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BOYS HOOPS: Nevada earns blowout win for 7th place at Butler tourney

BUTLER, Mo. — With a solid overall performance, Nevada’s boys basketball team defeated University Academy Charter 58-26 in the seventh-place game of the Butler Tournament on Saturday afternoon. 

The Tigers built a 36-15 halftime lead.

“I’m proud of the way our guys showed up and with the energy we brought,” Nevada coach Shaun Gray said. “There was no let down or feeling sorry for ourselves (after two straight losses). Our guys brought defensive intensity from the tip and that fueled our 36-point first half.”

The Tigers held a 54-21 lead by the end of the third quarter on their way to the lopsided win.

“In the second half we focused more on our halfcourt defense and were able to limit the Gryphons to 11 total points,” Gray noted. “It was really nice to see all 14 guys get extended minutes and to see 10 guys score. Our main rotation guys were enthusiastic and very supportive of their teammates when the roles were flipped, and they were manning the bench for longer than normal portions of the game. That togetherness and family attitude is another thing that makes these guys so special and fun to be around every day.”

Brice Budd scored 19 points to lead Nevada. 

“Brice Budd led our defensive effort and his energy also led to several transition buckets,” Gray said. “He also played well off of two feet in the paint and took advantage of University Academy’s lack of size.”

Also for the Tigers, Jack Cheaney scored eight points, Mason Majors had seven and Gabe Smith and Alex Ast contributed five points apiece. Rounding out Nevada’s scoring were Sean Simmons (4), Uche Mba (3), Kellen Braden (3), Riddick Shook (2) and Montgomery Palmer (2).

“Our bench guys played great in extended minutes,” Gray said. “And our 3-point defense was solid, holding University to only one 3-point goal.”

Nevada is now 4-5 on the season, and Gray noted there’s still work to do.

“Areas to improve on would be our court vision, seeing the open man sooner, and also our free throw shooting,” Gray said. “It’s something we have to correct in order to win big and close games.”

Nevada travels to Harrisonville (6-3) on Tuesday. 

“We are excited to get to work Monday in preparation for a Tuesday game against district opponent Harrisonville, who is off to a great start this season,” Gray said. 

BOYS HOOPS: Carthage struggles from perimeter in loss to Sparta

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Carthage struggled from the perimeter from the onset and couldn’t climb out of the early hole, with Class 3 seventh-ranked Sparta never relinquishing the lead in a 43-33 win on Friday night in the Tigers’ final home game of the 2023 year.

“His game plan was phenomenal,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said of Sparta coach Deric Link. “They have played some smaller schools, so we weren’t really sure how they were going to come in and defend us. Their matchup zone with (Jacob Lafferty) in the middle really affected us. I thought we were unsure against it early on, and I don’t think the shots that we took early were confident shots that our group is used to taking. Later in the game, we had better rhythm shots but I think at that point, we were mentally and physically exhausted fighting against their matchup zone.”

Sparta (7-0) found its footing on the offensive end early against the Tigers, outscoring Carthage 12-7 in the first period to take the momentum. 

Walker Loveland (four points) and Jacob Lafferty (eight points, including one 3-pointer), a 6-foot-5 forward, combined to score all of the Trojans’ points. 

It was a struggle on the offensive end for Carthage (3-2), which started off cold from the perimeter in the first half, failing to convert several open looks outside, particularly in the opening stanza. 

“That is a team we need to be,” Morris said about his team knocking down open looks from range when given the opportunity. “We started out hot against Webb City (in the Carthage Invitational championship game) but we didn’t start hot tonight and I think it affected us. … We were a little timid to start and were playing from behind the whole night and never really got into a rhythm.”

Carthage did get a 3-ball from junior Trent Yates in the first quarter, coupled with a score on the inside by senior Jack Ryder, but looked for other ways to improve the scoring output in the second period to prevent the game getting out of reach. That meant doing the dirty work—rebounding, coming up with 50-50 balls and getting the ball inside.

“We changed it up offensively and got the ball to the middle and attacked,” Morris said. “I was proud of their effort in the second quarter, and again down the stretch in the fourth. It was two teams battling like crazy.”

Sparta pushed its lead to a half-high eight points, 20-12, off an offensive rebound and a putback from LeeAnthony Mayes before Carthage with less than three minutes to play before Carthage answered with a floater on the drove from senior Justin Ray, a score on a baseline drive from junior Kruz Castor and a make from the charity stripe to cut the deficit to 20-17 with 90 seconds left in the half, ultimately trailing five at the intermission, 22-17.

The Trojans pushed the lead to nine twice in the third quarter, including taking a 35-26 lead into the final eight minutes after closing the third period on a 6-0 run with two buckets from Lovelnd and a hoop from Lafferty. 

“This was the first game where I saw some mental fatigue on our guys’ faces,” Morris said. “I think we got a little defeated by the shots that we normally take, and practice over and over and over at game speed, that weren’t falling.”

Sparta scored the first basket two and a half minutes into the fourth quarter on a bucket from Lafferty to push the lead to double digits for the first time.

Carthage cut the lead to seven, 37-30, on a four-point play from Ray, who was fouled on a 3-ball in transition and made the ensuing and-1 free throw, with 5:06 left in regulation, but that was the final field goal from the Tigers until Ray made another 3-pointer from the top of the key with 1:07 left to again cut the deficit to seven, 40-33, but that would be as close as Carthage would get to the lead.

“They played at their pace,” Morris said of the limited scoring in the fourth quarter. “They did what they wanted to do and kind of forced us into situations we weren’t comfortable in.” 

Despite the struggles on offense, Morris was pleased with the Tigers on the defensive end. Carthage held Sparta, which averages 68.5 points per game, to a season-low 43 points. 

Lafferty, who was held to less than 30 points for the first time this season, finished with a game-high 24 points and was the only Trojan to score in double figures. Loveland and Mayes each had six

Ray finished with a team-high 14 points, while Yates also finished in double figures with 10 points. 

Carthage takes part in the Hy-Vee 12 Courts of Christmas Shootout 

HOOPS ROUNDUP: Seneca boys top Neosho; McAuley boys beat NEVC; CHC girls fall to Diamond

SENECA BOYS 70, NEOSHO 45

SENECA, Mo. — Seneca started fast and never looked back in a convincing win over Neosho on Friday.

Seneca (3-3) outscored Neosho 21-8 in the opening stanza and carried that momentum throughout the game.

The Indians led by 14 at the intermission and played with the cushion in the second half. 

Ethan Altic led Seneca with a game-high 20 points, with 12 coming in the second half. Morgan Vaughn had 18 points in the win.

Gavyn Hoover finished with eight for the Indians.

Ty Harris led Neosho (3-3) with 15 points, nine in the first half.

Collier Hendricks, Kanten Smith and Colton Southern each added eight points in the loss.

Seneca hosts Crane on Tuesday.

Neosho hosts Aurora on Monday.

 

MCAULEY BOYS 46, NORTHEAST VERNON COUNTY 30

McAuley Catholic boys basketball limited Northeast Vernon County to five points in the first quarter to build a double-digit lead the Warriors would never relinquish in a win on Friday.

McAuley pushed the lead to 17 points by the start of the fourth quarter en route to victory.

The Warriors, which have won three of their last four games, was led in scoring by Michael Parrigon’s 13 points, including two 3-pointers.

Alex Bohachick scored 10 points to finish in double figures.

McAuley takes part in the 41st Annual Southwest Boys Holiday Tournament with a matchup against Monett on Dec. 27.

 

DIAMOND GIRLS 54, COLLEGE HEIGHTS CHRISTIAN 37

DIAMOND, Mo. — The College Heights Christian girls basketball team suffered a 54-37 setback to a solid Diamond squad on Friday night. 

“Diamond is an excellent team that has height, speed, and athleticism,”” College Heights coach John Blankenship said. “I have nothing but praise for Diamond. They are a dynamic team. They are well-coached, and it’s no wonder they are off to such a great start to their season with that many great athletes.” 

Diamond led 28-15 at halftime en route to the victory. 

“Grace Frazier and Lauren Turner are difficult to defend, but they demand your primary focus on defense,” Blankenship said. “However, they are a well-rounded team and have other scorers. We were 0 for 6 from 3-point range in the first half. It could have been much closer had we hit some of those 3-pointers.”

Blankenship noted his team continued to battle in the second half.  

“We made it a point to get the ball into the post in the third quarter and Libby Fanning responded with nine points in the third quarter,” Blankenship noted. “We also shot 4 for 8 from 3-point range in the second half.”

CHC’s Fanning recorded a double-double with 18 points and 16 rebounds. Also for the Cougars, Maddy Colin scored five, Karly Dorris and Allie Stoute added three points and Ava Lett, Jesalin Bever, Kinley Marsh and Molly Long contributed two points apiece. 

College Heights (2-6) travels to Pierce City on Monday.

“They are 6-1, but I fully expect my girls to bounce back and play extremely well,” Blankenship said. “We will see a change in the style of our play moving forward that will benefit the team. I’m excited to see how they do on Monday.”

Diamond is now 8-1 on the season. The Wildcats host Liberal on Tuesday.

 

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City rolls to home victory over Cassville

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals ended a two-game skid in a big way.

Propelled by a huge second quarter, Webb City cruised to a convincing 81-43 victory over Cassville on Friday night inside the Cardinal Dome.

It’s safe to say the Cardinals got well at home after road losses at Carthage and Rogers Heritage.

“It was good to be back at home,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said. “We had a rough stretch of two games. We played two good opponents, including a rival in a championship game. You could tell fatigue was setting in and we weren’t as sharp as we needed to be. It was good to play at home and get some confidence back.”

The Cardinals (4-2) were clinging to a 24-16 advantage at the end of the first quarter, as the Wildcats stayed within striking distance.

But the Cardinals picked up the defensive pressure and sped up the game. As a result, the hosts began the second period on a game-changing 14-2 surge for a 38-18 lead. 

During the spurt, Gabe Johnson and Holton Keith both knocked down 3-pointers before the hosts converted several steals into easy transition layups thanks to their defensive pressure.

“Early on, Cassville played well and did a good job of bothering some of our shots,” Horn said. “We thought our pace would wear on them. We knew we needed to play up-tempo. We were able to get some steals and defensive rebounds and get out ahead and get a lot of easy looks.”

Overall, Webb City outscored Cassville 30-8 in the one-sided second quarter for a commanding 54-24 halftime advantage.

“That’s our second 30-point quarter and we’ve had a 29-point quarter, so that shows we can be explosive,” Horn said. “We want to see that for four quarters, maybe not at the 30-point range, but we don’t want to see any droughts like we had in our last two games.”

Webb City held a comfortable 75-38 lead by the end of the third quarter and the final outcome was never in doubt in the final frame.

“This is a game we can build on,” Horn said. “Everything offensively will get better. Our timing will get better, and our legs will get better with time. We’re going to get a lot more practice time from here on out and I think we’ll clean up a lot of things. I think we’ll be a much-better team down the stretch.” 

Junior guard Holton Keith scored 21 points to lead the Cardinals. Keith, who scored 19 points in the first half, also had seven steals. 

“He did a good job of playing defense with his hands wide and he did a good job of getting in the passing lane,” Horn said of Keith. “He was picking passes off and he was finishing. He’s shooting the ball well from 3. He’s worked on his release and his layups.” 

Also for the Cardinals’ balanced attack, senior Barron Duda scored 16 points, sophomore Trae Turner had 10 points and senior Omari Jackson and junior Eli Pace contributed nine points apiece. 

Johnson chipped in six points and five steals.

The Cardinals made 48 percent of their field goal attempts (33 of 68). Webb City was credited with 22 steals.

Cassville (4-4) received 13 points and 11 rebounds from Eli Stokes and 12 points from Simon Gates. 

The Wildcats hit 15 of 33 shots (45 percent) but had 39 turnovers to Webb City’s seven.

Webb City hosts Seneca (3-3) on Thursday.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)