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GIRLS HOOPS: Walnut Grove rallies to beat McAuley in the Class 1 quarterfinals; Warriors end season with 20-9 record

WALNUT GROVE, Mo. — McAuley Catholic girls basketball jumped out to a fast start before Walnut Grove rallied in the second quarter to build a double-digit cushion and pulled away in the second half on the way to a 66-44 win in the Class 1 quarterfinals on Saturday.

The Warriors built a seven-point lead by the end of the first period against the two-time defending state champion Tigers (23-4). Walnut Grove turned the tides in the second quarter, scoring the first 19 points to completely flip the momentum in the process of building an 11-point advantage by halftime. The Tigers put the game out of each in the third.

“I’m extremely proud of the heart and the fight that they showed to come out and prove some doubters wrong in the first quarter, showing that we are good enough to be here,” McAuley coach Mike Howard said of his Warriors in a phone conversation to SoMo Sports. “As the game went along, they’re deeper and took advantage of some of their mismatches and started knocking down shots. I give all the credit in the world to our team for coming out and getting to this point. I was super proud of their effort tonight. You just have to tip your cap to Walnut Grove.”

A YEAR TO REMEMBER

McAuley ends the season with a 20-9 record, advancing to the quarterfinals for just the third time in school history.

“If over the summer you would have told me we would be at this point, I would have called you a liar,” Howard said with a laugh. “We had a rough summer. I was thinking this was going to be a rough year, but that is just a testament to the hard work these girls put in over the course of the year. … At first, we were a little inconsistent, but you could tell we slowly got better every single game. Here by the end, we were really clicking. They’ve improved so much and I couldn’t ask for more from them as far as hard work and dedication goes. It’s not the finish we wanted, obviously, but they are proud and I am so proud of them for getting to this point where only two other teams in our history have gotten to.”

The Warriors graduate seniors Gliza Damaso and Carmen Colson.

“Carmen came to us this year and hadn’t played since eighth grade,” Howard said. “At first when she asked to play, I thought she was kidding. But she was serious, and I said absolutely because I would love to have her. And she was exceptional for this team, which is surrounded by a lot of quiet voices. When we needed a voice, she was the person to step up. … She was the vocal leader on that team. … I just loved having her on this team this year and we wouldn’t have gotten to this point without her.

“Gliza has meant a lot to this program. I couldn’t ask for a better kid on and off the floor. She is devoted, humble and she tries so hard. She never missed a day of weights, never missed a practice and never complained about the role she was in. She always stepped up and was a leader for this team. She will be sorely missed.”

GAME ACTION

The Tigers held a 7-5 lead midway through the first quarter before the Warriors came up with the game’s first momentum swing. McAuley outscored Walnut Grove 12-3 to close the first period with a 17-10 lead. Kennedy DeRuy highlighted the run with five points, including a pull-up 3-pointer from the top of the key with 18 seconds left. Abbey Cahalan added a 3-pointer, while Kayleigh Teeter and Lily Black each scored as well.

“We just came out and played inspired,” Howard said. “I told them before we even left this morning that we understand the challenge that is in front of us. But if they weren’t going in with the mindset that we were going to win this ballgame, I didn’t want them to step on the bus.

“Their coach (Rory Henry) after the game came up to me and said, ‘You have one hell of a ball team. That is probably the scrappiest group of girls we have played all year long. Early on, you guys really punched us in the mouth and we were not prepared for that.’ Coming from him, that says a lot.”

McAuley took a hit early in the second quarter when Damaso, a starting guard, was carried off the court by Coach Howard with a knee injury. 

“That was a huge loss,” Howard said. “I knew she was hurting when she couldn’t walk on it. She is a huge part of our team offensively and defensively. She handles the ball a lot and passes exceptionally well. She is quick and can get to the basket, opening things up for our shooters. … Losing her at that time, I felt that basically stole all of the momentum we had going into that quarter.”

Walnut Grove, which is a top-ranked team in Class 1, seized the momentum by scoring the first 19 points of the second period, flipping a seven-point deficit into a 29-17 lead.

Kloee Williamson got the Warriors on the scoreboard with a free throw at the 1:22 mark before Teeter followed with a 3-pointer. 

“It’s hard to keep a good team down,” Howard said. “We knew they were going to make a run. They have three all-state players on their team and are super well-coached. They started knocking down open shots. Our girls, knowing Gliza was out and some younger players were going to have to step up into a bigger role against a really good team I think probably had something to do with that. It was kind of a combination of things that did us in during the second quarter.”

McAuley went into the intermission trailing 32-21.

The Tigers caught fire from the perimeter near the midway point of the third quarter, as Lauren Johnson and Morgan Hailey combined for three 3-pointers to push the lead to 46-25 with 2:15 left in the period. After Teeter knocked down a 3-ball of her own, Walnut Grove used an 8-1 surge, six points by Faith Gilkey, to push the lead to 54-30. The Tigers carried that cushion to the final horn.

SCORING LEADERS

Gilkey led Walnut Grove with a game-high 25 points, while Makayla McVay finished with 19. Johnson scored 16.

DeRuy led McAuley with 18 points, including three 3-pointers. Teeter finished with 14, while Williamson had five.

UP NEXT

Walnut Grove takes on Jefferson Conception at 8 p.m. on March 12 in the Class 1 semifinals.

BOYS HOOPS: Applegate sparks Nevada past Webb City in district title game

WEBB CITY, Mo. — With the score deadlocked and with just over two minutes remaining in a win-or-go-home situation, Nevada senior guard Logan Applegate delivered a game-changing play.

Like a defensive back with his eyes on the quarterback, Applegate anticipated where the ball would be thrown and his gut instinct was correct. 

Applegate’s late-game steal and breakaway dunk sparked second-seeded Nevada to a hard-fought 52-49 win over top-seeded Webb City in the championship game of the Class 5 District 12 tournament on Friday night inside a packed Cardinal Dome.

It’s Nevada’s first district championship since 1998. 

“This means everything,” Applegate said. “I’m so happy. I love this team so much. We’ve had some really good teams, but we’ve been stuck in a tough district. It feels good to finally win one.”

Nevada had come close to capturing a district crown before, but this year, the Tigers finally got over the hump. 

“It makes it that much sweeter,” Nevada coach Shaun Gray said. “These guys have been a part of some really good teams. We weren’t able to break through before. So this is a program win. It’s been 23 years. Our entire community is excited about this. And the Nevada faithful showed up tonight. Both sides had this place absolutely rocking.” 

The score was tied at 44 when Applegate jumped in the passing lane, stole the ball and streaked down the court en route to a two-handed dunk.

The momentum-swinging play ignited the Tigers, and the visitors would never relinquish their lead. 

“I saw him looking and he threw it without even looking and I just read it,” said Applegate, who finished with a game-high 29 points. “I’m up high on defense and I noticed they were starting to get lazy with some passes. I knew it was coming.”

“Logan Applegate, you can’t say enough about the type of player he is,” Gray said. “For him to come up with that steal when the game was tied…that was the absolute tipping point of the game.”

With the win, Nevada (21-5) will host Logan-Rogersville (20-5) in the sectional round of the state tournament at 6 on Tuesday night. The Big 8 Conference foes did not meet during the regular season. 

Webb City (18-9) was looking to capture its third straight district championship and fifth in six years. It wasn’t meant to be. 

“Logan Applegate played well, their team played well and executed well,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said. “The big difference was they were able to get to the free throw line and make their free throws. We got to the line late and had our chances to take the lead, but we just didn’t follow through and make shots.”

Playing their final game for the Cardinals were seniors Mekhi Garrard, Trenton Hayes, Nickhai Howard and Luke Brumit. 

“I’ve been here five years and I’ve seen them grow,” Horn said. “I’m proud of the work they’ve put in. Some of those guys are classic examples of guys sticking it out and working hard for your turn. Hayes and Brumit really brought it. Nickhai proved he was one of the better players in the area. Garrard is just a tremendous athlete and a great defender. They were a good class. They’ve been in this game for four years, so that says a lot about them.”

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Hayes led Webb City with 18 points. He made seven field goals, including four 3-pointers. 

“He’s a great shooter, a hard-worker and an intelligent kid,” Horn said of Hayes. “We’ve coached him hard all year, and he rose up and played big in a big game. He kept us in the game.” 

Junior guard Cohl Vaden added nine points, while Garrard, Brumit and junior Kaden Turner chipped in six points apiece. Howard rounded out Webb City’s scoring with four points. 

Howard had 10 rebounds, while Turner had eight boards. 

Webb City made 19-of-55 field goal attempts (35 percent). The Cardinals went 5-of-10 at the charity stripe. 

Leading the Tigers with 29, Applegate made 7-of-14 field goal attempts, including two treys, and went 13-for-16 at the foul line. 

Senior forward Ben Hines added 14 points for Nevada, while Logan McNeley had eight rebounds and three steals. 

The Tigers shot 44 percent from the field (14-of-32) and connected on 21-of-33 free throw attempts. 

Webb City committed 24 fouls to Nevada’s 15. Applegate and Hines finished the game with four fouls, while Webb City’s Garrard, Turner and Vaden all fouled out. 

“We had to do a better job of keeping our hands off,” Horn said of the fouls. “We were fouling. If you give them free points, they’re going to make you pay.” 

Nevada’s Logan Applegate puts up a shot in the lane during Friday’s district championship game against Webb City. Photo by Israel Perez.

GAME RECAP

The Cardinals and Tigers split two regular season meetings, and the rubber match was a thriller.   

Webb City led 11-5 after a pair of 3-pointers from Hayes, but Nevada’s Case Sanderson hit a trey of his own. Turner’s hoop gave Webb City a 13-8 lead at the end of the first quarter. 

“Webb City came out early and played like you expect a team on their home floor to play,” Gray said. “We were ice cold from the perimeter, but our guys showed grit and stayed together. That’s what it takes to win a district championship.”

The hosts took a seven-point lead early in the second quarter after baskets from Brumit and Hayes, but Nevada put together a game-changing 17-2 run. 

Applegate scored 13 of the 17 points during the surge, with Hines putting in the other four. 

With his team down eight, Hayes scored on a drive down the lane just before the end of first half, trimming his team’s halftime deficit to 27-21.

Webb City had three key performers pick up two fouls apiece in the first half.

A back-and-forth third period ended with Nevada clinging to a 39-36 lead.

The Cardinals missed four free throws early in the final frame, but Howard hit one at the line to tie the game at 44.

The hosts had several chances to take the lead, but shots simply wouldn’t fall.

Applegate’s key steal and dunk came with 2:19 remaining. 

Webb City missed a trey on the other end and then fouled. Hines made 1-of-2 for a 47-44 cushion.

Once again, the Cardinals misfired from the field and then fouled.  

Sanderson’s foul shot pushed the Tigers’ lead to four with a minute left to play. 

Webb City’s Nickhai Howard looks to score against Nevada’s Ben Hines. Photo by Israel Perez.

After both teams had empty possessions, Brumit scored in the paint to cut Webb City’s deficit to two with 26.5 seconds remaining.

Applegate drew a foul and sank both free throws before Garrard drilled a 3-pointer with eight seconds left that cut Nevada’s lead to 50-49.

After a timeout, the Cardinals were unable to force a turnover and had to foul. Applegate came up big again, making both attempts for a three-point advantage with 7.5 seconds showing on the clock.

Howard’s last-second 3-pointer was off the mark. 

In the second half, the Tigers didn’t allow the Cardinals to speed up the game.

To Gray, that was the goal.

“Webb City doesn’t lose very often when the score is in the mid-60s or 70s,” Gray said. “We have a lot of success when we hold our opponent in the 40s. It’s no secret that’s what we wanted to do.”

“These guys showed a lot of heart when the going got tough and waters were choppy,” Gray said. “We didn’t falter. We stayed together. There were times when Webb City was beating us up on the glass where it would have been easy to tuck our tails and run. We just kept coming.” 

Once the final buzzer sounded, the celebration began for the Tigers.

“It’s Webb City at Webb City,” Applegate said. “We knew it was going to be packed. We were ready for it. It was the most fun game all year. It was so loud. We fed off that.” 

Webb City’s Luke Brumit goes up for a putback against Nevada on Friday. Photo by Israel Perez.

 

Cohl Vaden makes a layup against Nevada on Friday night. Photo by Israel Perez.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

BOYS HOOPS: Thomas Jefferson’s magical run comes to an end in quarterfinals

EUGENE, Mo. — Thomas Jefferson boys basketball saw it’s magical season come to an end in a 67-53 loss to St. Elizabeth in the Class 1 quarterfinals on Friday.

The Cavaliers closed the first quarter strong to take a five-point lead into the second period. The Hornets (18-6) fought back to take a 31-30 advantage into halftime before using a 9-0 third-quarter surge to fuel a 46-38 cushion with one quarter to play. Thomas Jefferson cut the lead to six early in the fourth quarter before the Hornets scored 12 unanswered to put the game out of reach.

“I couldn’t be prouder of this team,” Thomas Jefferson coach Chris Myers said to SoMo Sports when asked his final thoughts on the season. “These boys played their hearts out all season long. It is one of the top seasons in our school’s history, and one none of us will soon forget.”

Thomas Jefferson finishes the season with a 20-6 record after reaching the quarterfinal round of the state tournament for just the second time in school history. 

The Cavaliers graduate seniors Dhruv Gheewala, Noah Hamlett and Kelsey Atteberry.

“This year’s team was led by three seniors who each had very different roles,” Coach Myers said. “However, the success our program had this year was because our seniors bought into their roles and that set the tone for the rest of the team to follow. The impact they had for our team and our program was phenomenal. They will undoubtedly be missed.”

SCORING LEADERS

Gheewala led Thomas Jefferson with 24 points in his final game as a Cavalier. Caden Myers added 10 points, while Drew Goodhope and Jay Ball each scored eight. 

Brock Lucas led St. Elizabeth with a game-high 25 points, while Carson Kesel added 12. Dylan Wobbe finished with 10.

GAME ACTION

St. Elizabeth built an early 10-7 lead before Thomas Jefferson answered with eight straight points to take a 15-10 advantage. Goodhope started things off with a 3-pointer from the top of the key before Ball grabbed his own miss for a putback score, drawing contact and converting the and-one free throw for a three-point play. Ball followed with a basket in the paint on the next possession to put the Cavaliers on top 15-10.

Ball converted another three-point play later in the quarter, with Dhruv Gheewala added a 3-ball and a driving score to give Thomas Jefferson a 23-18 lead after the first period.

The Hornets opened the second period on a 9-3 run to regain the lead with 4:30 to play in the first half. After Carson Kesel opened the second quarter with a trey, TJ’s Tyler Brouhard answered with a 3-pointer of his own. St. Elizabeth’s Lucas made a third-chance 3-ball and buried another triple on the next trip down the floor to put the Hornets on top 27-26.

The lead changed hands three more times before Lucas made a long fall-away mid-range jumper at the buzzer to send the Hornets into the intermission with a 31-30 lead.

Thomas Jefferson scored the first four points out of the half, but St. Elizabeth stole the momentum right back with a 9-0 run to take a 40-33 lead. Lucas highlighted the run with four points, while Kesel added a 3-pointer.

Lucas knocked down a 3-pointer before adding a three-point play moments later to push the lead to double digits for the first time, 46-35, at the 1:54 mark. 

A 3-ball from Myers with 18 seconds left sent the Cavaliers into the fourth trailing 46-38.

After Myers scored to open the fourth with a transition layup, the Hornets scored five straight points to rebuild the double-digit advantage, 51-40, with 6:08 left.

Goodhope answered with five straight of his own points for the Cavaliers, including a 3-pointer, but St. Elizabeth responded with a momentum-sealing 12-0 run to build an insurmountable cushion with less than three minutes to play. Jace Kesel highlighted the run with six points.

St. Elizabeth will meet Mound City in the Class 1 semifinals with a noon matchup on March 12.

COLLEGE BASEBALL: Pittsburg State takes opener against NSU

PITTSBURG, Kan. — The Pittsburg State baseball team opened its three-game MIAA series against Northeastern State University with a 5-2 victory on  Friday at Al Ortolani Field.

The Gorillas (6-1, 3-1 MIAA) jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning and never trailed in the contest. Pittsburg State added a run in the fourth and two more in the sixth inning to make the early lead stand out.

David Henderson improved to 3-0 on the season by allowing just two runs over 7.0 innings of work. He scattered five hits and registered five strikeouts. Nick Brown recorded the final four outs to pick up his second save of the season.

Ryan Kovan and Greyson Pinkett scored two runs apiece for Pitt State, while Adam Theis went 2-for-3 with an RBI.

T.J. Mullin (0-2) took the loss on the mound for NSU (3-2, 2-2 MIAA).

The two teams will wrap up their three-game MIAA series with a 1 p.m. doubleheader on Saturday.

COLLEGE BASEBALL: Southern earns series-opening win against Washburn

The fifth-ranked Missouri Southern baseball team scored three runs over the sixth and seventh innings and held on to defeat Washburn 3-1 on Friday in the series opener in Topeka, Kansas.

The Lions (10-0, 4-0 MIAA) got a strong start from Zach Parish as he went six innings, striking out five, walking none, and scattering three hits, while holding the Ichabods scoreless. Cole Woods threw two and two thirds, striking out four, while Chase Beiter got the final out for his second save of the season. Parish moved to 3-0.

Henry Kusiak had an RBI triple and a run scored, while Jordan Fitzpatrick had a hit and an RBI, as well. Troy Gagan and Matt Miller had a hit and run each, while Ryan Hunter had an RBI.

Washburn (2-6, 2-2 MIAA) starter Rane Pfeifer started and held the Lions hitless through the point he exited the game in the sixth, but a bases-loaded walk gave the Lions a lead in the inning.

Southern scored that first run in the sixth when Hunter walked with the bases-loaded, scoring Gagan to put the Lions up 1-0. Kusiak tripled down the right field line to score Miller in the seventh and then Kusiak scored on an RBI single from Fitzpatrick to go up 3-0.

Washburn got a late run in the ninth, but Beiter closed out the game for the win.

The two teams will be back at it tomorrow in a double-header beginning at 1 p.m.