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No. 1 Bearcats roll to 70-56 victory over No. 4 Lincoln Memorial

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

OWENSBORO, Ky. – In Eastern Kentucky, on a neutral court, the Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team showed it remains the king of Division II basketball.

The Bearcats, the defending national champions and No. 1-ranked team in the NABC coaches top 25, handed No. 4 Lincoln Memorial its first loss of the season Tuesday evening at Kentucky Wesleyan’s Owensboro Sportcenter.

An impressive display of offense and defense in the first eight minutes of the second half broke open a close game and propelled Northwest to a 70-56 victory. The Bearcats go into the Christmas break with an 11-0 record. Lincoln Memorial dropped to 11-1.

“Like I said before the game, this was really going to test us,” said Northwest senior Chris-Ebou Ndow, who finished with 24 points and 15 rebounds. “It was the biggest test we have had so far. Defensively, we showed we can play with anybody. We can defensively get after anybody. That is a good feeling to have going into Christmas.”

The nonconference game was a rematch of last year’s national semifinals that Northwest won 79-67.

The way the first half ended, it definitely looked like Tuesday’s game was going to be much closer.

Ndow had another idea. He wasted little time helping Northwest increase a four-point halftime lead. He opened the second half with a three-pointer, increasing the Bearcats lead to 35-28.

“We knew we ended the first half really bad and that is not what we wanted to do against a team like that,” Ndow said. “We knew they could get on a run at any time. The fact we let them get on a run at the end of the first was not good.

“Coming out in the second half, we knew we had to turn it up. It was good for me to make some threes and get us going.”

After Lincoln Memorial scored, the Bearcats went on an impressive 12-0 run that started with a three-pointer from senior Justin Pitts that bounced high off the rim, hit the backboard and fell through.

Some luck was definitely on the Bearcats’ side. It was fitting they were wearing their all green jerseys.

“For us, other than Ryan Hawkins bank shot and that shot by Pitts, I think we weren’t too lucky because the rims were tight,” Ndow said.

Ndow followed Pitts’ trey with another three-pointer. Senior Brett Dougherty did a nice fake in the paint and banked in a layup for two more points.

“I just tried to be aggressive,” said Dougherty, who finished with 14 points on seven of 14 shooting. “They weren’t doubling me. We have shooters around me so I have to take advantage of it. That was what I tried to do.”

Ndow followed with a basket in the paint that caused the Railsplitters to call timeout. The run ended with two free throws by Ndow that made it 47-30 with 15 minutes left.

Lincoln Memorial stopped the run with a basket and then the Bearcats revved it back up, scoring 12 straight points, making it 59-32. The banked-in three-pointer by Hawkins completed the 27-4 run to start the second half.

“I thought in the first half we had a chance to really put our foot on their throats and pull away,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “I thought we made some mistakes with some busted coverage and some turnovers and they made a run on us.

“In the second half, we buckled down, especially coming out of the gate. Chris hit some big shots and had 15 rebounds. He is a big-game player. You saw that tonight.”

Everything went well for Northwest. Pitts didn’t shoot the ball well, but his five assists put him No. 1 on the school’s career assist list with 494. The previous record was 492 by Kelvin Parker.

One hot stretch by Northwest in the first half gave the Bearcats a 13-point lead and enough of a cushion to take a 32-28 lead into halftime.

Northwest shot a cool 38 percent from the field in the opening 20 minutes but created enough turnovers to lead most of the half.

Lincoln Memorial took its first lead at 12-11 on two free throws by senior Dorian Pinson. The Railsplitters other lead was 14-13 on a massive dunk by senior Emanuel Terry.

“It is really tough to stop their runs,” Ndow said. “They are a high-scoring team and can get hot anytime. When they got that dunk and got hyped, we knew they could have made a big run. We had to stop the bleeding as soon as possible.”

The dunk didn’t rattle the Bearcats. They regained the lead for good for on two free throws by Ndow.

Those two free throws sparked a 10-0 run that gave Northwest a 23-14 lead with 5:09 remaining in the first half. Northwest junior Joey Witthus scored a couple of baskets during the run.

“It makes it really good for us when Joey hits baskets in the post and that gives you Brett and Joey,” McCollum said. “It gives us a more multi-facet offense.”

After Lincoln Memorial scored, Northwest answered with a three-pointer from Witthus and another three-pointer from Ndow, making it 29-16.

Trailing by 13, the Railsplitters got hot behind the shooting of sophomore Cornelius Taylor. He drilled two straight long three-pointers followed by a two-point field goal to pull Lincoln Memorial to within five at 29-24.

Lincoln Memorial actually shot much better than the Bearcats, hitting 12 of 21 shots for 57 percent. But the Railsplitters attempted 11 fewer shots.

“This win was huge,” Dougherty said. “A few years ago, we kind of went to Christmas too early, which is easy to do if you start looking ahead to it. A big game like this right before Christmas was nice. Defensively, we believe we can bring a lot to the table. I think we showed that tonight.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri Western women fall to Truman State for first home loss

ST. JOSEPH – For just the fourth time in the last three seasons, the Missouri Western women’s basketball team (9-3) lost back-to-back games, falling 77-68 to Truman State (7-2), Tuesday night in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

A 6-2 MWSU spurt late in the fourth quarter pulled the Griffons within four (72-68) with one minute to go in the game. Truman State scored the next seven points of the game, three of those points coming on free throws to ice the Griffons’ first consecutive losses involving a non-conference opponent since March, 2016.

NOTABLES
– The loss was the Griffons’ first this season in the MWSU Fieldhouse (7-1)

– Cera Ledbetter finished with her first double-double as a Griffon with 12 points and 10 rebounds. It was Ledbetter’s third consecutive double-digit scoring effort

– KeShara Scott led the Griffons with 12 rebounds and is averaging 9.8 per game over the last four games

– Savannah Lentz tied a career high with five three-pointers (5-12) in the game

– Four Griffons scored in double-figures (Lent-16, Brittany Atkins-16, Melia Richardson-13 and Ledbetter)

– Missouri Western out-rebounded Truman State 37-33 and shot close to 44 percent from the field

– The Griffons tied a season-high with six blocks in the game

– Truman State shot better than 47 percent from the field and scored 42 of its points in the paint

UP NEXT
Missouri Western plays its last non-conference game of the season Dec. 30 when the Griffons host Quincy.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou holds off Stephen F. Austin for 82-81 win

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Kassius Robertson scored 23 points with a steal in the closing seconds, Jordan Barnett had 22 points and Missouri hung on to defeat Stephen F. Austin 82-81 on Tuesday night for its fifth-straight win.

It was Robertson who missed two free throw with 13.5 seconds to play before his hustle led to a turnover with 2.7 seconds left.

Aaron Augustin hit a 3-pointer with 48 seconds left to pull the Lumberjacks with 81-78 and after Johntay Porter made 1 of 2 from the line with 24 to go, Kevon Harris hit another three at 18 seconds to make it a one-point game.

Missouri (10-2) started out efficient, making 10 of its first 11 shots, six of them 3-pointers, including the last four. But SFA stayed close, making 9 of 18, and only trailed 28-21 after Barnett’s 3-pointer at the 9:23 mark.

The Tigers finished the first half making 8 of 12 3-pointers and 14 of 21 overall — plus 12 of 13 free throws. Still, they only led 48-40.

The Lumberjacks scored eight straight points, the last four by Shannon Bogues and turned that into a 18-6 run, closing to 66-65 on a free throws by Ty Holyfield with 5:56 to play. Leon Gilmore III made 1 of 2 free throws to tie the game at 70.

Robertson led Missouri with 23 points, 15 of those points from 3-pointers. Jordan Barnett followed with 22 points.

Kevon Harris scored 19 points and Holyfield added 18 to lead Stephen F. Austin (10-2), which was coming off an 83-82 win at LSU on Saturday.

BIG PICTURE

Stephen F. Austin: The Lumberjacks stifling defense sets up well for a conference title run, and maybe a tournament appearance. They forced 21 Missouri turnovers with the team that is second in the nation in steals getting 11.

Missouri: The Tigers continue to show they can compete without their star freshman, Michael Porter Jr., who is out with a back injury. Tuesday’s game was no doubt a test for Missouri, and being able to learn from and overcome the Lumberjacks’ stifling defense will help the Tigers later down the road.

UP NEXT

Stephen F. Austin heads back home to face Arlington Baptist in its last non-conference game on Thursday.

Missouri travels to St. Louis to face Illinois on Saturday. It’ll be the Tigers last non-conference game before beginning SEC play at South Carolina on Jan. 3.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State defeats Wright State Tuesday 66-50

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Obediah Church scored 13 points and blocked three shots, Alize Johnson added 12 points with 14 rebounds for his seventh double-double of the season, and Missouri State held off a second-half Wright State run to win 66-50 on Tuesday night.

Trailing by 18 at halftime, the Raiders closed to within 53-48 after Hall capped a 12-4 run with 3-pointer with 7:51 to play. But Church scored four straight to spark a 13-2 run that included his dunk with 1:31 left and the Bears won going away.

Jarrid Rhodes scored 12 points with three 3s for Missouri State (10-3), which has won eight of its last nine games.

Ryan Kreklow’s 3 sparked a 20-4 run capped by Church’s dunk and the Bears led 34-16 at halftime.

Justin Mitchell scored 18 points and Jaylon Hall added 10 for the Raiders (7-5), which saw its three-game win streak end.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women fall short at McKendree for ninth straight loss

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

LEBANON, Ill. – A basket by freshmen Mallory McConkey midway through the fourth quarter pulled Northwest Missouri State’s women’s basketball team into a 63-63 tie against McKendree Monday evening at Harry Statham Sports Center.

A three-point answer by McKendree put a damper on the rest of the game for the Bearcats. Northwest managed just two more points and that led to a 72-65 loss.

“I thought at times our effort was very good,” Northwest coach Buck Scheel said. “We were able to push the ball up the floor and get some good transition buckets.

“But then we turn around and have a couple of turnovers here and there and took some bad shots. Those little things add up.”

The Bearcats gave a gritty effort on the road. Northwest trailed 59-53 early in the fourth quarter and fought back, scoring eight of the next 10 points.

During the 8-2 run, Northwest got baskets from junior Maria Dentlinger, a three-pointer from freshman Jaelyn Haggard and a three-pointer from junior Kaylani Maiava that made it 61-61 with 5:25 left in the game.

Unfortunately, the nice offensive flow the Bearcats showed in the first half and much of the third quarter left Northwest in the final 4 minutes.

In the third quarter, Northwest and McKendree went back and forth. McKendree took a 37-36 lead to start the second half. Northwest went right back in front on a four-point play by junior Mallory McAndrews that put the Bearcats ahead 40-37.

The rest of the third quarter went exactly like that. There were 13 lead changes in the third quarter. But when the quarter ended, McKendree held a 57-53 lead.

The first half was similar except Northwest did build a nine-point lead early in the second quarter but let it slip away.

Still, Northwest put together its best first half on the road and took a slim 36-35 lead into halftime. The Bearcats did numerous things right to gain the slight advantage.

“One of the things I talked about first in the locker room after the game is when that effort is there and there all the time, good things can happen.”

Junior Macy Williams provided a big spark midway through the first quarter when Northwest fell behind 10-4. Consecutive field goals by Williams quickly pulled Northwest to within two points.

Trailing 19-17 late in the first quarter, Williams drilled a three-pointer that gave the Bearcats their first lead at 20-19. It was Williams’ ninth point in the first quarter.

Williams finished the first quarter with an assist that set up a three-point bucket by senior Mia Stillman. The trey sent the Bearcats into the second quarter with a 23-19 lead.

Northwest continued to ride the momentum. Senior Tanya Meyer drained a three-pointer and freshman Kylie Coleman stole a pass and drove the length of the court for a layup, giving the Bearcats a 28-19 lead and forcing a timeout by McKendree.

McKendree regrouped from the Bearcats’ 14-1 run and slowly pulled closer. McKendree eventually retook the lead at 33-32.

Undaunted by the lead change, Northwest answered with a basket by Haggard and solidified the lead when Haggard made a nice bounce pass that led to a Stillman layup.

The strong passing by the Bearcats helped them shoot 56 percent from the field in the first half.

“Tonight, throughout the game, I was very pleased with our effort,” Scheel said.

— Northwest Athletics —

No. 14 Kansas rolls past Omaha 109-64

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Svi Mykhailiuk struggled to get his shot to drop for three straight games, two of them losses and a third that easily could have been had the Kansas sharpshooter missed one more 3-pointer.

Instead, Mykhailiuk hit the shot to beat Nebraska.

He kept hitting them against Omaha.

Mykhailiuk knocked down six more 3s and poured in 26 points, Devonte Graham added 17 points and the No. 14 Jayhawks rolled to a 109-64 victory over the Mavericks on Monday night.

“Everybody has bad games. Everybody has good games,” Mykhailiuk said. “The last three games I didn’t shoot it well. Today I did shoot it well. That’s basketball, up and down.”

Lagerald Vick added 15 points and Malik Newman had 14 for the Jayhawks (9-2), who enjoyed a breather after gritting out a win over Syracuse and dropping back-to-back games to Washington and Arizona State.

But it was Mykhailiuk who got the offense going. He was 6 of 7 from beyond the arc, 10 of 13 from the field and added four rebounds and four assists to fill his stat line.

“He can play off a screen, spot up, drive it,” Omaha coach Derrin Hansen said. “When he gets his feet set, he not only makes them, it’s like, in-the-middle makes them. He’s hard to guard.”

Daniel Norl had 13 points and Zach Jackson had 10 to lead Omaha, which went 9 for 28 from beyond the arc, shot 33 percent from the field and was outrebounded 49-26 by the Jayhawks.

“I think we were just a little overwhelmed,” the Mavericks’ Matt Pile said.

The Jayhawks toyed with Omaha throughout much of the first half, but their hot outside shooting and massive size advantage in the paint allowed them to easily draw away.

Arizona State transfer Sam Cunliffe, who became eligible after the fall semester and was playing his first game in Allen Fieldhouse, started the first big surge by knocking down a 3 late in the first half.

Mykhailiuk and Graham added 3s and the Jayhawks took an 11-0 run into the break.

Cunliffe also had a couple of nifty alley-oop dunks, leaping up to spear the ball with one hand for his first points with the Jayhawks. He finished with nine points in 19 minutes.

“To be honest with you, I kind of imagined it being a 3, the first one, but I always knew if I got out and ran, someone would throw it,” he said. “Devonte happened to throw it.”

It didn’t help the Mavericks’ cause that they rely on an up-and-down style predicated on 3s, one that plays right into the Jayhawks’ hands. Their superior speed and talent showed as the Jayhawks hit the 100-point mark before the final media timeout, allowing them to empty the bench.

Even walk-on James Sosinski got into the game. The tight end was plucked from the Kansas football team to provide depth in practice, and he wound up scoring four points in the final minutes.

“I would like for us to put the clamps on somebody and we still haven’t done that,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “But we’ve played consistently well this year except for back-to-back games, a four-day stretch where we weren’t very good. Other than that we played consistently well.”

STATS AND STREAKS

Udoka Azubuike had 11 points and 12 rebounds in 22 minutes for Kansas. The nation’s field-goal percentage leader was 5 of 7 from the floor. … The Mavericks were facing their highest-ranked opponent in their Division I era. … Vick also had nine rebounds. … Omaha was outscored 21-7 on the break.

BIG PICTURE

Omaha faced its fourth opponent that was ranked or currently resides in the Top 25, though that’s only part of a difficult schedule. The Mavericks also played on the road for the 11th time in 14 games.

Kansas has done just fine against members of the Summit League, beating South Dakota State earlier this season. Now the Jayhawks need to prove they can beat someone from the Pac-12. They lost to Oregon in last year’s NCAA Tournament, and to the Huskies and Sun Devils this season. Stanford is next.

UP NEXT

Omaha plays Montana State on Thursday night, its fourth game in nine days.

Kansas plays the Cardinal on Thursday night in Sacramento, California.

— Associated Press —

No. 16 Tigers top Xavier women 74-48 for 11th straight win

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Sophie Cunningham scored 20 points, Cierra Porter had her 17th career double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 16 Missouri won its 11th straight with a 74-48 victory over Xavier on Monday at the West Palm Invitational.

It’s Mizzou’s longest winning streak since 13 consecutive victories to open the 2015-16 season.

Porter’s block on Xavier’s last possession of the first half started a Missouri fast break and Jordan Chavis hit a 3-pointer just before the buzzer to give the Tigers a 39-27 lead. Chavis scored all nine of her points in the first half and Porter added six points and six rebounds.

Lauren Aldridge’s no-look pass to Jordan Frericks under the basket made it 53-34 midway through the third quarter and Missouri cruised in the fourth.

Aldridge and Frericks each added 10 points for Missouri (11-1), which lost to Western Kentucky 79-76 in the season opener. In the last three games, Cunningham has combined to score 74 points, on just 34 shots, in 75 minutes. Cunningham was also 13 of 21 from 3-point range during the span.

Freshman Deja Ross led Xavier (6-4) with three 3-pointers and 13 points.

— Associated Press —

K-State women defeat winless Chicago State by 48

MANHATTAN, Kansas – Playing its second game in three days, Kansas State showed no signs of strain as the Wildcats scored a season-high 99 points to defeat Chicago State, 99-51. The 99 points were the most since K-State scored 102 against Florida Atlantic on Dec. 13, 2015.

Kansas State (8-2) had three players reach double figures, as freshman Rachel Ranke scored a career-high 24 points and buried a career-best seven 3-pointers in 23 minutes off the bench. Ranke is the first Wildcat to make seven or more 3-pointers in a game since Brittany Chambers knocked down nine against Texas Southern on March 21, 2013.

Joining Ranke’s effort was equaled by junior Kayla Goth and sophomore Peyton Williams, as each notched a double-double. Goth tallied 19 points, a career-high 11 assists, five rebounds, four steals and a block. Goth is the first K-State player with 10 or more assists in three or more games since Shalee Lehning in the 2008-09 season.

Williams tallied her third career double-double and her second this season with 15 points and 10 rebounds while also handing out three assists. Williams has surpassed double figures in points in four of K-State’s last five games.

Chicago State (0-13) was led by Tyeshia Bowers with 15 points.

For the night, K-State shot 49.3 percent from the field (34-of-69), while carding a 11-of-28 effort from beyond the arc. The 11 connections from beyond the arc are the second-highest total this season for K-State, as the Wildcats knocked down 12 against Omaha on Nov. 13.

Kansas State spanned the first and second quarters with a 13-2 run to establish a 31-12 lead with 7:26 remaining in the first half. During the opening quarter, senior guard Karyla Middlebrook made her season debut and tallied three points in the first frame. Middlebrook finished the night with five points, two rebounds, one assist and one steal in 13 minutes.

K-State held a 51-21 lead at the half, as Ranke connected on a pair of 3-point field goals in the final minute to send the Wildcats to their largest lead of the opening half. The 51 first half points were a season high and marked the most since K-State scored 51 against West Virginia on January 1, 2017.

The Wildcats shot 53.1 percent (17-of-32) from the field in the opening half and were boosted by a 21-2 edge in points off turnovers. This is the fifth game this season K-State has scored 20 or more points off opponent turnovers.

K-State was led in the opening half by Ranke and Goth with 15 and 13 points, respectively. Goth added five assists, four rebounds and three steals to her first half stat line. All nine Wildcats that played in the first half registered at least two points.

The Wildcats would hold off the Cougars in the third quarter, 19-16, for a 70-37 lead after three. Williams and Shaelyn Martin combined to score 16 of K-State’s points in the third quarter, as Williams tallied nine and Martin added seven.

Martin finished the night with nine points, five rebounds, four assists and two steals. With her four assists, Martin improved her career total to 347 and is tied for ninth in program history for career assists with Carlisa Thomas (1983-87).

In the fourth quarter, K-State scored a season-high 29 points by shooting 61.1 percent in the final stanza. The Wildcats were 4-of-5 from beyond the arc in the final quarter, as Ranke connected on three attempts and Goth added the fourth.

Kansas State concludes the non-conference portion of its schedule on Thursday, as the Wildcats host Northern Iowa at 7 p.m.

— K-State Athletics —

Kansas women lose in OT at St. John’s

For first time this season, Kansas women’s basketball needed overtime to decide the outcome of its first road contest after a last second shot was a 10th of a second too late. After 14 lead changes in 45 minutes, St. John’s finished on top, downing Kansas, 65-53, on Monday night inside Carnesecca Arena.

After a last-second bucket by junior forward Austin Richardson was waved off by the officials, the game was sent into an extra period after the Red Storm (7-3) tied the game in the final seconds of regulation. Following Richardson’s near game-winning shot, the Jayhawks’ (8-2) offense went cold and didn’t get a field goal to fall in overtime, as St. John’s outscored Kansas 14-2 in added time.

The Jayhawks were led by junior guards Brianna Osorio and Christalah Lyons who netted 14 and 12 points, respectively. Lyon’s 12 points notches the ninth time this season the Dallas, Texas native scored in double figures.

Junior center Chelsea Lott and senior guard Eboni Watts each notched career-high scoring and rebounding performances. Lott netted four points and grabbed five rebounds, while Watts scored five points and brought down six boards.

St. John’s was led by four players who scored 10 points or more. Junior guard Akina Wllere led all scorers with 18 points, five rebounds and four assists. Senior forward Maya Singleton was the only player on either team to register a double-double netting 14 points and bringing down 24 rebounds. Sophomore guard Alisha Kebbe and freshman guard Qadashah Hoppie added 11 and 10 points, respectively.

After starting the game on an 8-3 run, the Red Storm’s shots stopped falling, shooting just 1-of-12 from the field to end the period. During St. John’s four-and-a-half-minute scoring drought, the Jayhawks went on an 8-0 run, featuring buckets from Lyons, redshirt-sophomore center Tyler Johnson and Richardson to give Kansas an 11-8 lead at the three-and-a-half-minute mark.

Five-straight points from Hoppie put St. John’s back on top by two, but a 3-point basket from Richardson and a layup from Lott gave the Jayhawks the lead, 16-13, to end the first quarter.

The Red Storm held the Jayhawks to just six points in the second period, while forcing nine KU turnovers. Despite holding St. John’s to shooting just 26.7 percent in the quarter and out rebounding the Red Storm 26-19 through the first 20 minutes of play, both teams’ struggles offensively in the quarter kept the game tied at 22 going into the locker room at the half.

St. John’s Singleton started the half off with a jumper before Osorio went on a 6-2 run to give Kansas a 28-26 lead in the early minutes of the second half. The Red Storm answered with a 5-0 run to regain the lead, but the Jayhawks continued to respond to each of the Red Storm’s run with buckets of their own.

A pair of free throws from freshman center Bailey Helgren cut the St. John’s lead to one. Osorio continued her impressive offensive period with her first 3-point bucket of the night to give Kansas a two-point lead. The Las Vegas, Nevada native netted 10 of her 14 points in the third quarter, shooting perfect from the field. The Jayhawks and Red Storm continued to battle back and forth as time in the third quarter expired, trading off on each of the last eight buckets heading into the final 10 minutes down 42-40.

St. John’s led by as many as five points in the first four minutes of the final quarter, but a series of Kansas offensive plays, including key free throws from Lyons and Watts put KU on top, 48-47, with under five minutes to play. Wellere knocked in two free throws from the charity stripe to give the Red Storm lead once again, but Richardson immediately responded with a jumper to give the Jayhawks a 50-49 lead.

Lyons connected on one of her two attempts from the free throw line to extend the KU lead to two, but a Singleton layup would tie the game up at 51 with 21 seconds remaining in the game. Richardson nailed a jumper at the buzzer that appeared to give Kansas the victory in the final seconds, but the bucket was waved off following review and the Jayhawks headed to overtime for the first time in the 2017-18 season.

The Red Storm netted seven-straight points before the Jayhawks could score in overtime. Kansas went cold in extra time, scoring only two points off of two free throws from junior guard Kylee Kopatich. St. John’s ended on a 7-0 run to hand Kansas its second loss of the season, 65-53.

UP NEXT
The Jayhawks face Iona on Wednesday, December 20 inside Hynes Athletics Center.

— KU Athletics —

No. 16 Mizzou women defeat Indiana for 10th straight win

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Sophie Cunningham scored 19 points and No. 16 Missouri rolled its 10th straight win with a 75-55 victory over Indiana at the West Palm Beach Invitational on Sunday.

Cunningham, coming off a season-high 35-point performance against Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, scored 17 of her points in the third quarter when the Tigers outscored the Hoosiers 28-14 to break open a game Missouri led by seven at halftime. She was 4 of 6 from 3-point range in 22 minutes. Amber Smith added 10 points, Cierra Porter grabbed 12 rebounds and Hannah Schuchts blocked five shots.

With the win, the Tigers (10-1) tied the program’s sixth-longest streak.

Amanda Cahill scored a season-best 18 points and Tyra Buss 14 for Indiana (6-5), which had a two-game win streak snapped.

Missouri outrebounded Indiana 46-28, 16-8 on the offensive glass, and had a 16-3 advantage in second-chance points.

— Associated Press —

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