ST. JOSEPH – The ninth-ranked Missouri Western Women’s basketball team broke a streak of nail biters with a 93-50 win over Lindenwood Thursday night in the MWSU Fieldhouse.
Missouri Western had not played a game decided by less than nine points since its 13-point win at Washburn on Jan. 16. Hot shooting from start to finish and smothering defense in the second half helped the Griffons to the convincing victory, the team’s 20th of the season.
Missouri Western took a 46-32 lead to halftime after shooting 61.3 percent from the field over the first two quarters. The Griffons outscored Lindenwood 20-10 in the third quarter and 27-8 in the fourth, shooting 48.6 percent from the field and holding Lindenwood to 25 percent shooting from the field in the second half. Missouri Western also forced the Lions into 31 turnovers, 21 of them steals for the Griffons.
LaQuinta Jefferson led Missouri Western once again with 27 points and added three assists. Sarafina Handy scored 13 on 3-4 shooting from three point range and also adding three assists. Chelsea Dewey led the Griffons with four assists and had 11 points along with Miliakere Koyamainavure, who had a team-high six rebounds.
The win gave Missouri Western a 20-win season for the first time since the 2004-05 season and improved the team’s MIAA record to 14-2, its most conference wins since 2001-02. The Griffons stay at home this weekend, hosting Lincoln on Saturday.
ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team ended a three-game losing streak and halted Lindenwood’s three-game winning streak with an 88-78 win Thursday night over the MIAA’s second place team.
Missouri Western set the tone early, opening the game with four straight three pointers, three of them from freshman Miles Wentzien. Lindenwood roared back to take a one-point lead with 11:57 to go in the first half, but would not lead again the rest of the night. The Griffons finished 10-15 (66.7%) from behind the arc, shot 52 percent from the field and 70 percent from the free throw line. On the other end, Missouri Western limited Lindenwood to 17.4 percent shooting from long range and 41.3 percent from the field.
Wentzien finished with a career-high 21 points on 5-9 shooting from the field. The freshman added six rebounds. Trey Sampson was a perfect 3-3 from behind the arc, finishing with 19 points, four assists and four rebounds. Xavier Newson added 14 points and Aaron Emmanuel finished with 11 and a team-high seven rebounds.
The win moved Missouri Western’s record to 7-15 overall and 5-11 in the MIAA. Lindenwood fell to 15-7 and 11-5 in the league. The Griffons stay in the Fieldhouse this week with Lincoln visiting on Saturday.
MARYVILLE, Mo. – In Northwest Missouri State’s impressive 86-61 victory over Lincoln University Thursday evening, there were so many jaw-dropping moments that it was impossible to pick one.
Some of the 1,005 fans who left Bearcat Arena might talk about the numerous nifty drives by sophomore Justin Pitts that led to layups. He finished with 18 points.
Others could speak about the beautiful team basketball by Northwest that led to open shots. The Bearcats had 14 assists compared to just five for Lincoln.
“I think it pays off from practice because in practice we try so hard to be perfect,” Pitts said. “It carries over to the game and today it showed.”
But since the basketball world currently revolves around Stephen Curry, the sharp shooting guard of the Golden State Warriors, the highlight moment for Northwest belonged to junior Zach Schneider.
Even though Northwest was well on its way to its sixth straight victory, what Schneider did with 13 minutes left brought a loud roar from the crowd and a timeout from Lincoln.
Leading 51-36, Schneider hit a long three-pointer. The Bearcats got a stop, raced down court and senior Conner Crooker delivered a perfect pass to Schneider for a three-pointer. Boom, boom, the long-range bombing by Schneider gave Northwest a commanding 57-36 lead.
“It is a pretty good feeling,” said Schneider, who went six for eight on three-pointers and finished with 18 points. “I was letting it fly and not even thinking about it. That is when I am at my best.
“It is nice to force the other team to call timeout. That is when the crowd gets into it.”
From that moment on, it was obvious Northwest was going to avenge its 79-74 loss at Lincoln on Dec. 18.
“Pretty much everything was different, our defense, our offense, and we played with more energy,” Schneider said. “We hit shots tonight. It was a completely different game. We feel we are a lot better team now.”
With the victory, the Bearcats maintain their firm grip on first place in the MIAA. They improved to 16-5 overall and 13-3 in conference. Northwest returns to action 3:30 p.m. Saturday at home against second-place Lindenwood.
From the outset, the Bearcats made sure Lincoln knew it had no chance of winning. The closest Lincoln got to Northwest in the second half was 12 points and that didn’t last long.
Ahead 43-31, Crooker drilled a three-pointer to make it 46-31. Cooker, though, did his damage distributing the basketball. He had a career-high eight assists.
“He was good today,” Schneider said of Crooker’s assists. “Teams have to bring two players to him sometimes and he is good at finding us.”
After Crooker’s trey, Schneider followed with a three-pointer, pushing Northwest’s lead to 49-31. The game was basically over, but there was still the Schneider back-to-back trey moment.
In the first half, Northwest played so well at the start that freshman forward Dray Starzl and sophomore guard Xavier Kurth saw significant minutes. Starzl responded by making both his field goal attempts and did his part to help the Bearcats go into halftime ahead 36-20.
“It is nice to come in and get more minutes,” Starzl said. “Coaches are trusting me. It is good to give Zach and Brett Dougherty and D’Vante Mosby a little breather. Keeping them fresh is a big thing.
“These games are crucial for me to grow as a player. If I am needed because we are in foul trouble, I will be ready to go. I feel like I am.”
Kurth, who has missed much of the season due to an injury, showed some rust. This was only the sixth game he has played in this season. Part of the reason Kurth saw 11 minutes of action in the first half was because of an injury to junior Anthony Woods, who was in street clothes for the game.
The Bearcats started the game on fire. Dougherty scored the first basket of the game. Crooker followed with a three-pointer. Before the Tigers knew what hit them, they were looking at a 13-1 deficit that bloomed to 19-3.
Northwest made sure Lincoln never made a dent in the lead the rest of the first half. The Bearcats shot 42 percent from the field and held Lincoln to five of 23 shooting from the field for a dismal 21.7 shooting percentage.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Marjorie Butler led a balanced attack with 16 points and Georgia used a late 12-0 run to defeat No. 21 Missouri 65-50 on Thursday night.
Tiaria Griffin added 15 points, Shacobia Barbee had 14 and Caliya Robinson 12 with 10 rebounds for the Bulldogs (17-6, 5-5 SEC), who were facing their sixth ranked team in the last 10 games. They lost the first three and have won the last three.
Sophie Cunningham had 17 points and Jordan Frericks 12 for Missouri (18-5, 5-5).
A 3-pointer by Griffin put Georgia up 45-43 with 6:15 to play. Frericks made a pair of free throws to pull the Tigers within two with 5:36 to go and then Butler started the run. She also ended it with a 3-pointer. By the time Cunningham made two free throws with 1:15 remaining, Georgia was up 59-47.
The Bulldogs turned 15 Missouri turnovers into 24 points.
MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team saw its 20-point lead in the third quarter against Lincoln quickly slip to 10 when the quarter ended Thursday evening at Bearcat Arena.
Fresh in the Bearcats’ memory bank was the last game when a 15-point lead at Pittsburg State in the third quarter turned into a loss.
Northwest was determined to prevent that from happening again. The Bearcats understand they need to win the majority of their remaining games to grab one of the final spots in the MIAA Tournament.
Despite some hot shooting by Lincoln in the final 4 minutes of the game, Northwest executed its offense to perfection, leading to points in the paint from senior Tember Schechinger and junior Shelby Mustain that allowed the Bearcats to maintain at least a six-point lead.
“We knew we couldn’t let go,” said Schechinger, who finished with a game-high 23 points and 12 rebounds. “We kept our composure the whole game and that really helped us.”
Four free throws by freshman Macy Williams in the final minute and then a steal by Mustain with less than 30 seconds left sealed a 73-63 victory for Northwest.
“We wanted it,” Schechinger said. “We are hungry for any win we can get. I feel we let Pitt State beat us. We had that game. We need to carry this win to tomorrow’s practice and into Saturday’s game.”
In the end, Northwest led from start to finish, playing one of its most complete games of the season.
The Bearcats wasted little time building their lead to 20 on a basket by Schechinger early in the third quarter that made it 44-24. Northwest held a 49-29 lead when Lincoln made its push.
The Tigers scored the final 10 points in the third quarter, but Northwest opened the fourth quarter with two free throws by sophomore Tanya Meyer, who finished with 14 points.
Lincoln kept battling and closed to 63-57 and that’s when Schechinger made a basket. The Tigers came right back with a basket.
“It was frustrating,” Schechinger said. “We score a layup and then they would score a layup. It makes you mad at yourself. You feel you have to go and make up on the other end.”
Northwest did exactly that. The Bearcats always had an answer. Mustain scored, making it 67-59. It became obvious at that juncture that Northwest wasn’t going to lose the game.
“Once we got into the half court, I knew with what we were running and how they were guarding us, we would be able to get those looks,” said Northwest interim head coach Buck Scheel. “That is what got us going in the first half. In the first half, we finished with 22 points in the paint. I knew going into this game we would have this advantage inside.”
It was a complete team effort. Like Schechinger, Mustain had a double-double, scoring 10 points and pulling down 10 rebounds. It was the first time since Jan. 19, 2013 that multiple Northwest players had double-doubles in the same game.
In the first half, Northwest scored the first seven points in the game, maintained its solid play through both quarters and went into halftime ahead 35-20.
The Bearcats excelled on both ends of the court, limiting Lincoln to seven field goals. Offensively, Northwest went 14-for-31 for 45 percent.
“We played really hard and I think that helped us on offense,” said junior Jasmin Howe, who finished with 13 points. “We got good stops against a good team and that gave us confidence going to offense.”
Keying the offense was the play of Macy Williams and Taylor Shull, both of whom found Schechinger cutting to the basket for layups. Schechinger scored 10 points in the first half.
Meyer also benefitted from solid guard play, scoring seven points before the break. It was the consistent offense that allowed the Bearcats to hold the lead the entire first half.
Early on, Lincoln made three ridiculously long three-pointers that brought the Tigers to within two at 11-9. But those bombs never rattled the Bearcats. Northwest scored the next seven points and increased its lead to 18-9. Northwest finished the first quarter with a 22-13 lead.
The Bearcats kept attacking at the start of the second quarter. Leading 24-15, Northwest got a basket by Schechinger, followed by another field goal from Mustain and then a three-pointer by Bailey Smith that gave Northwest a 31-15 lead.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Stefan Moody had 23 points and hit two free throws to put Mississippi ahead by a point with 13.4 seconds left in a late-game rally that led to a 76-73 victory over Missouri on Wednesday night.
Moody also matched his career best with eight rebounds and had five assists for the Rebels (14-8, 4-5 SEC), who won for just the second time in seven games. Tomasz Gieldo had 16 points including two 3-pointers in the final 1:33 to help Mississippi rally from a five-point deficit and Rasheed Brooks had 15 points.
Wesley Clark had 20 points including 10 for 10 at the free-throw line for Missouri (8-14, 1-8 SEC), which has lost seven in a row. The Tigers have a pair of three-point losses in the slump and squandered a five-point lead in the final 1:52.
Mississippi hit a season-best 14 3-pointers in 31 attempts, five of them by Moody and four by Gieldo. The Rebels have won four in a row in the series.
Kevin Puryear’s dunk gave Missouri its largest lead at 71-66. Clark’s layup attempt rolled in and out with 27 seconds left with a chance to put the Tigers up by three.
Moody entered with an SEC-leading 23.6-point average and had 14 points in 19 minutes in the first half, helping Mississippi build a 35-30 lead. Missouri stayed in it despite 34.6 percent shooting by going 9 for 13 at the line.
TIP-INS
Mississippi: Moody has made a 3-pointer in 35 consecutive games and equaled his rebounding best against Georgia Southern on Nov. 16. … F Sebastian Saiz, second in the SEC averaging 9.8 rebounds, missed his fifth straight game with an eye injury but the Rebels still had a 36-32 rebounding edge.
Missouri: Sophomore reserve G Tramaine Isabell emerged from a three-game benching but just barely with a missed shot in three minutes in the first half. He topped 20 minutes each of the last four games before the sit-down. Reserve Cullen Vanleer had 10 points, matching his total from the previous five games.
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Perry Ellis scored 19 points, Svi Mykhailiuk and Devonte Graham added 10 points apiece and No. 7 Kansas pulled away from turnover-prone Kansas State, 77-59 on Wednesday night.
Dominated on the glass all night, the Jayhawks (18-4, 6-3 Big 12) were able to overcome their poor rebounding and some streaky shooting in part by forcing the Wildcats (13-9, 2-7) into 23 turnovers.
Kansas guard Wayne Selden Jr., who had a career-best 33 points in last Saturday’s overtime victory against Kentucky, was shut out in the first half before finishing with seven points. Fellow guard Frank Mason III was just 1 of 5 from the field and contributed eight points.
Still, it was enough to give Kansas its 36th consecutive victory at Allen Fieldhouse.
Stephen Hurt had 14 points and 11 rebounds for the Wildcats, who have not won at Kansas since 2006 — three coaches ago. Wesley Iwundu added 15 points but also had six turnovers.
Perhaps it was a Kentucky hangover, or the fact that Kansas State is one of the few Big 12 teams that aren’t ranked in the Top 25, but the Jayhawks looked sleepy and disinterested for much of the game.
Eventually, Ellis and Mykhailiuk knocked down 3s to help start a first-half run, and Mason balanced out his balky shot with some hustle that created plays for others. After one hard landing, the guard got up to find the white sleeve covering his right calf and knee soaked through with blood.
Meanwhile, the Wildcats slowly began to lose their composure.
After Mason’s basket with 12 seconds to go, Hurt turned the ball over on the inbounds play, sending Kansas State coach Bruce Weber into an uproar. He stormed across the court after one of the officials and appeared to be close to getting a technical foul before assistants reined him in.
He wasn’t any happier when Brannen Greene knocked down a 3-pointer and was fouled, converting a rare four-point play with 2 seconds left that gave Kansas a 39-29 lead.
Kansas State trimmed its deficit to 47-45 on a basket by D.J. Johnson with just under 12 minutes to go, but Selden answered with a 3 from the wing and a layup off an alley-oop pass. That kicked off one more big run that allowed the Jayhawks to seize control with about 10 minutes to go.
TIP-INS
Kansas State: PG Kamau Stokes did not play after hurting his right knee in last Saturday’s win over Mississippi. … The Wildcats had a 36-21 rebounding advantage. … Kansas State is 1-6 in road games.
Kansas: C Hunter Mickelson did not play while dealing with a high ankle sprain. … Landen Lucas, who fouled out, had eight points and six rebounds. … Kansas was 16 of 22 from the free throw line.
The Benedictine Men’s Basketball team battled back from as much as a 10-point deficit on Wednesday night to lead by as much as seven points over Missouri Valley College before the Vikings held off the second-half surge to earn a 66-60 win.
Benedictine (12-9, 6-9 Heart) trailed by three at the half and outscored Missouri Valley (12-11, 7-8 Heart) 17-7 over the first seven minutes of the second half to build their lead before the Vikings were able to pull back ahead and hold on for the win.
Missouri Valley started off the game strong offensively, pushing ahead by as much as seven points inside the first four minutes of play.
Benedictine pulled back within three points on an old-fashion 3-point play from Christian Hatterle only to have the momentum taken back as the Vikings held the Ravens scoreless the next six minutes to build their 10-point lead.
The Ravens answered with a seven-point run that pull them within their three-point halftime deficit and set the stage for the second half.
Counting the offensive run to end the first half, Benedictine outscored Missouri Valley 24-7 over a 14-minute span extending into the second half and looked poised to rebound from their two-game road skid last week.
Benedictine held the lead until Brody Gronewold hit a 3-pointer for the Vikings with just over four minutes left in the game to put Missouri Valley back in front 57-55.
The Vikings outscored the Ravens 9-5 over the final four minutes of the game to hang on for the win.
In a game that saw just 31 combined fouls, the Ravens went 9 for 9 from the charity stripe while Missouri Valley converted on 9 of 14.
The Vikings finished the night hitting 43.9 percent from the floor and 46.7 percent from beyond the arc, which included a 60-percent second-half effort.
Benedictine finished the game at 38.2 percent from the floor after hitting 40.6 from the floor in the second half with a 6 for 15 effort from beyond the arc.
Hatterle finished with a career high 17 points off six field goals and a 6-for-6 effort at the charity stripe while Jake Schannuth added 14 points.
Benedictine returns to the road on Saturday as they travel to Springfield, Mo., for a 4 p.m. game against Evangel University. Benedictine earned a 83-72 win over the Crusaders in Atchison during the first match up of the season on Jan. 2.