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Chiefs game moved to Sunday evening due to ice storm

ChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The AFC divisional playoff game Sunday between the Steelers and Chiefs has been moved from an early afternoon kickoff to primetime because of an ice storm due to hit the Kansas City area this weekend.

The game was originally scheduled to kickoff at 12:05 p.m. Central time. It will now start at 7:20 p.m. to give road crews and public safety officials more time to treat roads and parking lots.

The forecast calls for ice to move into the area Friday, and persistent cold temperatures throughout Saturday and Sunday. Additional precipitation is expected Sunday, though mostly in the form of rain.

The time change means the Packers-Cowboys game scheduled to kickoff at 3:40 p.m. Central time on Fox on Sunday will lead into the Steelers-Chiefs game, which will air on NBC.

Griffons hang on to defeat SBU 66-63 for first MIAA road win

mwsuBOLIVAR, Mo. – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team (6-10, 2-5) held off a second half rally from Southwest Baptist (9-6, 2-4) Thursday and defeated the Bearcats 66-63.

NOTABLES
– Missouri Western led by 16 with 11:20 to go in the game, but SBU cut the lead to five 1:13 to go, neither team scored over the final 1:13
– It was Missouri Western’s fifth win in the last seven games
– SBU cut the MWSU lead to single digits on a 5-0 run on all free throws
– Southwest Baptist shot 35 free throws to Missouri Western’s 13
– The Griffons used a 14-1 run to turn a five-point deficit into an eight-point lead with 16:29 remaining
– Missouri Western hit eight threes and 24 field goals overall; SBU hit five threes and 17 field goals

TOP PERFORMERS
– TJ Evans led Missouri Western with 20 points on 6-13 shooting from the field
– Cole Clearman had 18 points, four made threes and a career-high nine rebounds
– Aaron Emmanuel led Missouri Western with five assists to go with his 12 points

UP NEXT
Missouri Western’s scheduled game at Central Missouri (9-5, 3-3) for this coming Saturday was pushed to Monday, Jan. 16 in Warrensburg.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats cruise past Central Missouri to tie MIAA record

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

WARRENSBURG, Mo. – The stage was set for No. 1-ranked Northwest Missouri State to suffer its first loss of the season Thursday evening against the University of Central Missouri.

The Multipurpose Building was rocking in what was deemed a red out. Red towels were handed out to Central Missouri fans.

Northwest, though, never gave nearly 4,100 fans an opportunity to wave the red hankie. Of course, several hundred fans were in Bearcat green and weren’t looking to defect to Central Missouri

The Mules had a few moments in the first half but never tasted a lead. After taking a six-point lead into halftime, Northwest played near flawless basketball in the second half and beat their rival 67-54 to improve to 15-0 overall and 7-0 in the MIAA.

“This means a lot,” said Northwest junior Chris-Ebou Ndow, who finished with 10 points and 11 rebounds. “We had a stretch where we won games pretty easily. Going down the stretch like this is really going to help. We are going to face some teams that we really have to grind it out. This was one of them.”

Northwest has now 19 straight MIAA regular season games, dating back to last year. The Bearcats tied an MIAA record that was established in 1931 by Northwest, coached by legendary Henry Iba.

“That is big time,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “In this league, with all the good coaches and all the good teams that have been in here, to be able to able to accomplish something like that is an honor. I don’t think people understand how difficult it is to do that and how difficult to be ready night in and night out in this league.”

Early in the second half, Northwest punished the Mules’ zone defense. A three-pointer to start the second half by senior Zach Schneider gave Northwest a 33-24 lead.

“It was huge just to get the team going and get myself going,” said Schneider, who went 3-for-6 from behind the arc. “I have been struggling the last couple of games. I knew coming in I was going to get some looks. I was pretty confident that I was going to knock them down. That got me going for my next two shots.”

A few minutes later, a three-pointer from freshman Ryan Welty increased Northwest’s lead to 41-31.

But the definitive moment in the game came when Northwest held a 41-33 lead. It started with a three-point play by junior forward Brett Dougherty. It was followed by a three-pointer from Justin Pitts and then another three-pointer from Pitts, making it 50-33. Ndow added to the 11-0 run with a two-point field goal, making 52-33.

“We lick our lips,” Schneider said of facing a zone defense. “We know we are going to get great shots. It kind of threw us for a loop in the first half. We made some adjustments to get it more inside the zone. After that, it was really open. We have so many great shooters. They had to get out of it. They eventually went back to man.”

Comfortably ahead, Northwest showed its unselfish play when it made two quick passes that led to an easy, reverse layup from senior D’Vante Mosby, which gave the Bearcats a 61-44 lead.

Central Missouri didn’t give up. The Mules closed to 63-54 with 3:09 left. Northwest still needed to make a few more plays to secure a win. One came when Pitts made a drive, stopped and flipped in a high-arching, 5-foot tear drop with 2:40 left that gave Northwest an 11-point lead. It was a shot that probably brought tears to the Central Missouri faithful.

Thirty seconds later, Pitts drove for another layup, increasing the lead for Northwest to 67-54.

“I don’t think we played overly well offensively, in the first half, but we withstood that,” McCollum said. “We weren’t totally ready to go. It wasn’t like we were bad when we started, but our concentration wasn’t at the level it had been.

“In the second half, we clicked a little bit better. But credit Central. I thought they did a good job defending us. I thought they had a good game plan.”

From the opening tip, it was obvious the first half was going to be a gritty, defensive battle. Northwest went into its methodical, offensive mode and walked into the locker room at halftime with a 30-24 lead.

Northwest scored the first seven points and never trailed in the first half, but the Bearcats worked hard to stay ahead.

After giving up the first seven points, Central Missouri fought back, closing to 14-11. Northwest responded with two free throws from Anthony Woods. It was a good sign. Woods missed the last three games with an injury.

Leading 16-11, Northwest received some of that Pitts magic. He nailed a three-pointer, giving the Bearcats an eight-point advantage. Northwest eventually increased its lead to 27-16.

An energetic Central Missouri crowd made sure the Mules weren’t going to get blown out of the Multipurpose Building in the first half. The Mules went on a 6-0 run and closed to 27-22.

The thing that makes Northwest so difficult for opposing teams is anybody can score. The Bearcats hit Central Missouri with a three-point dagger late in the first half from Welty to make it 30-22.

Northwest only shot 42 percent in the first half, making only eight field goals, but five of those field goals were three-pointers compared to one trey for the Mules.

“It was tough,” Ndow said. “Their fans were into it. They had a little run. It was tough to stop the bleeding. To go into half with a lead, considering how hard they were working, it was big.”

— Northwest Athletics —

Dewey’s career-high 27 not enough as MWSU women fall at Southwest Baptist

mwsuBOLIVAR, Mo. – A half-court buzzer beater at the end of the first half gave Southwest Baptist (11-4, 3-3) its first lead that the team never relinquished in a 76-69 win over the Missouri Western women’s basketball team Thursday night.

NOTABLES
– It was the most points allowed by 10, by the Griffons this season
– SBU shot better than 60% from the field in the game, 15% better than any Griffon opponent this season
– Three Griffons fouled out of the game (Dwanisha Tate, Melia Richardson and Erin Anderson)
– Missouri Western forced 27 SBU turnovers but were outscored off turnovers, 22-21
– Chelsea Dewey scored a career-high 27 points, 21 in the first half
– Megan Rosenbohm’s half-court buzzer beater before halftime gave SBU its first lead of the game, 40-38

TOP PERFORMERS
– Dewey led all scorers with 27, boing 9-16 from the field with five rebounds, four assists and four steals
– Julia Torres had a team-high eight rebounds to go with her 10 points
– Dwanisha Tate scored 12 points with a team-high five steals

UP NEXT
Missouri Western (12-4, 4-3) travels to Central Missouri (12-2, 5-1) Monday night for a game originally scheduled for this Saturday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest women drop ninth straight game as they lose at UCM

Northwest2013riggertBy David Boyce

WARRENSBURG, Mo. – After missing the last two games with an injury, junior Tanya Meyer returned for the Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team and played well.

But Meyer’s game-high 22 points were not enough to counter the balanced scoring from the University of Central Missouri. Four players scored in double figures for the Jennies in their 66-42 win over Northwest Thursday evening at the Multipurpose Building.

“For her first game back after being out a week or so, you could tell she was a little rusty. But she was doing everything she could do, but she can’t do it by herself,” Northwest coach Buck Scheel said. “We talked about that in the locker room. Until everybody is on the same page and have that same drive and competitiveness across the board, we are not going to give ourselves a chance.”

Northwest will regroup Friday and then take on Southwest Baptist Saturday afternoon in Bolivar, Mo.

“They have to come out and compete,” Scheel said. “I feel like right now we are scared to lose. That is kind of how we play when we are out on the floor.”

Central Missouri was on top of its game, scoring inside and hitting three-pointers when they were available. The diverse offense helped the Jennies build a 60-35 lead early in the fourth quarter.

The Bearcats didn’t quit. Despite the deficit, they kept battling and scored the next five points to make it 60-40.

Defensively, Northwest made it more difficult for Central Missouri to score, but the deficit was too much to overcome for the Bearcats.

“Nine losses in a row now, and we are playing like we are scared,” Scheel said. “You have to fight through that, and get through that adversity and want to compete.”

When Jasmin Howe’s three-point attempt bounced up and around the rim before falling in, it looked like a good sign for the Bearcats that fortune was on their side. The trey gave Northwest a 5-4 lead.

Unfortunately, the Bearcats never led again and went into halftime behind 36-21.

Offense was hard for Northwest to generate, particularly in the first quarter when it scored only nine points.

Meanwhile, Central had plenty of success driving to the basket and scoring. The Bearcats went into the second quarter trailing 19-9.

The only consistent offense for Northwest came from Meyer, who scored 12 of the Bearcats’ 21 points in the first half. In contrast, Central had four players who scored six or more points.

— Northwest Athletics —

Mizzou women lose at LSU Thursday 80-71

riggertMissouriBATON ROUGE, LA. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball dropped a road contest at LSU, 80-71, on Thursday night. Sophomore Sophie Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) poured in a season-high 32 points, but LSU held on behind a strong second half. Cunningham made 12-of-17 attempts (70.6 percent) and drained a season-best five three-pointers.

Thursday’s performance marked the fifth time in her career that Cunningham has shot 70 percent or better from the floor when taking at least five attempts. She has now scored at least 20 points in a single game 15 times and 30 points in a contest twice.

Redshirt senior Lindsey Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) matched her career-high for the third time with 16 points on 7-of-10 shooting. Two of her three career 16-point performances have come against LSU. Lindsey Cunningham also dished out a season-high eight assists in a solid all-around outing.

Senior Sierra Michaelis (Mercer, Mo.) chipped in 14 points and hit four three-pointers to help Mizzou finish with a season-high 12 triples. Mizzou made 12-of-22 from beyond the arc in the loss.

The Tigers in black and gold continued a trend of starting hot with a strong opening quarter. Mizzou raced out to a 21-16 lead as Sophie Cunningham set the tone early with 10 points in the first 10 minutes of action.

LSU swung the momentum with an 8-0 run to begin the second frame, but Michaelis seized it back with efficient shooting. The senior scored 11 consecutive points for Mizzou, including three trifectas to push her squad back in front by three as head coach Robin Pingeton’s team took a 34-31 lead into halftime.

Trailing 40-35 following another bucket by Sophie Cunningham, LSU catapulted ahead by seven after a key 12-0 spurt. Again, Mizzou responded, this time behind the Cunningham duo. Sophie Cunningham drained a pair of threes to pull Mizzou within two and then a tough driving layup by Lindsey knotted the score at 57-57 with 7:34 left.

LSU snatched the lead back with a 6-0 run and never relinquished its advantage down the stretch, cashing in from the free throw line. Mizzou could not erase another deficit and fell in a seesaw battle.

Mizzou continues its road swing with a trip to Vanderbilt on Sunday. Tip off is set for 2 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

No. 25 K-State women cruise to sixth straight win over Kansas

riggertKansasStateMANHATTAN, Kansas – Behind a dominant performance on the boards from Breanna Lewis, Kansas State defeated Kansas Wednesday night in Bramlage Coliseum, 73-60. K-State improved to 9-1 at home this season and secured the 28th win in the last 34 games over the Jayhawks including a 6-0 mark in the Jeff Mittie era.

Kansas State (13-4, 3-2 Big 12) was led by Lewis with 15 points and 10 rebounds. Lewis, a Naismith Trophy candidate, recorded her 17th career double-double and her fifth this season. Junior guard Karyla Middlebrook added 11 points, seven assists and six rebounds.

Kansas (6-10, 0-5 Big 12) was led by junior Jessica Washington, who came off the bench to score 31 points on 10-of-14 shooting, including 7-of-10 from downtown.

K-State shot 42.6 percent (26-of-61) from the field, while Kansas shot 37.5 percent (21-of-56). The Wildcats had the edge on the boards for the 13th time this season, 41-31, and outscored the Jayhawks 38-20 in the paint.

The Wildcats raced out to a 16-0 lead, as Lewis dominated the glass with seven offensive rebounds in the first five minutes while also tallying seven points. Kansas answered with back-to-back 3-pointers to push within 10, but K-State extended the lead back to 13 twice before taking a 22-9 lead at the end of the first quarter.

The Wildcats and Jayhawks traded baskets for the first five minutes of the second quarter before a Washington 3-pointer trimmed the lead to nine, 30-21, and forced a K-State timeout with 4:09 to play in the half.

The Jayhawks held K-State to just one field goal in the last five minutes of the first half to cut the Wildcat lead to seven, 33-26, to close the half.

Lewis led the way for the Wildcats in the opening half, scoring nine points and setting a team season-high with eight offensive rebounds. Middlebrook and Kaylee Page each added six points.

In the opening half, K-State shot just 34.3 percent (12-of-35) but tallied 14 offensive rebounds and outscored the Jayhawks 13-3 on second chance points. Kansas was held to 38.5 percent (10-of-26) from the field in the first half.

K-State opened the second half on a 12-0 run behind three consecutive layups and extended their lead to 47-30 with 4:46 to go in the third quarter.

After a Kylee Kopatich 3-pointer, Kindred Wesemann drilled a 3-pointer at the buzzer to put the Wildcats up 57-36 after three quarters.

The Wildcats pushed their lead to 25 two separate times early in the fourth quarter before the Jayhawks used an 8-0 run to fight back within 11 at the 1:48 mark. K-State made free throws down the stretch to secure the victory, 73-60.

K-State returns to the road this weekend, as the Wildcats travel to Stillwater, Oklahoma, to face Oklahoma State on Saturday. Game time at Gallagher-Iba Arena is set for 4 p.m.

— K-State Athletics —

Missouri State holds off Evansville 55-51

riggertMSUSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Dequon Miller converted three of four free throws in the final nine seconds to help Missouri State hold on to beat Evansville, 55-51 Wednesday night.

Jaylon Brown’s layup with 11 seconds left got Evansville within one, 52-51. After a Missouri State timeout Miller drew a foul from Dru Smith and converted both free throws with :09 left. Brown turned the ball over three seconds later and Miller again drew a foul from Smith, this time hitting the first of two from the line.

Jarrid Rhodes scored 14 points and Miller added another 13 to lead the Bears (12-6, 3-2 Missouri Valley).

Missouri State converted just one of every three shots from the field (19 of 57 for 33.3 percent), including 8 of 23 from long range.

Brown and Ryan Taylor each scored 19 points for the Purple Aces (10-8, 1-4). Evansville shot 21 of 50 (42 percent) from the field.

— Associated Press —

KU’s Mason, Jackson named to Wooden Award Top 25

riggertKULOS ANGELES – Kansas senior Frank Mason III and freshman Josh Jackson have been named to the John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 25, the Los Angeles Athletic Club announced Wednesday evening.

Chosen by a poll of national college basketball experts, the list comprises of 25 student-athletes who are front-runners for the John R. Wooden Award, based on their performances during the first half of the 2016-17 season. Kansas is one of five school with two players chosen. Mason and Jackson are two of four student-athletes from the Big 12 Conference on the list.

Mason leads the Big 12 in scoring at 20.4 points per game and 3-point field goal percentage at 54.9 percent. The 5-foot-11, Petersburg, Virginia, guard has nine games of 20 or more points this season, including two 30-point efforts for the No. 2/2 Jayhawks (15-1, 4-0). A two-time Big 12 Player of the Week, Mason is second in the league in assists at 5.6 per game and also ranks among the conference leaders in 3-point field goals made (third at 2.4), field goal percentage (seventh at 53.2 percent), free throw percentage (seventh at 74.7 percent) and assist-to-turnover ratio (eighth at 2.3).

Jackson is fourth in the Big 12 with a 15.4 scoring average and tied for 10th in rebounding at 5.4 boards per game. The 6-foot-8, Detroit guard has three double-doubles on the season and leads Kansas with 22 blocked shots. A three-time Big 12 Newcomer of the Week and one-time Big 12 Player of the Week, Jackson has eclipsed the 20-point mark three times. The 2016 CBE Hall of Fame Classic Most Valuable Player, Jackson is second on the KU team with 24 steals and also ranks among the Big 12 leaders in field goal percentage (10th at 51.3), steals (10th at 1.5), blocked shots (ninth at 1.4).

The players on the list are considered strong candidates for the 2017 John R. Wooden Award presented by Wendy’s. The leading candidates will be further pared to 20 top players in early February. Fifteen top players who have proven to their universities that they are also making progress toward graduation and maintaining at least a cumulative 2.0 GPA will be submitted to voters on the Final Ballot prior to the NCAA Tournament. Voters are permitted to take into consideration the opening rounds of the NCAA Tournament when casting the ballot. The 10-man Wooden Award All-American Team will be announced the week of the “Elite Eight” round of the NCAA Tournament.

The 41st annual presentation of the John R. Wooden Award to the men’s and women’s most outstanding basketball player will be the anchor presentation of the ESPN College Basketball Awards Show presented by Wendy’s on ESPN2 on Friday, April 7, 2017.

John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 25
Dwayne Bacon, Florida State
Lonzo Ball, UCLA
Joel Berry II, North Carolina
Jaron Blossomgame, Clemson
Dillon Brooks, Oregon
De’Aaron Fox, Kentucky
Markelle Fultz, Washington
Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
Josh Hart, Villanova
Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin
JOSH JACKSON, KANSAS
Justin Jackson, North Carolina
Luke Kennard, Duke
TJ Leaf, UCLA
Lauri Markkanen, Arizona
Kelan Martin, Butler
FRANK MASON III, KANSAS
Malik Monk, Kentucky
Monte Morris, Iowa State
Johnathan Motley, Baylor
Alec Peters, Valparaiso
Caleb Swanigan, Purdue
Melo Trimble, Maryland
Maurice Watson Jr., Creighton
Nigel Williams-Goss, Gonzaga

— KU Athletics —

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