Your online home for Joplin area sports coverage.

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City starts fast, finishes strong against Seneca

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Taking the court with a little extra motivation, Webb City started fast and finished strong in an 88-58 victory over Seneca on Thursday night in a non-conference boys basketball clash inside the Cardinal Dome.

In a game they never trailed, the speedy Cardinals built a 16-point lead by the midway point of the first quarter.

“Our guys were really motivated tonight,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said. “Coach (Cort) Hardy spent a lot of time here as an assistant and he coached a lot of our guys when they were coming up through the program. They wanted to have a good showing against him. I thought we were very aggressive, sharp and focused to start the game. And it always helps when you hit some shots early. That really fed our defense.”

Propelled by its full court pressure defense, and getting plenty of hoops in transition, Webb City held an 18-2 lead by the 3:55 mark of the opening stanza.

But Seneca adjusted to the speed of the game and the Indians started getting high-percentage shots from in close. In fact, the Indians closed the first quarter on a 13-4 surge, trimming Webb City’s lead from 16 to seven at 22-15.

“You have to give Seneca credit,” Horn said. “We won that first four minutes, but they were much better in that second four minutes. They made a run at us.” 

In the first meeting between the two programs since 2012, the fast-paced and back and forth second period was nearly even, as the Cardinals outscored the Indians 19-18 in the frame for a 41-33 halftime advantage.

“Seneca was hurting us in the soft spots of our 1-2-2,” Horn said. “We talked to our kids about that at halftime and we were able to make the adjustment.”

The visitors were still within striking distance when Webb City finished the third quarter on a 17-6 run for a 65-45 cushion.

“We wanted to wear them down and keep running at them in waves,” Horn commented. “We hope the wear and tear will take its toll. We play nine guys, and with the way we want to play, we’re going to need all of them. We want the tempo as fast as we can get it and we want to use our speed to our advantage. And the guys really like playing that way. I enjoy coaching that way and I think our fans like watching us play that way.” 

Webb City senior guard Barron Duda hit a trio of 3-pointers in the game-changing third quarter, while Eli Pace, Omari Jackson and Holton Keith all contributed buckets as the hosts won the third quarter 24-12.

In the early stages of the fourth quarter, Gabe Johnson and Keith both drilled 3-pointers before Jackson converted a steal into a layup, and the Cardinals blew the game open by pushing their lead to 30 at 79-49.

“We’re going to score in waves and it’s going to come in bunches,” Horn said. “But there are also going to be some short droughts. We have to play through them. And I thought our kids played extremely hard tonight.” 

Receiving votes in the MBCA’s Class 5 poll, Webb City hiked its record to 5-2.

Webb City shot 56 percent from the floor, making 36 of 64 shot attempts, including 11 of 24 from long range.

Four players scored in double figures for the Cardinals. 

Duda led the way with 24 points on 8 of 16 shooting, including 5 of 9 from 3-point land. 

A junior point guard, Pace scored 20 points to go along with eight assists.

Keith scored 16 points and Jackson added 12. Johnson just missed double figures with eight points.

Johnson and Keith compiled four assists and three steals apiece.

Hardy’s Seneca squad fell to 4-4. 

The Indians made 51 percent of their field goal attempts (23 of 45) and out-rebounded the Cardinals 27-26, but the visitors had 24 turnovers to Webb City’s 12.

Three players scored in double figures for the Indians. Senior forward Morgan Vaughn scored 19 points on 7 of 10 shooting and also grabbed 11 rebounds to lead the Indians.

Senior Gavyn Hoover added 14 points and junior Zane Grotjohn had 13 points.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City will take on St. Joseph Central at 3:30 on Dec. 28 at the Twelve Courts of Christmas tourney in Kansas City. 

Seneca will be among the teams competing at next week’s Neosho Holiday Classic.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

GIRLS HOOPS: Joplin tops Central for second straight win

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Joplin trailed by three after the first quarter before surging back in the second period to build an insurmountable cushion on the way to the team’s second win over the season, beating Central 43-35 on Thursday.

Central took an 8-5 lead into the second stanza before Joplin rebounded in a big way, outscoring the Bulldogs 17-6 on the way to a 22-14 lead by the intermission. Central trimmed the deficit to five to start the final eight minutes of play before Joplin added to its lead down the stretch to seal the win.

“This was a great team win for a second win in a row,” Joplin coach Brad Cox said. “We started out very well with 17 points in the second quarter. We went through a drought in the third and four quarters, but our girls responded and we were able to pull out the win. I feel like this is a big step for our program, continuing to fight and pulling out a win, and our defense is getting better each game.” 

The Eagles (3-7) were led in scoring by Bailey Owens’ 18 points, 10 coming in the second half. Her sister, Alissa Owens finished with 12 points to give Joplin a pair of players in double figures. Ashley Phillips added five and Aiyana Kroll scored four in the win.

Talia Dyson led Central in scoring with 18 points, while Desteny Pierce finished with 10.

Joplin is at Seneca on Jan. 4

GIRLS HOOPS: Ray-Pec holds off Carthage for road win

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Raymore-Peculiar closed the first half on a surge and held off Carthage in the second half en route to a 49-42 win on Thursday.

Ray-Pec took a nine-point lead into the second half before Carthage (3-5) outscored the Panthers 14-5 in the third period to tie the game heading into the final eight minutes of play. Ray-Pec took the momentum early in the fourth quarter and never gave it back.

“The girls battled hard tonight, there’s no questioning our effort against a talented Ray-Pec team,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said to SoMo Sports. “If a few more of our shots roll in, instead of just roll out, that game has a different ending.”

“Outside of a three-minute stretch to end the first half where Ray-Pec went on a 10-0 run, we outplayed them the other 29 minutes. The lesson we need to learn from this is that it takes a full 32 minutes to beat a good team.”

Ray-Pec closed the first quarter on a 9-5 run, which included a 3-pointer from Sam Larkins with 15 seconds left, to build a 15-10 lead heading into the second period.

Carthage took the momentum early in the second period after starting the quarter on an 8-2 run to grab the lead from the Panthers. 

Jaidyn Brunnert connected from the wing on the perimeter to start the quarter, while Lauren Choate added a pair of free throws before knocking down a deep 3-ball from the top of the key to put Carthage in front 18-17 with 3:36 left in the half.

Ray-Pec immediately took the advantage back and closed the first half on an 11-1 run to go into the intermission with a 28-19 cushion.

Sarai Clark contributed two field goals in the run, while Peyton Johnson knocked down a 3-pointer. Sophie Terry and Hayden Kurtz added buckets as well.

The Tigers spent the third quarter clawing back against the Panthers, outscoring Ray-Pec 14-5 out of the halftime break.

After Terry knocked down a 3-ball to start the second half, Lexa Younblood matched with a 3-pointer from the wing before Maggie Boyd connected from the perimeter to trim the CHS deficit to 31-26.

Clark scored on the drive for the Panthers before Carthage closed the third quarter making 7-of-8 free throws, which included Youngblood making 2 of 2 with five seconds left to tie the game at 33-all with one quarter to play.

Ray-Pec started the final eight minutes of play with a 3-pointer from Johnson before Clark scored inside and drew contact for a three-point play and a 39-33 lead. 

Boyd knocked down a runner for the Tigers before the Panthers got a baseline jumper from Johnson and an inside bucket by Hayden Kurtz to push the lead back out to 43-35.

Carthage cut the lead to five, 47-42, on a jumper from Brunnert off the assist by Choate with just over a minute to play, but that would be as close to the lead as the Tigers would get before the final horn.

Terry led Ray-Pec with 18 points, while Clark finished right behind with 15 points. Johnson sank two 3-pointers and finished with eight points.

Choate and Youngblood each knocked down a pair of 3-pointers and led Carthage in scoring with 16 points and 15 points, respectively. 

Lauren Choate and Lexa Youngblood were the offensive sparks tonight for us,” Moore added. “They did a great job of attacking the basket to score or draw fouls. Each of them shot 10 free throws with the added benefit of getting a couple of Panther players in foul trouble.”

Carthage takes part in the Pink & White Invitational basketball tournament hosted by Kickapoo from Dec. 27-30.