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Griffon baseball loses at Northwest Missouri State 8-4

MARYVILLE, Mo. – The Missouri Western baseball lost at Northwest Missouri State Wednesday 8-4. It’s the fourth consecutive loss for the Griffons as they fall to 14-13 and 7-7 in the MIAA. Northwest has now won four straight as they’re now 16-12 and 12-5 in league play.

Missouri Western struck early when Nolan Meyer homered to left field with the second at-bat of the game. Identical to the first inning, Will Jibas homered to left field as the second batter of the inning. Jibas’s home run helped MWSU tie the game 2-2.

A bases loaded walk to Fahd Shakeel allowed Casey Danley to score a Griffon run for three consecutive innings and tie the game at 3-3. Northwest answered with two runs in the fifth inning before a Nick Schrank double drove in Maurice Bruce to cut the lead to 5-4. The Bearcats added three more runs in the eighth to pull away.

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western’s top four batters combined for five of the team’s seven hits

– Casey Danley and Nolan Meyer scored two runs with a RBI

– Dusty Stroup was 2-for-5 at the plate, his 12th multiple hit game this season

– Will Jibas extended his hitting streak to nine games with his second inning home run

– Every NWMSU batter in the lineup recorded a hit

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Missouri Southern for a three-game series beginning Thursday at 5:00 p.m. from the Griffon Spring Sports Complex.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals’ Salvador Perez out 4-6 weeks after freak knee injury

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Talk about carrying some baggage into the season.

Kansas City will be without Salvador Perez for up to six week after the star catcher sprained the medial collateral in his left knee while carrying a suitcase up some stairs in his home.

The injury occurred Tuesday night, when the Royals returned to Kansas City from spring training. The five-time All-Star heard a “pop” and immediately called Royals trainer Nick Kenney, who advised Perez to ice the knee and come in for an MRI exam on Wednesday.

The exam revealed a Grade 2 sprain with a minor tear of the ligament.

No surgery is required, and recovery can be as little as four weeks. But the freak injury leaves the Royals without one of their top hitters when they open against the White Sox on Thursday.

“Hopefully,” Royals manager Ned Yost said, “it’s shorter than longer.”

Perez was wearing a bulky, black brace on his knee when he arrived at Kauffman Stadium for the club’s final preseason workout Wednesday. Later, he told reporters what irked him most about the injury is it happened at home, rather than in the midst of competition.

“All the work I do, training in the offseason, I feel sad,” he said.

Making it even more depressing was the fact that Perez, coming off one of the best seasons of his career, had been on a tear throughout the spring. He appeared in 16 games and hit .350 with six homers and 11 RBIs in only 40 at-bats during the Cactus League schedule.

He hit .268 with career-bests of 27 homers and 80 RBIs last season.

The Royals were counting on having his bat in the lineup after losing run-producers Eric Hosmer and Lorenzo Cain in free agency. And while they addressed some of the power loss by signing outfielder Jon Jay, first baseman Lucas Duda and re-signing third baseman Mike Moustakas — who set the franchise single-season home run record last season — it still hurts to lose Perez’s bat in the lineup.

Yost said after a rainy workout Wednesday that he expects Drew Butera, the club’s backup a year ago, and promising youngster Cam Gallagher to share catching duties in Perez’s place.

Butera hit .227 with three homers and 14 RBIs in 75 games last season, his third with the Royals, while Gallagher hit .250 with a homer and five RBIs in 13 games as a late-season call-up.

The Royals begin the season against former pitcher James Shields and the White Sox, then get Friday off before games Saturday and Sunday to wrap up a three-game set. Then they go on the road for three games in Detroit and Cleveland before returning home for a seven-game homestand.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western hires Sundance Wicks as new men’s basketball coach

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western State University Director of Athletics Josh Looney announced the hiring of Sundance Wicks as the fifth head men’s basketball coach at Missouri Western State University, Wednesday morning.

“When this search process started, our mission was to find a coach who possessed two defining characteristics: a relentless recruiter, and someone who has been part of building a championship culture at the NCAA Division II level. These characteristics were non-negotiable,” Looney said. “With ‘Sunny,’ we not only found a proven recruiter and winner, but we also found someone with an unwavering commitment to engaging and motivating communities through basketball. His energy and passion for basketball are unmistakable and he is the perfect fit to lead the resurgence of our men’s basketball program. We can’t wait for St. Joseph to meet our next head coach.”

An introductory press conference will be held Friday, March 30 at 11 a.m. in the Hall of Fame Room inside Spratt Memorial Stadium. A meet and greet session will be held immediately following the press conference in the Spratt Memorial Stadium Club.

Wicks will come to Missouri Western fresh off the NCAA Division II national championship game as the associate head coach at Northern State University, his alma mater. Wicks brings extensive experience to MWSU as an assistant coach at the Division II and Division I levels.

Since 2016, Wicks served as associate head coach at Northern State. He helped lead the Wolves to the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference regular season and postseason championships this year. Northern State also claimed the central region championship en route to the program’s first-ever appearance in the national championship game.

“To say that I am jacked up to be the next men’s basketball coach at Missouri Western would be an understatement,” Wicks said. “First off, I would like to thank Dr. Vartabedian and Josh Looney for entrusting me with this awesome leadership position. The search committee consisting of Mike Halloran, Brett Esely and Eric Kramer were absolute rock stars.”

“This job, in my opinion, is a sleeping giant and I’m ready to wake up the beast and help transform this program into one the St. Joseph community will rally behind for years to come. This is an exciting time for Griffon Athletics. You can tell by all the energy and enthusiasm throughout the athletic department and the campus community that Missouri Western is ready for the fight and about to take flight.”

After lettering four years as a student-athlete at Northern State from 1999-2003, Wicks held assistant coaching positions at Northern State, Colorado (2006-07), Northern Illinois (2007-11) and San Francisco (2015-16). Wicks also built the Arizona Power Basketball Academy, serving as a skill instructor and director from 2011-15. Prior to launching the APBA, he spent five months training NBA pre-draft prospects at the Impact Basketball Academy in Las Vegas. Wicks’ draft class trainees included Kawhi Leonard, Alec Burks and Isaiah Thomas.

Wicks began his collegiate coaching career as a graduate assistant at Northern State under the legendary Don Meyer. As a student-athlete, Wicks was twice named first team All-NSIC, scoring 1,174 points and pulling down 665 rebounds in his career. He was also a two-time All-NSIC performer in the 400-meter hurdles at Northern State. After graduation, Wicks played for the Sodertalje Kings in Sweden. He led the team in points and rebounding.

Wicks received a bachelor’s degree in international business from Northern State in 2003 and a master’s degree in health, physical education and coaching from Northern State in 2006.

WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING ABOUT SUNDANCE WICKS

“Coach Wicks is a tireless worker that will bring a contagious energy to everyone around him. He will create a winning culture at Missouri Western that people will be proud of. He’s a total package coach that will be impactful not only on the court, but in the community.” – Paul Sather, head coach, Northern State University

“I have witnessed, first hand, the passion that Sundance has for teaching the game of basketball. His knowledge of the game and ability to connect with young people is second to none. The basketball program at Missouri Western is in great hands!” – Greg McDermott, head coach, Creighton University

“Missouri Western just got some serious juice! I’ve been around some of the greatest basketball people on this earth and no one will bring more energy, passion, work ethic and true team building than Sundance Wicks. Every day I was around him, I got better. Every day my family, players and staff were around him, they got better. Missouri Western just got better today and will continue to do so each day Sundance is leading, guiding, mentoring and coaching your young men. You got a great man and great coach to lead your program.” – Rex Walters, assistant coach, Detroit Pistons

— MWSU Athletics —

Griffon softball splits doubleheader at Northwest Missouri State

MARYVILLE, Mo. – The Missouri Western softball team split a doubleheader at Northwest Missouri State Tuesday. The Griffons won the opener 8-0 before losing game two 1-0. MWSU is now 16-19 this season and 7-3 in the MIAA.

Missouri Western made quick work of the Bearcats in game one with an 8-0, 5-inning victory for the team’s ninth win in 10 tries. The Griffons left two runners on base in the seventh inning of a game two pitcher’s duel that went the Bearcats’ way, 1-0.

The rivals entered Tuesday’s doubleheader as part of a three-way tie for second place in the MIAA standings and left as the only two teams with 7-3 MIAA records, tied for third.

NOTABLES
– Lonnie Groves and Gabi Carter both doubled and homered in game one with Carter driving in three runs

– The Griffons stole five bases on five attempts in game one

– Kenzie Hilzer continued a hot streak in the circle, striking out five Bearcats without a walk and pitching her second shutout over her last four starts

– Missouri Western had two hits in game two with Kaili Hinds holding Northwest Missouri to four hits

– Hinds and Hilzer have combined to hold opponents to 22 runs over their last 69 innings on 57 hits. Over the same span (five appearances each) they have struck out 37 and walked 18. The Griffons are 8-2 during that stretch.

– Northwest Missouri’s Rachel Smith totaled eight strikeouts in game two

UP NEXT
Missouri Western travels to Central Missouri (17-15, 6-2) on Friday, March 29. The Jennies are alone in second place in the MIAA after Missouri Western and Northwest Missouri’s split on Tuesday

— MWSU Athletics —

Central hires former MWSU assistant Regi Trotter as new head football coach

Click to listen to Central head football coach Regi Trotter

Central high school has hired Regi Trotter as the Indians new head football coach.

Trotter spent last season as an assistant coach at CHS, but he was an assistant coach at Missouri Western for 16 seasons.

Trotter, who played at MWSU from 1995-1998, worked as an assistant coach from 1999-2002. He then spent two years at Cortland State University in New York and one season at the University of Texas-El Paso.

Trotter returned to Missouri Western in 2005 and coached the defensive backs until 2016. He was also the Griffons’ defensive coordinator for seven years during that time.

Trotter will be the fourth head coach at Central in four years. Andy Ball, who went 4-7 in 2017, left after one season to become the offensive coordinator at Missouri S&T. Phil Pitts spent just one year at Central in 2016 before taking the defensive coordinator position at Lincoln University. Jeff Wallace was the Indians head coach for six years prior to Pitts.

Benton names Kevin Keeton new head football coach

Click here to listen to Benton head football coach Kevin Keeton

Benton High School has hired Kevin Keeton as the school’s new head football coach.

Keeton comes to Benton after serving as an assistant coach at Winnetonka High School. He’s been a coach in the Suburban League for 19 years and has been a head coach at Belton High School and Oak Park High School.

Keeton graduate from Truman High School in 1995 and played football at William Jewell College.

Keeton will be the third head coach in three years at Benton. He replaces Ben Glidewell, who spent one season with the Cardinals and went 2-8. Matt Tabor was the head coach for nine years before stepping down after the 2016 season.

Mizzou’s Michael Porter, Jr. declares for the NBA Draft

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri’s Michael Porter Jr. says he is declaring for the NBA draft.

The 6-foot-10 forward made the announcement on Instagram on Monday “after talking it over with my coaches and my family.”

Missouri was eliminated from the NCAA Tournament by Florida State in the opening round. The freshman scored 16 points in 28 minutes as a reserve, just his third appearance of the season due to a back injury.

Porter played two minutes in the team’s opener, then had lower back surgery Nov. 21. He returned for the SEC Tournament, scoring 12 points in a loss to Georgia.

“I wish I could have been on the floor with my brothers every single night,” Porter wrote. “But I’m so thankful I’ve been a part of such a special group.”

Porter was a McDonald’s All-American in high school after averaging 36.2 points and 13.6 rebounds per game his senior year. He was expected to be a one-and-done player, though the back injury threw some uncertainty into his draft stock.

— Associated Press —

Ong leads MWSU women’s golf to a fifth-place finish in Colorado

PUEBLO, Colo. – Shi Qing Ong earned her fourth top-three finish of the season with an even-par 144 Monday at the Pack Spring Invite at Walking Stick Golf Course. Ong was just two strokes off the individual championship and helped the Missouri Western women’s golf team place fifth with a score of 619.

Chong Yong carded a 144 in the two rounds and finished tied for 10th place. Tiffanie Yabut ended the two-day tournament with a 158 and tied for 24th. Katie Irvin recorded a 167 and Jenna Kosmatka shot a 168 for the Griffons.

Midwestern State won the team championship with a 587. Dixie State’s Katie Ford won individual honors with a 2-under-par 142.

MWSU travels next to the Henderson State Spring Invitational in Mountain Home, Arkansas.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou’s Cunningham named Honorable Mention AP All-American

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou junior Sophie Cunningham has been named Associated Press All-America Honorable Mention, as announced by the AP on Monday. It marks the second consecutive season Cunningham has received the honor.

Cunningham is the first Tiger named All-America Honorable Mention in back-to-back seasons since Joni Davis in 1984 and 1985. Cunningham and Davis are the only two players in program history to achieve that feat.

Cunningham arguably had the most efficient season by any player in the nation as a junior. She is the only player in the nation shooting at least 45 percent from 3-point range, 54 percent from the field and 83 percent from the free throw line. She reached double figures 28 times in 31 games and scored at least 20 points on 13 different occasions.

Cunningham scored 18.5 points per game, which ranked fourth in the SEC. She captained her team to 24 wins, the most by a Mizzou squad since 1983-84. Cunningham and company reached at least 22 victories for the third consecutive season and captured a third straight NCAA Tournament berth. Only 15 Power 5 programs have won at least 22 games and gone to the NCAA Tournament in each of the last three seasons.

Cunningham shined when it mattered most, pouring in 27 points on 9-of-10 shooting and dishing seven assists vs. No. 4 South Carolina. She notched 20 points vs. No. 2 Mississippi State, 32 points vs No. 11 Tennessee and 29 points vs. Kentucky.

The standout junior wrapped up the campaign with a Mizzou record for points in an NCAA Tournament game, scoring 35 vs. Florida Gulf Coast. With a career-best 574 points as a junior, Cunningham has 1,563 career points already through three seasons, which ranks eighth all-time at Mizzou.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Kansas outlasts Duke 85-81 in OT, advances to Final Four

OMAHA, Neb. — Kansas is going back to the Final Four.

It’s hard to argue that Duke shouldn’t be headed there as well after the most riveting show of the NCAA tournament.

Malik Newman and the top-seeded Jayhawks got past their Elite Eight road block Sunday, knocking off second-seeded Duke 85-81 in overtime to clinch the program’s first trip to the Final Four since 2012.

Newman scored all 13 of the Jayhawks’ points in OT and finished with a career-high 32 to lead Kansas (31-7).

The Jayhawks will face fellow top seed Villanova on Saturday in San Antonio — the site of KU’s last title over Memphis in 2008 — after snapping a two-game losing skid in the regional finals.

“Everything we’ve been through…we do it for moments like this,” Kansas star Devonte’ Graham said. “Especially after the last two years, getting over the hump. It just feels (perfect).”

This was college basketball at its best, two blue bloods trading blows for 45 minutes in what was arguably the best game of March so far, one that featured 18 lead changes and 11 ties.

Had Grayson Allen’s bank shot to end regulation gone half an inch in a different direction, it might be Duke heading to South Texas.

But it didn’t, and instead the Jayhawks are moving on.

“It was an honor to play in this game,” said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, who remained tied with UCLA legend John Wooden with 12 Final Four performances. “I think both teams were deserving of winning.”

Newman, a redshirt sophomore who came on late this season, drilled his fifth and final 3 from the corner to make it 81-78 with 1:49 left. Newman followed with four straight free throws, and the Jayhawks’ defense stiffened enough to knock the favored Blue Devils out of the tournament.

Trevon Duval scored 20 points, two shy of a career high, for Duke. Freshman star and future lottery pick Marvin Bagley added 16 points and 10 rebounds in what could have been his final game for the Blue Devils (29-8), who fell shy of their first Final Four trip since winning the national title in 2015.

Allen had 12 points for the Blue Devils, but the senior’s try at the regulation buzzer went in and then out and then off the rim before spinning away to force overtime.

“I was trying to drive right, he cut me off. Went back left. Their big stepped into help. I had to get a shot up over him. I tried to bank it in and it about went in,” said Allen, who finished his brilliant career with 1,996 points.

THE BIG PICTURE

Kansas: This might be the unlikeliest of coach Bill Self’s three Final Four squads. They are not stacked with obvious future NBA starters and they lost three times at home this season. But the Jayhawks banded together to win the Big 12’s regular season and conference titles and now the Midwest Region. By doing so, they proved to their coach that they were hardly soft — a claim that Self had made often earlier in the season. And with the final buzzer about to sound and the outcome suddenly in focus, Self clenched both of his fists and lifted his arms in the air for a celebration years in the making.

Duke: The Blue Devils might see four of their freshman stars bolt for the NBA Draft, an expected exodus led by Bagley, a likely top-five pick. Duke will also lose Allen, one of the best players in school history. Don’t cry for Coach K, who has four five-star recruits committed to join the program next year. But this season will likely be remembered as a lost opportunity — and for that Allen shot that went agonizingly out of the rim.

PIVOTAL MOMENT

Duval was a revelation in the opening half, scoring 13 points to give the Blue Devils a 36-33 lead that at times felt like it could’ve been bigger. But the Jayhawks opened the second with a 13-3 run, forcing Duke to answer quickly. The Blue Devils did just that, time and time again, until it had the lead in the final minute. But Kansas senior Svi Mykhailiuk drilled a 3 with 25.7 seconds left in the second half to knot the game at 72-all.

THE NUMBERS

Kansas outrebounded Duke 47-32, a staggering stat given that the Jayhawks barely outrebounded their opponents heading into the game. …Lagerald Vick had 14 points, Devonte’ Graham had 11 with six boards and six assists and Mykhailiuk had 11 points, 10 rebounds and five assists while helping defend Bagley. “Even though Malik scored a lot of points, I don’t think that anybody had a better game than Svi did,” Self said. … The Blue Devils were 7 of 29 on 3s.

HE SAID IT

“We didn’t even talk about going to the Final Four. All we talked about is Duke. I do think playing Duke in that game helped us. It was fun. I would be proud to have coached in that game even if the outcome is different,” Self said.

UP NEXT

Duke: Welcoming the next batch of one-and-done stars.

Kansas: The Jayhawks are in the Final Four for the 15th time.

— Associated Press —

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