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No. 1 Bearcats stay unbeaten with blowout win at UCM

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

WARRENSBURG, Mo. – A smothering defense and a patient offense in the first half fueled Northwest Missouri State’s men’s basketball team to a huge halftime lead and an easy 79-55 victory at Central Missouri Sunday evening at the Multipurpose Building.

“It is always tough to win here,” said Pitts, who finished with 29 points on 11-of-13 shooting from the field. “I think we came out ready to play on the defensive end and that sparks the energy on the offensive end. Everybody was making shots.”

An offensive rebound and put-back dunk by sophomore Ryan Welty with 10 minutes left basically sealed Northwest’s 10th victory of the season. The play gave Northwest a 61-37 lead.

“It was pretty cool,” said Welty, who finished with 11 points. “My teammates loved it. I don’t think they thought I had it in me. It was good to show them I have hops.”

Senior Chris-Ebou Ndow was one player who had doubts about Welty’s hops.

“I was surprised,” Ndow said. “I don’t think he got too far off the ground.”

It is easy to have a laugh when you beat a rival in a conference road game by 24 points

Northwest, ranked No. 1 in the NABC coaches top 25, improved to 10-0 overall and 4-0 in the MIAA. Central Missouri dropped to 7-2 and 0-1.

The Bearcats started the second half with an 18-point lead and never allowed Central Missouri to build momentum and get its home crowd into the game.

Central Missouri scored the first point in the second half. Northwest answered with a three-point play from Ndow, who was able to celebrate his birthday with a victory and 12 points.

“I just wanted to have a nice easy birthday win,” Ndow said.

And it was easy.

After the Mules scored another point, Northwest junior Joey Witthus hit a three-pointer and then knocked down two free throws, putting the Bearcats ahead 48-24.

The Mules made one little run and closed to 50-34. Northwest responded with seven straight points on a basket by Pitts, a three-pointer by Ndow and a basket by senior Xavier Kurth.

“Obviously, from the outside looking in it looked like we had control the whole time,” Ndow said. “The biggest thing was stopping the bleeding. They are a really good team. They could have got on a run at any point.”

Truthfully, this was the third time in four conference games that Northwest put the game away before halftime.

The only area the Bearcats lost in the first half was at the free throw line. Central Missouri went 10 for 11 from the line compared to 1 for 1 for Northwest. It doesn’t take proficiency in calculus to figure that is a nine-point difference.

However, Northwest still went into halftime with a commanding 40-22 lead. How does that add up? Well, the Mules made just six baskets from the field. The Bearcats went nine for 16 from three-point range. That pretty much sums it up.

“We guarded the ball really well and stayed in the passing lane,” Welty said. “They didn’t score too much. Most of their points came at the free throw line.”

The only lead Central Missouri held occurred in the opening minute on a two-point field goal. Pitts wasted little time putting the Bearcats ahead with a bucket plus the free throw on the traditional three-point play.

After that, Pitts, a graduate of Blue Springs South, put on a show for his high school coach, Jimmy Cain, who was in attendance. Pitts made another basket and then drilled two-long three-pointers to give the Bearcats an 11-2 lead. Or you can call it an 11-0 Pitts run.

“It means a lot he still shows up to my games,” Pitts said. “He is like a father to me to this day. I always try to go back and make as many games as I can.

The Mules got no closer than five points the rest of the first half.
And when they pulled to 22-17, Northwest put on a clinic in how to score against an aggressive zone.

It started with Pitts passing the ball to Ndow, sprinting along the baseline. Ndow finished with a thunderous dunk. Senior Brett Dougherty followed with a basket and then Welty drilled a baseline three-pointer, making it 29-17 with 4:08 left in the first half.

Central Missouri called timeout.

It briefly worked. The Mules scored the next four points.

No worries.

Northwest spent the final 3 minutes dissecting the Mules’ zone. Pitts and Welty each drilled three-pointers. And at the halftime buzzer, Pitts knocked down a NBA-range three-pointer to give the Bearcats an 18-point halftime advantage.

Northwest shot a blistering 63 percent from the field in the first half while Central Missouri made only 25 percent of its shots.

“I thought activity with our hands sped them up more than they are used to,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “They missed shots, and we were able to get the rebounds. I think our energy and activity was the main thing that helped.

“I like to say it was an elaborate game plan, but we just played hard.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Chiefs snap four-game skid with 26-15 win over Oakland

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kareem Hunt ran for 116 yards and a touchdown, the Chiefs shut down Derek Carr and Raiders offense and Kansas City held on to beat Oakland 26-15 on Sunday to snap a four-game losing streak.

The suddenly stingy Chiefs (7-6) also made a big statement in the crowded AFC West race. They entered the game tied atop the division standings with the Raiders (6-7) and the Chargers, who played Washington later Sunday and visit Kansas City on Saturday night.

Alex Smith threw for 268 yards and Charcandrick West had a touchdown run for the Chiefs, who held the Raiders without points until Marshawn Lynch’s 22-yard touchdown run with 8:51 to go.

By that point, the Chiefs were cruising toward their 14th win in 15 divisional games.

Carr was 24 of 41 for 211 yards with a touchdown and two picks, a far cry from his performance when the teams met in October. Carr threw for 417 yards and three touchdowns that day, including the winning toss to Michael Crabtree on the final play of the game.

That loss was part of a midseason swoon for Kansas City, which started 5-0 but lost six of seven to fall into a tie for the division lead — and put its once-solid playoff prospects in peril.

The Chiefs gave them a boost again Sunday behind a defense that was shredded by the New York Jets last week, and that was missing All-Pro cornerback Marcus Peters.

The volatile young star was suspended by coach Andy Reid this week for a series of embarrassing incidents, including the throwing of an official’s flag into the stands in the Meadowlands.

The trio of Steven Nelson, Darrelle Revis and Terrance Mitchell more than made up for him.

So did Kansas City’s offense, which produced for the second straight week as offensive coordinator Matt Nagy called the plays. The Chiefs got four field goals from Harrison Butker, along with their two touchdown runs, and didn’t have to punt until the fourth quarter.

The Raiders tried to make it interesting late, recovering an onside kick after Lynch’s TD run. Carr connected with Jared Cook on fourth down for another score, and the 2-point conversion trimmed what had been a 26-0 deficit to 26-15 in a matter of minutes.

But after receiving the kickoff, the Chiefs’ Albert Wilson made a juggling catch to convert a third down, and that allowed the reigning AFC West champs to mostly run out the clock.

COOPER HURT

Raiders WR Amari Cooper was active after he was cleared of a concussion and a sprained left ankle was deemed OK. But he left in the second quarter with a right leg injury when he was blocking downfield on a run by DeAndre Washington, and a defender rolled into the back of him.

OTHER INJURIES

The Raiders also were missing two defensive starters in CB David Amerson (foot sprain) and LB Cory James (knee), while DE Mario Edwards Jr. (ankle) left early in the second quarter and TE Clive Walford went down in the fourth. The Chiefs missed starting C Mitch Morse with a sprained foot.

UP NEXT

Raiders: return home to face the Cowboys next Sunday night.

Chiefs: get another AFC West contender when the Chargers visit Saturday night.

— Associated Press —

No. 2 Kansas gets upset at home by No. 16 Arizona State

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Bobby Hurley is no stranger to college basketball lore. So when his Arizona State team traveled to Allen Fieldhouse to face Kansas on Sunday, the former Duke star knew what they were in for.

“No one really wins here,” Hurley said. “You come in here, most of the time you’re not leaving real happy.”

Well, the Sun Devils sure did. Tra Holder scored 29 points on 8-for-16 shooting, and No. 16 Arizona State upset No. 2 Kansas 95-85 on Sunday to improve to 9-0.

Shannon Evans II had 22 points, and Remy Martin added 21 for the Sun Devils. Arizona State shot 50 percent from 3-point range and 50.8 percent overall to hand Kansas (7-2) its second straight loss. The Jayhawks fell to unranked Washington on Wednesday night.

“I didn’t really have to coach a whole lot tonight,” Hurley said. “These guys sitting with me here deserve all the credit.”

After a slow start that forced Hurley to use a timeout less than two minutes into the game, the Sun Devils found themselves down by as much as 13 before making their first field goal. The energy in Allen Fieldhouse was as high as has been all season, as Hurley expected.

Arizona State got back into it, though, trimming the deficit to just three points at halftime and eventually outscoring the Jayhawks 58-42 in the second half. To get over this initial hump, the Sun Devils had to take a breath and tune out the raucous environment.

“The game slowed down for us,” Holder said. “At first it was really rapid, the crowd got into it.”

For Kansas, the difference was defense — or the lack thereof.

“It wasn’t our offense,” coach Bill Self said. “Hey, if you score 85 at home, you’re supposed to win.”

Lagerald Vick led Kansas with 25 points, his fifth time with 20 or more this season. Devonte’ Graham added 19 points and eight assists.

Svi Mykhailiuk had an off day, going 3 for 14 from the field and not registering any of his 14 points until he hit a 3-pointer with 6 minutes left. He had four turnovers and four fouls.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas lost consecutive games for the first time since December 2013. Self will need to diagnose what went wrong in a hurry, with the start of conference play just three games away.

Arizona State picked up another marquee victory after knocking off No. 15 Xavier in late November. The Sun Devils are 9-0 for the first time since 1974-75 and look to be one of the top teams in the Pac-12.

FANTASTIC FRESHMAN

Martin finished with 21 points on a 8-11 shooting and a perfect 2-for-2 from 3-point range. A true freshman, he didn’t seem to be intimidated by the Allen Fieldhouse crowd despite it being just his ninth career game.

“It was a tremendous thing for me to witness and be a part of,” Hurley said.

NEWMAN HURT

Kansas starting guard Malik Newman took a knee to the head late in the game, sending him to the floor for a couple minutes as he was evaluated by medical staff.

After the game, Self said that he was told Newman suffered a concussion, but that he didn’t know the severity or much of a concrete timetable for his recovery.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Kansas will tumble after the two losses. With another impressive win, Arizona State should continue its rise toward the top of the poll.

UP NEXT

Kansas heads north to face former Big 12 rival Nebraska on Saturday.

Arizona State hosts Vanderbilt next Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Cunningham scores 35 as No. 17 Mizzou women top SIU-Edwardsville

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Sophie Cunningham had a career-high seven 3-pointers and a season-high 35 points and No. 17 Missouri rolled to a 78-48 win over Southern Illinois-Edwardsville on Sunday for the Tigers’ ninth-straight win.

Cunningham was 11-of-16 shooting with all five of her misses coming behind the arc to reach 30 points for the fifth time in her career.

Cunningham had 11 in the first quarter as the Tigers (9-1) opened a 19-9 lead and 18 at the break when the lead was 37-28.

Missouri made 10 of 14 shots, including 6 of 8 behind the arc, to break the game open, outscoring the Cougars (3-5) 28-14. Cunningham had three 3s to help the Tigers to a season-high 15 on 31 attempts. Jordan Chavis, Jordan Roundtree and Cunningham scored from distance to cap a 13-0 run that made it 59-34.

Gwen Adams led the Cougars, who shot 26 percent (16 of 62), with 12 points.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State women lose big at No. 10 Central Missouri

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to Central Missouri, 77-40, on Saturday at the UCM Multipurpose Center in Warrensburg, Mo.

The Bearcats fall to 1-9 overall and 0-4 in MIAA play. The No. 10 ranked Jennies improve to 6-1 overall and 1-0 in conference action.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats blocked four shots and came away with three steals.

– Northwest hit eight three pointers on the day.

– In the fourth quarter, the Bearcats outscored the Jennies, 16-14.

– Mallory McAndrews hit three times from beyond the arc and finished with nine points, two rebounds and one assist.

– Tanya Meyer tied with Maria Dentlinger with a team-high six rebounds. Meyer added nine points and a steal.

– Jaelyn Haggard had seven points and a pair of assists.

Up Next
– Northwest will take on Quincy University on Saturday, Dec. 16, in Quincy, Ill., at 5:30 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri State’s win streak ends with loss at Oral Roberts

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Emmanuel Nzekwesi scored 17 points, Javan White added 14, and Oral Roberts rallied to beat Missouri State 73-66 on Sunday to end the Bears’ seven-game win streak and tie the series 8-8.

Sam Kearns scored 13 points and Chris Miller added 10 for the Golden Eagles (3-9), who outshot the Bears 53.1 percent to 45.6 percent from the floor but were outrebounded 35-26.

Miller tied it at 42 with a layup and White’s dunk put Oral Roberts up 53-49 and the Golden Eagles led 68-62 after Kearns’ back-to-back 3s with 4:07 to go.

The Bears closed to 70-66 on Reggie Scurry’s layup but Nzekwesi blocked his jumper on the next possession and Kearns and Nzekwesi sealed it with three free throws in the final 37 seconds.

RJ Fuqua hit two 3-pointers in Oral Roberts’ opening 9-2 run, but Scurry’s jumper put the Bears up 19-17 and Missouri State led 38-34 at halftime behind Jarrid Rhodes’ 12 points.

Rhodes scored 14 points, J.T. Miller had 13 and Scurry 11 for Missouri State (9-3). Jarred Dixon had seven assists.

— Associated Press —

KU women rally to edge Southeast Missouri State 51-50

LAWRENCE, Kan. – Clutch free throw shooting pushed Kansas women’s basketball past Southeast Missouri State for a 51-50 victory on Sunday night inside Allen Fieldhouse.

After shooting just 26.7 percent in the third quarter, Kansas (8-1) had to battle back, relying on clutch free throw shooting in the final minutes in the victory. Senior guard Sydney Benoit was the final Jayhawk to shoot from the charity stripe. After making her one of her two attempts from the free throw line, Benoit gave Kansas a two-possession lead over the Redhawks (4-7) with just under six seconds to play.

Redshirt-sophomore center Tyler Johnson’s career night led the Jayhawks. The Leavenworth, Kansas native finished the night with 14 points (6-of-9) and five rebounds. Junior guards Christalah Lyons and Kylee Kopatich each netted eight points and dished out two assists for Kansas.

SEMO was led by senior guard Ashton Luttrull, who had a game-high 15 points and five rebounds. Senior forward Mandy Madden added eight points and eight rebounds in the Redhawks’ loss.

The Jayhawks tipped off their final game of a nine-game homestand with a layup from senior forward Chayla Cheadle. Southeast Missouri and Kansas battled back and forth throughout the first six and a half minutes until the Jayhawks knocked down four of their final five FGs of the quarter to go on a 10-4 run. Johnson regained an 8-7 KU lead with two-straight baskets after the Jayhawks had missed their last four field goals and SEMO had knocked down back-to-back buckets.

Lyons and Cheadle concluded Kansas’ 8-0 run with a jumper and a pair of free throws to take a five-point lead. The Redhawks kept the Jayhawks from extending their lead any further, splitting up junior center Chelsea Lott’s layup with a layup and jumper to stay within three. Kansas led SEMO, 14-11, going into the second period.

Following a Lyons jumper in the opening minutes of the second period, SEMO scored five-straight points off of a 3-pointer and jumper from Luttrull to tie the game up at 16. Johnson and Kopatich each knocked down shots for the Jayhawks to regain a four-point Kansas lead.

The Redhawks tied the game back up at 20 with a free throw from McCurdy and a long-range bucket from senior guard/forward Kaley Leyhue, but Kansas responded with a basket from junior guard Brianna Osorio, ending the Jayhawks three-minute scoring drought. Junior guard Austin Richardson knocked down a basket to put Kansas up 24-20. Defensively, KU held SEMO to just one field goal in the final three minutes, going into the locker room up, 28-25.

Kansas was scoreless for nearly five minutes to start the half, while SEMO went on a 6-0 run to take a 3-point lead over the Jayhawks. Johnson ended the Redhawks run, connecting on her next two baskets to take back the KU lead, but Southeast Missouri went on an 8-0 run to take a 39-32 lead. Kansas and SEMO traded off the next three buckets, while Kopatich added a free throw that would put the Jayhawks within four going into the final 10 minutes of the game.

The Jayhawks ran out to a 6-0 start to begin the final 10 minutes of the game to regain the lead, 43-41. Senior forward Deja Jones knocked down the first basket for the Redhawks nearly four minutes into the game. Kansas and SEMO continued battling back and forth throughout the final minutes, but the Jayhawks’ clutch shooting from the charity stripe pushed KU past Southeast Missouri, 51-50.

UP NEXT
Kansas women’s basketball hits the road for the first time in the 2017-18 season, traveling to New York to tip off with St. John’s and Iona.

— KU Athletics —

Geist leads Missouri to 23-point win over Green Bay

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — When new Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin overhauled the roster in the offseason with a top-five recruiting class, it appeared from the outside that feisty but offensively challenged junior guard Jordan Geist could be an odd man out.

As it turned out, Geist was just Martin’s type. And in Saturday night’s 100-77 victory over Green Bay, he was an offensive machine.

Geist, a reserve guard who entered the game averaging 5.2 points, scored 28, exceeding his previous career high by 10. He made 11 of 14 shots from the field and 5 of 8 from 3-point range.

“He embraces challenges,” Martin said. “He’s battle-tested. He likes to compete. . He likes to wrestle out there now and then. I’d rather have that than not.”

Geist shot 29 percent from 3-point range last year. This year, he’s making 48 percent of his 3-pointers. He credits a summer of shooting for the improvement.

“That was one of my main focuses, just so people couldn’t just back off me,” Geist said. “I prided myself on that this summer.”

But 3-point shooting was only part of his big night. He regularly blew past his defenders and got to the rim. He even dunked — sort of, as the ball got a bit of the rim — on a breakaway after a steal.

Geist declared it was indeed a dunk.

“I’ll give it to him,” said teammate Jordan Barnett, who scored 19 points. “It’s arguable, but I’ll give it to him.”

Green Bay (3-5), led by the hot outside shooting of forward David Jesperson, hit five of its first seven shots and opened a 13-4 lead.

Missouri’s Kevin Puryear tied it at 21 with a driving layup with 11:30 left in the first half, and Barnett’s 3-pointer gave the Tigers a 29-21 lead a few minutes later. It only got worse for the Phoenix, who couldn’t stop penetration by Missouri’s guards. Missouri led 60-40 at halftime.

Turnovers have been a problem for the Tigers (8-2) early in the season — they averaged 15.3 through the first nine games — but they only had eight against Green Bay. Missouri’s Jeremiah Tilmon finished with 12 points and 11 rebounds, and Jontay Porter added 12 points and eight rebounds. Walk-on Adam Wolf, a fan favorite, got the Tigers to the 100-point mark with a 3-pointer in the final minute.

Jesperson made 5 of 6 3-pointers and led the Phoenix with 17 points. Khalil Small added 12, Will Chevalier scored 11 and Hunter Crist finished with 10.

BIG PICTURE

Green Bay: Saturday’s game was a reunion for Phoenix coach Linc Darner. He was a teammate of Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin at Purdue from 1992-95. Darner scored 437 career points for the Boilermakers, while Martin racked up 1,666 career points.

Missouri: Coach Martin announced Friday that freshman C.J. Roberts plans to transfer. Roberts, 6-foot point guard from Irving, Texas, was expected to redshirt this season. The Tigers usually play three point guards, and none of them are seniors, so prospects for future playing time were cloudy. “We wish him nothing but the best, and we will assist him in any way possible,” Martin said.

FIERCE FRESHMAN

Tilmon, a 6-10, 252-pound freshman, has been a force inside except when foul trouble limits his minutes. Against Green Bay, he played physically but didn’t commit the silly fouls that have been a problem early in the year.

“He was what we needed him to be, unstoppable on the glass,” Barnett said. “He had seven offensive rebounds. That says a lot. He did his job. He’s getting better, especially at staying out of foul trouble. We need that from him.”

DOUBLE TECHNICAL

With less than nine minutes left in the game, some bumping between Green Bay’s Trevian Bell and Puryear on one end of the floor escalated into shoving on the other. Both players were assessed technical fouls. Puryear, who did not appear to be the instigator, was disqualified because he already had four personal fouls. He finished with just four points.

UP NEXT

Green Bay: The Phoenix will visit Indiana State (4-5) on Tuesday.

Missouri: The Tigers have the week off for final exams and return to court Saturday with a home game against North Florida (3-7).

— Associated Press —

Kansas State loses to Tulsa 61-54 in Wichita

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Tulsa coach Frank Haith sent precocious guard Elijah Joiner into Saturday night’s nip-and-tuck game against Kansas State with a few minutes left and a simple message to remember.

“I said, `Hey, you get an open look, you take it,” Haith recalled later, “so for a freshman, I guess that means if I’m in the arena, I’m taking the shot.”

He knocked it down with veteran poise.

The deep shot from right in front of his bench gave Tulsa the lead with just over three minutes to go, and the Golden Hurricane held on to beat the Wildcats 61-54 in a sloppy, defensive slugfest.

“I thought our guys played with great toughness,” said Haith, who is no stranger to the Wildcats from his days coaching Missouri in the Big 12. “I thought we made some tough shots down the stretch, and I thought everybody that played contributed.”

Junior Etou had 22 points and seven rebounds, and Martins Igbanu added 10 points, as the Golden Hurricane (5-4) overcame the loss of junior guard DaQuan Jeffries. Their third-leading scorer at nearly 12 points a game hurt his hand on the rim in practice and could miss the next two months.

The loss of their best athlete forced Haith to implement a series of zone defenses, including one he installed just this week. That befuddled the Wildcats (8-2), who missed all nine of their field-goal attempts over the final five-plus minutes and wound up 4 for 31 from beyond the 3-point arc.

“The first half we ran offense and got good corner shots and we just missed them,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “Those corner 3s were open, we didn’t make them, then I think the second half we panicked a bit and forced some action, got a little uncharacteristic.”

Xavier Sneed had two of the 3-pointers and finished with 15 points and eight boards for the Wildcats. Dean Wade had 13 points, Kamau Stokes had 11 and Barry Brown finished with 10.

“Just a bad shooting night,” said Stokes, who along with Brown combined to go 1 for 15 from the 3-point arc. “We just didn’t make the shots that we normally make.”

The Wildcats, who entered the game 13th nationally in scoring defense, forced Tulsa into as many turnovers (11) in the first half as made field goals. Etou had four of them as he struggled to deal with the pesky hands of the Wildcats’ perimeter players.

Still, the Golden Hurricane trailed just 30-27 at halftime, and they used an early flurry of points in the second half to pull ahead on Etou’s 3-pointer with 12:38 to go.

The game remained a nip-and-tuck affair down the stretch, neither team ever leading by more than six until the final seconds, when Tulsa was able to put things away.

“This was the very first game were we put everything together as a team, and that feels good,” the Golden Hurricane’s Martins Igbanu said. “Some games we were guarding the ball but we didn’t rebound well and some games we were missing assignments. We still missed assignments but we played through it.”

STRANGE DOMINANCE

Tulsa improved to 6-1 against the Wildcats in a series dating to 1932. The teams were playing the first game of a three-game series between schools that are within driving distance of each other.

BIG PICTURE

Tulsa won a defensive slugfest despite 15 turnovers, including eight from Etou. A big reason was the Golden Hurricane’s perimeter defense and work on the boards, where they out-rebounded the Wildcats 40-30 despite giving up several inches in the paint.

Kansas State was trying to match its best start under Weber, but instead watched a 23-game non-conference home win streak come to an end. The Wildcats considered the game at Intrust Bank Arena in Wichita a home game even though it was a 2-hour drive from their campus in Manhattan.

UP NEXT

Tulsa begins a two-game homestand against Prairie View A&M on Thursday night.

Kansas State gets a week off before facing Southeast Missouri State next Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska loses to Creighton for a seventh straight time

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Creighton’s Marcus Foster wasn’t much of a factor early against Nebraska. He sure was at the end.

Foster scored 17 of his 19 points in the second half, and Creighton beat Nebraska 75-65 Saturday for its seventh straight win over the Cornhuskers and coach Greg McDermott’s sixth in a row over Nebraska’s Tim Miles.

“Just couldn’t get a rhythm the first half,” Foster said. “Something Coach Mac has told me over and over: `Be calm and be patient, and everything is going to go your way.’ ”

Foster was held to 1-of-5 shooting in the first half and was just 4 for 11 with 4 minutes to play. He scored 10 of Creighton’s last 18 points to hold off the Huskers.

Foster’s strong finish began when he made a nifty move on the baseline for a layup. After Isaiah Roby blocked his shot, Foster picked up the ball and scored. Then, after Nebraska came out of a timeout in a 1-3-1 zone for the first time, Foster buried a deep 3-pointer for a 69-63 lead with 43 seconds left.

Mitch Ballock had 11 of his 13 points in the second half, Ronnie Harrell Jr. finished with 12 and Khyri Thomas added 11 for Creighton.

“This is a really good win for us and I think later in the season we’ll see how good a win it is for us,” McDermott said. “I’ve said this week that I feel like this is Tim’s most complete team. They’re very disruptive defensively with their length and their size in particular.”

Isaac Copeland had a double-double with 20 points and a career-high 11 rebounds for Nebraska (7-4). The Huskers got 16 points from James Palmer Jr., and 10 from Roby. Glynn Watson had eight points and five assists before fouling out with 2:50 left.

“First of all you have to credit Creighton,” Miles said. “Their second half was outstanding. They got downhill on offense and Ballock got us early. If we’re going to beat a really good team on the road, we have to have seven or eight guys be stars in their roles.”

The Bluejays, fueled by a sellout crowd of 17,901 that was on its feet much of the second half, shot 59 percent after halftime.

They struggled in the first half, missing 5 of 7 free throws after getting in the bonus less than 8 minutes into the game, committing seven turnovers in a five-minute stretch and missing 11 of 13 3-pointers.

Still, they trailed just 33-28 at half thanks to Nebraska’s 39-percent shooting and inability to pull away when it had chances.

“Honestly,” McDermott said, “I felt fortunate to be down five with 10 turnovers and as bad as we shot free throws.”

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: The Huskers were coming off an upset of No. 14 Minnesota and clearly have closed the gap against Creighton. A big reason is Copeland. The Georgetown transfer’s length and athleticism bothered the Bluejays.

Creighton: The Bluejays took the all-time series lead, 26-25, against their in-state rival. The seven straight wins over Nebraska mark their longest streak in the series. Creighton has won 11 straight regular-season home games against the Huskers.

MCDERMOTT’S DOMINANCE

McDermott is now 14-0 all-time against Miles. The two longtime friends have squared off with different teams over the last 20 years, going back to when McDermott was at Wayne State (Nebraska) and Miles was at Southwest Minnesota State.

Miles joked before the game about the certainties of his life: “Death, taxes and Miles loses to McDermott.”

After the game, McDermott said, “Tim and I have been friends a long time, and I pull for his team when they’re not playing us.”

KEY NUMBERS

Creighton’s Martin Krampelj had his second straight double-double, with 10 points and 11 rebounds. … The Bluejays trailed at halftime for the first time this season. … Copeland’s double-double was his first for Nebraska and second of his career. … The Huskers’ Palmer has been in double figures in 10 of 11 games. … Nebraska got to the foul line a season-low three times.

UP NEXT

Nebraska hosts No. 2 Kansas on Saturday.

Creighton hosts Maryland-Eastern Shore on Friday.

— Associated Press —

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