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Missouri falls at No. 18 Florida 40-14

riggertMissouriGAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — When Steve Spurrier spoke to No. 18 Florida earlier in the week, he talked about how one player can affect the entire team.

The message stuck with Jalen Tabor, who wanted to be — and was — that guy Saturday.

Tabor and Quincy Wilson returned interceptions for touchdowns, helping No. 18 Florida beat Missouri 40-14 and move into first place in the Southeastern Conference’s Eastern Division.

The cornerback tandem provided nearly as many highlights as either offense and seemingly saved the Gators (5-1, 3-1) from a fourth homecoming loss in the last seven years.

“Anytime you get a defensive score or a non-offensive score, it’s a momentum shift for the whole team,” Tabor said. “I felt like I did that for my team today.”

Tabor, widely considered a first-round pick in the 2017 NFL draft, squatted on a short pass by Drew Lock and went untouched for a 39-yard score in the second quarter. It was Tabor’s second Pick Six in as many years against the Tigers (2-4, 0-3). Not to be outdone, Wilson stepped in front of Sean Culkin on the ensuing possession, picked off Lock’s pass and went 78 yards the other way for his first career touchdown.

“When you’ve got two great corners like that, they’ve got to pick one side of the field,” Gators coach Jim McElwain said. “It’s like pick your poison. Where you going to go with it?”

Florida, at least early, looked like it might need both of them on a rainy day in the Swamp.

Playing for the first time in a month, Luke Del Rio threw three interceptions in his return from a sprained left knee. And the Gators were flagged for eight false starts.

“Knee felt great,” Del Rio said. “Brett Favre said it: Playing injured or hurt is not an excuse for playing poorly. The knee didn’t affect me at all. It was just bad decisions, bad throws.”

Florida’s defense once again bailed out a less-than-sharp offense, which has become an all-too-often occurrence in Gainesville.

Missouri went three-and-out on its first six possessions, and Lock threw for a meager 39 yards. The result was a ninth consecutive conference loss for the Tigers.

“It’s definitely one of the worst feelings as a quarterback when you can’t hold up your end,” Lock said. “It’s on you. You force your defense back out on the field and they can barely get off the field because they’re so tired. We’re out there making them play for 10 minutes at a time and that’s not right.”

Mizzou’s latest loss came after an off week in which coach Barry Odom retooled his defense in hopes of better results. The Tigers allowed 418 yards rushing in a 42-7 loss at LSU two weeks ago.

Florida finished with 523 yards.

“They took advantage of mistakes we made, and that’s what good teams do,” Odom said.

Tabor and Wilson have done that before and surely will again.

“It’s like a domino effect with those guys,” Florida defensive tackle CeCe Jefferson said. “If one gets one, the other’s guaranteed to get one. That was big, man. That was big. It definitely changed the momentum of the game. We were definitely rolling from there.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Missouri: The Tigers will surely face more questions about an inept offense and a run-porous defense that has struggled to adjust to a new scheme.

Florida: Despite losing to rival Tennessee last month, the Gators now control their fate in the SEC East. But to win the division for the second consecutive year, Florida probably will need to beat Georgia, Arkansas, South Carolina and LSU in consecutive weeks down the stretch.

KEY INJURY

Florida linebacker Jarrad Davis, the team’s leading tackler, injured his left ankle in the third quarter and had to be helped off the field. McElwain said Davis was getting tests to determine the severity, but said it was not broken.

FOLEY’S FINALE

McElwain gave the game ball to retiring athletic director Jeremy Foley. It was Foley’s final game at Florida Field. He officially steps down Nov. 1.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Florida should move up a few spots in the next AP poll . The Gators topped 500 yards for the second time this season and would have enjoyed an even easier time had it not been for four turnovers.

UP NEXT

Missouri: Hosts Middle Tennessee next Saturday. The Tigers won the only other meeting, 41-40 in overtime in 2003.

Florida: Gets another off week before playing rival Georgia in nearby Jacksonville. The Gators have won 20 of the last 26 in the series.

— Associated Press —

Western volleyball gets swept by No. 18 Washburn

MWSUST. JOSEPH, Mo. – The Missouri Western volleyball team fell to #15 Washburn 3-0 (25-21, 25-23, 25-17) on Dig Pink night at the MWSU Fieldhouse Saturday.

It was a career night Missouri Western’s Kayla Ruff.  Ruff finished with 29 digs, setting a new program record for digs in a three set match.

After falling behind early in the first set, MWSU took an early 6-3 second set lead.  Washburn, however, would counter with a run to take the set.  Using a 6-2 run in the third set, the Griffons cut into the Washburn lead but could not maintain the momentum, as they dropped the match.

As Ruff led Missouri Western defensively, Rachel Friedrichs led the offense with 10 kills and one ace. Kelsey Olion finished with nine kills and 14 digs.

The Griffons are home again next weekend as they host Missouri Southern on Friday, Oct. 21 and Southwest Baptist on Saturday, Oct. 22.

— MWSU Athletics —

K-State loses at No. 19 Oklahoma 38-17

riggertKansasStateNORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Baker Mayfield and Dede Westbrook have become a dynamic duo for the Oklahoma Sooners.

Mayfield completed all but six of his 31 passes for 346 yards and four touchdowns, Westbrook had nine receptions for 184 yards and three scores and No. 19 Oklahoma pulled away to beat Kansas State 38-17 on Saturday.

One week after Mayfield passed for 390 yards and Westbrook had a school-record 232 yards receiving, they were electric once again as Oklahoma (4-2, 3-0 Big 12) won its third straight game after starting out 1-2.

When Mayfield hit a wide open Westbrook for an 88-yard touchdown — the longest pass play at home and fourth-longest overall in Oklahoma history — in the fourth quarter, it was Westbrook’s eighth TD in the last three games, a new school record.

“Two talented guys,” Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops said. “Of course, Baker’s just great. I’m just looking at 25 out of 31 — that’s a great day against a good defense. And then Dede’s just got that speed and polish in his route running to get open.”

With Samaje Perine sidelined by a muscle injury in the first quarter, Joe Mixon stepped up for Oklahoma. He rushed for 88 yards, caught three passes for 34 yards and a touchdown and became the first Sooners running back since Joe Washington in 1973 to throw a touchdown pass. The 26-yarder to Westbrook in the second quarter put the Sooners ahead 21-7.

“We trust Joe,” Mayfield said. “We were able to come out there and still run the same plays, even when Samaje wasn’t out there, so that’s why you saw some success in our passing game because those guys were still worried about our run game.”

Stoops noted that Perine was held out for precautionary reasons.

“Samaje just had a slight pulled muscle, and if forced to play, he could have,” Stoops said. “We wanted to see if we could get away with it, and hopefully allow it to heal this week.”

Kansas State (3-3, 1-2) had its own injury issues as starting quarterback Jesse Ertz left for good just after halftime with an apparent problem with his right throwing shoulder. He completed 8 of 14 passes for 68 yards and ended the game as the Wildcats’ leading rusher with 40 yards and a touchdown on seven carries.

Joe Hubener came in and threw for 157 yards on 12 of 23 passes, with a spectacular 54-yard touchdown to Dominique Heath early in the fourth quarter that pulled K-State to within 31-17. Heath ended up with seven receptions for 101 yards, both career-highs.

“It’s never as good as I would like,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said of his quarterbacks. “I think Jesse did some good things, Joe did some good things, but they made some mistakes. It’s still a work in progress.”

TAKEAWAY

Kansas State: K-State entered the game with the Big 12’s top defense, allowing just 17.6 points and 310.2 yards per game, but Oklahoma had 21 points less than five minutes into the second quarter and piled up 510 total yards.

“You have to stay aggressive against a defense like K-State,” said Oklahoma offensive coordinator Lincoln Riley. “If you start to get conservative and hand it off every time, they will prey on you, and they’ve done it against everybody, they’re one of the best run defenses in the country.”

Oklahoma: The Sooners need to keep feeding the ball to Mixon, even when Perine is healthy. Even as Perine’s backup, Mixon entered the day ranking fourth in the nation averaging 179 yards per game in all-purpose yards, and put up 177 in this one. His 19 rushes were a career high.

“Joe was sensational running the football,” Stoops said, “making a really good defense miss him on a good number of occasions to get extra yards. He ran tough in a lot of instances, caught the ball well, had a big kickoff return, and then goes and throws a touchdown pass.”

PLAY OF THE GAME

Which Mixon play to choose? There was the 8-yard touchdown reception where he made a one-handed catch on a short shovel pass from Mayfield and then hurdled over K-State safety Dante Barnett on his way to the end zone, which made it 14-0. Or would it be his 26-yard touchdown pass to Westbrook early in the second quarter?

“We’ll have to work on his spiral,” Mayfield said of Mixon’s pass. “That was a pretty ugly duck, but he got it there, that’s all that matters.”

UP NEXT

Kansas State: The Wildcats host Texas next Saturday.

Oklahoma: The Sooners visit Texas Tech next Saturday.

— Associated Press —

No. 10 Nebraska holds off Indiana to stay unbeaten

riggertNebraskaBLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — No. 10 Nebraska finally finished off Indiana on Saturday.

Barely.

They needed Stanley Morgan Jr. to take advantage of two Indiana safeties running into one another for a 72-yard TD catch. They needed a break from the officials — and the replay booth — when Terrell Newby nearly lost a fumble with the Cornhuskers clinging to a two-point lead with 2:06 to play. They needed a 39-yard field goal with 45 seconds left to force the Hoosiers to drive for a touchdown and they needed an interception on the Hoosiers’ final series to close it out.

No, it wasn’t pretty and it certainly wasn’t easy. But for the first time in 15 years, Nebraska has won its first six games.

“Great teams win games,” quarterback Tommy Armstrong Jr. said. “That’s all I got to say about it. You can say what you want about it, but all we do is come out and win games.”

Nebraska (6-0, 3-0 Big Ten) has won seven straight overall and five straight in this series, which was played for the first time since 1978.

Afterward, relieved Nebraska players and coaches were just glad to be heading home still in charge of the conference’s West Division.

The improving Hoosiers (3-3, 1-2), meanwhile, sure didn’t make it easy as they chased their first win over a top 10 team since 1987.

Nebraska scored the first 17 points courtesy of a field goal and two TDs in a 14-second span.

Indiana scored the next 15 and finally got into the end zone on the final play of the third quarter with a 33-yard TD run from Devine Redding on a fake reverse.

Morgan’s TD catch finally gave Nebraska the upper hand and all the Hoosiers could muster after that was Redding’s 4-yard TD catch that made 24-22 with 8:26 to play and the Cornhuskers played keep away the rest of the night.

“Three weeks in a row, play three pretty good games. One game we eliminate the mistakes and we get a victory,” Indiana coach Kevin Wilson said. “The other two weeks, we make mistakes and we lose the games.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Nebraska: The ‘Huskers could start to lock up the Big Ten West over the next two weeks. Nebraska is the only unbeaten team left on that side of the conference standings, and No. 8 Wisconsin comes to town in two weeks. A win there — or a loss by the Badgers before then — would make Nebraska a clear favorite to book a trip to December’s Big Ten championship game.

Indiana: The Hoosiers are in solid shape heading into an easier second half. They’ve already upset one ranked team, seriously challenged two more and their usually maligned defense has proven it can hold up. That bodes well for the Hoosiers, who need three wins to become bowl eligible for a second straight season for the first time in a quarter century.

KEY NUMBERS

Armstrong was held in check, running 11 times for 36 yards while going 10 of 26 for 208 yards through the air. Morgan had three catches for 93 yards and Newby ran 22 times for 102 yards. Indiana’s Lagow completed 19 of 32 passes for 196 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. His top target was Mitchell Paige, who had nine catches for 101 yards. Ricky Jones had six catches for 76 yards for Indiana.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Nebraska: This week, the Cornhuskers cracked the Top 10 for the first time in five years and they should continue moving up. How high they’ll go depends on everyone in front of them.

Indiana: The Hoosiers might be getting closer to a major breakthroughs but don’t expect them to end their 22-year absence in the rankings this week.

UP NEXT

Nebraska: Now the Cornhuskers have something to prove against Purdue. A year ago, the Boilermakers stunned Nebraska. But after Iowa’s 49-35 victory, the Boilermakers are reeling and Nebraska needs to keep the momentum rolling before facing No. 8 Wisconsin and No. 2 Ohio State.

Indiana: After finishing a brutal stretch against three straight Top 20 foes, the Hoosiers visit underperforming Northwestern. For the Hoosiers, it’s a chance to get back on the right track with two more winnable games after next week.

— Associated Press —

KU remains winless in Big 12 play with loss at No. 11 Baylor

riggertKUWACO, Tex. (AP) – Cornerback Ryan Reid and No. 11 Baylor will enjoy their upcoming open date a little more than the last one.

Reid returned the first of his two interceptions 64 yards for a touchdown , quarterback Seth Russell accounted for four touchdowns playing only a half, and Shock Linwood earned the school record for career rushing touchdowns in the Bears’ 49-7 win over Kansas on Saturday.

“We were just trying to make a statement. A lot of people they thought that Iowa State game, that’s who we are, which it’s not,” Reid said, referring to a 45-42 win two weeks ago in the last game when Baylor’s only lead came on a game-ending field goal. “We had to make a statement with our next game, and Kansas was in the way.”

Baylor (6-0, 3-0 Big 12), which now has another open date, led 42-0 after Russell’s last pass, a 4-yard TD to Ishmael Zamora with 1:45 left in the first half. KD Cannon, who missed the last game with a groin injury, turned a short pass into a 59-yard score.

A week after almost beating TCU at home, Kansas (1-5, 0-3) had five turnovers that led to 21 points for the Bears. The Jayhawks have lost 15 Big 12 games in a row, and dropped 36 consecutive road games since winning at UTEP seven years ago.

“We made some strides last week, and then today we took several steps back. That’s my responsibility,” second-year Kansas coach David Beaty said of the Jayhawks offense, which had only 217 total yards.

Russell had two touchdown runs in the first quarter, with Reid’s TD return coming between those.

Now 14-0 when starting for Baylor, Russell was 9-of-22 passing for 144 yards. He led the Bears with 68 yards rushing, and got flipped after he leaped in the end zone for a 26-yard TD when converting a fourth-and-3 to make it 21-0 in the first quarter

Linwood’s 4-yard score on the first play after a Kansas fumble was his 36th career rushing touchdown and broke a tie with Alfred Anderson for the most in school history. Linwood was already the career rushing leader for the Bears.

Reid returned his second pick 52 yards to the Jayhawks 19, but Baylor then had the first of its three missed field goals.

THE TAKEAWAY

Kansas: It’s not a good day when the highlight is the 82-yard punt by Cole Moos , who had the wind to his back and had the ball roll to the Baylor 3 after a great bounce off the turf. Sure, the Jayhawks were five-touchdown underdogs, but this was a bit of a backward step. They were also big underdogs a week in the one-point loss to TCU when they missed three field goals in the fourth quarter.

Baylor: While already bowl eligible for the seventh consecutive season, and the only FBS team to be 6-0 for the fourth year in a row, the Bears haven’t really been tested. Their only opponent with a winning record they’ve played is Oklahoma State, which had two fourth-quarter drives end inside the 5. The other opponents went into Saturday with a combined 5-22 record, and that doesn’t include Kansas’ latest loss. The Bears will get tested, still with No. 19 Oklahoma and No. 20 West Virginia on the road.

“We know that the lion’s share of our schedule lies in front of us, and the toughest part is the second half,” acting head coach Jim Grobe said. “Our guys realize that we’re happy to be 6-0 right now, but we know positively that we’re going to have to play great down the stretch.”

BLANK FINISHES

Baylor still hasn’t allowed a point in the fourth quarter this season. The Bears didn’t score either in the final 15 minutes Saturday, but have a 45-0 edge in that quarter this season.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Depending on how voters judge the losers of two games matching Top 10 teams, far-from-proven Baylor could move up into the Top 10 for the first time this season. The Big 12 hasn’t had a Top 10 team since Oklahoma was third in the preseason poll, then dropped 10 spots after a season-opening loss at Houston.

UP NEXT

Kansas: Plays four of its next five games at home, starting next Saturday against Oklahoma St.

Baylor: Another open date before playing at Texas on Oct. 29.

— Associated Press —

Griffons’ rally comes up short in five set loss to Emporia State

MWSUST. JOSEPH, Mo. – The Missouri Western Volleyball team fell to Emporia State in five sets (25-20, 25-20, 23-25, 16-25, 15-10) at the MWSU Fieldhouse on Friday night.

Dropping the first two sets, the Griffons would regroup in the third set.  MWSU took a decisive 9-2 lead behind an ace from Kayla Ruff to start the set.  Emporia State would cut into the lead, tying the set at 18, before Missouri Western would pull away and finish the set with a Blair Russell kill.

It was all Griffons in the fourth set, as an 8-0 rally propelled them to force a fifth set. Trading leads early in the final set, the Hornets were able to use a late rally to take the match.

Rachel Friedrichs had one of her best nights of the season as she finished with 15 kills, three aces and two blocks while hitting .343 for the match.  Kelsey Olion also had a big night for the Griffons as she recorded 14 kills, 12 digs and an ace.  Continuing their strong work from the service line, Kayla Ruff and Tiana Butler combined to ace Emporia State six times.

Missouri Western returns to the MWSU Fieldhouse Saturday at 7 p.m. as they host #15 Washburn.  Saturday night will be Dig Pink night for the Griffons as they encourage everyone to wear pink in support of Breast Cancer Awareness.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 17 Bearcats lose to No. 15 Washburn 3-2

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

MARYVILLE, Mo. – In a five-set thriller that took nearly 2 ½ hours to complete, the Northwest Missouri State volleyball team came up just a couple points shy of knocking off No. 15 Washburn Friday evening at Bearcat Arena.

When senior Miranda Foster’s kill attempt landed just outside the inbound line, the match ended with Northwest falling 25-23, 23-25, 25-23, 22-25, 15-13.

“That is always a disappointing moment,” said Foster, who finished with 19 kills. “But I think overall, we really fought. It doesn’t come down to that one point. It comes down to stringing more points together. I thought we did really well fighting. We left a lot of heart out there.”

The loss dropped the No. 17 Bearcats to 18-2 overall and 6-2 in the MIAA. Washburn improved to 18-4 and 8-1 and remains in first place.

Despite the outcome, there was nothing heartbreaking for the Bearcats. They fought from behind throughout the evening, pushing one of the perennial powers in the MIAA to make clutch plays in the final set.

“I think what we can take away from this match is how hard we fought,” said junior Sarah Dannettell, who had a match-high 57 assists. “Obviously, fighting that hard and not getting the win is tough. Our coach always says that if you leave everything on the court and you don’t get the result you want, that is all you can do.

“Our team can walk away from this game and say we left it all out on the court. It happens it didn’t fall in our favor tonight.”

Beyond any doubt, Northwest proved it can play with the very best in the MIAA. Now the Bearcats turn their attention to Emporia State. Northwest will face the Hornets at 6 p.m. Saturday at Bearcat Arena.

“I think tomorrow is going to be a battle,” Northwest coach Amy Woerth said. “Emporia is a good team. They went five with Washburn. They have good middles. It is going to come down to serve and pass and offensive performance. I just want our girls to continue to give the effort they gave tonight.”

The first two sets Friday night dripped with edge-of-your-seat drama. The matched opened with Washburn scoring the first two points. It would be the biggest lead by either team in the entire first set.

“I knew it was going to be a battle,” Woerth said. “I kept emphasizing we got to go win this battle. Anytime you have Washburn in your gym, they are not going to go down without a fight.”

Northwest went ahead 14-13 on a kill by Foster. The Bearcats held the lead until Wasburn pushed back in front 19-18. With the set tied at 21-21, Washburn scored the next points and that would prove to be the difference.

The second set was the exact opposite with a couple of wild swings in momentum. Northwest opened an early 6-2 lead and then watched Washburn score the next four points.

Leading 9-8, the Bearcats took command of the set, scoring seven of the next 10 points for a 16-11 lead. Seemingly in control, the Bearcats lost their rhythm. Washburn scored nine of the next 10 points for a 20-17 lead.

Northwest was on the brink of falling behind two sets to none when Bruder and Foster came up with big shots to help the Bearcats close to 20-19. Most importantly, the points changed momentum.

The Bearcats tied the match at 21-21 on a kill by Bruder, who finished with a team-high 28 kills. Northwest went ahead 22-21 on a kill by Foster and increased the lead to 23-21 on a block by Foster. Leading 24-23, Northwest won the next set point on a block by Dannettell and Alexis Williams.

“Going down 0-2 is never an ideal situation in a match,” Dannettell said. “Honestly, in my perspective, I think winning the second set is almost more important than winning the first set. That is how the rest of the game is going to look like. It was nice going out and fighting hard for the second game.”

Northwest played from behind most of the third set and when the deficit slipped to 18-14, it was a bit too much for the Bearcats to overcome. Still, Northwest kept battling and even tied the set at 23-23 on a nice serve by Olivia Nowakowski that Washburn was unable to return. The Ichabods buckled down and won the next two points and took a 2-1 lead.

Undaunted by being down a set again, Northwest calmly executed in the fourth set despite an early 11-8 deficit. The Bearcats moved ahead 15-14 on a kill by junior Taylor Linenberger. Northwest quickly increased its lead to 18-14 and used that cushion to take the fourth set 25-22.

“We knew we would contend with them,” Foster said. “It is always encouraging to know that we were that close. They are a very good team. We are going to keep working hard and those will fall in the end.”

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU soccer comes up short against Central Oklahoma 1-0

riggertMissouriWestern ST. JOSEPH – A Central Oklahoma goal in the 37th minute proved to be all the Bronchos needed to defeat the Missouri Westenr soccer team 1-0 on Friday night at Craig Field at Spratt Memorial Stadium.

Morgan Cherry’s goal was the final dagger in the first 35 minutes of the contest, which were controlled by UCO. The 9-4-1 Bronchos out-shot Missouri Western 14-6 in the game and 7-2 on goal. Both Missouri Western’s shots on frame came in the first half.

Paige LaBadie was credited with six saves but fell to 2-4 on the season with the loss. In a physical contest from start to finish, Maddy Cowell was issued a yellow card in the 79th minute. Cassidy Menke led the Griffons with three shots. Maddy Cowell had another as did Sydney Cluck and Layne Shepherd who had the only two shots on goal, off the bench for Missouri Western.

The loss dropped Missouri Western to 8-5 overall and 3-3 in the MIAA. UCO improved to 5-1 in conference play. The Griffons host Northeastern State on Sunday at noon. Northeastern State improved to 12-1 and 5-1 in the MIAA with a 4-1 win at Northwest Missouri State Friday night.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State soccer falls at home to Northeastern State

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University soccer team fell to Northeastern State, 4-1, on Friday at Bearcat Pitch in Maryville, Mo.

– Northwest falls to 4-7-1 on the year and 2-4 in MIAA play. The No. 21 ranked RiverHawks improve to 12-1 overall and 4-1 in conference action.

– The Bearcats got a goal from senior Cassie Phillips in the 65th minute off a corner kick by Izzy Romano.

– After falling behind in the first half, Northwest held the RiverHawks scoreless in the second.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The RiverHawks held a 17-9 advantage in shots but tallied only six on goal. Northwest had nine shots, four coming on goal.

– Northeastern State scored in the sixth, 22nd, 36th and 39th minutes.

– Northwest earned five corner kicks on the afternoon while the RiverHawks had six.

– Romano had three shots on the day, one coming on goal.

– Phillips, Abbi Brown and Rachel Roshek also recorded shots on goal for the Bearcats.

– Ashley Cole had two shots on the afternoon and Hannah Goetz had one shot.

– Brooke McCluskey made her Bearcat debut, making two saves with no goals allowed in almost 50 minutes of action.

Key Northwest Sequence
– Trailing midway through the second half, Northwest lined up for a corner kick in the 65th minute. Romano sent a curling ball in that found Phillips in the middle of the goal. Phillips timed her jump and headed the ball into the back of the net for her third goal of the year.

Up Next
– Northwest will face Central Oklahoma at 12:30 p.m. on Bearcat Pitch on Sunday, Oct. 16.

— Northwest Athletics —

Kansas unanimously picked to win another Big 12 men’s basketball title

riggertKUIRVING, Texas – For the 15th time in the 21-year history of the Big 12, Kansas men’s basketball has been selected as the preseason favorite to win the conference regular-season championship as the league released its coaches’ preseason poll Thursday.

Coaches were not allowed to vote for their own teams in the poll and KU received a unanimous nine first-place votes and a total of 81 points. West Virginia was second in the poll receiving 65 points, followed by Texas (59), Iowa State (56) and Baylor (53). Oklahoma was sixth with 40 points, while Oklahoma State and Texas Tech tied for seventh with 32 points. Kansas State (20) and TCU (12) rounded out the coaches’ preseason poll.

Kansas has won, or tied for, 16 of the 20 Big 12 regular-season titles, including the last 12 consecutive, a streak which ranks second all-time in NCAA Division I history. Should the prediction happen, a 13th straight regular-season championship would tie the NCAA record held by UCLA from 1967-79.

KU will have four of its top six scorers back from a 2015-16 squad that posted its 11th-straight campaign with 25 or more victories, finishing 33-5 overall and 15-3 in league play. Leading the way are guards Frank Mason III and Devonte’ Graham, who were recently named to the Preseason All-Big 12 Team. Senior forward Landen Lucas joins Mason and Graham as a returning starter. The Jayhawks also welcome freshman Josh Jackson, touted by several outlets as the No. 1 recruit in the nation. As a senior at Prolific Prep, he averaged 26.9 points, 13.1 rebounds and 6.3 assists in 2015-16.

Historically, the preseason favorite has gone on to finish first in the regular season 13 times, which does not include 1996-97 as a coaches’ poll was not conducted. Kansas has been the preseason favorite in 12 of its 16 Big 12 regular-season titles, missing 1996-97 (no poll), 2005-06 (third) and 2010-11 (second).

2016-17 Big 12 Coaches’ Preseason Poll
Place. School (first-place votes) – total points
1. KANSAS (9) – 81
2. West Virginia – 65
3. Texas – 59
4. Iowa State (1) – 56
5. Baylor – 53
6. Oklahoma – 40
7. Oklahoma State – 32
7. Texas Tech – 32
9. Kansas State – 20
10. TCU – 12

— KU Athletics —

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