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BOYS HOOPS: Neosho finishes strong in rivalry win over Carthage

NEOSHO, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats and the Carthage Tigers went back-and-forth like a pair of champion boxers all Tuesday evening during their Central Ozark Conference bout at Neosho High School.

The lead exchanged hands many times — for example, Carthage led Neosho 34-29 late in the first half, but the Wildcats took a 41-34 early in the second half after scoring the final two points before halftime and the first 10 points after halftime.

Carthage regained the lead late in the third only to see Neosho tie it up at 48 entering the fourth.

Around the midway point of the fourth quarter, Neosho gained a 57-55 lead on a Brock Franklin 3-point basket and then extended it to 60-55 after three free throws from Isaiah Green and two Carthage empty possessions on the other end.

The Wildcats outscored the Tigers 24-19 in the fourth to earn a 72-67 win.

“My gosh, we got it up to eight (66-58) and we missed some free throws and fouled on an and-one,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “They didn’t go down without a fight, but Isaiah Green’s been great at the line at the end of games all year. (Carter) Baslee had a couple great shots there with Kael Smith facilitating in the middle. It was a great game.

“Thinking back, it was such a wild game that I don’t even remember certain parts of it. I just know Brock Franklin had a huge three in the corner that gave us the lead that we kept the whole time. (Carter) Fenske shot the heck out of it that first half.

“Yeah, I would say there in the second half the biggest difference is we made a few more free throws and they missed several, and we made our closer shots, they missed a few layups. When it comes down to two good teams, it’s the small things that make the difference.”

Carthage led 18-15 at the end of the first quarter, 34-31 at halftime, and 55-54 for the last time in the fourth.

“That was probably the fastest-paced first half of basketball that we’ve played all season,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said. “I’m sure it was exciting basketball to watch. When it counted most, they made some big shots and some winning plays and the right pass. We just didn’t, and we had some chances. We did a good job of speeding them up late, earning some turnovers, and we were unable to finish. They were absolutely lights out from the free-throw line down the stretch.”

Green and Baslee led Neosho with 18 points each — Green scored 10 of his points Tuesday on free throws, including seven of them in the fourth, and Baslee finished strong around the basket for six of his points in the final three minutes. Baslee’s last two points on a breakaway slam dunk gave Neosho a 70-64 lead.

Smith added 14 points, Fenske finished with 12 points with a quartet of trifectas, Collier Hendricks scored all five of his points in a row to earn Neosho a 23-all score early in the second quarter, Franklin’s three points might have been the most important three of the game, and Jared Siler finished at the basket in the first quarter for his two points.

The Wildcats honored their seniors Green, Baslee, Smith, Fenske, Franklin, Siler, and Michael Day before the game Tuesday.

“When the seniors got here as freshmen, that was only my second year (as head coach),” Culp said. “We hadn’t had any kind of consistency, even having coaches for multiple seasons. We had a 14-win season every now and then, but as soon as they stepped on the floor as freshmen that wasn’t going to be status quo anymore. They challenged seniors, it didn’t matter, and it was like we’re here to win and that’s what we’re going to do.

“They were 19-3 as freshmen. When they stepped on the floor, they were on a mission to change this program. I’m just so glad I got to be the coach to shepherd them through. I’m so proud of them for all the accomplishments we’ve had. First back-to-back winning seasons since 2003, most wins in a season since 2003, and most COC wins ever … and playing in back-to-back district championship games during their run. They’re great young men and they’ve not only had a great season, but they’ve set us up moving on forward.”

Neosho improved to 19-6 overall and 6-2 COC, and the Wildcats finish their regular season on Thursday on the road against unbeaten and second-ranked in Class 6 Nixa (25-0, 8-0 COC).

“They haven’t lost,” Culp said. “All we can do is go in there and battle. We’ll find out our district seed (Wednesday). We should fall around the five or the six. We’ll see how that goes. Either way, it will probably be a rematch with either Republic or Joplin. It should be fun. Our mind is on Nixa. We’ll go out there and compete, and it’s not going to have any bearing on seeding. We just want to enjoy these last couple, hopefully several, games with these seniors.”

Max Templeman sparked Carthage with a game-high 30 points, while Justin Ray finished with 14, Clay Kinder 10, Britt Coy nine, and Kruz Castor and Trent Yates two points each.

“Max is an ultra-competitor no matter what he’s doing,” Morris said. “It doesn’t have to be basketball, it’s anything he does. Huge competitor and he means a lot to us. He puts a lot on his shoulders, and he didn’t probably have his best night late in the fourth quarter. It wasn’t for a lack of effort from any of our kids, we just didn’t finish the plays late.”

The Tigers finished their regular season 14-11 overall and 4-5 COC, and they find out their next opponent Wednesday when the seeds for the Class 6 District 5 tournament are determined.

 

 

HOOPS ROUNDUP: McDonald County girls top Joplin; TJ girls knock off McAuley; other area teams in action

MCDONALD COUNTY GIRLS 54, JOPLIN 49

ANDERSON, Mo. — Joplin took a five-point lead into the final eight minutes of action before McDonald County rallied down the stretch to earn the win in the regular season finale for both teams on Tuesday.

The Eagles led 44-39 heading into the fourth quarter before the Mustangs outscored their opponents 15-5 in the fourth quarter to earn the win.

Riley Kelly led Joplin with 16 points, while Bailey Ledford added 12 points. Alissa Owens scored nine.

Carlie Martin scored 14 points for McDonald County, while Carlee Cooper finished right behind with 13. Roslynn Huston scored 10.

Joplin closes the season at 4-22 and heads into the Class 6 District 5 Tournament as the eighth seed and will take on top-seeded Republic at 4 p.m. on March 2 at Nixa High School

McDonald County closes the season with a 13-13 record and is the sixth seed in the Class 5 District 7 tournament, taking on third-seeded Bolivar at 6:30 p.m. on March 2 inside the Cardinal Dome at Webb City High School.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON GIRLS 67, MCAULEY CATHOLIC 47

LIBERAL, Mo. — Thomas Jefferson opened Class 1 District 6 play with a convincing win over McAuley Catholic on Tuesday.

The third-seeded Cavaliers (14-10) and sixth-seeded Warriors (9-18) were all tied up after the first quarter before Thomas Jefferson took a 28-23 lead into the intermission. The Cavaliers took a double-digit lead into the final period and pulled away down the stretch.

The Warriors advance to play second-seeded Liberal at 7 p.m. on Thursday in the district semifinals.

Gabbi Hiebert finished with 24 points, while Lannag Grigg finished with 19 for Thomas Jefferson. Sarah Mueller added 13, with Nico Carlson adding six.

Kloee Williamson led McAuley with 20 points, while Brooke Righter finished with eight points. Avery Gardner finished with seven.

 

PURDY, PIERCE CITY EARN WINS AT CLASS 2 DISTRICT 12 TOURNEY

In girls games played at College Heights’ athletic complex, fifth-seeded Purdy beat fourth-seeded Wheaton 37-31 and third-seeded Pierce City rolled past sixth-seeded Verona 61-17 at the Class 2 District 12 tournament.

No. 1 seed College Heights meets Purdy at 6 on Thursday night in the district semifinals. No. 2 Jasper plays Pierce City at 7:30 in the other semifinal. 

 

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City scores at the buzzer to upend Carl Junction in double OT

WEBB CITY, Mo. — It may have been Senior Night, but a sophomore made the biggest play of the game for the Webb City Cardinals.

Sophomore guard Holton Keith’s tip-in at the buzzer lifted Webb City to a thrilling 68-66 victory over Carl Junction in double overtime on Tuesday night inside a packed Cardinal Dome.

The final Central Ozark Conference clash of the season was deadlocked at 66 in the final seconds of the second extra session when Webb City senior guard Joe Adams hoisted up a 3-pointer from the left corner. 

The shot was off the mark, but Keith soared down the lane, grabbed the offensive rebound, and while still in the air, banked in the game-winning bucket just before the final horn sounded.

“Coach (Jason) Horn was telling us in our last timeout that we have to go get rebounds and we have to hustle to the ball,” Keith said. “That’s what I tried to do. It was exciting and a lot of fun. It’s big to get the seniors a win tonight. We all just played hard tonight…we really wanted it. And it feels great to break our losing streak.” 

The buzzer-beater finished off a significant comeback for the hosts, as the Cardinals trailed by 15 in the first half before rallying late in the game. 

“You have to give Carl Junction a lot of credit,” Cardinals coach Jason Horn said. “They punched us in the mouth at the start of the game. They’ve got some young talent and the (Ayden) Bard kid can really score the ball. There’s a lot of emotion in this game and I thought our kids did a good job of not getting rattled early. They stayed composed and kept chipping away. Our kids battled their way back. Our kids have been in a lot of tough games and some good environments this year. I’m just proud of their composure.”

For the Bulldogs, a signature win slipped away despite the valiant effort.

“I’m super proud of our guys,” Carl Junction coach Justin Pock said. “We played hard and we knew this would be a hard-fought battle. That’s what CJ versus Webb City is all about. It was a great environment here tonight and our guys answered the call. Every one of them played for each other tonight and they did the things we wanted them to do. But unfortunately, there has to be a winner and there has to be a loser. The game could have gone either way.”

 

GAME RECAP

Hot-shooting Carl Junction stormed out of the gates and scored the game’s first 10 points, with freshman guard Cooper Vediz scoring eight.

The Bulldogs led 17-6 at the end of the first quarter and extended their advantage to 15 at 24-9 before Webb City used a 15-2 surge to get back into the game, with Adams providing much of the scoring punch.

Propelled by 15 first-half points from Bard, the Bulldogs led 31-24 at halftime. The visitors were still up 46-42 entering the fourth quarter.

Adams came through in the clutch late in regulation by drilling a game-tying 3-pointer with two minutes to go. 

Both teams traded turnovers before senior forward Alex Martin recorded a key blocked shot with 37 seconds left. 

But the Cardinals’ alley-oop attempt failed with four seconds to play and Vediz’s heave from just inside halfcourt was off, sending the game to the first OT.

The teams scored four points apiece in the first overtime.

On the final play of the first OT, Webb City junior guard Barron Duda got the ball inside, but his shot from in close didn’t go down.

“We had good looks at the end of regulation and at the end of the first overtime,” Horn noted. “I thought we executed them pretty well. The pass was off a bit at the end of regulation. And then Barron got a good look, it just didn’t go in for him.”

In a key swing of momentum, the Cardinals scored the first five points of the second overtime to take a 66-61 lead. Martin scored inside, Keith made one free throw before Carl Junction turned the ball over and fouled, resulting in two made free throws from Adams with 1:30 to go.

The Bulldogs weren’t done. 

Carl Junction junior guard Jett Hocut swished a 3-pointer from the corner with just over a minute to play, trimming his team’s deficit to two.

The Cardinals missed the front end of a 1-and-1 free throw with 53 seconds left. On the other end, Carl Junction’s Lucas Vanlanduit scored inside and drew a foul to tie it up with 44 seconds remaining.

However, the ensuing free throw was off the mark, keeping the game deadlocked.

The Cardinals ran the clock down before Keith’s game-winning putback set off a celebration on the court for the hosts.

“It was a set play that we run,” Horn said of the final possession. “Alex made a good pass, Joe floated to the corner and got a good look. Holton just plays with a lot of energy. He was going to fly in for the rebound and he wasn’t going to be denied.”

 

SENIOR NIGHT

Webb City snapped a five-game skid on the night the program’s seniors—Adams, Martin, Trey Roets and Karstan Gooch—were recognized.

Roets has missed the entire season due to a shoulder injury, but he suited up, started the game and got off a shot in the opening minute before exiting.

“Our seniors have shown a lot of growth from junior high to where they are now,” Horn said. “It would have been easy for these guys to call this season a wash after we lost Trey and Dante Washington. Trey has been at practice every day even though he’s hurt. They’re a good group. They’ve shown that we’re still a good team even though we’re missing a couple of good players.” 

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Webb City is now 16-9 overall and the Cardinals went 3-6 in the always-tough COC. 

Adams led Webb City with 23 points. He hit seven 3-pointers, including four in the second quarter that allowed the Cardinals to remain within striking distance.

“There was a stretch where Joe carried us,” Horn said. “We just couldn’t get anything to fall. We’ve been telling Joe he has to shoot it when he’s open, and tonight, he did that.” 

Duda added 17 points and seven boards, while Keith scored 11 points and had five assists and Martin contributed 12 rebounds, nine points and seven assists.

“I thought Barron played amazing from the second quarter on,” Horn said. “He finished plays. I can’t say enough about him. Our two young guards, Eli Pace and Holton Keith, they got us back in the game with their defense. Alex made a big free throw. The guys who came in off the bench made energy plays. It was just a great team effort.” 

The Cardinals made 23-of-58 field goal attempts (40 percent), including 11-of-28 from beyond the arc. The hosts went 11-for-16 at the charity stripe.

Carl Junction fell to 8-18, 1-8 in the COC. 

The Bulldogs hit 26-of-55 shots from the floor (47 percent), including 8-of-23 on 3-pointers. Carl 

Junction went 6-of-11 at the foul line.

Bard paced Carl Junction with a game-high 27 points on 11-of-18 shooting. 

Vediz added 14 points with three treys, while senior Xavier Perkins scored seven, sophomore Wyatt McAfee had six and senior Ky Warren scored five.

 

THEY’LL MEET AGAIN 

Second-seeded Webb City will meet seventh-seeded Carl Junction at 7 p.m. on March 1 in the quarterfinals of the Class 5 District 7 tournament at Belton High School.

“To me, they’re not the seventh seed in that district,” Horn said of the Bulldogs. “I think they’re one of the top five teams in the district. We know Carl Junction will be a challenge for anyone in our district.” 

Pock noted Tuesday’s solid showing should give his squad confidence going into the postseason rematch.

“We gained some confidence tonight,” Pock said. “Webb City’s a good team. We took them to two overtimes and they only beat us by two. That should give us a lot of confidence going into districts. We’re going to battle them again.” 

Before the postseason begins, Webb City hosts Hillcrest on Thursday night in the regular-season finale. 

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

BOYS HOOPS: Joplin sends seniors off with win over Ozark in final home game

Joplin closed out the home portion of its regular season on high note, using an early second-half spurt to take a lead the Eagles wouldn’t relinquish en route to a 63-48 win over Ozark inside Kaminsky Gymnasium to cap off Senior Night.

Joplin’s All Wright dishes the ball for an assist during the Eagles’ win over Ozark on Tuesday. Photo by Israel Perez.

After a first half littered with lead changes, the second half saw just two and it was Joplin (16-9, 7-2 COC) out in front of the Tigers (11-14, 4-4 COC) the final time the lead changed hands on Tuesday in Central Ozark Conference and district action.

“That team is probably one of the hottest in our district and conference,” Joplin coach Bronson Schaake said after the win. “I think they have won seven of eight and beat Republic by 13. I don’t know if they’re going to be a seventh or eighth seed, but I don’t know if I want to run into them. They have two really good big guys and (Hudson Roberts) can flat score. We did a good job of making him earn it. I don’t know that we shot it very well, but we were opportunistic when we needed a bucket. I don’t know what we did at the free-throw line but it was a good way to expand the lead midway through the fourth.”

SENIOR NIGHT

Joplin basketball honored a pair of Eagles with Senior Night Ceremonies—Terrance Gibson and Grayden Cravens.

“I was very proud of Terrance’s last home game here,” Schaake said. “It’s the best way to go out. I have been here two years and Terrance has just been a really good kid. Throughout the school day, he is going to come and talk to you and goof around. But when he is locked in, he is one of the best ones I’ve seen. He has a load of potential and I hope he takes that to Independence (Community College). 

“I am very proud of Grayden. This was his first year playing since eighth grade. He is my (teacher’s aid) and he is just an awesome kid. To go through the entire season and not get much run but you still show up and practice hard every day, there are not a lot of kids or people in general who would put that amount of time in if they didn’t see the reward. I am very proud of him.”

GAME ACTION

Joplin’s Whit Hafer pulls up from mid-range during the Eagles’ win over Ozark on Tuesday. Photo by Israel Perez.

After a first half that saw a combined five ties and seven total lead changes, Ozark briefly regained the lead with the first bucket out of the break before Joplin scored the next seven points, with Gibson accounting for five of those points—including a pair of dunks—to give the Eagles a 30-24 lead.

“I think I have one of the best coaching staffs around,” Schaake said about the difference in play between the first and second halves of the win. “We do a really good job of making adjustments and the kids pick it up pretty quick, too, which is important. You can draw all day, but if they’re not getting it, it doesn’t matter.”

“It was weird,” Schaake added. “There were times where we didn’t rebound well. Then, we would put two or three stops together, get some tough rebounds and then push out and get something at the rim. That’s what we need to do when we are not shooting well.”

The early spurt gave Joplin a lead they wouldn’t relinquish throughout the period. The Tigers cut the lead to one possession four times before ultimately going into the fourth quarter down 37-33.

The Eagles built a six-point lead with 6:36 on the clock in the fourth quarter on an old-fashioned three-point play from All Wright after he drew contact on a drive and converted the charity to make the score 41-35.  

Cooper Williams knocked down a baseline floating runner at the 4:20 mark to push the lead to seven and Gibson came up with an exclamation point after driving baseline for a two-handed dunk to give Joplin a 48-59 lead with 2:42 left in regulation. Collis Jones also added back-to-back buckets late, including a three-point play.

Joplin’s Quin Renfro pulls up for a jumper in the Eagles’ win over Ozark on Tuesday. Photo by Israel Perez.

“Throughout the year, the kids have stepped up,” Schaake said. “At the beginning of the year, guys were just trying to figure out the varsity speed of the game, especially Cooper and Collis. … Guys have gradually stepped up. Everyone knows All is our guys, but he has done a better job of getting his teammates going. That builds confidence, and that is what you need at the end.”

Joplin went 13 of 15 from the free-throw line in the final four minutes of the game and 17-of-22 shooting from the stripe for the entire fourth quarter, which helped push the lead to double digits for the first time with 1:30 to play, 53-43, after a pair of charities by Wright, who had eight total in the quarter, that ultimately sealed the win. 

“I think we lost four games by a total of 11 or so points in the first half of the season because we didn’t make free throws or get key rebounds,” Schaake said. “We’re starting to put it all together, and hopefully we can carry it into district play.”

SCORING LEADERS

Wright finished with a team-high 17 points, while Gibson was right behind with 10 in the win. Whit Hafer added 10 points to give Joplin three players in double figures. Hobbs Gooch and Jones each added six points in the win.

Jace Whatley finished with 13 points to lead Ozark, while Roberts had 12 and Garrett Ballard finished with 10 in the loss.

UP NEXT

Joplin closes the regular season with a matchup at Springfield Central on Friday before taking part in the Class 6 District 5 tournament on March 1 at Willard High School.