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Missouri State women upset No. 3 seed Iowa State to advance to Sweet 16

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Alexa Willard scored 17 points to help 11th-seeded Missouri State stun third-seeded Iowa State 69-60 on Monday, becoming the only double-digit seed to reach this year’s Sweet 16.

Abby Hipp had 11 points and Danielle Gitzen scored 10 for the Lady Bears (25-9), who will compete in an NCAA Tournament regional semifinal for the first time since the Jackie Stiles-led team in 2001. They’ll face either Stanford or BYU in Chicago after becoming the ninth team in 10 years to reach the Sweet 16 as a double-digit seed.

Iowa State (26-9) played much of the fourth quarter within a possession of the lead, only to let Missouri State answer time and time again. Sydney Manning extended the Lady Bears’ lead to 60-54 on a 3, her only field goal of the game, and Willard followed with a jumper.

Gitzen answered an empty Cyclones possession with two free throws, and Bridget Carleton threw the ball away at the 1:07 mark with Iowa State down 65-58. The Cyclones then inexplicably failed to foul Missouri State, allowing the Lady Bears to burn nearly 30 seconds off the clock.

Carleton had 31 points in her final game to lead Iowa State, which shot a ghastly 2 of 17 on 3s and 35.6 percent overall.

Missouri State controlled the first half, jumping ahead 33-30 at the break after Iowa State — which makes 8.9 3s a game — missed its first five tries from deep. A 10-2 run to open the second half gave the Lady Bears a 43-32 lead midway through the third quarter.

Finally faced with the idea that their Cyclones were in trouble, Iowa State’s fans got into the act. The Cyclones followed, reeling off nine quick points to make it a one-possession game. But a crucial 3 by Willard helped Missouri State push its lead to 49-45 entering the final quarter.

It might have seemed as though a game-deciding run was inevitable for the Cyclones. But it was the Lady Bears, fresh off a dominant win over sixth-seeded DePaul, who took control when it mattered.

The jubilant Bears ran into the crowd to celebrate with their band after the final horn, and a few of them picked up coach Kellie Harper’s son in celebration while screaming “We’re going to Chicago!”

THE BIG PICTURE

Iowa State: The Cyclones fell a game shy of matching the school record for wins in a season. This was a brutal way to end the year — but it was still a remarkable turnaround for a program that bottomed out at 14-17 a year ago.

Missouri State: The Lady Bears have beaten three straight ranked opponents — Drake, DePaul and Iowa State — in road or neutral games. They’ll be underdogs the rest of the way, but they’re much more dangerous than their mid-major backstory might suggest. Iowa State was just the fifth opponent in 34 tries to outrebound them, and even then it was just 38-37.

UP NEXT

Missouri State moves on to the Chicago Regional semifinals.

— Associated Press —

Missouri athletics files NCAA appeals brief

COLUMBIA, Mo. – The University of Missouri took the next step in the process of appealing overly-harsh sanctions imposed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) Committee on Infractions by filing its 64-page appeals brief with the organization’s Appeals Committee Monday afternoon.

“We believe that the penalties our programs received were a clear abuse of the Committee’s discretion based upon existing NCAA bylaws. Our staff and legal team have worked tirelessly to research and develop a well-written appeal that accurately reflects our position,” said Mizzou Director of Athletics Jim Sterk. “We look forward to having the opportunity to meet face to face with the NCAA Appeals Committee later this year, and it is our sincere hope that at the end of this process, the penalties assessed are consistent with the nature of the violations and take into account our swift response.”

In its appeals brief, the University argues the following:

–  The penalties handed down were contrary to NCAA case precedent;

–  They were not supported, or appropriate, given the nature of the violations;

–  They could have a chilling effect on future NCAA enforcement processes.

The NCAA Committee on Infractions now has 30 days to respond to Mizzou’s appeal, and following that, an in-person hearing date will be established for Mizzou to appear before the NCAA Appeals Committee.

“A message is sent to the membership every time the NCAA Committee on Infractions adjudicates cases. In this instance, the message is loud and clear that neither proactive self-reporting nor exemplary cooperation is of any value to the committee. I am shocked this is the message the NCAA wants to send to its membership in today’s climate,” Sterk added.

On Jan. 31, the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions imposed severe penalties on Mizzou’s football, baseball and softball programs in the form of postseason bans, as well as scholarship and recruiting restrictions. The sweeping sanctions were completely unexpected because the violations resulted from the actions made by a single, rogue, part-time employee who acted on her own. The university self-reported the incident as soon as officials became aware.

“As the university prepared its vigorous response to these unfair penalties, the spirits of our student-athletes have been buoyed by the widespread support of our students, alumni, university supporters and our elected officials in Jefferson City and in Washington D.C. That unified support has been most gratifying for all of us associated with this great institution,” Sterk said. “We will continue to work diligently to make this situation right for our student-athletes, coaches and fans who are impacted by these penalties as they now stand.”

— Mizzou Athletics —

Griffon men in 4th after first two rounds at Lindenwood

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s golf team finished the first and second rounds of the Lindenwood Invitational on Monday. The Griffons are in fourth place after day one, shooting 298 in both rounds for a combined score of 596. Patrick McCarthy leads the Griffons and is tied for sixth entering Tuesday’s third round.

Patrick McCarthy’s score of 144 over the first two rounds is the best on the team. After shooting a 73 in the opening round, McCarthy shaved two strokes off in the second round. His second-round score of 71 was the best single round score by a Missouri Western golfer on Monday.

Tom Buffington is currently tied for 17th after the first two rounds. Buffington shot a 76 and 73 for a combined score of 149. Jett Simmons scored a 77 in back-to-back rounds for a 154, placing him tied for 41st.

Jake Mikesch had one of the best rounds of the day for the Griffons in the first, finishing with a score of 72 in the round. Mikesch enters Tuesday with a total score of 156.

Lucas Horseman finished with a two-round total of 159 to round out the Missouri Western scoring.

The Lindenwood Invitational will resume on Tuesday morning.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest’s McCollum, Witthus, Hudgins earn NABC all-district honors

The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) announced today the 2019 NABC Coaches’ Division II All-District teams and coaches, recognizing the best men’s collegiate basketball student-athletes and coaches in the division.  Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC in NCAA Division II, these 88 student-athletes represent the finest basketball players across America.

Northwest Missouri State University head coach Ben McCollum earned central region coach of the year honors after guiding the Bearcats to their sixth straight MIAA regular season title and fourth straight MIAA tournament crown.

Senior Joey Witthus (Chanhassen, Minnesota) and redshirt freshman Trevor Hudgins (Manhattan, Kansas) were each named to the central region first team.

Central
First Team                                                                          Second Team
Kevin Buckingham, Southeastern Oklahoma              Javion Blake, Washburn
Ryan Bruggeman, Southwest Minnesota State           Brandon Myer, UM Duluth
Gage Davis, St. Cloud State                                             Harrison Cleary, UM Crookston
Trevor Hudgins, Northwest Missouri State                 Jhonathan Dunn, Southern Nazarene
Cam Martin, Missouri Southern State                          Ian Smith, Northern State
Joey Witthus, Northwest Missouri State

Coach of the Year: Ben McCollum, Northwest Missouri State

MWSU women in 3rd after day one at Jennies Invite

WARRENSBURG, Mo. – Missouri Western Women’s Golf sits in third place after the opening round of the Jennies Invitational on Monday, finishing with a combined team score of 321. Shi Qing Ong is competing for yet another tournament win, shooting a 75 (+4) for the second-best score in the field.

The Griffons sit in the top-three of a field that includes 14 teams, all in NCAA Div. II. The team is just four strokes back of Northwest Missouri for the second slot, while host Central Missouri leads the competition with a score of 313.

Continuing momentum from her first two wins this spring was Ong. Ong’s score of 75 (+4) lands her in second place heading into the second round as she trails Central Missouri’s Molly Saporito by just two strokes. Ong led the field in par-four scoring and was one of only eight golfers with multiple birdies.

Anna Bech also neared the top of the leaderboard with her 79 (+8) on Monday, tying her for 10th. Bech led the entire field of 75 in birdies, as she was the only golfer with three.

Chong Yong is tied for 20th after shooting 82 (+11), finishing the first round with nine pars.

Jenna Kosmatka shot an 85 (+14) and Katie Irvin shot a 91 (+20) for the Griffons.

The second round of the Jennies Invitational will begin at 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, with Missouri Western scheduled to tee off at 10:36 a.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Griffons drop series finale at Lindenwood 5-0

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Lindenwood’s Blake Beckmann held Missouri Western to just two hits and three total base runners in a complete game shutout of the Griffons in the series finale between the two teams on Sunday.

After Anthony Castaneda threw a complete game shutout for the Griffons on Saturday, Beckmann answered to give Lindenwood (14-15, 8-7) a 2-1 series win over the Griffs (11-11, 9-6) with a 5-0 win on Sunday.

NOTABLES

  • Fahd Shakeel’s two-out double in the ninth ended a run of 19-straight Griffons retired by Beckmann
  • Shakeel and Josh Robinson each had one hit in the game
  • Kyle Snuttjer was hit by a pitch in the third, the only other base runner for MWSU and the last before Shakeel’s double in the ninth
  • Jacob Miller got the start for the Griffons, his first appearance since suffering an injury on March 2 at Missouri Southern
  • Miller went three innings, giving up four runs – three earned – on five hits. He struck out two and walked two
  • Lindenwood scored four in the third on Miller, three with two out
  • Beckmann’s complete game was the first by a Lindenwood starter this season. He struck out 11 and didn’t walk a batter

UP NEXT

  • Missouri Western travels to Northwest Missouri for a mid-week game on March 26 before hosting Central Oklahoma in a three-game set March 29-31.

— MWSU Athletics —

Missouri women lose at Iowa in second round of NCAA Tournament

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Megan Gustafson and the surging Hawkeyes are off to the Sweet 16.

Iowa might evolve into a true Final Four contender if Gustafson can get the kind of help that she got from her teammates on Sunday.

Gustafson scored 24 points with 19 rebounds, Makenzie Meyer added 18 points and second-seeded Iowa pounded Missouri 68-52 to advance to its second Sweet 16 in five years.

Kathleen Doyle scored 15 points for the Hawkeyes (28-6), who held the Tigers to 36 percent shooting and blew them away with a blistering 23-4 run in the second half. They’ll face either Kentucky or North Carolina State, who play each other on Monday, in the semifinals of the Greensboro Regional next week.

“We are just wanting to keep playing basketball,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said. “We want to make it to the Sweet Sixteen because it’s a huge accomplishment. But it’s not about a legacy. It’s more about a sentiment; it’s more about being together.”

Gustafson was brilliant in the first two rounds, combining for 54 points and 35 rebounds. But the Hawkeyes showed how truly dangerous they can be when Gustafson’s teammates turn up the pressure on defense and take advantage of the attention their star center demands on the other end.

“We made them work really hard to get shots. And Megan was there to clean up the boards,” Bluder said. “They were just not getting any really good looks. When we were able to keep getting defensive stops, it gave us a mental edge.

Tania Davis hit her first 3 of the game to open the fourth quarter, putting Iowa up 50-41, and Meyer’s corner 3 pushed the lead to 13. Gustafson’s jumper over two defenders made it 60-43 with 4:21 to go, capping a spurt that helped Iowa clinch its highest win total in 31 years.

“We really can’t control a lot of things, but we’re able to control our effort on defense,” Gustafson said.

Amber Smith scored 21 points for Missouri (24-11). The Tigers bowed out in the second round for the third time in four years after scoring just 23 points in the second half.

Iowa held Mizzou star Sophie Cunningham to just eight points — 10 below her average — on 3 of 11 shooting.

“We didn’t feel like we could take away everything. Megan demands so much attention. The last thing we wanted to do was give up 3s and easy touches inside,” Missouri coach Robin Pingeton said. “It makes it hard when you’re having a hard time scoring.”

Iowa struggled mightily in beating 15th-seeded Mercer on Friday, and it got off to another sluggish start that was punctuated when Missouri’s Jordan Roundtree hit a half-court bank shot to beat the first-quarter buzzer.

Iowa finally woke up in the second quarter.

The Hawkeyes shored up their defense and started feeding Gustafson in the post, fueling a 15-2 run that put the Hawkeyes ahead 33-29 at the break. Missouri responded, tying the game at 39 on an Smith jumper, but Gustafson buried two more inside jumpers to push Iowa ahead 47-41 heading into the fourth.

THE BIG PICTURE

Iowa: Gustafson received a standing ovation when she was finally pulled from her final home game with 22.4 seconds to go. “It was a bittersweet moment (leaving the court the final time), but mostly sweet because we’re moving onto the Sweet 16,” Gustafson said.

Missouri: The Tigers’ senior class elevated the program to new heights even though they never led the team past the second round. Missouri will likely go through a rebuild next season with starters Cunningham, Cierra Porter and Lauren Aldridge set to graduate.

OOPS

Iowa coach Lisa Bluder grabbed a microphone and screamed “How `bout them Hawks!” before launching into a speech thanking the crowd for their support shortly after the game. But before Bluder could blurt out her first sentence, the Missouri band started playing its final song of the season. Bluder said “I’ll wait” and stopped talking, but the crowd drowned out Mizzou’s pep band with their trademark “Let’s Go Hawks!” chant.

— Associated Press —

Northwest baseball splits doubleheader at No. 10 Missouri Southern

JOPLIN, Missouri – Northwest Missouri State split a doubleheader against No. 10-ranked Missouri Southern on Sunday.

Northwest (11-14 overall, 7-8 MIAA) took the opener, 6-3, but the Lions bounced back with a 16-7 triumph in the nightcap.

GAME ONE
Northwest scored three runs in the second. Senior catcher Alixon Herrera led off the inning by drawing a walk. Junior first baseman Connor Quick singled down the third base line. Senior infielder Mondesi Gutierrez reached on a fielder’s choice when his sacrifice bunt attempt turned into an out at third. Senior outfielder Derek Hussey reached on a fielding error and loaded the bases for the Bearcats. The first two runs came when junior infielder Matt Gastner doubled to left center, scoring Gutierrez and Quick. The third run came after senior infielder Logan Rycraft singled and scored Hussey. Northwest left the bases loaded.

Missouri Southern closed the Northwest lead to just one after recording two runs in the fifth.

The Bearcats added one in the sixth and two in the bottom of the seventh to increase their lead to 6-2 over the Lions. Small ball and successful base running assisted Northwest in controlling much of the game.

The Lions rallied to score one more in the top of the eight before being shut down by the Bearcats’ pitching staff in the the ninth.

Junior pitcher Quintin Van Ackeren got his team-leading third win of the season, going seven full innings while giving up three runs on six hits and adding four strikeouts.

Senior Trevor Dudar notched his fifth save on the season for the Bearcats.

GAME TWO
During the first inning, both squads got off to a hot start combining to score five runs. Heading into the second, Missouri Southern controlled a one-run lead over Northwest, 3-2.

After a three-up, three-down second inning, the Bearcats notched two more runs in the bottom of third after Quick tripled to right field, scoring junior infielder Calvin Rudolph and Herrera and took the lead over the Lions, 4-3.

Missouri Southern added two of its own in the top of the fourth after a two-run homer to left by senior outfielder Mike Million. The Lions retook the lead, 5-4.

Northwest bounced back in the home half of the fourth scoring one run and tying the game at 5-5.

The Lions would go on to plate three runs in the fifth, one in the sixth, four in the seventh and three in the eight to take a commanding lead over the Bearcats. Northwest would score two runs to counter in the seventh, but it just wasn’t enough to stop the Missouri Southern offense.

Northwest falls to 11-14 overall and 7-8 in MIAA play.

NOTES: Herrera extended his hitting streak to six games…junior first baseman Conner Quick and Herrera extend their team-leading on-base streaks to nine games apiece.

— Northwest Athletics —

Western tennis falls at home to No. 8 Washburn

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western (8-8, 0-3 MIAA) took on No. 8 Washburn (13-1, 4-0 MIAA) on Sunday afternoon at Genesis Health Club in St. Joseph. The Ichabods proved why they are ranked in the top-10 in the nation, defeating the Griffons by a score of 6-1.

Washburn swept the three doubles matches on Sunday, but had trouble fending off Missouri Western’s Karolina Ström and Joanna Abreu Roman. The pair nearly escaped with a win, but fell 7-6 in the final doubles match. Ström and Abreu Roman have proved to be the Griffons’ most productive doubles team, totaling 13 wins this season compared to just four losses.

The Griffons fell in five of the six matches in singles. Giving Missouri Western the point on the number one courts was Ström. Ström improves to 11-2 this spring after her 6-2, 7-5 victory on Sunday.

Bojana Vuksan came close to securing another win for the Griffons, but fell in a three-set match on the number six courts. Vuksan won the first set by a convincing 6-0 margin, but fell in the final two sets.

Missouri Western will hit the road for its Oklahoma road trip next weekend, beginning with a match against Central Oklahoma (9-2, 3-0 MIAA). The Bronchos’ only two losses this spring have come against NCAA Div. I opponents.

MWSU VS. WU
SINGLES
Karolina Ström (MWSU) def. Jacqueline Engelbrecht (WU) 6-2, 7-5
Alexis Czapinski (WU) def. Mireia Birosta (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0
Logan Morrissey (WU) def. Joanna Abreu Roman (MWSU) 6-4, 6-1
Maria Soler Valverde (WU) def. Federica Salmaso (MWSU) 6-1, 6-0
Svea Crohn (WU) def. Ciarra Gilmore (MWSU) 6-0, 6-0
Madison Lysaught (WU) def. Bojana Vuksan (MWSU) 0-6, 6-4, 10-2

DOUBLES
Czapinski/Morrissey (WU) def. Birosta/Gilmore (MWSU) 6-0
Crohn/Engelbrecht,Jacqueli (WU) def. Abreu Roman/Strom (MWSU) 7-6
Fields/Valverde (WU) def. Salmaso/Vuksan (MWSU) 6-2

— MWSU Athletics —

Castaneda strikes out 14 as Griffons even series at Lindenwood

ST. CHARLES, Mo. – Lindenwood (13-15, 7-7) might have been the first team since Feb. 2 to score more than a run on Missouri Western baseball (11-10, 9-5) starter Anthony Castaneda, but the senior pitcher and his team still evened the series with the Lions in a 5-2 victory Saturday afternoon.

Castaneda tied the MWSU single-game strikeout record – for the second time this season – with a complete game 14-K performance.

NOTABLES

  • Castaneda shut the Lions out for the first four innings before they scratched across two in the bottom of the fifth
  • The senior recorded 14 strikeouts for the second time this season, matching his season opening performance at Oklahoma Baptist. He now has four games with 12 or more strikeouts in seven starts
  • Andrew Curry led off the fourth with a single; stole second then got to third on a wild pitch before scoring when Zach Pych reached on an error
  • Lindenwood was charged with eight errors in the game
  • After Lindenwood took a 2-1 lead in the fifth, the Griffons regained the lead with three in the sixth
  • Curry scored the first in the sixth on a wild pitch
  • Nolan Monthei drove in the other two with a single up the middle
  • The Griffons took advantage of another Lindenwood error that allowed Monthei to score an insurance run in the ninth
  • Castaneda improved to 6-0 on the season, allowing just seven hits through nine innings. He struck out 14 and walked two
  • Monthei was 2-for-4 with two RBIs and a run scored

UP NEXT

  • The rubber match comes Sunday at a re-scheduled time of 11 a.m. in St. Charles.

— MWSU Athletics —

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