68 yards for a touchdown.

Snyder took a gamble in the third quarter, opting to go for it on fourth-and-goal from the 1. Delton came through again, bulling his way through a massive pile — with some help from his teammates — for a hard-earned score.

Kansas State recovered Bolu Olorunfunmi’s fumble at the Bruins 24-yard line on the next play from scrimmage, and Delton hit Dominique Heath for an 8-yard touchdown to give the Wildcats the lead.

UCLA turned it over on downs — after a successful fake punt — and Kansas State turned its fourth-down try into a touchdown, with Alex Barnes putting the Wildcats up 28-17 with a 41-yard run.

Kansas State gave UCLA no hope of a comeback with a drive that lasted more than eight minutes and ended with Delton’s final TD run.

Rosen, expected to leave for the NFL after his junior year, was in uniform at Chase Field and warmed up before the game, but Devon Modster trotted out to the huddle for UCLA.

The Bruins still had their big-play game going even without Rosen, building a 17-7 halftime lead on two long TD passes by Modster.

UCLA’s offensive roll ended with halftime. The Bruins had 100 total yards and three first downs in the second half.

THE TAKEAWAY

If this was the final game of Snyder’s career, the Wildcats sent him out on a high note with a dominant second-half performance.

UCLA’s defense, a sore spot all season, had no answer for Delton, and its offense could have used Rosen in the second half.

UP NEXT

Kansas State: The Wildcats should be in good shape on offense next season whether Snyder returns or not. Kansas State has no seniors on its two-deep roster on offense, though there are five on defense.

UCLA: Kelly will likely have to replace Rosen when he takes over, but will have plenty of firepower returning. He’s also one of the nation’s top recruiters, so the Bruins should be well-stocked with talent.

— Associated Press —

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