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Central High School names Andy Ball new football coach

ballClick here to listen to new Central football coach Andy Ball

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. – Central High School named Andy Ball its new football coach on Tuesday, as he comes to the Indians after serving as the offensive line coach at Missouri Western the last two seasons.

Ball takes over for Phil Pitts, who resigned after one season at Central to become the defensive coordinator at Lincoln University.  The Indians went 4-7 this past season.

This will be Ball’s first head coaching job as he’s been a position coach in college his entire career.

Ball spent the last two years in St. Joseph at Missouri Western as the offensive line coach of the Griffons.  Prior to that he was the defensive line coach and co-recruiting coordinator at Truman State from 2011-2014.  Ball spent four years at Missouri S&T in charge of the offensive line, strength and conditioning, special teams and recruiting.  And he started his coaching career at Culver-Stockton, where he spent three years as the offensive and defensive line coach and the strength and conditioning coordinator.

Ball comes from a strong football pedigree as his father Randy coached eight seasons (1990-98) at Western Illinois and spent seven seasons as the head coach at Missouri State.  Randy is currently a pro personnel scouting assistant for the Kansas City Chiefs, while his uncle Russ Ball is the Vice President of Football Administration/Player Finance of the Green Bay Packers.

Missouri’s Sophie Cunningham named SEC Women’s Basketball Player of the Week

SECriggertCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou sophomore guard Sophie Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) was named Southeastern Conference Co-Player of the Week, announced Tuesday by the league office. It’s Cunningham’s first weekly honor since earning SEC Freshman of the Week six times last season and Mizzou’s second weekly award this season, with senior Sierra Michaelis receiving SEC Co-Player of the Week recognition in December.

Cunningham steered Mizzou to a pair of wins last week as the Tigers extended their win streak to three games. The sensational sophomore averaged 20.5 points, 7.0 rebounds and 4.5 assists to lead Mizzou to victories over No. 25 Texas A&M and Arkansas.

On Thursday, Cunningham guided her team to an upset overtime win over No. 25 Texas A&M with the top scoring performance in the SEC during league play this season. Cunningham poured in a season-high 36 points on 10-of-19 shooting in the victory. She made a career-high 14 free throws, just three shy of the single-game program record. She is the first Tiger in 15 seasons with 10 field goals and 10 free throws in the same game and she has now accomplished that feat twice in her career (Wake Forest, Nov. 22, 2015).

Cunningham dominated late to beat the Aggies. Ten of her 14 free throws came after the 1:04 mark of the fourth quarter. Her game-tying, clutch layup with three seconds remaining sent the game to overtime and her free throws in the extra period sealed the win.

On Monday, in a blowout win on the road at Arkansas that saw nine Tigers find the scoring column, Cunningham chipped in five points and five assists. She added seven rebounds in the rout for the second consecutive game to complete an all-around solid effort. It marks the fourth time this season she’s recorded at least seven points and five assists in the same game.

After her stellar week, Cunningham is now the only player in the SEC shooting above 80 percent from the free throw line and above 45 percent from the field. She has reached 20 points in a game five times since returning from an injury in mid-December and has done so 16 times in 50 career games. For the season, Cunningham ranks third in the SEC in scoring with 16.9 points per game.

Mizzou begins a two-game homestand when it hosts Auburn on Thursday night at Mizzou Arena before a rematch with Kentucky on Jan. 30. The contest against Auburn is set to tip at 7 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State’s Pitts earns weekly MIAA basketball honor

Northwest2013riggertKANSAS CITY, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University junior guard Justin Pitts has been named the MIAA Men’s Basketball Athlete of the Week. Pitts averaged 30.0 points, 5.5 rebounds and 5.5 assists in a pair of wins last week for the top-ranked Bearcats.

Against Nebraska-Kearney, Pitts scored a season-high 37 points on 14-of-22 shooting. He had seven assists, six rebounds and just one turnover. He was 5-of-9 from beyond the arc. On Saturday, Pitts scored 23 points with five rebounds, four assists and four steals. He was 3-of-7 from three point territory and 7-of-18 from the field. For the week, he went 10-of-10 from the charity stripe.

Northwest will play at Missouri Western on Saturday, Jan. 28, at 4 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Michaelis leads Missouri women to 60-46 win at Arkansas

riggertMissouriFAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Mizzou earned its third consecutive victory and head coach Robin Pingeton secured her 450th career win as the Tigers raced past Arkansas, 60-46, on Monday night in Fayetteville, Ark. Mizzou (14-7, 4-3) clinched its first road victory at Arkansas since Dec 21, 2008 and the second total win over the Razorbacks in Fayetteville in program history.

Mizzou has now won six SEC road games by double digits since joining the league and beaten four SEC opponents by 14 points or more on the road since the 2014-15 campaign. The Tigers’ current three-game win streak is the third streak of three games or more in conference play over the last two seasons.

Senior guard Sierra Michaelis (Mercer, Mo.) tallied a game-high 23 points and grabbed nine rebounds to lead Mizzou. During the performance, Michaelis became the 34th Tiger in program history to eclipse 1,000 career points. With 1,009 career points, she ranks 33rd on Mizzou’s all-time scoring list.

She has now scored in double digits five times in seven conference games and recorded five 20-point outings this season. Michaelis shot a scorching 10-of-16 from the floor and 3-of-7 from beyond the arc on Monday, matching her career high for total field goals in a game for the third time.

Sophomore Cierra Porter (Columbia, Mo.) contributed 10 points, making all of her field goal attempts (4-of-4), and dished three assists for the second time this season.  Fellow sophomore Sophie Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) chipped in five points, seven rebounds and five assists in an all-around effort. Freshman Amber Smith (Shreveport, La.) added nine points off the bench, including three consecutive buckets to end the first quarter.

Mizzou led for all forty minutes on Monday night and set the tone early, racing ahead 13-2 out of the gate with a balanced attack. Six different Tigers scored in the opening frame as Mizzou held a 21-8 edge after 10 minutes of action. Mizzou has now outscored opponents 119-71 in first quarters during SEC play and limited opponents to single-digit scoring in a quarter 15 times during the 2016-17 campaign.

Michaelis helped Mizzou maintain its lead with hot shooting in the second quarter. She scored seven points in the frame, including a steal and transition score that pushed the Tigers in front by 15. After an Arkansas bucket, Mizzou led 33-20 at halftime.

Mizzou surged in front by as many as 20 points midway through the third quarter. After a layup and another jumper by Michaelis, Mizzou led 45-25 with 15 minutes left in the game.  The Tigers sustained their defensive intensity throughout the second half. Arkansas shot just 32.7 percent from the field in the game, the eighth opponent Mizzou has held under 35-percent shooting this season.

The Razorbacks could not cut the deficit below 14 as both times Mizzou responded with a triple from freshman Jordan Chavis (Lexington, N.C.) and Michaelis. Michaelis finished with 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting in the second half as the Tigers cruised to a big road win.

Mizzou begins a two-game homestand when it hosts Auburn on Thursday night at Mizzou Arena before a rematch with Kentucky on Jan. 30. The contest against Auburn is set to tip at 7 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Royals’ Ventura killed in car crash in Dominican Republic

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Yordano Ventura quit school as a teenager so he could begin working a construction job to help his family make ends meet, laboring day after day in the hot sun of the Dominican Republic.

It was a chance tryout with the Kansas City Royals that changed the trajectory of his life.

Yordano wowed scouts with an electrifying fastball, the best they had seen in years, and a confident demeanor that bordered on brash and arrogant. And both of those traits served him well as he rocketed to the major leagues, helped the Royals win a long-awaited World Series championship in 2015, and became one of the most popular players in a city that embraced baseball one again.

Ventura, whose nickname “Ace” fit so perfectly, died Sunday in a car crash on a stretch of highway near the town of San Adrian in his native Dominican Republic. He was 25.

“Our team and our organization is hurting deeply,” Royals general manager Dayton Moore said. “It’s certainly something that puts everything into strong perspective, and challenges us all to never grow tired or weary or cease to do what is right, and loving others. Nobody is guaranteed tomorrow.

“We loved Yordano,” Moore said. “We loved his heart, we loved who he was as a teammate, a friend. He was somebody that challenged us all and made us better and I’m going to miss him.”

Highway patrol spokesman Jacobo Mateo said Ventura died on a stretch of highway 40 miles northwest of Santo Domingo, the nation’s capital. Mateo did not say whether Ventura was driving.

He’s the second young star pitcher to die in past four months. Marlins ace Jose Fernandez was 24 when he was killed along with two other men in a boating accident near Miami Beach in late September.

Also Sunday, former major league infielder Andy Marte died in a separate car accident in the Dominican Republic. Metropolitan traffic authorities said he died about 95 miles north of the capital.

“I was traveling to the airport this morning and I got a phone call wanting to know if I’d heard about Yordano, and I thought they meant Marte,” Moore said. “My first thought was, ‘Were they together?’

“Then shortly afterwards, I got a call from Major League Baseball confirming this tragedy.”

The Dominican Republic has the second-highest traffic-related death rate in the world — officials there believe alcohol, speed and a blatant disregard for traffic laws is to blame. Oscar Taveras, Jose Oliva, Rufino Linares and Jose Uribe are among players who have died in crashes in the country.

It wasn’t known whether Ventura had been drinking or speeding at the time of his accident.

Hall of Fame pitcher Pedro Martinez, a fellow Dominican whom Ventura called his hero, posted pictures of Ventura and Marte on Twitter and said, “Guys, the only way we can pay tribute to you, is by reflecting on the adjustments we all have to make in this game called life.”

Moore speaks frequently with Latin American players about dangers of returning home, including driving on the perilous roads.

“I’m more intentional about it to the point where it probably goes in one ear and out the other,” Moore said, “but we’re constantly discussing these things.”

The Royals lowered flags at Kauffman Stadium to half-staff Sunday, and displayed Ventura’s photograph on the large, crown-shaped scoreboard in centerfield of the empty ballpark. Fans were leaving flowers, hats and other mementos within hours of learning of his death.

Royals teammates learned the news in a text chain and took to Twitter to share their sorrow.

“I love you my brother. I’m in disbelief and don’t know what to say,” first baseman Eric Hosmer said.

Third baseman Mike Moustakas also expressed disbelief, tweeting: “I love you Ace. I don’t know what to say other than I’m going to miss you a lot. RIP ACE.”

Ventura will be buried Tuesday in the Dominican Republic. Moore, manager Ned Yost and other members of the Royals are planning to attend.

Before his start in Game 6 of the 2014 World Series, Ventura paid tribute to Taveras, his close friend and countryman who had been killed days earlier in a car accident in the Dominican Republic. Ventura wrote “RIP O.T #18” on his hat and also wrote messages on his glove, cleats and the mound before shutting out San Francisco for seven innings in a win.

“If he was still here, I would for sure be talking to him, and Oscar would be very happy for me,” Ventura said afterward. “Oscar was a very humble guy and very likable, and I’m going to miss him a lot.”

Ventura signed a $23 million, five-year deal with the Royals shortly before he started on opening day in 2015. He then helped them bounce back from their loss to the Giants in Game 7 by returning to the World Series and beating the New York Mets in five games for their first crown since 1985.

The right-hander went 11-12 with a 4.45 ERA last season, and his fiery demeanor was never more evident than when he hit Orioles star Manny Machado with a fastball to trigger a brawl. Ventura was suspended nine games for the pitch, though it was cut to eight on appeal.

In a surreal coincidence, the 33-year-old Marte played his final game in the big leagues for Arizona on Aug. 6, 2014. Ventura started that game for Kansas City.

“We are deeply saddened to learn of the tragic passing of Andy Marte and Yordano Ventura,” players’ union executive Tony Clark said. “It’s never easy to lose a member of our fraternity, and there are no words to describe the feeling of losing two young men in the prime of their lives. Our thoughts and prayers go out to their families, friends, teammates and fans throughout the United States and Latin America.”

Moore said he spoke to Miami general manager Mike Hill early Sunday, in part because Moore admired the grace and heart in which the Marlins organization dealt with Fernandez’s death.

It wasn’t certain whether Fernandez was driving the boat when it crashed on Sept. 25. He had a blood-alcohol content level of 0.147, above Florida’s legal limit of 0.08, according to autopsy reports released by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner’s Office.

“That was one of the first things that came to mind when I began to figure out how we were going to process this,” Moore said. “Mike was able to provide some insight. Just give me some comfort, really.”

Ventura wound up pitching his entire career for the Royals, going 38-31 with a 3.89 ERA.

Born June 3, 1991, in Samana, Dominican Republic, Ventura was a true rags-to-riches story. He quit school at 14 and was laboring on a construction crew to support his family when he heard about a tryout, which led to a spot in the Royals’ academy located on his picturesque island home.

Still, the odds were long that Ventura would ever make it to the big leagues. Very few players from the Dominican academies reached the pinnacle of the sport.

But over time, Ventura was able to harness one of the most electric fastballs that scouts had seen in years, and his headstrong and confident nature was essential to his rapid rise. He made his debut to great fanfare in 2013, allowing just one run again Cleveland in a sign of things to come.

He eventually became a cornerstone of a youth movement that included young stars such as Hosmer and Moustakas, one that carried the Royals first to respectability, then to the top of the American League.

He was 14-10 with a 3.20 ERA in 2014, his first full season in the big leagues, and helped the Royals reach the World Series for the first time in nearly three decades. Then he helped to lead them back to the Fall Classic in 2015, this time completing the job on a crisp night in New York.

“He always had a zest for life, an innocence about the game, a freshness, a fearlessness,” Moore said, his voice cracking. “He was a very compassionate human being, loved to compete, no doubt challenged us, but that made us better. Nobody could ever doubt how much he cared about his teammates, how much he cared about the fans, and how much he loved to compete and to pitch.”

— Associated Press —

Griffons use balanced attack to roll past Nebraska-Kearney

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH –  The Missouri Western men’s basketball team used a 15-0 run to end the first half and begin the second and they cruised to an 80-63 victory over Nebraska-Kearney Saturday inside the MWSU Fieldhouse.

NOTABLES
– The Griffons shot 71.4 percent from the three-point arc in the first half
– Missouri Western started a 15-0 run with 3:22 left in the first half and never trailed after that
– MWSU had two 7-0 runs throughout the game to go along with the 15-0 run
– The Griffons held a 33-29 rebounding advantage over the Lopers
– UNK was held to a season-low of 63 points

TOP PERFORMERS
– Seth Bonifas dropped a career-high 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds
– TJ Evans scored 21 points, going 3-4 from three-point and 4-5 on the free-throw stripe
– Cole Clearman had 15 points and went 3-4 from the three-point arc

UP NEXT
Missouri Western is back in action Saturday as they host No. 1 Northwest Missouri State at 4:00 p.m. inside the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats remain unbeaten with win over Fort Hays State

Northwest2013riggertMARYVILLE, Mo. – Sharing the basketball is a hallmark for the No. 1-ranked Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team. But in uncharacteristic fashion, the Bearcats went into halftime with only two assists against Fort Hays State.

This one statistic helped explain why Northwest held a slim three-point lead after the first half.

The Bearcats quickly returned to form at the start of the second half. They scored their first two field goals on assists by junior Justin Pitts. The Bearcats’ basketball world was back in order.

Northwest built a double-digit lead and carried it to an 82-72 victory Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena. Northwest improved to 18-0 overall an 10-0 in the MIAA.

“It is just game by game,” said Northwest junior Brett Dougherty about the undefeated start to the season. “We don’t look too far ahead. This week, when we played Nebraska-Kearney, we focused on Kearney. When that game is done, we take it to the next one.

“Coach always preaches that being undefeated is a result, but the way you get there is taking it one step at a time.”

The Bearcats set the tone in the second half when Pitts passed the ball inside to Dougherty for a layup. On the next possession, Pitts hit junior Xavier Kurth in the corner for a three-pointer. The back-to-back field goals gave Northwest a 41-33 lead.

“I think when you are assisting the ball, it is a good sign your offense is doing well and moving it,” said Dougherty, who finished with 10 points. “In the first half, we struggled a little bit with that. In the second half, we did a little bit better.”

Fort Hays, which dropped to 10-7 and 4-5 in the MIAA, kept battling. Northwest held a 45-39 lead with 13 minutes left, and that was when the Bearcats got real separation from the pesky Tigers.

A three-pointer by senior Zach Schneider pushed Northwest’s lead to 48-39. On the next possession, senior Anthony Woods slipped a nice pass inside that Dougherty turned into a reverse layup, making it 50-39.

“That was huge,” said Northwest associate head coach Austin Meyer said. “There wasn’t a lot of flow to the game.”

Pitts, who finished with 23 points, followed with two free throws and then scored a two-point field goal off an assist from Schneider. The 14-0 run ended with two free throws from freshman Ryan Welty, making it 59-39.

To the Tigers’ credit, they didn’t quit. They started firing three-pointers and making them. They closed to 70-60 with 5 minutes, 58 seconds left on a three-pointer by Rob Davis.

And with 1:30 left, Northwest held a 72-64 lead. Two free throws by Pitts with 1:04 left put the Bearcats up 74-64.

It was fitting that the last field goal by Northwest came on a nice pass from senior Chris-Ebou Ndow that led to a layup by Woods with 44 seconds remaining that pushed Northwest’s lead back to 10 at 76-66

“We were pleased with our energy and effort most of the game,” Meyer said. “We knew they were a good offensive rebounding team. We didn’t do a good job of blocking out.

“As far as being in the game, and playing hard, we did a good job of that.”

After jumping to a 21-9 lead, Northwest hit the cruise control button and coasted into halftime ahead 36-33 lead.

The Bearcats never trailed in the first half, but after their initial burst, they didn’t quite have the energy they displayed in the second half against Nebraska-Kearney on Thursday.

Early on, it appeared Northwest was going to take a double-digit lead into halftime. Back-to-back three-pointers by Ndow gave the Bearcats a 12-4 lead.

Northwest held a 29-20 lead when the sputtering began. A few times Northwest made great passes to setup a layup, but the layup didn’t fall through the nets.

The Bearcats also lost some focus at the free throw line, missing seven in 20 attempts. Those misses allowed Fort Hays to slowly crawl back into the game.

“We stepped off the peddle a little bit and let them get a chance to come back and they took the chance and played really well,” said Ndow, who finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds. “It wasn’t just us playing bad. They came ready. They really wanted this game and they showed it.”

Fort Hays ended the first half with all the momentum when Trey O’Neil nailed a 30-foot trey with a few seconds on the clock that helped the Tigers close to three.

The focus was definitely there for the Bearcats in the second half. They made all 16 of their free throw attempts.

“I think everybody has the confidence to step up and hit free throws when they are in the game,” Ndow said. “In the second half, we needed some big free throws and everybody stepped up and knocked them down.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Western women grind out four-point win over Nebraska-Kearney

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – If nothing else, the Missouri Western women’s basketball team discovered it can win a game despite shooting worse than 35 percent from the field and getting out-rebounded by 10. That’s exactly what the Griffons (14-5, 6-4) did Saturday afternoon in a 55-51 win over Nebraska Kearney (5-12, 1-8).

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western’s 55 points were the fewest the team has scored in a victory this season
– The Griffons shot just 36.4 percent from the field, 16.7 percent from three-point range and 68.4 percent from the free throw line
– Nebraska-Kearney out-rebounded Missouri Western 42-42
– The Griffons were aided by outscoring Nebraska Kearney 22-11 in the second quarter after being outscored 16-10 in the first

TOP PERFORMERS
– Chelsea Dewey had 14 points and a team-high six rebounds
– Dwanisha Tate led Missouri Western with 15 points on 6-13 shooting from the field to go with her four rebounds
– Melia Richardson went 4-9 from the field and scored a season-high 12 points
– Sefulu Faavae also had six rebounds and a team-high three assists to go with her five points

UP NEXT
Missouri Western gets a break next week with no midweek game before hosting Northwest Missouri (7-10, 2-8) next Saturday, Jan. 28 at 2 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou’s skid reaches 10 with close loss to Ole Miss

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Sebastian Saiz recorded his third-consecutive double-double, scoring 19 points to go with 10 rebounds as Ole Miss defeated Missouri 75-71 Saturday.

It’s the 22nd career double-double for Saiz, who is the Southeastern Conference’s active rebounding leader and the only player in the conference averaging a double-double at 15.2 points and 11.6 rebounds per game.

Terrence Davis had 18 points and 11 rebounds, and Deandre Burnett added 14 points, shooting 3-for-6 from 3-point ranges.

Missouri coach Kim Anderson said double-teaming Saiz was the Tigers’ primary game plan.

“We did a decent job, but there were probably five times where we were late doubling him,” Anderson said. “So, consequently, when you don’t get a good double, (Saiz) did a pretty good job of clearing the double, making the pass, and then you’ve got to scamper back and they make one extra pass and they’ve got a wide open shot. I thought that burned us a few times.”

Kevin Puryear led all scorers with a career-high 26 points to go with eight rebounds, shooting 11-for-14 from the field and hitting all four of his 3-point shots. Russell Woods finished with 13 points and 11 rebounds, and Terrence Phillips had 10 points, 10 assists and five rebounds, but fouled out with 14 seconds remaining.

Puryear, who had struggled in conference play, making just 5 of his last 26 shot attempts, was not thrilled about achieving a career-high in a loss, but said he can still build off the performance.

“These last three or four games have been really frustrating,” Puryear said. “Our whole coaching staff has done a great job of just trying to keep me calm…This gives me momentum going into further games.”

Ole Miss (12-7, 3-4 Southeastern Conference) assumed an early double-digit lead following a peculiar start, in which Saiz was assessed a flagrant foul in the first 16 seconds for elbowing Missouri’s Russell Woods while going after a loose ball. The Rebels were up 22-10 within 6 minutes of play, but Missouri steadily closed the gap behind 11-point first halves from Woods and Kevin Puryear, and trailed 39-33 at halftime.

The Tigers (5-13, 0-6) put on arguably their best offensive performance of the season in the second half, shooting 9-for-17 from 3-point range — including 4 of 5 to start — and eventually taking a one-point lead following a 3-pointer by Cullen Van Leer with 7:34 remaining.

Following that sequence, Ole Miss coach Andy Kennedy called timeout and the Rebels responded with an 11-1 run that seemed to halt any remaining momentum for Missouri.

However, 3-pointers by Jordan Barnett and Van Leer in the final minute made for an interesting finish, as Van Leer was fouled on a made shot with 6 seconds remaining, but missed the free-throw to make it a one-point deficit. The Rebels were 17-for-23 from the free-throw line, including 4 for 6 in the final minute.

“I told our team, I just told them and I challenged them throughout the course of the game, I thought, from an approach standpoint, we were fairly locked in,” Kennedy said. “We obviously have issues as it relates to personnel.But, we had to make some plays. If you want to win SEC games, you’ve got to make SEC plays.”

Barnett finished with 11 points and five rebounds, and Van Leer had nine points, making 3 of 6 3-pointers.

MASH UNIT

Ole Miss guard Rasheed Brooks did not play after suffering a seizure during a timeout of the Rebels’ 80-69 win over Tennessee on Tuesday. Brooks was carted off the court on a stretcher and taken to a local hospital. He was released Thursday night, and no timeline has been announced for his return.

BIG PICTURE

Ole Miss: Saiz’s double-double is his 13th of the season, which ranks sixth nationally and leads all SEC players. After being outrebounded 23-17 in the first half, Saiz’s tenacity on the glass helped Ole Miss close the rebounding gap in the second half.

Missouri: The Tigers have now lost 10 games in a row, including six straight conference losses. It’s the longest losing streak since the 2014-15 season, when the Tigers dropped 13 straight before defeating Florida at home late in the season.

UP NEXT

Ole Miss: Hosts Texas A&M Wednesday.

Missouri: Visits Mississippi State Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

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