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Lock, Crockett help lift Missouri over Vanderbilt, 26-17

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri coach Barry Odom has finally reached a milestone that eluded him for months.

Drew Lock completed 22 of 37 passes for 294 yards and two touchdowns as Missouri defeated Vanderbilt 26-17 Saturday, marking Odom’s first Southeastern Conference win.

It marks Missouri’s first SEC victory since Lock’s starting debut, a 24-10 victory over South Carolina on Oct. 3, 2015.

“I’m happy for our seniors and happy for our team,” said Odom, who played linebacker for Missouri from 1996-99. “They’ve invested a lot and it hasn’t been pretty, but they continue to do everything that I’ve asked them to do. I’m glad they finally got a little bit of success for working through that.”

Each team opened with a three-and-out before Damarea Crockett’s 6-yard touchdown run gave Missouri (3-7, 1-5) a lead it would never relinquish. Crockett had 20 carries for 154 yards and the touchdown.

“He’s got a bright future,” Odom said of Crockett. “We blocked well from the point of attack and Damarea, for a freshman, he’s gotten better every week. He works that way in practice.”

J’Mon Moore caught eight passes for 138 yards and two touchdowns, including an 82-yard score with 9:50 remaining in the second quarter, and Johnathon Johnson added four catches for 73 yards.

Kyle Shurmur was 17 of 29 for 252 yards and two interceptions, one of which Missouri cornerback Aarion Penton returned 19 yards for a touchdown, the second of his career.

“I knew I had safety help, so I could go ahead and be aggressive on any underneath routes,” Penton said in describing the interception. “I just used my keys, saw the three-step read, saw that the receivert was running a slant, and I just stepped in front of him and made a play.”

C.J. Duncan caught five passes for 89 yards and Caleb Scott had three catches for 63 yards.

Darius Sims rushed seven times for 86 yards, Khari Blasingame had 14 carries for 64 yards and a touchdown, and Ralph Webb added 11 carries for 34 yards and a touchdown.

Missouri gained 481 yards despite a 13-minute differential in time of possession. It’s the Tigers’ highest yardage total in SEC play since Nov. 15, 2014 when they gained 587 yards en route to a 34-27 victory over Texas A&M.

Vanderbilt (4-6, 1-5) punted three times in the fourth quarter and was held to -14 yards.

Vanderbilt coach Derek Mason said his team struggled to get defensive stops for multiple reasons.

“I think it was a combination of rush and coverage,” said Mason, who also serves as defensive coordinator for the Commodores. “To be honest, a couple of times they made some good throws versus tight coverage. A couple of times the coverage didn’t necessarily finish in the way we’re supposed to, and the pass rush didn’t get home. That’s something I’m going to have to get back, look at, and fix quickly because we need to move on.”

KICKING CONUNDRUM

Missouri missed out on at least eight points due to place-kicking issues. Freshman Tucker McCann missed back-to-back extra point attempts in the first half before missing field goal attempts from 55 and 21 yards. Following a 4-yard touchdown pass from Lock to Moore with 8:39 remaining, Odom called on Ben Tesson, who drilled the attempt, giving the Tigers a two-score lead.

TAKEAWAYS

Vanderbilt: The Commodores struggled on third down, converting on just 3 of 14 attempts, while also failing their only fourth down conversion attempt. Missouri converted 10 of 19 third down attempts, including 7 of 11 in the second half.

“That’s on us as players,” Shurmur said of Vanderbilt’s third down struggles. “The coaches had a great game plan, put us in a great positon the whole entire week, and it’s on us as players to do better on third down especially.”

Missouri: The Tigers brought the pressure defensively, racking up six sacks and nine tackles for losses. Charles Harris made eight tackles -three of them for losses — 2 1/2 sacks and a forced fumble, and Marcell Frazier added 1 1/2. Vanderbilt amassed 411 yards, the lowest opponent yardage total Missouri’s defense has allowed in six games.

UP NEXT

Vanderbilt: The Commodores host Ole Miss (4-5, 1-4 SEC) next Saturday. The Rebels defeated Vanderbilt 27-16 last season in Oxford.

Missouri: The Tigers visit Tennessee (7-3, 3-3 SEC) next Saturday. The Volunteers defeated Missouri 19-8 last season in Columbia.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks stay winless in Big 12 play with 31-24 loss to Iowa State

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. — Last week, Iowa State coach Matt Campbell told his team that he refused to give up on this year’s Cyclone squad.

“I’m not looking for next year,” Campbell said of his message to the team. “I’m looking for right now.”

They took that message to heart. Only the clock could stop Iowa State in the second half as ISU scored on four of its five second-half possessions — the fifth bleeding the final seconds off the clock — and beat Kansas 31-24 for its first conference win of the season on Saturday.

Jacob Park threw for 205 yards and two touchdowns, Allen Lazard had a career-high 10 receptions for 120 yards and a score for Iowa State (2-8, 1-6 Big 12).

“He’s a big dude,” Kansas’ Steven Sims Jr. said of Lazard. “He’s a big target, big guy. He can run and he’s hard to cover. He’s hard, he’s physical. He’s trouble for anybody’s defense. He had a good game.”

David Montgomery had a career-high 169 yards rushing for Iowa State.

The Cyclones scored on four-consecutive drives, including a 37-yard field goal by Cole Netten that capped the scoring with 2:48 remaining, and Jomal Wiltz intercepted a pass at the ISU 38 to seal it 40 seconds later.

“Yeah, that wasn’t fun to watch,” Kansas coach David Beaty said of the game. “We’ve got to get off the field (on defense). I thought we did some good things first half doing that, and then we didn’t sustain our drives in the second half to go put points on the board. You can’t kick field goals, man. You’re not going to be able to kick field goals in this league and win. You can’t do that. You’ve got to score touchdowns. We didn’t do it.”

Matthew Wyman’s 37-yard field goal gave Kansas a 17-10 lead early in the second half. Park hit Deshaunte Jones for a 12-yard touchdown and, after a 39-yard TD run by Kansas’ Ke’aun Kinner, Mitchell Harger scored on a 6-yard run to make it 24-22 with 10 seconds left in the third quarter.

A 46-yard run by Montgomery set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Joel Lanning and gave the Cyclones the lead, 28-24, for good with 12:03 left.

Carter Stanley passed for 171 yards and Kinner had 152 yards rushing for Kansas (1-9, Big 12 0-7).

INJURY REPORT:

Kansas tight end Ben Johnson missed the game with an undisclosed injury.

THE TAKEAWAY:

Kansas: The Jayhawks have lost 23-straight games against FBS opponents, dating to Nov. 8, 2014, when Kansas defeated Iowa State 34-14 at home.

Iowa State: Iowa relied primarily on Jacob Park under center. Joel Lanning, the starter, completed 1 of 4 passes for 15 yards passing and added 9 yards on the ground.

UP NEXT:

Kansas hosts the Texas Longhorns on Nov. 19. The Jayhawks are still looking for their first conference win since 2014.

Iowa State hosts Texas Tech on Nov. 19.

— Associated Press —

High School Basketball Jamboree schedule released for Friday

basketball2016 St. Joseph High School Basketball Jamboree

Benton, Central, Lafayette and LeBlond will come together on Friday, Nov. 18 for the annual basketball scrimmage at the St. Joseph Civic Arena.

The gates will open at 2:30 p.m. The girls games are scheduled to begin at 3:30 p.m. followed by the boys games at 6:30 p.m.

SCHEDULE:  (Rotated Each Year)

East (home) West (visitors)

1 & 2 Quarter Central vs. Benton

3 & 4 Quarter Lafayette vs. LeBlond

5 & 6 Quarter Benton vs. Lafayette

7 & 8 Quarter LeBlond vs. Central

9 & 10 Quarter Benton vs. LeBlond

11 & 12 Quarter Lafayette vs. Central

Missouri Western women roll past SW Minnesota State in opener 78-56

mwsuST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s basketball team began defense of its 2015-2016 MIAA championship with a convincing 78-56 win over Southwest Minnesota State to open the Drury Inn Tip-Off Tournament Friday inside the MWSU Fieldhouse.

The Griffons recovered from a 35 percent field goal shooting effort in the first half to finish 42 percent from the field on the night. Missouri Western was cold to begin the night, shooting 25 percent from three-point range through the first two quarters, then 50 percent from behind the arc in the second half. The Griffons scored 16 points off 20 Southwest Minnesota turnovers, 13 of them steals.

Dwanisha Tate led the Griffons with 16 points. The senior guard added seven rebounds. Chelsea Dewey scored 13 on the night to go with five assists. Sefulu Faavae flirted with her first career triple-double, scoring eight with five rebounds, five assists and five steals. Erin Anderson scored 10 in her first game as a Griffon. Julia Torres dropped in nine points with a team-high 10 rebounds.

The Griffons continue play in the Drury Inn Tip-Off Tournament on Saturday when the team hosts Upper Iowa at 6:30 p.m. The Peacocks dropped their opener Friday afternoon to Fort Hays State.

— MWSU Athletics —

Bearcats dominate Upper Iowa behind Pitts’ 31 points

nwmsuBy David Boyce

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. – Other than junior Chris-Ebou Ndow missing the opener because of sickness, the Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team were healthy, wealthy with made baskets and wise with its suffocating defense.

While not perfect, the Bearcats bolted to a 24-point halftime lead late Friday afternoon against Upper Iowa in the 25th annual Hillyard Tip-Off Classic at the MWSU Fieldhouse.

Northwest rode its comfortable halftime lead to an 87-52 victory and very much looked like the team deserving of its No. 6 ranking in the NABC preseason basketball poll. A year ago, Northwest lost 76-72 to Upper Iowa.

“This was a good start for us,” said Northwest junior forward Brett Dougherty, who finished with eight points and six rebounds. “It was kind of a revenge game because we lost to them last year. In the past, we kind of had some slow starts to the season.”

The Bearcats scored the first five points in the first half and never trailed, taking a commanding 46-22 lead into halftime.

Stifling defense was the key reason Northwest built a double-digit lead, particularly in the opening 10 minutes when only Pitts managed to knock down shots.

While the Bearcats were working on their offensive rhythm, they completely stopped Upper Iowa on the other end of the court. The Peacocks went 8 for 25 from the field in the first half for 32 percent.

“I thought we played pretty well on defense, especially the first half,” Dougherty said. “We did a good job on ball screen and coverage. In the second half, we didn’t have as much energy but I thought we played pretty well.”

Defense allowed Northwest to turn a 5-3 lead to 18-7 advantage. Offensively, Pitts was on fire from the outside, knocking down four three-pointers and scoring 16 of the first 18 points.

Amazingly, Pitts, who finished with a game-high 31 points, entered MWSU Fieldhouse wondering about his shot.

“I was a little nervous,” said Pitts, who went 11 for 16 from the field. “All week I don’t think I made a three, maybe even a shot in practice so coming into this game, I was nervous. But I hit the first couple of shots and I felt comfortable after that.”

As the first half progressed, more Bearcats found their offensive mojo, particularly Dougherty. Back-to-back baskets in the paint by Dougherty helped Northwest extend its lead to 25-13.

With 2:44 left in the first half, another notable moment occurred for Northwest. Freshman forward Ryan Welty, a graduate of Park Hill South in Kansas City, scored his first points in a Bearcat jersey. It was a three-pointer that increased Northwest’s lead to 37-17.

“I had some butterflies going in, but the coaches and players really helped me out during the week, and they did a really good job of getting me prepared for the game,” said Welty, who finished with 12 points.

“It felt good when I finally put it through the hoop because I missed the first two and I don’t like to miss three in a row.”

Less than a minute later, senior Zach Schneider pulled out his specialty, the four-point play. The three-pointer plus the made free throw off the foul by Schneider put Northwest up 41-19.

Northwest finished the half making 16 of 33 shots for 48.5 percent. The Bearcats were even hotter from behind the arc, making nine of 17 for 52.9 percent.

“We really executed our game plan, No. 1 and No. 2, I thought our rotations were good on defense and we guarded the ball,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “We got deflections. Defense I thought was the key to the game.”

The Bearcats continued to play well in the second half. One play that stood out was a steal followed by a fast break that was pass driven between Pitts and Woods and it led to a layup by Woods plus a foul shot. The successful three-point play gave Northwest a 71-42 lead with 8:21 left in the game. Woods finished with 16 points.

Even with a big lead, the Bearcats continued to hustle, getting back to disrupt a fast break opportunity by Upper Iowa. Northwest rewarded itself by turning that defensive stand into a three-point bucket by Welty, his fourth of the game. It gave Northwest a 76-43 lead with under 6 minutes remaining.

“He played really well,” Dougherty said of Welty. “Ryan does the right things. He plays hard and plays his role. We do a good job of finding shooters and he can definitely shoot it.”

It was an eventful first game for Welty, who fouled out of his first game with 4 minutes left.

“That is something different for me,” Welty said. “I am not used to fouling out.”

Overall, Northwest played so well that the reserve players were able to play the final 5 minutes of the game and they made plays. Sophomore Dray Starzl knocked down a three-pointer with 3 minutes left that gave Northwest an 81-47 lead.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffons fall in season opener to Wayne State 70-57

mwsuST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team let a one-point halftime lead evaporate quickly in a 70-57 loss to Wayne State College to open the 2016-17 season at the Hillyard Tip-Off Classic on Friday night.

The Griffons took a 30-29 lead to the break off a TJ Evans layup with 30 seconds left in the first frame. Missouri Western outscored Wayne State 22-4 in the paint during the first half, but just 18-16 in the second half. Evan’s layup gave MWSU one of three leads in the first half. The Griffons led by as many as six before the break, but the Griffons couldn’t overcome a 9-0 Wayne State run to open the second half.

Missouri Western finished 43 percent from the field and just 15 percent from three-point range. The Griffons were 0-5 in the first half from behind the arc and 2-8 in the second half. Wayne State forced 12 Missouri Western turnovers to just ten assists for the home team.

Cole Clearman led the way for the Griffons with 15 points and four assists. Seth Bonifas added a career-high 12 points and seven rebounds. Beau Baker also pulled down seven boards and scored 10 points.

Missouri Western continues the Hillyard Tip-Off Classic on Sunday against Upper Iowa at 3:30 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Missouri women rally past Abilene Christian Friday 52-46

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball kicked off its season with a 52-46 win over Abilene Christian on Friday night at Mizzou Arena. The Tigers’ stout defense forced 22 turnovers and held Abilene Christian to 28.8-percent shooting from the field. Mizzou now advances to the next round of the Preseason WNIT. Opponent and location of the Tigers’ next contest will be determined at a later date.

Mizzou was led by sophomore forward Cierra Porter (Columbia, Mo.) who hauled in a career-high 12 rebounds while recording her second career double-double. Porter was efficient from the field as she racked up 10 points behind a 4-for-5 effort from the field.

Porter’s big night led four Tigers in double digits. Redshirt senior guard Lianna Doty (St. Louis, Mo.) had a career-high seven steals and chipped in 12 points. Sophomore guard Sophie Cunningham (Columbia, Mo.) posted a team-high 13 points while senior guard Sierra Michaelis (Mercer, Mo.) posted 11 points, scoring all of them in the fourth quarter.

Freshman Amber Smith (Shreveport, La.) made a significant impact in her first career start as she pulled in seven rebounds and added four points and a blocked shot.

After Abilene Christian jumped out to a quick lead to start the game, head coach Robin Pingeton’s squad bounced back and cut the deficit to one by the end of the first quarter. Porter and Doty both had five points in the period.

Mizzou grabbed its first lead of the game on a Cunningham layup with 5:28 left in the second quarter. Doty followed with a driving layup and a rhythm three-pointer on back-to-back possessions to cap a 10-0 Mizzou run that handed the Tigers a 25-18 advantage. Defensively, the Tigers stifled the Wildcat offense, allowing just five second-quarter points on 2-of-19 shooting. Mizzou went into halftime with a 25-21 lead.

After a tightly contested third quarter, Mizzou’s offense came out firing early in the fourth as the Tigers converted on their first four field goal attempts. The stretch was fueled by Michaelis, whose clutch trey with 7:08 remaining put her squad in front, 40-36. Less than two minutes later, Doty forced a turnover and went coast-to-coast for a bucket to extend Mizzou’s lead. The Tigers rattled off an 11-0 run that proved to be the difference down the stretch.

With less than two minutes left, Michaelis collected another steal in the Wildcats’ backcourt and converted a layup to push Mizzou ahead, 50-43. Mizzou sealed the win in the final minute to earn its first victory of the 2016-17 campaign and improve to 35-8 all-time in season-opening games.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Meyer sets career marks as Northwest women win season opener

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team picked up a 78-70 season opening win over Ouachita Baptist on Friday night at the Meyer Sports Center in Bolivar, Mo.

– The game was the season opener for both programs. It was also the first all-time meeting between the two programs from the MIAA and the GAC.

– Junior Tanya Meyer set career highs with 31 points, 11 made field goals and six three-pointers made. She also grabbed five rebounds, two coming on the offensive end.

– Taryne Shull had a career-high 11 rebounds for Northwest, four of the offensive variety. She added five points in 35 minutes of work with a steal.

– Northwest outrebounded Ouachita Baptist, 35-24, and had 16 total assists.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats shot 46.4 percent (26-56) from the field and hit 11 three pointers. Northwest was 15-of-17 at the charity stripe, hitting at an 88.2 percent clip.

– Northwest grabbed 12 offensive rebounds which turned into 11 second-chance points. The Tigers only managed four second-chance points.

– Jasmin Howe knocked down three long range jumpers, finishing the night with 17 points, two rebounds and two assists.

– Macy Williams scored 12 points in 39 minutes. She tied a career-high with six assists and did not commit a foul. She set a career-high with seven made free throws.

– Alexa Schaaf also set a career-high with six assists in the game. She grabbed a pair of rebounds with a steal.

Key Northwest Sequences
– The Bearcats got off to a quick start, beginning the game with a 7-0 run. Meyer hit a three-pointer off an assist from Williams just 38 seconds into the game for a 3-0 lead. Half a minute later, Howe made a layup to push the lead to 5-0. After a second missed Tiger three pointer, Meyer hit a jumper to put Northwest up, 7-0.

– At the end of the first quarter, Northwest got five quick points as Meyer hit a three pointer to put the Bearcats up by eight, 21-13. A missed jumper by Ouachita Baptist led to a Northwest possession with 45 seconds left. Meyer would miss a three but Shull picked up the offensive board and hit a layup to put the Bearcats up, 25-13 to end the first quarter.

– The Tigers tied things up 44-44 early in the third quarter but Northwest went on a 14-6 run to pull ahead by eight. Williams broke the tie at the 7:20 mark with a three pointer. Meyer hit a jumper to make it a five-point lead, 49-44. Ouachita answered back with a jumper but Meyer converted an conventional three-point play, making the layup and drawing a foul to push the lead up to 52-46. After a miss by the Tigers, Benson drew a foul and hit a pair of free throws to extend the lead to 54-46. Ouachita Baptist got a layup to cut the lad to 54-48 but Williams knocked down a pair of free throws and Carlie Willhelmi converted a layup to put the Bearcats up by eight, 58-50, with 3:01 left in the third quarter.

Up Next
– Northwest will face off with Henderson State on Saturday, Nov. 12, at 8:15 p.m. in Bolivar, Mo.

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU volleyball loses in three sets at No. 16 Central Missouri

riggertMissouriWesternWARRENSBURG, MO.- The Missouri Western volleyball team fell to #16 Central Missouri 3-0 (25-18, 25-14, 25-22) in their final conference regular season road match.

Missouri Western could not overcome a slow start in the first set, finishing with 11 kills as a team.  MWSU would regroup in the second set as they took an early 5-3 advantage, however the Jennies would gain momentum to take a 2-0 match lead.  A 4-1 run in the third set allowed the Griffons to take a 17-16.  UCM would be able to stop the run to win the match.

Lauren Murphy paced the offense with 26 assists, connecting 10 of those assist for Stephanie Doak kills.  Kayla Ruff finished with 13 digs and Audrey Keim recorded 10.  Shellby Taylor led the team with four blocks.

Missouri Western is home tomorrow afternoon at 2 p.m. against Lindenwood for the regular season finale.  Before the match, the Griffons will honor their four seniors as part of the senior day celebrations.

— MWSU Athletics —

Lafayette’s Bennett officially signs letter of intent to play basketball at Lehigh

calebbennettsigningClick to listen to Caleb Bennett talk about signing with Lehigh

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. – Lafayette high school Senior Caleb Bennett officially signed his letter of intent Thursday to play basketball at Lehigh University.

Bennett led the Fighting Irish in scoring, rebounding, steals and blocks last season as a junior. He averaged 14.7 points, 4.7 rebounds and 2.4 assists per game, and also had 62 steals and 19 blocked shots. Bennett shot 49.2% from the field, 40.2% from the three-point line and 73.2% from the free throw line.

Bennett helped Lafayette go 28-4 last season as they finished as the state runner-up in Class 4, losing in the state championship game to Vashon. He and the Fighting Irish also won their fourth consecutive MEC title.

Lehigh is a Division I University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and they’re a member of the Patriot League. Last year they finished 17-15 and were 13-5 in conference play.

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