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GIRLS HOOPS: All-COC team released

CENTRAL OZARK CONFERENCE GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM

FIRST TEAM

Kaemyn Bekemeier, Republic 

Addalyn Adamson, Willard

Destiny Buerge, Carl Junction 

Macie Conway, Nixa

Brielle Adamson, Willard

Anna Hitt, Ozark

SECOND TEAM

Jaydee Duda, Webb City

Hailey Fullerton, Carthage

Ali Kamies, Nixa

Savana Powell-Goodman, Republic

Moriah Putt, Ozark

Kianna Yates, Carthage

HONORABLE MENTION TEAM

Riley Boggs, Ozark

Rhianna Gibbons, Nixa

Olivia Hixson, Neosho

Jada Holloman, Willard

Jessa Hylton, Carl Junction

Ariana Patillo, Willard

ALL-DEFENSIVE TEAM

Emma Floyd, Joplin

Anna Hitt, Ozark

Ali Kamies, Nixa

Katie Kamies, Nixa

Sierra Kimbrough, Webb City

Jazzy Kirby, Republic

Vanessa Wells, Willard

Kianna Yates, Carthage

 

Player of the Year: Kaemyn Bekemeier, Republic

Coaches of the Year: Kris Flood, Republic; JJ Adamson, Willard

 

STATE WRESTLING: Carthage’s King earns medal; Eagles, Tigers end season alongside state’s best

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Carthage and Joplin combined for eight state qualifiers but only one of those brought home a medal from the MSHSAA Class 4 Wrestling Championships held on Saturday at Cable Dahmer Arena.

Carthage sophomore Davion King took fifth place at the 145-pound weight class to finish the year with a 40-6 mark.

King got a first-round bye in the shortened one-day tournament thanks to winning a sectional championship. That moved into a quarterfinal round against Liberty’s Kyle Dutton. The defending state champion got a win by fall in 3 minutes, 36 seconds – on his way to winning another state championship.

In the consolation bracket, where a loss would end the season, King won out on his way to a medal.

“I only lost one and I took fifth,” King said. “Usually we have an opportunity to wrestle back for third but this is way more cram-packed than the real tournament. But I do like the one-day tournament much better.

Carthage’s Davion King is pictured competing in the fifth place match. Courtesy photo.

“This is nice (the medal) but I feel like I could’ve placed higher if I had the opportunity to go for third.”

King beat Nixa’s Dylan Carter (5-1), Lee’s Summit North’s Javi Gutierrez (2-1) and Ozark’s Brock Sundlie (1:43) to close his day.

The matchup with Sundlie was a familiar one for both of them. King beat Sundlie four other times this year, three coming late in the season at the Central Ozark Conference meet, districts and sectionals. The latter two meetings were both in championship matches.

King pinned Sundlie in five of the six matches – the exception was the first meeting on Jan. 5.

All six of King’s losses came against wrestlers that were state finalists: two against Neosho’s Eli Zar, Excelsior Springs’ Ayden Dolt, Pacific’s Callum Sitek, Dutton and Ozark’s Braxton Strick.

Dutton, Dolt and Sitek all won state championships.

The medal by King helped Carthage continue a streak that has featured at least one medal every year since 2001 – the oldest year MSHSAA’s record book goes.

The Tigers other state qualifiers included the Tate brothers – Bradyn and Braxdon – Dagan Sappinington, Eli Sneed and Luke Gall.

Braydn Tate went 0-2 in his first year at 113 and finished 25-6, while his older brother, Braxdon also went 0-2 in the 152 weight class. The junior finished 26-9.

Sappington (132) was ranked throughout most of the year by MissouriWrestling.com. The senior won his opener, 11-4, against Liberty North’s Joseph Knight. Sappington lost in the quarterfinals to eventual third-place finisher Tyler Bierman of Holt by a pin. Mitchell Huber of Fort Zumwalt West beat Sappingtton by a pin.

Eli Sneed (138) lost his two matches and finished 35-11, a season that included a Central Ozark Conference title.

Carthage’s Luke Gall was thought to be in contention for a title after winning a sectional title but was upset by Dai’Mont Mucker at the 5:13 mark in the quarterfinals. An injury then ended the run at state with a medical forfeit done out of precaution.

Gall finished his sophomore season with a 32-7 mark.

Joplin’s Sam Melton picked up a win at state but then dropped his next two.

The freshman beat Lafayette Wildwood’s Dylan Roth, 6-4, in overtime. Melton (27-7) then lost his next two, one by tech fall to Hunter Taylor of Liberty in the quarterfinals and another by decision, 11-4, to Mark Matschiner of Troy Buchanan in the wrestlebacks.

Josiah Vaughn, a Joplin senior, ended the year with a 19-14 record after falling in his first two matches by pins. Earning wins by fall over Vaughn were Liberty’s Jude Axsom and Hickman’s Ethan Barr. 

 

Pictured is Carthage’s Davion King. Courtesy photo.

GIRLS HOOPS: Mount Vernon rallies from 11 down in the second half to advance to Class 4 Final Four

MOUNT VERNON, Mo. — Trailing by 11 points early in the second half in the midst of a Blair Oaks’ 7-2 scoring run, the Mount Vernon girls basketball team was at a crossroads—find consistency on both ends of the floor to flip the momentum and get back into the game, or watch their impressive season end in the Class 4 quarterfinal round on Saturady.

The Mountaineers chose the former, vaulting back into contention behind a 14-2 surge led by a steadfast defensive effort and the dynamic scoring of senior Lacy Stokes, a Missouri Southern commit, to take a one-point lead into the fourth quarter. 

Mount Vernon found itself up 46-44 with nine seconds left in a free-for-all fourth quarter with Blair Oaks’ Autumn Bax shooting free throws. Bax made the first charity shot to cut the lead to one but missed the second, with the Falcons grabbing the rebound and missing a followup shot from the baseline. After a scrum, the 50-50 ball found its way into Stokes’ hands, who dribbled in a sprint to the far side of midcourt to run the waning seconds off the clock before being bombarded by teammates as the Mountaineers clinched a 46-45 come-from-behind win over Blair Oaks for a trip to the Class 4 semifinal round.

“It just means everything to me,” Stokes said. “I can’t put into words what it means to be here. We lost my freshman and sophomore years, and we thought we were going to do it my junior year, but we choked it out. We finally have our foot down, pushing all of the momentum in the right direction. Everyone wants it just as much as our three seniors.”

AND THEN THERE WERE FOUR

The win marks the 14th straight for Mountaineers (27-3), who are returning to the Final Four for the first time since 2012. Mount Vernon will battle Vashon (17-1) in the semifinal round at 6 p.m. on March 19 at JQH Arena in Springfield.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling,” Mount Vernon coach Grant Berendt said about making it to the Final Four. “I have been there as an assistant a few times but never as a head coach. I am super proud of our kids. Since Lacy and Ellie (Johnston) were little kids, they’ve talked about doing this. A lot of them were in the stands watching the 2012 team go all the way and win it. … We broke through this year. We had to claw and scratch to do it, but it is an unbelievable feeling.”

HOME SWEET HOME

The last time Mount Vernon played on its home floor, it clinched a district championship with an 84-23 win over Seneca on March 6. The Mountaineer seniors never anticipated another chance to play in front of the home crowd. Under normal circumstances, quarterfinal games are played at a neutral site, but because of COVID protocols, Mount Vernon girls basketball was able to give the community one of the most meaningful wins ever in the final home game of the 2020-21 season.

“After the district championship, I didn’t think we’d be playing on this floor again,” Stokes said. “When we heard we were hosting a quarterfinal, we thought it was one last go around on this court for the seniors. It was big for us to get to do it. … My favorite thing to do is to put banners on that wall. To get to put as many as I have, I can’t put it into words.”

“It means more than anything because I don’t know if it will ever happen again,” Berendt said when asked about earning this type of win in front of the Mount Vernon faithful. “The one good thing about COVID is we got to host the quarterfinals. That never happens in basketball. To have the home crowd here, for us to be able to come back in this environment, I don’t know if it happens on a neutral floor. For our seniors, to go out with two big wins — a district championship and quarterfinal win — at home. Man, that’s special.”

EXPERIENCED IN ADVERSITY

While most teams might crumble under an 11-point deficit in the second half of a state tournament game, Mount Vernon used very recent experiences to draw from when rallying back against Blair Oaks on Friday. In the sectional round, the Mountaineers trailed Ava by seven points to start the second half before recovering to earn a 53-49 victory. 

“If we don’t win like that at Ava, we don’t win today,” Berendt said. “We haven’t faced a lot of second-half deficits in the last month of the season. For us to have one in a big game and get that monkey off our back in the sectional, if we can’t come from behind from something like that, we don’t win this one because we wouldn’t have been there before and our kids wouldn’t have that feeling.”

SCORING LEADERS

Stokes led the way for Mount Vernon with a game-high 19 points, 17 of which game in the second half. Kruger finished in double figures with 10 points, while Ellie Johnston scored eight. 

Malorie Fick led Blair Oaks with 18 points, while Bax finished with 10. Bailey Rissmiller scored eight.

HOW THEY GOT THERE

The first shot of the game found nothing but twine on a 3-pointer from Johnston, and after makes from Raegan Boswell and Cameryn Cassity, the Mountaineers held a quick 7-2 lead.

Blair Oaks stormed back to close the quarter with an 11-8 lead behind two 3-pointers from Fick and an inside score from Natalie Heckman.

The Falcons pushed the lead to seven nearly three minutes into the second period after a score on the drive and a transition 3-ball from Fick made the score 18-11.

Mount Vernon whittled the lead down to two, 22-20, after a 9-4 run fueled by the play of Kruger, who had three baskets inside the paint as well as several rebounds and defensive stops.

“I can’t speak enough on our posts,” Stokes said. “It’s all heart for them. Lisa has a huge heart and works her butt off inside. I couldn’t be more thankful to have her on the team this year.”

Rissmiller scored consecutive baskets inside the final minute of the first half to send Blair Oaks into the intermission with a 26-20 lead.

A 7-2 run by the Falcons to open the third quarter put the Mountaineers in a 33-22 hold with 6:12 on the clock. 

Stokes hit her stride offensively in the third quarter, kicking off Mount Vernon’s game-changing 14-2 run with a mid-range jumper from the free-throw line. After the first of four turnovers by Blair Oaks, Stokes found Boswell inside for a score to trim the lead to 33-26.

Heckman and Stokes traded two makes from the free-throw line before Johnston knocked down a runner in the paint to cut the lead to 35-30 with 4:30 on the clock. Stokes proceeded to bury back-to-back 3-pointers from the corner to ignite the crowd and give Mount Vernon it’s first lead since early in the first quarter, 36-35, with 2:10 on the clock.

“My confidence was kind of down going into the half,” Stokes said of her play in the first two quarters. “I felt like we were a second-half team all season. So coming out, Coach B lit a fire under our butts in the locker room. We just had to believe. He put that confidence in us to take the shots we did and luckily they went in.”

Stokes added a third 3-ball shortly after and the Mountaineers went into the fourth quarter with a 39-38 advantage.

“That is what you want your senior point guard, a 2000-point scorer, to do in a game like this,” Berendt said about Stokes’ play in the second half. “You want them to put you on their back and get you back into it. It took all of us, but it takes a gutsy kid to make a shot when you have six feet flying at you in the corner.”

The Falcons scored the first four points in the fourth quarter behind a 3-pointer from Fick to regain the lead, but Stokes tied things up at 42-42 again with another 3-ball of her own.

Blair Oaks added a basket inside before Stokes found Kruger in the paint near the five minute mark to tie the game for the final time at 45s. A free throw by Cassity shortly after gave Mount Vernon the lead for good.

“If we don’t have Lisa Kruger in the last two games to battle 6(-foot)-1 against Ava and 6-1 here, we don’t win those games,” Berendt said. “To have a 5-10 kid who is strong and won’t allow a kid to overpower her is huge. huge.”

Stokes added a free throw with 2:47 left to push the lead to 46-44 and that was the last point scored until Bax’s free throw with nine seconds left.

GIRLS HOOPS: Carl Junction’s season ends in quarterfinals with loss to West Plains

 

A semifinal berth wasn’t meant to be for the Carl Junction Bulldogs. 

The second-ranked West Plains Zizzers took control early and knocked off Carl Junction 61-42 in a quarterfinal contest of the Class 5 state girls basketball tournament on Saturday at the West Plains Civic Center. 

In the quarterfinals for the fifth time in six seasons, Carl Junction finishes the season with a record of 18-9. 

Carl Junction coach Brad Shorter looked on the bright side after the season-ending setback. 

“If you would have told me at the beginning of the season that we’d be 18-9 and in the quarterfinals, I would have taken it,” Shorter told SoMo Sports in a postgame phone interview. “I’m excited about what we’ve got and the consistency we’ve had in our program. Hopefully this is another step for us and hopefully we can go further next year.” 

The Bulldogs will return all but one player from this year’s squad, as Hannah Lee was the lone senior. 

“She was a part of a ton of wins,” Shorter said of Lee. “I can’t say enough about the kid. She works really hard and she’s definitely going to be successful in whatever she decides to do. We’re going to miss her. We wish her the best.” 

With just one starter back from last year’s 28-0 squad, youthful Carl Junction played the second half of the season without 6-foot-1 freshman forward Kylie Scott, a starter who suffered a season-ending wrist injury. 

Shorter noted his young squad gained a lot of valuable experience this season. 

“That’s huge going forward,” Shorter said. “We are very young. It was a season of ups and downs with injuries, quarantines and COVID and all that. With all of that, our youth made it difficult at times. But I thought our group really grew and progressed this year. I’m excited about what’s to come for this group and for our program.”

Ranked second in Class 5 by the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association, West Plains scored the game’s first 14 points and never looked back. 

Carl Junction finally got on the board with 3:15 remaining in the first period when Destiny Buerge hit three free throws. 

Klohe Burk’s layup was the only Carl Junction field goal of the opening frame, and the Zizzers led 18-5.

The Bulldogs scored the first four points of the second quarter before both teams had a number of empty possessions. Carl Junction also had several turnovers in the low-scoring frame.

The Zizzers scored five straight points before Jessa Hylton’s layup got the visitors into double figures. But Ashton Judd’s hoop just before the buzzer gave West Plains a 25-11 lead at intermission.

Facing an active zone defense, the Bulldogs struggled offensively throughout the first half, as shots simply would not fall. 

“They got off to that lead and we were struggling to make shots,” Shorter said. “They rebounded it exceptionally well. It was a big difference. I think a little bit of it was due to our youth and playing against a matchup zone. Our kids hadn’t seen it or experienced it yet or known the toughness of it. You have to tip your hat to West Plains.”  

A trey from Burk and Buerge’s breakaway layup, her first hoop of the game, cut Carl Junction’s deficit to 31-16 with 4:10 left in the third quarter.

Buerge buried back-to-back treys late in the period, but Carl Junction trailed 39-23 entering the fourth quarter.

Treys from Buerge and Burk trimmed West Plains’ lead to 45-29 with 5:40 remaining, but there would be no comeback for the Bulldogs.

At the same time, Carl Junction scored 31 in the second half after being limited to 11 in the first two periods. 

“I certainly loved the charge we had in the second half,” Shorter said. “We were resilient and continued to work. They never gave up. I thought our kids really competed hard all the way until the final buzzer.” 

A sophomore guard, Buerge scored 20 points to lead the Bulldogs, with 16 coming in the second half. Buerge, who has already surpassed 1,000 career points as a sophomore, made four 3-pointers.  

Burk, another sophomore, scored 11 points with three treys. A junior, Hylton added six points. Sophomore Hali Shorter and junior Ellie Lawson are two other players who will return with starting experience next winter. 

Judd scored 22 points to lead the Zizzers and Allyssa Joyner had 15 points.

West Plains (27-3) advanced to Thursday’s semifinals, where they’ll meet Union (18-1) at 5 at JQH Arena in Springfield. It’s the first Final Four trip for the Zizzers in 23 years.