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No. 1 Bearcats remain unbeaten with win over Fort Hays State

Northwest2013riggertMARYVILLE, Mo. – Sharing the basketball is a hallmark for the No. 1-ranked Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team. But in uncharacteristic fashion, the Bearcats went into halftime with only two assists against Fort Hays State.

This one statistic helped explain why Northwest held a slim three-point lead after the first half.

The Bearcats quickly returned to form at the start of the second half. They scored their first two field goals on assists by junior Justin Pitts. The Bearcats’ basketball world was back in order.

Northwest built a double-digit lead and carried it to an 82-72 victory Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena. Northwest improved to 18-0 overall an 10-0 in the MIAA.

“It is just game by game,” said Northwest junior Brett Dougherty about the undefeated start to the season. “We don’t look too far ahead. This week, when we played Nebraska-Kearney, we focused on Kearney. When that game is done, we take it to the next one.

“Coach always preaches that being undefeated is a result, but the way you get there is taking it one step at a time.”

The Bearcats set the tone in the second half when Pitts passed the ball inside to Dougherty for a layup. On the next possession, Pitts hit junior Xavier Kurth in the corner for a three-pointer. The back-to-back field goals gave Northwest a 41-33 lead.

“I think when you are assisting the ball, it is a good sign your offense is doing well and moving it,” said Dougherty, who finished with 10 points. “In the first half, we struggled a little bit with that. In the second half, we did a little bit better.”

Fort Hays, which dropped to 10-7 and 4-5 in the MIAA, kept battling. Northwest held a 45-39 lead with 13 minutes left, and that was when the Bearcats got real separation from the pesky Tigers.

A three-pointer by senior Zach Schneider pushed Northwest’s lead to 48-39. On the next possession, senior Anthony Woods slipped a nice pass inside that Dougherty turned into a reverse layup, making it 50-39.

“That was huge,” said Northwest associate head coach Austin Meyer said. “There wasn’t a lot of flow to the game.”

Pitts, who finished with 23 points, followed with two free throws and then scored a two-point field goal off an assist from Schneider. The 14-0 run ended with two free throws from freshman Ryan Welty, making it 59-39.

To the Tigers’ credit, they didn’t quit. They started firing three-pointers and making them. They closed to 70-60 with 5 minutes, 58 seconds left on a three-pointer by Rob Davis.

And with 1:30 left, Northwest held a 72-64 lead. Two free throws by Pitts with 1:04 left put the Bearcats up 74-64.

It was fitting that the last field goal by Northwest came on a nice pass from senior Chris-Ebou Ndow that led to a layup by Woods with 44 seconds remaining that pushed Northwest’s lead back to 10 at 76-66

“We were pleased with our energy and effort most of the game,” Meyer said. “We knew they were a good offensive rebounding team. We didn’t do a good job of blocking out.

“As far as being in the game, and playing hard, we did a good job of that.”

After jumping to a 21-9 lead, Northwest hit the cruise control button and coasted into halftime ahead 36-33 lead.

The Bearcats never trailed in the first half, but after their initial burst, they didn’t quite have the energy they displayed in the second half against Nebraska-Kearney on Thursday.

Early on, it appeared Northwest was going to take a double-digit lead into halftime. Back-to-back three-pointers by Ndow gave the Bearcats a 12-4 lead.

Northwest held a 29-20 lead when the sputtering began. A few times Northwest made great passes to setup a layup, but the layup didn’t fall through the nets.

The Bearcats also lost some focus at the free throw line, missing seven in 20 attempts. Those misses allowed Fort Hays to slowly crawl back into the game.

“We stepped off the peddle a little bit and let them get a chance to come back and they took the chance and played really well,” said Ndow, who finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds. “It wasn’t just us playing bad. They came ready. They really wanted this game and they showed it.”

Fort Hays ended the first half with all the momentum when Trey O’Neil nailed a 30-foot trey with a few seconds on the clock that helped the Tigers close to three.

The focus was definitely there for the Bearcats in the second half. They made all 16 of their free throw attempts.

“I think everybody has the confidence to step up and hit free throws when they are in the game,” Ndow said. “In the second half, we needed some big free throws and everybody stepped up and knocked them down.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Western women grind out four-point win over Nebraska-Kearney

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – If nothing else, the Missouri Western women’s basketball team discovered it can win a game despite shooting worse than 35 percent from the field and getting out-rebounded by 10. That’s exactly what the Griffons (14-5, 6-4) did Saturday afternoon in a 55-51 win over Nebraska Kearney (5-12, 1-8).

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western’s 55 points were the fewest the team has scored in a victory this season
– The Griffons shot just 36.4 percent from the field, 16.7 percent from three-point range and 68.4 percent from the free throw line
– Nebraska-Kearney out-rebounded Missouri Western 42-42
– The Griffons were aided by outscoring Nebraska Kearney 22-11 in the second quarter after being outscored 16-10 in the first

TOP PERFORMERS
– Chelsea Dewey had 14 points and a team-high six rebounds
– Dwanisha Tate led Missouri Western with 15 points on 6-13 shooting from the field to go with her four rebounds
– Melia Richardson went 4-9 from the field and scored a season-high 12 points
– Sefulu Faavae also had six rebounds and a team-high three assists to go with her five points

UP NEXT
Missouri Western gets a break next week with no midweek game before hosting Northwest Missouri (7-10, 2-8) next Saturday, Jan. 28 at 2 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou’s skid reaches 10 with close loss to Ole Miss

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Sebastian Saiz recorded his third-consecutive double-double, scoring 19 points to go with 10 rebounds as Ole Miss defeated Missouri 75-71 Saturday.

It’s the 22nd career double-double for Saiz, who is the Southeastern Conference’s active rebounding leader and the only player in the conference averaging a double-double at 15.2 points and 11.6 rebounds per game.

Terrence Davis had 18 points and 11 rebounds, and Deandre Burnett added 14 points, shooting 3-for-6 from 3-point ranges.

Missouri coach Kim Anderson said double-teaming Saiz was the Tigers’ primary game plan.

“We did a decent job, but there were probably five times where we were late doubling him,” Anderson said. “So, consequently, when you don’t get a good double, (Saiz) did a pretty good job of clearing the double, making the pass, and then you’ve got to scamper back and they make one extra pass and they’ve got a wide open shot. I thought that burned us a few times.”

Kevin Puryear led all scorers with a career-high 26 points to go with eight rebounds, shooting 11-for-14 from the field and hitting all four of his 3-point shots. Russell Woods finished with 13 points and 11 rebounds, and Terrence Phillips had 10 points, 10 assists and five rebounds, but fouled out with 14 seconds remaining.

Puryear, who had struggled in conference play, making just 5 of his last 26 shot attempts, was not thrilled about achieving a career-high in a loss, but said he can still build off the performance.

“These last three or four games have been really frustrating,” Puryear said. “Our whole coaching staff has done a great job of just trying to keep me calm…This gives me momentum going into further games.”

Ole Miss (12-7, 3-4 Southeastern Conference) assumed an early double-digit lead following a peculiar start, in which Saiz was assessed a flagrant foul in the first 16 seconds for elbowing Missouri’s Russell Woods while going after a loose ball. The Rebels were up 22-10 within 6 minutes of play, but Missouri steadily closed the gap behind 11-point first halves from Woods and Kevin Puryear, and trailed 39-33 at halftime.

The Tigers (5-13, 0-6) put on arguably their best offensive performance of the season in the second half, shooting 9-for-17 from 3-point range — including 4 of 5 to start — and eventually taking a one-point lead following a 3-pointer by Cullen Van Leer with 7:34 remaining.

Following that sequence, Ole Miss coach Andy Kennedy called timeout and the Rebels responded with an 11-1 run that seemed to halt any remaining momentum for Missouri.

However, 3-pointers by Jordan Barnett and Van Leer in the final minute made for an interesting finish, as Van Leer was fouled on a made shot with 6 seconds remaining, but missed the free-throw to make it a one-point deficit. The Rebels were 17-for-23 from the free-throw line, including 4 for 6 in the final minute.

“I told our team, I just told them and I challenged them throughout the course of the game, I thought, from an approach standpoint, we were fairly locked in,” Kennedy said. “We obviously have issues as it relates to personnel.But, we had to make some plays. If you want to win SEC games, you’ve got to make SEC plays.”

Barnett finished with 11 points and five rebounds, and Van Leer had nine points, making 3 of 6 3-pointers.

MASH UNIT

Ole Miss guard Rasheed Brooks did not play after suffering a seizure during a timeout of the Rebels’ 80-69 win over Tennessee on Tuesday. Brooks was carted off the court on a stretcher and taken to a local hospital. He was released Thursday night, and no timeline has been announced for his return.

BIG PICTURE

Ole Miss: Saiz’s double-double is his 13th of the season, which ranks sixth nationally and leads all SEC players. After being outrebounded 23-17 in the first half, Saiz’s tenacity on the glass helped Ole Miss close the rebounding gap in the second half.

Missouri: The Tigers have now lost 10 games in a row, including six straight conference losses. It’s the longest losing streak since the 2014-15 season, when the Tigers dropped 13 straight before defeating Florida at home late in the season.

UP NEXT

Ole Miss: Hosts Texas A&M Wednesday.

Missouri: Visits Mississippi State Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

No. 2 Kansas’ backcourt shines in 79-67 win over Texas

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Shaquille Cleare turned the ball over on Texas’ first two possessions. Not even 40 seconds had expired before Kansas’ Devonte’ Graham drained a 3-pointer in transition.

Thirty seconds later, Frank Mason III pulled up for a shot outside the arc to put Kansas up 6-0.

“I think that’s the best we started a game in the past few games that we’ve played in,” Mason said. “We have to do that every game moving forward.”

Graham scored 18 points, Mason added 17 and No. 2 Kansas beat Texas 79-67 on Saturday.

Freshman Josh Jackson chipped in 15 points for the Jayhawks while Svi Mykhailiuk added 12 points and Landen Lucas had 12 rebounds.

Kansas (18-1, 7-0 Big 12) hovered between a six- and eight-point lead for most of the second half. The Jayhawks only pulled away with 60 seconds remaining, as Graham and Mykhailiuk hit corner 3-pointers in front of the Kansas bench.

“We were so good early, you’re not going to keep playing that way,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “Texas, we kind of staggered them early and then the law of averages prevailed. They fought back. I don’t think you should apologize for playing somebody even.”

Texas (7-12, 1-6) opened the game with five turnovers in the first 4 minutes, letting the Jayhawks run out to a quick 10-point lead. Texas managed to cut the deficit to three points with 6 1/2 minutes remaining in the first half, but that was as close as the Longhorns would get.

Freshman Jarrett Allen posted season-highs with 22 points and 19 rebounds for Texas. Eric Davis Jr. added 12 points and Cleare scored 11.

BIG PICTURE

The next three games for Kansas are going to be the biggest test the Jayhawks have had all season. In a span of nine days, the Jayhawks will play three top seven teams. Two of those games take place in hostile road environments.

Kansas goes to No. 7 West Virginia on Tuesday and remains on the road to play at No. 5 Kentucky on the following Saturday. Kansas returns home that following Wednesday to host No. 6 Baylor.

The big win over the Longhorns should give the Jayhawks confidence heading into their tough test, but the big question is: Will Kansas have enough energy to get through it?

“This is a stretch that is probably as tough as we’ve had since I’ve been here,” Self said.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Villanova leapfrogged Kansas for the No. 1 spot on Monday. With the Wildcats’ definitive 30- and 10-point wins over Seton Hall and Providence this week, expect the top two spots to remain the same.

QUOTABLE

“It’s kind of like the `Twilight Zone’ because it feels like there’s nothing else going on here besides the game,” Texas coach Shaka Smart said of Lawrence and the University of Kansas. “Everybody’s locked in on the game. That’s a testament to the program and Coach Self and what they’ve built over the years.”

GOIN’ STREAKING

The win over Texas gave Kansas its 50th straight win in Allen Fieldhouse and its 36th straight at home in conference play.

UP NEXT

Texas returns home to host Oklahoma on Monday.

Kansas hits the road to start its gauntlet, playing at West Virginia on Tuesday.

— Associated Press —

K-State hands No. 7 West Virginia second straight loss

riggertKansasStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — After coming close on a few occasions this season, Kansas State finally picked up that elusive win over a ranked opponent.

Kamau Stokes and Barry Brown each scored 13 points to help Kansas State rally to upset No. 7 West Virginia 79-75 on Saturday night. Brown reflected on the team’s ability to finally get over the hump and defeat a ranked team this season.

“It’s great, I mean especially being on this team last year and not being able to get over the hump besides beating OU. Coach talked about playing with maturity, courage and just coming out with a win at home feels good.”

The Wildcats (15-4, 4-3 Big 12) trailed by 12 late in the first half before Stokes keyed a late burst, hitting a layup right before the halftime buzzer to cut the deficit to two at the half.

Buoyed by that run, Kansas State went on a 14-6 run to start the second half and take a 50-44 lead on a layup by Dean Wade.

The Mountaineers (15-4, 4-3 Big 12) trailed 65-55 with 7:43 left before taking a 68-67 lead on Nathan Adrian’s jumper with just under 5 minutes left.

Turnovers by the Mountaineers would eventually be their undoing. After averaging just a shade over 11 turnovers per game, the Mountaineers committed 23 in the loss.

“When you look at the amount of turnovers, and their halfcourt defense is not something to turn people over.” West Virginia head coach Bob Huggins said following the contest.

“We just threw it away. What kiss you is unforced turnovers. It us one that you are forced to play at a pace you cannot play, or your will have guys with the ball that do not know what to do with the ball. The unforced ones absolutely kill you.”

Wesley Iwundu and Stokes combined to score the next seven points to help Kansas State get the win.

Tarik Phillip led West Virginia with 20 points.

BIG PICTURE

West Virginia: The loss by West Virginia marks the first time the Mountaineers have lost back to back games this season.

Kansas State: Saturday’s victory against No. 7 marks the first time Kansas State has defeated a ranked opponent this season.

POLL IMPLICATIONS: West Virginia will surely take a tumble in next week’s rankings after losing two in a row after being ranked 7th in the nation this past week. Kansas State may receive a few more votes in the AP poll this week, the Wildcats only received one in this past week’s ranking.

STAT OF THE NIGHT: Iwundu became the first player in Kansas State history to compile over 1,000 points, 500 rebounds, 300 assists and 100 steals in his career.

HE SAID IT: Huggins on Brown’s 2nd Half Performance

“We decided to stand on the side of him and let him drive to the basket instead of staying in from him. I do not know why we do what we do. It is not what we practice. I promise you that is not what we practice.”

UP NEXT

West Virginia travels home and will host Kansas on Tuesday night.

Kansas State will travel to Iowa State on Tuesday night.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State women upset No. 23 Fort Hays State

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State’s women’s basketball team put together its most impressive performance in over two years Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena.

Facing Fort Hays State, the 23rd -ranked team in the WBCA top 25, the Bearcats led from start to finish in their 92-80 victory. Northwest has now won two of its last three games.

“Since I have been here, this is one of the biggest wins we have had,” said junior Tanya Meyer, who finished with a game-high 28 points and a game-high 11 rebounds. “This was a good game for us. I think it will definitely help with the games coming up, especially Missouri Western next weekend.”

The performance caught Northwest coach Buck Scheel by surprise.

“After today’s shoot-around, I thought we would be on the losing end. I am glad they proved me wrong,” Scheel said. “They stepped up bigtime today. They really played inspired, and they played together for 40 minutes.”

As nice as the Bearcats’ win at Southwest Baptist was a week ago, Northwest was more impressive against Fort Hays, particularly in the fourth quarter when the Tigers unleashed a full-court press.

For the most part, the Bearcats handled it and once they got the ball across half court, they executed their offense at a high level.

“It was a little dicey at times,” Scheel said of breaking the press. “They weathered the storm and in the second half, they handled it much better because they were more aggressive against it.”

Northwest took an 11-point lead into the final quarter and maintained a double-digit advantage most of the final 10 minutes. The best example of it occurred with 5 minutes, 10 seconds remaining in the game. Arbrie Benson tossed a perfect pass inside to Meyer, who made the layup. The field goal gave Northwest an 80-64 lead.

“We just didn’t want to panic,” said Benson, who finished with 22 points. “We wanted to keep competing and execute on offense and stay aggressive on defense to get the big lead back.”

The Bearcats simply had too many players operating at a high level on offense for Fort Hays to defend. Benson had nice drives to the baskets. Jasmin Howe was knocking down three-point bombs. Meyer was scoring inside and outside. Mallory McAndrews hit several timely three-pointers.

“We have kids who are very capable of putting up those numbers,” Scheel said. “We just have to do it consistently. You have to come in with that focus and demand it of yourself.”

And every Northwest player who stepped on the court hustled on defense. It was the type of performance that Scheel wants to see the rest of the season.

“I told them in the locker room that this is how you want to feel after a game,” Scheel said. “They competed the full 40 minutes. I am extremely proud of them.”

Midway through the third quarter, Northwest faced its stiffest challenge in the game. The Bearcats’ comfortable lead had dipped to 47-45. Fort Hays was charging hard.

Northwest stayed composed, scoring the next four points. With those two baskets, the Bearcats had the confidence to finish the quarter strong. Leading 53-48, Northwest got a basket from Meyer followed by a three-pointer from Howe that gave the Bearcats a 58-48 lead.

The Bearcats were so on top of their game that when third quarter buzzer was close to sounding, Howe hit an off-balanced three-pointer at the top of the key that sent Northwest into the fourth quarter with a 65-54 lead.

In the first half, Northwest scored the first seven points of the game and never had an offensive lull. The strong performance on the offensive end allowed the Bearcats to take a 40-31 lead into halftime.

The game started with Howe knocking down a three-pointer and she followed with a two-point bucket. The 7-0 run concluded with a basket by Benson.

“That is huge for us to come out of the gates firing. That really helped us throughout the game,” said Howe, who finished with 25 points. “We came out ready to go.”

Fort Hays never got closer than four points the rest of the first quarter. When the Tigers closed to 14-10, Northwest responded with a three-pointer. And when it was 17-13, Carlie Wilhelmi had a put-back basket.

The Bearcats went into the second quarter with a 23-16 lead. Fort Hays once again closed to four points on a three-pointer to start the quarter. Northwest scored the next six points on baskets by Meyer, Howe and Benson that prompted Fort Hays to call timeout. The Bearcats held a 29-19 lead.

After the timeout, Northwest scored four more points. The 10-0 run put the Bearcats up 33-19.

Over the next 4 minutes, the Tigers cut their deficit to single digits until Meyer drained a three-pointer with about a minute left, giving Northwest a 40-30 lead.

Northwest made 15 of 30 shots from the field for 50 percent while holding the Tigers to 33.3 percent shooting from the field.

“We needed this one game against one of the top five teams in conference, and better yet, they are one of the top 25 teams in the country. That makes it even better,” Meyer said.

— Northwest Athletics —

Miller ties career best, Missouri St. beats Bradley 76-62

riggertMSUSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Dequon Miller matched his career high with 24 points and Alize Johnson added 13 points while grabbing 13 rebounds as Missouri State pulled away late to beat Bradley 76-62 on Saturday.

Johnson, who garnered his 12th double-double this season and had his ninth straight game with 10 or more rebounds, hauled in seven offensive boards.

Miller drilled 3 of 5 from distance and Chris Kendrix chipped in 17 points with four steals and one block.

Missouri State (14-7, 5-3 Missouri Valley Conference) led 41-31 at the break and was up 59-50 at the midpoint of the second period. A Koch Bar jumper closed the gap to 59-55 with 6:32 left but Kendrix made two free throws and Johnson drilled a 3-pointer for a 64-55 lead two minutes later and the Bears cruised home.

DonteThomas had 17 points and Jayden Hodgson added 16 for Bradley (8-13, 3-5).

— Associated Press —

Nebraska loses at Rutgers on another last-second shot

riggertNebraskaPISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) — Rutgers finally put together a 40-minute game in conference play and coach Steve Pikiell earned his first Big Ten win with a 65-64 nail-biting victory over Nebraska on Saturday.

Corey Sanders scored a season-high 25 points, including the game-winner with one second left.

Sanders stole a ball that bounced off Nebraska’s Tai Webster’s foot with 12 seconds to play. Following a timeout, Sanders drove to the basket, corralled his own rebound and gave Rutgers the lead.

“We’re in every game,” Pikiell said. “We just have to learn how to win and today these guys made sure that happened on the court.

“Offensive rebounding has been huge for us all year, so it’s great to win a game like this with our biggest strength, which is rebounding.”

Deshawn Freeman and C.J. Gettys each added 10 points for Rutgers (12-8, 1-6).

Sanders’ layup with 4:42 tied it at 55-all. From there, the teams exchanged leads five times over the final minutes. Rutgers was led by Sanders down the stretch, including a fast-break dunk for a 57-55 lead before a jumper gave the Scarlet Knights a 59-58 lead with 2:31 left.

Jack McVeigh hit three 3-pointers in the span of 1:14 to give Nebraska (9-10, 3-4) a 64-59 lead with 1:31 to go.

“I didn’t think our guys were on balance and in the second half I thought we just ran much better offense and we handled the man-zone switch up, the press — we handled everything pretty well,” Nebraska coach Tim Miles said. “We just couldn’t hang on to the lead.”

Webster finished with 14 points while Glynn Watson Jr. and McVeigh scored 12 points apiece for Nebraska.

“It wasn’t going to happen overnight,” Sanders said of the program’s rebuilding process. “But I feel like with this win we can keep things rolling and hopefully get more wins.”

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: After starting 3-0 in Big Ten play, the Cornhuskers have lost four straight by single digits. Nebraska lost at Ohio State when Marc Loving scored with 0.6 seconds left to escape Lincoln with a 67-66 victory.

Rutgers: The Scarlet Knights returned home after playing six of their last eight games on the road. Nebraska was Rutgers’ sixth opponent in the last eight games to have been ranked or receiving votes this season.

TOUGH SHOTS

Rutgers continued its tenacious defense, forcing Nebraska into tough shots. Rutgers entered the game holding opponents to under 40 percent shooting for the season and Nebraska shot 34 percent overall after just 22.2 percent in the first half.

WELL RESTED

The Scarlet Knights had almost a week off to prepare for Nebraska after losing at Indiana 76-57 last Sunday.

“Prep is always great,” Pikiell said. “They had a good practice — a great practice yesterday. They’re really learning how to fight through adversity, which in this league, there’s nothing but adversity and as we continue to face it and conquer it, it’s a good thing for us.”

HIGH SCORER

Entering the game with an 18.3 scoring average, Webster was held four points below that mark. Webster’s on track to have the highest average for a season since Aleks Maric’s 18.5 in 2006-07.

UP NEXT

Nebraska: Has five days off before playing at Northwestern on Thursday night.

Rutgers: Travels to College Park to play No. 25 Maryland.

— Associated Press —

No. 22 Kansas State women get knocked off at Iowa State

riggertKansasStateAMES, Iowa (AP) — Jadda Buckley scored 21 points, Seanna Johnson totaled 13 points, eight rebounds and a career-high nine assists and Iowa State got its first victory against a ranked team in over a year with a 75-69 win over No. 22 Kansas State on Saturday.

Iowa State led 48-44 heading into the fourth quarter and stayed in front until a pair of free throws from Karyla Middlebook gave the Wildcats a 58-57 lead with 5:19 remaining. Bridget Carleton put the Cyclones up for good with her fourth 3-pointer, as Buckley and Johnson coupled to make all eight free-throw attempts in the final 30 seconds to seal it.

Buckley and Carleton combined to make 7 of 11 3-pointers for Iowa State (11-8, 2-6 Big 12). The Cyclones made 8 of 12 from the field and 9 of 9 free throws in the fourth quarter and shot 51 percent from the field (26 of 51) overall.

Kaylee Page and Breanna Lewis each had 14 points for Kansas State (15-5, 5-3).

Iowa State last defeated a ranked team on Dec. 11, 2015, with a 69-66 win over Iowa.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western women snap 2-game skid with upset of No. 23 Fort Hays State

mwsuST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s basketball team (13-5, 5-4 MIAA) stopped a two-game skid and snapped No. 23 Fort Hays State’s eight-game winning streak with an impressive 65-51 victory Thursday inside the MWSU Fieldhouse.

NOTABLES
– Fort Hays State had won eight-straight games coming into Thursday night and was ranked No. 23 in the WBCA poll
– Missouri Western held Fort Hays 30 points under its scoring average
– Fort Hays State entered, shooting 43.9 percent from the field and was limited to 29.3 percent by the Griffons
– In the first quarter, Missouri Western shot better than 63 percent from the field and limited Fort Hays to 25 percent shooting
– The Griffons shot 58.3 percent in the third quarter and limited Fort Hays to 25 percent shooting again
– It was the first time in eight games the Griffons outscored an opponent in the fourth quarter (19-14)

TOP PERFORMERS
– Chelsea Dewey led all scorers with 23 points on 6-11 shooting from the field
– Julia Torres registered her third double-double of the season, pulling down a career-high 13 rebounds and scoring 15 points
– Dwanisha Tate added 11 points, eight in the second half

UP NEXT
Nebraska-Kearney (5-11, 1-7) visits the fieldhouse this Saturday, Jan. 21 at 2 p.m. after picking up its first MIAA win of the season Thursday night at Northwest Missouri State.

— MWSU Athletics —

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