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Griffons struggle defensively in 81-68 loss at Central Missouri

riggertMissouriWesternWARRENSBURG, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team (6-11, 2-6) couldn’t hang on to a nine-point first half lead as they lost 81-68 at Central Missouri (10-5, 4-3) on Monday.

NOTABLES
– It was the sixth-straight loss in Warrensburg for the Griffons
– Missouri Western twice led by nine in the first half
– UCM ended the first half on a 6-0 run to take a three-point lead to the half
– After falling behind by 13 in the second half, MWSU cut the lead to six with a 10-3 run but UCM answered with an 8-0 run to take a 14-point lead
– The Griffons’ bench was outscored 33-11 by Central Missouri’s reserves
– Central Missouri shot 61.5 percent from the field, best of any MWSU opponent this season

TOP PERFORMERS
– Cole Clearman led Missouri Western with 20 points on 6-10 shooting from three-point range to go with his four assists
– Aaron Emmanuel scored 16 points with six rebounds and four assists
– Seth Bonifas had 10 points and six rebounds

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Fort Hays State (9-6, 3-4) Thursday, Jan. 19 at 7:30 p.m. before second place Nebraska-Kearney (12-4, 5-2) visits the MWSU Fieldhouse on Saturday, Jan. 21 at 4 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Missouri Western women score two points in the fourth quarter, lose at UCM 69-49

riggertMissouriWesternWARRENSBURG, Mo. – It was a tale of two halves in Warrensburg on Monday as the Missouri Western women’s basketball team lost at Central Missouri 69-49.  After leading by as many as 11 points in the first half and seven at halftime, the Griffons were outscored 39-12 in the second half and 22-2 in the fourth quarter.

Western falls to 12-5 this season and 4-4 in the MIAA, while UCM improves to 13-2 and 6-1 in league play.

NOTABLES
– MWSU went 3-24 (12.5%) from the field in the second half
– The Griffons were out-rebounded 22-8 in the second half after holding a 23-13 advantage on the glass at halftime
– Central Missouri opened the second half on a 13-5 run to take its first lead since the opening minute of the game
– Central Missouri opened the fourth quarter on an 18-0 run
– Missouri Western went 1-15 from three-point range
– The Griffons shot a season-low 30.6 percent from the field and 6.7 percent from long range
– Sefulu Faavae tied a career-high with six rebounds

TOP PERFORMERS
– Faave ahd 10 points to go with her six rebounds
– Julia Torres also scored 10 points along with a team-high nine rebounds

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Fort Hays State (14-2, 5-2) Thursday, Jan. 19 at 5:30 p.m. before Nebraska-Kearney (4-11, 0-7) visits the MWSU Fieldhouse on Saturday, Jan. 21 at 2 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 2 Jayhawks hang on for road win at Iowa State

riggertKUAMES, Iowa (AP) — Frank Mason III had 16 points, Landen Lucas scored 14 and No. 2 Kansas held off Iowa State 76-72 on Monday night for its 17th straight win.

Svi Mykhailiuk added 13 for the Jayhawks (17-1, 6-0 Big 12), who snapped a two-game skid in Ames and opened 6-0 in the Big 12 for the 10th time.

Though it was never comfortable for Kansas, the Jayhawks led the entire second half. Iowa State star Monte Morris drilled a long 3 and two free throws to make it 75-72 with 14.6 seconds left. But then Devonte Graham’s free throw made it a two-possession game and Morris missed a 3 that would’ve made for an interesting finish.

Morris scored 23 points with seven rebounds and seven assists for the Cyclones (11-6, 3-3), who saw their recent string of success against the Jayhawks come to an end.

Iowa State had won four of its last six against the 12-time defending league champions.

Deonte Burton had 21 points on 21 shots for the Cyclones, losers of two straight for the first time in six weeks.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas: This was a win Kansas can be proud of. Hilton Coliseum is one of the most intimidating atmospheres in America — especially when the Jayhawks come to town — and more than 14,000 fans braved an ice storm to scream at them. Victories like this are the reason Kansas keeps winning the Big 12, and a win in Ames could be the difference yet again come March.

Iowa State: The Cyclones let a huge opportunity slip by. Iowa State is very talented and remains a threat in the postseason because of its strong backcourt. But the Cyclones have lost tight games to Gonzaga, Baylor and Kansas, and their program has long since passed the day when moral victories mattered.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

In a slight surprise, voters picked Villanova over Kansas for the top spot on Monday. It’ll be hard for the Jayhawks to pass the Wildcats after Villanova routed Seton Hall by 30 points on Monday. The defending national champions host Providence on Saturday.

UP NEXT

Kansas hosts Texas on Saturday.

Iowa State plays at Oklahoma on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State football player shot and killed

Richard Nelson. Courtesy Missourinet.
Richard Nelson. Courtesy Missourinet.

(Missourinet) – The Missouri State University family is mourning the loss of freshman football player Richard Nelson after the tailback was shot and killed in his hometown of Las Vegas, Nevada Saturday evening.

Details on the incident are still under investigation by local authorities.

Nelson’s mother Roxanne Bruce told the ReviewJournal.com, that Nelson was trying to defend his sister, who was involved in the fight outside their home. Nelson pulled one person off his sister, Bruce said, and that person shot Nelson multiple times.

“Our Missouri State football family is in shock and mourning at the loss of one of our family members,” said Bears’ head coach Dave Steckel. “Richard is like a son and a brother. It is a tragedy that he lost his life defending what is right. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family in Las Vegas, and we know he is in a good place with God. We ask everyone to respect the privacy of our football family at this time as we begin the healing process.”

Nelson, 18, was a product of Chaparral High School in Las Vegas. He redshirted for the Bears during the 2016 season.

“On behalf of our administration, coaches and student-athletes, we want to express our condolences to Richard’s family and friends,” said Director of Athletics Kyle Moats. “He will be dearly missed by his Missouri State family and the coaches and teammates who knew him so well.”

According to Moats, grief counseling will be available for student-athletes upon their return to campus this week.

(Portions of this story, courtesy of Missouri State Athletics)

Mizzou women hang on to win at Vanderbilt 74-68

riggertMissouriNASHVILLE, Tenn. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball (12-7, 2-3) picked up its first conference road win with a gritty 74-68 victory over Vanderbilt on Sunday afternoon at Memorial Gymnasium. Senior guard Sierra Michaelis (Mercer, Mo.) led four Tigers in double figures with 19 points. Michaelis has now reached double figures 12 times this season and Mizzou is 9-3 in those contests.

Mizzou’s win over the Commodores marked the first time in program history that the Tigers have won back-to-back road games against Vanderbilt. Mizzou sunk a season-high 13 three-pointers to push past the Commodores. The Tigers have made 25 triples over the last two games.

Freshman Jordan Chavis (Lexington, N.C.) led the three-point barrage, shooting a perfect 4-of-4 from beyond the arc. She finished with 12 crucial points and two assists in 26 strong minutes. Freshman Amber Smith (Shreveport, La.) posted 12 points of her own behind a career-high three triples and added four rebounds.

Sophomore Cierra Porter (Columbia, Mo.) scored in double digits for the 17th time in 19 games this season as she finished with 16 points. Porter’s free throws in the final minutes helped seal the win.

The first half was a back-and-forth, physical battle. Porter’s nine first-half points paced Mizzou. Vanderbilt took a 29-27 lead into the break after a layup that just beat the buzzer.

The two teams continued to trade buckets to begin the third frame. With Mizzou trailing 39-36, Chavis checked in and exploded offensively from long range. She nailed three 3-pointers in third quarter alone to give the Tigers a slight edge. Chavis ended the third quarter with a steal and an assist in transition as Mizzou led 51-48 through three quarters.

The Tigers built a 61-56 lead with 4:24 remaining, but Vanderbilt battled back with an 8-0 run to seize a 64-61 advantage. Mizzou responded though, as Michaelis and Smith helped the Tigers regain momentum. After a Michaelis steal and layup, Smith sunk a key trifecta on the next possession to catapult Mizzou in front, 66-64, with 1:17 left.

The Tigers got a defensive stop and then converted eight consecutive free throws in the final minute to seal a big road win. Mizzou is now shooting 78.7 percent from the line this season, which leads the SEC.

Mizzou returns home to face Texas A&M on Thursday at Mizzou Arena. The matchup, which tips off at 8 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Missouri State falls on the road at Loyola (Chicago)

riggertMSUCHICAGO (AP) — Aundre Jackson scored 22 points, Milton Doyle had 18 points, seven rebounds and seven assists, and Loyola (Chicago) beat Missouri State 77-71 on Sunday.

Jackson made two free throws with 2:49 to go and, after Missouri State was whistled for a charge, Doyle made a pull-up jumper to cap a 10-0 run for a 67-60 lead.

Loyola hit 8 of 10 free-throw attempts in the final 1:04 to hold on.

Donte Ingram sank four 3-pointers and scored 17 points for Loyola (13-6, 3-3 Missouri Valley), which was 5 of 13 from distance. Doyle entered averaging 29 points, nine rebounds and 4.5 assist in his last two games and he has scored 10-plus in 20 straight games.

Loyola erased an 11-point halftime deficit to improve to 9-1 this season at Gentile Arena.

Alize Johnson had 20 points and 10 rebounds- his 10th double-double this season — for Missouri State (12-7, 3-3). Dequon Miller added 16 points and Chris Kendrix 15.

— Associated Press —

KU women get hammered by No. 2 Baylor again

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. – Kansas women’s basketball dropped its second game of the 2017 campaign to No. 2 Baylor, as the Lady Bears swept the 2017 series with a 92-43 victory on Sunday afternoon inside Allen Fieldhouse.

Nationally-ranked Baylor (16-1, 6-0 Big 12) continued to prove that it’s not only the top team in the Big 12, but one of the best teams in the nation, as the Lady Bears controlled the game both offensively and defensively throughout all four quarters. With the loss, Kansas (6-11, 0-6 Big 12) dropped its third-straight game to BU at home.

In five of the last six outings, redshirt junior guard Jessica Washington has led Kansas’ offense after netting a team-high 15 points. Washington has now recorded 10 double-digit scoring efforts of the season, the most of all the Jayhawks. Sophomore guard Kylee Kopatich also recorded a double-figure scoring performance with 11 points, her seventh time this season to reach double digits.

The Lady Bears had six players in double figures in the second meeting of the season. Sophomore post Kalani Brown led Baylor’s offense with 16 points. Senior forward Nina Davis ended the afternoon with 15 points, while redshirt senior guard Alexis Prince added 12 points. Senior post Khadijiah Cave and junior guard Kristy Wallace rounded out the double-digit scorers with 11 and 10 points, respectively.

The Jayhawks fought to win the tipoff, but the first basket of the game went to the Lady Bears. Four minutes in, the Jayhawks remained scoreless, while Baylor opened with a 10-point run. Junior guard Chayla Cheadle sunk a free throw to put Kansas on the board and end BU’s run.

After five minutes of play, redshirt sophomore guard McKenzie Calvert made the Jayhawks first basket of the game from the floor. Washington added her first 3-pointer of the game with just two minutes remaining in the first quarter, as Kansas battled a slow start and cold-shooting effort form the floor. The following possession Cheadle took a charge, which sparked KU at the other end. Immediately after the defensive play, Kopatich added a 3-pointer, bringing the Jayhawks within 11 points of the Lady Bears. The Jayhawks’ defense held Baylor scoreless in the final three minutes of the quarter, but the Lady Bears had a 25-9 advantage.

Kopatich kicked off the second quarter with her second 3-point bucket of the day, Baylor responded with a 3-pointer from Prince. Washington hustled down the court to add a layup in the second minute, hoping to spark a much needed offensive charge for the Jayhawks. Despite the Jayhawks’ effort, Baylor’s offense controlled the quarter, extending the lead, 31-14.

Late in the first half, O’Neal sank her first 3-point basket of the day. Soon after that possession Kansas endured a four-minute scoring drought, while Baylor went on an 11-point run. Washington ended the drought with a basket from beyond the arc, but the Lady Bears managed to build up a 47-24 lead heading into the intermission.

The Lady Bears opened the third quarter with a 6-0 run, but Cheadle ended that run with a free throw. Washington extended KU’s run after finding Kopatich outside the 3-point arc. Kopatich netted five-straight points for Kansas and became the first Jayhawk to reach double figures. Baylor halted KU’s offensive momentum with a 3-pointer. Following Baylor’s shot from long range, KU endured another scoring drought, lasting nearly 4 minutes. While KU’s offense was held scoreless, the Lady Bears went on a 14-0 run. Once again, Washington put an end to the Jayhawks’ scoring drought with a free throw, joining Kopatich as the second scorer in double digits. Despite Washington and Kopatich’s efforts, the Jayhawks trailed Baylor, 73-35, after three periods.

Washington kicked off the final quarter with her third 3-pointer of the day. In the next four minutes, the Lady Bears scored 10 unanswered points extending their lead. Sophomore guard Jayde Christopher ended the run with her first basket of the afternoon, but it wasn’t long before another BU run was sparked. Baylor’s lead was too great for the Jayhawks to mount a fourth-quarter comeback, as the Lady Bears swept the 2017 series with a 92-43 victory.

UP NEXT
Kansas continues its two-game home stretch with No. 18 West Virginia on Wednesday, Jan. 18. Tipoff against the Mountaineers is slated for 7 p.m.

— KU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats roll past Southwest Baptist to extend MIAA win streak to 20

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

BOLIVAR, Mo. – On a cold, icy Saturday evening in southwest Missouri, Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball made MIAA history with its 75-54 victory over Southwest Baptist at the Meyer Sports Center.

The No. 1-ranked Bearcats won its 20th straight regular season conference game and improved to 16-0 overall and 8-0 in the MIAA. The previous mark was 19 established in 1931 by Northwest, which was coached by legendary Henry Iba.

“It is really cool,” said Northwest junior forward Brett Dougherty, who finished with 10 points. “We didn’t really know about it until a few games ago. It is something we have worked really hard for.

“We have a lot of the same guys. It is the experience of knowing what to expect and what it takes to win and the level you got to get to.”

Despite his youthful age, coach Ben McCollum will soon enter legendary status if the Bearcats keep piling up victories in rapid fashion in the rugged MIAA.

“I don’t know if I am a legend on Iba’s level,” McCollum said with a laugh. “But it is certainly humbling to be able to break somebody as good as he was in coaching, especially in today’s day in age with all the scouting and all the coaching and all the different players.

“Honestly, the way millennials supposedly are, they are not supposed to be ready for every game. They have been. They have proven that their generation can do those things. They can be unselfish. They can be tough. They aren’t entitled. They are a special group.

“It is a spectacular record. There are people who have won conference championships and national titles. But there is only one team in the history of the MIAA that has won this many games in a row in league. That is big.”

Like in their previous 19 conference wins, the Bearcats used their successful formula of strong defense, sharing the basketball on offense and playing as a team in all phases.

Northwest also understands what it takes to continue to play strong in the second half regardless of the size of its advantage.

The Bearcats started the second half with a 17-point lead and never saw it dip under 15, and it only happened once when Baptist scored the first basket in the final 20 minutes to close to 41-26.

A three-pointer by junior Chris-Ebou Ndow, followed by a two-pointer by Ndow quickly increased the Bearcats’ lead to 46-26. Ndow finished with a team-high 18 points.

“That is one of our number one focus,” Ndow said. “Early on in the season, we had a tough time coming out in the second half and we blew big leads. Lately, we have been really good coming out in the second half and be ready and not underestimate any team.”

A few minutes later, Dougherty played a man’s game by powering inside for a couple of hard-nosed baskets in the paint. The second one gave Northwest a 51-28 lead.

“It is fun,” Dougherty said of scoring inside. “D Mo (D’Vante Mosby) and I work on our moves inside all the time. When we are able to get buckets inside, it makes it easier for everybody else.”

Northwest continued to cruise through the second half. An indication that the game was really going well occurred when the shot clock was winding down, forcing Zach Schneider to take a desperation guarded three-pointer. The shot banked in to give Northwest a 64-41 lead with less than 8 minutes left.

With 5 minutes remaining, Northwest held a 69-45 lead, which allowed McCollum to use his reserves.

Despite going into halftime with a comfortable 41-24 lead, the Bearcats once again got an early lesson about what it means to be the No. 1 target in the MIAA.

Baptist didn’t come out like a team that only has two conference wins and had just lost a home game to Missouri Western on Thursday. Baptist was locked in. They were playing tenacious defense and knocking down shots.

A three-pointer by Cartier Dean gave Baptist an early 10-5. The bad news for SBU is the shot shook the Bearcats out of their early doldrums. Northwest scored the next six on consecutive three-pointers from Justin Pitts and Ryan Welty to briefly give Northwest an 11-10 lead.

“We just kept our composure,” Ndow said. “We understand we are the No. 1 team. We understand they are going to come ready. We do have to do a better job of coming out ready and not let them feel good about themselves when the game starts. But when that happens, we have to calm down, stick to our game plan and eventually we will get in a rhythm.”

Baptist regained the lead and held it until Northwest went ahead for good on back-to-back baskets from Anthony Woods that put the Bearcats ahead 17-15. Northwest didn’t stop there. Free throws by Mosby and Ndow pushed the lead to 21-15. Pitts concluded the 10-0 run with a field goal, making 23-15.

Northwest closed out the first half strong. Leading 31-23, the Bearcats outscored Baptist 10-1 for the 17-point lead. Six players for Northwest scored at least four points. Northwest shot well from behind the arc, going 6 for 11.

By the end of the first half, everybody for Northwest was zeroed in, including associate head coach Austin Meyer. When Meyer noticed that a point wasn’t added for a free throw made by Dougherty, he politely told the scorer’s table that Northwest had 38 points instead of the 37 showing on the scoreboard.

“We got a little result happy to start the game,” McCollum said. “We wanted to win instead of focusing on the process. And then we got our energy right.

“We are trying to focus on the process so we can perform in the postseason and play our best in the end.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Mizzou falls at Arkansas for eighth consecutive loss

riggertMissouriFAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Daryl Macon scored 17 points and Dusty Hannahs added 16 as Arkansas snapped a two-game Southeastern Conference losing streak with a 92-73 win against Missouri on Saturday.

Macon, Arkansas’ top scorer, had just eight points in Tuesday night’s stunning 84-78 home loss to youthful Mississippi State.

Staring down a 0-3 home start to conference play for the first time since the 1985-86 season, Macon turned in a performance Arkansas coach Mike Anderson is more accustomed to. The junior was 6-of-11 shooting and 4 of 8 from distance, leading the Razorbacks in scoring for the third time in five conference games.

“It really wasn’t about me tonight, it was just trying to find my groove back with the team and get the team involved,” Macon said. “My shots are going to come. That’s nothing I’m worried about.”

Macon sparked the Razorbacks with eight first-half points, including a highlight-worthy dunk as a result of guard Anton Beard’s hustle play, and had five assists. He also added a pair of 3-pointers to help Arkansas reach 50 points in a half for the fifth time this season.

“I thought he was extremely, extremely dangerous and he proved that,” Missouri coach Kim Anderson said of Macon. “He got his shot whenever and he made them, especially early.”

Jaylen Barford, who was recruited by Anderson at Missouri, added 13 points for the Razorbacks. Anton Beard pitched in 11 and Moses Kingsley finished with 10, eight in the second half for Arkansas, which shot 56 percent from the floor.

Anderson felt his team played with a greater sense of urgency after dropping its first two home games in SEC play. The Razorbacks shared the ball well, assisting on 18 of 33 made baskets. Macon led with six assists.

“If you watched our guys today, they had a lot more fun and played with confidence and played for each other,” Anderson said. “We made the extra pass. Consistency is the key.”

Jordan Barnett led Missouri with 14 points on 6-of-11 shooting. Terrence Phillips and Jordan Geist added 13 and Kevin Puryear added 11.

BIG PICTURE

Arkansas: In order to keep pace in the SEC, Arkansas must find some success away from Bud Walton Arena. Three of the Razorbacks’ next four games are on the road. Arkansas is 1-2 in true road games this season.

Missouri: The hits keep coming for the Tigers, who dropped their eighth consecutive game, the third longest under coach Kim Anderson.

ONE FOR WATKINS

Arkansas senior Manny Watkins made the first 3-pointer of his Razorbacks career in the first half. Watkins had been 0-for-8 shooting from long range prior to the make. “That’s big,” Macon said. “That was very exciting to us. I was speechless when it went in.” Arkansas has made a 3-pointer in 923 consecutive games.

UP NEXT

Arkansas: The Razorbacks travel to Texas A&M on Tuesday, a place the Razorbacks have not won since a 111-72 victory in 1991.

Missouri: The Tigers hope to snap their eight-game losing streak at Alabama on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

No. 2 Kansas fights off pesky Oklahoma State 87-80

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — No. 2 Kansas had the perfect remedy for its slow start: senior guard Frank Mason III.

Mason had 22 points, five rebounds and four assists, and the Jayhawks held off Oklahoma State 87-80 on Saturday.

Kansas (16-1, 5-0 Big 12) rallied for its 16th straight win and could move into the top spot when the AP poll comes out on Monday. No. 1 Baylor lost 89-68 to West Virginia on Tuesday.

When the Jayhawks fell behind early on against the Cowboys, Mason took over. He scored in transition. He connected from long range. He dished the ball around to open Jayhawks on the floor.

“(Mason’s) bulldog mentality, he’s getting that thing to the rim, he’s going to make the stop, he’s gonna sit down and guard,” Oklahoma State coach Brad Underwood said. “He’s gonna do whatever it takes for that team to win. There’s not many people that have that.”

Devonte’ Graham scored 21 points for Kansas, and freshman Josh Jackson added 20 points and 11 rebounds. Svi Mykhailiuk scored 14 points, and Landen Lucas grabbed 12 rebounds.

The Jayhawks grabbed their first lead when Graham burst down the lane for a layup with 14:10 left. Graham also had a key 3-pointer and Mason got loose in transition to help Kansas to the tight victory.

Kansas went 5 for 20 from 3-point range.

“We didn’t shoot the ball well at all today,” coach Bill Self said. “Devonte’ made three and everybody else was pretty cold.”

Jeffrey Carroll scored 23 for Oklahoma State (10-7, 0-5), and Mitchell Solomon had 16 points. Jawun Evans finished with 15 on 6-for-22 shooting.

The Cowboys got off to a nice start, holding the Jayhawks to 10 points in the first 12 minutes. Oklahoma State ran out to an 11-point lead over that same span, aided by early buckets from Evans and Carroll.

QUOTABLE

“Not one second in my 30 years have I ever thought any game wasn’t winnable,” Underwood said. “You’re damn straight. I don’t care who we play. I think we got a chance every single night to fight and to win. I expected to win tonight. If for one second I don’t ever do that, Oklahoma State should quit paying me.”

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Kansas looks set to ascend to No. 1, but Self doesn’t care very much about the rankings right now.

“I don’t know what’ll happen, if we’ll be 1, if Villanova’ll jump us or whatever,” Self said. “It’s really not a big deal. I’d much rather be 5-0 in the league than be No. 1. At least we have that.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas remains the lone undefeated team in Big 12 play, but a difficult stretch is looming at the end of the month. The Jayhawks visit West Virginia and Kentucky and host Baylor over a span of nine days. If the Jayhawks want to keep their hopes alive for their 13th straight Big 12 title, they’ll have to find a way to give their starters adequate rest.

UP NEXT

Kansas travels to Ames, Iowa to take on the Iowa State on Monday.

Still in search of its first Big 12 win, Oklahoma State hosts No. 25 Kansas State on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

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