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Western women use hot shooting to blow out Missouri S&T

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s basketball team (5-1) used red-hot shooting from behind the arc to lift itself to a convincing 87-56 win over Missouri S&T Friday night.

The Griffons scored 33 of their points in their opening game of the Holiday Inn Express/Candlewood Suites Classic on three point field goals. Missouri Western shot 55 percent (11-20) from behind the arc on the night, including 5-7 shooting from Savannah Lentz, who scored a game-high 20 points. Lakota Goe was 3-3 from long range and scored 13 points.

Missouri Western was also able to force 25 Missouri S&T turnovers on the night, picking up 11 steals, four by Julia Torres.

Dwanisha Tate added 14 points and Chelsea Dewey had 11 with five assists.

The Griffons continue play in the classic on Saturday with William Jewell at 5 p.m. William Jewell defeated Northwest Missouri State 64-53 on Friday night in the fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 16 Nebraska gets hammered by Iowa 40-10

riggertNebraskaIOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — With a possible trip to the Big Ten championship game at stake, Nebraska fell flat.

C.J. Beathard threw three touchdown passes and the Hawkeyes pummeled No. 16 Nebraska 40-10 on Friday, knocking the Cornhuskers out of Big Ten title contention and sending Wisconsin to the championship game.

Tommy Armstrong started for Nebraska (9-3, 6-3 Big Ten) despite a balky hamstring and was just 13 of 35 passing for 125 yards. Backup Ryker Fyfe, who broke his non-throwing wrist last week, didn’t take a snap until the game had long been decided.

“Tommy wasn’t 100 percent,” Huskers coach Mike Riley said. “I don’t know if he was the healthiest…I don’t know how much it would have made a difference (to play Fyfe).”

Nebraska’s defense was just as bad as its offense.

LeShun Daniels Jr. ran for 158 yards and two scores and George Kittle caught two TD passes for the Hawkeyes (8-4, 6-3). They closed the regular season with three straight wins — two of them over ranked opponents — and scored their most points since a win over Purdue on Oct. 15.

Iowa broke open what was expected to be a tight game with a 75-yard TD run by Akrum Wadley and a 77-yard touchdown throw from Beathard to Riley McCarron in the first quarter.

“We played as good as we’ve played all year,” Beathard said. “It just shows the fight and the resilience of this team.”

The Badgers are big favorites to beat Minnesota on Saturday anyway. But the Cornhuskers, who entered November as a legitimate playoff contender, hardly looked like one after being outscored 102-13 in their last two road games.

“We gave up big plays. I think we were horrible on third down,” Riley said. “I’m really disappointed all the way around in all of us.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Nebraska: With so much to play for, it’s hard to believe that the Cornhuskers played so, so poorly. Nebraska gave up three plays of over 50 yards, and Armstrong was all over the place. The Huskers have lost three of their last four to Iowa, a fate sealed when they ran into Iowa kicker Keith Duncan on a field goal try in the fourth quarter — allowing the Hawkeyes to go up 23 a few plays later.

Iowa: The Hawkeyes didn’t make it to the Big Ten title game either. But they did go 6-3 in the league, an impressive feat for a team that lost to North Dakota State of the FCS in its final nonconference game. Iowa also made its case for a high-profile bowl, which looked iffy to say the least after losing by 27 points at Penn State to start this month. “You learn a lot about yourself in November,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said.

B1G TITLE GAME UPDATE

Wisconsin gets the West’s spot in Indianapolis next week because it beat Nebraska 23-17 (OT) in late October. In the East, Penn State might have the easiest path. The favored Nittany Lions need to beat Michigan State at home and hope favored Ohio State beats Michigan on Saturday. Ohio State needs a win and a Penn State loss — and even if the Nittany Lions take the East the Buckeyes should be in good shape for the playoff at 11-1. Michigan needs to upset the hated Buckeyes.

EXTRA POINTS

Daniels became the first Iowa rusher with over 1,000 yards since 2011. …Armstrong’s 13-yard TD pass to Stanley Morgan snapped a streak of over 136 minutes without allowing a touchdown for Iowa. The Hawkeyes shut out Illinois 28-0 last week. … Wadley had 105 yards rushing on just 11 carries. … Armstrong made his 44th career start, setting a team record for a quarterback. Taylor Martinez, his predecessor, made 43 career starts.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Nebraska likely stays in the Top 25. But the Huskers could find themselves drop a few spots after their second straight poor showing on the road. Iowa, which reached as high as 13th earlier this year, could sneak back after beating the Huskers and Michigan in November.

UP NEXT

Nebraska will head to a decent bowl game just a year after sneaking into a bid with just five wins.

Iowa will find out which bowl game it will play in next Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State women fall to William Jewell for first loss

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to William Jewell, 64-53, on Friday afternoon in St. Joseph, Mo.

– The Bearcats fall for the first time in 2016-17, moving to 5-1 on the year. William Jewell improved to 2-1.

– Tanya Meyer recorded her third double-double of the year, scoring 14 points with 12 rebounds in 26 minutes.

Key Northwest Statistics
– Northwest shot 46 percent from the field (23-50) and hit 5-of-16 from beyond the arc (31.3 percent).

– The Cardinals shot just 33.9 percent (21-62) but made 17-of-23 from the charity stripe.

– Meyer’s 12 boards marked the third game she has hit double-digit rebound totals this year.

– Jasmin Howe hit a trio of long range buckets to finish with 13 points, four rebounds and two assists.

– Arbrie Benson recorded her fourth double-digit scoring effort of the year. She had 10 points, an assist and a steal.

– Macy Williams had a game-high six assists with five points and a steal.

– The Bearcats led 33-24 at halftime.

Key Northwest Sequences
– The Cardinals tied the game, 10-10, with 4:22 left in the first quarter but Northwest responded with a 7-0 run. Maria Dentlinger was unable to answer immediately but got her own rebound and Meyer hit a layup to give the Bearcats the lead. After a William Jewell miss, Howe hit a layup to push the lead to four. The next trip down for Northwest, Meyer hit a layup off an assist from Howe and drew the foul. She converted the traditional three-point play to make it a seven-point lead, 17-10, with 2:58 remaining in the first.

– Northwest also controlled the second half’s opening five minutes, scoring seven of the first eight points. After an empty first possession, Benson converted a layup to make it a nine-point lead, 23-14. The Cardinals got a free throw to pull back within eight, 23-15, with 7:01 left in the quarter. On the next defensive possession, Carlie Wilhelmi recorded a block that led to a Howe three pointer off an assist from Benson. William Jewell turned the ball over the next time down as Benson came up with a steal. Wilhelmi was able to convert a layup off a pass from Dentlinger to make it 28-15 with 5:19 left in the first half.

Up Next
– The Bearcats will conclude the non-conference season on Saturday at 3 p.m. against Missouri S&T in St. Joseph.

— Northwest Athletics —

No. 5 Kansas dunks its way past UNC Asheville, 95-57

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Despite all the rim-rattling dunks that Kansas freshman Udoka Azubuike had Friday night, the play that stood out to UNC Asheville coach Nick McDevitt was the only shot the big man missed.

“Got his own rebound and dunked it,” McDevitt said with a shake of his head.

Azubuike had seven dunks in all, finished with 17 points in his first career start and helped the fifth-ranked Jayhawks roll to a 95-57 victory over the Bulldogs in their return to Allen Fieldhouse.

“I tried not to think about it because I was just like, everyone told me, right before the game started, `Go out there and play your game,” Azubuike said. “Have fun.”

Just about everyone had fun for the Jayhawks (5-1): Frank Mason III led all scorers with 21 points, Josh Jackson added 14, Lagerald Vick had 12 and Devonte Graham finished with 11 assists.

The result was their 42nd straight win at Allen Fieldhouse.

“They kind of overpowered us around the basket, doubling us up rebounding-wise,” McDevitt said. “We knew they had a — pardon the pun — a big size advantage on us, but I just didn’t think we negated that size well enough by putting enough pressure on the ball.”

The only bummer for Kansas came in the closing minutes, when Graham banged up his right big toe on a drive to the basket. He did not return, though he said later that it wasn’t anything serious.

Kevin Vannatta and Ahmad Thomas led Asheville (3-3) with 12 points apiece.

The Jayhawks, coming off their CBE Classic triumph in Kansas City, never had much trouble with their Big South opponent in just their second game at the Phog this season.

Mason got things started with three 3-pointers in a span of a couple of minutes, but it was the way that Kansas dominated inside that put the game away early. Azubuike began pounding at the rim with some ferocious dunks while Jackson, their springy freshman phenom, kept gliding to the rack.

At one point, the pair scored four straight baskets on dunks.

Azubuike got the start over sophomore Carlton Bragg Jr. and senior Landen Lucas, both of whom struggled in the CBE Classic. And when the two came off the bench and each picked up two fouls, it gave coach Bill Self all the reason he needed to keep Azubuike in the game.

Asheville tried to guard the 7-foot, 280-pound behemoth with Giacomo Zilli, who checks in at 6-9, 215, with predictable results. Azubuike bullied to the basket every time he wanted the ball.

“Now, getting lobs and stuff, you’re not going to get that against some teams,” Self said, “but `Doke is so good at catching above the rim — he’s about the best I’ve seen at it.”

The Jayhawks led 58-34 at halftime before cruising over the final 20 minutes.

“I think we’re going to be a team that’s unlike most teams we’ve had. We’re going to start based on scouting report most times,” Self said. “We haven’t ever done that. If a team starts small, we’ll go small, if a team goes with two bigs, we’ll go two bigs. But it was nice to see Udoka have success. He can do some things that none of us can.”

BIG PICTURE

UNC Asheville was overmatched at every position, not to mention when it came to depth. The Bulldogs looked exhausted in the second half as the Jayhawks kept getting into transition for easy baskets.

Kansas used Vick and Azubuike in a new-look starting five. It sent a message to Bragg and Lucas to pick it up — which they did in the second half — while showcasing the Jayhawks’ versatility.

GRAHAM-MY WINNER

Sure, the dunks will make the highlights, but Self thought Graham played as well as anyone. Along with 11 assists, he also had six points and two steals with only two turnovers. “I thought Devonte was certainly the facilitator,” Self said. “He was really good.”

DEEP THREAT

Even with the big size advantage, the Jayhawks still lit it up from the arc. Mason was 5 for 5 from 3-point range, Vick was 3 for 4 and Graham and Svi Mykhailiuk also hit two 3s. The Jayhawks wound up 13 of 21 from beyond the arc.

UP NEXT:

UNC Asheville returns home to face Division II Brevard on Tuesday night.

Kansas continues its five-game home stand against Long Beach State on Tuesday night.

— Associated Press —

Sneed’s 16 lifts K-State over Boston College

riggertKansasStateNEW YORK (AP) — Xavier Sneed scored 16 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead Kansas State to a 72-54 win over Boston College in the first game of the Barclays Center Classic on Friday night in New York.

Dean Wade and Barry Brown added 11 points apiece as Kansas State improved to 5-0.

Ky Bowman led Boston College with 13 points. Connor Tava and Jerome Robinson finished with 11 each.

The third meeting between the ACC and Big 12 programs-and the first in regular season play-was not especially competitive.

Kansas State used a 11-2 run spanning 6:47 in the first half to take control. The run began with Isaiah Maurice’s jumper at 7:27 which tied the game 7-7, and was culminated by Wade’s dunk with 5:46 left in the half. By that point, the Wildcats had an 18-9 lead that they would not relinquish.

The Wildcats led 31-22 at halftime and limited the Eagles to 29.2 percent shooting from the field in the first and 33.3 percent for the game.

Boston College committed 14 turnovers in the first half and 21 for the game, with Sneed’s steal and breakaway jam midway through the second half underscoring Kansas State’s prowess in turning turnovers into points.

Sneed’s jam put the Wildcats up 47-35, and from there the Eagles never seriously threatened Kansas State.

The Wildcats finished the game shooting 45.4 percent from the field.

BIG PICTURE

Boston College: After starting the season with four games against small programs, the Eagles took on a major conference squad in Kansas State and were found to be significantly lacking. Was it an isolated moment or is Jim Christian’s team headed for its third-straight losing season?

Kansas State: The Wildcats’ first game against a major conference opponent could not have been scripted better as Kansas State maintained its early first half lead for the remainder of the game.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Boston College: The loss ended the Eagles’ three-game winning streak, and probably put to rest any hopes Boston College could break into the Top 25.

Kansas State: Despite a complete performance in beating Boston College, Kansas State is probably not going to move into the Top 25.

NOTABLE

Boston College: Nic Popovic was tended to by a trainer as he lay on the court after being inadvertently elbowed by Kansas State’s D.J. Johnson early in the first half.

Kansas State: Friday night’s game was Kansas State’s second at the Barclays Center.

UP NEXT

Boston College: Will meet the loser of the of the Maryland/Richmond game Saturday.

Kansas State: Will meet the winner of the of the Maryland/Richmond game Saturday.

— Associated Press —

No. 3 Northwest hangs on to defeat Lake Superior State 91-86

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

MARYVILLE, Mo. – For much of the first half, Northwest Missouri State seemed headed to a double-digit victory over Lake Superior State Wednesday afternoon at Bearcat Arena.

Northwest held a 15-point halftime lead, but by midway through the second half, the Bearcats were locked in a battle that forced them to make clutch plays in the waning minutes.

And the Bearcats responded in positive fashion. Northwest, the No. 3 ranked team in NCAA Division II, pulled out a thrilling 91-86 victory, handing the Lakers their first loss of the season. Northwest improved to 5-0.

“We kind of lost focused,” said senior Zach Schneider, who finished with 21 points. “That is what we have done this year. We have built big leads and kind of lose focus at halftime. That is something we have to work on.”

It is a good thing for the fans the game came a day before Thanksgiving instead of Thanksgiving. The Bearcats put their fans on a wild, roller coaster ride the last 11 minutes of the game.

A ho hum win went by the wayside the first minute of the second half when Lake Superior opened with consecutive three-pointers, quickly closing to 49-40. It was the first time the Lakers trailed in single digits since it was 19-11.

Lake Superior trailed only 62-59 after a three-pointer by Blake Marquardt. It looked like Northwest put out that fire with a three pointer from freshman Ryan Welty.

It didn’t happen. The Lakers kept charging and eventually took a 66-65 lead. Northwest went right back in front on a layup by Justin Pitts with under 9 minutes left.

The Lakers took its second lead at 71-70 on another three-pointer by Marquardt. Once again, Northwest immediately answered with a four-point play by Schneider that gave the Bearcats a 74-71 lead with 5:38 left.

“That was a big one,” Schneider said. “It was kind of a jet screen that Pitts and I have been running for four years, since we came up here for our visit. He drags my defender away. They both commit to him and I was able to get open, knock it down and got fouled at the same time.”

Northwest never trailed again, but the Bearcats definitely needed to make plays in the final 5 minutes to put the game away. Pitts, who finished with a team-high 27 points, made a couple of free throws that gave Northwest an 82-77 lead. Northwest held an 87-81 lead when the Lakers made their final charge.

A three-pointer by Akaemji Williams with 12 seconds left, made it 87-86. Williams finished with a game-high 34 points.

The final key play of the game by Northwest came a couple of seconds later. Welty, who drained a couple important three-pointers during the game, made a cut to the basket. Brett Dougherty tossed a perfect pass to him. Welty was going in for a layup when Lake Superior fouled him too hard. A flagrant foul was called. Welty wasn’t in condition to shoot the free throws so Pitts calmly made both free throws.

“Brett had the ball right there and he saw me cutting towards the rim,” Welty said. “I knew I was going to get fouled hard, but I wasn’t expecting to get fouled as hard as I did. It stinks I had to come out, but JP (Pitts) hit two big free throws and Xavier hit two big free throws to ice the game.”

Because it was a flagrant foul, Northwest maintained possession of the basketball and Xavier Kurth was fouled with 7.6 seconds left. Kurth calmly made both free throws to give Northwest a five-point cushion.

“We knew it certainly could be,” Schneider said about the potential of a close second half. “We executed our scouting report really well in the first half.”

In the first half, Northwest needed to execute at a high level to take a 49-34 lead into halftime. The Bearcats shot 57.7 percent from the field, including four for seven from behind the three-point arc.

Northwest jumped to a 12-6 lead fueled by six quick points from Pitts. Over the next 5 minutes, the Bearcats stayed hot, increasing their lead to 26-11 on three free throws by Schneider.

During the first 10 minutes, Northwest played as well as a team can play early in the season against a good opponent.

As the Lakers started to heat up, Northwest managed to hold a comfortable lead because of the way it kept making baskets and free throws. Northwest held a 47-32 lead when Welty made three straight free throws after being fouled on a three-point attempt. The lead went to 17 points on a basket by Pitts.

“Coach trusted me to hit open shots,” said Welty, who finished with nine points. “It is really easy to hit open shots when JP is creating like he does. He gets to the basket so easily so the defense collapse on him and he kicks it out and that helps a lot.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri State loses on a buzzer-beater at DePaul

riggertMSUROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Billy Garrett Jr. beat the buzzer with a 15-foot pull-up jumper in the lane to give DePaul a 68-66 win over Missouri State on Wednesday night.

Garrett scored 21 of his 23 points in the second half and led the late charge with 15 coming in the final 7:15. The Blue Demons (3-1) took their first lead at 66-64 on Garrett’s 3-point play with 48.3 seconds left.

Missouri State (3-1) tied it with 18.1 seconds left on a pair of free throws by Chris Kendrix.

Eli Cain added 22 points and Tre’Darius McCallum 10 for DePaul.

Kendrix had 15 points, Ronnie Rousseau III scored 14 and Dequon Miller 12 for Missouri State. The Bears opened the game with a 9-2 run, led 31-22 at halftime, were up by as many as 13 in the second half and had a 10-point lead with 6:02 left.

— Associated Press —

MWSU women to host free basketball clinic Saturday

riggertMissouriWesternIn conjunction with this weekend’s Holiday Inn Express/Candlewood Suites Classic, Griffon Women’s Basketball will host a free clinic for girls in grades 2 through 6.

The clinic will take place in the MWSU Fieldhouse this Saturday, November 26 from 9-11 AM with registration beginning at 8:30 AM.

Participants will receive instruction from the defending MIAA Champion Griffons along with a t-shirt and ticket to that afternoons game against William Jewell. The clinic will conclude with an autograph session.  No RSVP is required.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou reacts to allegations of academic violations

Mizzou(Missourinet) – A former tutor for Mizzou athletics, Yolanda Kumar, has self-reported herself of wrong-doing in what she called “academic dishonesty,” in a post on her private Facebook account Tuesday afternoon.

“I have knowingly participated in academic dishonesty in my position as a tutor at the University of Missouri-Columbia Intercollegiate Athletic department, which is not limited to assistance with assignments. I have taken and assisted with entrance assessment, completed entire courses, and I been present to provide assistance with online assessments. It was encouraged, promoted, and supported by at least two Academic Coordinators for athletes in revenue generating sports, however, the wide spread desperation to succeed by other student-athletes at the bottom of an inverted pyramid of the organization’s construct cross (sic) multiple sports. I self-reported on November 2 and naively wanted to close the door on the manner after seeking counsel. I immediately resigned from my position on November 7 prior to meeting with a member for compliance, general counsel, and an individual that reports to the chancellor.

“You are able to see this post because I respect and honor your thoughts of me. I wanted you to hear it from me first. I apologize for disappointing you.

“I just can’t carry this burden anymore.”

From Kumar’s response, she is clear to point out, “revenue generating sports,” which are football and men’s basketball.

The news from Mizzou came out the same day when Notre Dame football was forced to vacate wins and pay a fine after an athletic training for the team was completing assignments and classes.

While the facts of the case at Missouri are still left to be determined, the penalty could be strong and harsh if it is proven that Kumar was pressured or forced by members within the athletic department to help.

STATEMENT FROM MIZZOU ATHLETICS

The University of Missouri has received allegations of potential academic rules violations by a former tutor in the Athletics Academic Services area.  Consistent with our commitment to rules compliance and to operating our athletics program with integrity, we are conducting a review of the allegations.  We also have informed the NCAA who is working with us on this matter.  To protect the integrity of the review process, we will not comment further at this time.

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS JIM STERK

“While we recognize that there will be many questions regarding this situation, these investigations take time to ensure that we do it the right way.  As always, our mission is to uphold the highest standard of academic performance and ensure the proper conduct with all of our programs.”

Northwest Missouri State women defeat Kansas Christian 76-47

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team moved to 5-0 with a 76-47 win over Kansas Christian College on Tuesday evening at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Mo.

– Northwest improved to 5-0 on the year while Kansas Christian College falls to 3-3.

– Tanya Meyer recorded her second double-double of the year, recording 18 points and 13 rebounds.

– Arbrie Benson also notched her first career double-double, scoring 10 points with 10 rebounds.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats shot 43.8 percent (32-73) from the field while holding the Falcons to just 18-of-54 from the field (33.3 percent).

– Northwest outrebounded Kansas Christian, 44-34, including 14 coming on the offensive end.

– The Bearcats never trailed in the game and led by as many as 41 in the game.

– Jasmin Howe hit four three pointers and finished with 18 points, a career-high five assists, a blocked shot and a rebound.

– Carlie Wilhelmi scored a career-high 14 points and tied a career-high with eight rebounds.

– Mallory McAndrews hit three long-range attempts to finish with nine points, three assists and two steals.

– Macy Williams had a team-high six assists with three points and two rebounds.

Key Northwest Sequence
– Northwest put the game out of reach early, staring the contest on a 16-2 run. Meyer scored just 19 second in on the first possession and Benson followed it with a three on the next trip down. Kansas Christian would score to make it 5-2 but the Bearats would score the next 11 points. Howe hit a three and Meyer added a jumper. After an empty trip, Howe finished a layup to make it 12-22. Maria Dentlinger hit a jumper off a Benson assist to push the lead to 14-2 and Howe knocked down her second three-pointer of the frame to push the advantage to 17-2. After a Falcon three-point miss, Wilhelmi hit a layup and added a jumper with 2:17 left to make it 21-2.

Up Next
– The Bearcats will head to St. Joseph for a pair of games this weekend. Northwest will face William Jewell on Friday at 5:30 p.m. followed by a 3 p.m. Saturday contest against Missouri S&T.

— Northwest Athletics —

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