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Kansas women fall at home to No. 15 Texas

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Brooke McCarty scored 15 points and Ariel Atkins and Joyner Holmes combined for 14 in the pivotal third quarter to lead No. 15 Texas over Kansas 66-54 on Wednesday night.

Kansas (6-8, 0-3 Big 12) got within three on Kylee Kopatich’s jumper with 5:53 left in the third quarter but didn’t get another field goal the rest of the period with Texas going on a 15-2 run. The Longhorns led by as many as 20 in the final quarter in winning despite 31 turnovers.

McCarty made three 3-pointers, Holmes finished with 13 points and nine rebounds and Atkins had 12 points for the Longhorns (9-4, 3-0), who have won seven straight. Their four losses came to teams currently ranked in the top 10.

Jessica Washington had 23 points and 10 rebounds for the Jayhawks, her first double-double this season.

Texas scored the game’s first eight points and stayed in front, leading 35-30 at halftime.

— Associated Press —

Mykhailiuk’s controversial layup gives No. 3 Kansas 90-88 win over K-State

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Svi Mykhailiuk claimed he had no idea whether he traveled during his coast-to-coast, buzzer-beating layup that gave No. 3 Kansas a dramatic 90-88 victory over Kansas State on Tuesday night.

Wildcats coach Bruce Weber couldn’t have been more certain.

“I think everybody knows what happened. Want to see my phone? There’s a hundred (messages),” Weber said. “Everybody knows what happened. I mean, it’s obvious. The TV people came up to me. Everyone.”

Indeed, replays showed Mykhailiuk picking up his dribble shy of midcourt and taking four massive strides to the basket. But the officiating crew of Mike Stuart, Ray Natali and Keith Kimble never blew a whistle, and traveling calls are not covered by instant replay.

The game was over. Even if the controversy was certain to continue.

“Svi showed some athletic ability there at the end,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “I haven’t seen it. I don’t’ know if he walked or not. I know everybody said he did. He may have, I don’t know. But it still was a heck of an athletic play to get all the way to the hole.”

Josh Jackson matched a career high with 22 points to go with nine rebounds and six assists, and Landen Lucas added 18 points and 12 rebounds, as the Jayhawks (13-1, 2-0 Big 12) pushed their home winning streak to 50 in one of the closest games during that incredible streak.

“It was a great play by Svi,” Lucas said of the final play, which broke down on the inbounds. “It wasn’t exactly what we drew up, but he improvised and made it happen.”

The Wildcats (13-2, 1-1) had the first chance to take the lead in the final seconds, but Dean Wade missed a 3-pointer and the ball bounced out of bounds with 5.6 ticks left on the clock.

Kansas struggled to get the ball inbounds, but once it got into Mykhailiuk’s hands, he used his long stride to carry him down the court — four of them, as it turned out. His winning basket gave him 11 points for the game, not to mention kept Self from losing to Kansas State for the second time at home.

Wade matched a career high with 20 points. Wesley Iwundu finished with 17, Kamau Stokes and Barry Brown added 13 points apiece, and D.J. Johnson had 10.

The Wildcats have often been shell-shocked by the Phog, the early minutes taking them right out of the game. But they never appeared to be intimidated by the atmosphere Tuesday night.

In fact, it was Kansas State that raced to a 21-13 lead in the opening minutes.

The Wildcats eventually cooled down from beyond the arc, where they hit four of their first five shots, and Kansas began to claw back. A big run midway through the half allowed the Jayhawks to take the lead, and they hit nine of their last 10 shots to forge a 52-42 halftime advantage.

Kansas never trailed the rest of the way.

Kansas State never made it easy.

The Wildcats used a five-point trip thanks in part to a technical foul on Jackson to trim into a 56-48 deficit. Then, Johnson single-handedly got Lucas into foul trouble by bulldozing for baskets, robbing the Jayhawks of their best interior player for much of the half.

Kansas State finally tied the game 84-all when Brown scored high off the glass in transition, but the Jayhawks went right back to Lucas, whose inside basket made it 86-84 with 1:27 to go.

Back and forth it went: Stokes answered with two free throws — par for the course in a foul-filled game — only for Lucas to get his revenge by fouling out Johnson at the other end. And after his two free throws, Iwundu’s basket tied it at 88 with 49 seconds to go.

That set up the final, frantic play that ultimately overshadowed everything else.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State nearly aced its toughest test of the season, and may gain more in a close loss than it did in compiling a glossy non-conference record against low-level fodder.

Kansas has won two close games to open conference play, quickly finding that the path to its 13th consecutive Big 12 championship could be tougher than expected.

STATS AND STREAK

Kansas shot 53.2 percent while Kansas State shot 50.8 percent. … Each team had 33 rebounds. … Mason was 4 of 5 from beyond the arc but matched a season high with five turnovers. … Wade missed all three of his 3-point attempts. … The Wildcats only committed nine turnovers. … The 88 points are the second-most scored by the Wildcats in Allen Fieldhouse. They scored 91 on Feb. 7, 1962.

UP NEXT

Kansas State returns home to face former coach Lon Kruger and Oklahoma on Saturday.

Kansas welcomes Texas Tech to Allen Fieldhouse on Saturday night.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western’s Chelsea Dewey earns weekly MIAA honor

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western’s Chelsea Dewey has been named MIAA Women’s Basketball Athlete of the Week.  Dewey was vital for the Griffons in their upset win at previous unbeaten #19 Central Oklahoma.

The senior guard from Gower, Missouri scored a team-high 17 point and dished out a team leading six assists in the 67-57 win.  She was a perfect 3-3 from the free throw line and was 3-6 from the three-point arc. This is the first Athlete of the Week honor for Dewey and MWSU on the season.

Missouri Western returns home on Thursday, January 5 as they host #6 Pittsburg State at 5:30 p.m. in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

KU’s Landon Lucas named Big 12 Player of the Week

riggertBig12IRVING, Texas – Kansas senior center Landen Lucas has been named the Phillips 66 Big 12 Player of the Week in a vote by a media panel which covers the league, the conference announced Tuesday.

In Kansas’ lone game last week, an 86-80 win at TCU on Dec. 30, Lucas recorded his first double-double of the season, fifth of his career, with a season-high 15 points and a career-high 17 rebounds. The Portland, Oregon, native connected on 7-of-9 shots from the field against the Horned Frogs. Lucas’ 17 rebounds were the most for a Jayhawk since Andrew Wiggins pulled down 19 boards at Iowa State on Jan. 13, 2014.

Lucas becomes the third Jayhawk to be named Big 12 Player of the Week this season. Senior guard Frank Mason III has earned the accolade twice (Nov. 17 and Dec. 12) and freshman guard Josh Jackson once (Dec. 27). This is the second-straight season KU has had three different players selected as the Big 12 Player of the Week.

— KU Athletics —

Mizzou women open SEC play with 18-point win over Georgia

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. — The Missouri women opened Southeastern Conference play and the New Year with an emphatic 63-45 win over Georgia at Mizzou Arena on Sunday.  Mizzou improved to 11-4 on the season and 9-0 on its home floor.

Senior guard Sierra Michaelis (Mercer, Mo.) led the way for the Tigers, pouring in 20 points (8-15 FG, 4-8 3FG), including a 12-point explosion in the third quarter.  She also contributed three rebounds and three steals.  Sophomore forward Cierra Porter (Columbia, Mo.) put up her seventh double-double of the year, scoring 20 points (6-12 FG, 8-8 FT) and grabbing 12 rebounds in a strong performance.  Mizzou moved to 7-0 on the year when Porter posts at least 10 points and 10 rebounds.

Fellow sophomore Sophie Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) had another solid all-around effort, tallying nine points, nine rebounds and three assists in a high-energy effort.

The game started off going back and forth, as Mizzou and Georgia traded baskets in the early going.  Michaelis set the tone for the Tigers early on, as she had eight points, two steals, an assist and a rebound in an active first frame. Porter also chipped in, adding six points, four of which came at the free throw line.

As Porter and Michaelis opened up the scoring, Mizzou’s team defense dug its heels in and didn’t allow a single basket over the last 2:45 of the quarter.  The Tigers finished the first quarter on a 9-2 run, and held a 19-11 lead as the frame came to a close.

Georgia clawed back with a 7-0 run to surge in front for the first time, 22-21.  Mizzou regained the lead courtesy of senior guard Lindsey Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.), who broke up the Georgia run by slashing to the basket for a layup and then finding a wide-open Hannah Schuchts (Tallahassee, Fla.) in the short corner for a jumper on the next possession.

After Georgia knotted the game at 29-29, Sophie Cunningham finished a tough bucket in traffic in transition and Mizzou took a 33-29 advantage in to halftime.

Michaelis heated up in the third quarter to help Mizzou build a commanding edge.  The senior guard outscored the Bulldogs by herself in the frame, 12-6.  Michaelis scored inside and out, hitting two triples, finishing a pair of nifty layups and draining a smooth turnaround fade away jumper from the elbow.

Mizzou’s defense surrendered just one field goal during the third quarter.  The combination of Michaelis hot hand and tough team defense propelled the Tigers to 51-35 lead heading to the fourth quarter.

Georgia opened the period on a 10-0 run, cutting the Tiger lead to just seven with 3:41 to go.  However, Mizzou went back to Porter who closed out the win with clutch free throws and a strong layup down the stretch.

Mizzou continues SEC play with a trip to Kentucky on Thursday. Tip from Rupp Arena is set for 6 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Kansas State women hand No. 12 West Virginia first loss

riggertKansasStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Breanna Lewis had 23 points and nine rebounds, Kindred Wesemann made four 3-pointers and scored 16 points, and Kansas State knocked off previously unbeaten No. 12 West Virginia 86-71 on Sunday.

West Virginia entered with the nation’s best field-goal percentage defense at 29 percent but Lewis was 10-of-15 shooting and the Wildcats made 54.7 percent overall.

Kansas State used a 13-2 run to build a 17-point lead with 4:09 left in the third quarter and the Wildcats’ lead didn’t drop below 14 the rest of the way.

Shaelyn Martin and Kaylee Page each added 10 points for Kansas State (11-3, 1-1 Big 12), which had a season-high point total in beating West Virginia for the second time in 10 tries.

Chania Ray made six 3-pointers and scored a career-high 23 points with seven assists for West Virginia (13-1, 1-1), which had its fifth-longest winning streak in program history snapped. Teana Muldrow added five 3s and 15 points and Tynice Martin hit three 3s and had 14 points and six assists. The Mountaineers hit 14 of 29 from distance.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska rallies to stun Maryland 65-63

riggertNebraskaCOLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — If the start of Big Ten play is any indication, this could be a very special season for the Nebraska basketball team.

Tai Webster scored 18 points, and the Cornhuskers closed with a 14-0 run to beat Maryland 67-65 Sunday and end the Terrapins’ six-game winning streak.

Nebraska trailed 65-53 with six minutes left before charging back behind Webster, who scored the game’s final seven points.

Glynn Watson Jr. scored 17 for the Cornhuskers (8-6, 2-0), off to their best start in league play since the 2005-06 season.

“It was a really critical win,” Nebraska coach Tim Miles said. “You don’t get it without buying in, and these guys have bought into each other.”

After losing half its 12 non-conference games — including a defeat at home against Gardner-Webb — Nebraska used a 54-point second half Wednesday to upset No. 16 Indiana, which had had won 26 straight at home.

That victory was no less shocking that this one, given that the Cornhuskers had yielded 17 straight points to a team that was 17-1 at home in the Big Ten since joining the league.

“We wanted to play better in moments like this, obviously, after not having the start of the season we wanted,” Webster said.

A layup by Webster with 30 seconds left put Nebraska up 66-65. After the senior guard added a free throw with 17 seconds to go, Maryland still had a chance to salvage the victory. But Melo Trimble fired up an air ball with five seconds left and clanged a shot off the rim just before the buzzer.

Coach Mark Turgeon said, “I told our guys in a meeting yesterday, `You got to knock Nebraska out. They keep coming.’ We never knocked them out.”

Trimble, Maryland’s scoring leader, finished with 14 points on 5-for-15 shooting and had three turnovers.

Freshman Kevin Huerter scored a career-high 26 points for the Terrapins (13-2, 1-1). Maryland’s last basket was a jumper by Trimble in the paint with 6:43 remaining.

Earlier, the Terps appeared poised to win by virtue of a comeback of their own.

After Nebraska took a 41-33 lead early in the second half, Trimble hit a 3-pointer and Justin Jackson sank a layup to spark a 10-2 run that evened the score.

The Cornhuskers answered with successive layups, but would not score again over the next four minutes.

Maryland’s 17-point surge included four-point plays by Trimble and Huerter. That made it 60-43, but the Terrapins added only five points the rest of the way.

“Did a lot of nice things,” Turgeon said. “It’s disappointing we let it get away.”

Watson scored 12 points in the first half and the Cornhuskers went 4 for 5 from beyond the arc in taking a 34-30 lead.

Huerter kept the Terrapins close with 13 points, including six in a 10-0 run that erased a 26-19 deficit.

Maryland missed 11 of its first 13 field goal tries and shot 33 percent before the break.

ZONED OUT

Nebraska’s switch to a 1-3-1 zone down the stretch blunted Maryland’s offense and made the comeback possible.

“We just had to go with it, and the guys did great,” Miles said.

Turgeon said: “The 1-3-1, we didn’t work on it enough. It’s 100 percent on me. We got some good looks. Got a few layups against it and just couldn’t finish. With that said, we just needed to make one play. We needed that one stop and a rebound. Or one play offensively. And we just never did it.”

ANOTHER MILESTONE

It was Nebraska’s first win against Maryland in five tries. The series began in 2015.

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: Playing at a school known for its football team, the Cornhuskers’ basketball squad just might draw some attention from the state’s faithful fan base.

Maryland: Coming in, the Terps appeared on the brink of reaching the Top 25. It’s going to take some work to get there again.

UP NEXT

Nebraska: The Cornhuskers host Iowa on Thursday night. The Hawkeyes lead the series 18-9, but Nebraska is 7-5 at home.

Maryland: The Terrapins get a five-day break before facing Michigan on the road Saturday afternoon.

— Associated Press —

KU women get routed by No. 3 Baylor 90-43

riggertKUWACO, Texas (AP) — When teams fall behind, they often try to shoot themselves back into games and lose focus on executing offensively. Kansas did that Sunday, and it played right into No. 3 Baylor’s hands.

The Lady Bears stifled the Jayhawks’ inside game, then turned long rebounds off Kansas misses into easy baskets on the other end. That helped Baylor overcome a sluggish start, and Nina Davis and Alexis Jones scored 16 points apiece to lead the Lady Bears to a 90-43 victory.

“They can play so many different styles because of their personnel groupings,” Kansas coach Brandon Schneider said. “I thought we showed some fight in the first quarter, but eventually their ability to rebound and get out in transition wears on you.”

The Lady Bears (13-1, 2-0 Big 12) shot 60 percent from the floor while limiting Kansas to a 22.4 percent clip. Baylor also controlled the boards, 58-30.

The Jayhawks (6-7, 0-2) stayed in the game early, thanks in large part to Jessica Washington, who scored 11 of her 18 points in the first quarter. The Lady Bears turned the ball over six times in the opening quarter but still led 28-19 midway through the second quarter.

“I thought we got off to a slow start,” Baylor coach Kim Mulkey said. “It was physical and aggressive, and we weren’t the aggressor coming out. So in the third quarter that same group got an opportunity to be on the floor again to start the second half and it was much better.”

It was all Baylor after that, as it outscored Kansas 41-7 over the next 11 minutes to blow the game wide open. As the Lady Bears’ aggressiveness picked up, so did the Jayhawks’ fouls. Baylor shot 40 free throws, but Mulkey wasn’t happy it missed 14 of them.’

“I don’t want to address them much. I think now, though, I need to address it because we have kids missing free throws that shouldn’t be,” Mulkey said. “Some of it is fatigue, but we’re going to start holding each other accountable for free throws more than we have.”

Beatrice Mompremier had 15 points and 10 rebounds for Baylor, and Kalani Brown added 11 points.

“We have so much depth it’s almost impossible to know who to stop,” Davis said. “You can start (Mompremier) Kalani, Khadijiah Cave, Lauren Cox, you can pretty much start any one of us. But just having that person you know is going to come off the bench and go to the offensive rebounds hard, it’s good to have.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas: Other than Washington’s early offense, Kansas didn’t have much success on that end. Baylor’s size forced the Jayhawks into jump shots, and they weren’t falling. They were 6 for 30 from 3-point range, and many of those long rebounds turned into breakaway opportunities for Baylor. Leading scorer McKenzie Calvert, once a Baylor commit, was hounded by 6-foot-2 Alexis Prince on the perimeter and went 1 for 10 for two points.

Baylor: The Lady Bears took full advantage of their two home games to start conference play, dominating Kansas State and Kansas by an average of 38 1/2 points. Baylor nearly blocked more shots (15) than it allowed points in the paint (16) against the Jayhawks, and did so without fouling. Kansas received only four free throw attempts, all in the first quarter.

UP NEXT

Kansas: Hosts No. 16 Texas on Wednesday.

Baylor: At No. 12 West Virginia on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

No. 3 Baylor women beat Kansas State in Big 12 opener

riggertKansasStateWACO, Texas (AP) — Kalani Brown had 22 points and 12 rebounds to help No. 3 Baylor open Big 12 Conference play Thursday night with an 87-57 victory over Kansas State.

The Lady Bears (12-1, 1-0) outrebounded Kansas State 56-28, and that turned into a 25-5 edge in second-chance points. Baylor also outscored the Wildcats 31-10 off the bench.

Brown had four blocks, and Alexis Prince and Nina Davis both added 14 points for Baylor. Nina Davis and Lauren Cox scored 12 apiece.

Alexis Jones, the Lady Bears’ leading scorer who missed the previous two games to rest, tied Kristy Wallace for the team lead in assists with eight.

Kindred Wesemann led Kansas State (10-3, 0-1) with 16 points.

Rolfzen twins, Nebraska volleyball stars, join German club

riggertNebraskaLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Former Nebraska volleyball standouts Amber Rolfzen and Kadie Rolfzen have signed professional contracts with the powerful Dresdner Sportclub 1898 in Germany.

The university announced their signings on Thursday.

Amber Rolfzen earned her second AVCA All-America honor as a senior in 2016 and was an All-Big Ten selection for the second straight season. Kadie Rolfzen was a two-time first-team AVCA All-American. She became only the second four-time AVCA All-American in program history after earning third-team accolades as a freshman and sophomore.

The twins helped lead the Cornhuskers to the national championship in 2015 and a Big Ten championship and NCAA final four in 2016.

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