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Miller, Griffons blank Washburn 5-0 for fourth straight win

ST. JOSEPH – Jacob Miller tossed a complete game with a career-high nine strikeouts as Griffon baseball (9-9) beat Washburn (6-12) 5-0. It is the fourth consecutive win for Missouri Western win.

MWSU tried to supply plenty of run support in the first inning when it scored a run and loaded the bases on a pair of Ichabod errors. The Griffons only managed one run in the inning but added three insurance runs in the third inning and another run in the eighth inning.

Miller controlled Washburn throughout his complete first complete game at Missouri Western. He allowed just three hits and two walks as he faced 32 batters. Washburn committed five errors in the game.

NOTABLES
– Jacob Miller is Missouri Western’s third pitcher this season to throw a complete game

– The seven through nine batters for the Griffons combined to score three of the team’s five runs

– Brooks Day scored two runs for MWSU in his four at-bats

– Dusty Stroup drove in two runs for Missouri Western, it is fourth multiple RBI game this season

– Casey Danley went 2-for-4 at the plate

UP NEXT
Missouri Western goes for the series sweep tomorrow, March 11 at 1 p.m. from the Spring Sports Complex.

— Associated Press —

Kansas tops West Virginia 81-70 to win Big 12 tourney title

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Devonte Graham ripped off the shooting sleeve he was wearing and tossed it into the crowd, then took the two-time Big 12 defensive player of the year baseline for a pullup jumper.

Talk about unflappable.

Unstoppable, too.

The league’s player of the year finished with 18 points and 13 assists, most of them during the decisive second half, and Graham led ninth-ranked Kansas to an 81-70 victory over Jevon Carter and No. 18 West Virginia in the Big 12 Tournament championship game Saturday night.

Malik Newman added 20 points on his way to tournament MVP, and freshman Silvio De Sousa had 16 points on 8-for-8 shooting in place of injured big man Udoka Azubuike, lifting the Jayhawks (27-7) to their 11th tournament title and a likely No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

It was the second time in three years they’ve beaten West Virginia (24-10) for the championship.

“We just locked on and starting plays and kept competing, and it was just fun. It was fun to be out there,” Graham said with a smile. “It helped that we were able to make shots.”

Modest understatement there. The Jayhawks shot 72 percent from the field in the second half, and 56 percent for the game, while going 15 of 27 from beyond the 3-point arc.

“They have a lot of guys who can make shots,” West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said. “Let’s be honest, all of those guys out there, if they’re not McDonald’s All-Americans it’s because they’re from another country. They have good players and their guy can coach, you know?”

Daxter Miles Jr. hit five 3s and had 25 points to lead West Virginia, which has lost the last three Big 12 title games. Sagaba Konate added 18 points while Carter, the best defender in the league, finished with 17 points and nine assists.

West Virginia still has not won a postseason league tournament since the Big East in 2010.

“They just did a real good job of knocking down shots,” Carter said. “Seemed like every shot they put up, it went in. When we went cold, they kept hitting.”

The Mountaineers controlled most of the first half, picking and choosing when to employ their full-court press. And they caught a break when Mykhailiuk and Mitch Lightfoot picked up two fouls apiece, allowing Konate to score nearly at will in the paint.

Then the Mountaineers’ big fella picked up his second foul and took a seat on the bench.

The Jayhawks roared back to briefly tie the game, and trailed 34-33 at the break after De Sousa threw down an alley-oop dunk in transition in the closing seconds of the first half.

One of the hallmarks of Kansas over the years, especially under Bill Self, has been tenacious half-court defense — and the Mountaineers shredded it early in the second half. They scored their first eight possessions, and Miles’ layup gave them their biggest lead at 51-43 with 15:08 left.

From there, the game turned into a back-and-forth prizefight: Kansas scored 10 straight, West Virginia answered with eight in a row and the Jayhawks responded with 10 more.

“They got control of the game. We made a run. They got control in the second half, we made a run,” Self said, “and that was the difference. When they had a chance to distance themselves we got back in it, and we played almost flawless down the stretch.”

The Jayhawks’ last run was part of a larger 17-3 charge to finally take control.

Graham capped it with his fadeaway baseline jumper over Carter — after shedding a bit of clothes — and a 3-pointer from the wing that made it 73-66 with 3:49 to go.

West Virginia got it to 76-70 on Carter’s two free throws moments later, but Miles missed a 3-pointer and Carter missed a circus-style layup, then turned the ball over with a minute left.

That allowed the Jayhawks to seal their latest Big 12 championship from the foul line.

“We had open shots, didn’t make them. They had contested shots, made them,” Huggins said. “If they can do that for three weeks, they could win a national championship.”

MORE ON DOKE

Azubuike will be evaluated again Sunday, and Self expressed hope that he would be ready for the Jayhawks’ NCAA Tournament opener. The 7-foot sophomore hurt a ligament in his left knee during practice Tuesday, but he appeared to be moving well with a brace on before the game.

BIG PICTURE

West Virginia will be happy to play someone other than Kansas in the NCAA Tournament. Not only have the Mountaineers struggled against the Jayhawks in Kansas City, they were swept in the regular season — blowing a big second-half lead during the game in Lawrence.

Kansas got a big lift from De Sousa, who joined the team after graduating from high school in December. The 6-foot-9 forward grew by leaps and bounds during his time at Sprint Center, making the Jayhawks an even scarier proposition in next week’s NCAA Tournament.

UP NEXT

West Virginia and Kansas head home to rest before Selection Sunday. The Big 12 could get anywhere from five to nine teams into the dance, with the Jayhawks a likely No. 1 seed.

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s Thompson finishes 3rd in the triple jump at NCAA Championships

PITTSBURG, Kan. – Phil Thompson saved his best for last as the Griffon track and field senior finished third in the triple jump at the NCAA Division II Indoor Track and Field National Championships.

The senior became the first Griffon All-American after becoming the first-year program’s first-ever national qualifier with a lifetime-best 15.53m (50-11 ½) on his third jump of the day. The record breaking jump won the heat for Thompson and put him in the finals against the top-10 jumpers in the nation.

Thompson entered the national championships ranked 14th in the nation with a 15.06m at the Graduate Classic. After just missing that mark on the first jump of his heat with a 15.04, Thompson set the personal best and the jump that made him an All-American two jumps later. After two low marks in his first two jumps of the finals, Thompson finished strong with a 15.37 on his final jump of the night, but it was his third that held up.

It wasn’t Thompson’s first national championship appearance, just his first as a Griffon. Thompson transferred to Missouri Western after St. Joseph’s College closed. At the same event last year, Thompson placed 12th. This year, he bested last year’s champion Michael Sandle of Minnesota State; last year’s second place finisher, Jumonne Exeter of St. Augustine’s; and last year’s third place finisher, Chalres Greaves of Texas A&M-Kingsville.

Thompson also overcame a fourth-place finish in the MIAA Championships, finishing second among MIAA competitors. Only Sedeekie Edie of Lincoln with a 15.55 was better than Thompson among MIAA competitors on Saturday. DeVontae Steele of Texas A&M-Commerce blew away the field with an event-record 16.25. Any of Steele’s six jumps would have been good enough to win the competition.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State baseball loses finale to Northeastern State

The Northwest Missouri State University baseball team falls in final game against Northeastern State 3-2.

The Bearcats are now 10-9 overall and 7-2 in conference while NSU improved to 11-9 overall and 3-6 in conference play.

Key Northwest Statistics
– Northwest scored two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning. The RiverHawks scored once in the third, once in the fourth and once in the fifth.
– The Bearcats had two runs on 11 hits with one error. Northeastern State had three runs on four hits and zero errors.
– Jay Hrdlicka finished the day going 2-for-5.
– Landon Figg went 2-for-4 with one run scored and a walk.
– Matt Schingel was 2-for-4.
– Hudson Bilodeau finished 1-for-4 with one walk.
– Luke Hassman went 1-for-3, drew a walk and scored a run.
– Kevin Handzlik, was 1-for-3 with a sacrifice hit.
– Mondesi Gutierrez went 1-for-3 with a sacrifice fly.
– Aaron Barratt finished the day 1-for-4 and had one RBI.
– Logan Rycraft went 1-for-4.
– Eddy Kraber completed six innings, allowed three hits, two earned runs and struck out four batters.
– Quintin Van Ackeren threw three shut out innings with only one hit and struck out two batters.

Key Northwest Innings
– Figg started the inning with a walk and Hassman followed him up with a single through the left side. Handzlik put down a sacrifice bunt to advance the runners to second and third. Gutierrez hit a sacrifice fly to deep right field to score Figg. Next batter Barratt, hit a single up the middle to score Hassman and cut the RiverHawks lead to one.

Up Next
– Northwest will take on William Jewell on Wednesday, March 14 , at 2 p.m. in Maryville, Mo.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri Western softball sweeps Lincoln

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Griffon softball will come home, albeit briefly, with a 3-1 MIAA record after an impressive doubleheader sweep at Lincoln (3-13, 0-4) on Saturday.

Missouri Western (6-13) outscored Lincoln 20-2 in the doubleheader and saw both games end due to run-rule. Not only did the Griffons win three of their first four conference games this weekend, but they got two-straight shortened games ahead of next week’s 10-game schedule. After entering conference play on a six-game losing streak, the Griffons are in a tie for third place in the MIAA standings.

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western totaled 21 hits in the doubleheader while Griffon pitchers allowed just five

– Griffon pitchers walked just four batters on the day and held Lincoln to a .125 batting average

– Griffon batters totaled seven extra base hits (four doubles, one triple, two home runs)

– Missouri Western had three sacrifice flies on the day

– Lonnie Groves went 4-for-6 at the dish with three RBIs and two runs scored. She hit one of the home runs in game one

– Tamara Hicks was also 4-for-6 with two runs scored

– Gabi Carter went 3-for-5 with three RBIs and four runs scored and hit the other home run in game one

– Emma Hoffart and Riley Wilson had three RBIs each in game two

– Kenzie Hilzer allowed one run on two hits through five innings in game one. She picked up her second-straight win to improve her record to 4-6.

– Barbara Billingsley picked up her first win of the season, allowing one run on three hits through five innings in game two

UP NEXT
The Griffs don’t get much of a break before hitting the road again. Missouri Western heads to Texas for two doubleheaders early next week. The team is at No. 11 Texas A&M-Commerce (17-3) on March 12 before another twin-bill at Texas Woman’s (13-8) on March 13. After the Texas two-step, it’s back home for the Hy-Vee Classic, March 16-18.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest softball splits with Lindenwood Saturday

The Northwest Missouri State University softball team splits a pair of conference games in St. Charles, Mo.

The Bearcats finish the weekend 9-7 overall and 3-1 in conference, while Lindenwood concludes the weekend 10-8 overall and 2-2 in conference play.

Game One Key Statistics (Northwest 9, Lindenwood 2)
– Northwest scored one in the first, three in the second, three in the third, one in the fifth and one in the seventh inning. The Lions scored one run in the fourth and one in the seventh inning.
– The Bearcats had nine runs on eight hits and one error. Lindenwood scored two runs on 12 hits and had two errors.
– Lynnlee Parrott started the day going 3-for-4 with one run scored and one RBI.
– Karli Allen was perfect from the plate going 2-for-2 with two walks, one double, one run scored and one RBI.
– Kaitlyn Weis was 1-for-4 with one RBI, a run scored and a homerun.
– Erin Keeney went 1-for-4.
– Abigail Gilson was 1-for-1 with four runs scored and drew three walks.
– Taylor Blackford threw seven innings and allowed two runs scored.

Game One Key Innings
– In the first inning, Weis hit a solo homerun over the left field fence to give Northwest the lead, 1-0.

– Gilson drew a one out walk to start the rally for the Bearcats. Allen then hit a single to left field to put two runners on. Parrott reached on a fielder’s choice to shortstop and then advanced to second on a wild pitch. Baderdeen reached on an error, while Gilson scored on a passed ball. Parrott then came in to score on a wild pitch and Kiana Baderdeen advanced to third. Rebecca Maher reached base on a walk and Jaedra Moses reached on an error to score Baderdeen from third.

– Jessica Rawie drew a one out walk and Gilson singled to shortstop to start the rally in the third. Allen hit a double to right center to score Rawie and move Gilson to third. Parrott continued the hitting with a single to right field to score Gilson and put Allen on third. Allen would then come in to score on a wild pitch to give the Bearcats the lead, 7-0.

– Gilson and Allen each drew walks to start the fifth inning. Parrott singled through the right side to load the bases for Maher. Maher hit a sacrifice fly to deep left to score Gilson.

– For the second straight inning, Gilson and Allen drew walks, Parrott hit a single to right field and Maher hit a sacrifice fly to center field to score Gilson.
Game Two Key Statistics (Northwest 5, Lindenwood 7)
– The Bearcats scored three runs in fifth and two in the seventh inning. Lindenwood scored one in the second, two in the third, one in the fourth and three in the sixth inning.
– Northwest had five runs on ten hits and one error. The Lions had seven runs on 11 hits and one error.
– Weis finished the day going 3-for-4 with one run scored, one RBI and a double.
– Baderdeen was perfect from the plate going 3-for-3 with one run scored, one RBI and a homerun.
– Maher went 1-for-4 with a run scored.
– Moses finished 1-for-4 with a run scored and a triple.
– Keeney went 1-for-4 with a run scored, three RBIs and a homerun.
– Rawie was 1-for-3 and drew a walk.

Game Two Key Innings
– Baderdeen and Maher started the fifth inning with a pair of singles up the middle. Weis reached base on a fielder’s choice and Keeney hit a homerun to right field to score Maher and Weis.

– To start the seventh inning, Baderdeen hits a solo homerun over left field to cut the lead. Moses kept the rally going by hitting a triple to left center and Weis hit her in with a single through the right side to conclude the Bearcat rally.
Up Next
– Northwest will play on Friday, March 16, against Upper Iowa in St. Joseph, Mo., at noon.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffons get walk-off win over Washburn; Verduzco becomes all-time wins leader

ST. JOSEPH – Buzz Verduzco became Missouri Western baseball’s all-time wins leader on Casey Danley’s walk-off single Friday at the Spring Sports Complex.

Danley’s only hit of the game gave the Griffons (8-9, 1-3) a 2-1 win over Washburn (6-11, 1-6) and Verduzco his program-best 541st wiv. Verduzco passed the only other man to ever lead the program, Doug Minnis.

Verduzco got the milestone victory in appropriate fashion. Known for his small-ball methods, the Griffons earned their first conference win of the season with six hits, only one for extra bases. Maurice Bruce led off the ninth with a single to center. Brooks Day bunted Bruce to second before Washburn intentionally walked Dusty Stroup. A passed ball got Bruce to third and Stroup to second before Danley bounced a 2-2 pitch through the middle for the game winner.

NOTABLES
– Stroup went 2-for-3, the only Griff with more than one hit. His double was the team’s only extra base hit.

– Nate Hunter picked up his second-straight win in relief, going 1 1/3 of perfect baseball with two strikeouts

– Trever Carroll got his first career start, allowing just one hit and no runs. He walked three and struck out one.

– Fahd Shakeel drove in the Griffons’ first run in the third and threw out what would have been Washburn’s first run at the plate from left field in the sixth

– Carroll’s three walks were the only free passes allowed by the Griffons who went without an error in the game

– The teams totaled 10 hits, four walks and no errors in a game that lasted 1:55

UP NEXT
Game two of the series is scheduled for 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 10.

— MWSU Athletics —

Area High School Basketball Scores / Schedule

FRIDAY’S RESULTS
CLASS 2 GIRLS STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Neelyville 70
Mid-Buchanan 51

CLASS 2 BOYS 3RD PLACE GAME
Mid-Buchanan 83
Purdy 63

CLASS 1 GIRLS SEMIFINAL
Mound City 49
Wheatland 39

CLASS 1 BOYS SEMIFINAL
Walnut Grove 51
North Andrew 50

SATURDAY’S SCHEDULE
CLASS 1 BOYS 3RD PLACE GAME
North Andrew vs. Chamois – 12:50 PM

CLASS 1 GIRLS STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Mound City vs. Bradleyville – 2:40 PM

Kansas cruises past K-State in the Big 12 semifinals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas absorbed the biggest blows that short-handed Kansas State could land, played without its star big man for the second straight game and won its Big 12 Tournament semifinal comfortably.

You’d think that would be enough to make coach Bill Self happy.

“I thought they played better than us,” he insisted after an 83-67 victory Friday night, “but I thought a lot of it was self-inflected. We couldn’t guard them and offensively we weren’t very smart.

“If I sleep two hours tonight,” Self added, “it’ll be more than I probably think I should.”

So much for feel-good feelings.

Malik Newman poured in 22 points, Devonte Graham added 15 points and Svi Mykhailiuk had 12 for the top-seeded Jayhawks (26-7), who nevertheless cruised into a title matchup with No. 14 Texas Tech or No. 18 West Virginia on Saturday night at the Sprint Center.

It was the Jayhawks’ eighth straight win over Kansas State (23-10), and they remained perfect in 10 games against their cross-state rival in the Big 12 Tournament.

The fourth-seeded Wildcats learned Friday morning they’d be without All-Big 12 forward Dean Wade, who hurt his foot in their quarterfinal win over TCU. Then they lost starting guard Barry Brown early against the Jayhawks when he was accidentally poked in the eye.

“You can’t prepare for Barry going down the first play,” Wildcats coach Bruce Weber said. “He had very little vision. He wanted to play. He kept saying, `Put me in.’ But I held up fingers and asked him how many and he couldn’t say.”

Unheralded forward Mawien stepped up with a career-high 29 points, and Xavier Sneed scored 12 despite another poor shooting night, but the duo couldn’t make up for two major absences.

Brown’s injury came 90 seconds into the game, when he drove the lane and Graham accidentally got him in the left eye. He flopped to the floor in pain — “It was a little gross when I looked at it,” Weber said — and was checked for several minutes before going to the locker room.

Even when he returned to the bench, Brown was never looked like he was going to play. There was some bleeding in his eye and he spent the rest of the game holding an ice pack on it.

“It’s very tough when one of your main contributors goes down with an injury,” Mawien said. “We just had to step up and play hard.”

Kansas took advantage of the absences by ripping off a 19-4 run midway through the first half that gave the Jayhawks control. They eventually pushed the advantage to 43-30 by the break.

Mawien and the Wildcats made the Jayhawks work for it in the second half, though. The junior college transfer dominated in the paint, especially when Kansas big man Mitch Lightfoot picked up his fourth foul with 11:38 to go, and Kansas State clawed to within 53-51 with 10 minutes left.

“There was absolutely no resistant guarding Mawien,” Self said, “and I hope I’m pronouncing it correctly, because he was by far the best player in the game. He whipped us.”

It was Newman that restored order. The transfer from Mississippi State followed his career-best 30-point effort in a quarterfinal win over Oklahoma State with another virtuoso performance.

He drained a 3-pointer to make it 60-53 with 8 1/2 minutes left, then hit his fifth of the game a few minutes later. And by the time Lagerald Vick curled in back-to-back baskets, the lead had swelled to 71-59 and the Jayhawks were on their way toward the title game.

“I mean, we know that basketball is a game of runs. Those guys did a good job of going on their run,” Newman said, “but we were able to withstand the storm. We had confidence in one another that we were going to make stops and make plays.”

WADE WATCH

Weber held out hope Wade could return for the title game if Kansas State won, and he is optimistic about his availability for next week’s NCAA Tournament. “Going forward into next week,” Weber said, “we have every indication he will be able to play.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State almost certainly locked up its NCAA Tournament bid with its win over TCU, but the fight the Wildcats showed against Kansas — down their two best players — may have helped their cause.

Kansas has played well using a four-guard lineup while Azubuike deals with a sprained ligament in his left knee. That should give the Jayhawks confidence if he misses any NCAA Tournament games.

UP NEXT

Kansas State returns to Manhattan to await its NCAA Tournament fate.

Kansas turns its attention toward winning its 15th conference tournament title.

— Associated Press —

Northwest baseball sweeps Northeastern State

The Northwest Missouri State University baseball team picked up a pair of wins over Northeastern State on Friday at Bearcat Field in Maryville, Mo.
– The Bearcats improve to 10-8 overall, 7-1 in conference, while the RiverHawks fall to 10-9 overall and 2-6 in conference play.
Game One Key Statistics (Northwest 4, Northeastern State 1)
– Northwest scored one in the first, one in the second and two in the third. The RiverHawks got one run in the fifth inning.
– The Bearcats had four runs on five hits with no errors. Northeastern State had one run on four hits with four errors.
– Kevin Handzlik went 1-for-3 with one run scored, one RBI and a hit by pitch.
– Matt Schingel was 1-for-3 with one RBI and one run scored.
– Hudson Bilodeau went 1-for-4 with one RBI and a double to deep left field.
– Landon Figg and Aaron Barratt each went 1-for-4.
– Joseph Hietpas threw 7.2 innings, allowed one run, six hits and threw five scoreless innings.
– Trevor Dudar got the save after throwing one scoreless inning in the top of the ninth.

Game One Key Innings
– Jay Hrdlicka started the game off with a walk. After two outs, Hassman reached on an error to advance Hrdlicka to second. Handzlik singled to left field to score Hrdlicka.
– – Schingel started the second inning with a single to center field. Rycraft reached on a fielder’s choice while an out was recorded at second. After an out, Bilodeau hit a double deep to left field to score Rycraft from first base.

– – To start the third, Hassman walked and Handzlik was hit by a pitch to put runners at first and second. Gutierrez reached on an error to load the bases. After an out, Schingel hit a sacrifice fly to right to score Hassman and advance Handzlik to third. Gutierrez stole second base and Handzlick came in to score on a throwing error.

Game Two Key Statistics (Northwest 3, Northeastern 1)
– The Bearcats scored one in the fourth and two in the eighth. Northeastern State scored one run in the third.
– Northwest had three runs on five hits with one error. The RiverHawks scored one run on five hits with one error.
– Logan Rycraft was 2-for-3, scored one run and hit a triple.
– Mondesi Gutierrez went 1-for-3, had one RBI and a triple.
– Handzlik was 1-for-3, scored one run and drew a walk.
– Luke Hassman went 1-for-4, collecting two RBIs and drove in the go ahead runs.
– Hrdlicka and Schingel each drew walks.
– Brad Roberts completed six innings, allowed one run, five hits, struck out five and walked one batter.
– Quintin Van Ackeren came in to throw two scoreless innings to pick up the win.
– Dudar picked up his fifth save of the year.

Game Two Key Innings
– Handzlik drew a two out walk to start a rally in the bottom of the fourth inning. Next batter Gutierrez hit a triple to center field to score Handzlik to make the score, 1-1.

– Rycraft started the inning with a single through the right side and then advanced to second on a wild pitch. Hrdlicka drew a walk and Bioldeau advanced the runners to second and third with a sacrifice bunt. Hassman cleared the bases with a two out single to centerfield to give the Bearcats the lead.
Up Next
– The third and final game of the series is scheduled for 1 p.m. on Saturday.

— Northwest Athletics —

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