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Griffons fall on the road at Rockhurst 73-59

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team’s first road game of the 2017-18 season resulted in the Griffons’ third loss (2-3) of the year. Missouri Western led for 28 seconds in the first half of a 73-59 loss at Rockhurst (3-1).

CLOSE AT THE HALF
After falling behind 13-2 to open the game, Missouri Western trailed by eight with three minutes to go in the first half before going on a 9-0 run to take a 30-29 lead with 28 seconds to go before halftime. Rockhurst made two free throws with two seconds left in halftime to take a 31-30 lead to the break. The one-point deficit at halftime was the Griffons’ first of the season. Missouri Western led its previous three games at the half and was tied with Winona State halfway through the season opener. The Griffons would have two more short-lived leads early in the second half on Seth Bonifas jumpers, the second of which gave the Griffons their last lead of the game with 17:51 to go in the game. The Griffons shot close to 43 percent from the field in the first half and just 27 percent in the second. Rockhurst shot better than 63 percent in the second half after just under 38 percent shooting in the first half.

BROWN BESTS CAREER-HIGH
Freshman Trey Brown has had his two highest scoring totals of the young season in the past two games. Brown scored a team-high 12 points Tuesday night on 4-of-10 shooting from the field to go along with three assists and two rebounds. In his first collegiate season, Brown is averaging 6.8 points per game.

BONIFAS IN DOUBLE-FIGURES AGAIN
Seth Bonifas scored 10 points Tuesday night and has now scored in double-figures in four of the Griffons’ five games this season. The senior is averaging 11.8 points per game, more than two points more than he averaged in any of his first three seasons. Bonifas is also averaging a career-high 5.4 rebounds per game after pulling down a team-high six boards against Rockhurst.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western stays on the road for two more non-conference games this week before diving into MIAA play next week. The Griffons will be in Fort Smith, Arkansas to take on Southeastern Oklahoma State (1-3) on Nov. 24 at 5 p.m. and Arkansas-Fort Smith (5-0) on Nov. 25 at 3 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats defeat Washburn in non-league game at Municipal

The Northwest Missouri State University men’s basketball team defeated Washburn, 86-78, at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., on Tuesday night.

The Bearcats move to 5-0 on the year with the win while Washburn falls to 2-3. The game was counted as a non-MIAA contest.

Justin Pitts led all scorers with 22 points and a season-high nine assists. He added two steals and two rebounds while going 9-of-11 from the free throw line.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats shot 56.6 percent (26-of-46) from the field and hit on 14-of-25 (56 percent) from beyond the arc.

– Northwest had 23 rebounds with two coming on the offensive end.

– Each team committed 12 turnovers.

– The Bearcats blocked four shots and held the Ichabods to just 6-of-20 (30 percent) from three point territory.

– Chris-Ebou Ndow scored 19 points with a team-high seven rebounds. He had a block and an assist.

– Ryan Welty hit all five of his three-point attempts, finishing with 15 points. He had a pair of rebounds.

– Joey Witthus had 13 points with a pair of rebounds and two blocked shots. He was 5-of-6 from the free throw line.

– Ryan Hawkins had five rebounds and added a blocked shot.

Key Northwest Sequence
– Midway through the first half, Washburn took an eight point lead, 29-21, on a jumper by Tyler Geiman. But Northwest responded with a 13-0 run. Witthus started the rally with a layup and then drew a foul the next time down and hit both free throws. After a Washburn turnover, Welty knocked down a three off a feed from Pitts. The Ichabods would turn the ball over again as Northwest regained possession with 5:34 left, trailing 29-28. Kirk Finley missed a bucket inside but Welty tracked down the offensive board and hit a three from the corner to give Northwest the lead, 31-29. Washburn would misfire the next time down and facing a 2-3 zone, Pitts knocked down a three from the top of the arc to put the Bearcats up, 34-29.

Up Next
– Northwest will host Missouri Valley College on Saturday, Nov. 25, at 1 p.m. at Bearcat Arena.

— Northwest Athletics —

No. 3 KU breaks school record for 3’s in blowout win over Texas Southern

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas shot the ball from 3-point range better than it ever has in its illustrious history.

Once the Jayhawks found their rhythm from deep, their offense was virtually impossible to stop. Texas Southern coach Mike Davis was in awe.

“I’ve never seen a team pass the ball and shoot the basketball as well as they do,” Davis said.

Svi Mykhailiuk scored 21 points, Udoka Azubuike added 20 and No. 3 Kansas cruised to a resounding 114-71 victory over Texas Southern on Tuesday night in the Jayhawks’ first game of the Hoophall Miami Invitational.

They got after it early, as with just under 5 minutes remaining in the first half Lagerald Vick hit the team’s seventh 3 of the half — a program record. A similar feat was achieved in the second half, when Devonte’ Graham hit No. 17, the record for 3s in a game.

“It’s super fun,” Graham said. “Being active, sharing the ball, it’s contagious. Just making that extra pass, and when the ball’s going through the hoop like that, it just feeds energy into us.”

Graham, Vick and Marcus Garrett all finished with a double-double for Kansas, as Vick posted 19 points and 10 rebounds, Graham had 17 points and 11 assists, and Garrett logged 13 points and 11 boards.

Texas Southern’s Demontrae Jefferson led all scorers with 24 points. Donte Clark added 19 and had a game-high 14 rebounds as well.

Davis has seen plenty of high-powered offenses run by Bill Self, as the pair used to meet regularly when they coached at Illinois and Indiana, respectively. After watching a performance like this, he has no doubts over his former rival’s future chances.

“I’ve been around for a long time,” Davis said. “If you play basketball like they play basketball, they’ll be cutting the net down in April.”

BIG PICTURE

Kansas continues to thrive without freshman Billy Preston, who remains benched as the school investigates a single-car on-campus incident involving him earlier in the month. His absence has left Self with just two big men, but the lack of depth has yet to truly hurt the Jayhawks.

Texas Southern is still searching for its first win after facing a daunting schedule to start the season. Even though the Tigers have yet to find themselves in the win column, games against bigger schools like Kansas will continue to provide invaluable experience regardless of the score.

“It was a great opportunity for us,” Davis said. “We leave tomorrow to go play Clemson on Friday, and this game right here will get us ready for our next game.”

T’ED UP

Azubuike earned a technical foul midway through the first half when he hung on the rim following a thunderous dunk.

“He deserved it,” Self said of the technical. “I told the official — he said `I hate calling that,’ I said `but you got to call it.’ I mean, that’s good for us … he has a bad habit of doing that, and I was glad they called it because that may end up not costing us where we really need it, in a close game.”

SARCASTIC SELF

While Self agreed that the Jayhawks shot the ball about as well as they possibly could have, he wasn’t overtly enthused by the record, as per usual.

 

“I couldn’t be happier. I think we should celebrate for a week,” Self said. “My reaction is we made shots. That doesn’t mean anything to me.”

MODEL FOR SUCCESS

“Love the way they play,” Davis said of the Jayhawks. “That’s the way I want my team to play. When we get to January and play in our conference, that’s the way we want to be playing basketball.”

UP NEXT

Kansas will continue Hoophall Miami Invitational play Friday night with another home game against Oakland, which has already dropped its first two games of the tournament.

Texas Southern will once again face an uphill battle for its first victory as it travels to Clemson on Friday.

— Associated Press —

Missouri’s Michael Porter Jr. out for the season after back surgery

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) – Missouri freshman Michael Porter Jr. will miss the remainder of the season after undergoing lower back surgery.

The 6-foot-10 Porter, the top prep prospect in the country last season, played in only two minutes of the season-opening win over Iowa State before missing the last three games with the injury. The school said Tuesday that he will undergo surgery in Dallas, and his expected recovery time is three to four months.

Porter averaged 36.2 points and 13.6 rebounds per game as a senior in high school in Washington, and he was a McDonald’s All-American after signing with Missouri.

He was part of a stellar recruiting class for first-year coach Cuonzo Martin that featured five top prep prospects.

— Associated Press —

Alize Johnson helps Missouri State defeat Manhattan

ESTERO, Fla. (AP) — Alize Johnson drove and scored with 11 seconds left to give Missouri State a 69-65 victory over Manhattan on Tuesday in the consolation semifinals of the Gulf Coast Showcase.

After Johnson’s basket, Ryan Kreklow made a steal and sank two free throws for the final score.

Johnson shot 5 of 10 from the field and made all seven of his free throws in leading the Bears (2-2) with 17 points. Obediah Church and J.T. Miller added 12 points each. The Bears (3-2) were only 1 of 11 from 3-point range but 20 of 25 from the free-throw line.

Aaron Walker Jr. and Rich Williams each scored 15 points for the Jaspers (2-2).

Neither team led by double figures. The Jaspers led by five at halftime and clung to the lead until a 6-0 run with 4 1/2 minutes left capped by a dunk from Church gave the Bears a two-point lead with 2:41 to go. The Jaspers tied it twice after that but Johnson scored inside twice, including the game-winning layup.

The Bears will play for fifth place on Wednesday and the Jaspers for seventh.

— Associated Press —

Griffons earn bid to NCAA Volleyball Tournament for the first time in 17 years

ST. JOSEPH – For the first time in 17 years, Missouri Western volleyball will play in the NCAA tournament.

The Griffons were awarded the No. 6-seed in the central region championship and will open play Thursday, Nov. 30 against the No. 3-seed Nebraska Kearney in Marshall, Minnesota.

Southwest Minnesota State is the host and No. 1 seed in the Central Regional and they’ll face No. 8 seed Arkansas Tech. Concordia-St. Paul is the No. 2 seed and they face No. 7 seed Central Oklahoma out of the MIAA. The No. 4 seed is Northern State and they open with 5th-seeded Minnesota Duluth.

Missouri Western’s run to the NCAA Championships began on Oct. 13 when the team upset then No. 7-ranked Central Oklahoma on the road. The win set off a string of 13-straight victories, culminating in the program’s first-ever MIAA regular season championship, a shared title with Nebraska Kearney.

A tie-breaker left the Griffons with the No. 2-seed in the MIAA Championships, where they advanced to the final, again against Nebraska Kearney. A four-set loss to the No. 6-ranked Lopers left the Griffons NCAA postseason hopes in jeopardy.

Now, the team will make its first NCAA Championship appearance since 2000, facing a team they’ve played three times this season, going 1-2 against Nebraska Kearney.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou squeaks past MIAA’s Emporia State 67-62

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — A complete offseason makeover raised the expectations exponentially for the Missouri basketball team. But a mysterious injury to star freshman Michael Porter Jr. and a few atrocious shooting nights have tempered the excitement for the Tigers, who needed to hang on in the last minute to beat Division II Emporia State 67-62 on Monday.

Missouri made just 2 of 20 shots from 3-point range and only 19 of 34 free throws against the Hornets. That close victory followed a blowout loss at Utah on Thursday in which the Tigers made just 5 of 27 shots from beyond the arc.

“We’ve hit a couple bumps,” junior forward Kevin Puryear said. “This game we didn’t play as well as we could have and also at Utah on the road. We’ve been fighting adversity lately. Now it’s time for us to buckle down and come together. This is the most important time for us to come together as a team.”

Puryear and Jeremiah Tilmon each scored 13 points, and Jontay Porter added 11 points, 11 rebounds and three blocks off the bench. Missouri (3-1) also got a boost from sophomore forward Reed Nikko, who scored eight points and grabbed four rebounds in 10 minutes.

Tilmon, Porter and Nikko are all at least 6-foot-10, which gave the Tigers a decided size advantage over the Hornets (2-3), whose tallest starter is 6-8 Hassan Thomas. Missouri’s 24 offensive rebounds saved it from an embarrassing defeat to a scrappy opponent.

“If we didn’t have those guys on the interior, we probably lose that game by eight or 10 points,” Puryear said. “When our shots aren’t falling, it’s good to have guys on the inside making plays.”

Brian Morton led Emporia State with 21 points, including 15 in the second half. Stephaun Limuel added eight points and nine rebounds for the Hornets, who helped their cause by making 11 of 12 free throws.

The game was tied at 28 at halftime, at which point Missouri had made just 1 of 13 3-point attempts. The second half started much the same way, as the Tigers continued to attempt and miss 3-pointers. Emporia State led 39-32 five minutes into the second half when Malik Hluchoweckyj beat the shot clock with a 3-pointer.

Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin said he didn’t think shot selection was his team’s problem — the shots just didn’t go in.

“Sometimes you can overemphasize pounding the ball inside,” Martin said. “I know we emphasized pounding the ball inside, and now, all the sudden guys aren’t looking to shoot.”

A Blake Harris no-look pass to Tilmon for a dunk gave Missouri a 43-41 lead midway through the second half. When Harris found Porter inside again two minutes later, the Tigers led 50-45.

The Hornets never led again, but they did cut the deficit to two points with 1:32 left when Grant Shell hit a 3-pointer in transition. Danny Hodge again cut the margin to two with a 3-pointer with less than a minute left. Emporia State had the ball with a chance to tie or take the lead, but Porter blocked a Shell finger-roll layup attempt in the lane, and the Tigers hung on.

“We had opportunities to make shots from 3, didn’t shoot the ball well from the free-throw line, had 18 turnovers,” Martin said. “I think the only thing that saved us was we were playing at home.”

BIG PICTURE

Missouri: Michael Porter Jr. did not play and did not sit on the bench for the third straight game because of injury. Martin said Porter did not attend Monday’s game because he was seeing a specialist for his injury. Porter, considered one of the nation’s top two recruits, has played only the first two minutes of the season opener. MU initially described his injury as a tweaked hip but has since only called it a leg injury.

Martin said he didn’t have any further updates on Porter’s status or whether he would join the team on its trip to Orlando, Fla., for the AdvoCare Invitational.

“I’m not sure right now,” Martin said. “We’ll see if he’s going to Orlando with us.”

Emporia State: Hornets coach Shaun Vandiver was making his first appearance at Mizzou Arena, but as a center for Colorado from 1988-91 he played against the Tigers next door at the Hearnes Center. Vandiver averaged 17.3 points and 11 rebounds against Missouri in seven career games.

GOOD REED: Nikko has been pleasant early season surprise for Missouri. The 6-10, 250-pound sophomore was hampered by hip injuries as a senior at Maple Grove High School in Minnesota and was slowed by a high ankle sprain as a freshman at Missouri.

“It’s probably the best I’ve felt since junior year of high school,” Nikko said. “I feel great. Huge credit to our trainers and medical staff for getting me there.”

He has scored eight points in each of the last two games.

“He’s one of those guys that carries out his assignment to a T,” Martin said. “He executes everything we’re trying to do. He’s big. He’s physical. The key with Reed is understanding how talented he is and really believing in himself. I think he’s better than what he gives himself credit for.”

UP NEXT

Missouri will face Long Beach State in the first round of the AdvoCare Invitational on Thanksgiving in Orlando, Fla.

Emporia State will play Northwestern Oklahoma at home on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women fall at home by 20 to Maryville

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to Maryville University, 83-63, on Monday evening at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Mo.

Northwest falls to 1-3 overall while the Saints improve to 3-1.

Tanya Meyer scored 16 points and had a game-high nine rebounds.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats outrebounded Maryville, 35-34. Northwest had 10 offensive rebounds and came away with four steals.

– Jaelyn Haggard added 11 points, going 6-of-7 from the charity stripe.

– Mallory McConkey had 10 points with six rebounds. She also added a pair of assists.

– Arbrie Benson had eight points with three assists.

– Kaylani Maiava had eight points with five rebounds and a blocked shot. She was 4-for-5 on free throw attempts.

– Zoie Hayward was a perfect 4-of-4 from the charity stripe.

Up Next
– Northwest will head to St. Joseph, Mo., for a pair of games this weekend. The Bearcats will face Rockhurst at 5:30 p.m. on Friday followed by a 3 p.m. game Saturday against the University of Saint Mary (Kan.).

— Northwest Athletics —

Kansas State ties steals mark in 80-58 win over Northern Arizona

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Barry Brown had 20 points on 9-of-13 shooting and Kansas State took advantage of 31 Northern Arizona turnovers for an 80-58 win on Monday night.

The Wildcats (4-0) were relentless on the defensive end and scored 38 points off turnovers. Kansas State also tied a 41-year old school record with 19 steals, matching the mark that was last reached back on Jan. 10, 1976, against Tulane.

“This is what we have to do in order to put ourselves in position to win games,” Brown said. “The scouting reports so far have been excellent and I feel like our guys are in position to win games. We go through their plays and take away their tendencies and what they like to do. Credit to the coaches and our players.”

While it seemed like Kansas State was attacking the basketball with much ferocity, head coach Bruce Weber was not too happy with some portions of the Wildcats play on the night.

“We did not do a good job in the half court in the first half,” Weber said. We scored a lot on steals and in transition, but I thought in the second half we pushed it and got it over the top to Makol (Mawien) for the first time this year. But every time we got on a run, we just kind of put the breaks on.”

Northern Arizona’s turnover total has increased each game so far this season and the Lumberjacks (0-4) broke their season high in turnovers before the first media timeout of the second half.

“We played Arizona and had 14-15 turnovers and we had double that tonight,” Northern Arizona head coach Jack Murphy said. “So obviously, Kansas State and their defensive pressure really bothered us tonight. You can see impact that had on the game and you have to give coach Weber and his staff at lot of credit for the way that their guards get out there and defend.”

Although the Lumberjacks could not get going on offense, Torry Johnson scored a game high 18 points on 5-of-7 shooting with 10 coming from the foul line.

BIG PICTURE

This was the final game for the on-campus portion of the Continental Tire Las Vegas Invitational. Kansas State and Northern Arizona each came into this game going in opposite directions and it stayed that way once the game went final. The Wildcats are starting to hit their stride on the defensive end while Northern Arizona’s issues with ball control continue to be its downfall.

UP NEXT

Northern Arizona: The Lumberjacks will face Hampton in the Continental Tire Las Vegas Invitational on Thursday.

Kansas State: The Wildcats will face Arizona State in the Continental Tire Las Vegas Invitational on Thursday.

— Associated Press —

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