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Griffons suffer 90-75 loss against Maryville

ST. LOUIS, Mo. – Missouri Western Men’s Basketball (4-4) lost its second and final game of the UMSL Thanksgiving Classic 90-75 to Maryville (4-2) on Saturday. The Griffons shot 47 percent from the field but couldn’t overcome hot shooting from Maryville as MWSU suffers its third straight loss.

NOTABLES

  • Maryville ended the first half on an 18-6 run to take a 43-32 lead going into the break.
  • Missouri Western’s six made three pointers kept the Maryville lead at 11 points going into halftime. Lavon Hightower made all four of his three-point attempts in the first half.
  • Hightower’s made jumper at 9:23 in the second half capped off a 10-3 run by the Griffon to cut the deficit to just eight.
  • The Saints outscored the Griffons 23-16 throughout the remainder of the game.
  • Maryville’s 90 points on Saturday are the most points allowed by the Griffons this season.
  • Saturday was also the first game in which the Griffons have allowed their opponent to shoot over 50 percent from the field, as the Saints shot 61 percent.
  • The Griffons shot 52 percent from the field in the second half.
  • Missouri Western shot a season-high 41 percent from three in the loss.
  • Maryville hands the Griffons their third-straight loss, with all three of those games on the road.

LEADERS

  • Bryan Hudson led the team in scoring for the second time this season with 21 points.
  • Hightower added 19 points, eight board, and three assists.
  • Alex Martin scored a season-high 14 points.
  • Beau Baker scored a season-high seven points in 22 minutes.

UP NEXT

  • The Griffons will wrap up a five-game road trip against William Jewell (2-5) on Nov. 26.
  • The Cardinals will be coming off a 91-81 win at Southwest Baptist earlier this week.

— MWSU Athletics —

Bearcats knocked out of playoffs with 27-21 loss at Ferris State

BIG RAPIDS, Michigan – The Northwest Missouri State University football team put up a valiant effort against No. 2-ranked Ferris State Saturday and the game came down to a final play as the Bulldogs hung on for a 27-21 win in the second round of the NCAA Division II playoffs.

Northwest trailed 27-14 with 1:15 left in the fourth quarter when the Bearcats took over on downs. Northwest drove 88 yards on eight plays and scored on a two-yard touchdown pass from Braden Wright to Alec Tatum. Northwest put the ball on the two-yard line following a 51-yard pass play from Wright to LaTroy Harper. Tatum’s score cut the Ferris Stat lead to 27-21 with :14 left.

Northwest kicker Parker Sampson executed a perfect on side kick and the Bearcats’s Marqus Andrews recovered the ball to give the Bearcats possession. Northwest gained 20 yards and had 1st and 10 at the 34-yard line with :05 left in the game. However, Wright was sacked by Austin Simpson and FSU’s Austin Edwards recovered the fumble as the clock expired.

Ferris State jumped on the scoreboard early only three plays into the contest. Following a 71-yard passing play from Jevon Shaw to Sy Barnett set up the Bulldogs for a two-yard touchdown run by Marvin Campbell one minute into the game.

The Bulldogs added their second touchdown of the first quarter on an 8-yard run by third-string quarterback Evan Cummins. Cummins score capped a five-play, 96-yard drive after a Matt Thorman punt had backed up the Bulldogs to their own four.

Ferris State’s Jackson Dieterle tacked on field goals of 45 and 44 yards in the second quarter to build the Bulldog lead to 20-0 with 2:50 left until halftime.

Northwest put together a sustained drive and cracked the scoreboard on a 19-yard passing play from Braden Wright to Shawn Bane Jr. with :09 left in the half. Wright guided the Bearcats 75 yards in 12 plays and the drive consumed 2:36 off the clock. The touchdown pulled Northwest to within 20-7 at the break.

In the first half, Ferris State racked up 343 total yards on 36 plays. The Bulldogs rushed for 149 yards and threw for 194. Meanwhile, Northwest was limited to 132 total yards on 34 plays. Northwest rushed for 13 yards on 14 carries in the opening 30 minutes.

Jack Richards picked off a Travis Russell pass and returned it 32 yards for a touchdown with 12:03 left in the third quarter to pull Northwest to within 20-14 of the Bulldogs.

Northwest failed to capitalize on a missed 26-yard field goal by FSU’s Dieterle in the third quarter. Following a Northwest punt, Ferris state marched 74 yards in eight plays capped by a two-yard touchdown run by quarterback Travis Russell with 0:56 left in the third. The Russell score gave Ferris State a 27-14 lead.

LaTroy Harper tallied his first 100-yard receiving game eight catches for 115 yards. Wright passed for 269 yards on 28-of-43 passing. Ben Althoff tallied a game-high 16 tackles.

NOTES: Ferris State played without the services of Harlon Hill candidate quarterback Jayru Campbell, who suffered a shoulder injury in the Bulldogs’s win over Harding last week … Northwest had won the only previous meeting between the two schools in the 2016 NCAA Division II semifinals Maryville, in which Northwest was victorious, 35-20.

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU women fall in overtime to William Jewell

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western (3-4) and William Jewell (3-2) saved the best for last for the final game of the Fairfield Inn Thanksgiving Classic on Saturday. The Griffons fell 68-61 in a back-and-forth overtime game that featured 10 ties and 11 lead changes.

NOTABLES

  • William Jewell took a narrow 32-29 lead into overtime. Both teams struggled offensively, shooting a combined 36 percent with a total of 20 turnovers.
  • The Griffons played their best basketball in the third quarter. The Griffons held William Jewell to 20 percent shooting and scored 16 points in the period, making seven of their 10 free throws.
  • The Cardinals used a 13-2 run to regain the lead with 1:24 left in the fourth quarter.
  • KeShara Scott tied the game at 58-58 with 64 seconds remaining on a mid-range jumper.
  • Jessica Davies scored the first basket of the overtime period on a three-pointer. Davies extended the possession with an offensive rebound before Jill Rumpf kicked it back out to Davies for three.
  • The Cardinals made three of their next four free throws to tie the game at 61.
  • With 44 seconds remaining, Antoinette Mussorici gave William Jewell a three point lead as she converted an and-one layup.
  • William Jewell drew six fouls in overtime and converted eight of nine free-throw attempts, outscoring the Griffons 10-3 in the extra period to hand the Griffons the loss.
  • Both teams shot 33 percent from the field in the game.
  • The Griffons outrebounded their opponent for the fourth-straight game on Saturday, winning the rebounding battle 44-30.

LEADERS

  • Davies and Ledbetter both tied for the team lead in points (10) and rebounds (8).
  • Davies’ 10 points and 8 boards are both season-high marks.
  • Scott added nine points, six rebounds, and a team-high three assists

UP NEXT

  • Missouri Western will host Adams State (0-2) on Nov. 27 in its next game.
  • The Grizzlies lost their last game by 15 points on the road at William Jewell.

— MWSU Athletics —

K-State blows 17-point fourth quarter lead, loses at No. 25 Iowa State

AMES, Iowa (AP) — For Iowa State, it felt like yet another inexplicable loss to Kansas State might be inevitable.

Then a fumble flipped in the air and fell right into Mike Rose’s hands, and the Cyclones’ bad luck against the Wildcats seemed to wash away.

David Montgomery ran for three touchdowns, including the winner with 4:34 to go, and 25th-ranked Iowa State rallied from 17 down in the fourth quarter to stun Kansas State 42-38 and snap a 10-game skid against the Wildcats on Saturday night.

Montgomery had 149 yards rushing for the Cyclones (7-4, 6-3 Big 12), who clinched their best-ever finish in the Big 12.

Down 38-21, Iowa State scored twice in just 1:44 early in the fourth — on Brock Purdy’s short TD pass and a 21-yard fumble return by Rose after Willie Harvey forced it — to pull to 38-35.

The made a stop, and Montgomery’s 18-yard touchdown run gave Iowa State an improbable lead.

“This team has never disappointed me,” Iowa State coach Matt Campbell said. “We’re not flashy. We’re not pretty. But you better not count us out.”

Kansas State’s (5-7, 3-6) fate was sealed when a long pass to Dalton Schoen deep in Iowa State territory glanced off his fingertips with 1:20 left.

The Wildcats took control by going 92 yards on eight plays after picking off Purdy, opening up a 31-21 lead on Skylar Thompson’s 9-yard TD pass to Chabastin Taylor late in the third. K-State’s Kevion McGee then intercepted Purdy again, and Isaiah Zuber’s second TD grab of the game made it 38-21 early in the fourth.

Purdy redeemed himself down the stretch though, finishing with 337 yards passing and two touchdowns in what Campbell said was his best game yet.

Thompson threw three touchdown passes and ran for a score, and Alex Barnes rushed for 184 yards and a TD for the Wildcats. Barnes rushed for at least 100 yards in his last four games, the longest such streak for a Wildcat since Darren Sproles had a five-game streak in 2003.

“I’ve never lost a ballgame that way. I’ll have to dissect it,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said. “I can’t tell you what my feelings are right now.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Iowa State: The Cyclones revival since the start of last season had been sparked by their defense. But the cracks that began to show in a win over Baylor and a loss at Texas developed into sink holes against the Wildcats. Iowa State’s offense, bailed out so often by their teammates on the other side of the ball, finally returned the favor — and the defense showed up when it mattered.

K-State: If this proves to be Bill Snyder’s final game, what a brutal way to go out. All the Wildcats had to do was protect a 17-point lead with 12 minutes to go bowling, but they couldn’t do it.

SNYDER’S STATUS

K-State’s 5-7 record is the worst since Snyder came back in 2009. Speculation has been rampant that the 79-year-old Snyder might step down, but he didn’t address those rumors after the game. “That’s the last thing on my mind right now,” Snyder said when asked about his status.

WHY THE CYCLONES FELL BEHIND

Tarique Milton fumbled away a punt just before halftime, and it took the Wildcats 16 seconds to go 34 yards for a touchdown; a 6-yard pass from Thompson to Isaiah Zuber to make it 21-14. Kansas State, which struggled in the red zone all year, scored on all six of its trips inside Iowa State’s 20.

DID THE BUTLER DO IT?

On the previous series, Iowa State appeared to take a 20-14 lead on a short TD pass from Purdy to Milton. But Hakeem Butler was called for offensive pass interference, and Connor Assalley then shanked a 38-yard field goal attempt. Butler also had a sure TD bounce off his hands late in the fourth quarter, but Montgomery bailed him out shortly thereafter. “David is the best player in the country to me,” Butler said. “I tell him that every day, and he proved that.” Butler finished with 144 yards on five catches.

HE SAID IT

“The chances of the ball just falling right in his lap like that and then returning it for a touchdown and quick scores like that after we were up 17 points, that was frustrating. We couldn’t really get it going after that,” Thompson said about Rose’s fumble return.

UP NEXT

Iowa State hosts Drake of the FCS in a makeup for its canceled opener.

Kansas State’s season is complete.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women cruise to 73-23 win over Saint Mary

The Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team defeated Saint Mary’s 73-23 in the Fairfield Inn Thanksgiving Classic Saturday in St. Jospeh. Northwest got off to a fast start, never trailing in the game.

Erika Schlosser led all players in scoring with 17 points. Also in double figures was Kaylani Maiava with 13 and Mallory McConkey with 11. The Bearcats shot 13-23 from behind the arc. Schlosser went a perfect 6-6 from the field, including 5-5 from the three-point line. Jaelyn Haggard led the team with 7 assists. McConkey and Mia Stillman led the team in rebounds with 8. McConkey also led the team in steals with 4. The Bearcats had 12 steals and did not allow a single player from Saint Mary to break 5 points or allow them to score double digits in any quarter. The Bearcats shot 49.1% from the field and held Saint Mary to 17% shooting.

The 23 points scored by Saint Mary is the least amount of points Northwest has allowed since the Bearcats defeated Missouri Western 104-19 in 1975.

Northwest will play again Saturday, December 1 at 1 p.m. against Nebraska Christian College in Bearcat Arena.

— Northwest Athletics —

Wade takes over in 2nd half as No. 12 Kansas State defeats Lehigh

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Dean Wade knew Kansas State was in need of a spark, and he took it upon himself to provide it.

Wade scored 14 of his 18 points in the second half, Barry Brown added 16 and No. 12 Kansas State beat Lehigh 77-58 on Saturday.

“The first half we weren’t playing with any emotion or energy so my main focus was to do that,” Wade said. “I just wanted to be aggressive, but smart.”

The Wildcats (6-0) controlled the second half after the Mountain Hawks hung around and trailed by two at halftime.

“I think we wore them down as the game went on,” coach Bruce Weber said. “I told our guys these guys are pretty good and I didn’t think we played very good defense in the first half.”

Kamau Stokes scored 10 points, including two first-half 3-pointers, but the Wildcats continued to struggle with their long-distance shooting at home, making 6 of 20 3-point attempts.

James Karnik had 15 points and eight rebounds for Lehigh (4-2), and Pat Andree scored 12. Lehigh compiled 16 turnovers and made just nine field goals in the second half, shooting 28 percent. Lehigh shot 54 percent in the first half.

The Wildcats scored 18 points off Lehigh’s turnovers.

“Our defense is always something we take pride in,” Brown said. “We just focused on getting stops every time and we were able to get some easy baskets off those.”

Brown converted a three-point play to give K-State a 50-40 lead with 14 minutes remaining. That was part of a 12-5 run by the Wildcats that gave them a 57-45 lead.

Kansas State led 37-35 at halftime as neither team build a lead larger than five in the first 20 minutes. The Wildcats struggled against the Mountain Hawks’ matchup zone.

“We don’t see that very often and it’s even a hard thing to practice,” Weber said. “We needed to move the basketball and look inside and keep it going. They got us a little stagnant at times, but once we settled down we were able to find some things.”

Kansas State is off to its best start since 2004-05, when it won its first eight games. The Wildcats face Marquette next Saturday in their first road game of the season.

“This is a chance to take a big step as a team, but Marquette is a very good team,” Weber said. “They beat Louisville and played Kansas well, so it’s going to be a tough test.”

STAR WATCH

Brown recorded the 200th steal of his career and is now second in Kansas State history behind Jacob Pullen, who had 210 from 2007-11.

BIG PICTURE

The Wildcats have struggled with all three nonconference opponents this year, but have managed to win all three with big runs in the second half. They will need to come out with more urgency when Big 12 play begins.

Lehigh had an impressive start to the season with wins over Siena and Princeton, but couldn’t get over the hump against Power Five schools K-State and Miami.

UP NEXT

Lehigh hosts Arkansas State on Dec. 1.

Kansas State will take on arguably its toughest test of the season thus far when it travels to Marquette on Dec. 1.

— Associated Press —

Big run sends Nebraska past Western Illinois 73-49

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Glynn Watson Jr. had 20 points to lead Nebraska past Western Illinois 73-49 Saturday. But, after the game, the senior guard wanted to talk about rebounding.

Watson led Nebraska with nine rebounds, matching his career high — and coming up one carom short of a double-double.

“Coach had talked to us about rebounding,” Watson said. “I just tried to come out and play defense and rebound… I’m just cleaning up. Them guys box out, I’m the guy who comes and cleans up. They told me I needed one more. They hit a couple shots at the end, I guess it wasn’t for me today.”

Nebraska (5-1) was sluggish at the start, trailing Western Illinois 9-4 in the early going. The Huskers then slapped on the defense, holding the Leathernecks (2-4) to just five points in the next 15 minutes.

The Huskers led 17-11 when James Palmer Jr. heated up, hitting three layups, a jumper in the lane and a pair of free throws, putting Nebraska up 27-14 with 4:35 left in the half. Nebraska led by 23 at intermission.

Nebraska hit 57 percent of its shots in the first half while holding Western Illinois to 24 percent.

Nebraska opened the second half with 10-0 run, going up 50-17 on Watson’s 3-pointer with 17:41 remaining.

That lead was built off of the Huskers’ defense, which Nebraska coach Tim Miles praised, at least for the game’s first 23 minutes.

“I thought it was good for awhile, then I thought it fell off,” Miles said. “You don’t build a 33-point lead on anybody unless you’re locking them up. At the time we’d held them to just a couple 3-pointers. We’d rebounded pretty well… I thought we did a lot of things right for a long time. We didn’t finish the job. I’m not happy about that.”

Nebraska scored just 23 points after it took the big lead, in part because the Huskers were firing up and missing quick 3-pointers against Western Illinois’ zone defense. That let the Leathernecks get out in transition and cut the Husker lead to less than 20 a few times in the half.

“In the first half we were not ourselves,” said Western Illinois coach Billy Wright. “I think that had a lot to do with them (Nebraska)… but you look at some things that we didn’t do so well the first half, we were able to correct in the second half and it was 33-32 in the second half. We were still very competitive for most of the second half we just got down too many points from the start.”

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: After scoring more than 80 points in their first four games, the Huskers had just 52 points in a Tuesday loss to Texas Tech. Nebraska got its scoring back on track Saturday, scoring 40 in the first half. Nebraska is now averaging 80 points per game.

Western Illinois: Leatherneck 7-foot-senior center Brandon Gilbeck came into Saturday’s game leading the nation in blocked shots per game at 5.5 and second in total blocks at 21 Gilbeck was foul-plagued Saturday, playing just 14 minutes before fouling out. He still got three blocks against the Huskers.

UP NEXT

Nebraska: The Cornhuskers travel to Clemson to play the Tigers in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge on Monday.

Western Illinois: The Leathernecks host Southern Illinois-Edwardsville on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

No. 21 Missouri women top Quinnipiac at Gulf Coast Showcase

ESTERO, Fla. (AP) — Sophie Cunningham scored 26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, Amber Smith also had a double-double and No. 21 Missouri beat Quinnipiac 65-51 in the consolation semifinals of the Gulf Coast Showcase on Saturday.

Cunningham made 7 of 14 shots and 9 of 12 free throws, and also had three assists and two blocks. Smith had 17 points and 10 rebounds for Missouri (4-2).

Cunningham scored 15 of Missouri’s 37 first-half points and the Tigers ended the half on a 13-2 run for a 15-point lead. Missouri made seven of its nine 3-point attempts in the first half.

Jen Fay led Quinnipiac (2-3) with 14 points and eight rebounds.

Quinnipiac was just 6-of-32 shooting (18.8 percent) in the first half, with four makes from 3-point range. The Bobcats were held to nine points in the second quarter and trailed 37-22 at the break. Quinnipiac started the fourth quarter on a 9-0 run to pull to 49-40.

— Associated Press —

Griffons let late lead slip away, lose at Missouri-St. Louis

ST. LOUIS, Mo. – Griffon Men’s Basketball (4-3) fell on the road at Missouri – St. Louis (5-1) in the team’s first game of the UMSL Thanksgiving Classic on Friday. The Griffons took their first lead of the second half with just under four minutes remaining, but fell by a score of 74-61.

NOTABLES

  • The Griffons trailed by just two going into halftime, holding Missouri – St. Louis to just 39 percent shooting in the half. The Tritons’ five made jump shots gave them the 34-32 advantage going into halftime.
  • Missouri – St. Louis stretched the lead to 10 points with just over six minutes remaining.
  • The Griffons then made four-straight three-pointers on a 12-0 run to take their first lead of the second half at 59-57 with 3:35 to play.
  • The Tritons closed the game on a 17-2 run, forcing four Griffon turnovers.
  • Missouri Western outrebounded the Tritons 35-30 in the loss.
  • The Griffons shot 42 percent from the field.

LEADERS

  • Tyree Martin earned his first career double-double on Friday, finishing with a career high in points (12) and rebounds (11).
  • Lavon Hightower scored in double-digits for the 19thstraight game, finishing with 16 points on five made three’s.
  • Bryan Hudson added 12 points on 63 percent shooting.
  • Tyus Millhollin dished out a game-high four assists.

UP NEXT

  • The Griffons will play their second and final game of the UMSL Thanksgiving Classic against Maryville (3-2) on Saturday.
  • The Saints lost to Central Missouri 83-76 on Friday.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 2 Bearcats roll to a 50-point win over Tabor

MARYVILLE, Missouri – The No. 2-ranked Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team cruised to a 93-43 non-conference home win over Tabor College on Friday afternoon in Bearcat Arena.

Northwest (7-0 overall) won for the 22nd straight time in the month of November. Tabor fell to 3-6 on the season.

Junior Ryan Welty buried 7-of-10 three-pointers and led the way with 21 points. Sophomore Ryan Hawkins narrowly missed a double-double with 18 points and nine rebounds. Redshirt freshman Trevor Hudgins dished out six assists and scored 10 points.

Freshman Diego Bernard scored 10 points and handed out three assists in his first collegiate start.

Northwest shot 57.6 percent from the field and drained 14 three-pointers against the Bluejays.

The Bearcats will take to the court against next Saturday against Midland at 3 p.m. in Bearcat Arena.

NOTES: Daric Laing scored his first points of the season as he sank a pair of three-pointers … Xavier Rhodes scored his first collegiate points with eight points off the bench … Northwest has won the rebounding battle in all seven games this season.

— Northwest Athltiecs —

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