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GIRLS HOOPS: Carthage comes up with final run to beat Neosho

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Carthage and Neosho opened the CHS Senior Night doubleheader on Saturday with a special moment. 

Tigers’ Lauren Wilson, who is out for her final season after a knee injury early in the schedule, suited up and was allowed to score the game’s first bucket on an uncontested layup in a way to honor the senior.

“You hope that is her lasting memory from high school basketball and not the last play before that when she got hurt,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said. “She started all last year, started the first 10 games this year and got hurt in December. She’s been an integral part of our program for four years. For her not to finish her last year actively on the court hurts. So, hopefully, we put a little shine on that by allowing her to get her last basket as a Carthage Tiger.” 

The Tigers (12-9, 2-4 COC) held a six-point lead after the first quarter before only to see the Wildcats (8-9, 0-5) use an early second-quarter surge to take their first lead of the contest. Carthage went into the intermission up two and started the third quarter on an 11-1 run to build the advantage back up to double digits. Neosho cut the margin to one possession early in the fourth before Carthage’s Kianna Yates put her team on her back down the stretch to seal the 63-48 Central Ozark Conference win.

Carthage’s Sophie Shannon goes for a block in the Tigers’ win over Neosho on Saturday. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

“Overall, I didn’t think it was too bad,” Neosho coach Ryan Madison said. “We started slow. But I thought for about two quarters we played right with them. Defensively, we didn’t do a great job at times. I thought we guarded better than we have. When we took care of the ball, we were able to do some things. They just turned us over way too many times.”

SENIOR NIGHT

The Tigers honored four seniors after the win against Neosho—Wilson, Hailey Fullerton, Brinna Ream and Katie Crowe.

“Not a lot of teams have four seniors who are starters,” Moore said. “They’ve been a big part of our program for a couple of years. They’ve all been important in setting the tempo in practice, being mature leaders on the team and really they’re why we’ve had so much success this season.”

GAME ACTION

Carthage jumped out to an 8-2 start and held the pace into the second period with a 19-13 advantage. The Wildcats started the second period with a 9-0 run to take their first lead of the game. Baylie Bowers and Karlee Ellick scored inside to start the surge before Ellick knocked down a 3-pointer at the 5:02 mark to put Neosho on top 20-19. Olivia Hixon followed with a driving score to push the lead to three.

“We just took care of the ball,” Madison said of his team’s play to open the second quarter. “If we don’t turn the ball over and make it a half-court game, which we are trying to do, we are hard to guard. … I just felt like we didn’t turn the ball over much and got to run our stuff to put more pressure on them. We attacked the rim pretty well.”

Carthage halted the run there before answering with six straight points of their own to regain the momentum, ultimately heading into the intermission with a 25-24 lead. Ream, Presley Probert and Sophie Shannon each had baskets for the Tigers.

“We dug ourselves into a little bit of a hole when we let them make that run,” Moore said. “But I liked that our girls maturely answered it to take back the lead before halftime.”

After Neosho’s hot start to the second quarter, Carthage returned the favor in the third with an 11-1 spurt to open the second half, pushing the lead back to double digits. The run was fueled by a 3-pointer from Crowe, a score on the break by Fullerton and a mid-range jumper by Yates.

Neosho was able to trim the lead to one possession early in the fourth, 43-41, after a score on the break by Michelle Lindsay, and again near the midway mark, 47-44, following a Hixon 3-pointer.

Neosho’s Michelle Lindsay drives to the hoop in the Wildcats’ loss to Carthage on Saturday. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

 

Yates put the final touches on the win for the Tigers, scoring 11 straight points for her team, including a 3-pointer, down the stretch to extend Carthage’s lead to 58-44 with less than two minutes to play.

“Kianna has had a couple of games in a row where she probably hasn’t played up to her ability,” Moore said. “It was nice to see her come out more aggressive tonight, maybe even more composed with her aggression to find her spot for open looks. It was nice the team fed off of that. … She gave us that energy right there.”

SCORING LEADERS

Fullerton finished with a game-high 26 points to lead Carthage. Yates scored all of her 16 points in the second half, while Ream finished with 10. Crowe scored seven.

Hixon led Neosho with 21 points. Ellick added 11, while Reagan McInturff scored eight.

UP NEXT

Carthage is at Branson on Monday.

Neosho is at Webb City on Tuesday.

CLASS 2 DISTRICT 5 WRESTLING: Seneca athletes advance to sectional

The Class 2 District 5 wrestling tournament was held on Saturday at Monett. 

Seneca captured the team crown, advancing a wrestler in every weight class. 

The top four in each weight class qualified for the sectional tournament in two weeks that will be hosted by Seneca High School. 

The top four in each weight class and final team standings are listed below.

 

106 POUNDS

  1. Brady Roark, Seneca
  2. Simon Hartline, Monett
  3. Kurt Deaver, Cassville
  4. Cameron McKendrick, Buffalo

113 POUNDS

  1. Karey Anderson, Monett
  2. Alex Mejia-Jerez, Seneca

120 POUNDS

  1. Jacob Foster, Logan-Rogersville
  2. Bradyen Thiel, Seneca
  3. Cornelius Kidd, Buffalo
  4. Grant Jones, Hollister

126 POUNDS

  1. Kendon Pollard, Seneca
  2. Conner Pinkley, Buffalo
  3. Matthew Whittenburg, Cassville
  4. Griffin Swearingen, Logan-Rogersville

132 POUNDS

  1. Andrew Manley, Seneca
  2. Riley Williams, Logan-Rogersville
  3. Ben Bluel, Monett
  4. Gavin Moore, Cassville

138 POUNDS

  1. Gabe Brandenburg, Logan-Rogersville
  2. Gabe Hunter, Cassville
  3. Easton Byrne, Reeds Spring
  4. Cole Whitehead, Seneca

145 POUNDS

  1. Clayton Swadley, Seneca
  2. Jake Anthonysz, Cassville
  3. Kit Farran, Logan-Rogersville
  4. Lucas Bare, Hollister

152 POUNDS

  1. Elias Barrientos, Monett
  2. Lincoln Renfro, Seneca
  3. Wyatt Rogers, Reeds Spring
  4. Brady Smith, Buffalo

160 POUNDS

  1. Corbin McCully, Monett
  2. John Jenkins, Buffalo
  3. Cooper Martin, Logan-Rogersville
  4. Jeremy Williams, Seneca

170 POUNDS

  1. Gabriel Commons, Seneca
  2. Evan Wilson, Reeds Spring
  3. Hunter Jenkins, Buffalo
  4. Ryland Hacker, Logan-Rogersville

182 POUNDS

  1. Ethan Umfleet, Monett
  2. Dane Napier, Seneca
  3. Gage Moore, Hollister

195 POUNDS

  1. Zane Cotten, Seneca
  2. Brock Maverick, Buffalo
  3. Joey Anderson, Logan-Rogersville

220 POUNDS

  1. Zach Coenen, Cassville
  2. Jakob Tate, Seneca
  3. Trystan Voss, Logan-Rogersville
  4. Joe Korasick, Monett

285 POUNDS

  1. Harrison Merriman, Monett
  2. Eben Crain, Reeds Spring
  3. Garret Babbit, Seneca

 

TEAM STANDINGS

Seneca 229, Monett 134, Logan-Rogersville 110, Cassville 83, Buffalo 80, Reeds Spring 54, Hollister 19.5

 

BOYS HOOPS: Carthage surges ahead down the stretch in win over Neosho

CARTHAGE, Mo. — The pace picked up in the final two quarters after a defensive struggle in the first half, with Carthage pulling away from Neosho down the stretch for a 57-47 Central Ozark Conference win on Senior Night on Saturday.

“We did not play very well last night,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said. “Coming into a Senior Night, which we tried to make really important to our younger kids by letting them know that someday this would be their night. We were down a senior, who was sick, and down another starter, who is at home. It took some of those guys who have not played a ton of varsity minutes a half to get their feet under them.”

SENIOR NIGHT

Carthage honored Silas Templemen, Brandon Gacke and Sam Fuert with Senior Night ceremonies before the game.

GAME ACTION

Neither team held more than a two-possession lead in the first half of play, with the Tigers’ biggest lead at two points and the Wildcats’ at five points. 

Neosho scored the final five points of the first quarter on buckets from Dalton Brodie and Isaiah Green to take a 9-4 lead into the second period. After a pair of makes from the charity stripe at the 2:15 mark of the first half, the Wildcats once again held a five-point advantage at 15-10.

Neosho’s Isaiah Green lets go of a floater on the drive against Carthage on Saturday. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

Carthage responded with the final seven points of the second quarter to take a 17-15 lead into halftime. Clay Kinder splashed a 3-pointer to cut the lead to two before an offensive board for a putback score by Joel Pugh tied the game at 15s with a minute to play. Kinder sank two free throws with no time on the clock following a Neosho foul at the buzzer to give the Tigers the momentum into the locker room. 

“That was big,” Morris said of his team’s play to close the first half. “I think some of our kids were kind of questioning things before that. For us to hit that stretch … it gave us all the confidence in the world tolling into the second half.”

“You always have an optimistic outlook, but I knew that as good of defense as we played in the first half, to go into the half losing, that was going to be tough,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “I knew that if we got down, our press wasn’t going to be any good because they have a dynamic point guard. 

“We were up 15-10 with two minutes to go, and they went on a 7-0 run. … If we just score once there and don’t let them score once, then we are up. I think it is just a different outlook on the second half.”

The lead traded hands out of the intermission before Carthage played in front for most of the third period. Once again, neither team established more than a two-possession advantage in the period, with the Tigers holding onto a 34-31 cushion after three quarters thanks to an offensive rebound and putback bucket by Max Templemen at the buzzer. 

Carthage’s Tyler Willis scores inside in the win over Neosho on Saturday. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

Carthage got a basket from Tyler Willis to start the fourth before Neosho responded with a 3-pointer and score on the drive both by Green, tying the game at 36-36 with 6:27 to play.

The Tigers proceeded to use a 17-4 run over the next five-plus minutes to build an insurmountable 53-40 lead with less than a minute to play. Willis fueled the run with eight points. Fuert added a 3-pointer and a score on the break.

“He is such a good kid and a hard worker,” Morris said of Willis. “Basketball is not natural to him. I told our senior Brandon Gacke that it was extremely unselfish of him to lend some minutes to a kid who came in and just fought with everything he had. Every minute he is on the court, he is learning and growing, which is better for us.”

SCORING LEADERS

Max Templemen had 20 points to lead Carthage, while Willis finished with 12 and Pugh added 11. 

Landon Austin led Neosho with 16 points. Green finished with nine points, while Brodie added eight.

UP NEXT

Carthage is at Branson on Tuesday. 

Neosho is at Webb City on Tuesday.

GIRLS HOOPS: Buerge’s 48-point outburst leads Carl Junction past Webb City

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Late in Saturday’s rivalry game with Webb City, Destiny Buerge glanced up at the massive scoreboard that hangs above center court. 

The Cardinal Dome’s impressive unit displays the point totals for each player on the floor. 

When Buerge saw the large number next to her number, the Carl Junction standout had the type of reaction you’d expect. 

“I looked up and I was like, ‘Oh dang,'” Buerge said. “I didn’t realize I had that many.”

Call it an eye-opening performance. 

Buerge’s career-high 48 points led the Carl Junction girls basketball team to a convincing 76-50 Central Ozark Conference win over Webb City.

A 5-foot-6 sophomore guard, Buerge made 13 field goals—11 2-pointers and two 3-pointers. She also converted 20-of-22 free-throw attempts. 

“It’s really exciting,” Buerge said of her memorable outing. “But I couldn’t have done it without my teammates getting me open, getting me the ball and getting the driving lanes open for me.”

“She’s very capable of doing that,” Carl Junction coach Brad Shorter said of Buerge’s offensive outburst. “She can score in large amounts in a hurry. What’s helping her is getting the ball to other kids and them getting it back to her, as opposed to trying to score against a loaded floor or defense. She played outstanding. I’m very proud of her. Destiny puts a heck of a lot of work in. She’s working at it all the time. I’m just happy to see it’s paying off for her.” 

Carl Junction sophomore guard Destiny Buerge scores two of her 48 points on Saturday at Webb City. Photo by Israel Perez.

Buerge’s previous career-high was 33 points, which came on Jan. 12 against Carthage. The 48 points is likely a school record for a CJ girls basketball player.

“It really means a lot,” Buerge said. “I didn’t expect to come out and drop 48 points. I just played my game and worked with my teammates.”

After erupting for 28 points in the second quarter, Carl Junction built a 20-point lead by intermission at 40-20.

The second half was nearly even, 36-30 in favor of Carl Junction, but the Cardinals were unable to make a serious dent in their deficit. 

The game was played on Saturday after Tuesday’s clash was postponed due to weather. The contest was moved to Webb City because Carl Junction was hosting a wrestling district tournament. 

“To lose a home game against a rival is tough,” Shorter noted. “Having to go to their place is tough. But our kids responded well and fought hard.”  

 Ranked 10th in Class 5, the Bulldogs are now 13-7 overall and 3-3 in the COC. The Cardinals are 7-11 and 2-4 in the conference. 

“We didn’t do a very good job defensively,” Webb City coach Lance Robbins said. “Our team defense was not up to par. It hasn’t been up to par the last few games. We have to get better defensively if we’re going to have any type of success going forward.”

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

In addition to Buerge’s 48, sophomore guard Klohe Burk scored 10 points, hitting two 3-pointers, while senior forward Hannah Lee chipped in six points. 

Rounding out the scoring for the Bulldogs, Jessa Hylton had four points while Hali Shorter and Anna Burch contributed three points apiece. 

“I thought we moved the ball really well,” Shorter said. “I thought our kids played hard. They took advantage of quality looks and knocked those down. I thought Ellie Lawson and Jessa Hylton did a fabulous job defensively, too. I thought all of our kids played really hard today.” 

Senior guard Jaydee Duda led Webb City with 17 points on six field goals and five free throws. 

Freshman Malorie Stanley and senior Sierra Kimbrough scored eight points apiece for Webb City, while junior Peyton Hawkins had seven and freshman Mia Robbins chipped in five. 

Also for the hosts, Kate Brownfield contributed three points and Josie Spikereit had two.

Webb City senior Jaydee Duda scores in the lane against Carl Junction on Saturday. Photo by Israel Perez.

GAME RECAP

Carl Junction led 9-2 right away, with Buerge scoring seven.

The Cardinals rattled off five straight points, an old-fashioned 3-point play by Robbins and a hoop by Duda, to pull within two.

Hali Shorter buried a 3-pointer to give the Bulldogs a 12-7 advantage heading into the second quarter.

Carl Junction owned the second quarter, outscoring the Cardinals 28-13.

Treys from Burk and Buerge, along with hoops from Hylton and Lee, pushed Carl Junction’s lead to 22-9 with five minutes remaining in the second quarter.

Webb City countered with buckets from Stanley, Spikereit and Duda, to cut their deficit to 11.

But Carl Junction closed out the first half on a 10-1 run. The spurt was capped by a trey from the top of the key by Burk, giving the Bulldogs a 40-20 advantage at the break. 

Buerge had 19 points in the first half and then put up 29 more in the second half. 

Buerge had 13 points in the back-and-forth third period and Carl Junction led 55-34.

The younger sister of former Webb City and Missouri Southern standout Desirea Buerge scored 16 in the final frame to finish off an impressive performance. 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City hosts Neosho on Tuesday, while Carl Junction is at Joplin on Tuesday. Both of those dates are weather permitting of course.

 

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City gets well at home with win over rival Bulldogs

WEBB CITY, Mo. — After a pair of disappointing setbacks earlier in the week, the Webb City Cardinals needed to get well.

It wouldn’t be a stretch to say the Cardinals did just that on Saturday night. 

Webb City led from start to finish in a 73-46 victory over rival Carl Junction in Central Ozark Conference boys basketball action inside the Cardinal Dome. 

Ranked 10th in Class 5, the Cardinals (15-7, 3-3 COC) rebounded nicely after suffering a road loss at Nixa on Friday and a home setback to Branson last Friday.

“It was a bad two-game stretch for us,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said. “We could have been better in both games. Our opponents had something to do with that. But it was nice to come back home and get right and get a win.” 

Solid overall, the Cardinals slowly extended their lead throughout the game.

“I thought we were executing really well offensively,” Horn said. “We got good looks in the first half that weren’t falling. They started to fall in the second quarter and in the second half. Defensively, we were really good at getting in the passing lanes and that led to some easy offense for us.”

The Bulldogs stayed within striking distance in the first half, but the visitors were unable to make a run after intermission. 

“We hit a cold streak and couldn’t put the ball in the bucket,” Carl Junction coach Justin Pock said. “We would get a turnover, but we would give it right back. Against a good team, you can’t do that. They started hitting shots when we weren’t. We couldn’t answer back.”

Webb City senior Nickhai Howard looks to score in the lane against the defense of Carl Junction’s Alex Baker. Howard scored 11 points for the Cardinals, while Baker had 28 for the Bulldogs. Photo by Israel Perez.

NAMES & NUMBERS

Five players scored in double figures for Webb City’s balanced attack. 

“They share the ball,” Horn said. “They don’t take a lot of ‘my turn’ shots. They don’t worry about who’s scoring. They’re really unselfish and that’s one reason we’ve had success.” 

Senior Mekhi Garrard and junior Cohl Vaden scored 12 points apiece, while seniors Trenton Hayes and Nickhai Howard and junior Kaden Turner each had 11 points. Garrard had two dunks in transition. 

Also for the Cardinals, Alex Martin scored eight, Luke Brumit and Trey Roets had three apiece and Isaiah Briscoe chipped in two. 

Carl Junction senior forward Alex Baker poured in 28 points. The 6-foot-3 Baker made nine field goals, including two treys, to go along with eight made free throws.

“I thought Alex had a really good game,” Pock said. “He was really tough inside. They struggled guarding him in there.” 

Sincere Williams added nine points for the Bulldogs (4-17, 1-5 COC), while Kyler Perry had six. Ayden Bard contributed two points and Blake Poorman had one. 

Cohl Vaden scored 12 points for Webb City in Saturday’s win over Carl Junction.

 

GAME RECAP

The Cardinals finished the first quarter on a 10-2 run to take a 17-8 lead into the second period.

A trey from Turner pushed Webb City’s lead to 20-8, but Carl Junction scored eight unanswered points, with four apiece from Baker and Perry. 

Williams’ 3-pointer trimmed CJ’s deficit to six, but Webb City finished the first half on a 7-2 run, as Howard and Garrard had hoops and Vaden hit a trey. 

With that, the Cardinals led 35-24 at intermission.

Webb City separated for good by outscoring Carl Junction 14-5 in the third period, including nine straight to end the frame. 

By the start of the fourth quarter, Webb City was up 49-29.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Both teams are scheduled to compete on Tuesday night, weather permitting, with Webb City hosting Neosho and Carl Junction traveling to Joplin. 

 

Carl Junction’s Jaden Cherry is pictured during Saturday’s game at Webb City. Photo by Israel Perez.

 

Sincere Williams of Carl Junction goes up for a shot against the Cardinals on Saturday. Photo by Israel Perez.

COLLEGE HOOPS: Jenkins’ big game not enough for MSSU men

MARYVILLE, Mo. — A pair of second half runs for No. 3 ranked Northwest Missouri turned out to be too much as the Missouri Southern men’s basketball team fell 83-69 on the road today inside Bearcat Arena.

Southern (11-8, 11-8 MIAA) was led by Lawson Jenkins as the freshman scored 26 points on 5-of-10 shooting from long-range and a perfect 5-of-5 from the free throw line. Jenkins added six rebounds, four assists and a pair of steals. Yagizhan Selcuk had a career-high 11 points as he played 23 minutes off the bench and was a perfect 4-of-4 from the field and went 3-of-4 from the free throw line. Stan Scott scored 11 points, while Christian Bundy added eight.

Northwest (17-1, 17-1 MIAA) had three in double-figures, led by 31 points from Trevor Hudgins.

The two teams traded baskets early on before a bucket from Cam Martin put the Lions up 6-5 about three minutes into the first half. A three from Scott with 16:38 gave the Lions back the lead at 9-8, but the Bearcats went on a 10-3 run and led 18-11 with 11:10 to go.

A layup from Selcuk tied the score at 18 and capped a 7-0 run for the Lions with 9:26 to go, while a bucket from Winston Dessesow with just 2:15 left gave the Lions a 33-30 lead. Northwest went ahead 34-33 after a bucket from Hudgins with 1:31 left and led 37-30 with 36 seconds to go, but a layup from Jenkins with 10 left on the game clock got the Lions within two (37-35). The Bearcats, however, got a buzzer-beating three from Hawkins to go up 40-35 at the break.

A pair of free throws from Bundy two minutes in got the Lions within three (40-37), but the Bearcats pushed ahead and led 52-41 with 13:20 on the clock. A three from the Bearcats put Northwest up 58-45 two minutes later, but the Lions went on a 10-3 run and got within six (61-55) after a three from Jenkins with 8:23 on the clock.

Northwest answered that run with a 10-0 run to get back up by 16 (71-55), before a pair of freebies from Scott stopped the run. A three from Jenkins got the Lions within 11 (75-64) and another three from Jenkins made the score 76-67 with 51 seconds to go, capping a 12-5 run by the Lions.

Southern shot 41 percent from the field and 80 percent from the free throw line. The Lions out rebounded the Bearcats 38-32 but couldn’t overcome a hot-shooting Bearcat squad that made 18 three pointers, shooting 53 percent from beyond the arc.

The Lions will be back in action a week from today with a matchup against Pittsburg State. Tip off from Robert Corn Court inside the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center is set for 3:30 p.m.