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Missouri State loses on the road at Bradley

PEORIA, Ill. (AP) — Darrell Brown scored 20 points with eight assists, Elijah Childs added 12 points with 12 rebounds and Bradley pulled away in the second half to defeat Missouri State 72-52 Tuesday night, maintaining a perfect record on its home court this season.

Jayden Hodgson made a 3-pointer to start a 16-2 breakaway run that turned a one-point lead into 17, 47-30, midway through the second half, and Bradley (15-7, 5-4 Missouri Valley Conference) wasn’t challenged again.

Ronnie Rousseau III and Jarrid Rhodes each scored 10 points to lead Missouri State (15-7, 5-4), which made just eight field goals — at one point it was 1-for-12 — in the decisive second half, finishing 18 of 57 for 32 percent. The Bears, preseason favorites, haven’t won a conference road game in five tries this season.

Bradley pushed its home-court record to 11-0 this season.

— Associated Press —

Brown & Wade lead Kansas State to 90-83 win at Baylor

WACO, Texas (AP) — Last week it was Kansas State’s Dean Wade pulling down Big 12 and national accolades.

If Barry Brown has another game like he did against Baylor on Monday night, he might grab some of his own.

Brown scored 34 points, Wade added 24 and Kansas State beat Baylor 90-83 for its third straight victory.

“He was great tonight. Whenever he needed a big play he was there,” Wade said of Brown. “Even on defense, he made some great plays. When they had their little runs, he was the one that shut the runs off defensively and then came out on offense and started our runs. He was the best player on the court tonight. He played amazing.”

Kansas State (15-5, 5-3 Big 12) tied its highest point total of the season.

The Wildcats made five of their first six 3-point attempts in running out to a 29-13 lead with eight minutes to go in the first half. The Bears got within five points twice late in the first half, but a 16-3 run midway through the second half gave the Wildcats enough of a cushion at 71-52.

“I thought the beginning was really impressive for us on both ends of the court,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “I thought we were really good defensively and disrupted them, took away their stuff. We only had a one-day prep, but we really talked about having to take away their quick-hitters and their sets, and we got some transition, great passing, great ball movement, made shots.”

Baylor (12-8, 2-6) had six players score in double figures, led by Manu Lecomte with 18. Jo Lual-Acuil added 15, and Tristan Clark had 14 points and eight rebounds for the Bears.

“I think we were all embarrassed we didn’t have more fight to us tonight, the way we started the first and second half,” Baylor coach Scott Drew said. “I don’t know if we were tired, the turnaround, whatever. The bottom line is it was unacceptable. You don’t get opportunities to go back and redo things. We just need to make sure that doesn’t happen again.”

Kansas State’s win comes on the heels of a week in which it earned a pair of home victories against ranked teams against then-No. 4 Oklahoma and No. 24 TCU. The Wildcats’ win moves them into a tie for second in the Big 12 with No. 7 West Virginia, which lost to TCU on Monday. They are both a game and a half behind No. 5 Kansas.

“It’s not just my goal (to win the Big 12), it’s everybody on the team’s goal, the coaching staff and all of Kansas State nation,” Brown said. “We’re playing for everyone right now, and I think all the hard work we’re putting in is paying off with these games. We’ve just got to keep the streak rolling.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State: The Wildcats average a Big 12-low 11.3 turnovers per game, and they improved upon that mark with 10 miscues. But more importantly, none of those came in live-ball situations until there were 12 seconds remaining. That helped the Wildcats hold Baylor without a fast-break point and made up for a 36-20 deficit on the boards.

Baylor: For the second straight game, the Bears trailed by double digits less than six minutes in and spent the rest of the night trying to get back in it. Unlike in Baylor’s road tilt against then-No. 10 Kansas on Saturday, the Bears never got back in this one.

UP NEXT

Kansas State returns home for its Big 12-SEC Challenge game against Georgia on Saturday.

Baylor travels to meet Florida in the Big 12-SEC Challenge on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Huskers’ upset bid comes up short at No. 13 Ohio State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Playing its fourth game in eight days, No. 13 Ohio State seemed vulnerable Monday night. Facing a surprising Nebraska team that upset Michigan last week, the Buckeyes were at risk of letting one slip away.

But that didn’t happen. Keita Bates-Diop, the Big Ten’s top scorer, had 14 of his 20 points in the second half and the surging Buckeyes ground out a 64-59 win over the Cornhuskers for their ninth straight conference victory.

Nebraska (14-8, 5-4 Big Ten), fresh off a 20-point win over then-No. 23 Michigan on Thursday, tied it at 46 with 7:56 left with a 3-pointer from James Palmer Jr., who finished with a career-high 34 points.

The lead changed six times in the next four minutes. A pair of foul shots by Palmer cut Ohio State’s lead to four with 2:19 remaining, but the Cornhuskers couldn’t pull any closer.

Jae’Sean Tate put the Buckeyes (18-4, 9-0 Big Ten) up by six with a layup with 1:02 left, and a pair of foul shots by Kaleb Wesson stretched it to eight. Palmer hit a 3-pointer with 12 seconds left, but Nebraska ran out of time.

“I think mentally we just stayed together,” said Tate, who had 17 points. “There were times you could see we struggled. In the first half, we were getting a little frustrated, but I think we did a great job in the second half, especially later on, coming together and staying together.”

Neither team lit up the scoreboard. Ohio State shot 44 percent to Nebraska’s 39 percent.

SEEING DOUBLE

The secret is out about Bates-Diop, which means he is regularly double-teamed now. That was the case Monday, when the Cornhuskers did a good job of neutralizing him in the first half. Later in the game his teammates figured out how to get him the ball.

“They were doubling me pretty much everywhere,” he said. “Every time I drove someone was coming. Besides slipping screens and just moving around a little bit more with the ball, my teammates found me. It was mostly just layups to the basket.”

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: The surprising Cornhuskers knocked off a ranked team last week and are a better squad than last season with Palmer carrying the load. But they couldn’t outlast the gritty Buckeyes, who are on a roll.

“I thought we did a lot of good things defensively,” Nebraska coach Tim Miles said. “I was disappointed with our offense in the second half. A game like this you’re only going to get so many chances.”

Ohio State: The Buckeyes may have been fatigued after a rugged traveling schedule and three straight games on the road. But they found a rhythm in the second half and locked down another critical Big Ten win over a scrappy team.

BUCKEYES RISING

Every week seems to bring another pleasant surprise for Ohio State.

By beating Nebraska, the Buckeyes surpassed their win total for all of last season. Earlier in the day, they moved from No. 22 to No. 13 in the AP Top 25, their highest position since 2014.

CARRYING THE LOAD

Palmer was 11 for 18, and 5 for 11 from beyond the 3-point arc. His 34 points led all scorers, and none of his teammates contributed more than five points.

“I’m no rocket scientist, but I’ll tell you what — when James is going like that we just keep getting him the ball and get out of his way,” Miles said. “James is a special player, and I’m glad he’s with us. He’s one of those guys who’s getting a little better every night out.”

NEXT UP

Nebraska: At Rutgers on Wednesday.

Ohio State: Hosts Penn State on Thursday.

— Associated Press —

KU’s Newman named Big 12 Newcomer of the Week

IRVING, Texas – Kansas redshirt sophomore Malik Newman has been named the co-Big 12 Newcomer of the Week, in a vote by a media panel which covers the league, the conference announced Monday.

Newman averaged 16.5 points and 6.5 rebounds in KU’s wins at No. 6 West Virginia, 71-66, and versus Baylor, 70-67. The Jackson, Mississippi, guard scored 12 of Kansas’ final 14 points in the comeback win against Baylor. For the game he hit 63.6 percent from the field (7-for-11) and all seven of his free throw attempts in the three-point victory.

Newman is averaging 11.3 points and 4.7 rebounds for Kansas this season. He’s scoring 12.9 points per game in Big 12 play and both his 20-point efforts this season have been against league foes. For the year, Newman has made 31 3-pointers this season.

Newman won the honor with Iowa State freshman forward Cameron Lard. This is the third Big 12 weekly honor for a Jayhawk this season. Freshman guard Marcus Garrett was named co-Big 12 Newcomer of the Week Nov. 13 and senior guard Devonte’ Graham was the conference player of the week on Dec. 4.

Kansas (16-3, 6-1) will look to extend its conference game road winning game streak to nine when it travels to Oklahoma (14-4, 4-3) on Tuesday, Jan. 23, at 6 p.m.

— KU Athletics —

Cunningham scores 22 as No. 11 Mizzou women cruise past Arkansas

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Sophie Cunningham scored 22 points to lead five Missouri players in double figures and the No. 11 Tigers beat Arkansas 88-54 on Sunday.

Kayla Michael and Lauren Aldridge had 13 points apiece, while Jordan Chavis and Jordan Frericks each scored 12, for Missouri (17-2, 5-1 SEC).

Michael and Aldridge each hit 3-pointers as the Tigers took an 8-0 lead fewer than two minutes in and Amber Smith made a 3 and then a short jumper to cap a 9-0 run that made it 27-11 late in the first quarter. Kiara Williams made jumpers to close the first and open the second quarters that pulled Arkansas within 10 points, but Aldridge answered with a 3-pointer before Cunningham scored six points to make it 37-18 with seven minutes left in the half and Missouri led by at least 15 points the rest of the way.

Williams and Jailyn Mason led Arkansas (11-9, 2-5) with 14 points apiece. Malica Monk added 11 points.

Missouri outscored the Razorbacks 21-2 from the free-throw line and shot 52 percent from the field (27 of 52) and from 3-point range (13 of 25).

— Associated Press —

Griffons’ rally comes up short as they lose at Nebraska-Kearney 78-71

KEARNEY, Neb – Griffon men’s basketball (3-14) fell to Nebraska Kearney (8-10) 78-71. Missouri Western used a 16-5 run in the second half to cut the UNK lead to four points with 2:15 left in the game. However it would not be enough as the Lopers pulled away in the final two minutes.

MWSU looked poised to win on the road early in the game. The Griffons used a 14-2 run in after the first media timeout to take a nine point lead with 11:12 left in the first half. The nine point lead would be Missouri Western’s largest lead of the game.

Nebraska Kearney answered the Griffons with a 20-2 run over the next five minutes and built a 13-point halftime lead. MWSU wouldn’t go away quietly and outscored the Lopers 41-35 in the second half.

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western scored its most points since at Jan. 3 at Pittsburg State

– The Griffons won the turnover margin 13-11

– Lavon Hightower and TJ Evans each scored 20 points, it is the second time this season both have scored at least 20 points

– UNK’s Trey Lansman recorded a double-double with 23 points and 13 rebounds

UP NEXT
Missouri Western closes out its three-game road stretch on Saturday, Jan. 27 at No. 2 Northwest Missouri with a 3:30 p.m. tip-off.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 2 Bearcats bounce back with road win at Fort Hays State without Justin Pitts

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

HAYS, Kan. – Northwest Missouri State’s men’s basketball entered the historic Gross Memorial Coliseum early Saturday evening against Fort Hays State, facing its most adversity since December 2015 when it lost consecutive conference games just before Christmas break.

The Bearcats were coming off a tough loss on Thursday at Nebraska-Kearney, and senior point guard Justin Pitts suffered a mild concussion.

Before tipoff, the Northwest players knew they wouldn’t have Pitts, the school’s all-time leading scorer and reigning Division II Player of the Year.

As good as Pitts is, Northwest has never relied on one player to win games. The Bearcats proved it once again with a hard-fought 72-67 victory. The win lifted Northwest to 16-2 overall and 8-2 in the MIAA.

“This was big,” Northwest senior Brett Dougherty said. “We could have hung our heads and got upset about the loss and Justin, too. You can start making excuses. But that is not what we did. All the tough situations we have been through we know to keep our heads up and have that positivity.”

Northwest never trailed in the second half, but there were definitely some anxious moments in the final 8 minutes as Fort Hays tried desperately to avoid its first home loss of the season. The Tigers couldn’t rattle Northwest even when they went to a full-court press in the final 2 minutes and the Bearcats were without their play-making point guard.

“Justin is obviously the best player in Division II,” said Northwest senior Chris-Ebou Ndow, who finished with 20 points and 14 rebounds. “But we pride ourselves on being a great team. It is not just one player on the offensive end and one player on the defensive end. It is a team collection.

“We showed it today that without the best player we can grind away a win.”

The Bearcats appeared to be in total control the first 10 minutes in the second half. When Fort Hays closed to 41-32, junior Joey Witthus knocked down a three-pointer. A few minutes later, Witthus gave Northwest a 50-36 lead with another trey.

Those two treys showed the air ball Witthus shot a few minutes earlier had no affect on him. Another example of overcoming adversity.

“I remember one point in the game, Chris passed me the ball on the wing and I didn’t take the shot,” said Witthus, who finished with 15 points. “He was yelling at me to shoot it, shoot it. Everyone has confidence in each other and trust each other. No matter if you make a mistake, you still got to go out there and play your game.”

Fort Hays, which dropped to 12-6 and 5-4, battled back when it trailed 51-41 with less than 10 minutes remaining. With 6:30 left, the Tigers stared at a 53-48 deficit. Northwest responded with a strong inside basket from senior Brett Dougherty.

After a free throw by Fort Hays, Dougherty knocked down another tough basket in the paint, increasing Northwest’s lead to 57-49 with just over 5 minutes left.

“If they are on our shooters and I am 1-on-1, my teammates have a lot of confidence in me to go out and score,” said Dougherty, who finished with 13 points.

Fort Hays battled back once again. The Tigers trailed only 57-53 with 3:30 left. Witthus pushed the lead back to six on two free throws but then he fouled out with 3 minutes remaining.

Northwest’s lead slipped to four with 2:36 when Kyler Kinnamon drove inside for a layup, making it 60-56.

Thirty seconds later, when Northwest needed two free throws, Dougherty stepped to the line and made both to give Northwest a 63-56 lead. Dougherty was one for six from the free throw line before he made those two. Dougherty showed he was able to overcome adversity.

“It was big just from a confidence standpoint,” Dougherty said. “Obviously, my confidence wasn’t very high at that point. We knew we had to hit some free throws down the stretch. We didn’t do a great job of it, but everyone counts.”

Strong defense and a patient offense propelled Northwest to a 33-20 halftime lead.

“We played really well,” Witthus said. “I think the biggest thing tonight, which was good to see was we came out and competed. We made some mistakes, but we competed the whole game. That is what we have to keep doing moving forward.”

The Bearcats only trailed 2-0 and 5-2 in the first half. Three straight free throws by sophomore Ryan Welty quickly erased the puny deficit. Northwest followed those points with a basket from Dougherty and another by senior Xavier Kurth.

Northwest took an 11-10 lead into the first media timeout and wasted little time increasing its advantage to 16-10 on a three-point play by Ndow and another basket by Kurth.

In the slow-paced game, Fort Hays stayed close, pulling to within two at 18-16. Northwest, though, stayed with its game of moving the ball inside on nearly every possession.

The constant threat of inside baskets opened up the outside in the final few minutes in the first half. Leading 24-20, Northwest got back-to-back three-pointers from Welty. Ndow added another trey and pushed the Bearcats’ lead to 13.

The efficiency on offense was one of the keys for Northwest. The Bearcats went 13 for 20 from the field for 65 percent. On defense, Northwest limited Fort Hays to eight field goals.

“It was important for us to come out firing and get off to a good start so we would have our confidence throughout the game,” Ndow said.

— Northwest Athletics —

Western women play only five players, fall short of upset at UNK

KEARNEY, Neb – Griffon women’s basketball (10-9) fell at Nebraska Kearney (14-3) 55-49. Savannah Lentz hit six three-pointers in the game, the second most by a Griffon in program history. Missouri Western led for over 32 minutes in the game despite playing only five players.

MWSU jumped out of the gates early and went on a 17-2 run to end the first quarter. Missouri Western shot lights out in the first-half as it went to halftime shooting 50 percent from the three-point arc and had a nine point lead. MWSU would continue the hot shooting to start the second half as it built a 17-point lead and shot 40 percent from the field in the third quarter.

After being shut down for three quarters, the UNK offense found life in the fourth quarter. After trailing most of the game, Nebraska Kearney went on a 17-2 run over the final three minutes of the game. The Lopers forced back-to-back turnovers in the final minute to take the lead. UNK was 83.8 percent from the field and outscored MWSU 29-10 in the final quarter.

NOTABLES
– Savannah Lentz scored a career-high 21 points, 18 came on three-pointers

– Dossou Ndiaye recorded her first double-double of the season with 14 points and 11 rebounds

– KeShara Scott pulled down 11 rebounds, it is the third time this season she had double-digit rebounds

– The Griffons were 47.1 percent from the three-point line, the second highest this season

– UNK’s Michaela Barry scored a game-high 18 points

UP NEXT
Missouri Western closes out its three-game road stretch next Saturday at Northwest Missouri. Tip-off is set for 1:30 p.m. in Maryville.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou struggles offensively in 60-49 loss at Texas A&M

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Texas A&M, once ranked No. 5 nationally to start Southeastern Conference play, believes it’s finally back on track following its second consecutive league victory.

“It’s good to get back to the way we’re capable of playing on the defensive end and taking care of the ball offensively,” A&M coach Billy Kennedy said following the Aggies’ 60-49 victory over Missouri on Saturday.

Tonny Trocha-Morelos scored a season-high 14 points and the Aggies (13-6, 2-5) continued a tedious recovery from an 0-5 start in SEC play in which they dropped out of the rankings along the way.

“We lost five straight and to come back with two straight wins shows we really care, and that we really want to prove to everybody that we want to win this,” Trocha-Morelos said.

On Saturday both teams shot poorly from the field, as A&M converted 39.1 percent (25 of 64) of its shots and Missouri made 27.8 percent (15 of 54) of its attempts.

Missouri was held to season lows in points and shooting percentage, in the Tigers’ seventh straight loss to A&M. The Aggies led 29-20 at halftime and were aided in the second half by two rare swishes from the right baseline by the senior center Trocha-Morelos, along with his 15-foot jumper from the free-throw line that put the game out of reach at 58-46 with 1:38 remaining.

“It was the tough, physical game that we expected,” said Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin, pointing out A&M’s early SEC troubles were primarily because of injuries. “They have a very talented team.”

No one from the Tigers (13-6, 3-3) scored in double digits, as Jordan Geist, Jeremiah Tilmon and Jordan Barnett scored nine points each. Both teams struggled from the 3-point line, with A&M making 3 of 17 (17.6 percent) and Missouri 4 of 18 (22.2 percent).

A&M center Tyler Davis was the only player with double-digit rebounds with 14 and he also collected a game-high three blocks.

BIG PICTURE

Texas A&M: The Aggies continue to try and work their way back into the NCAA Tournament mix with their second consecutive win in SEC play, following the 0-5 start that included one-point losses at home to LSU and on the road at Kentucky. The talented Aggies are as healthy as they’ve been all season, and their confidence continues to grow early in SEC action.

Missouri: The Tigers defeated South Carolina by double-digits in their SEC opener, so they’ve proven they can win on the road in league play. They only held a brief lead early in the second half on Saturday, however, as the surging Aggies kept them at arm’s length for most of the final 20 minutes. The outcome never seemed in doubt, and Missouri often appeared overmatched against A&M big men Robert Williams and Davis.

STAT OF THE NIGHT

The Aggies committed a season-low four turnovers, with their next lowest total this season 10. Forward Robert Williams committed two of the miscues, with no other A&M player having more than one.

ON THE BENCH

A&M point guard J.J. Caldwell didn’t log any minutes, as Kennedy said it was coach’s decision to go with fellow freshman T.J. Starks to try and provide some offense. The move worked, with Starks scoring 11 points on 4-of-9 shooting from the field.

UP NEXT

Texas A&M: Following consecutive home games, the Aggies play at LSU on Tuesday night. LSU beat A&M on a last-second 3-pointer by Tremont Waters in College Station on Jan. 6.

Missouri: The Tigers play host to Auburn on Wednesday before going back on the road for their next two games at Mississippi State and Alabama.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women fall at Fort Hays for 15th straight loss

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to Fort Hays State, 75-46, on Saturday afternoon at Gross Memorial Coliseum in Hays, Kan.

– The Bearcats fall to 1-17 overall and 0-10 in MIAA play. The Tigers improve to 14-4 on the year and 5-4 in conference action.

– Kaylani Maiava scored a career-high 13 points and tied a career-best with nine rebounds, two coming on the offensive end. She added a steal and a block.

Key Northwest Statistics
– Northwest hit 12-of-13 attempts from the free throw line.

– Kylie Coleman was 5-for-6 at the free throw line, finishing with seven points, two rebounds and two assists.

– Mele Tupouata had a season-high five points and grabbed four rebounds.

Up Next
– Northwest will host Missouri Western on Saturday, Jan. 27, at 1:30 p.m. at Bearcat Arena.

— Associated Press —

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