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GIRLS HOOPS ROUNDUP: Yates reaches milestone in Carthage win; CHC girls top Greenfield; TJ girls suffer loss to Wheaton

 

CARTHAGE GIRLS 54, NEOSHO 34

NEOSHO, Mo. — Carthage built an early lead on the way to a Central Ozark Conference road win over Neosho on Monday in what turned out to be a memorable night for Tigers junior point guard Kianna Yates.

The Tigers (10-12, 1-3 COC) built a 10-point lead by the end of the first quarter and went into the intermission leading 26-16. Carthage methodically grew the lead over Neosho (8-13, 0-4 COC) in the second half through the final horn. 

“It was a good road win for us tonight,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said to SoMo Sports. “Neosho plays a tough 2-1-2 zone and it took us a few minutes to get into a rhythm. When we did, the shots started to fall and we were able to play with a double-digit lead for most of the game.

“The biggest key to victory tonight was our defense,” Moore added. “We switched between about four different defenses to keep Neosho off-balance. It’s a huge credit to all 10 girls who played that they handled all of that so well.”

During the win, Yates made history as she eclipsed the 1,000-point mark for her career. Yates finished the night with 14 points to tie for the team lead.

“Junior Kianna Yates accomplished a big milestone tonight with her 1,000th point,” Moore said. “Her teammates were so excited for her when we called time out. She is such a great basketball player and an even better teammate. We are proud of her and know she will score many more points before her career is over.”

Lauren Choate also finished with 14 points, while Maggie Boyd was right behind with 12. Sophie Shannon added six.

“Freshmen guards Lauren Choate and Maggie Boyd have really matured their offensive games this season,” Moore added. “To have both of them in double digits again gives us a three-headed monster for other teams to try to stop.”

Beclynn Garrett scored 13 points for the Wildcats, while Karlee Ellick added 10 points. 

Carthage hosts Willard on Thursday, while Neosho hosts Branson on Thursday.

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS GIRLS 47, GREENFIELD 38

A strong defensive effort led College Heights Christian’s girls to a 47-38 win over Greenfield on Monday.

College Heights coach John Blankenship noted he was proud of his team’s effort.

“It was a close game throughout the contest,” Blankenship said. “Greenfield jumped out to a 6-2 lead before we clamped down on defense and allowed only one point for the remainder of the first quarter. We emphasize defense, and our team continues to step up and play really solid defense. Tonight was a great collective team win. Our scoring was very balanced, which makes it difficult for teams to focus on just one player. We struggled shooting the ball again tonight and missed too many easy shots.”

The Cougars improved to 11-8.

Freshman guard Ava Lett led College Heights with 12 points and 10 rebounds. 

“Lauren Ukena was out with a shoulder injury, and so freshman guard Ava Lett stepped in and played a great game with a double-double,” Blankenship said. “She is a great shooter. She connected on a couple of 3s and a long 2 that gave us the offensive lift we needed to give us some breathing room down the stretch.”  

Jayli Johnson compiled eight points, eight rebounds, seven assists and four steals.

“Jayli Johnson is an incredible defender with a strong work ethic,” Blankenship said. “She sets the tone for the rest of the team.”

Libby Fanning scored 10 points and grabbed seven rebounds for the Cougars, while Maddy Colin chipped in five points and five boards. 

College Heights is at Thomas Jefferson on Tuesday night. 

 

WHEATON GIRLS 39, THOMAS JEFFERSON 30

Wheaton rallied from an early deficit and outlasted Thomas Jefferson in Ozark 7 action on Monday.

Thomas Jefferson held a three-point lead by the end of the first quarter before Wheaton rallied to hold a 19-14 advantage by the intermission. Wheaton pushed the lead to double digits in the third quarter and held off the Cavaliers down the stretch.

Lily Ray hit four 3-pointers on the way to a game-high 18 points for Wheaton. Monica Hinojosa had 14 points and Allison Whitman added seven.

Thomas Jefferson was led in scoring by Gabbi Hiebert, who finished with 14 points and made a pair of shots from the perimeter. Lannah Grigg added seven points and Alivia Beard finished with five.

Thomas Jefferson hosts College Heights on Tuesday.

 

AURORA GIRLS 40, MOUNT VERNON 36

AURORA, Mo. — Aurora rallied late for a Big 8 Conference win.

Mount Vernon overcame an early 10-point deficit and led 32-31 at the end of the third quarter.

But the Houn’ Dawgs outscored the Mountaineers 9-4 in the fourth quarter. 

Makenna Hall scored 13 points to lead Aurora, while Payden Blevins had 11 and Ellie Griese added nine.

Cameryn Cassity scored 13 points to lead Mount Vernon (10-9), while Jolie Prescott added 10 points.

Mount Vernon hosts Springfield Catholic on Thursday, while Aurora (10-12) is at Reeds Spring on Thursday.

GIRLS HOOPS: Carl Junction rides strong second half to knock off Webb City; Buerge reaches milestone

 

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Faced with a halftime deficit, Carl Junction came from behind with a strong second half to knock off rival Webb City 55-40 on Monday night in a Central Ozark Conference girls basketball contest inside the Cardinal Dome.

The host Cardinals led at the end of the first two periods, but the Bulldogs began the second half on a 12-2 run to take the lead for good.

“One thing we pride ourselves on is the first five minutes of the third quarter,” Bulldogs coach Brad Shorter said. “We went on a run and that was beneficial for us. We were seeing some things on the sideline that we relayed to the kids and we started making shots. It was really a good second half for us and it was a good night for our kids.”

Up five at the end of the third period, Carl Junction outscored Webb City 18-8 in the final eight minutes to secure the hard-fought win. 

The Cardinals were simply unable to hold off the Bulldogs’ second half surge.

“I thought our effort was good and I thought we did a lot of good things defensively tonight,” Cardinals coach Lance Robbins said. “I thought we controlled the tempo of the game in the first half and I thought they controlled the tempo in the second half. That was the difference in the game.”

NAMES & NUMBERS

Carl Junction junior guard Destiny Buerge surpassed 1,500 career points on Monday night against Webb City. Photo by Shawn Fowler for SoMo Sports.

Ranked sixth in Class 5, Carl Junction improved to 17-5 overall and 4-1 in the COC. A sixth straight win keeps the Bulldogs in the hunt for a COC title. 

“We’re right there,” Shorter said. “It’s a very tough league and very rarely does a team go undefeated in the conference. I’ve seen teams win it with three losses. If we keep plugging away, we’ll definitely have a shot.” 

Junior guard Destiny Buerge scored a game-high 22 points to lead the Bulldogs. 

That’s not all she accomplished. Buerge went past 1,500 career points during the game. 

“It was cool to see Destiny get to 1,500 points,” Shorter said. “That’s pretty impressive for a junior.”

The 5-foot-8 Buerge, who scored all of her points in the final three quarters, hit four 3-pointers, grabbed seven boards and had three steals. 

Two others reached double figures for the Bulldogs. 

Carl Junction junior guard Hali Shorter scored 13 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, while backcourt mate Klohe Burk contributed 10 points, seven steals and three assists. 

“I thought Hali played really well tonight,” Coach Shorter said. “We had her for a double-double and she hit some big shots. And I thought Klohe played really well. She played really hard defensively and took care of the ball when Destiny was on the sideline.”

Sophomore forward Kylie Scott compiled nine rebounds, four blocked shots and six points.

“Kylie has been a rebounding machine,” Shorter noted. “She missed a lot of games last year, but I think she’ll get to 1,000 points and maybe even 1,000 rebounds in her career.”

Webb City’s Kate Brownfield handles the ball against Carl Junction’s Ellie Lawson on Monday night.

Webb City fell to 8-11 and 1-3 in the COC. 

Junior guard Kate Brownfield led Webb City with 14 points with three 3-pointers and six rebounds. Brownfield was the lone Cardinal in double figures.

Freshman post player Sami Mancini contributed six points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocks, while senior forward Ripley Shanks scored seven points.

The Bulldogs out-rebounded the Cardinals 32-23. Webb City had 23 turnovers to Carl Junction’s 16. 

 

GAME RECAP

A low scoring opening frame, capped by two hoops inside by Webb City’s Shanks, ended with the Cardinals up 9-8.

The Bulldogs began the second period on a 14-5 run to take a 19-15 lead, but the Cardinals responded with seven straight points, as Mia Robbins hit a 3-pointer, Izzy Lopez made a layup and Mancini scored inside. 

Scott’s hoop in the paint cut Webb City’s lead to 22-21 at the break.

Buerge picked up two fouls in the first quarter and played limited minutes in the first half. 

Pictured is Carl Junction junior guard Hali Shorter.

Carl Junction came out on fire in the third quarter, as the visitors scored 12 of the first 14 points of the second half. Buerge scored the first nine points of the third quarter to give the Bulldogs a lead they would not relinquish.

Two free throws from Buerge gave CJ a 37-29 lead, but Brownfield buried a trey, cutting her team’s deficit to 37-32 at the end of the third quarter.

The Bulldogs recorded the first five points of the fourth quarter to go up 42-32. The Cardinals suffered through a scoring drought for the first half of the final frame.

“I think they picked up their pressure a little more in the second half and we didn’t value the basketball as well as we should have in the second half,” Robbins said. 

Down 10 with time running out, Brownfield hit a 3-pointer for the Cardinals, but Shorter answered with a trey of her own on the other end. Shorter and Buerge combined to go 6-for-6 at the foul line late in the game. 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City hosts Nixa on Thursday, while Carl Junction hosts Ozark on Thursday.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

 

Webb City’s Sami Mancini puts up a shot against Carl Junction on Monday night. All photos by Shawn Fowler for SoMo Sports.

 

Carl Junction’s Kylie Scott shoots in the lane under pressure on Monday night against Webb City.

 

Carl Junction’s Klohe Burk draws a foul on Mia Robbins after grabbing a steal on Monday night. All photos by Shawn Fowler.

Webb City’s Ripley Shanks pulls down a rebound in traffic against Carl Junction.

GIRLS HOOPS: Ozark builds early lead in conference win over Joplin

Eighth-ranked Ozark found rhythm behind the arc early to build a cushion on the way to a 60-50 Central Ozark Conference win over Joplin on Monday inside the Kaminsky Gymnasium. 

The Tigers (14-5) took a four-point lead into the second period before heating up from the perimeter to push the lead to double-digits by halftime. Ozark pushed the advantage to 17 to start the fourth quarter and Joplin (10-11) was unable to make a run at the lead before the final horn.

“I thought it was a tale of two halves,” Joplin coach Luke Floyd said. “Turnovers got us in the first half. We always talk about it, but you can’t win basketball games turning the ball over. I don’t know how many turnovers we had in the second half, but I told them if it isn’t noticeable then that’s a good thing. 

“Defensively, they were just carving up our zone, getting wide-open looks and they weren’t missing them. We switched to man in the second half and that helped us out a little bit. They were still getting open looks, but I felt it allowed us to close out on their shooters a lot better that way. And on offense, we stopped turning the ball over and started attacking downhill. When we get downhill, good things usually happen for us.”

GAME ACTION

Ozark took a four-point lead into the second quarter and built a 12-point cushion by the intermission thanks in large part to perimeter shooting. The Tigers knocked down a trio of 3-pointers down the stretch to gain some separation.

Ozark’s Riley Boggs and Zeffie Kent opened the second quarter with baskets in the paint to push the Tigers lead to 19-11. 

Up seven shortly after, Jordyn Foley sank a 3-pointer from the corner to give OHS its first 10-point lead of the game, 24-14, with 4:55 to play. Lyla Watson followed with a 3-ball to push the margin to 13. 

After a score on the drive by Joplin’s Brynn Driver, Kent buried another triple to push the lead to 30-16. The Eagles got a basket from Ella Hafer in the closing second to go into the intermission down 12.

“They were a good passing team,” Floyd said. “Every time they caught the ball they were downhill getting in the paint, we’d collapse and they’d kick it out for wide-open 3s. Your shooting percent is going to go up if you get open shots.”

Joplin used a 3-pointer from Brooke Nice and a driving bucket from Driver to trim the deficit back to 10, 39-29, with 1:55 left in the third quarter. However, Ozark closed the period on an 8-1 run fueled by 3-pointers from Watson and Alexis Soloman to head into the final eight minutes of play with a 47-30 lead.

By the time the Eagles trimmed the lead to 10 points, there were less than 30 seconds to play in regulation.

SCORING LEADERS

Kent led Ozark with 13 points, while Moriah Putt finished with 10 points. Boggs and Foley each finished with eight points in the win.

Driver finished with a game-high 18 points, 14 coming in the second, to lead Joplin. Emma Floyd and Nice each finished with 10 points, while Hafer had nine points in the loss.

UP NEXT

Joplin hosts No. 10 Republic at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday.

“It’s another tough game against Republic,” Coach Floyd said. “Nixa, Ozark and Republic are either ranked or getting votes. They are all also in our district. There are no nights off, but I think what we are proving to ourselves is that when we put our minds to it, we can play with anybody. … We just can’t come out and play scared from the get-go. Republic is a carbon copy of Ozark and Nixa. They are going to come out, play downhill, shoot the ball well and play defense. We have seen it enough the last two games, we should be able to make the adjustment, hopefully.”

 

COLLEGE SIGNINGS: Webb City seniors sign letters of intent

 

Webb City High School held a college signing ceremony for eight seniors on Monday afternoon inside the Cardinal Dome.

Two members of Webb City’s state championship gridiron squad signed to play football at the next level—Dupree Jackson and Christian Kinney. 

Baseball players Cooper Crouch, Jeremiah Leaming and Gavin Stowell made their college decisions official, while soccer player Delaney Duke and track and field and cross country standouts Dustin Brockmiller and Alanna Bundy also signed.

 

DUPREE JACKSON

A running back who rushed for 1,028 yards and 19 touchdowns during his senior season, Jackson inked with William Penn University in Iowa.

“It means a lot to me to meet this milestone that I’ve worked for all of high school,” Jackson said. “I couldn’t have asked for better people to be around. My friends, family and the coaching staff all helped me to develop in some way.”

Jackson, who plans on majoring in business administration, said William Penn seemed like a great fit.

“At the visit, everyone was very genuine and it seemed like a place I’d like to be at,” he said. 

 

CHRISTIAN KINNEY

A 6-foot-2, 250-pound offensive lineman, Kinney signed with Harding University in Arkansas.

“This means I get to play the sport I love for four or five more years,” Kinney said. “I wanted to join a winning program and somewhere that I felt the coaches really cared about me. I found that place with Harding. And I couldn’t imagine going to college and not playing football.”

Kinney, an all-state performer who plans to major in business management, thanked his coaches.

“I wouldn’t have had this opportunity or any others if it wasn’t for my time at Webb City,” he said. “It made me the player I am today.” 

 

COOPER CROUCH

A hard-throwing right-handed pitcher, Crouch signed with Crowder College.

“It feels great,” Crouch said of signing with the Roughriders. “It has been my dream since my brother (Theran) played there. It’s not far from home and they have a great program with great coaches. It makes it even better knowing there are people that didn’t think this would happen.”

Also an all-state linebacker for Webb City’s football team, Crouch noted he plans to major in kinesiology when he lands at a school following his time at Crowder.

“It’s a dream come true, but I want to go further with baseball,” Crouch said, noting playing at Webb City and with the Marucci Midwest programs helped him get to this point.

 

JEREMIAH LEAMING

An outfielder and right-handed pitcher, Leaming put pen to paper to play at Evangel.

“Getting to go to Evangel to learn and play baseball is an awesome opportunity,” Leaming said. “It means a lot. Evangel’s coaches and professors were so welcoming. It’s a faith-based school, which is important to me. Getting the chance to play at the next level is a blessing.” 

Leaming, who plans to major in either kinesiology and pre-physical therapy, thanked his past and present coaches.

“I also want to give thanks to God,” Leaming said. “I felt he led me to sign with Evangel. And I have to thank my family who sacrificed a lot to let me play the game I love.” 

 

GAVIN STOWELL

A left-handed pitcher and outfielder, Stowell inked with Highland Community College in Kansas.

“This is an opportunity to do what I love at the next level,” Stowell said. “I think Coach (Landon) Hay really wants to build something special at Highland, and I trust him to do so. Playing college baseball has been a dream of mine since the fifth grade, so achieving that goal feels pretty good.”

Stowell, a defensive back on Webb City’s football team, plans to major in exercise science.

“I’m just thankful for everyone who has helped me get here,” Stowell said. “Playing at Webb City really helped me understand the value of hard work.” 

 

DELANEY DUKE

An all-conference goalkeeper, Duke signed to join the women’s soccer team at Park University.  

“Park University is a soccer school,” Duke said. “I’m excited to become a part of a program that continually strives to succeed. Park is in a small town next to a big city, so it’s the best of both worlds. I have always loved soccer. To be able to continue to play as I pursue a degree means everything to me.” 

Duke, who plans to major in political science, thanked her family, coaches and teammates for helping her get to this point.

“I only started playing goalkeeper the summer before my freshman year,” she said. “The time I’ve spent with coaches and teammates has made me so much better. Without it, playing in college wouldn’t even be a possibility.” 

 

DUSTIN BROCKMILLER

Brockmiller signed to join the track and cross country programs at Pittsburg State.

Among his accomplishments as a distance runner, Brockmiller finished 17th at last fall’s state cross country meet, earning all-state recognition. 

“This means the world to me because I used to be horrible at running,” he said, noting a nearly 10-minute improvement in the 5K. “I just kept working and got better. All of the high school coaches have helped. I’ve truly been blessed. Nobody expected me to get to this point. It’s kind of special because it really proves you can accomplish anything you set your mind to.”

Brockmiller, who said he plans on majoring in military science or criminal justice, said Pittsburg State was an obvious choice.

“My mom and grandpa graduated from Pitt State, so getting to be the third generation is exciting,” he said. “To get to be a part of this program is going to be exciting.” 

 

ALANNA BUNDY

A distance runner, Bundy will join the always-solid cross country and track and field programs at Missouri Southern. 

“This means I get to develop athletically and academically with a great program,” Bundy said. “To be able to perform at this level is a great opportunity. The team at MSSU seems very welcoming and Coach (Jamie) Burnham has been so nice. MSSU feels like the right fit.”

Bundy, who finished 40th at last fall’s Class 4 state cross country meet, said she’s undecided on a major and thanked her coaches. 

“Running in high school significantly improved my athletic ability,” she said. “Coach (Dustin) Miller and (Shanda) Stepp helped me develop a strong mindset and helped me learn how to be consistent.” 

 

Eight Webb City seniors signed their letters of intent on Monday inside the Cardinal Dome. Pictured with their parents are Delaney Duke, Alanna Bundy, Dustin Brockmiller, Dupree Jackson, Christian Kinney, Jeremiah Leaming, Gavin Stowell and Cooper Crouch.