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STATE WRESTLING: Neosho’s Auch makes history as four-time champ; CJ’s Cassatt ends prep career with second title

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Neosho’s Cayden Auch etched his name in the state history book, while Carl Junction’s Jesse Cassatt tied a bit of school history during the MSHSAA Class 3 Wrestling Championships held on Friday at Cable Dahmer Arena in Independence.

Auch became the 35th wrestler in MSHSAA history to win four straight state championships — breaking his tie with Nate Rodriguez for the most for the Wildcats. Later in the night, Cassatt won a second straight state championship, tying a mark set by his current head coach Mike Frizzell.

Neosho finished second in the team chase and came up short in a quest to win three straight titles — as Class 3 newcomer Whitfield won its first in the class and won its fifth straight counting Class 1 titles. The Wildcats finished with 148 points, while Whitfield had 182.

The team trophy was the 14th straight for the Wildcats, a streak that started in 2008.

The highlight of the day was Auch, who finished his career with a 49-0 season this year and claimed the 160-pound championship. Overall, he finished with a 202-6 record – a mark that will put him fifth all-time in MSHSAA history. The group above him features a pair of Neosho wrestlers, Kyler Rea and Nate Rodriguez. Right ahead of Auch is Olympian J’den Cox, who had 205. Seneca’s Will Roark holds the record with 214 wins.

Neosho’s Cayden Auch ended his prep wrestling career with a fourth straight state title.

This was the only undefeated season for Auch, whose previous best was a 39-1 record his sophomore year. Auch opened his title run with an 11-3 major decision over Riley Brown of Smithville. In the semifinals, Auch beat Rockwood Summit’s Ty Brunk by a pin in 3:36 and capped off his Neosho legacy with a 10-3 decision over Wyatt Haynes of Wentzville Liberty, who entered with a 49-1 record.

“Before I got into high school I thought I could be a four-time champion,” Auch said. “I believed and bought into Coach (Jeremy) Phillips. I believed I would do it and I went out there and worked for it. It feels good to be up there in the category of guys I looked up to and I can rub it in Nate a little, he’s a four-time finalist and three-time champion. He helped me a lot throughout the years. It is exciting.”

Auch will wrestle for Arkansas-Little Rock next and starts his quest to be yet another All-American at the next level that started at Neosho.

“Success breeds success and some of the guys that were his role models in youth wrestling helped himself to those goals and hopefully he does the same as a college wrestler,” Phillip said.

Neosho’s Cayden Auch is pictured during the 160-pound state title bout on Friday night. Photo by Cody Thorn.

 

The win for Auch was the only one despite having six Wildcats in the finals. Two of those losses came head-to-head against Whitfield, which allowed the St. Louis powerhouse to pull away and secure the team title after entering the finals with a 16-point lead over Neosho.

Raymond Hembree finished as the runner-up for the second year in a row at 106, falling 6-0 to Porter Matecki of Whitfield. Hembree finished the year with a 41-7 mark. Landon Kivett reached the finals at 120 but lost to a defending state champion in Evan Binder, the Whitfield star who finished the year 43-0. Kivett went 3-1 on the day and capped the year with a 32-8 mark.

Sophomore Eli Zar also finished second for the Wildcats, losing to Pacific’s Callum Sitek, who put the finishing touches on a 52-0 season with an 8-0 major decision. Zar beat the fifth-place (Whitfield’s Logan Ferrero) and third-place (Platte County’s Eli Rocha) finishers on the way to the medal. Zar was 36-8 this year.

Seniors Eric Holt and Jeremiah Larson were the final two medalists for the Wildcats, both coming up second in state title matches. Holt (41-9) lost the 170-pound by a pin against Hannibal’s Trevor Wilson. To reach the finals, Holt got a 7-5 sudden victory in overtime against Whitfield’s Reese Callahan.

Larson (195) saw his perfect season come to an end after losing to Grain Valley’s Hunter Newsom, 6-5, in the finals.

Hayden Crane (132) took third for the Wildcats, his only loss was to eventual state champion Eli Ashcroft of Kearney in the semifinals. Crane, 39-10, ended with a 10-8 decision over Hazelwood East’s Eittien Rogers.

The Wildcats never could catch up to Whitfield despite some head-to-head wins as the private school had 11 qualifiers – five of whom won state championships.

Phillips lamented the loss of some would-be-varsity wrestlers and noted some of them could’ve helped make the difference. Last year Drayke Perry won a state championship at 220 but didn’t come out for the team this winter.

“We got to get more kids here,” Phillips said. “We were qualifying 14, 13, 12 (when we won titles). We gotta get back to double digits. That was one of my goals this year. I knew when we got eight we would have a big uphill battle but one I had to sell to the kids. I told them they had to focus and they did their best.

“Overall, I was very pleased with how we prepared ourselves for every match and wrestled our match, for the most part. At the end, it sticks out and that hurts … to lose five of those final matches. That is the thing I told them, we’d like to get a different result but not a thing we can do about it now.”

CARL JUNCTION: CASSATT WINS SECOND STRAIGHT TITLE

Both of Carl Junction state qualifiers brought home medals, headlined by Cassatt winning the 182-pound title – a year after winning the 195-pound class.

The senior talked to many college coaches since last wrestling season and a few of them said they would consider him an 184-pound wrestler in college. So, Cassatt went to work on it, got down to a lower weight class and spent all season ranked No. 1 in the MissouriWrestling.com poll.

Carl Junction’s Jesse Cassatt captured his second straight state title. Photo by Cody Thorn.

He ended the season No. 1 as well, picking up a win over a fellow returning state champion in Chase Brock of Whitfield – the 182-pound Class 1 champion. Cassatt secured a 5-2, getting a late takedown over Brock, who was just 10-0 entering the match. Cassatt (50-0) also had a 5-2 winning margin in the semifinals, where he upended Festus’ Luke Shaver, who was 43-0 entering the match.

The key to beating Brock came in what the coaching staff saw earlier in the day. The longer Brock wrestled the more Brock – a runner-up in 2019 – wore down. Cassatt got a takedown at the end of the second period to take a 3-1 lead and never trailed again. He opened the period 1-0 but got a quick escape to tie it.

“It is extremely hard,” Cassatt said of repeating as a champion. “Everyone is coming after you and that made it so much better. This is something I have dreamed about as a kid as a youth wrestler.”

With 20 seconds left in the third, Cassatt got a takedown to account for the final score. With four second left, Frizzell threw his hands up to celebrate before hugging the champion.

Cassatt joins Frizzell as the only Bulldog wrestler to win multiple state championships, a superlative his coach set in 1986 and 1987.

“I can’t put into words for being the coach of the next two-timer at Carl Junction whenever I’m the only two-timer at Carl Junction,” Frizzell said. “It comes full circle for me. It was a record I was proud of for so many years but to be able to be the coach that comes in and coach a kid that takes that record, how does it get any better?”

Lukas Walker was also at state and he posted a 4-1 mark to take fifth place. The only loss was to Whitfield’s Parker Matecki in the quarterfinals. Walker (41-7) then won three straight to earn a medal in the abridged one-day tournament. Three of his four wins were by fall, including a takedown in 1:00 against Hillsboro’s Aidan Black.

 

WEBB CITY: OTT, CARRANCO MEDAL

The Cardinals had only two wrestlers at the state meet and both brought home medals.

Senior Jacob Ott reached the semifinals but lost his final two matches to finish 29-8 and place fourth at 195. Ott went 2-2 at state, winning a first-round match and then getting a win by fall against Parkway North’s James Harris in the quarterfinals.

In the semifinals, Grain Valley’s Hunter Newsom, got a 6-2 win over Ott. Newsom ended up winning the state championship. Ott’s day ended with an 11-3 major decision loss to Platte County’s Jaydon Walls in the third-place match.

Another senior, Roger Carranco, placed sixth for the Cardinals at 182. He lost to Brock – who lost to Cassatt – in the quarterfinals. Carranco (30-10) won his next two matches to earn a medal – which includes knocking off state-ranked Jake Fernandez of Platte County by a 12-3 major decision. In the fifth-place match, Rolla’s Hayden Fane beat Carranco. 

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL: Brehm, Mader finish with double-doubles in Southern’s loss to UCO

EDMOND, Okla. — The Missouri Southern volleyball team got a double-double from both Janelle Brehm and Sophie Mader, but the Lions fell three sets to none tonight at Central Oklahoma.

Individual set scores were 13-25, 21-25 and 15-25.

Brehm posted a double-double with 11 kills and 13 digs, while Mader dished out 25 assists and had 10 digs for her double-double. Abbie Casper had 13 digs, while Kylah Carter had seven kills.

UCO was led by setter Amanda Desch who had 10 kills, 32 assists and 20 digs.

The Lions will be back in action tomorrow with a 2 pm first-serve at Newman.

COLLEGE TRACK & FIELD: Lions have strong showing on second day of national championships

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Missouri Southern track and field program picked up a pair of All-American performances and sent multiple athletes onto the finals in running events as the Lions competed in day two of the 2021 NCAA Division II Indoor Track and Field Championships.

Ryan Riddle started off the day by recording the fastest qualifying time in the mile, clocking in at 4:05.64. Riddle will race in the finals of the event tomorrow.

Riddle, Gidieon Kimutai, Gabe McCain and Brieon Randle nearly picked up a National Championship in the distance medley relay as there was just two tenths of a second separating first and third place in the event. The Lions finished third with a new school record of 9:46.89 as each runner earned All-American honors.

The Lions sent all three runners in the 60m hurdles onto the finals as Claire Luallen, Cornesia Calhoun-Whtie and Precious Olatunji each qualified for tomorrow’s finals. Calhoun-White put forward the fastest time of the trio, crossing the line in a time of 8.66.

Luallen picked up her second All-American honor of the meet and third of her career when she finished seventh in the long jump. Bringing added difficulty to the event, Luallen had to pause her jumping to qualify for the finals in the hurdles, missing a pair of jumps in the process. In her final jump of the series, Luallen hit a mark of 5.81m (19-00.75) to secure the All-American finish.

In the final event of the night for the Lions, Chardae Overstreet qualified for the finals of the 400m and will race tomorrow afternoon in the event’s finals.

Through seven of 17 events, the Southern men are in eighth place with ten points, while the women sit in 22nd place with four points.

It will be a busy day for the Lions tomorrow. Dean Howard will start things off with the men’s pole vault at 12:30 pm, while Adrain Broadus competes in the men’s triple jump at 1 pm. Riddle will race in the finals of the men’s mile at 2 pm, while Overstreet races in the finals of the 400m at 6:20 pm. The trio of Luallen, Calhoun-White and Olatunji race in the finals of the 60m hurdles at 6:30 pm.

COLLEGE BASEBALL: No. 4 Lions fall at Missouri Western

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — The fourth-ranked Missouri Southern baseball team dropped the finale of a three-game set today at Missouri Western by the score of 3-0.

The Lions (13-2, 7-2 MIAA) were on the short side of a pitcher’s duel today as the Southern bats were limited to just three hits. Tommy StevensonMatt Miller and Joe Kinder had a hit each for the Lions.

Will Bausinger started and went six innings, striking out five and allowing just two unearned runs on five hits. Cole Woods threw the final two innings.

Western (3-11, 2-7 MIAA) got a strong outing from Jared Wells as he went six and a third and struck out seven batters.

The Griffons put across two unearned runs in the seventh inning and added an insurance run in the eighth.

The Lions will be back in action next weekend as Southern returns home to play host to Central Oklahoma in a three-game set at Warren Turner Field. The teams will play a single game on Friday at 3 pm with a double-header on Saturday at 1 pm.

COLLEGE TRACK & FIELD: Pittsburg State men win two individual national championships

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Pittsburg State men’s indoor track & field team witnessed a pair of individual event national championships Friday and the Gorillas exited Day 2 action of the 2021 NCAA Division II Indoor National Championships in second place.

The Gorillas scored 23 points Friday to shoot into second place in the team standings behind only day two leader Grand Valley State University. The Lakers head to Saturday’s final day action with 29 points.

Junior Trey Mooney started the day with a national championship performance in the heptathlon. The Lamar, Mo., native capped off the final three disciplines in the multi events in strong form and compiled a personal best and new school record 5,567 points. Redshirt freshman Hunter Jones also garnered All-America honors in the heptathlon with his sixth-place finish. Jones also earned a PR and posted the fifth best mark in school history with 5,115 points.

The distance medley relay of Connar Southard, Graham Hudelson, Matt Wilson and Mason Strader also claimed a dramatic national championship by edging second place GVSU by .01 second. Strader broke the finish line in 9:46.68 to edge the Lakers’ Caleb Futter by a fraction of a second. The DMR also broke its own two-week-old school record time in the race.

In other action men’s Friday, Strader qualified to the finals of the mile run with his semifinal time of 4:06.95. Junior Konner Swenson also placed 10th overall in the shot put with a best mark of 55-8.25.

In the women’s action, senior Asia Anderson finished ninth in the women’s long jump (18-11.75). Senior Haven Lander earned All-America honors with a seventh-place finish in the pole vault. Lander and five others all cleared 13-3.5, but the Republic, Mo., native finished seventh based upon misses.

Juniors London Futch and Christine Williams both qualified to sprint finals Friday. Futch posted the second-fastest time in the 400 meters (55.57), while Williams qualified seventh in the 200 meters (24.76).

The Pitt State women exited day two action in a tie for ninth place in the team standings with 10 points. GVSU leads the women’s field with 34 points.

BOYS HOOPS: Patriots’ historical season comes to a close in Class 4 quarterfinals

GRANBY, Mo. — Sadly, all good things must come to an end, as East Newton boys basketball found out on Friday.

The Patriots’ memorable season drew to a close after falling to Blair Oaks 44-40 in the Class 4 quarterfinal round.

East Newton and Blair Oaks took a 34-34 tie into the fourth quarter when the Falcons gained the early edge with the first two baskets before the Patriots answered with four straight points to keep things tied midway through the period. 

Blair Oak’s Jake Closser knocked down a corner 3-pointer to break the tie with less than three minutes to play before East Newton’s Gabe Bergen found room inside for a score to cut the lead to 41-40 with two minutes to play.

Quinn Kusgen converted both free throws for the Falcons with 54.8 seconds left to push the lead to 43-40. The Patriots missed a 3-point attempt at the other end, but Blair Oaks missed the front end of a one-and-one trip to the line after the ensuing foul to keep the deficit at 3.

East Newton was unable to convert on the offensive end in the waning seconds and were forced to foul Closser with two seconds left. Closser made his first free throw to put the game out of reach while sending his team to the semifinal round for the second straight season.

“I thought we played with a lot of heart and a lot of guts,” East Newton coach Kyle Fields said. “We played fearless against (a team with a kid who is) 6-9, and I thought we played extremely tough, especially in the first half. You have to make shots late. I thought we had some live-ball turnovers that really hurt us and gave them some chances for baskets. But, I am proud of them.”

A SEASON TO REMEMBER

East Newton ends the season with a 26-3 record, making the school’s first ever appearance in the Class 4 quarterfinal round.

“It’s special,” Fields said when asked his thoughts on the season his team put together. “This is a special group of kids. They’re extremely intelligent, they love one another and they love to come to practice everyday to work. We had our 70th practice the other day and they’re not tired of it. It’s been a lot of fun. The wins are icing. They are the results of all of that.”

East Newton’s Lucas Kimbrough raises up for a jumper during the Patriots’ Class 4 quarterfinal game against Blair Oaks on Friday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

SAYING GOODBYE

The Patriots graduate seniors Kyson Lahman, Tanner Youngblood, Connor Killion and Lucas Kimbrough.

“They’ve been playing this game together for a long time and it shows on the court,” Fields said of his graduating class. “The nuances and details of the game are what they’re really good at. That is really hard to teach. That speaks a lot to them and their work, and I think that’s why we’ve had the success we’ve had.”

HOW THEY GOT THERE

East Newton got the raucous, standing-room home crowd involved early after Kimbrough scored in the opening seconds on a runout following the tip from Killion. After an empty possession by Blair Oaks, the Patriots went up 5-0 off a 3-pointer in the corner by Lahman, forcing the Falcons to call the game’s first timeout inside the first minute of play.

“It was great execution against 6-9 on the tip by Killion,” Fields said when talking about his team’s start to the game that ignited the crowd. “What a controlled tip it was, and a good pass. Then, Lahman hitting that 3—it gave us the confidence that we can play, we belong and we can hit some shots tonight.”

The Patriots took that five-point cushion all the way through to the intermission, leading the Falcons 28-23 at the half. Blair Oaks trimmed the lead to one several times but never gained the advantage on the scoreboard through the first two quarters. East Newton’s biggest lead of the first half was eight points—when Killion buried a 3-ball from the wing to make the score 28-20 with 1:42 to play in the second period.

“Our defense is our constant,” Fields said about his team’s play in the first half. “That is our foundation and we lean on that just like we did against Ava. We just didn’t make enough shots late.”

The game’s only real momentum swing came to open the second half when Blair Oaks scored the first six points out of the gate to take its first lead of the game. After two free throws by the Falcons, 6-foot-9 forward Luke Northweather scored inside to trim the lead to one before Kusgen made a floater with 3:18 on the clock to put Blair Oaks up 29-28.

“I thought our offensive execution was really poor,” Fields said of the Patriots’ start to the second half. “We were trying to be patient and look for something we could take advantage of. We ended up turning it over and they got a runout and some easy baskets. It just wasn’t very good execution to start.”

East Newton’s Connor Killion defends Blair Oaks’ Luke Northweather in Class 4 quarterfinal action on Friday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Kelton Sorrell answered with a 3-pointer from the corner to give East Newton the lead back, 31-29, but Closser drained a triple on the next trip down the floor to regain the advantage for Blair Oaks with 2:15 left. Closser added a followup score on the drive to make the score 34-31.

Killion set up a thrilling fourth quarter after banking in a deep 3-pointer from just in front of the halfcourt line at the buzzer to end the third period with the game tied at 34-all.

“He’s been good for us all year,” Fields said of his senior. “He releases the ball so high being a 6-5 guard. He’s good in ball screens and we just tell him that it doesn’t matter where he’s at on the court, let it fly. He has great range and hit some big shots for us tonight.”

SCORING LEADERS

Killion led the way for East Newton with 15 points, including three 3-pointers. Sorrell added 10, while Bergen finished with eight.

Northweather led all scorers with 17 points, while Kusgen had 13. Closser also finished in double digits with 12. 

STATE BOYS HOOPS: Nevada’s stellar season ends with quarterfinal loss to Bolivar

BOLIVAR, Mo. — Shaun Gray wasn’t ready to say goodbye to his stellar senior class.

But on Friday night, the head coach of the Nevada Tigers had to give his final postgame speech of the season.

Nevada was unable to overcome its size disadvantage, as Bolivar rode its superior height inside to a 60-47 victory over the Tigers in a quarterfinal contest of the Missouri Class 5 state boys basketball tournament inside a packed Bolivar High School gymnasium. 

“The main message was to keep their heads up because they have nothing to hang their heads about,” Gray said of his postgame speech to the team in the locker room. “Disappointment is natural. Everybody is disappointed. But no one should have their head down. This should be a celebration of this group and this season. We should keep our heads up. These guys will have a special place in my heart forever.” 

The Tigers, who had a 15-game win streak snapped and were seeking the program’s first Final Four berth since 1991, end the season with a record of 22-6. 

Playing their final game in a Nevada uniform were seniors Logan Applegate, Logan McNeley, Lane McNeley and Ben Hines. 

“It’s going to be so weird going to practice without Logan Applegate, Logan and Lane McNeley and Ben Hines…even though he was only with us this year,” Gray said. “But we’ve got kids in second and third grade who have watched every game those guys have played. And someday when they’re in high school, and we talk about how those guys played, those kids will know who we’re talking about. Our seniors have left a true legacy in our program. They’re right up there with the ’91 team as the most-special group we’ve ever had at Nevada.” 

“I’ve got two young sons and if I want to show them film of how to play together and how to play hard, this will be the team that I show them as they grow up,” Gray added. 

Bolivar had a clear size advantage, with 6-foot-7 Luke Gabani, 6-6 Kyle Pock, 6-5 Josh Bowes and 6-5 Chase Kirby. Nevada’s tallest player is the 6-4 Hines. 

Up two at the break, the hosts pounded the ball inside and made 11 field goals in the second half, and none of them were from long range. When the Liberators weren’t scoring from in close, they were getting to the foul line. Bolivar made 16-of-21 free throws in the second half. 

“You can’t simulate that physicality and you can’t simulate that size, especially for four quarters,” Gray said. “Hats off to Bolivar. If you’re a second late rotating or a second late getting around (their post players), they make you pay for it. We forced them into some turnovers in the first half. They adjusted in the second half. They started throwing a skip pass over the top and then hit us inside on the back side and we were late rotating.” 

The Liberators (15-12) advanced to the semifinals, where they’ll face Lutheran South (16-11) at 1 on March 18 at JQH Arena in Springfield. 

 

NAMES & NUMBERS 

In his final outing for the Tigers, Applegate scored a game-high 27 points. He made three 3-pointers. 

“He played as hard as he could for all 32 minutes,” Gray said. “He left it all on the floor and we’d expect nothing else from him.” 

Hines added 10 points, while the McNeley twins chipped in five points apiece. 

The Tigers had an off-shooting night overall, as the visitors made just five treys and also missed a number of shots in the lane. 

“We didn’t have the shooting night that we’re accustomed to having…for all of our guys,” Gray said. “We did not shoot it as well as we are accustomed to. And we didn’t get some trips to the free throw line that we thought we should get, but you expect that when you go on the road. There’s a reason why Final Fours are so hard to get to.” 

Bolivar’s bigs had their way in the paint. 

A junior, Bowes scored 18 points, while sophomore Pock added 17 points. A junior, Gabani also reached double figures with 12 points, while classmate Kirby added nine.

 

GAME RECAP

The Liberators led 14-8 when Applegate’s trey cut Nevada’s deficit to three at the end of the first quarter.

The Tigers trailed by two when the visitors received hoops from Logan McNeley, Applegate and Hines to go up 20-16.

Bolivar closed out the first half with six straight on Pock’s hoop and free throw and Kirby’s 3-pointer. Those points gave the Liberators a 22-20 halftime advantage.

Applegate had 14 of Nevada’s 20 first-half points, while Pock had 11 of Bolivar’s 22. 

Bolivar’s Bowes scored 14 points in the third period, all in the paint, to give the Liberators a 38-31 lead entering the fourth quarter. The Tigers managed just four field goals in the third period. 

Bolivar continued to pound the ball inside in the fourth quarter, and the hosts were up 43-35 after a pair of buckets in the paint by Gabani. 

Applegate was fouled making a 3-pointer, and his free throw trimmed Nevada’s deficit to four with just over five minutes to play.

“We felt like we were right there when that happened,” Gray said. 

Bolivar’s lead was six with just over two minutes to play. The Tigers had a number of empty possessions and then had to begin fouling. 

The Liberators made 14-of-19 foul shots in the fourth quarter for the final margin. 

“We were able to bother them with pressure in the second quarter,” Gray said. “But they did a great job in the second half when we extended pressure. They were stronger with the ball. We couldn’t turn them over and we had to start fouling. They made their free throws. Hats off to them. They earned it.”