Your online home for Joplin area sports coverage.

STATE WRESTLING: Local athletes claim hardware; Neosho’s Zar, Seneca’s Roark, Monett’s Hartline earn championships

 

COLUMBIA, Mo. — With three state champions and four runners-up, the Joplin area fared well at the MSHSAA Wrestling Championships on Saturday at Mizzou Arena. 

Neosho’s Eli Zar, Seneca’s Brady Roark and Monett’s Simon Hartline all captured state championships. 

Carl Junction’s Sam Melton, Carthage’s Davion King, Monett’s Harrison Merriman and Diamond’s Landon Clement all took second place in their respective brackets.

Below is a look at how area squads fared at the state wrestling tournament.

 

NEOSHO 

In Class 3, Zar was the champ at 170 pounds. He defeated Hannibal’s Trevor Wilson 7-2 in the title bout. Zar, who went 50-4 this season, won his first two matches by fall before a 7-1 decision in the semifinals.

Four other Wildcats competed in third-place matches. 

Trent Neece placed third at 152 pounds, while Hayden Crane (132), Nate Copeland (138) and Collyn Kivett (160) all finished fourth. 

Also for Neosho, Fisher Butler took fifth at 113 and Johnny Chrisco placed sixth at 126.

With seven medalists, the Wildcats finished third in the Class 3 team standings with 122.5 points. Whitfield (181.5) and Hillsboro (125) were first and second. 

 

CARL JUNCTION

Carl Junction’s Melton was the Class 3 runner-up at 113 pounds.

In the bracket’s title match, Farmington’s Dayton Boyd defeated Melton 9-4. Melton went 3-1 at the tourney, with a win by fall and two major decisions, to finish the season with a record of 40-6.

The Bulldogs had two medalists at the event. 

In addition to Melton, CJ’s Lukas Walker won the 106-pound bracket’s third-place match 7-3 over Hannibal’s Reign Creech. 

Walker went 4-1 at the event, falling in the semifinals 3-1 to Kearney’s Ryder Shelton. Walker finished the season with a record of 43-5.

 

CARTHAGE

Competing in Class 4, King was the runner-up at 160 pounds. In the title bout, Seckman’s Cole Ruble won by fall over King. 

After going 3-1 at state, King finished the season with a record of 38-5. 

Also for the Tigers, Braxdon Tate won the fifth-place match at 152 by beating Grain Valley’s Tanner Barker 4-2. Tate went 32-8 this season. 

 

MCDONALD COUNTY 

The McDonald County Mustangs had two medalists in Class 3, as Samuel Murphy took third at 220 and Jayce Hitt placed fifth at 285. 

Murphy went 47-2 this season, while Hitt went 24-6.

 

SENECA 

Seneca had three medalists and one champion in Class 2.

Roark won the title bout at 120 pounds by technical fall, 20-4, over Helias Catholic’s Carter Prenger. Roark went 48-0 this season en route to his second championship.

Seneca’s Andrew Manley won the third-place match at 138 pounds, while Gabriel Commons took third at 170. Manley went 50-5 this season, while Commons had a record of 47-4. 

The Indians finished fifth in the Class 2 team standings.

 

OTHER SWMO MEDALISTS

In Class 2, Monett’s Hartline won by fall over Osage’s Zach Green in his title bout at 106 pounds, while Merriman suffered a 3-1 overtime loss to Boonville’s Peyton Hahn in his title match. 

Cassville’s duo of Arkhilleus Arguelles (132) and Jake Anthonysz (160) both finished fifth, while Aurora’s Ian Jackson took sixth at 220.

Nevada’s Kenneth Johnson went 1-2 at 195, while teammate Mokey Dawn went 0-2 at 126.

In Class 1, Diamond’s Clement lost by fall to Mid-Buchanan’s Wade Stanton in the title bout at 195. Diamond’s Breydon Pelt was sixth at 106.

In girls action, Seneca’s Isabella Renfro was the runner-up at 174 pounds and Cassville’s Annie Moore took second at 115.

 

JOPLIN RECAP

Joplin’s Gunner Price went 2-2 in the Class 4 heavyweight bracket, while Draven VanGilder went 0-2 at 195 pounds.

 

FULL RESULTS: MSHSAA Boys State Championships (trackwrestling.com)

GIRLS HOOPS: Thomas Jefferson comes up short against Bronaugh

Sixth-seeded Thomas Jefferson gave third-seeded Bronough everything they could handle but in the end, the Wildcats walked away with a 52-48 win over the Cavaliers in the opening round of the Class 1 District 5 tournament on Saturday.

Thomas Jefferson ends the season with a 7-16 record and graduates senior Alivia Beard.

The Cavaliers trailed by six heading into the second period when sophomore Gabbi Hiebert put her teammates on her back, scoring 13 of TJ’s 17 points in the quarter. She knocked down three 3-pointers, including a go-ahead catch-and-shoot 3-ball with five seconds left to send Thomas Jefferson into halftime with a 26-25 lead.

The Cavs held onto that slim lead in a third quarter that saw six lead changes in the final three minutes. Thomas Jefferson led 39-38 heading into the final quarter thanks to a nine-point effort in the period by Lannah Grigg. 

Sarah Mueller scored out of the break and Alexis Stamps added a charity make to push TJ’s lead to 42-38 early in the fourth.

Bronaugh rallied with the next seven points to regain the lead, 45-42, with less than four minute to play. 

Stamps knocked down a 3-pointer from the corner off an inbounds play to tie the game back up at 45s with 2:12 left in regulation, but Bronaugh’s Nicole Hagerman buried a 3-pointer with 1:28 left and added a score on the drive at the one-minute mark to give the Wildcats a 50-45 advantage.

Beard tried to keep the Cavs within striking distance, sinking a 3-pointer with 32 second left to cut the deficit to 50-48, but Hagerman sank two free throws with 18.7 seconds left to ice the win and send Bronaugh into the semifinals.

Hagerman finished with a game-high 29 points, while Gretchen Banes closed with 11.

Hiebert led Thomas Jefferson with 18 points, while Grigg finished with 11. Stamps finished with nine.

The Wildcats take on second-seeded McAuley Catholic at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday in the district semis.

DISTRICT GIRLS HOOPS: McAuley pulls away from Everton to open postseason play

Second-seeded McAuley Catholic girls basketball built a double-digit lead by halftime and pulled away down the stretch in the fourth quarter to earn a 57-39 win over seventh-seeded Everton in the Class 1 District 5 tournament on Saturday hosted by Thomas Jefferson.

The Warriors (17-10), who were without starting forward Lily Black because of illness, ended the first quarter on a surge and opened the second period in similar fashion to gain a 13-point lead with four minutes left in the first half. McAuley flirted with pushing the lead to 20 or more several times in the second half before Everton (3-18) made a run early in the fourth period to cut the lead to 11. Facing their first real adversity in the game, the Warriors responded with a 10-0 run to put the finishing touches on the district-opening win.

“The first thing I said to them after the game was that it wasn’t pretty, but at this point in the season, it’s survive and advance time,” McAuley coach Mike Howard said. “I’ll take an ugly win any day of the week. We were down Lily in this game and that was a huge loss because she does great defensively down low and she does a great job of getting our guards open. Other girls stepped in and got some minutes and played pretty well. … Overall, I am proud of their effort and I am just glad to be moving on.”

GAME ACTION

After playing to a 4-4 tie in the early going, McAuley took the first momentum swing after closing the first period on a 9-2 run highlighted by buckets from Kennedy DeRuy, Avery Eminger and Kloee Williamson to take a 13-6 advantage into the second period.

The Warriors opened the second period as hot as they closed the first, using an 8-2 run over the first four minutes to push the lead to double digits, 21-8. Eminger had an offensive rebound for a putback score, while DeRuy knocked down back to back 3-pointers to close the run.

“It’s very important for our confidence, especially down a starter, to close out quarters and open the next one well. … They started out in a man (defense) against us and I thought we could take advantage of that with some of our athleticism. When they switched to a zone, we just tried to find the open spots and attack. As long as we didn’t get in a hurry, we were successful.” 

McAuley took a 30-14 lead into the intermission and extended the advantage to 39-24 after a back-and-forth third period.

Everton made a run at the lead early in the fourth quarter, using a 9-2 run to trim the deficit to 11, 41-30, with less than six minutes to play in the game.

The Warriors answered the adversity with a scoring surge of their own, putting 10 unanswered points on the scoreboard to push the lead to more than 20 points for the first time, 53-32, with 2:35 left. DeRuy started the run with a three-point play after drawing contact on a score on the break. Eminger grabbed an offensive rebound for a bucket before DeRuy scored on a back cut. DeRuy closed the run with a floater to push the lead to 53-32 with 2:35 left in regulation.

“I think they knew this was do-or-die time,” Howard said of his team’s play down the stretch. “They had to do something to stop that run because they didn’t want to allow (Everton) to hang around until the end because if they are close late, all the pressure is on us. … I am proud of them for not falling to the adversity they faced there. A lot of these girls have played in big games the last couple of years and they are kind of used to that pressure. I thought they responded beautifully to it.”

SCORING LEADERS

DeRuy led McAuley with a game-high 26 points, including three 3-pointers. She had 14 points in the second half. Eminger finished with 22 points, 13 coming in the first half. Williamson finished with five points.

Jazzmenn Luney closed the game with 20 points, while Erza Wood had 11 for Everton. Kenzie Sartin finished with six points in the loss.

UP NEXT

McAuley takes on (3) Bronaugh (15-9) in the district semifinals at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

HOOPS: Brackets released for Class 6 District 5 tourney

 

Joplin High School will host the Class 6 District 5 girls and boys basketball tournaments from Feb. 26-March 4.

Brackets for both tournaments are listed below.

 

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5 TOURNAMENT

GIRLS BRACKET

Saturday, Feb. 26 games

11 a.m. — (1) Kickapoo vs. (8) Springfield Central

12:30 — (4) Ozark vs. (5) Carthage

2 — (2) Nixa vs. (7) Joplin

3:30 — (3) Republic vs. (6) Lebanon

 

March 1 semifinals

6 —Kickapoo-Central winner vs. Ozark-Carthage winner

7:30 — Nixa-Joplin winner vs. Republic-Lebanon winner

 

March 4

6 p.m. — Title game

 

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5 TOURNAMENT

BOYS BRACKET

Monday, Feb. 28 games

3 — (1) Nixa vs. (8) Lebanon

4:30 — (4) Joplin vs. (5) Republic

6 — (2) Kickapoo vs. (7) Central

7:30 — (3) Ozark vs. (6) Carthage

 

March 2 semifinals

6 — Nixa-Lebanon winner vs. Joplin-Republic winner

7:30 — Kickapoo-Central winner vs. Ozark-Carthage winner

 

March 4

7:30 — Title game

HOOPS: Class 5 District 6 brackets released

 

The brackets for the Class 5 District 6 girls and boys basketball tournaments have been released.

Willard High School will be the host for the tourneys. Carl Junction’s girls and Bolivar’s boys are the top seeds. 

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 6 TOURNAMENT

GIRLS BRACKET

(At Willard)

Saturday, Feb. 26 games

10 a.m. — (1) Carl Junction vs. (8) Hillcrest

11:30 — (4) Parkview vs. (5) Neosho

1 p.m.­ ­— (2) Willard vs. (7) McDonald County

2:30 — (3) Webb City vs. (6) Bolivar

 

Feb. 28 semifinals

6— CJ-Hillcrest winner vs. Parkview-Neosho winner.

7:30 —Willard-Mac County winner vs. Webb City-Bolivar winner

 

March 4

6 p.m. — Title game

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 6 TOURNAMENT

BOYS BRACKET

(At Willard)

Saturday, Feb. 26 games

4—(1) Bolivar vs. (8) Carl Junction

5:30 — (4) Neosho vs. (5) Willard

7 —(2) Parkview vs. (7) Hillcrest

8:30 — (3) Webb City vs. McDonald County

 

March 1 semifinals

6—Bolivar-CJ winner vs. Neosho-Willard winner

7:30 —Parkview-Hillcrest winner vs. Webb City-Mac County winner

 

March 4

7:30 — Title game

HOOPS ROUNDUP: Carthage squads fall at Ozark; Neosho boys suffer loss at Nixa; College Heights girls end regular season win lopsided win

 

OZARK BOYS 81, CARTHAGE 61

OZARK, Mo. — Ozark pulled away in the second half for an 81-61 win over Carthage on Friday night in Central Ozark Conference boys basketball action. 

The clash between Tigers was tied at 21 at the end of the first quarter and Ozark led 40-36 at halftime.

The hosts outscored the visitors 41-25 after intermission.

Ozark held a 58-50 lead heading into the fourth quarter. The host Tigers finished strong, outscoring Carthage 23-11 in the fourth quarter.

The loss snapped a three-game conference winning streak for Carthage (18-6, 4-4 COC).

Clay Kinder scored 22 points and hit four 3-pointers for Carthage, while Max Templeman added 13 points. Also for CHS, Britt Coy had 10 points and Joel Pugh scored eight.

Ozark improved to 17-7 and 6-1 in the COC. 

Tyler Harmon scored 21 points, while Ethan Whatley added 18. 

These two teams will meet again on Feb. 28 in the opening round of the Class 6 District 5 tournament at Joplin High School. Ozark is the No. 3 seed, while Carthage is seeded sixth. 

Carthage ends the regular season at rival Webb City on Tuesday night.

 

OZARK GIRLS 50, CARTHAGE 19

OZARK, Mo. — Ranked seventh in Class 6, Ozark took control early and the host Tigers continued to add to their lead throughout the COC clash.

Ozark held an 11-5 lead by the end of the opening period. Ozark then outscored Carthage 16-4 in the second period to take a comfortable 27-9 halftime lead. 

The host Tigers led 40-15 at the end of the third quarter. A 10-4 fourth quarter gave Ozark a convincing win. 

Sophie Shannon scored seven points for Carthage, while Kianna Yates added six points.

Zeffie Kent scored 16 points to lead Ozark (19-5, 7-1 COC). 

Carthage (11-14, 2-6 COC) is at Webb City at 6 on Tuesday. 

 

NIXA BOYS 77, NEOSHO 51

NIXA, Mo. — Nixa built a double-digit lead by halftime and pulled away from Neosho down the stretch for a Central Ozark Conference win on Friday.

Ranked fourth in Class 6, the Eagles (22-3, 8-0 COC) led by 11 points at halftime before outscoring the Wildcats by nine in the third quarter to build an insurmountable lead down the stretch.

Kael Combs led Nixa with 26 points, 16 coming in the first half. Jaret Nelson had 17 points and Jordyn Turner finished with 12. 

K’dyn Waters led Neosho (16-8, 3-4 COC) with 16 points, while Isaiah Green added 11 and Carter Fenske finished with 10. The Wildcats are ranked ninth in Class 5. 

Neosho is at Joplin on Tuesday.

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS GIRLS 50, SARCOXIE 33

SARCOXIE, Mo. — College Heights Christian closed out the regular season with a convincing road win.

“We got off to a tremendous start, winning the first quarter 16-6,” CHC coach John Blankenship said. “Our defense was great in the opening quarter and our transition game was much better tonight. We rebounded well and gave ourselves second and third shot opportunities. I was very pleased with our effort tonight.” 

CHC’s Libby Fanning recorded her 11th double-double with 15 points and 18 rebounds, while Addie Lawrence scored 10 points and grabbed eight rebounds.

Jayli Johnson had 13 points and five assists, while Maddy Colin contributed 14 rebounds to go with four assists.

The Cougars (14-10) begin Class 2 District 12 play at 7:30 on Monday night in Verona.

Second-seeded College Heights awaits either No. 3 Marionville or No. 6 Purdy in the semifinals. 

Also of note, the College Heights boys beat Sarcoxie 59-29 to end the regular season at 21-4. 

The CHC boys are the No. 1 seed for the district tournament. The Cougars will take on either No. 4 Miller or No. 5 Purdy at 6 on Tuesday in Verona.

 

MOUNT VERNON GIRLS 54, MCDONALD COUNTY 39

The Mountaineers took control with a 17-4 second period. 

Cameryn Cassity scored 19 points for Mount Vernon (13-10), while Jolie Prescott and Raegan Boswell added 14 points apiece.

Addy Leach scored 16 points for McDonald County, while Anna Clarkson had eight.

BOYS HOOPS: Joplin rallies past Willard behind Always Wright’s 41 points

WILLARD, Mo. —  Joplin trailed by double digits in the second half only to put on a furious rally down the stretch on the way to an 80-77 Central Ozark Conference win with senior guard Always Wright’s career-high 41 points.

The Eagles (17-7, 5-3 COC) trailed by nine at the intermission and fell behind by as many as 11 in the second half before rallying back in the final six minutes of action to take the lead and hold off the Tigers (14-11, 2-6 COC) for the conference road win.

SCORING LEADERS

Wright led the way for Joplin with 41 points. He scored 19 in the second half and 12 points in the fourth quarter as the offensive catalyst in the win.

All Wright finished with 18 points, while Brantley Morris scored 11 to give Joplin three players in double figures.

Haden Brown led Willard with 29 points, while Gavin Davis finished with 22 points in the loss. Brett Hall closed with 13 for the Tigers.

GAME ACTION

Joplin went into the half down 43-34 before Willard pushed the lead to 52-41 with less than five minutes to play following back to back buckets from Brown.

Joplin used a 9-0 run late in the third quarter to trim a 10-point deficit down to 56-55. Morris started the run with a driving score before Always Wright knocked down a floater. Morris buried a 3-pointer to cut the lead to three before All Wright converted on the drive to close the run.

Brown added a three-point play and Hall knocked down a 3-pointer for Willard to give the Tigers a 62-55 lead heading into the fourth quarter.
Always Wright made the first three baskets for the Eagles out of the break, trimming the Tigers advantage to five points, 66-61, in the process. All Wright converted from the perimeter at the 5:41 mark to cut the lead to four and scored on the drive the next possession to make the score 68-62 with 4:55 left in regulation. Always Wright brought Joplin all the way back with a stepback mid-range jumper with 4:25 on the clock to tie the game at 68s.

Joplin took its first lead of the game since early in the first quarter with less than four minutes to play after Morris drilled a 3-ball from the wing to make the score 73-70. 

Willard tied the game up on an inside bucket from Davis only for Morris to bury another 3-pointer from the corner at the two-minute mark to give the Eagles a 76-73 advantage.

Brown scored inside with a minute left to cut the lead to one, but Always Wright answered with two free throws with 29 seconds left to push the lead back to three.
Brown again found room inside on the drive, but with 10.2 left in regulation, Always Wright converted both shots at the foul line to keep the Tigers three points shy of a tie.

Willard missed a shot at the buzzer, sending Joplin to the conference road win.

UP NEXT

Joplin hosts Neosho on Tuesday.

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City suffers heartbreaking loss at Republic

 

REPUBLIC, Mo. — Republic’s Devon McMillin made a layup at the buzzer to give his team a 60-59 victory over Webb City on Friday in a Central Ozark Conference boys basketball clash.

The Tigers trailed by one with five seconds left. Republic guard Ahlante Askew lost the ball near the foul line, dove on the floor to grab the loose ball and somehow hoisted a shot up in a crowd. McMillin caught the errant shot and laid in it at the buzzer. 

Ranked sixth in Class 5, Webb City fell to 16-8 and 4-3 in the COC. Republic improved to 15-10 and 5-3 in the conference. 

This one featured 12 ties and 19 lead changes.

There were four ties in the first quarter. Dante Washington went 3-for-4 at the foul line late in the opening frame to give Webb City a 17-16 advantage.

Cohl Vaden had 11 first-half points for the Cardinals and teammate Max Higginbotham hit a trio of 3-pointers in the second quarter, but the game was deadlocked at 33 at halftime.

The third period saw both teams trade the lead back and forth. A trey just before the buzzer by Higginbotham gave Webb City a 50-48 lead at the end of the third quarter.

The game was tied at 57 with 3:15 remaining.

Vaden’s hoop in the lane gave the Cardinals a 59-58 advantage before the two teams traded turnovers and empty possessions. 

The Tigers missed a shot from the perimeter and then turned the ball over with 18 seconds left. 

Up one, the Cardinals missed the front end of a one-and-one with six seconds left and Republic took a timeout with five seconds remaining before the game-winning bucket went in as time expired. 

Webb City’s Trey Roets, Higginbotham and Vaden scored 15 points apiece to lead the Cardinals. Washington added eight points, while Roets had a team-high nine rebounds.

Webb City made 21-of-44 field goal attempts (47 percent).

Republic made 24-of-45 shots (53 percent). 

Avery Moody led the Tigers with 19 points, while Brenley Hagewood scored 14. McMillin added 12 points and Askew had 10. 

Webb City hosts Carthage on Tuesday night.

 

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

GIRLS HOOPS: Joplin’s rally comes up short in road loss to Willard

WILLARD, Mo. — Joplin held an early advantage before Willard rallied to take a double-digit lead late only to see the Eagles make a final push that come up just short in a 62-57 loss to the Tigers in Central Ozark Conference action on Friday.

The Eagles (10-14, 1-7 COC) led for much of the first quarter before the Tigers (11-14, 3-5 COC) found life to close the opening period and start the second quarter, taking their first lead of the game. Willard pulled out to a 15-point lead to start the fourth quarter. Joplin rallied late but ran out of time before getting a chance to tie the game.

Willard is a good, well-coached team,” Joplin coach Luke Floyd said. “They play hard and play great team basketball. We got off to a really good start and then hit a lull in the second and third quarters. To our girls’ credit, they kept fighting and made a run in the fourth. Hopefully we can build off of the fourth quarter heading into the last week of the season.”

GAME ACTION

Joplin, which has lost five games in a row, played in front for much of the opening period and held a 12-7 lead with 2:18 to play when Willard found life. The Tigers closed the first quarter on a 7-2 run to tie the game and opened the second period with the first five points to take their first lead of the game. Kailyn Washington gave Willard its first lead with a driving score to open the second quarter before Brielle Adamson knocked down a 3-pointer from the wing to make the score 19-14.

Willard built the lead to eight points with two minutes left in the second quarter before a Brooke Nice 3-pointer and Emma Floyd elbow jumper to close the first half to trim Joplin’s deficit to 29-26 head into the intermission. 

Willard took control of the contest while closing out the third quarter with the momentum after a late 12-0 surge led the Tigers to a 15-point lead to start the fourth quarter. Willard led 37-29 early in the third off a 3-pointer from Carolina Crawford before Nice converted from the perimeter and Ella Hafer scored on the drive to cut the deficit to 37-34. 

From there, the Tigers scored the next 12 points to extend the lead to double digits. Crawford led the push with five points, while Washington had four points. Morgan Hall added a 3-pointer. 

Willard led 52-38 to start the fourth quarter  and by as much as 17 points before Joplin rallied to cut the lead to three in the final minute, but the Eagles never gained possession with the chance to tie. Hafer and Brynn Driver each had six points in the fourth quarter to lead the resurgence.

SCORING LEADERS

Willard was led in scoring by Crawford, who finished with four 3-pointers and 18 points. Washington converted twice from the perimeter and finished with 15 points. Adamson had nine points on three 3-pointers. The Tigers hit 10 total shots from beyond the arc.

Joplin was led in scoring by Hafer, who finished with 15 points. Nice had 14 points, while Driver closed the game with 11. Floyd finished with nine points in the loss.

UP NEXT

Joplin hosts Neosho on Monday.

STATE SWIMMING: Carl Junction takes 6th in Class 1; local athletes earn state hardware

 

Led by a pair of silver medalists, and with five trips to the awards podium overall, Carl Junction finished sixth in the Class 1 team standings at the 47th annual MSHSAA Girls Swimming & Diving Championships on Friday at the St. Peters Rec-Plex.

The Bulldogs finished with 114.5 points. Parkway West (220.5), Cape Girardeau Central (187), Clayton (165), Pembroke Hill (129) and Webster Groves (124.5) were the only squads to top the Bulldogs.

“The girls are in good spirits, and I feel really good about how we performed,” Carl Junction coach Stephanie Miller said in a phone interview. “I told them they had to really show up at the prelims and hold on for the finals. And for the most part, they did that. There was one relay that fell short, but we moved on and did really well today. I was happy. Going to the medal stand five times is fun, and two second places is really good.”

Carl Junction sophomore Chloe Miller was the runner-up in the 50-yard freestyle with her time of 24.39 seconds. Rogersville’s Maddie Atwood took first in 23.67.

Miller also finished sixth in the 100 freestyle with a time of 54.61.

Carl Junction’s Skyler Sundy placed second in the 100 backstroke in 59.72 seconds. New Covenant’s Maggie Moore took first in 55.74.

A junior, Sundy also placed fifth in the 50 freestyle (24.68).

“For two of them to be top eight in two races was great to see,” Coach Miller said.  

The Bulldogs finished fourth in the 200 medley relay in 1:53, with Sundy, Abigail Wilson, Miller and Alanza Montez competing.

The CJ team of Sundy, Elyanna Dogotch, Montez and Miller finished ninth in the 200 free relay (1:42). 

“I put freshman Elyanna Dogotch on the 200 free relay so Carsyn Smith could get ready for the backstroke, and Elyanna showed up big with a lifetime best time… in the finals at state,” Miller said. “That was one of my favorite swims today because it’s fun to see someone deal with that pressure.”

CJ senior Carsyn Smith placed 12th in the 100 backstroke with a time of 1:02, while Wilson was 16th in the 100 breaststroke (1:11).

The Bulldogs will lose seniors Montez and Smith to graduation, but Carl Junction will return a solid core next winter. 

“It’s always hard to see the seniors go,” Coach Miller said. “We’ve had a solid team all year. And we’re already looking at next year. We’re ready to go and ready to do it again. It’s just so much fun.” 

The Bulldogs weren’t the only local squad to have a nice showing alongside the state’s best. 

The Carthage Tigers and Webb City Cardinals also had state medalists. 

Carthage junior Madison Riley placed fourth in the 100 butterfly in 58.86 to earn state medalist honors. According to Tigers coach Braden McBride, Riley is the first state medalist in program history.

Carthage took 11th in the 200 freestyle relay in 1:44, with senior Cassidy Smith, sophomore Aubree Santillan, senior Hope Fultz and Riley competing.

The Tigers were 12th in the 200 medley relay, as Santillan, Smith, Riley and Fultz recorded a time of 1:57.

Webb City junior Sophia Whitesell placed eighth in the 200 individual medley with a time of 2:16 to earn a state medal. Whitesell also placed 16th in the 500 freestyle in 5:31.

Cardinals junior Skylar Powell finished 13th in the 50 freestyle (25.64) and 14th in the 100 free (56.64).

Webb City fared well in all three relays. 

The 400 freestyle relay team of Powell, sophomore Avery Mitchell, freshman Alix Davis and Whitesell finished 11th in 3:49.

Webb City’s 200 medley relay team of freshman Camryn Klosterman, senior Makenzie Storm, Whitesell and junior Olivia Honey finished 15th in 2:01. The Cardinals placed 16th in the 200 free relay in 1:46, with Powell, senior Ella Holt, Honey and Mitchell competing.

Like the Bulldogs, Shawn Klosterman’s Cardinals will return a solid core next year.  

Carthage (38) and Webb City (37) were 20th and 21st, respectively, in the team standings.  

Before departing St. Peters for a long bus ride home, Coach Miller noted the Southwest Missouri squads represented the area well at the state championships.

“We see so much great competition in Southwest Missouri with Webb City, Kickapoo and Glendale and everybody,” Miller said. “We all go at it during the season and then it’s fun here at state because we’re all cheering for each other. I love that dynamic. We’re from an area that is so powerful down there in the corner. We all show up here at state and we all care about each other. The area coaches hang out and we look forward to seeing all the area kids compete. It’s been really fun and that’s what I love about this sport.”

 

MSHSAA Girls Swimming & Diving Championships

Class 1 top 10 teams

Parkway West 220.5, Cape Girardeau Central 187, Clayton 165, Pembroke Hill 129, Webster Groves 124.5, Carl Junction 114.5, Villa Duchesne 104.5, Parkway Central 99.5, Visitation 99, Mehlville 95.

 

FULL RESULTS:  

MSHSAA 2022 Class 1 Girls Results

BOYS HOOPS: Thomas Jefferson builds early lead and holds off McAuley

Thomas Jefferson built a double-digit lead in the first quarter and added on throughout on the way to a 59-46 win in Ozark 7 Conference and district action on Thursday.

The Cavaliers (18-6, 4-2 Ozark 7) opened the game with a double digit scoring run as the catalyst for Thomas Jefferson’s 11-point lead by the end of the first eight minutes. Thomas Jefferson pushed the lead to 18 by the intermission and past the 10-point mark three minutes into the second half. The Warriors (6-20, 0-6 Ozark 7) made a run at the lead in the fourth, but the Cavaliers held McAuley at bay in the closing minutes to preserve the district road win.

“I thought we played well early, but we obviously didn’t do a good job there down the stretch that last quarter and a half,” Thomas Jefferson coach Chris Myers said. “I thought we got a little complacent. We talked about it before this game ever tipped off—McAuley is never going to go away. Coach (Tony) Witt does a great job with them. They battle tooth and nail all the way until the end no matter what the score is. They proved me correct right there because they stayed after it the whole game.”

SENIOR NIGHT

McAuley celebrated Senior Night before the game and held ceremonies for Kevin Tran, Declan Berkstresser, Jacob Bracich and Jeffrey Horinek.

“Those guys have been through some trials and tribulations,” McAuley coach Tony Witt said of his senior class. “When I took the job (two seasons ago), someone’s parent from that senior class told me those kids had a different coach every single year until I arrived. This is the only stretch where they have had some stability in their basketball career. For them to stick it out and keep bearing it, it says a lot about their character. They are absolutely great kids and high-character guys. I just wish I had them for all four years instead of two.”

GAME ACTION

Thomas Jefferson wasted little time taking control of the game, using a 13-0 run out of the game to dictate the pace early. Drew Goodhope and Caden Myers fueled the early surge with six points and five points, respectively. 

“Anytime you can build a lead, you are pretty happy,” Myers said. “I thought we played well in the first half. We just kind of let up right there at the wrong time and things started to get away from us. I thought we reeled it back in and really did a good job down the stretch of finishing.”

Jay Ball finished the first quarter with six points and ended the first half in double figures along with Myers and Goodhope to propel Cavaliers to an 18-point advantage by halftime, 36-18. 

Thomas Jefferson pushed the lead to more than 20 for the first time early in the third quarter after a score on the break by Myers and a pair of makes at the foul line from Ball made the score 42-20 with five minutes to play.

McAuley was able to close the third quarter on a 12-5 run to trim the deficit to 47-32 after a three-point play from Michael Parrigon in the closing seconds of the period.

The Warriors refused to go away down the stretch, cutting the lead down to 12 points, 52-40, off back to back 3-pointers from Rocco Bazzano-Joseph, who missed a significant portion of the season with a wrist injury, near the midway point of the fourth. Noah Black earned a steal for a layup on the break the other way to make the score 55-44 with 2:08 left in regulation, but that would be as close as the Warriors would get to the lead before the sound of the final horn. 

“He is just starting to feel comfortable again,” Witt said of Bazzano-Joseph. “When he first came back, you could tell he was favoring the wrist and trying to figure it out. He had only played four games before getting hurt and came back in mid-January. For him to come out of his shell tonight is really big for us down the stretch. When you have someone like him playing on the side of Noah (Black) and Michael (Parrigon) on the perimeter, it’s—optimistic is the word I would use. It’s very optimistic.”

SCORING LEADERS

Ball finished with a game-high 22 points and added 16 rebounds for a double-double to lead the way for Thomas Jefferson. Myers had two 3-pointers and finished with 15 points, while Goodhope scored 11 points, all of which came in the first half.

Bazzano-Joseph knocked down a game-high five 3-pointers and tied Ball with a game-high 22 points in the loss. Parrigon finished with eight points.

UP NEXT

Thomas Jefferson takes on Bronaugh (5-19) at 7:30 p.m. on Monday in the opening round of the Class 1 District 5 tournament hosted by the Cavaliers.

The McAuley boys take on Sheldon (8-17) at 4:30 on Monday in the opening round of the Class 1 District 5 tournament hosted by Thomas Jefferson.

GIRLS HOOPS: Early defense propels McAuley past Thomas Jefferson on Senior Night

McAuley Catholic girls basketball used a staunch defensive effort in the second quarter to build a double-digit lead by the intermission, setting the pace in the second half on the way to a 50-27 Ozark 7 Conference win over Thomas Jefferson on Senior Night.

The Warriors (16-10, 4-2 Ozark 7) took a 12-10 lead into the second period before holding the Cavaliers (7-15) scoreless in the period to build an 11-point lead by halftime. McAuley pushed the lead to more than 30 points in the second half on the way to the district win.

“Senior Night is kind of an emotional night because they are playing their final game on the home floor,” McAuley coach Mike Howard said. “You always want to send the girls out on a win. The last few games have not gone our way, so we wanted to come out and focus on defense and make it an emphasis.”

SENIOR NIGHT MEMORIES

The McAuley girls celebrated seniors Kayleigh Teeter, Kennedy DeRuy and Avery Eminger before the tip with Thomas Jefferson.

“They have been playing together since they were little kids,” Howard said. “I just can’t say enough about all three of them. Their work ethic and passion for the game—there are not three other people that work harder than them. I am so proud to be able to send them to a win their last night here on our floor.”

Teeter, who is the third all-time leading scorer in McAuley girls basketball history with 1,383 points, saw her senior year end prematurely after suffering a season-ending knee injury near the midway point of the schedule. Allowing her one more chance to take the court in her team’s final home game of the regular season, Teeter suited for McAuley in her knee brace and was allowed to score the Warriors’ first points of the game on an uncontested layup. 

“I wanted to give her one more chance with everything that has happened,” Howard said of Teeter’s final basket as a Warrior. “(The knee injury) was so unfortunate for her. She is a great kid and the most humble person I have ever met. For a leader and one of our best players, it means a lot to send her out on a positive note and to give her the reception she deserves from the fans. She has meant a world to this team and our community.”

Getting all three seniors involved, Eminger tipped the ball to DeRuy, who dribbled down the court before passing to Teeter for the layup.

“It was a great honor just to go out there one last time with teammates I have played with since third grade,” Teeter said. “I cherished that moment and really tried to enjoy it. It was really meaningful, especially since it was (Kennedy who passed it to me). We’ve played together since third grade, doing travel ball with her. Just having that friendship and chemistry with her over the years is really special.” 

GAME ACTION

McAuley held a two-point lead after the first quarter and pushed the lead to double digits by the intermission thanks in large part to the Warriors’ effort on defense. McAuley held Thomas Jefferson scoreless in the second quarter, using what turned out to be a 9-0 run in the period to push the margin to 21-10 by halftime.

“The first quarter I felt like we were timid and still thinking about Kayleigh’s reception,” Howard said. “We weren’t too focused on playing the game. When the second quarter started, we actually started playing and got back into what we like to do and that is just play good defense.”

Eminger highlighted the scoring in the second quarter. After Lily Black opened the quarter with a bucket inside, Eminger scored the next six points for the Warriors to push the lead to 20-10 with 55 seconds left in the first half. 

McAuley pushed the lead to 19 several times in the third period before DeRuy knocked down a catch-and-shoot 3-pointer from the wing with less than three minutes to play in the quarter to give the Warriors a 37-16 advantage.

The Warriors outscored the Cavs 8-2 to close out the third quarter, with DeRuy accounting for a score off the drive and a corner 3-pointer to push the lead to 45-18 to start the fourth. Her final two baskets of the quarter pushed DeRuy into fourth place all-time on the McAuley girls career scoring list with 1,323 points.

SCORING LEADERS

DeRuy led the Warriors with 22 points, including a game-high five 3-pointers in the win. Eminger closed with 10 points and Kloee Williamson finished with eight. Black added 10 points.

Thomas Jefferson’s Tannah Grigg and Alexis Stamps finished with a team-high seven points each, while Lannah Grigg scored six.

UP NEXT

The McAuley girls take on Everton (3-17) at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday in the first round of the Class 1 District 5 tournament hosted by Thomas Jefferson. 

Thomas Jefferson takes on Bronaugh (14-9) at 1 p.m. on Saturday in the opening round of the Class 1 District 5 tournament hosted by the Cavaliers.

STATE SWIMMING: Athletes from Carl Junction, Carthage, Webb City advance to finals

 

ST. PETERS, Mo. — Area squads fared well on the opening day of the 47th annual MSHSAA Girls Swimming & Diving Championships.

The Class 1 prelims were held on Thursday at the St. Peters Rec-Plex, with the top 16 in each event advancing to Friday’s finals. 

The top eight in each preliminary event qualified for the championship finals, with those who finished 9th through 16th will swim in Friday’s consolation finals. 

 

CARL JUNCTION RESULTS

Carl Junction’s Chloe Miller and Skyler Sundy advanced to the championship finals in two events apiece.

Miller finished second in the 50-yard freestyle prelims with a time of 24.15 seconds and also placed fifth in the 100 freestyle in 53.67 seconds. 

Sundy placed second in the 100 backstroke (59.93) and took sixth in the 50 free (24.63).

Also qualifying to compete in individual events on Friday were Carsyn Smith and Abigail Wilson. 

Smith placed 13th in the 100 backstroke in 1:02, while Wilson finished 14th in the 100 breaststroke (1:10). 

The Bulldogs also advanced in two relays. 

Carl Junction’s 200-yard medley relay team of Sundy, Wilson, Miller and Alanza Montez finished third with a time of 1:52.

The Bulldogs were ninth in the 200 freestyle relay, as Montez, Smith, Sundy and Miller recorded a time of 1:43. 

Carl Junction’s 400 freestyle relay team of Montez, Smith, Elyanna Dogotch and Madeleine Garoutte finished 19th (3:59) and did not advance. 

Montez finished 26th in the 50 free (26.08).

 

CARTHAGE RESULTS

Carthage’s Madison Riley placed fourth in the 100 butterfly prelims with a time of 58.4 seconds to advance to the championship finals. 

Cassidy Smith finished 16th in the 100 freestyle in 56.81.

The Tigers finished 11th in the 200 medley relay in 1:56, with Aubree Santillan, Smith, Riley and Hope Fultz competing. 

Carthage’s 200 freestyle relay team of Riley, Santillan, Fultz and Smith took 12th place in 1:44. 

The Tigers just missed advancing in the 400 free relay, as the team of Riley, Smith, Fultz and Santillan finished 17th in 3:53. 

Also, Santillan took 23rd in the 100 backstroke (1:06) and Ava Lacey finished 32nd in the 200 freestyle (2:13). 

 

WEBB CITY RESULTS

Webb City’s Sophia Whitesell advanced to the championship finals of the 200 individual medley by finishing eighth in 2:14. 

Whitesell also moved on to the “B” finals of the 500 freestyle by finishing ninth (5:24). 

Skylar Powell moved on in two eventsthe 50 freestyle and the 100 freestyle. 

Powell finished 15th in both events, recording a time of 25.51 in the 50 free and a time of 56.03 in the 100 free. 

The Cardinals advanced to Friday in all three relays.

The team of Powell, Avery Mitchell, Alix Davis and Whitesell finished 12th in the 400 freestyle relay (3:50).

Webb City’s 200 medley relay team of Camryn Klosterman, Makenzie Storm, Whitesell and Olivia Honey finished 16th in 1:59.

Webb City’s 200 freestyle relay team of Powell, Ella Holt, Honey and Mitchell finished 16th with a time of 1:46.

Also for the Cardinals, Mitchell finished 19th in the 50 free (25.68) and 21st in the 100 free (57.4), while Storm took 23rd in the 100 breaststroke (1:14) and Klosterman was 26th in the 200 IM (2:26). 

The Class 1 finals are scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. on Friday.

 

FULL RESULTS: MSHSAA Class 1 Prelim Results

STATE WRESTLING: Local squads compete alongside state’s best

 

COLUMBIA, Mo. — The 92nd MSHSAA Boys Wrestling Championships began on Thursday at Mizzou Arena. 

Below is a look at how Joplin area squads fared.

Joplin and Carthage have athletes competing in Class 4, while Carl Junction, Neosho and McDonald County are competing in Class 3. Seneca is competing in Class 2.

The tourney continues on Friday for those still alive in their respective brackets. 

 

JOPLIN RESULTS

Joplin’s Draven VanGilder went 0-2 and saw his season end, while teammate Gunner Price went 1-1.  

Competing at 195 pounds, VanGilder suffered a 4-3 loss to Fort Zumwalt South’s William Pierce in the first round and then fell 9-1 to Jackson’s Tyler Beyatte.

A heavyweight, Price lost by major decision, 8-0, to Blue Springs’ Brock Sullivan in the first round. Price bounced back and won by fall over Fort Zumwalt South’s Joseph Kaufman in the wrestlebacks.

 

CARTHAGE RESULTS

At 138, Eli Sneed earned an 8-3 decision over Northwest-Cedar Hill’s Landon Rogers. 

At 145, Grey Petticrew went 0-2 to end the season. Petticrew suffered a 7-3 loss to Wildwood’s Gavin Shoulders in the first round and then lost by fall to Francis Howell’s Chris Gibson in the wrestlebacks.

At 152, Braxdon Tate won via major decision, 10-2, over Fort Zumwalt South’s Jeric Gumahin.

At 160, Davion King pinned Oak Park’s Karl Knaak.

 

CARL JUNCTION RESULTS

At 106 pounds, Lukas Walker won by fall over Winnetonka’s John Nguyen in the first round.

At 113, Sam Melton pinned Jefferson City’s Tytus Oliver.

At 120, Max Matthews lost by fall to Pacific’s Ethan Flaherty and then defeated Jefferson City’s Dominic Stafford 10-5.

Competing at 170, Tony Stewart won by fall over Vianney’s Westley Kruger.

At 182, Chance Benford suffered a 15-7 loss to Hillsboro’s Dalton Litzsinger, but then pinned Capital City’s Matthew Boyer. 

At 220, Cayden Bollinger lost by fall to Platte County’s Jake Fernandez, but then pinned North Point’s Jimmy Thompson.

At heavyweight, CJ’s Kameron Bennett pinned Grandview’s Derek Joiner.

 

NEOSHO RESULTS

At 113, Fisher Butler pinned Capital City’s Sterling Wheatley.

At 120, Wyatt Black lost by technical fall to Farmington’s Presley Johnson and then won by tech fall over Chaminade’s Massimo Mattina.

At 126, Johnny Chrisco pinned Hazelwood East’s Kamron Watson.

At 132, Hayden Crane won by fall over North Point’s Leo Buchheit.

At 138, Nate Copeland won by fall over Farmington’s Nate Schnur.

Competing at 145, Bostyn Patterson lost by fall to Hillsboro’s Sam Richardson and then lost 10-2 to Whitfield’s Caleb Carter.

At 152, Trent Neece pinned Parkway West’s Tommy Wehrmeister.

At 160, Collyn Kivett won by fall over Platte County’s Ben McDaniel.

At 170, Eli Zar won by fall over Sikeston’s Sam Lancaster.

At 195, Ulysses DeLeon lost by fall to Warrenton’s Jacob Ruff and then defeated Farmington’s Rowdy Vaugh 8-4.

The Wildcats are in third place in the team standings after Day 1 with 31.5 points. Hillsboro is first (34) and Whitfield is second (32).

 

MCDONALD COUNTY RESULTS

At 113, Jose Mendoza Garcia went 0-2, falling by fall to William Chrisman’s Riley Ragan and Washington’s Couper Deckard. 

Blaine Ortiz won by fall over Warrenton’s Nicholas Schulze at 126.

At 152, Levi Smith defeated Whitfield’s Rome Tate 8-4.

At 220, Samuel Murphy pinned Kearney’s Zach Olson.

At heavyweight, Jayce Hitt pinned Smithville’s Mason Crim.

 

SENECA RESULTS

At 106, Caden Thompson won by fall over Pleasant Hill’s Aiden Minor.

Keatin Burleson went 1-1 at 113. Savannah’s Gage Schottel pinned Burleson in the first round. Burleson earned a 9-2 decision over Fulton’s Cameron Cumins.

At 120, Brady Roark pinned Park Hills Central’s Austin Hassell.

At 132, Brayden Thiel defeated Fulton’s Kaden Barnes 6-4. 

Andrew Manley won by tech fall, 18-1, over St. Clair’s Bass Hughes at 138.

At 170, Gabriel Commons pinned Potosi’s Levi Courtney.

At 182, Dane Napier won by fall over Braeden Stotts of St. Mary’s. 

At 220, Nick Stephens lost 5-1 to Oak Grove’s Garrett Hudsepth and lost by fall to Potosi’s Aden Martinez. 

 

GIRLS SWIMMING: Local athletes set for state meet

 

The Joplin area will be well-represented at this week’s MSHSAA Girls Swimming & Diving Championships.

Athletes from Carl Junction, Carthage and Webb City will be competing at the Class 1 state meet on Thursday and Friday at the St. Peters Rec-Plex.

Below is a look at the area’s state qualifiers.

 

CARL JUNCTION

The Carl Junction Bulldogs will be taking 10 girls to state.  

Carl Junction sophomore Chloe Miller is the top seed in the 50-yard freestyle (24.01 seconds). Miller is also seeded fifth in the 100 freestyle (53.77). 

Bulldogs junior Skyler Sundy is the second seed in the 100 backstroke (59.26) and the sixth seed in the 50 free (24.7). 

The Bulldogs are seeded third in the 200 yard medley relay, eighth in the 200 free relay and 16th in the 400 free relay. 

Also for Stephanie Miller’s Bulldogs, Carsyn Smith is the 17th seed in the 100 backstroke, Abigail Wilson is the 18th seed in the 100 breaststroke and Alanza Montez is seeded 18th in the 50 free.

Also attending the meet for the Bulldogs, either on relays or as alternates, are Elyanna Dogotch, Madeleine Garoutte, Kennedy Johnson, Abigail Holcomb and Sophia Holcomb.  

 

CARTHAGE

The Tigers will have eight girls in attendance. 

Carthage junior Madison Riley is seeded fifth in the 100 butterfly (59.27). 

The Tigers are seeded 10th in the 200 freestyle relay, 14th in the 200 medley relay and 15th in the 400 free relay.  

Also for the Tigers, Aubree Santillan is seeded 19th in the 100 backstroke, Cassidy Smith is seeded 22nd in the 100 freestyle and Ava Lacey is seeded 31st in the 200 free.

Also attending for the Tigers will be Hope Fultz, Joey Hettinger, Victoria Martinez and Elena Wright.

 

WEBB CITY

The Webb City Cardinals are taking 12 girls to the state meet. 

Webb City junior Sophia Whitesell is seeded seventh in the 200 yard individual medley (2:15) and is seeded 10th in the 500 freestyle (5:27). 

Skylar Powell and Avery Mitchell will compete in both freestyle races. In the 50 free, Powell is seeded 17th and Mitchell is seeded 27th. In the 100 free, Powell is seeded 16th, with Mitchell 26th. 

Also for Central Ozark Conference champion Cardinals, Makenzie Storm is the 19th seed in the 100 breaststroke and Camryn Klosterman is seeded 28th in the 200 IM

The Cardinals are seeded 11th in the 400 freestyle relay, 19th in the 200 medley relay and 21st in the 200 free relay.

Also heading to state, as alternates or on relays, will be Ally Ansley, Alix Davis, Ella Holt, Olivia Honey, Novely Lamont, Hally Philpot and Hannah Ross.

HOOPS ROUNDUP: Thomas Jefferson sweeps Verona; McAuley boys earn win

THOMAS JEFFERSON BOYS 64,  VERONA 61

VERONA, Mo. —  Thomas Jefferson rallied from a double-digit deficit in the first half on the way to an Ozark 7 Conference win on Tuesday.

Verona held a 19-10 lead after the first quarter before cutting the deficit to six by intermission. The Cavaliers rallied all the way back in the third quarter, outscoring Verona 26-9 in the third period. Verona made a push in the fourth quarter, but the Cavaliers held on for the win.

“I thought our kids really played through some early struggles, and just wouldn’t go away,” Thomas Jefferson coach Chris Myers. “The way we responded in the third quarter was exciting to see. They really took what we talked about at halftime and applied it on the court. Verona is a tough team, and they have some great players. Anytime you can go in there and get out with a victory is a real blessing”.

Caden Myers and Drew Goodhope each scored 17 to lead Thomas Jefferson in scoring. Myers had four 3-pointers, and eight assists. Goodhope had a pair of 3-balls. Jay Ball had 16 points and eight boards, while Tyler Brouhard had seven points and 10 rebounds.

Jaiden Carrasquillo had 27 points to lead Verona. Deuce Francisco finished with 13 points.

Thomas Jefferson is at McAuley on Thursday.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON GIRLS 52, VERONA 21

VERONA, Mo. —  Thomas Jefferson held an early lead and played add-on throughout on the way to an Ozark 7 Conference win on Tuesday.

The Cavaliers took a 13-7 lead over the Wildcats and pushed the margin to 11 by the intermission. Thomas Jefferson added to the lead in the third and fourth quarters, cruising to victory. 

Lannah Grigg scored a career-high 24 points to lead the Cavaliers. Gabbi Hiebert and Sarah Mueller each had seven points. Tannah Cassatt and Nico Carlson each scored six in the win.

Thomas Jefferson is at McAuley on Thursday.

 

MCAULEY BOYS 58, BRONAUGH 36

The Warriors led 22-9 at the end of the first quarter and were up 37-19 at halftime en route to victory.

McAuley improved to 6-19.

Noah Black scored 18 points and Michael Parrigon added 11. 

Bronaugh’s Strauss Banes and Isaac Earnest scored eight points apiece. 

McAuley hosts Thomas Jefferson at 5:30 on Thursday for Senior Night. 

 

GOLDEN CITY GIRLS 42, COLLEGE HEIGHTS 33

“Golden City is a good team and deserved to win,” College Heights coach John Blankenship said. “Our defensive rotation was slow tonight and that cost us several points. Couple that with 27 percent shooting from the floor and that’s difficult to overcome. We needed to get the ball inside more than we did tonight to better establish our inside-out game.”

Ava Lett scored 12 points on four treys, while Addie Lawrence added nine points. Jayli Johnson contributed four points and five assists, while Maddy Colin had six rebounds.

Molly Long and Libby Fanning had seven rebounds apiece for the Cougars (13-10, 5-1 Ozark 7). 

College Heights is at Sarcoxie on Thursday. 

 

BRONAUGH GIRLS 50, MCAULEY 46

McAuley girls led by three at halftime before Bronaugh rallied in the final two quarters to earn the win on Tuesday.

The Warriors held a 21-18 lead by the intermission before Bronaugh outscored McAuley 13-9 in the third quarter to take the lead, holding on down the stretch.

Kennedy DeRuy finished with 21 points to lead McAuley in scoring. Avery Eminger added 15 points.

McAuley hosts Thomas Jefferson on Thursday. 

HOOPS: Carthage splits with Branson on Senior Night; CHS boys improve to 18-5

 

CARTHAGE, Mo. — The Carthage High School boys basketball team sent its seniors out with a win.

Carthage topped Branson 72-50 on Tuesday in Central Ozark Conference action. The team’s seniors were recognized during the evening.

“I am so happy for our four seniors,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said of Joel Pugh, Sylas Browning, Caden Kabance and Logan Carmickle. “They are great human beings and ambassadors for our program. They did a fantastic job getting us started during the first quarter tonight. Sylas Browning came out determined for his Senior Night to go well!” 

Carthage led 17-10 at the end of the first quarter, but extended the advantage to 37-23 by halftime. 

“Branson is a team that can score in bunches and we held them to 23 first half points,” Morris said. “Coach Linehan gave our kids one of the best compliments we can ask for, mentioning that our halfcourt man-to-man was fantastic tonight.”

The Tigers led 49-40 at the end of the third quarter, but the hosts outscored the Pirates 23-10 in the fourth quarter. 

Max Templeman scored 18 points to lead Carthage, while Joel Pugh had 16, Clay Kinder added 11 and Tyler Willis had 10. Britt Coy contributed six points, while Sylas Browning and Justin Ray added five points apiece. 

“It’s no secret that we ask Max Templeman to do a lot for this team, but he played his most complete game tonight, even with limited minutes in the first half due to foul trouble,” Morris said. “Max had 18 big points, seven rebounds and eight assists tonight.” 

Branson’s Kade Goodwin had 17 points and Kyle Scharbrough had 11. Ethan Jones was limited to eight points.

“We asked six different guys to take turns taking away Ethan Jones and Kyle Scharbrough and they were up to the challenge,” Morris said.

The Pirates fell to 7-15 and 0-6 in the COC. 

Carthage is now 18-5 overall and 4-3 in the COC. 

“This group has been special after the growing pains they experienced last year,” Morris said. “They care about each other, do what is asked, and are enjoying playing the game. It’s no wonder that they are 18-5 on the season with a chance to make some noise in the postseason.”

Carthage is at Ozark on Friday.

 

BRANSON GIRLS 72, CARTHAGE 65, OT

The game was tied at 61 at the end of regulation before the visiting Pirates outscored the Tigers 11-4 in the extra session to claim the COC win.

Branson led 19-13 at the end of the first quarter and the Pirates were up 36-23 at the break.

The Tigers trailed by seven at the end of the third period but erupted for 21 points in the fourth quarter to force overtime. 

“We didn’t come out with our normal energy to start the game and dug ourselves a 13-point hole at halftime,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said. “However, thanks to a Kianna Yates halfcourt shot at the buzzer, we were able to claw and fight our way back to send the game into overtime. Unfortunately, our game-long foul trouble caught up with us in overtime and four starters fouled out. Branson made their free throws and we could not muster the points we needed to pull out the victory.”

Carthage dropped to 11-13 overall and 2-5 in the COC. 

Sophie Shannon poured in 27 points on 11 field goals and five charities for the Tigers. 

“The star of the game tonight was senior Sophie Shannon who scored a career-high 27 points on Senior Night,” Moore said. “Branson had no answer for her in the paint and she scored at will on them. Fellow senior Presley Probert had a good game scoring five points and made several good passes that led to baskets for teammates.”

Carthage’s Kianna Yates added 19 points and Lauren Choate had nine. Shannon and Presley Probert are the team’s lone seniors. 

Taylor Foster and Chloe Grimm scored 21 points apiece for Branson, while Hadly Houston added 13. The Pirates are now 11-10 overall and 3-3 in the COC.

Carthage travels to Ozark on Thursday. 

 

BOYS HOOPS: Joplin builds early lead and pulls away from Carl Junction late in COC win

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — Joplin’s defense suffocated Carl Junction early to build a sizable cushion before pulling away for an 80-44 win in the Central Ozark Conference action on Tuesday.

Joplin’s Brantley Morris knocks down a 3-pointer in the Eagles’ conference win over Carl Junction on Tuesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

Joplin (16-7, 4-3 COC) used a 14-0 run in the first quarter and an 11-1 run in the second quarter to accumulate an 18-point lead over Carl Junction (4-19, 0-7 COC) by the intermission. The Eagles held the pace before pulling away down the stretch of the fourth quarter.

“That is how we are going to have to win from here on out, on the defensive end,” Joplin coach Bronson Schaake said. “I told the guys we will have to use our size, which we have, and the guard spot with the Wrights. They ran a triangle and two against us again and I thought we did what we needed to do to get it in the paint, especially at the end of the third quarter and into the fourth quarter. We were getting layups. We need to do that.”

GAME ACTION

Carl Junction opened with the first five points of the game on an inside score from Ayden Bard and a 3-pointer by Kyler Perry before Joplin ripped off a 14-0 run to swing the momentum in its favor permanently.

The Eagles held the Bulldogs scoreless for five minutes of game action while building a 14-5 advantage in the process. Brantley Morris had a 3-pointer early in the run before an All Wright transition bucket off a turnover and a floater from Always Wright gave Joplin an 8-5 lead. Joe Jasper added a bucket inside in transition before a block from Whit Hafer, his third swat of the first period, led to a transition hoop from All Wright to make the score 12-5 with 55 seconds on the clock. Terrance Gibson closed the run with an offensive board for a putback.

“I know it was their Senior Night and they were going to come out jacked up,” Schaake said of the start to the game. “We just needed to wake up after seeing what they were doing. Going on a run like that is triggered at the defensive end. The last two weeks, we have been trying to get back to that as our foundation as we head into districts.”

Joplin took a 16-7 lead into the second period and started the quarter just as fast, using an 11-1 run to build a 23-8 lead with less than five minutes to play in the first half.

Carl Junction’s Ayden Bard raises up for a mid-range jumper in the Bulldogs’ loss to Joplin. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

“It was good to see us kind of go at them,” Schaake said about the start to the second quarter. “I didn’t want us to be passive and get caught up in this environment. So, that was good to see.”

Gibson started the run with a bucket inside before All Wright scored on the drive. Morris knocked down his second 3-pointer of the game and Gibson followed with a tip-in basket to extend the Eagles’ lead to 27-8 near the midway point of the second period. 

Joplin played with the 19-point lead through the rest of the half, taking a 37-19 lead into the intermission.

Carl Junction cut the lead to 44-28 midway through the third period, but Joplin closed the quarter on a 10-4 run to push the lead to more than 20 points. Morris knocked down a 3-pointer, while All Wright added a 3-ball and a score off the drive. Gibson added an offensive rebound for a bucket. The Eagles led 54-33 heading into the final eight minutes.

Carl Junction trimmed the lead to 58-42 on a 3-pointer by Bard, but the Eagles responded with a 16-0 run to put the game out of reach with a 30-plus point lead, 74-42, to start a running clock with two minutes to play.

“Kids can get that way when they look at the clock and they have a lead,” Schaake said. “They were a little (lackadaisical) without realizing it. To see them amp it back up and finish strong, going right back at them, was good. I was going to be a little angry if we didn’t.”

SCORING LEADERS

Gibson led Joplin in scoring with 22 points, scoring 11 in each half. All Wright finished with 16 points and Morris added 11, knocking down three 3-pointers. Always Wright added seven points and Jasper contributed six in the win.

Bard finished with a game-high 22 points to lead Carl Junction. Josh Cory added 11 points.

SENIOR NIGHT

Carl Junction honored Perry and Cory in Senior Night ceremonies after the game.

UP NEXT

Joplin is at Willard on Friday.
Carl Junction is at Branson on Friday.

Joplin’s Whit Hafer flushes home a dunk in the Eagles’ COC win over Carl Junction on Tuesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City holds on late, wins thriller over Neosho

 

NEOSHO, Mo. — Neosho’s last-second 3-pointer was off the mark, and the Webb City Cardinals let out a collective sigh of relief.

In a clash with conference and postseason implications on the line, Webb City held on late for a hard-fought 74-71 win over Neosho on Tuesday night in a Central Ozark Conference thriller. 

“Neosho is really good and K’dyn Waters is a really good player,” Cardinals coach Jason Horn said. “Offensively, they were on fire in the first half. I thought we did a good job defensively of slowing them down in the second half. Our intensity rose up in the second half and we guarded a little better. And getting Waters in foul trouble definitely helped us.”

The Cardinals, who trailed by seven in the first half, rode a strong second half to pick up a key road win in a hostile environment. After allowing 45 points in the first half, the Cardinals limited the Wildcats to 26 after the break. 

“I’m just proud of how we bounced back in the second half,” Horn said. “We rebounded the ball better and we converted points at the foul line and, for the most part, we valued the basketball. Cohl Vaden played a big part in that. We survived foul trouble, and that was huge.”

Webb City’s Trey Roets looks to score in the lane against Neosho on Tuesday night at Neosho High School. Roets scored 26 points to lead the Cardinals. Photo by Israel Perez.

In a nail-biter that saw both teams lose key performers due to fouls, Webb City was clinging to a one-point lead with a minute to play. 

After an empty possession by the Wildcats, Webb City’s Vaden calmly sank two free throws with 30 seconds left.

The Wildcats misfired on a 3-pointer but got the ball back with 12 seconds left. The hosts turned it over, but the Cardinals returned the favor just seconds later.

Neosho’s Brock Franklin hoisted a long 3-pointer at the buzzer, but it was off the mark. 

“That’s the kind of game you’d expect when you have two state-ranked Class 5 teams from the COC going blow for blow,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “We had a chance to tie it with a minute to go, so it doesn’t get much more even or competitive than that. We had our chances at the end. I was very proud of all the boys. It felt like a playoff game with the atmosphere and intensity.” 

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Ranked eighth in Class 5, Webb City hiked its record to 16-7 overall and 4-2 in the COC.

Junior post player Trey Roets led Webb City with 26 points on 10-of-15 shooting. 

Junior guard Dante Washington and senior guard Max Higginbotham contributed 16 points apiece for the Cardinals.

Higginbotham made five crucial 3-pointers off the bench.

“He shot the ball with confidence,” Horn said. “When teams zone us, that’s what he’s going to have to do. We have some guys who can stretch the floor. Max is the guy we want to go to in those situations. He was a big factor down the stretch.”

Webb City made 23-of-45 shots from the floor (51 percent), including 8-of-19 from long distance. The Cardinals out-rebounded the Wildcats 29-18.

Ranked 10th in Class 5, Neosho slipped to 16-7 and 3-3 in conference action with the Senior Night loss.

Neosho senior K’dyn Waters scores from in close against Webb City on Tuesday night. Waters scored 24 points before fouling out on Senior Night. Photo by Israel Perez.

Neosho’s lone senior recognized before the game, K’dyn Waters scored 24 points in just over 20 minutes of game time. Waters made 7-of-10 field goal attempts and went 8-for-8 from the foul line before fouling out with 1:34 remaining.

Isaiah Green added 15 points for the Wildcats, while Franklin had 13. 

“Brock and Isaiah really stepped up and hit shots,” Culp said. “And I don’t think Carter Fenske came out the entire game, so I was pleased with his play, too.” 

Neosho made 23-of-48 field goal attempts (48 percent), including 7-of-20 from beyond the arc. The Wildcats went 18-for-24 at the charity stripe. 

Neosho turned it over just nine times to Webb City’s 13 turnovers. 

 

GAME RECAP

The high-scoring first quarter featured eight lead changes. Neosho put together a 9-0 run late in the opening frame, as Franklin hit a trey before Waters and Fenske both converted old-fashioned three-point plays. 

Webb City’s Roets hit a jump hook in the paint just before the buzzer, trimming Neosho’s lead to 28-23.

Both teams finished the first half with key performers on the bench with three fouls apiece, as Webb City’s Kaden Turner and Vaden and Neosho’s Waters and Kael Smith all battled foul trouble. 

Neosho’s Franklin and Webb City’s Higginbotham traded 3-pointers late in the first half, and Neosho was up 45-43 at intermission. 

Webb City finished the third period on an 11-2 run to take a 56-53 advantage into the final frame. 

While the Wildcats kept coming, the Cardinals never relinquished their lead in the fourth quarter.

Webb City’s Turner fouled out with 3:29 left, but Higginbotham buried three treys in the fourth quarter, his last giving the Cards a 70-63 lead with 2:15 to play. 

Waters scored 10 points in the fourth period before fouling out with 1:34 to play. 

Neosho’s Brock Franklin shoots under pressure from Webb City’s Kaden Turner on Tuesday night. Photo by Israel Perez.

Webb City’s Vaden and Neosho’s Smith and Green all made free throws, and the Cardinals held a 72-71 cushion with a minute to play. 

The hosts had their chances in the final minute, but simply couldn’t get a jumper to fall. 

“It’s tough having to finish the game without Waters, but it was probably even tougher going long stretches of the second and third quarters without him,” Culp said. 

Culp noted his team can take away positives from the setback. 

“Our boys don’t lack confidence, but this game shows them that we can compete with the rest of the teams on our schedule,” Culp said. 

Horn noted his squad was definitely pleased to leave Neosho with a win. 

“It was a great environment tonight,” Horn said. “Any of the games against the schools on the West side of the COC are always tough. There are great rivalries with all of us.”

These two teams could see each other in the postseason, as both are in District 6. 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Both teams have conference road games on Friday, as Webb City is at Republic and Neosho travels to league-leading Nixa.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

 

Neosho’s Isaiah Green looks to score over Webb City’s Trey Roets on Tuesday night. Webb City won the game 74-71. Photos by Israel Perez.
Webb City’s Cohl Vaden puts up a shot against Neosho on Tuesday night. Vaden sank two key free throws late in his team’s 74-71 win.

GIRLS HOOPS: Carl Junction starts fast and finishes strong in COC win over Joplin

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — No. 6 Carl Junction built a double-digit lead in the first quarter and ballooned the margin to nearly 30 in the second half on the way to a 62-47 Central Ozark Conference and Senior Night win over Joplin on Tuesday

Carl Junction’s Destiny Buerge knocks down one of four second-quarter 3-pointers during the Bulldogs’ conference win over Joplin. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

“I think Joplin has been play really well this year and Coach (Luke) Floyd has done a great job with that group,” Carl Junction coach Brad Shorter said. “They play hard and have great size. 

“We moved the ball well in the first half and Destiny (Buerge) got some great looks. She is a shot maker. When her and Kylie (Scott get that one-two punch going, they’re tough to beat.”

The Bulldogs (18-6, 5-2 COC) built an 11-point lead by the first quarter and pushed the margin to nearly 20 points by the intermission thanks to a monster first half from Destiny Buerge. Carl Junction pushed the lead to as much as 29 in the third period over Joplin (10-13, 1-6 COC) and held on down the stretch to send the Eagles to their fourth consecutive loss.

“They are a very good team and I felt like our game plan didn’t set our girls up for success coming in,” Joplin coach Luke Floyd said. “We wanted to key on Destiny and Kylie, but I have to do a better job in getting us to rotate our defense to get girls like that covered.”

SENIOR NIGHT

Carl Junction honored seniors Ellie Lawson, Jessa Hylton and Loren Lee in Senior Night ceremonies after the game.

Carl Junction’s Kylie Scott earns a block during the Bulldogs’ COC win over Joplin on Tuesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

“What we talked about before the game is how much these seniors meant to the program, just from a commitment standpoint,” Shorter said. “They are dedicated to what we do and are model student-athletes. They’ve set the bar high for the rest of our girls and have done a great job of putting the work in every day and continuing to improve. I hate it that Jessa hasn’t been able to play this year [because if a knee injury], but she has had three really good years. But they are all great kids and will be successful after high school for sure.”

GAME ACTION 

Carl Junction built an early cushion in the first quarter thanks to the play of Buerge and Scott, who put up seven and six points respectively to lead the Bulldogs to a 20-9 lead after the first eight minutes.

“If you are not able to jump out to an early lead like that, Joplin is in it and they are fighting and clawing because they are a tough team,” Shorter said. “It was important for our kids to come out and build an early lead and continue to fight.”

Buerge continued her torrid pace in the second period, scoring 16 of 18 points for Carl Junction as the catalyst. 

Joplin’s Brynn Driver and Ella Hafer had back-to-back scores inside at the 5:35 mark before Buerge scored on the drive and added a 3-pointer in transition to push the lead to 27-13 with 3:11 to play.

Buerge added three more 3-pointers as the Bulldogs finished the first half on an 11-6 run to take a 38-19 advantage into the intermission. 

“She comes down the floor and has 10 eyes on her,” Shorter said of Buerge’s first half of play. “She is just a complete player. She can score it and she can pass it. She is just a wonderful player.”

After the Bulldogs used a heavy dose of Buerge in the first half, Carl Junction went to work inside the paint with Scott in the third period. Scott scored three of the Bulldogs’ first five baskets, including a three-point play, as part of an 11-2 run to open the second half, pushing the lead to 49-21 with 2:33 on the clock.

Joplin’s Brynn Driver pushes the ball in transition during the Eagles’ loss to Carl Junction. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

“We are either looking to work outside-in or inside-out,” Shorter said. “It was important that we spaced the floor better tonight, moved it well and made sure those [inside] opportunities were there. Kylie was an animal in there offensively and defensively. When she gets going, she is tough.”

Carl Junction played with that pace be-fore Joplin’s Brooke Nice knocked down a 3-pointer near the 3:30 mark to trim the deficit to 20, 58-28. Joplin got baskets from Izzy Yust and Brynn Driver in the closing minutes but couldn’t make a run at the lead before the final horn.

“We just have to find the passion for the game again,” Coach Floyd said. “We have to show some toughness. At some point, you have to dig in your heals and say enough is enough. … The sooner we realize we can play with anyone, the sooner we can get back into the win column.”

SCORING LEADERS

Buerge closed the win out with a game-high 29 points, 23 of those points came in the first half. She knocked down five total 3-pointers in the win. Scott finished with 13 points, while Dezi Williams finished with 10 points.

Driver led Joplin with 18 points, 12 coming in the second half. Hafer finished with 14 points and Nice closed with 10 in the loss.

UP NEXT

Carl Junction is at Branson on Friday.

Joplin is at Willard on Friday.

Joplin’s Ella Hafer fights off contact for a bucket on the drive during the Eagles’ loss to Carl Junction on Tuesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.