Your online home for Joplin area sports coverage.

PREP HOOPS: Neosho ends season with loss to Rogersville; East Newton boys advance to district title game; Miller girls win sectional game

LOGAN-ROGERSVILLE 77, NEOSHO 49

ROGERSVILLE, Mo. — Second-seeded Neosho suffered a 77-49 season-ending setback to top-seeded Logan-Rogersville in the championship game of the Class 5 District 11 boys basketball tournament on Wednesday night at Logan-Rogersville High School.

Ranked fifth in Class 5 by the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association, Rogersville (20-5) advanced to the sectional round, where they’ll meet the Webb City-Nevada winner on March 9 at a location to be determined.

Neosho hung tough early, but Rogersville pulled away for good with a 22-9 third quarter.

Neosho ends the season at 13-13. 

Senior Chase Flynn led Neosho with 19 points, while classmate Landon Austin added 13. Flynn had 13 of Neosho’s 28 points in the first half. Carter Fenske chipped in nine points on three 3-pointers. 

Jonathan Dunn scored 33 points for Rogersville. The 6-foot-7 Dunn is a Western Illinois recruit who recently transferred to Rogersville from Hazelwood Central.

Zach Bergmann and Kanon Gipson scored 14 points apiece for Rogersville. 

In a clash between Wildcats, Neosho took a 14-13 lead after Fenske hit two 3-pointers, Isaiah Green scored in the lane and Flynn made a pair of free throws.

After hoops from Dunn and Gipson, Rogersville led 20-19 at the end of the back-and-forth first quarter. 

Flynn scored seven of Neosho’s nine second-quarter points, and his trey gave the visiting Wildcats a 24-23 lead. It would be Neosho’s last advantage. 

Later, Rogersville finished the first half on a 7-2 run to take a 33-28 lead into the break. 

The hosts scored the first 10 points of the third period to go up 43-28. Dunn’s back-to-back hoops extended Rogersville’s lead to 50-31.

Neosho trailed 55-37 at the end of the third quarter. Rogersville led 67-42 with 5:30 left en route to victory. 

It’s Rogersville’s fourth straight district title. 

Playing their final game for Neosho were seniors Flynn, Austin and Dalton Brodie.

 

EAST NEWTON BOYS 69, AURORA 42

GRANBY, Mo. — The Patriots advanced to the championship game of the Class 4 District 12 tournament.

East Newton (24-2) will host Mount Vernon (16-7) at 7 on Friday in the title game. 

Lucas Kimbrough scored 26 points for the Patriots, while Kyson Lahman surpassed 1,000 career points during the game. 

The Patriots were up 17-11 at the end of the first quarter and East Newton led 39-23 at halftime. 

The Patriots held a comfortable 63-34 advantage by the end of the third quarter.

The Mountaineers beat Reeds Spring 48-36.

 

MILLER GIRLS 52, ASH GROVE 41

The Cardinals (28-1) advanced to the quarterfinal round of the Class 3 state tournament, where they’ll meet Steelville (22-6) at 1 on Saturday at a location to be determined. 

In Wednesday’s sectional, Miller led 13-9 at the end of the first quarter and 26-21 at halftime. By the end of the third period, Miller’s lead was 38-32.

The Cardinals led 44-40 with 5:15 remaining. Miller finished the game on an 8-1 run to advance.

Kaylee Helton and Claudia Hadlock scored 14 points apiece for the Cardinals, while Lili Merrick added 11. 

Steelville defeated Strafford 50-41. 

Strafford was going for a sixth straight state title and the Indians had won 37 straight postseason games.

GIRLS HOOPS: McAuley avenges last year’s loss to Montrose, advances to the Class 1 quarterfinals for the first time since 2002

If there were ever a perfect time for McAuley Catholic girls basketball to avenge a loss, it was Wednesday night.

And the Warriors did just that. After falling to Montrose last year in the sectional round, McAuley built an early first-half lead and played add-on throughout en route to a dominating 70-45 win over the Bluejays in the Class 1 sectional round.

“I am just so excited for them,” McAuley coach Mike Howard said. “They have worked so hard to get to this point. After what happened last year at this point in the season against the same team, it is so nice to be able to play on your home floor and get a little retribution. It means everything. The girls knew how hard that game was last year. … It gave them extra motivation this year.”

HOME SWEET HOME

The win was the first time McAuley girls basketball ever hosted a sectional-round game, and giving the home crowd that experience is something the team will forever cherish. 

“We definitely feed off the crowd’s energy,” McAuley senior Gliza Damaso said. “With this game, I am so glad we had that giant crowd cheering us on. Every single person in that crowd mattered. They gave us energy and that helped us reach our goal.”

“We were very excited when we learned we would be able to host,” Howard said. “It got them even more motivated for this game. … It was a huge confidence boost (to play in front of the home crowd). When you go through the season with COVID and everything — not being able to play in front of full crowds all year long — to come out to a full crowd with people supporting you that you haven’t seen in a long time, it meant a lot to the girls. It means a lot for our community, for our family.”

McAuley senior Gliza Damaso drives to the hoop during the Warriors’ win over Montrose in the Class 1 sectional round on Wednesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

THIRD TIME’S A CHARM

The Warriors are playing in the quarterfinal round for the first time since 2002 and just the third time in school history.

“It means so much to be a part of this team,” Damaso said. “Playing with this team for the three seasons I’ve had them with me, it’s been insane. It’s been a rollercoaster. I am so glad that I could do it with my teammates, who I consider my family, now.”

UP NEXT

McAuley (20-8) will travel to Walnut Grove (22-4) in the quarterfinal round for a 1 p.m. tipoff on Saturday. The Tigers are back-to-back Class 1 state champions and are currently the top-ranked team in the state, according to the MBCA rankings.

“We have two days to prepare for what arguably could be the toughest opponent we’ve faced all year,” Howard said. “It is going to take everything we have to compete in that game. They are a very good team and are very well coached. I told them this next game is going to be super tough. So, if they want to put themselves on the map, that is the game to do it.”

GAME ACTION

The Warriors broke a 7-7 tie midway through the first quarter with a 12-0 run to take control of the lead permanently. 

“The first part of that quarter, we just had to get the jitters out,” Howard said. “I think they were a little nervous. After they ran up and down the floor a few times, I felt like they really started to settle in and started to play basketball the way we know how to play.”

Kayleigh Teeter started the game-defining run with a bucket before Kennedy DeRuy knocked down a 3-pointer to push the lead to five. Damaso followed with a basket before DeRuy converted from the perimeter again at the two-minute mark to make the score 17-7. Teeter closed the run with a score on the drive. 

McAuley led by as much as 16 points in the second quarter before taking a 35-23 lead into the intermission.

The Warriors came out of the locker room and scored the first eight points of the third quarter to push the lead to 20 points for the first time, essentially putting the game out of reach for Montrose.

“That was an emphasis at halftime,” Howard said of his team’s fast start to the second half. “In the last part of the first half, we let them back into the game by fouling and sending them to the free-throw line. I told them at halftime that they needed to come out with energy in the second half to get the crowd back into it. … I thought we did a really good job of playing good defense and limiting good shots and limiting second-chance opportunities.”

McAuley’s Kayleigh Teeter goes airborne for a layup in the Warriors’ sectional win over Montrose on Wednesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Teeter and DeRuy splashed home 3-balls to start the second half before Teeter converted two charity shots to extend the lead to 43-23 with six minutes to play in the third quarter. 

McAuley closed the third on a 6-2 run highlighted by another DeRuy 3-pointer that she followed up with a driving score. 

“We needed her to step up and she stepped up tonight in big moments,” Howard said of DeRuy’s performance. “I feel so good for that kid because she works so hard. The last few games have been down games for her, but she was able to find her stride tonight and get back into her flow of the way she likes to play the game.”

Teeter found Lily Black on the pick and roll to close the run, sending the Warriors into the final eight minutes with a 54-29 lead.

Montrose never broke the 20-point barrier before the sound of the final horn.

SCORING LEADERS

DeRuy led McAuley with a game-high 31 points, including a team-high six 3-pointers. Teeter finished with 22 points, while Black had six. Damaso and Kloee Williamson each added five in the win.

Ryan Landes led Montrose with 12 points in the loss.

McAuley’s Kennedy DeRuy pulls up for a jumper in the Warriors’ sectional win over Montrose on Wednesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

WOMEN’S HOOPS: UNK tops PSU in MIAA Tournament

KEARNEY, Neb. — The Nebraska-Kearney Lopers jumped out to an early lead and rode that momentum to a 66-50 victory over Pittsburg State in the quarterfinals of the 2021 MIAA Postseason Tournament on Wednesday.

The Gorillas end their season with a 14-9 overall record while the No. 14 ranked Lopers (20-3) advance to the semifinals on the MIAA Tournament on Saturday where they will meet No. 7 seed Washburn University. The Ichabods upset No. 2 seed University of Central Missouri, 63-55, Wednesday at Warrensburg, Missouri.

Maya Williams scored a team-leading 13 points in her final collegiate game for the Gorillas. Kaylee DaMitz added 11 points and Sydnee Crain chipped in with 10. Pitt State shot 32.7 percent from the field (17-52).

Brooke Carlson scored a game high 20 points for UNK. She posted a double double with 13 rebounds. Haley Simental added 17 points.

COLLEGE HOOPS: MSSU women fall to Fort Hays State in MIAA tourney

HAYS, Kan. The Missouri Southern women’s basketball team ran into a tough 5th-ranked Fort Hays State squad tonight and fell 71-44 in the opening round of the 2021 MIAA Women’s Basketball Tournament at Gross Memorial Coliseum.

Southern (9-14) was led by nine points from Amaya Johns as Zoe Campbell and Madi Stokes added six each.

Fort Hays State (20-2) was led by 20 points from Olivia Hollenbeck as four Tigers scored in double-figures.

The Tigers got out to a 9-2 lead three minutes in and FHSU led 13-4 after a free throw with four minutes to go in the first quarter. A three-point play from Kaitlin Hunnicutt cut the lead to eight (15-7) with three minutes to go, but the Tigers went on a 7-0 run to end the quarter and led 22-7 after one.

The Tigers’ lead was 27-9 after a layup with 7:36 to go and the lead was 35-11 with 3:35 to go before back-to-back three’s from Layne Skiles and Zoe Campbell made the score 35-17 with just more than two left on the clock. The Tigers made a late bucket to make the halftime score 37-17.

Johns hit a three pointer two minutes into the third quarter to make the score 39-20, FHSU, and a jumper from Stokes with six to go made it 43-24. A jumper from Johns with three minutes to go cut the lead to 20 (50-30) but the Tigers took a 57-33 lead into the final quarter.

A layup from Campbell and a free throw the next trip down made the score 67-42, Tigers, with four minutes to go and both teams were scoreless for the next three minutes but two free throws from Johns proved to be the final scores.

Southern ends the season at 9-14, but saw many positives on the season. Both Carley Turnbull and Madi Stokes were named All-MIAA. Stokes raced onto the scene as a sophomore for the Lions and moved up the rankings on the blocks list at MSSU. She currently ranks second in single-season blocks with her 47 putbacks this year and ranks fifth nationally in that category. She leads the MIAA in total blocks, blocks per game, total rebounds, rebounds per game and defensive rebounds per game.

Earlier this season, Stokes became just the third player to ever have a 20 point, 20-rebound game in MSSU history when she put up 21 points and 22 rebounds against Emporia State. Not to be out done, she followed that up with a 31-point, 21-rebound game against Rogers State, becoming the first Lion to ever have at least 30 points and 20 rebounds in a single game. The first 30-point, 20-rebound game in Division II this season. Stokes also tied an MSSU single-game record with seven blocks in that contest.

This season Turnbull was the MIAA’s Player of the Week when she averaged 25 points, 5.5 rebounds and three assists in helping the Lions to wins over Northeastern State and Rogers State. She shot 51 percent from the field that week and 82 percent from the free throw line.

For the season, Turnbull leads the Lions with 13.7 points per game and is second with 4.9 rebounds per game. She is shooting 43 percent from the field and 79 percent from the free throw line. Turnbull is third on the team with 35 assists and leads the Lions with 22 steals.

COLLEGE HOOPS: Missouri Southern men fall to UCO in MIAA Tournament

The Missouri Southern men’s basketball team was on the wrong end of a high-scoring game as the Lions fell 109-101 to Central Oklahoma in an opening-round game of the 2021 MIAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.

Southern (13-10) was led by 31 points from Cam Martin. Stan Scott scored 22 points and added eight rebounds, while RJ Smith had 17 points and seven boards. Lawson Jenkins and Winston Dessesow had 11 points each in the game.

Central (13-10) had six score in double-figures, led by 24 points from Cam Givens and 21 from Callen Haydon.

The teams traded points for the first three minutes of the first half as a three from Jenkins with 17:27 got the Lions within two at 9-7. UCO, however, went on a 14-6 run and led 23-13 with 13 to go forcing a Lions’ timeout.

Southern trailed 34-24, but a 12-2 run from the Lions over a three-minute stretch tied the score at 36 with 4:44 left in the half. UCO answered with an 8-0 run to go up 44-36 with 2:51 to go, but the Lions closed on a 6-4 run to end the half and trailed 47-42 going into the locker room.

A dunk from Martin off a dish from Scott started the second half for the Lions, but the Bronchos put their foot on the gas and led by 12 (63-51) just five minutes later. UCO led by as many as 14 (71-57) with 11:45 on the clock, but the Lions fought back and a pair of free throws from Scott with 6:14 on the clock got the Lions within five (78-73) and capped a 16-7 run for the Lions.

The Bronchos answered with a run of their own and led by 12 (83-75) just two minutes later and the Lions couldn’t ever get back into the game.

Southern shot 55 percent from the field, 44 percent from long-range and 76 percent from the free throw line, but UCO was just as hot from the field. The Bronchos shot 57 percent from the field, 48 percent from long-range and 83 percent from the free throw line.

The Lions will now wait until Sunday evening to see if they have made the field of 48 for the NCAA Tournament. The Lions entered the final regular season ranking as the 7th team in the poll. The top six teams make the NCAA Tournament.