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WRESTLING ROUNDUP: Carl Junction tops Joplin; McDonald County beats Seneca

 

CARL JUNCTION 57, JOPLIN 18

The Carl Junction Bulldogs won seven matches by fall on their way to a 57-18 win over Joplin on Thursday night. 

Carl Junction’s Carter Foglesong (106), Lukas Walker (120), Sam Melton (126), Marcus Lopez-Durman (157), Dexter Merrell (165), Cody Berry (190) and Cayden Bollinger (285) all won their respective matches by fall.

Winning matches by fall for Joplin were Alex Short (144) and Draven VanGilder (215). 

At 132 pounds, Joplin’s Andrew Burke earned a 10-7 decision over Keaton Colburn, while CJ’s Max Matthews recorded a 9-3 win over Freddy Cerrato-Martinez at 138. Joplin’s Orion Norris defeated Nevan Challenger 4-2 at 150 pounds.  

CJ’s Cole Beezley (113) and Tony Stewart (175) won by forfeit.

 

MCDONALD COUNTY 42, SENECA 39

McDonald County edged Seneca 42-39 on Thursday night in a boys wrestling dual.

Mustangs coach Josh Factor told SoMo Sports that he believes this is McDonald County’s first ever dual win over Seneca.

Seneca’s Paxton Bruegal (106), Keatin Burleson (126), Eli Manley (132), Brady Roark (138), Trentyn Raney (144) and Andrew Manley (150) all won their matches by fall. 

Seneca’s Hunter Hanes edged Robinson Yoshino 15-13 at 113 pounds. McDonald County’s Colter Vick won by fall at 190 pounds.

McDonald County’s Paden Vance (120), Levi Smith (157), Brady Bogart (165), Huxley Wardlaw (175), Samuel Murphy (215) and Jayce Hitt (285) all won their matches by forfeit.

The Mustangs also defeated Diamond 45-22.

At 144, Mac County’s Blaine Ortiz earned a tech fall, 20-4, over James LaFever. Ortiz earned his 100th career victory. 

Also for the Mustangs, Smith won by fall at 157 and Vick earned a major decision, 14-2, at 175.

Eberson Perez (106), Kevin Blancas (126), Bogart, Murphy and Hitt all won by forfeit.

Diamond’s Braydon Pelt earned a tech fall, 18-2, at 113, while Connor Pelt won by fall at 120 and Alex Stevens earned an 8-4 decision over Yeison Lopez-Duenas at 132.

Diamond’s Cody Neal (150) and Brayden Clement (190) both won by major decisions.

Seneca defeated Diamond 57-12.

The Indians received pins from Bruegal, Hanes, Eli Manley, Andrew Manley, Nash Crane and Gentry Barnes. Raney defeated LaFever 8-6 at 144 and Jace Renfro won by DQ at 190. 

Diamond’s Brandon Calentine won by fall at 157.

 

GIRLS RESULTS

McDonald County and Seneca tied 24-24 in a girls dual. 

Winning matches by fall for Seneca were Louzella Graham (120), Tessa Kinslow (135) and Liberty Cornell (155). Isabella Renfro won by forfeit at 235.

Winning by forfeit for Mac County were Jaslyn Benhumea (110), Kimberly Torres-Blancas (115), Jazmynn Brewer (145) and Helen Martinez-Mazariegos (170).

McDonald County defeated Diamond 30-18. 

In the lone contested bouts, Diamond’s Callie Montgomery (135) and Allison Calentine (145) won their matches by fall over Rylie Huston and Brewer. 

Seneca beat Diamond 21-6.

In contested matches, Seneca’s Kinslow defeated Montgomery 12-8 and Cornell won by fall over Calentine.

CJ CLASSIC: Carl Junction rallies late, repeats as tourney champs

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — The host Carl Junction Bulldogs repeated as CJ Classic champs.

But it was far from easy. 

Using a furious late rally, Carl Junction came from behind in the fourth quarter to knock off Nevada 53-47 in the 46th annual event’s championship game on Thursday night.

The Tigers held a four-point lead with just over three minutes to play before the Bulldogs pulled ahead for good with a late surge.

“Nevada played terrific and they had a great game plan,” Bulldogs coach Brad Shorter said. “I’m sure our kids would tell you we didn’t play very well for three quarters. Nevada had a lot to do with that obviously, but our kids found a way to win. They kept fighting and they got the job done.”

It was the second straight season the two teams met in the tourney title game, as the Bulldogs earned a 60-41 victory a year ago. This year’s title game was much closer.

“I’m very proud of our girls,” Nevada coach Blake Howarth said. “Carl Junction is the third-ranked team in Class 5. This game shows how much our girls have improved since last year. It wasn’t much of a game last year. It was a great showing for our girls tonight and it shows how hard they’re working. Even though this is a loss, it’s a moral victory.”

Carl Junction’s Kylie Scott handles the ball during Thursday’s game against Nevada. Scott led the Bulldogs with 21 points. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

Carl Junction junior forward Kylie Scott scored 21 points and grabbed 14 rebounds to lead the Bulldogs. The 6-3 Scott scored 17 of her points in the second half.

Senior guard Destiny Buerge scored 19 points and repeated as the tourney’s MVP. Also for the Bulldogs, sophomore Dezi Williams contributed seven points and nine boards.

Carl Junction improved to 3-0, while Nevada fell to 2-2. 

Nevada senior guard Maddy Majors scored 15 points, while junior guard Clara Swearingen added 12. Also for the Tigers, senior Abbey Heathman scored 11 before fouling out and junior Katie Johnson chipped in nine points.

In addition to Buerge, Scott, Swearingen and Heathman were named to the all-tourney team.

On the first night of December, neither team could gain much separation. 

Carl Junction led 9-3 before Nevada finished the first quarter on a 6-2 run, trimming CJ’s lead to two.

The game was deadlocked at 17 when a pair of hoops from Scott gave the Bulldogs a 21-17 advantage. 

Nevada pulled within a single tally on Swearingen’s corner trey, but a bucket inside by freshman Jadyn Howard gave the hosts a 23-20 halftime advantage. 

The Tigers won the third quarter 13-9 to take a 33-32 lead into the final frame.

Nevada’s Swearingen and Majors both knocked down 3-pointers on key possessions in the fourth quarter, and the Tigers held a 45-41 advantage with 3:25 remaining.

But that’s when the momentum suddenly shifted CJ’s way.

The Bulldogs reeled off nine unanswered points to take the lead for good, with Scott scoring five and Buerge and Williams adding hoops in the paint for a 50-45 cushion. 

During the spurt, the Bulldogs crashed the offensive glass well, as Scott and Buerge both had putbacks.

“We went to a little bit of pressure out of our matchup zone,” Shorter said. “We got some turnovers and some easy buckets and that proved to be the difference.” 

Clara Swearingen makes a layup against Carl Junction on Thursday night. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

Down five, Nevada didn’t go away, as Majors hit a pull-up jumper in the lane to trim her team’s deficit to three with 50 seconds left.

Next, the Bulldogs were able to run just over 20 seconds off the clock before the Tigers were forced to foul.

Buerge, a Pittsburg State signee, sank one of two at the charity stripe to give the Bulldogs a 51-47 lead with 28 seconds to play.

The Tigers turned the ball over on the ensuing possession and Scott’s late basket accounted for the final margin.

“We can continue to get better and hopefully this game will help us down the road,” Shorter said. 

Carl Junction AD Rich Neria presents Destiny Buerge, Hali Shorter, Klohe Burk and Allie Wrestler with the championship plaque after the Bulldogs defeated Nevada. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

WHAT’S NEXT FOR CJ?

The Bulldogs have two more tournaments on the horizon. 

Carl Junction will compete at the Taco Bell Tournament of Champions in Fort Smith (Ark.) from Dec. 8-10. This is a new event for CJ, as the team had previously competed at Joplin’s Lady Eagle Classic.

The Bulldogs will also compete at the Mustang Classic at McDonald County from Dec. 12-14.

 

CLASSIC ROUNDUP

In the event’s third-place game, Springdale defeated Parkview 59-54. 

Neosho beat rival McDonald County 46-35 for fifth-place and Seneca topped Mount Vernon 54-35 for seventh-place. 

See a related story for more details on those games (CJ CLASSIC ROUNDUP: Neosho, Seneca end tourney with wins – SoMo Sports (somo-sports.com).

 

CJ CLASSIC ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

Destiny Buerge, Carl Junction (MVP)

Kylie Scott, Carl Junction

Abbey Heathman, Nevada

Clara Swearingen, Nevada

Tara Masten, Parkview

Karlee Ellick, Neosho

Adriana Hernandez, Springdale

Charleen Hudson, Springdale

 

Carl Junction senior Destiny Buerge shoots over Nevada’s Clara Swearingen on Thursday night. Buerge was the CJ Classic MVP for the second straight season. Photos by Sloan Uebinger.

 

Carl Junction’s Dezi Williams defends Nevada’s Maddy Majors on Thursday night.

 

The Carl Junction Bulldogs pose with the championship plaque after winning the CJ Classic on Thursday night. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

 

The Carl Junction Bulldogs celebrate after winning the CJ Classic on Thursday night.

GEM CITY CLASSIC ROUNDUP: CHC girls fall in semis; TJ boys advance to championship; McAuley beats Diamond

DIAMOND, Mo. — College Heights and Miller found themselves in a defensive battle with the Cardinals coming away with a 37-26 win in the Gem City Classic semifinals on Thursday.

We went cold in the third quarter and tried to force too many passes,” CHC coach John Blankenship said to SoMo Sports. “A little more dribble penetration and patience in getting the ball reversed would have been advantageous for us. However, I am really proud of my team for hanging in there with the third-ranked team in the state. They are a very solid basketball team on both ends of the court.”

The shorthanded Cougars, playing without Addie Lawrence, were led by Libby Fanning’s double-double of 13 points and 15 rebounds. Kinley Marsh added seven rebounds and a steal.

CHC matches up with East Newton in the third-place game on Saturday.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON BOYS 63, GALENA 51 (WEDNESDAY)

Thomas Jefferson boys took an early lead before trailing by the intermission, only to rally back down the stretch for a win in the semifinal round of the Gem City Classic on Wednesday at Diamond High School.

The Cavaliers took an 18-12 lead into the second period before trailing by two at the intermission. Galena (Missouri) pushed the lead to five by the start of the fourth quarter before Thomas Jefferson outscored the Bears 21-4 in the final eight minutes to rally for the win.

Jay Ball had a double-double with 33 points and 23 rebounds. The rebound total tied a school record. Tyler Brouhard had 11 points and 10 rebounds to also record a double-double. Kip Atteberry had nine points, including two 3-pointers, while Kohl Thurman added six points and Levi Triplett four.

Thomas Jefferson advances to the boys championship game with a matchup against El Dorado Springs at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday.

 

MCAULEY 42, DIAMOND 31 (WEDNESDAY)

Seventh-seeded McAuley boys basketball went into halftime tied with third-seeded Diamond and outscored the host Wildcats 28-17 in the second half to earn a consolation-bracket victory in the Gem City Classic.

“I am really proud of our effort,” McAuley coach Tony Witt said. “This is a good win for us moving forward. I am extremely proud of our guys.”

The Warriors earned their first win of the season after taking control of the contest by outscored Diamond 14-5 in the third period and never relinquished the lead down the stretch.

Noah Black had 18 points, while Rocco Bazzano-Joseph finished with 11.

Ty McDermontt led Diamond with 14 points.

McAuley matches up with Carthage JV in the fifth-place game on Saturday.

 

CJ CLASSIC ROUNDUP: Neosho, Seneca end tourney with wins

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — Neosho and Seneca both earned victories on the final night of the 46th Carl Junction Classic.

Neosho won the tourney’s fifth-place game 46-35 over rival McDonald County on Thursday night, while Seneca defeated Mount Vernon 54-35 in the event’s seventh-place game. 

 

NEOSHO 46, MCDONALD COUNTY 35

In a game they never trailed, Neosho took control early by establishing a 19-2 lead. 

The Wildcats scored 14 unanswered points during the early surge.

Neosho led 22-6 at halftime and a pair of hoops in the paint from senior forward Karlee Ellick gave the Wildcats a comfortable 31-10 lead with 4:35 remaining in the third period.

However, the Mustangs finished the third quarter on an 11-2 run, but they still trailed 33-21.

McDonald County cut its deficit to seven in the fourth quarter, but Neosho never relinquished its lead en route to capturing the consolation championship. 

Ellick scored 14 points to lead Neosho, while Beclynn Garrett had 10 and Raine Harris added seven. Ellick was named to the all-tourney team. 

McDonald County received 11 points from Carlee Cooper and six from Jamie Washam. 

 

SENECA 54, MOUNT VERNON 35

Sophomore guard Hazley Grotjohn scored 16 points to lead Seneca, while senior forward Parker Long had 14 and junior guard Samarah Mittag added nine.

For the Mountaineers, sophomore Cheyenne Bieber scored 11 and classmate Addie Hall had nine.

The Indians led 14-10 at the end of the first quarter.

The Mountaineers scored the first seven points of the second quarter to briefly take the lead, but the Indians closed the first half on a 14-0 run to take a 28-17 halftime advantage.

Seneca extended its lead to 44-24 by the end of the third quarter and the Mountaineers were unable to rally in the final frame. 

GIRLS HOOPS: Carthage, Webb City win on opening night of Lady Tiger Shootout

CARTHAGE, Mo. — The Carthage Tigers opened their home shootout tournament with a 44-34 win Thursday night over Olathe East.

Carthage’s Maggie Boyd drives the lane for a bucket in the Tigers’ win over Olathe East in the Lady Tigers Invitational on Thursday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Carthage scored the game’s first nine points, never trailed, and the Tigers earned a 29-14 edge from the first and fourth quarters.

“Some of that is early season,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said. “We hit some lulls in our offense. I thought our press and energy were good early, then we got a little tired in that second quarter. Third quarter, I thought both teams were a little sluggish and both teams made some changes. I liked that we finished strong again.

“We’re kind of young and old. We have two seniors and then a bunch of sophomores that play and one junior in the rotation. Not a lot of varsity experience for some of those kids, so to finish against a relatively experienced team like that was impressive. We’ll be a much better team when we can play more consistently through the second and third quarters.”

Sophomore guard Maggie Boyd came through for the Tigers in a big way with a career-high 22 points, half of which she scored in the fourth.

“Maggie played a great game,” Moore said. “I thought she had great energy throughout and then executed well. When she’s hitting her threes, she’s a really talented player because she’s good off the bounce and she’s a good free-throw shooter. If she adds that third level, it makes her almost unguardable when she’s having nights like that. It’s great to see.”

Senior guard Kianna Yates added 16 points with 12 of them scored in the first half.

Carthage’s Kianna Yates glides to the rim for a basket in the Tigers’ win over Olathe East on Thursday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

“Kianna Yates had a Kianna Yates game,” Moore said. “She distributed the ball well, scored when needed, knocked down a lot of free throws, and then played great defense whether on or off the ball. She’s always around the ball, and she keeps us all together defensively. It’s nice to have her in control of our offense and our defense.”

Boyd and Yates combined for 38 of the Tigers’ 44 points.

Olathe East (Kansas City, Kansas) received 12 points off the bench from freshman Katie LeFever.

Carthage (2-0) returns to action Friday against Sunrise Christian Academy (Bel Aire, Kansas).

“We’re excited about the six teams that are here,” Moore said. “We’ve got some state championship teams from previous years. We’ve got some teams from out of state that we don’t normally get to see.

“We’ve got two tough games to go. We’ve got to recover from what was an up-and-down energy battle (against Olathe East) and recoup in 24 hours to get back out there against Sunrise Christian, who probably weren’t happy with the way they played (against Bentonville) so they’ll be out to play better. We’re going to have to play better to beat them.”

Carthage closes out the three-day shootout Saturday with Arkansas school Bentonville.

 

WEBB CITY 39, EL DORADO 35

The Webb City Cardinals built a 15-point lead early on in the second half and survived a scare in the fourth quarter during their season-opening win on Thursday in the opening game of the Carthage Lady Tigers Shootout against the El Dorado Springs Bulldogs, the defending Class 3 state champions.

Webb City came out with six of the first eight points after halftime for a 28-13 lead, then El Dorado Springs went on a 14-0 run over the remainder of the third and the first 41 seconds of the fourth to make it 28-27.

The Cardinals made enough baskets (namely from their 6-foot-5 sophomore post Sami Mancini before she fouled out with 1 minute, 15 seconds remaining in regulation), free throws (including four by junior Mia Robbins), and defensive plays down the stretch to build their lead back up and earn their first win of the season.

“El Dorado Springs is a very good basketball team and they’re very well-coached,” Webb City coach Lance Robbins said. “We knew that coming into the game. They won a state title last year, and we knew they were going to come out and compete. We talked at halftime about the fact that we were up 11 (22-11), but that team lost some kids from last year’s team, but they’ve still got some experience and they were going to come out and compete and fight.

“They did a lot better job defensively in the second half, and we struggled to score. Finally, we were able to get the ball inside to our big a little bit and get some buckets. That was the difference in the game. We made some key free throws at the end of the game and got some stops on the defensive end.”

Mancini, who had at minimum a five-inch height advantage on every El Dorado Springs player, led Webb City with 15 points.

Kate Brownfield added nine points, Kirra Long five, Mia Robbins and Malorie Stanley four each, and Izzy Lopez two.

El Dorado Springs senior Macie Mays poured in a game-high 24 points and she netted 11 straight points during that 14-0 run in the third and fourth on her way to 16 second-half points.

At times Thursday, Webb City and El Dorado Springs resembled a pair of teams in their season openers.

“It was very ugly on both ends to start the game with missed layups and some turnovers,” Coach Robbins said. “Once both teams got settled in a little bit, the game started to flow better. There are definitely some things we can build on from this game and things we can work on to get better.”

El Dorado Springs went long stretches during both the first and second quarters without a made field goal, which allowed Webb City to double up the score in the first half.

Webb City returns to shootout action Friday and Saturday against Bentonville and Olathe East.

“We’ve got a good game each day,” Coach Robbins said. “We’ve got Bentonville, one of the better teams in Arkansas in their class last year (Class 6). They will be a challenge for us. We’ve got Olathe East on Saturday. We play a tough schedule early hoping that it will prepare us for our conference (Central Ozark Conference) and obviously districts late in the season.”