BOYS
CARDINAL CLASSIC – POOL PLAY
Benton 59 (5-6)
Excelsior Springs 20
GIRLS
Central 58 (10-3, 3-0 Suburban)
Liberty North 44
KEARNEY TOURNAMENT – 1ST ROUND
Park Hill 50
Lafayette 12 (2-11)
BOYS
CARDINAL CLASSIC – POOL PLAY
Benton 59 (5-6)
Excelsior Springs 20
GIRLS
Central 58 (10-3, 3-0 Suburban)
Liberty North 44
KEARNEY TOURNAMENT – 1ST ROUND
Park Hill 50
Lafayette 12 (2-11)
Northwest Missouri State University sophomore Ryan Hawkins has been named the MIAA co-player of the week for his performance. Hawkins will share the honor with Lincoln’s Terrance Smith.
Hawkins (Atlantic, Iowa) averaged 26.0 points per game, 4.3 steals per game and shot 66.7 percent from the field (including 52.2 percent from 3-point range) in a trio of Northwest Missouri State victories.
Hawkins went for a career-high 31 points on 10-of-13 shooting (5-of-7 3-point FGs) in a 105-70 win at Northeastern State. Hawkins added five steals and a block while also draining all six of his free throw attempts in the Bearcats’s road victory.
He scored 18 points on 7-of-13 shooting and chipped in with eight rebounds and two steals in a 78-67 road triumph at Central Oklahoma.
Hawkins posted a then-career-high 29 points, eight rebounds, six steals and a block in a 108-58 victory over Simpson on Dec. 30. Hawkins went 11-of-16 from the field, including 5-of-8 from three-point range against the Storm.
He leads the MIAA in rebounding (9.9) and steals (34).
Hawkins and the Bearcats will be in action at home Wednesday against Emporia State. The women’s game will begin at 5:30 p.m. with the men’s to follow at approximately 7:30 p.m. All members of the military and law enforcement will receive free admission for Wednesday’s doubleheader vs. Emporia State.
— Northwest Athletics —
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Missouri’s Sophie Cunningham irritated Tennessee’s fan base late in the third quarter by elbowing Tennessee’s Rennia Davis on her way to the basket.
She gave them even more reason to gripe by the end of the day.
Cunningham scored 20 points and Haley Troup added a career-high 16 points off the bench as Missouri edged the 10th-ranked Lady Volunteers 66-64 on Sunday for its fifth consecutive victory. Missouri (13-3, 2-0 SEC) beat the Lady Vols at Knoxville for the first time in five attempts and ended a 20-game skid in road games against top-10 teams.
“It was such a good game, it was a hard-fought win,” said Cunningham, who scored 32 points in a victory over Tennessee last season. “Honestly, I prefer those close games. I think blowout games can get old.”
A postgame video showed Cunningham exchanging words with Tennessee’s Rae Burrell and Lou Brown after the game. The same video showed Cunningham going back to shake the hand of Tennessee assistant to the head coach Janet McGee, who initially appeared to walk past her without shaking her hand.
“I just wanted to make sure that she tapped my hand because we’re going to meet again and I kind of wanted to end on good terms,” Cunningham said.
Tennessee’s Rennia Davis missed a potential go-ahead shot in the final five seconds and a game-tying attempt at the buzzer.
In a game that neither team ever led by more than five points, Missouri was ahead 65-60 when Tennessee (12-2, 1-1) staged one last rally.
Zaay Green made a three-point play to cut Missouri’s lead to 65-63 with 1:28 remaining. Evina Westbrook had a chance to tie the game when she went to the foul line with 59.4 seconds left, but Missouri maintained a 65-64 advantage after she missed the second of two free throws.
Cunningham missed a shot on Missouri’s next possession, giving Tennessee another opportunity. Tennessee called a timeout with 19.6 seconds left and got the ball to Davis, whose shot bounced off the rim.
“I think it’s a makeable shot for me,” Davis said. “It just didn’t go in.”
After Cunningham made one of two free throws with 3.1 seconds left, Tennessee called another timeout and got the ball at midcourt. The Lady Vols again threw to Davis, whose hurried shot that fell short of the basket.
Troup, a redshirt freshman who was averaging just 2.9 points per game, put Missouri ahead for good 56-54 by hitting a 3-pointer with 6:08 remaining. Troup went 4 of 6 from 3-point range.
“You can kind of feel it as a player when you’re kind of in the zone,” Troup said. “I just felt that.”
Lauren Aldridge added 12 points for Missouri and made all three of her 3-point attempts.
Davis and Westbrook had 16 points each for Tennessee, which had a four-game winning streak snapped. Cheridene Green had 13 points and a career-high 14 rebounds. Zaay Green added 11 points.
BIG PICTURE
Missouri: After shooting just 34.6 percent (9 of 26) in the first half, Missouri shot 56.5 percent (13 of 23) in the second half. The Tigers were 8 of 11 in the third quarter. Missouri also shot 6 of 9 from 3-point range in the second half. Cunningham, Aldridge and Troup were a combined 10 of 14 on 3-point attempts for the game.
Tennessee: The Lady Vols couldn’t overcome an off day from senior Meme Jackson, who scored just two points and missed all nine of her field-goal attempts. Jackson was averaging 14.8 points was coming off a 27-point performance in a 78-69 victory at Auburn.
CUNNINGHAM’S ELBOW
Cunningham delivered her elbow to Davis’ face in the final minute of the third quarter while driving to the basket for a shot that extended Missouri’s lead to 48-44.
Although Cunningham’s basket counted, she was called for an unsportsmanlike foul after officials saw the replay. Jackson made the ensuing two free throws for Tennessee.
“I’m really not surprised because of who it was,” Davis said. “At the end of the day, I was just playing defense and she was dribbling and she stuck her elbow all the way up and I flew back. She hit me dead in the eye.”
Cunningham, who has a reputation for physical play, had six rebounds, six assists and six turnovers to go along with her 20 points.
NOTABLE NUMBERS
Missouri had a 25-6 edge in bench scoring that made up for the Lady Vols’ 15-3 advantage in second-chance points.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
This loss likely will drop Tennessee out of the top 10.
UP NEXT
Missouri hosts Arkansas on Thursday.
Tennessee hosts No. 16 Kentucky on Thursday.
— Associated Press —
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Fifth-ranked Kansas will be without center Udoka Azubuike for the remainder of the season after an MRI exam Sunday revealed the 7-footer tore ligaments in his right hand during practice.
Jayhawks coach Bill Self said in a statement that X-rays taken after Friday’s practice did not show the severity of the injury. The MRI exam revealed the tendon tear, which is similar to a torn tendon Azubuike had in his opposite hand in December 2016 that sidelined him the remainder of his freshman season.
“The surgery date will be set early this week,” Self said. “The doctors expect a complete recovery and Udoka will be able to resume full basketball activities at some point this summer.”
The injury is a significant blow to the Jayhawks’ interior depth, not to mention their national title aspirations. The nation’s preseason No. 1 already has been playing without sophomore forward Silvio De Sousa, whose eligibility remains in question after his name surfaced in the FBI probe into apparel company adidas.
Self said recently that there has been no change in De Sousa’s status.
The Jayhawks (12-2, 1-1) lost 77-60 to Iowa State on Saturday in their first game without their bruising center from Nigeria. But that was a byproduct of 24 turnovers and some patchy work on defense rather than any issues in the paint, where Kansas had a dominant plus-15 advantage on the boards.
“We’ve been living on the razor’s edge a lot,” Self said. “Granted, we don’t have a lot of where we can go to guarantee us having a great possession. We really don’t have good ball-handlers right now.”
Azubuike had been rounding into the sure thing before his injury.
After missing time earlier this season with a sprained ankle, he had been on a tear the past couple of games. He had 23 points and nine boards in a blowout of Eastern Michigan, then had eight points and nine more rebounds in a comfortable win over No. 23 Oklahoma to begin defense of the Jayhawks’ Big 12 title.
The only other true center on the Kansas roster is relatively raw freshman David McCormack, which means Self could be forced to use smaller lineups again. He prefers to run with two big men but has leaned on four-guard lineups the past couple of seasons because of the configuration of his roster.
The starting lineup Self used Saturday featured Dedric Lawson in the post, with Marcus Garrett joining starters Lagerald Vick, Quentin Grimes and Devon Dotson in a four-guard backcourt.
Whether that sticks when Kansas returns to the floor against TCU on Wednesday night remains to be seen.
“We’ve got a lot of stuff we’ve got to hammer out,” Self said, “and hopefully we can do it relatively soon. …. There’s no question, eventually you’re going to play like you practice. So certainly, we’ve got to be better in practice, I think, and that will probably translate to better performances in the games.”
— Associated Press —
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — In a game that Iowa simply had to have, junior Jordan Bohannon carried the 25th-ranked Hawkeyes with one of the best halves of his career.
Bohannon scored 22 of his season-high 25 points in the second half, Tyler Cook had 16 points and Iowa beat No. 24 Nebraska 93-84 on Sunday, snapping a three-game losing streak to open Big Ten play.
“It’s hard to get your first Big Ten win, especially against a team like Nebraska. They have one of the most talented (starting lineups) in the Big Ten,” Bohannon said. “We got some stops when we needed to, especially down the stretch.”
Ryan Kriener added 14 points in his first career start for the Hawkeyes (12-3, 1-3). They shot 29 of 32 from the free throw line in holding off the Huskers (11-4, 1-3).
Nebraska, which shot 37.8 percent on 3s entering play, was a dismal 4 of 23 beyond the arc.
Bohannon, on the other hand, kept hitting 3s that kept the Huskers at bay.
Bohannon’s one-handed banked 3, his first basket of the game, gave Iowa a 44-40 lead at the halftime buzzer. Bohannon drilled another 3 to help slow Nebraska’s momentum and push Iowa’s edge back up to 72-63 — and he did the same after the Huskers got within 72-68.
“When you make one, the basket seems to get a little bigger,” Bohannon said.
Bohannon’s final 3, with 2:03 left, gave Iowa an 83-75 lead. He finished 5 of 8 on 3s, hit all 10 of his free throws and added five assists.
“He’s just a very good perimeter player,” Nebraska coach Tim Miles said about Bohannon, who torched the Huskers after they went to a 1-3-1 zone. “He’s one of those guys that makes his team just so much better.”
Isaac Copeland had 24 points to lead Nebraska, which dropped back-to-back games for the first time this season. James Palmer Jr. scored 20 points, but Iowa held the Big Ten’s second-leading scorer without a point for the opening 18 minutes.
“We didn’t play with as much urgency as Iowa did,” Miles said.
THE BIG PICTURE
Iowa: After missing three games with a sprained ankle, sophomore center Luka Garza checked in with 11:59 in the first half. It was a welcome sight for the Hawkeyes, who’ve desperately missed the big man’s presence in the post. Garza had eight points in 10 minutes. “It gives us another offensive weapon inside. It gives us a post presence defensively,” Iowa coach Fran McCaffery said.
Nebraska: The problem with blowing winnable road games, as the Huskers did against Minnesota and Maryland, is that it leaves less of a cushion for those times when shots just won’t go down on the road. Ironically, Nebraska kept it close by hitting 20 free throws.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
It’s possible, if not probable, that both teams will drop out of the poll Monday after losing to unranked teams this week.
THE NUMBERS
Nebraska’s Isaiah Roby scored 17 points on 8 of 10 shooting with nine rebounds. But he battled foul trouble in the second half. …Isaiah Moss had 12 points and 10 assists for Iowa, and Joe Wieskamp had 10 points with seven boards. …Iowa committed 13 turnovers. …Nebraska was 26 of 42 inside the arc.
HE SAID IT
“He knows (that) all I’ve ever done is encourage him to keep shooting,” McCaffery said about Bohannon, who moved into fourth place on made 3s in school history. “We’ll just keep telling him to shoot. That’s what he does.”
UP NEXT
Nebraska: Hosts Penn State on Thursday night.
Iowa: At Northwestern on Wednesday night.
— Associated Press —
TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Missouri Western Men’s Basketball (8-7, 2-2 MIAA) trailed by as much as 11 points in the second half, but came back to defeat Northeastern State (6-7, 0-4 MIAA) 71-70 on the road on Saturday.
With the Griffons holding on to a two-point lead, Northeastern State was fouled at the buzzer, sending the RiverHawks to the line with a chance to tie the game. After making the first attempt, the RiverHawks missed the potential game-tying free throw, giving the Griffons the one-point win.
NOTABLES
LEADERS
UP NEXT
— MWSU Athletics —
EDMOND, Oklahoma – The No. 2-ranked Northwest Missouri State University men’s basketball team moved to 14-0 and 4-0 in MIAA play with a 78-67 road win over Central Oklahoma at the Hamilton Field House Saturday.
Senior Joey Witthus carried the offensive load as he recorded a career-high 34 points. Witthus was 10-of-16 from the field and 11-of-12 from the free throw line. Witthus scored 26 of his 34 in the second half.
Central Oklahoma held Northwest to less than 80 points for the first time in 10 games this season. Northwest was held to a season-low five three-pointers.
The Bearcats will be in action against Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at home against the Emporia State Hornets.
NOTES: Northwest tallied 13 steals and only turned the ball over seven times, including only two miscues in the second half … Northwest out-scored UCO in the paint, 44-26 … Northwest enjoyed a 16-2 scoring edge in points off turnovers.
— Northwest Athletics —
TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Missouri Western Women’s Basketball (7-6, 2-2 MIAA) jumped out to a 9-0 lead after the opening tip and never looked back, as the Griffons never trailed and beat Northeastern State (3-10, 0-4 MIAA) 63-49 on the road on Saturday.
NOTABLES
LEADERS
UP NEXT
— MWSU Athletics —
EDMOND, Oklahoma – The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team captured back-to-back road MIAA games for the first time since the 2010-11 season with a 51-47 victory at Central Oklahoma on Saturday.
Northwest (6-7 overall, 2-2 MIAA) got 16 points from sophomore guard Jaelyn Haggard, including the final three at the line to close out the four-point victory.
The Bronchos led by as many as seven in the second quarter before the Bearcats locked in defensively. Northwest would go on an 8-0 run to take a 17-16 lead. UCO took a 21-19 lead only to see Jaelyn Haggard knock in her second triple of the opening half that put the Bearcats on top 22-21 with 54 seconds left in the second quarter.
The Bearcats opened up a six-point lead at 39-33 on a three-pointer by Mallory McAndrews with 2:30 left in the third quarter. UCO would chip away and re-took the lead following an 11-2 run. The Bronchos took a 44-41 advantage following a bucket from Megan Hartness with 6:29 left in the fourth.
However, the Bearcats would not fade. Kendey Eaton hit a floater in the lane with 4:38 left to pull the Bearcats to within one. Then Kylie Coleman drove in for a left-handed layup that knotted the game at 45-45 with 3:54 left.
McAndrews buried a triple from the wing with 3:13 for the final field goal of the contest for the Bearcats. UCO’s Micayla Haynes knocked in a basket with 2:33 left in the game.
Haggard sank one of two free throws with :12 left and UCO turned it over with :05.7 remaining. Haggard made both free throws with :04 left to clinch the road win.
The Bearcats will be in action against Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at home against the Emporia State Hornets.
NOTES: The Northwest win snapped a six-game losing streak for the Bearcats against Central Oklahoma … Northwest knocked in nine three-pointers … Northwest limited UCO to 32.6 percent shooting from the field and forced the Bronchos into 21 turnovers.
— Northwest Athletics —
AMES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa State served notice that it’s a Big 12 contender again after an ugly rebuild last season.
Marial Shayok scored 24 points, and the streaking Cyclones routed No. 5 Kansas 77-60 on Saturday for their most lopsided victory over the Jayhawks in 46 years.
Freshman Tyrese Haliburton made four 3-pointers and scored 14 points for Iowa State (12-2, 2-0), which opened Big 12 play with back-to-back wins for the first time since 2015. It was the Cyclones’ fifth consecutive victory overall.
Kansas (12-2, 1-1) committed a season-high 24 turnovers in its worst loss to Iowa State since an 89-65 blowout in Lawrence in 1973.
“They’re the standard in our league and the team we’re all trying to catch,” Cyclones coach Steve Prohm said. “It’s a great win. I loved the way they competed.”
Despite getting outrebounded 41-26, Iowa State — now one shy of matching its win total from a dismal 13-18 campaign a year ago — made surprisingly easy work of Kansas in part by shooting 9 of 13 on 3s in the second half.
“We were awful. But they were good,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “They manhandled us.”
The Cyclones opened their first double-digit lead when Haliburton made a corner 3-pointer with 9:59 to go. Lagerald Vick answered with a hasty 3-point try that bounced off the bottom of the backboard, and Lindell Wigginton connected from long range to make it 60-47 and force Self to burn his third timeout in 11 minutes.
Shayok’s 3 with just under seven minutes to go made it 65-49, and the rout was on.
“We came out playing careless,” said Kansas star Dedric Lawson, who had 13 points and 12 rebounds, but committed six turnovers. “I played terrible. … I didn’t get guys open shots. A lot of this falls back on me.”
Quentin Grimes scored 19 points for Kansas, including 14 straight for the Jayhawks in one stretch.
Kansas played without big man Udoka Azubuike, who was hit on the right wrist during Friday’s practice. Self said about an hour before tip-off that X-rays on Azubuike’s wrist were negative, but he was in too much pain to play.
Azubuike, who is averaging 13.4 points and 6.8 rebounds a game, is scheduled for an MRI on Sunday. Azubuike needed surgery to repair torn ligaments in his left wrist in 2017.
“It could be a one-game deal or it could be a season-ending deal. But there’s no indication that it’ll be the latter,” Self said.
THE BIG PICTURE
Kansas: Losing at Hilton Coliseum isn’t anything to be embarrassed about; the Cyclones are 5-2 against top-10 teams at home under Prohm, and Iowa State was actually a one-point favorite. But the Jayhawks were an absolute mess for stretches on offense — and they wasted a plus-15 effort on the boards without Azubuike. “We were just trying to play a little bit too fast,” Grimes said.
Iowa State: The Cyclones finally showed how much potential they have when they’re healthy. There’s little doubt that the rest of the Big 12 took notice of this result, because Iowa State has enough talent to do some serious damage in the league this winter.
THE NUMBERS
Kansas had just 12 assists on 24 baskets. Iowa State also had 13 steals, with Vick (seven) leading the way in turnovers. …Haliburton has begun his Big 12 career by shooting 8 of 11 from beyond the arc. … The Jayhawks opened play with a staggering 20-4 edge on the glass. But they still trailed by four at halftime, a sign of things to come. …Wigginton, coming off the bench for the third straight game, was just 2-of-11 shooting.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
Kansas, which has wins over Michigan State and Tennessee to its credit, likely won’t fall too far. The Jayhawks almost certainly will be joined in Monday’s poll by the Cyclones.
UP NEXT
Kansas hosts TCU on Wednesday.
Iowa State plays at Baylor on Tuesday.
— Associated Press —