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GIRLS HOOPS: Joplin girls end Seneca tourney with win; Aurora claims championship with victory over host Indians

SENECA, Mo. Joplin’s girls basketball team grinded out a hard-fought 43-33 win over Monett in the fifth-place game of the Seneca Tournament on Saturday afternoon.

Clinging to a two-point lead at intermission, the Eagles outscored the Cubs 23-15 in the second half.

It may not have always been pretty, but the Eagles were able to end the tournament on a positive note. 

“A win’s a win and we’ll take it,” Joplin coach Luke Floyd said. “In the second half, we played to our capabilities. I thought the girls did a better job of attacking in the second half and we did a much better job of moving our feet defensively. We were sluggish in the first half. It’s our third game in a row, but at the same time, we’re young so we should be able to handle that. Sometimes we have trouble being engaged from the get-go.”

The Eagles earned their seventh win of the season. 

Sophomore guard Brynn Driver led Joplin with 12 points, while junior guard Brooke Nice added 11.

Sophomore guard Isabella Yust contributed eight points, while junior forward Emma Floyd had six. Nice and Yust hit two 3-pointers apiece. 

Also for Joplin (7-12), freshman Bailey Ledford chipped in four points and senior Lily Pagan had two. 

Kim Parris scored nine points for the Cubs, while Natalie Turner had eight.

The game was deadlocked at 10 at the end of the first quarter. 

Monett led 18-14, but the Eagles scored six straight points to end the first half, as Nice recorded a hoop, Driver made one free throw before Yust buried a trey, giving Joplin a 20-18 halftime advantage. 

The Eagles were up one late in the third period when Pagan made one foul shot and Driver scored on a drive through the lane, extending Joplin’s lead to 31-27 heading into the fourth quarter. 

The Eagles would never relinquish their lead, as they outscored the Cubs 12-6 in the final frame. 

Driver, Nice and Yust made field goals to push the advantage to 39-31 with just under two minutes to play. 

Floyd noted his team played much better in the second half.  

“Defensively, in the first half we put them on the free-throw line too much,” Floyd said. “Offensively, we settled for the 3 too much. But the girls made the adjustments we needed to make in the second half.”

Joplin returns to Central Ozark Conference play at Ozark on Monday. 

 

AURORA 45, SENECA 36

A big second quarter propelled Aurora to the tourney championship. 

The Houn’ Dawgs outscored Seneca 19-3 in the second period and then held off the Indians late in the 10th annual event’s title game. 

Elizabeth Martin scored 27 points for Aurora. 

Aliya Grotjohn, a junior who recently surpassed 1,000 career points, scored 26 of Seneca’s 36 points. 

Makayla French and Grotjohn knocked down two treys apiece in the opening frame, and the Indians led 12-8.

But Aurora got going offensively in the second quarter while the Indians went cold from the field.

After the Houn’ Dawgs went on a 19-0 run, Grotjohn’s trey in the final minute of the first half accounted for Seneca’s only points of the frame and cut Aurora’s lead to 27-15 at the break.

Aurora led 32-17 when Grotjohn scored 11 straight points. Grotjohn’s sixth trey of the game trimmed Aurora’s lead to three, but the Houn’ Dawgs responded with seven straight points to seal the win. 

 

MUSTANGS TAKE THIRD

In the tournament’s third-place game, McDonald County defeated Purdy 40-22.

The Mustangs led 20-9 at intermission and 30-17 at the end of the third quarter en route to victory. 

Samara Smith scored 10 points for the Mustangs, while Carlee Cooper and Abby Wiseman added six points apiece.

Kinsley Mattingly scored six points for Purdy and Annabelle Bowman had five. 

 

PREP HOOPS ROUNDUP: Thomas Jefferson takes third, CJ JV fifth at Mercy/Warrior Classic

The 38th annual Mercy/Warrior Classic concluded on Saturday, with the Thomas Jefferson boys beating McAuley in the third-place game and Carl Junction JV defeating Sheldon in the fifth-place game.

THOMAS JEFFERSON 62, MCAULEY 30

Thomas Jefferson outscored McAuley 34-12 in the first half to build an insurmountable lead on the way to the win in the third-place game of the Mercy/Warrior Classic.

The Cavaliers had four players finish in double figures, with Caden Myers’ game-high 20 points leading the way. Jay Ball and Dhruv Gheewala each scored 12, while Drew Goodhope ended the night with 10.

Daniel Wagner led McAuley with 11 points, while Rocco Bazzano-Joseph added six.

CARL JUNCTION JV 41, SHELDON 37

Carl Junction JV and Sheldon went into the intermission tied at 21 before Bulldogs gained a three-point edge heading into the final quarter. Carl Junction JV outscored the Panthers 9-8 down the stretch to earn the fifth-place win.

Xavier Perkins led the Bulldogs with 11 points, while Ky Warren added 10.

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS

BOYS

Brantley Morris, Joplin JV

Hobbs Campbell, Joplin JV

Miller Long, College Heights

Caden Myers, Thomas Jefferson

Daniel Wagner, McAuley

GIRLS

Grace Bishop, College Heights

Catie Secker, College Heights

Kayleigh Teeter, McAuley

Kennedy DeRuy, McAuley

Kara Morey, Lamar

BOYS HOOPS: Joplin JV outlasts College Heights to win Mercy/Warrior Classic championship game

Joplin JV took the game’s first two-possession lead since early in the first half with time dwindling in the fourth quarter and held on to defeat College Heights 49-46 in the 38th annual Mercy/Warrior Classic boys championship game on Saturday. 

“Like I told them in there, we get everybody’s best shot,” Joplin JV coach James Spencer said. “Everybody wants to beat Joplin—the biggest school. We had to come mentally prepared and physically prepared to play our best game. Hats off to College Heights because they made it hard on us. Their zone and bigs hurt us inside. We had to make plays down the stretch.”

“It was a good, close game,” College Heights coach Eric Johnson said. “I thought our kids played well. We missed out on some plays at the end, and they made a few. It happens. It’s no excuse, but we were two starters short tonight, too. … It was a good tournament and a good three games for us.”

The Eagles took a 34-32 lead heading into the fourth quarter before College Heights’ Miller Long scored on a drive to tie the game. Ben Thomas followed by driving the baseline for an inside score, while converting the and-one free throw to give the Cougars a 37-34 lead.

Joplin JV regained the lead on a Brantley Morris mid-range jumper before Hobbs Campbell knocked down his own jumper from the baseline to put the Eagles on top 38-37 with 5:25 to play.

The lead changed hands three more times over the next several possessions, with College Heights’ Long scoring on a baseline drive with four minutes to play to give the Cougars a 41-40 lead.

Joplin JV answered with the only real momentum swing of the fourth quarter, as Zayshon Hugley checked in and promptly knocked down a 3-pointer from the corner. Following a CHC turnover, Campbell scored on the break to give the Eagles the game’s first two-possession lead, 45-41, since Joplin led 23-19 late in the first half.

“That was huge,” Spencer said. “It forced them to call a timeout, and that allowed us to collect ourselves. That is where we were able to make the adjustment on the defensive end to help with what they were trying to do with us. Having that cushion allowed our guys to take a deep breath there and say, ‘OK, we can get after this again.’”

The Cougars cut the lead to one, 45-44, on a 3-pointer from Thomas, but Morris converted on a drive and Wyatt Saterlee added a free throw to once again put Joplin up by four, 48-44, with 29.2 seconds left in regulation. 

“We made an adjustment to how we were playing defensively,” Spencer said of his team’s play down the stretch. “That was huge. And we came up with big rebounds at the end. … That really was the difference at the end.”

Long found room on the drive for a basket with 12 seconds left cut the deficit to 48-46.

Saterlee was fouled and sent to the line with 8.5 seconds left, making the first and missing the second to give the Cougars a shot at the tie with less than three ticks on the clock.

Long got off a deep 3-pointer before the buzzer, but it was no good, preserving the win for the Eagles.

“It is a huge confidence builder for them,” Spencer said when asked what this type of win means for his players when they eventually see those moments at the varsity level. “They have to know how to compete in those big games and those big moments.”

HOW THEY GOT THERE

The first half saw three ties and four lead changes. Joplin JV held an 11-6 lead midway through the first before College Heights closed the period with a 6-0, as Ethan Meeks, who had four of the points, scored inside at the buzzer to give the Cougars a 12-11 lead.

The pace remained the same in the second quarter, as both teams traded buckets before the Eagles ultimately took a 26-23 advantage into the intermission following a late 3-pointer from Brantley Morris.

As much of a seesaw battle as the first half was, it didn’t compare to the second half. The third quarter had one tie and four lead changes, while the final eight minutes had one tie and another six lead changes.

Neither team established the momentum in the third, as Joplin JV took a 34-32 lead into the fourth quarter after Morris knifed his way through the lane for a basket, drawing contact for a three-point play with 14.4 seconds on the clock.

SCORING LEADERS

Campbell led Joplin JV with 16 points, while Morris finished with 13. Hugley added 12.

Long led College Heights with a game-high 17 points, while Thomas and Meeks each finished with 10. Curtis Davenport finished with eight.

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

Brantley Morris, Joplin JV

Hobbs Campbell, Joplin JV

Miller Long, College Heights

Caden Myers, Thomas Jefferson

Daniel Wagner, McAuley

 

GIRLS HOOPS: College Heights pulls away from McAuley to win Mercy/Warrior Classic championship game

College Heights Christian took the momentum in the second quarter and never looked back on the way to a 57-29 win over McAuley Catholic in the 38th annual Mercy/Warrior Classic girls championship game on Saturday. 

It is the third tournament the Cougars (19-2) have won this season, which includes the Gem City Classic and the Lancer Classic.

“It feels good,” College Heights coach John Blankenship said. “Anytime you play in three championship games and three tournaments, it says a lot. But to win all three championships in those three tournaments, I couldn’t be prouder of my team. They played phenomenal defense. We struggled a little bit on the offensive end, but our defense always gives us a chance and it was sensational tonight.”

“Overall in the tournament, I thought we played pretty well,” McAuley coach Mike Howard said of his team’s second-place finish. “Our first two games, I thought we came out with some good energy. … This championship game was not one of our best by any stretch. That is a really good team over there. There is a reason they are state ranked and have only lost two games all year. John (Blankenship) does a really good job with their defense, putting you in situations where you feel uncomfortable. That’s what our girls felt basically the entire game.”

McAuley (14-7) and College Heights battled back and forth in a low-scoring opening quarter with two ties and two lead changes that saw the Cougars holding a 6-5 lead to start the second. 

Kayleigh Teeter knocked down a 3-pointer at the 6:20 mark to give McAuley an 8-7 advantage just before College Heights came up with the game’s first momentum swing.

The Cougars used a mid-range jumper from Addie Lawrence to kick off an 8-0 run that was fueled by a pair of inside scores by Catie Secker and finished with a transition basket from Grace Bishop to give College Heights a 15-9 lead with four minutes to play in the first half.

“Our defense is what stems that,” Blankenship said of CHC’s first surge. “When we get out on the break, which is what our defense allows us to do, we get some quick, easy baskets, and it builds our energy a little bit.”

McAuley answered back with baskets from Lily Black and Teeter to trim the lead back to one possession, 15-13.

College Heights took a foothold on the lead after closing out the first half with the final three points from Bishop and starting the second half with the first nine points to build a 27-13 cushion with 5:04 on the clock in the third quarter. Jayli Johnson and Secker each had baskets, while Laney Lett had two offensive rebounds for putback scores to start the third.

“We talked about a better defensive rotation at halftime,” Blankenship said. “We had to start attacking the basket offensively. They play a really good extended 2-1-2 zone and we were struggling from the outside.”

College Heights essentially put the game out of reach after closing the third on a 13-2 run with Bishop accounting for all 13 points, including a pair of 3-pointers, giving the Cougars a commanding 40-17 advantage to start the final quarter.

“She has been incredibly consistent for us this year,” Blankenship said of Bishop’s play. “She is kind of our go-to player whenever we need a score. We can always count on her to either get in there and get a basket, draw a foul or at last get a high-percentage look. She is just so consistent. … She is at her best when she is cutting and slicing through the lane, finishing around the basket.”

Bishop scored the first basket of the fourth quarter to make it 15 straight points scored, with College Heights starting the fourth on a 7-2 run to push the lead to 28. Secker and Lett added baskets in the run.

SCORING LEADERS

Bishop led all scorers with 25 points, while Lett finished with 14. Secker added eight and Johnson finished with six.

Teeter led McAuley with 11 points, while Kennedy DeRuy scored eight. Kloee Williamson finished with four points.

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

Grace Bishop, College Heights

Catie Secker, College Heights

Kayleigh Teeter, McAuley

Kennedy DeRuy, McAuley

Kara Morey, Lamar

UP NEXT

College Heights hosts Thomas Jefferson on Monday.

McAuley hosts Golden City on Tuesday. 

COLLEGE HOOPS: Skiles’ big game not enough for MSSU women

The Missouri Southern women’s basketball program got a career-game from Layne Skiles, but the Lions couldn’t pull off the upset, falling to No. 21 ranked Central Missouri, 78-59, on Saturday inside the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.

Southern (7-10, 7-10 MIAA) was led by Skiles’ career-high 21 points and three blocks, while Carley Turnbull scored seven points.

Central Missouri (14-2, 14-2 MIAA) had three score in double-figures, led by 22 points from Nija Collier.

The Lions opened up the game on a 6-2 run and led 11-10 after a layup from Skiles with 4:36 left in the first quarter. Central answered with a 6-0 run to lead 16-11 with two minutes to go in the quarter and despite a pair of threes from the Lions in the final two minutes, the Jennies led 22-17 after one.

A three from the Jennies with 5:42 remaining gave Central a 30-20 advantage and another three from UCM, this time with 1:56 left in the quarter pushed the Jennies’ lead to 15 (38-23). Skiles hit a pair of threes in the final minute, the latter as time was expiring to get the Lions back to within 10 (41-31) at the break.

Central opened up a 51-34 lead midway through the third quarter, and five late points from the Jennies in the final 29 seconds made the third quarter score 64-42, UCM.

A bucket from Megan Jackson with seven minutes left in the fourth got the Lions within 16 (65-49), while a pair of freebies from Turnbull with 3:53 to go made the score 71-52, but that would be as close as the Lions got.

The Lions shot 43 percent from the field and 41 percent from the three-point line, as well as 78 percent from the free throw line.

Southern will be back in action next Thursday when the Lions travel to St. Joseph to take on Missouri Western. Tip-off is set for 5:30 p.m.

COLLEGE HOOPS: Missouri Southern men power past Central Missouri

Cam Martin moved into third-place on the Missouri Southern all-time scoring list as the Southern men’s basketball team took out visiting Central Missouri 86-67 on Saturday on Robert Corn Court inside the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.

Southern (10-7, 10-7 MIAA) was led by Martin’s 29 points on 9-of-14 from the field and 5-of-9 from long-range. Martin was also 6-of-6 from the free throw line and added seven rebounds. He now has 1,909 points in his career and passed Carl Tyler for the all-time scoring mark. Next up for Martin is Jason Adams with 1,981 points.

Stan Scott scored 19 points and added five rebounds and six assists, while RJ Smith had 13 points and five rebounds. Christian Bundy had a game-high nine rebounds.

Central Missouri (6-10, 6-10 MIAA) had three in double-figures led by 15 from Koray Gilbert.

Southern jumped out to a 14-7 lead after a three from Scott with 14:17 left on the first-half clock. A three from Christian Bundy made the score 17-9, Lions with 12:27 left and a jumper from Smith with 9:39 on the clock made the score 21-16.

The Mules got within three (21-18), but the Lions went on a 12-0 run capped by a pair of freebies from Martin to lead 33-18 with 5:49 to go. A fast-break layup from Scott with about a minute to go in the half gave the Lions a 42-30 lead, which ended up being the halftime score.

A pair of free throws from Martin pushed the Southern lead to 15 (45-30), but the Mules got to within six (51-45) at the 12:26 mark. From there, however, it was all Lions. A dunk from Martin with 8:40 left made the score 64-50, while a three for Martin two minutes later gave the Lions a 72-52 lead. A three from Winston Dessesow with 4:40 to go pushed the lead to 27 (82-52) and forced a Central timeout. A late three from the Mules made the final tally 86-67.

The Lions shot 56 percent from the field and 48 percent from long-range. Southern had a 41-28 advantage on the boards and either led or were tied for all by 31 seconds of the game.

Southern will be back in action next Thursday when the Lions travel to St. Joseph to take on Missouri Western. Tip-off is set for 7:30 p.m.