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GIRLS SWIMMING: Webb City wins Red Bird Invite; Carl Junction, Joplin finish second, third

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Led by seven event wins, the hosts captured the team championship at the Red Bird Invitational girls swim meet on Saturday.

Webb City topped the team standings with 397 points. Carl Junction was the runner-up with 300 points and Joplin took third with 151.

There were nine teams in attendance.

 

WEBB CITY HIGHLIGHTS

The Cardinals won seven of the 12 events, including all three relays. 

Webb City’s 200-yard medley relay team of Norah Klosterman, Sophia Whitesell, Camryn Klosterman and Olivia Honey took first with a time of 2:05.

Webb City’s 200 freestyle relay team of Skylar Powell, Alix Davis, Honey and Avery Mitchell recorded a winning time of 1:50.

The 400 freestyle relay team of Powell, Mitchell, Davis and Whitesell won with a time of 4:02.

Whitsell won a pair of individual events — the 200 IM and the 500 freestyle.

Hally Philpot took first in the 100 breaststroke, while Kelli Tollefson was the top performer in the 1-meter diving competition.

Finishing second in their individual events were Norah Klosterman (200 free, 500 free), Powell (100) and Kiera McDonald (diving).

Taking third place in their respective events were Allie Eggleston (200 free, 500 free), Camryn Klosterman (200 IM, 100 butterfly) and Davis (100 free, 100 backstroke).

Finishing fourth were Honey (200 free) and Mitchell (50 free, 100 free). Powell finished fifth in the 50 free. 

 

CARL JUNCTION HIGHLIGHTS

The Bulldogs won four events.

Chloe Miller won two events for the Bulldogs — the 50-yard freestyle with a time of 25.44 seconds and the 100 freestyle in 58.4 seconds.

Madeleine Garoutte took first in the 100 butterfly in 1:06, while Skyler Sundy won the 100 backstroke in 1:06.

Carl Junction took second in five events, including all three relays.

The 200 medley relay team of Sundy, Abigail Holcomb, Sophia Holcomb and Kennedy Johnson took second in 2:09.

The Bulldogs were second in the 200 free relay, with Garoutte, Elyanna Dogotch, Avari Fifer and Sydney Ward finishing in 1:54.

CJ’s 400 free relay team of Garoutte, Dogotch, Sundy and Sophia Holcomb finished second in 4:08.

Taking second in their individual events were Garoutte (200 IM) and Abigail Holcomb (100 breaststroke). 

Sundy was third in the 50 free and Johnson placed fourth in the 500 free, while Abigail Holcomb and Sophia Holcomb were fourth and fifth, respectively, in the 200 IM.

Finishing fifth in their events were Fifer (200 free), Sophia Holcomb (100 fly), Dogotch (100 free) and Ward (100 breaststroke).

 

JOPLIN HIGHLIGHTS

Joplin’s 200 medley relay team of Lily Rakes, Taegen Smith, Kiki Thom and Megan Walser finished third.

The JHS 400 freestyle relay team of Thom, Lydia Barwick, Walser and Rakes took third.

The Eagles placed sixth in the 200 freestyle relay, with Barwick, Brooklyn Hiller, Allysun Higdon and Gwen Zamanzadeh competing.

Also for the Eagles, Rakes finished fourth in the 100 backstroke, Thom placed fourth in the 100 butterfly and Smith was fourth in the 100 breaststroke.

Walser and Rakes were fifth and sixth in the 500 freestyle.

 

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

Thomas Jefferson’s Natalie Carroll finished second in two events — the 100 butterfly and the 100 backstroke.

TJ’s Meghan Mueller finished third in the 100 breaststroke.

Greenwood’s Reese Moore won the 200 freestyle. It was the only event that wasn’t won by Webb City or Carl Junction. 

 

Red Bird Invitational

Team standings: Webb City 397, Carl Junction 300, Joplin 151, Marshfield 114, Bolivar 89, Hillcrest 79, Thomas Jefferson 39, Seymour 29, Greenwood 29.

 

BOYS HOOPS: Eagles repeat as champs after rallying to beat Tigers in Carthage Invitational finals

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Joplin entered the fourth quarter trailing by four, but once the Eagles regained the lead, they never relinquished it on the way to a 60-54 win over Carthage in the 76th annual Carthage Invitational championship game on Saturday. 

“We didn’t have a very good start to the first quarter, but I think we held them to 10 points,” Joplin coach Bronson Schaake said. “Then we got into some foul trouble and they went after those guys. We stayed within one at the half, and I thought whoever had the lead after the third was going to win. We were down, but our dudes battled and we got stops.

Joplin’s All Wright knocks down a mid-range jumper in the Eagles’ win over the Tigers in the Carthage Invitational championship game. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

“I thought the matchups were tough on both sides. They can shoot and we’re a big team, so I just told our guys to get to the paint and make free throws as well. It was a grind-it-out game, which we needed. … They’re a really good team. (Max) Templeman is a shifty, quick guard who is smart and can get into your body. He gets them going. (Justin) Ray is constantly moving, and he has expanded his game—he has the mid-range and he is getting to the bucket. (Clay) Kinder is always a matchup problem. If he knows he can take a big, he is really smart about it. They’re just a well-coached team and they move the ball extremely well.”

With the win, the Eagles, who improved to 4-1, are the first back-to-back Carthage Invitational champions since Heritage (Arkansas) in 2013 and ‘14.

“Confidence,” Schaake said when asked what this early-season tournament title win does for his team. “I think it shows them what they can do. Ray-Pec is a quality team and Carthage is going to be one of the better teams in our league. It shows that we have a whole new level we can get to as well. I think confidence is pushing us in the right direction.”

The defeat is the first of the year for Carthage, which falls to 3-1.

“I thought our kids played hard,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said. “When Max (Templeman) hit that shot to send us into the fourth quarter with a four-point lead, I thought we were in a good spot despite the fact that we didn’t rebound well enough throughout the entire game. They were more physical than us at the rim, and we aren’t going to win many basketball games when we shoot 3-of-15 or 16 from the 3-point line and these guys know that. We’re pretty good at attacking the rim, but we’re going to have to bury some outside shots.

“I hate this for our seniors, who had a chance to win this tournament. Our group was upset, but they weren’t down because they realize that we still have a high ceiling for our team this season. We are going to keep getting better.”

DOWN THE STRETCH

Carthage’s Britt Coy scores inside during the Tigers’ loss to Joplin in the Carthage Invitational championship game. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

After a free throw from the Tigers early in the fourth, Joplin rallied to regain the lead, 42-41, with six straight points coming in the form of two buckets from junior G All Wright and dunk on the break by senior F Terrance Gibson off a turnover by Carthage.

The Tigers jumped back out in front on a drive by senior G Max Templeman the next trip down the court, but it would be the last time Carthage held the lead in the waning minutes.

Joplin used a basket from junior F Whit Hafer and a 3-pointer off a ball screen at the top of the key by Wright for a 47-43 advantage with 5:30 to play. 

Joplin pushed the lead to five thanks to a three-point play on a putback score from Gibson with 4:15 to push the lead to make the score 49-45.

The Eagles and Tigers traded scores evenly through the remainder of the contest without Carthage able to trim the lead to one possession for a chance to tie the game.

HOW THEY GOT THERE

Carthage opened the game with the momentum after kicking things off with an 8-2 run through the first three and a half minutes of action, fueled by six points from senior F Clay Kinder on a pair of old-fashioned three-point plays. 

Joplin responded by closing the first period on an 11-2 surge to take a 13-10 lead into the second quarter. Junior F Hobbs Gooch scored in the paint early in the run and closed it out with a driving score. Sophomore G Collis Jones grabbed an offensive rebound for a putback and Wright hit a pair of runners to fill out the run.

The lead changed hands five times in the final 2:15 of the second period. Joplin led 16-10 early in the period on a Jones’ 3-pointer before the Tigers rallied to tie it on a 3-pointer from Kinder at the wind with 3:15 to play. Carthage went in front on the next trip down the court on a free throw from Templeman. Wright and Templeman traded two makes at the stripe before trading driving scores to close out the first half with the Tigers on top 27-26.

“You can just point out how important every detail is,” Morris said when asked what he hopes his team takes from this loss moving forward. “A rebound here, missed free throw there, a missed assignment on defense or you didn’t execute a set on the offensive end—they matter in games that are that tight.”

Joplin took the lead back out of the break with the first two buckets of the second half on a mid-range jumper from Hafer and a transition layup by Gibson for a 30-27 advantage. 

Joplin’s Quin Renfro drives to the basket for a bucket during the Eagles’ win over Carthage on Saturday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Carthage countered by scoring 11 of the last 15 points of the third quarter to take a 40-36 lead into the final eight minutes. Senior G Britt Coy started the run with an offensive rebound for a putback score before junior G Justin Ray buried a 3-pointer from the corner to give the Tigers a 34-32 lead with 2:50 to play. Kinder added a baseline drive before the half closed with Gibson getting a pair of scores in the paint for Joplin, with Ray and Templeman countering with inside hoops of their own to keep the Carthage lead at four entering the fourth quarter.

“We talked about it in the locker room after the game, but you have to care if you’re going to be good at anything,” Schaake said when asked about his team closing out games in the fourth quarter this season. “We’re young in areas and we have pieces who are getting better and better. I don’t think we are anywhere near where we are going to be defensively. We still have to get better with communication on certain things. … But (the way they are closing out games) shows me that they care enough to want to buckle down and fight, which is what you need from a young group.”

SCORING LEADERS

Wright led all scorers with 23 points, 12 coming in the first half. Gibson closed with 16 points, while Quin Refro had six and Jones five. Hafer and Gooch each added four.

Kinder and Templeman each finished with 17 points to lead the Tigers in scoring. Coy added 11 to give Carthage three players in double figures. Ray finished with seven and Trent Yates scored two.

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

MVP – All Wright, Joplin

Max Templeman, Carthage

Justin Ray, Carthage

Ashton Jermain, Raymore-Peculiar

Joseph Graves, Rush

Barron Duda, Webb City

Alex Martin, Webb City

Quin Renfro, Joplin

Jeremiah Lewis, Leavenworth

Elijah Watts, Raymore-Peculiar

UP NEXT

Joplin hosts Lee’s Summit on Friday.

Carthage is at Springfield Central on Tuesday.

GIRLS HOOPS: Tournament host Joplin places fourth in Lady Eagle Classic

Despite taking a 56-18 loss on Saturday in the third-place game of the 26th annual Freeman Lady Eagle Classic at Kaminsky Gymnasium, the Joplin Eagles showed improvement from their 68-21 loss Friday against Farmington (Arkansas) and their season-opening 83-38 loss against Saturday’s opponent Kickapoo.

Joplin’s former rival in the Ozark Conference, Kickapoo scored the first 16 points of the game, blanked Joplin in the first quarter, went on a 17-0 run during the second and third quarters, and held a combined 32-4 advantage on the scoreboard from the first and third quarters.

“We counted at halftime, and I think we turned them (Kickapoo) over 13 at halftime,” Joplin coach Brad Cox said. “We were probably 7-10 second half, so we created 23 turnovers tonight. We understood that after losing Brynn (Driver), scoring is going to be an issue for us for a little while, but we have a plan in place to get that back. If we’re able to do that and limit some of our turnovers to where they get some offense and easy points, it’s a 10-point game.

“We definitely are trending in the right direction. Yesterday was our shock and awe at losing our leader (Driver), but today we were zoned in and played good defense and rebounded the ball well. I was very happy, and it was a lot better than the first time.”

During the second quarter, Joplin narrowed it to 22-10 behind a pair of 3-point baskets from Bailey Ledford and two points each from Isabella Yust and Alissa Owens.

Unfortunately, though, for the Eagles, they would never get any closer since Kickapoo scored the final nine of the first half and the first eight of the second half to go ahead 39-10.

Kickapoo put the game in running clock mode for the fourth with a 47-14 lead entering the final eight minutes.

Ledford led Joplin with seven points, Serafina Auberry added three, and Yust, Owens, Bailey Owens and Jill McDaniel each had two.

Miya Nieto and Allison Scott each paced Kickapoo with 12 points and Mikayla Smith had 10.

The Eagles came away from their home tournament with a quarterfinal win against Leavenworth (Kansas) and fourth place overall.

“Fourth place in a tournament like this with this caliber of teams, it’s great,” Cox said. “I feel like this year people are looking at us to be more down and I just feel like we’re trending in the right direction. We’ve battled adversity in this tournament and it’s only going to make us better and help us out at the end of the season when it really matters.”

Joplin, 2-5 overall, returns to action Friday at home against Lee’s Summit.

GIRLS HOOPS: Buerge scores 39, but Carl Junction falls to Sapulpa in TOC title game

FORT SMITH, Ark. — The Carl Junction girls basketball team settled for the runner-up plaque at the Taco Bell Tournament of Champions.

Short-handed Carl Junction suffered an 82-59 setback to a solid Sapulpa, Oklahoma, squad in the event’s championship game on Saturday night at Northside High School.

It was Carl Junction’s first loss of the season after five wins.

Carl Junction senior guard Destiny Buerge scored a game-high 39 points. A Pittsburg State signee, Buerge made 12 field goals, including five 3-pointers, to go with 10-of-13 free throws. Buerge scored 106 points in the three tourney games.

Sophomore forward Dezi Williams added 12 points for Carl Junction.

Carl Junction played nearly all of the game without junior forward Kylie Scott, who was limited by an ankle injury she suffered during Friday’s game.

Sapulpa’s Stailee Heard, an Oklahoma State recruit, scored 25 points. Tyla Heard added 20 for the Chieftains. Two others reached double figures for Sapulpa, as Taylor Bilby scored 11 and Raegan McQuarters added 10.

Sapulpa scored the first eight points of the game and led 22-10 by the end of the first quarter. Buerge had eight of CJ’s 10 points in the opening frame.

In the second quarter, a hoop inside by Williams and back to back treys from Buerge cut Carl Junction’s deficit to six, but the Chieftains finished the first half on an 18-6 run for a 44-26 halftime advantage.

Carl Junction scored the first 11 points of the third quarter, with Williams scoring six and Buerge scoring five during the spurt. Those points cut CJ’s deficit to 44-37.

But the Chieftains used an 11-5 run to go up 55-42. Carl Junction got treys from Klohe Burk and Buerge late in the third quarter, but the Bulldogs trailed 61-48 entering the fourth period.

Sapulpa scored eight unanswered points early in the final frame to take a 20-point lead at 69-49.

Buerge and Scott were named to the all-tournament team, while senior Hali Shorter was one of the Heart of a Champion award recipients.

Carl Junction will take on Gentry (Arkansas) at 3:30 on Monday at the Mustang Classic at McDonald County High School.