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BASEBALL PREVIEW: Experience and depth to lead the way for Neosho in 2023 season

The Neosho baseball program has two important pillars to build off of for the upcoming 2023 season.

The Wildcats finished with a 14-16 record last season in Bo Helsel’s first year at the helm of the program and are ready to improve upon that record after returning nearly every starter from a year ago while also welcoming an influx of newcomers to the varsity level.

“This team is very excited,” said Helsel, a longtime assistant before taking over last year. “We have more depth than I can remember on a Neosho team. We also have a lot of senior leadership and experience. Nearly all of our seniors have varsity-level experience on the mound and in the field. We also have a great group of juniors who will push for time. Our sophomore class is very deep and I can see a few of those players pushing for varsity time this season.”

Neosho returns six seniors to the varsity squad—SS/P River Brill, UTL/P Kael Smith (all-conference HM and all-district), UTL/P Carter Fenske, C Eli Zar (second-team all-COC, all-district), OF/P Wyatt Shadwick (all-district) and OF/P Austin Rodriguez. Also returning to the varsity lineup is junior 3B and pitcher Quenton Hughes. 

The Wildcats also add senior DH/3B Dante Igisomar and welcome two juniors—UTL/P Noah Lawson and 2B/P Colton Southern. Also joining the varsity roster this season are sophomores Hudson Williams (2B/P), Denver Welch (OF/P) and Kanten Smith (C/P) as well as freshman OF/P Brody Crane.

“In my second year at the helm of Neosho baseball, my expectations are at an all-time high,” Helsel said. “I believe this group has the guts and drive to work hard in practice everyday and go and win baseball games. We are a focused group who I am excited to be a part of.”

Brill, Hughes and Zar figure to be the top three in the lineup for Neosho, with Shadwick, Rodriguez and Crane making up the middle of the order. Smith, Igisomar (DH) and Southern project to round things out.

Neosho’s rotation sets up with Smith, Austin Rodriguez, Hughes and Fenske. Brill projects as the closer, with Shadwick, Lawson, Welch, Williams, Bostyn Patterson, Liam McInturff, Alex Rodriguez, Brodie Arthur and Brody Crane all potentially working in relief out of the pen.

“We need to hit,” Helsel said about what improvements he wants from his team over last season. “If we had averaged two more runs a game last year, we would have five to six  more wins. I know we have great depth and solid starting pitching, but we need to score runs. It doesn’t matter how our kids get on base, we just need to challenge the defense every inning for us to be successful.”

With so much varsity experience returning coupled with the youth infusement to provide depth, it’s no wonder why the expectations are high around the Wildcats’ program this spring. After struggling mightily two years ago, Neosho bounced back to improve by 10 wins and finish just below .500. If Neosho continues that trend 2023 could be a big season for the Wildcats.

“I expect us to compete for a conference and district championship,” Helsel said. “Anyone who plays in the COC knows that schedule is a gauntlet. We have the talent and experience to make a run in districts as well. We will be moving up to Class 6 this season because our school continues to grow rapidly, but I believe we are ready for that.

“Our strengths are depth and experience. We have many kids with tons of playing time at the varsity level. We went from a four-win team in 2021 to a 14-win team last season. I believe we will continue to grow on that and send our seniors out with a season to remember.”

Neosho opens the season on the road at Carl Junction in a non-conference matchup scheduled for 2 p.m. on March 18.

BOYS GOLF: Neosho has increased numbers, new head coach this season

The Neosho Wildcats return two varsity lettermen, as well as three other golfers, from last season and welcome a host of newcomers for their new head coach Logan Shaw, who serves as associate head coach, special teams coordinator and offensive line coach for the Neosho football team.

“This season, we will be extremely young with only four seniors on a roster of 18 which bodes well for the future,” Shaw said. “We are focused on getting better every day. From putting short putts to working on our short game and working to learn how to manage a course. I think this team’s youth will show a little early in the year, but as the year progresses, I expect much improvement from the team over the course of the season.”

Camp Ramsey and Colby Shadwick earned varsity letters as freshmen last season and sophomore Cordell Ward, senior Collin Williams and junior Hayden Marble are the other returning golfers.

“I have a pretty good idea of who will be the top three golfers on our team,” Shaw said. “Camp Ramsey and Colby Shadwick, and I am also expecting junior newcomer Collier Hendricks to be a solid varsity player as well.

“There are a good number of players competing for the other two varsity spots. In the running for those two spots are freshman River Feagans, junior Cade Camerer, and seniors Collyn Kivett, Jared Siler and Brock Franklin. There are a number of other guys competing for varsity and JV spots.”

Neosho graduated three golfers from a squad last season that finished 10th in the Central Ozark Conference and 12th in Class 4 District 3, including lone state qualifier Xander Woodward, who finished 20th at district and 32nd at state.

“We have had a good number of kids who have lived at the golf course over the summer and fall,” Shaw said. “Those kids have improved mightily from where they were a year ago. I am hoping the dedication of kids like Colby Shadwick, Camp Ramsey and Collier Hendricks will pay dividends for them later in the spring.”

Shaw named the two returning varsity players and the overall size of the team as Neosho’s strengths, the Wildcats’ overall lack of varsity experience as their weakness and said that the key to a successful season for Neosho will hinge on developing the underclassmen so that they can push the varsity players by the end of the season.

The Wildcats open their season at home March 23 against Diamond and their schedule includes the Klint Andrews Memorial Tournament (March 27), the Joplin Invitational at twin Hills (April 6), the Horton Smith at Schifferdecker (April 10), the Ozark Invitational (April 13), the Carthage Invitational (April 17), and the Bird Dog Invitational at Briarbrook (April 24) before conference, district, and possibly state competition in May.

The Klint Andrews Memorial Tournament is a new event for the Wildcats this season and it’s held at the Fred Arbanas Golf Course in Lee’s Summit, a course named after the former Kansas City Chiefs tight end who passed away in 2021.

The tournament itself is named after a three-year member of the Lee’s Summit North golf team who passed away at the age of 17 on Dec. 31, 1999.

BOYS HOOPS: All-Central Ozark Conference team released

Below is the All-Central Ozark Conference Boys Basketball Team for the 2022-23 season.

 

ALL-CENTRAL OZARK CONFERENCE TEAM

Player of the Year: Kael Combs, Nixa 

Coach of the Year: Brock Blansit, Nixa

 

FIRST TEAM

Kael Combs, Nixa, Senior (U)

Ahlante Askew, Republic, Sr. (U)

Max Templeman, Carthage, Sr. (U)

All Wright, Joplin, Jr. (U)

Isaiah Green, Neosho, Sr. (U)

Brenley Hagewood, Republic, Soph.

Hudson Roberts, Ozark, Soph.

 

SECOND TEAM

Ayden Bard, Carl Junction, Sr.

Josh Peters, Nixa, Jr.

Justin Ray, Carthage, Jr.

Terrance Gibson, Joplin, Sr. 

Jace Whatley, Ozark, Jr.

Barron Duda, Webb City, Jr.

Garrett Hines, Nixa, Jr.

 

THIRD TEAM

Justin Gill, Branson, Sr.

Carter Baslee, Neosho, Sr.

Alex Martin, Webb City, Sr.

Drew Quinlan, Willard, Jr.

Cooper Wilken, Willard, Sr.

Cooper Vediz, Carl Junction, Fr.

 

DISTRICT HOOPS: Updated postseason scores

BOYS DISTRICT TOURNAMENTS

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5

(At Ozark)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(1) Nixa 57, (8) Ozark 55

(4) Joplin 90, (5) Springfield Central 88 (2 OT)

(2) Kickapoo 74, (7) Carthage 54 

(3) Republic 56, (6) Neosho 40

 

Friday’s semifinals

Nixa 68, Joplin 46

Kickapoo 59, Republic 49

 

Monday’s title game

Kickapoo 68, Nixa 60

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7

(At Belton)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(1) Grandview 69, (8) Warrensburg 62

(4) Belton 79, (5) Hogan Prep 68

(2) Webb City 56, (7) Carl Junction 37

(3) Ruskin 48, (6) Raytown South 36

 

Friday’s semifinals

Belton 59, Grandview 51

Ruskin 79, Webb City 63

 

Monday’s title game

Ruskin 76, Belton 62

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 6

(At Willard)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(8) Branson 55, (1) Bolivar 52

(4) Hillcrest 60, (5) McDonald County 43

(2) Parkview 58, (7) West Plains 45

(3) Glendale 73, (6) Willard 70

 

Friday’s semifinals

Hillcrest 54, Branson 37

Parkview 64, Glendale 57

 

Monday’s title game

Hillcrest 56, Parkview 51

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 12

(At Monett)

Monday’s quarterfinals

(4) Monett 25, (5) Reeds Spring 19

(3) Cassville 37, (6) Mount Vernon 31

Wednesday’s semifinals

(1) Seneca 51, Monett 46

(2) Aurora 60, Cassville 36

 

Friday’s title game

Seneca 61, Aurora 47

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 13

(At Pleasant Hill)

Monday’s quarterfinals

(5) Clinton 60, (4) Knob Noster 50

(3) Harrisonville 63, (6) Pleasant Hill 60

 

Wednesday’s semifinals

(1) Nevada 51, Clinton 36

(2) Barstow 60, Harrisonville 43

 

Friday’s title game

Barstow 57, Nevada 42

 

GIRLS DISTRICT TOURNAMENTS

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5

(At Nixa)

Thursday’s quarterfinals

(1) Republic 74, (8) Joplin 24

(5) Ozark 50, (4) Glendale 42

(2) Nixa 65, (7) Neosho 30

(3) Kickapoo 64, (6) Carthage 40

 

Saturday’s semifinals

Republic 52, Ozark 41

Kickapoo 60, Nixa 56

 

Tuesday’s title game

Republic 57, Kickapoo 50

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7

(At Webb City)

Thursday’s quarterfinals

(1) Carl Junction 71, (8) Ruskin 22

(4) Grandview 60, (5) Warrensburg 50

(2) Webb City 34, (7) Belton 24

(3) Bolivar 61, (6) McDonald County 33

 

Saturday’s semifinals

Carl Junction 68, Grandview 37

Webb City 55, Bolivar 34

 

Tuesday’s title game

Carl Junction 67, Webb City 42

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 12

(At Monett)

Tuesday’s quarterfinals

(4) Cassville 43, (5) Reeds Spring 38

 

Thursday’s semifinals

(1) Aurora 46, Cassville 26

(2) Seneca 50, (3) Monett 45

 

Saturday’s title game

Aurora 48, Seneca 38

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 13

(At Pleasant Hill)

Tuesday’s quarterfinals

(3) Clinton 54, (6) Pleasant Hill 29

(4) Harrisonville 44, (5) Center 41

 

Thursday’s semifinals

(1) Nevada 42, Harrisonville 39 (OT)

Clinton 40, (2) Notre Dame de Sion 37

 

Saturday’s title game

Nevada 46, Clinton 45

DISTRICT HOOPS ROUNDUP: Joplin, Neosho and Carthage girls fall in opening round

REPUBLIC GIRLS 74, JOPLIN 24

NIXA, Mo. — Top-seeded Republic suffocated eighth-seeded Joplin early on the way to building a big lead the Tigers never relinquished in the opening-round win of the Class 6 District 5 tournament hosted by Nixa High School. 

Republic (24-3) went to work early, building a 21-2 lead after the first quarter. The Tigers pushed the lead to 29 by halftime and limited the Eagles offensively to 10 points in the second half. 

Joplin closes the season with a 4-23 record and graduates seniors Serafina Auberry, Brynn Driver, Izzy Yust and Jill McDaniel.

Molly Blades led Republic with 18 points, while Kaemyn Bekemeier finished with 16 points. Lanney Strong, Alainna Norman each finished with eight points. 

Auberry finished with 12 points to lead the Eagles. Maria Loum and Bailey Ledford had four points each. 

Republic advances to take on fifth-seeded Ozark in the district semifinals on Saturday.

 

KICKAPOO GIRLS 64, CARTHAGE 40

NIXA, Mo. — Third-seeded Kickapoo started fast and didn’t look back in an opening-round win over sixth-seeded Carthage in the Class 6 District 5 tournament on Thursday.

The Chiefs (21-6) jumped out to a 22-5 lead after the first quarter and led by 22 at the intermission. Kickapoo added to its lead in the third quarter and finished off the win in the final eight minutes.

“Kickapoo came out and hit shots early and often in the first quarter,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said to SoMo Sports. “Unfortunately, we did not. When we missed, they turned it into a track meet and we couldn’t get back quickly enough to stop them. I thought we settled in and played much better the final three quarters, but it’s hard to overcome a 17-point first quarter deficit to a good team like Kickapoo.”

The Tigers finish the season with a 12-15 record and graduate seniors Kianna Yates, the program’s all-time leading scorer, and Landry Cochran.

“I’m really proud of our two seniors,” Moore said. “They have been leaders on the court, in the classroom and in the community for four years. They are very beloved within our program and their legacy will last a long time in Carthage. They will be greatly missed by their teammates, their coaches and the Lady Tigers fans.”

Lauren Choate led Carthage with 13 points, including three 3-pointers. Yates finished with 10 points.

Mikayla Pilley had 22 points to lead Kickapoo, while Miya Nieto had 11 points and three 3-pointers.

Kickapoo advances to take on second-seeded Nixa in the district semifinals at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday.

 

NIXA GIRLS 65, NEOSHO 30

NIXA, Mo. — Second-seeded Nixa jumped out in front of seventh-seeded Neosho and cruised to an opening-round win in district action. 

The Wildcats finished the season with a 10-17 record and graduate seniors Meredith Baldwin, Karlee Ellick, Maelynn Garrett, Reagan McInturff and Raine Harris.

No other information was made available.

DISTRICT HOOPS ROUNDUP: Carthage, Neosho suffer season-ending losses; Nevada, Seneca advance to title games

Neosho, Carthage fall in Class 6 District 5 quarterfinals

OZARK, Mo. — The sixth-seeded Neosho Wildcats traded punches with the third-seeded and sixth-ranked Republic Tigers for the first two quarters of their Class 6 District 5 quarterfinal contest on Wednesday night.

Sparked by senior Isaiah Green, who had eight points in the first quarter and 14 overall in the first half, Neosho led 13-12 after one quarter and earned a 24-all halftime score.

Unfortunately, though for the Wildcats, Republic caught fire in the second half and doubled up Neosho after halftime on the way to a 56-40 win.

Neosho senior Kael Smith’s basket maintained the tie score early in the second half at 26, but Republic went on an 11-1 run, including nine unanswered, to go ahead with the first double-digit lead of the night at 37-27. The Tigers then entered the fourth leading 40-31 behind their 16-7 advantage in the third.

Republic threatened pushing the lead out to 20 in the fourth, but the damage had already been done.

Green finished the night with a game-high 25 points, which turned out to be 62.5 percent of the Wildcats’ point production Wednesday night.

Smith added seven points and Collier Hendricks and Jared Siler finished with four each.

Neosho ends the season 19-8 overall and seniors Green, Smith, Siler, Carter Baslee, Michael Day, Carter Fenske, and Brock Franklin played their final high school games.

“We are really proud of this senior group and the guys below them this year,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “Just an unbelievable season and the group of seniors that really helped change the program. The best season we’ve had in the last two decades. Most wins since 2003, most Central Ozark Conference wins ever (six), and highest finish in the COC (fourth). These seniors will be very missed and their impact on the program will be lasting.”

The Wildcats earned back-to-back winning seasons and posted a 36-19 overall record.

Republic improved to 24-3 overall and the Tigers will face second-seeded Kickapoo in the semifinals Friday.

 

Kickapoo 74, Carthage 54

The Carthage Tigers saw their season end at 14-12 overall after their 74-54 loss Wednesday in the Class 6 District 5 quarterfinals against No. 2 seed Kickapoo.

Kickapoo built a 40-18 halftime lead behind a 25-8 advantage in the second quarter, including 16 of the final 19 points before the half.

Carthage outscored Kickapoo 27-22 in the third quarter and knocked five points off that halftime deficit.

Kickapoo extended the lead back out to 20 over the final eight minutes.

Max Templeman paced Carthage with a team-high 17 points, Justin Ray added 16, Britt Coy hit a team-high three 3-pointers on his way to 11 points, Clay Kinder scored five points, Trent Yates had three points, and Kruz Castor rounded out the Tigers’ scoring with two points.

Templeman, Coy, and Kinder, as well as fellow senior Ben Nicholas, each played their final high school games.

Harrison Doennig scored a game-high 24 points to spark the Chiefs, Trae Oetting finished with 17, Brayden Shorter netted 16, Jackson Shorter added 11, and Mason Robb, Shaun Campbell, and Landon Keisker each had two points.

Carthage finished with a winning record in back-to-back seasons for the first time since 2010-11.

 

NEVADA 51, CLINTON 36

PLEASANT HILL, Mo. — The Nevada Tigers advanced to the championship game of the Class 4 District 13 tournament by beating Clinton 51-36 on Wednesday night in the tourney’s semifinals.

The Tigers led 19-7 at the end of the first quarter and 35-22 at halftime. Nevada’s lead was 41-24 at the end of the third period. 

Cade Beshore scored 15 points and hit four 3-pointers to lead Nevada, while Drew Beachler and Brice Budd added 10 points apiece. 

No. 1 seed Nevada will meet second-seeded Barstow at 7 on Friday night for the district crown. 

 

SENECA 51, MONETT 46

MONETT, Mo. — The Seneca Indians secured a spot in the championship game of the Class 4 District 12 tournament by holding off Monett on Wednesday night.

The Indians went 7-for-7 at the foul line in the fourth quarter to seal the close win over the Cubs.

Morgan Vaughn scored 26 points to lead Seneca, while Ian Waterman scored 12 points for Monett.

Top-seeded Seneca meets second-seeded Aurora at 6 p.m. on Friday for the district title. 

Aurora hammered third-seeded Cassville 60-36 in the other semifinal. 

 

DISTRICT HOOPS: Postseason scores, schedules

BOYS DISTRICT TOURNAMENTS

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5

(At Ozark)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(1) Nixa 57, (8) Ozark 55

(4) Joplin 90, (5) Springfield Central 88 (2 OT)

(2) Kickapoo 74, (7) Carthage 54 

(3) Republic 56, (6) Neosho 40

 

Friday’s semifinals

Nixa 68, Joplin 46

Kickapoo 59, Republic 49

 

Monday, March 6

Championship game, 6 p.m.

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7

(At Belton)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(1) Grandview 69, (8) Warrensburg 62

(4) Belton 79, (5) Hogan Prep 68

(2) Webb City 56, (7) Carl Junction 37

(3) Ruskin 48, (6) Raytown South 36

 

Friday’s semifinals

Belton 59, Grandview 51

Ruskin 79, Webb City 63

 

Monday, March 6

Championship game, 6 p.m.

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 6

(At Willard)

Wednesday’s quarterfinals

(8) Branson 55, (1) Bolivar 52

(4) Hillcrest 60, (5) McDonald County 43

(2) Parkview 58, (7) West Plains 45

(3) Glendale 73, (6) Willard 70

 

Friday’s semifinals

Hillcrest 54, Branson 37

Parkview 64, Glendale 57

 

Monday, March 6

Championship game, 7 p.m.

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 12

(At Monett)

Monday’s quarterfinals

(4) Monett 25, (5) Reeds Spring 19

(3) Cassville 37, (6) Mount Vernon 31

Wednesday’s semifinals

(1) Seneca 51, Monett 46

(2) Aurora 60, Cassville 36

 

Friday’s title game

Seneca 61, Aurora 47

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 13

(At Pleasant Hill)

Monday’s quarterfinals

(5) Clinton 60, (4) Knob Noster 50

(3) Harrisonville 63, (6) Pleasant Hill 60

 

Wednesday’s semifinals

(1) Nevada 51, Clinton 36

(2) Barstow 60, Harrisonville 43

 

Friday’s title game

Barstow 57, Nevada 42

 

GIRLS DISTRICT TOURNAMENTS

CLASS 6 DISTRICT 5

(At Nixa)

Thursday’s quarterfinals

(1) Republic 74, (8) Joplin 24

(5) Ozark 50, (4) Glendale 42

(2) Nixa 65, (7) Neosho 30

(3) Kickapoo 64, (6) Carthage 40

 

Saturday’s semifinals

Republic 52, Ozark 41

Kickapoo, Nixa

 

Tuesday, March 7

Championship game, 6 p.m.

 

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 7

(At Webb City)

Thursday’s quarterfinals

(1) Carl Junction 71, (8) Ruskin 22

(4) Grandview 60, (5) Warrensburg 50

(2) Webb City 34, (7) Belton 24

(3) Bolivar 61, (6) McDonald County 33

 

Saturday’s semifinals

Carl Junction 68, Grandview 37

Webb City 55, Bolivar 34

 

Tuesday, March 7

Championship game, 6 p.m.

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 12

(At Monett)

Tuesday’s quarterfinals

(4) Cassville 43, (5) Reeds Spring 38

 

Thursday’s semifinals

(1) Aurora 46, Cassville 26

(2) Seneca 50, (3) Monett 45

 

Saturday’s title game

Aurora 48, Seneca 38

 

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 13

(At Pleasant Hill)

Tuesday’s quarterfinals

(3) Clinton 54, (6) Pleasant Hill 29

(4) Harrisonville 44, (5) Center 41

 

Thursday’s semifinals

(1) Nevada 42, Harrisonville 39 (OT)

Clinton 40, (2) Notre Dame de Sion 37

 

Saturday’s title game

Nevada 46, Clinton 45

STATE WRESTLING: McDonald County, Carl Junction, Neosho finish in top 10; Murphy, Hitt win titles

COLUMBIA, Mo. — The McDonald County Mustangs, the Carl Junction Bulldogs and the Neosho Wildcats all finished in the top 10 of the team standings as the 2023 MSHSAA Boys Wrestling Championships wrapped up on Saturday night at Mizzou Arena.

McDonald County and Carl Junction finished in fifth and sixth in Class 3 with 88 and 83 points, respectively, while Neosho finished seventh in Class 4 with 77 points.

McDonald County juniors Samuel Murphy (215 pounds) and Jayce Hitt (285) each won state titles at their respective weights Saturday night.

Murphy (44-1) defeated Branson’s Cade Grimm on a 6-1 sudden victory for the state title one week after Murphy defeated Grimm with a sudden victory for the district crown. Earlier in the semifinals Saturday, Murphy won a 3-2 ultimate tie-breaker against Willard’s Alex Nunez.

Hitt (26-0) pinned DeSoto’s Isaac Foeller in 1 minute and 42 seconds in the championship match and won 7-3 against Grandview’s Derek Joiner in the semifinals.

McDonald County seniors Blaine Ortiz (138) and Colter Vick (175) closed out their prep careers with state medals, Ortiz finishing third and Vick sixth.

Ortiz (43-7) rebounded with two victories after losing 3-0 in the semifinals against Whitfield’s A.J. Rallo, winning a 6-1 sudden victory against Bolivar’s Cooper Moore for third and a 6-4 decision against Jefferson City’s Braden Werdehausen in the consolation semis.

Vick (35-14) lost 5-0 against Willard’s Jase Motlagh in his final high school match.

Carl Junction will return home with five state medalists, including two state runners-up in junior Sam Melton (120) and sophomore Tony Stewart (165).

Melton (43-6) lost 7-0 against North Point’s Kaden Purler in the championship match, while Stewart (41-12) lost by pinfall against Hillsboro’s Griffin Ray in his title match.

Carl Junction’s Carter Foglesong (41-6) and Lukas Walker (46-3) placed fourth at 106 and 113 and Cayden Bolinger (31-15) finished sixth at 285.

Webb City’s lone state qualifier, junior Colt Taylor, lost both his matches at 132 on Friday and finished his season 28-19 overall.

In Class 4, Neosho earned four state medals with Carter Howard (138) and Eli Zar (165) taking second, Nico Olivares (285) fourth, and Collyn Kivett (157) fifth.

Howard lost by pinfall against Liberty’s Christopher Coates, now a three-time state champion, in the championship match and finished his freshman season 21-6 overall.

Zar (48-3) closed out his outstanding high school wrestling career with a 7-2 tie-breaker loss against Francis Howell Central’s Aidan Hernandez.

Olivares and Kivett finished their senior seasons 36-6 and 38-9 overall, respectively.

Carthage finished 18th overall in Class 4 with 34 points and the Tigers bring home three state medals with Davion King (30-4) in fourth at 165 and Bradyn Tate (48-8) and Grey Petticrew (32-12) both in sixth at 132 and 150.

King’s two losses at state came against Grain Valley’s Tanner Barker and Tate and Petticrew also had opponents who beat them twice at state in Oak Park’s Jamison Tunstill for Tate and Poplar Bluff’s Lucas Robertson for Petticrew.

Joplin’s lone state qualifier, Draven VanGilder (215), rebounded from semifinal and consolation semifinal losses to win a 5-4 decision against Staley’s Jack Stoffel for fifth and to finish his senior year on a winning note and with a 29-10 overall record his last season.

On the girls side, Joplin’s Erika Washom (31-12) finished 2-2 overall at state in her Class 2 135 weight class. She pinned St. Joseph Central’s Ashley Slade and Park Hill’s Rylin Beatty in her first two consolation matches, but Joplin’s first girls wrestling state qualifier finished her junior season 31-12 with a loss in the third consolation round.

 

BOYS HOOPS ROUNDUP: Webb City, Neosho suffer losses in regular-season finales

HILLCREST BOYS 63, WEBB CITY 43

WEBB CITY, Mo. — It wasn’t the way the Webb City Cardinals wanted to end the regular season.

Hillcrest took an early lead and never relinquished it en route to a 63-43 win over Webb City on Thursday night inside the Cardinal Dome.

“We didn’t do a very good job of rebounding the basketball tonight,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said. “And we had too many empty possessions. We didn’t convert point-blank shots and we didn’t finish shots off from the perimeter. You can’t have that many empty possessions against a good team. They were able to stretch the lead on us.”

Webb City ends the regular season with a record of 16-10.

The Cardinals made just 8-of-26 field goal attempts (32 percent), including 3-of-18 from beyond the arc.

Sophomore guard Holton Keith scored 14 points to lead the Cardinals, while classmate Eli Pace added 10. Junior guard Omari Jackson contributed eight points off the bench.

Hillcrest (16-11) shot 47 percent from the floor (22-of-47). The Hornets also went 17-for-24 at the foul line. 

Braxton Baker recorded 24 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Hornets, while Anarre Clark added 21 points and Cole Griesemer contributed 14 points and 10 rebounds.

Hillcrest out-rebounded Webb City 37-21.

Utilizing an early 11-2 run, Hillcrest led 20-9 at the end of the first quarter. 

Webb City outscored the visitors 10-9 in the second period, but the hosts trailed 29-19 at intermission.

The Hornets led 47-30 at the end of the third quarter and never surrendered their advantage in the final frame.

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.

“I think we have a chance to win the district, but we obviously have to get through that first game with Carl Junction,” Horn said. “Carl Junction played us really tough the other night and we know there are some really good teams in our district. It’s going to come down to which team gets hot at the right time. If we can get hot, stay confident and make plays, and maybe get a little luck on our side, we can come out of there with a district championship.” 

 

NIXA BOYS 71, NEOSHO 35

NIXA, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats dropped the regular-season finale to the undefeated Nixa Eagles. 

Neosho ends the regular season with a record of 19-7. The Wildcats went 6-3 in the always-tough Central Ozark Conference. 

With Thursday’s win, Nixa remained undefeated and locked up an outright Central Ozark Conference championship. Ranked second in Class 6, Nixa improved to 26-0 and the Eagles went undefeated in the COC at 9-0.

The Eagles led 24-10 at the end of the first quarter and 30-21 at halftime. Nixa pulled away with a big third quarter, as the hosts took a 60-31 lead into the fourth quarter.

Sixth-seeded Neosho meets third-seeded Republic at 8:30 on March 1 in a quarterfinal contest of the Class 6 District 5 tournament at Ozark.

Also of note, Nixa’s girls defeated Neosho 70-40 on Thursday night. No other information was available.

Seventh-seeded Neosho (10-16) meets second-seeded Nixa (20-6) at 7 on March 2 in the opening-round of the Class 6 District 5 tournament at Nixa. 

 

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.

 

 

DISTRICT WRESTLING ROUNDUP: Area athletes advance to state

OZARK, Mo. — Joplin, Neosho and Carthage all had wrestlers advance to the state wrestling tournament by finishing in the top four of their respective brackets on Saturday at the Class 4 District 3 tournament at Ozark High School.

Neosho had six wrestlers move on to state.

Neosho’s Carter Howard (138), Eli Zar (165) and Nico Olivares (285) were district champions, Fisher Butler was the runner-up at 120, Ulysses DeLeon took third at 190 and Collyn Kivett placed fourth at 157.

In the title match at 138, Howard earned an 8-3 decision over Lebanon’s Jonathon Perryman. Zar defeated Carthage’s Davion King 5-1 for the championship at 165. In the heavyweight title bout, Olivares won by fall over Ozark’s Peyton Greer. Butler suffered an 11-2 setback to Lee’s Summit North’s Charlie Dykes in the final at 120.

DeLeon pinned Lee’s Summit West’s Nate Moore in the third-place match. At 157, Kivett dropped a 7-0 decision to Springfield Central’s Gaven Bremenkamp for third place.

Neosho finished second in the team standings with 146 points. Ozark took first with 191 points.

The Carthage Tigers had four wrestlers advance.

Carthage had three athletes take second in their respective brackets—Tanner Putt (106), Grey Petticrew (150) and Davion King (165). Also for the Tigers, Bradyn Tate finished third at 132 pounds.

Putt suffered a 1-0 loss to Raymore-Peculiar’s Kamdon VonHolten in the title match at 106.

Petticrew suffered a loss by fall to Ozark’s Braxton Strick in the title bout at 150, while King lost to Neosho’s Zar, 5-1.

Wrestling for third, Tate won by fall over Kickapoo’s Tobias Collins. 

Carthage finished seventh in the team standings with 102 points.

Joplin’s lone state qualifier is senior Draven VanGilder, who was the runner-up at 215 pounds.

In the title bout, Nixa’s Brennan Carey earned a 7-0 decision over VanGilder.

VanGilder beat Smith-Cotton’s Jerian Maupins 8-2 in the semifinals. He pinned Carthage’s Alexander Salas-Marquez in the opening round and topped Waynesville’s Joshua Bess 4-2 in the quarterfinals. 

 

SENECA SHINES AT CLASS 2 DISTRICT 3 TOURNEY

SENECA, Mo. — The Seneca Indians had eight wrestlers advance to state by finishing in the top four of their weight classes on Saturday at the Class 2 District 3 tournament.

Seneca’s district champs were Brady Roark (132) and Andrew Manley (144) and Jace Renfro was the runner-up at 190.

Finishing third in their brackets for the Indians were Paxton Bruegal (106) and Eli Manley (126). Taking fourth were Landen Commons (157), Nolan Napier (165) and Lincoln Renfro (175).

Cassville had six qualifiers. 

Taking second for the Wildcats were Akhilleus Arguelles (132), Riley James (150), Tristan Thompson (157) and Jake Anthonysz (165). Colton Roark was third at 144 pounds and DJ Glidewell finished fourth at 285.

Nevada had four athletes move on.

Nevada’s Tyler Longobardi was the runner-up at 175, Brayden Keonig (150) and Kenneth Johnson (215) both finished third and Joseph Fahnstock took fourth.

Monett’s Simon Hartline was the district champ at 120 pounds.

The top four teams were Pleasant Hill (218.5), Blair Oaks (174), Seneca (154) and Cassville (114.5).

 

STATE WRESTLING 

The MSHSAA state wrestling tournament will now be a four-day affair in Columbia.

The Class 1 girls and Class 1-2 boys tournaments will be held on Feb. 22-23, while the Class 2 girls and Class 3-4 boys tourneys are slated for Feb. 24-25.

 

RELATED STORY: C3D3 WRESTLING: Carl Junction makes history with first district title in 25 years – SoMo Sports (somo-sports.com)

HOOPS ROUNDUP: Carthage boys edge Willard; Neosho, Webb City boys, Carthage girls suffer COC losses

CARTHAGE BOYS 59, WILLARD 58
WILLARD, Mo. — Carthage and Willard battled to the final seconds, with Carthage holding on for a Central Ozark Conference win on Friday.

Carthage (14-10, 4-4 COC) led by four after the first quarter and took a one-possession lead into the intermission, 30-28. CHS pushed the lead to five to start the fourth quarter and spent the fourth quarter holding off Willard’s comeback bid. Carthage withstood the rally for the win.

Max Templeman led Carthage with a pair of 3-pointers and a game-high 24 points. Justin Ray (13 points) and Clay Kinder (10 points) each added a pair of 3-pointers in the win.

Carthage secured the program’s first back-to-back winning seasons since 2010-12.

Carthage wraps up its regular season with a matchup at Neosho on Tuesday.

 

REPUBLIC BOYS 64, NEOSHO 53

REPUBLIC, Mo. — Republic erased an early deficit over the middle quarters on the way to a Central Ozark Conference and district matchup on Friday.

The Wildcats (18-6, 5-2 COC) took a 15-12 lead into the second quarter before the Tigers (21-3, 5-2 COC) outscored Neosho 33-20 in the second and third quarters to build a 10-point cushion to start the final eight minutes. Republic held firm down the stretch.

Brenley Hagewood finished with 17 points to lead the Tigers, while Allante Askew added 14.  Gunner Ellison scored 12. 

Isaiah Green had 19 points to lead Neosho in scoring, while Brock Franklin finished with 11. Carter Baslee added 10.

Neosho hosts Carthage on Tuesday before wrapping up the regular-season portion of the schedule with a road contest at Nixa on Thursday.

 

NIXA BOYS 82, WEBB CITY 69

NIXA, Mo. — A solid effort wasn’t enough for the Webb City Cardinals. 

Overcoming an early deficit, Class 6 No. 2 Nixa remained undefeated by earning a COC win over the visiting Cardinals.

Nixa is now 24-0 and 7-0 in the conference, while Webb City fell to 15-9 overall and 2-6 in the COC.

The Cardinals scored nine unanswered points early in the game and led 21-18 by the end of the opening frame.

Using an 11-5 spurt, Webb City held a nine-point lead with just under four minutes to play in the second quarter at 32-23. But Nixa closed the first half on a 17-6 surge to take a 40-38 advantage at the break. 

The Eagles outscored the Cardinals 25-11 in the third period for a 63-51 advantage.

The visitors were unable to rally in the final frame. Nixa won the fourth quarter 19-18 for the final margin.

Sophomore guard Eli Pace led the Cardinals with 20 points on 9-of-13 shooting, while junior guard Barron Duda added 16 points and 13 rebounds. Senior forward Alex Martin had 15 points and sophomore guard Holton Keith added eight points.

Kael Combs led Nixa with a game-high 25 points, while Garrett Hines added 21 points and Josh Peters had 14.

The Eagles hit 13 3-pointers, while the Cardinals made three. Nixa went 17-of-24 at the foul line, while Webb City made 6-of-15 at the charity stripe.

Webb City will host Carl Junction on Tuesday night in the final conference game of the season. 

 

JOPLIN BOYS 65, BRANSON 53

BRANSON, Mo. — Joplin went on the road and earned a Central Ozark Conference win over Branson on Friday.

No other information was made available.

 

WILLARD GIRLS 48, CARTHAGE 42

WILLARD, Mo. — Carthage built an early double-digit lead only to see Willard rally back for a Central Ozark Conference win on Friday.

Carthage (10-14, 2-6 COC) jumped out to a 15-point lead after the first quarter after outscoring Willard 23-8 over the first eight minutes. Willard rallied hard in the middle quarters, scoring a combined 32 points and holding Carthage to nine points to take a 40-32 advantage heading into the final eight minutes of action. Willard held off Carthage to earn the win.

Elise Murray led Willard with 15 points, while Carolina Crawford knocked down two 3-pointers on the way to 10 points. Karli Wheeler and Kenadie Johnson each scored nine.

Carthage was led in scoring by Kianna Yates’ game-high 17 points, including a set of 3-pointers. Lauren Choate added seven points, while Landry Cochran finished with six. Cochran knocked down two 3-points in the loss.

Carthage is at Neosho on Monday before wrapping the regular season at Cassville on Thursday. 

HOOPS: Neosho boys, Carl Junction girls earn commanding conference wins

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats achieved their most overall wins in a season since 2003 with 18 and their most ever wins in Central Ozark Conference play with five, by coming into hostile territory and spoiling the Senior Night festivities with a 64-47 victory over the host Carl Junction Bulldogs on Tuesday night.

Carl Junction’s Ayden Bard pulls up for a jumper in the Bulldogs’ loss to Neosho on Tuesday. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

Neosho trailed just once when Carl Junction senior Ayden Bard opened the scoring early on and the Wildcats already built a 16-4 lead late in the first from a pair of 8-0 scoring runs.

The Wildcats led 16-7 after one, 32-19 at halftime, and 52-32 after three quarters.

Neosho senior Kael Smith alone proved responsible for all eight points in the first 8-0 spurt and finished with all 14 of his points in the first half.

Fellow senior Isaiah Green scored 15 of his game-high 21 points in the second half and his last point Tuesday extended Neosho’s lead to 62-38 with nearly four minutes remaining in regulation.

“Kael played great,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “He just put us on his back and took care of business that whole first quarter. Isaiah just does what he does. We know that he’s going to reach that 16-point mark every night, whether it’s free throws or whatever it is he has to do, he just does it.

“We’re playing so well right now. We feel like we were the favorite in this game and just took care of business. That’s always fun.”

Carter Baslee added 10 points, Jared Siler seven, Carter Fenske six, Michael Day three, Tyrone Harris two, and Brock Franklin one point for the Wildcats (18-5 overall, 5-1 COC).

Neosho’s Isaiah Green absorbs contact on a drive to the hoop during the Wildcats’ win over Carl Junction on Tuesday. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

The Wildcats are 8-1 overall, including their 5-1 start in conference play, since their 44-38 comeback win over Carl Junction in the Kaminsky Classic in early January.

“We’ve had only one loss since then and that was a hard-fought one (77-69) against Joplin,” Culp said. “It was the turning point in our season. We played Francis Howell and didn’t play well at all, lost to William Chrisman in overtime, and we realized those are the teams that we want to be competing against. We dug in and have taken care of business since then.”

Neosho returns to action Friday on the road against Republic, one of two 20-win teams faces during the last three games of the regular season.

Bard led Carl Junction (8-16, 1-6) with 13 points, while Xavier Perkins added seven, Jett Hocut and Ky Warren six each, Cooper Vediz five, Braxton Dodds four, and Wyatt McAfee, Brody Pant, and Shea Perkins had two points each for the Bulldogs, who are back on the court Thursday on the road against Ozark.

Bulldog seniors Bard, Dodds, Luke Jones, Xavier Perkins, Lucas Vanlanduit, and Warren were honored before the game Tuesday.

 

CARL JUNCTION GIRLS 74, NEOSHO 31

The Carl Junction Bulldogs improved to 23-1 overall and 7-0 in the Central Ozark Conference after their commanding win over the visiting Neosho Wildcats on Tuesday night.

Carl Junction’s Kylie Scott scores in the paint during the Bulldogs’ win over Neosho on Tuesday. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

Carl Junction’s girls, winners of 18 straight games overall and ranked first in Class 5 by the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association, trailed just once early on at 4-2 and the Bulldogs never looked back as they outscored Neosho 16-2 the rest of the first quarter on their way to a 18-6 lead after one.

The Bulldogs then ended the first half on an 11-0 run and entered the lockers with a 39-12 halftime lead, then they continued their scoring run in the second half with eight more unanswered points for a 47-12 lead.

Carl Junction entered the fourth ahead 65-24, behind a 47-18 advantage in the second and third quarters.

“I thought our kids did a solid job defensively pressuring the basketball and making looks inside tough for them,” Carl Junction coach Brad Shorter said. “You hate to see kids injured like they’ve got multiple injuries that have forced them into setbacks. I’m proud of our kids. We moved the ball well tonight. We got some good flow and rhythm offensively. Just proud of them and our effort.”

Destiny Buerge finished with a game-high 24 points to pace the Bulldogs, who surpassed 70 points for the fourth straight game, all conference games.

Kylie Scott added 15 points, Dezi Williams 14, and Klohe Burk had 11 points to complete the quartet in double figures, while Jadyn Howard scored four points, Hali Shorter three, Anna Burch two, and DeShaye Buerge one.

Carl Junction seniors Destiny Buerge, Burk, Shorter, and Allie Wrestler were honored between the girls and boys varsity games.

“I don’t know how many wins these seniors have been a part of, but it’s a lot,” Coach Shorter said. “They started as freshmen and we were 28-0, Destiny was a huge part of that and some of those others got a little bit of time. Wins aside, they’re great kids, they’ve grown up to be great young ladies, and they’re going to be successful at whatever they choose to do, whether it’s on the basketball court or in college or trade. We’re going to miss them.

Neosho’s Jazmyn Washington lets go of a jumper during the Wildcats’ game with Carl Junction on Tuesday. Photo by Sloan Uebinger.

“It’s been a treat to coach Hal. She’s been my water girl since she could sit on the bench. That makes it tough to lose her because she’s such an intelligent player and she’s not some prolific scorer or some outstanding athlete, but she gets the job done and she does a lot of the little things … a lot of it is coaching on the floor and she’s a great teammate, one of the most unselfish, most selfless individuals I know. She’s terrific and I’m going to miss her.

“Destiny is a scoring machine. She has matured so much over the four years, and she’s become more of a great team player that we can utilize when needed. She’s always willing to take on a challenge.

“Klohe has been a fabulous addition. Just shoots it, her defense is unbelievable, and she can put teams at a disadvantage immediately with her speed and quickness.

“Allie didn’t come out last year and we talked her into coming back out this year. Just a great kid and can give us quality minutes off the bench. That’s big for us moving forward.

“Hopefully, we can continue playing and get a few more games out of them.”

The Bulldogs are 92-18 overall so far during the past four seasons.

Carl Junction returns to the court Thursday on the road against Ozark.

Karlee Ellick paced Neosho on Tuesday with 10 points and the trio of Meredith Baldwin, Avyn Blair, and Jazmyn Washington each produced four points for the Wildcats (10-12 overall, 1-4 COC), who are back on the road on Thursday against Republic.

WRESTLING: Neosho strong in sweeping Webb City, McDonald County

NEOSHO, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats accumulated 129 points, highlighted by 17 wins by pin, during their varsity boys sweep Thursday night of their rival to the north Webb City and their rival to the south McDonald County.

Neosho defeated Webb City 72-9 behind eight pins and wins by forfeit at 120, 126, 175, and 215 pounds.

In the nightcap, Neosho won 57-22 over McDonald County with nine pins and one decision.

McDonald County prevailed 54-27 over Webb City in the first dual of the evening.

“The thing I’m most pleased about is we’ve lacked doing some little things right and gaining the momentum I feel like we need in the second half of the season,” Neosho coach Jeremy Phillips said. “I feel like, as a team, we have turned the corner a little bit and maybe gained some slight momentum and demonstrated that progress is being made.

“It’s not about being perfect. We’re far from perfect, but I don’t expect us to be perfect, I expect us to progress, move forward, get better, listen, and be coachable. Some of our losses and shortcomings tonight could lead to the growth we need, and it could lead to a win in the postseason because of the learning that takes place from a loss now.

“That’s what I try to get them to understand: Don’t be satisfied and use our opportunities to grow. I felt like we did that tonight. Hopefully, this slight bit of momentum that we gained is used to keep moving forward. I always talk about how the second half of the season is like going down a hill. We don’t want to be coasting down the hill. We want to be peddling down the hill for that climb we’re trying to make of that peak performance at the end.”

In the closer dual against McDonald County, Brody Mitchell (120), Fisher Butler (126), Chase Kivett (150), Collyn Kivett (157), Eli Zar (165), Ulysses DeLeon (190), Everson Tomlinson (215), Connor Reiboldt (106), and Sam Fryer (113) each won by pin and Hunter Butler (132) won a 12-9 decision against Ayden Ball.

McDonald County’s Blaine Ortiz (138) won by a 14-6 major decision against Josh Scheuerman, Levi Smith (144) and Colter Vick (175) each won by pin, and Samuel Murphy (285) won by forfeit.

Against Webb City, Fryer (113), Scheuerman (138), River Feagans (144), Chase Kivett (150), Collyn Kivett (157), Zar (165), DeLeon (190), and Olivares (285) each won by pin, while Mitchell (120), Fisher Butler (126), Gabriel Busteed (175), and Tomlinson (215) won by forfeit.

Webb City’s Colt Taylor (132) pinned Hunter Butler and Tyler Pearish (106) won a 6-3 decision from Reiboldt.

McDonald County’s Eberson Perez (106), Ortiz (138), Smith (144), Malosi Sosef (190), and Murphy (285) each won by pin and Paden Vance (120), Micheal Owens (126), Vick (175), and Cole Thomas (215) each won by forfeit in their dual against Webb City.

Webb City’s Grant Humphrey (113), Taylor (132), Aidan Rose (150), and Dominic Boles (157) each won by pin and Bronson Collard (165) won a 7-6 decision against McDonald County’s Huxley Wardlaw in one of a select number of varsity matches Thursday that lasted all three periods.

Neosho and McDonald County both return to action Saturday in the Branson Tournament, and Webb City travels to St. Louis for competition Friday and Saturday in the Rockwood Summit Tournament.

GIRLS HOOPS: Cold first half derails Neosho in home conference opener

NEOSHO, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats dug themselves too deep a hole in the first half on Wednesday night during their home Central Ozark Conference opener against Willard.

Neosho went scoreless for the first 4 minutes and 46 minutes of the game, then for 5:34 of the second quarter as Willard scored the game’s first 13 points, led 18-6 after one quarter, and went into halftime ahead 28-12.

Neosho cut its deficit to 38-33 early in the fourth quarter, but Willard had more than enough defensive stops and made foul shots to fend off the Wildcats and hold on for a 50-42 win.

The more than 10 minutes without a point ultimately proved too much to overcome.

“We started flat,” Neosho coach Daniel Durst said. “We weren’t making shots that we normally make, and I think it mentally affected us on the defensive end. We just have to get tougher in those instances. We fought back pretty hard in the second half, and we came up short.

“It’s the same situation that we were in when we played Fort Smith Northside (championship game of the Neosho Holiday Classic on Dec. 30). We start flat and we dig ourselves a hole. When we figure that out, we’ll be much more formidable than we are in these games. It’s just a mental battle that we fight.”

Younger players like sophomore Avyn Blair and freshmen Autumn Kinnaird and Jazmyn Washington helped give the Wildcats a significant boost on both ends in the second half, one of the main bright spots for Neosho on Wednesday and possibly going forward this season.

“I would say that our bench players, the younger ones, came in and were pivotal to us pushing forward and cutting that lead down to five at one point,” Durst said. “Without them, I don’t think that happens and so they’re starting to step up big and that’s huge for us.”

Neosho senior Karlee Ellick finished with a game-high 20 points, Kinnaird scored all of her eight points in the second half, Beclynn Garrett added four points, and Blair, Washington, Maelynn Garrett, Raine Harris, and Reagan McInturff each had two points.

At halftime, Ellick had eight of the Wildcats’ 12 points with Harris and McInturff chipping in the other four.

Willard senior Carolina Crawford and Elise Murray each scored nine points in the first half on their way to 14 and 11 points, respectively, while Emma Howard added nine, Kenadie Johnson seven, Kailyn Washington five, and Harper Floyd and Scarlett Floyd two points each for the Tigers, who improved to 4-9 overall and 1-1 COC.

Neosho dropped to 7-7 overall and 0-2 COC, and the Wildcats are looking to end a three-game losing streak when they return to action in the Gary Keeling Invitational hosted by Bolivar starting on Monday and running through Friday.

BOYS HOOPS: Neosho finishes strong, stuns Webb City in COC opener

WEBB CITY, Mo. — A strong finish propelled the Neosho Wildcats to a signature win.

Clinging to a one-point advantage entering the fourth quarter, the Wildcats scored 10 of the first 11 points of the final frame en route to a stunning 54-41 victory over Webb City on Tuesday night in the Central Ozark Conference opener for both teams inside the Cardinal Dome.

“This is definitely a signature win,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “This is the first time in my tenure we’ve beat Webb City. Our seniors have meant a lot to the program. And Coach (Jacob) Srigley, who left Neosho to go to Webb, was a big part of why they were good. I know this win means a lot to our seniors, so I’m just happy for them.”

The Wildcats won the fourth quarter 19-7. 

Key to the fourth quarter surge was the play of senior guard Isaiah Green, who scored 17 points in the final eight minutes.

“We wanted the ball in Isaiah Green’s hands,” Culp said. “And he took care of business tonight. And we played great team defense, so I’m really proud of them. I can’t say enough about the defense. The boys locked in and did what they were supposed to do.”

It was a disappointing setback for the Cardinals. 

Webb City was not only coming off a Kaminsky Classic championship, but also entered the night riding an eight-game winning streak.

The Cardinals (10-3, 0-1 COC) managed just four made field goals in the second half, with only one made field goal in the fourth quarter.

“I thought we were terrible all game,” Webb City coach Jason Horn said bluntly. “Defensively, we gave up the lane way too many times. We had too many reaching fouls. We had no sense of urgency to go after rebounds and I thought Neosho’s kids were a step quicker to loose balls. They wanted it a little bit more than us. That’s on me, and we’ll do our best to correct that.” 

Neosho, on the heels of winning the seventh-place game at the Kaminsky Classic, improved to 11-4 overall and 1-0 in conference play. 

Culp noted Tuesday’s win should be a confidence boost going forward.

“I told our guys, ‘Don’t let this be your Super Bowl,'” Culp said. “We have a lot more to accomplish. But I think this win shows that we can play with anybody and it should give them confidence. And Coach Horn is a great coach and is a great friend. I was under him at Neosho and he’s done a lot to help me get to where I am. So to beat him every once in a while is nice.”

 

NAMES & NUMBERS

Neosho’s Green poured in 26 points, making 18-of-22 free throws to go with four field goals. He also had five steals.

Senior forward Kael Smith added 13 points for the Wildcats, while senior Carter Fenkse added eight points and classmate Carter Baslee had 12 rebounds to go with four points.

The Wildcats made 15-of-37 field goal attempts (41 percent) and connected on 20-of-28 shots from the charity stripe. 

Webb City made 14-of-37 shots from the floor (39 percent), including 3-of-15 from beyond the arc. The Cardinals went 10-for-15 at the foul line.

“We didn’t get to the free throw line enough,” Horn noted. “And when we did, we didn’t convert enough.” 

Senior forward Alex Martin scored 19 points to lead the Cardinals, while junior guard Barron Duda added 10 points. Sophomore guard Holton Keith contributed six points and six rebounds. 

 

GAME RECAP

This one was close from the start, as the clash featured eight lead changes and five ties.

Webb City took a one-point lead late in the opening frame on Keith’s reverse layup, but Neosho’s Green answered with a runner in the lane to give the Wildcats a 12-11 advantage heading into the second quarter. 

The Wildcats held a four-point cushion twice in the second period, the last on Baslee’s bucket inside. 

Webb City eventually went up 26-24 after Martin’s old-fashioned 3-point play, Omari Jackson’s corner trey and another hoop in the paint by Martin. 

But Neosho’s Green made two free throws late in the first half and the game was deadlocked at 26 at the break.

Both teams battled foul trouble in the second half. The low-scoring third period, which saw Neosho out-point Webb City 9-8, ended with the Wildcats up 35-34.

Neosho started the fourth quarter on a game-changing 10-1 run, with Green scoring eight during the burst.

Green often went one-on-one with his defender, either getting a shot up in the lane or drawing a foul. 

“He played really well,” Horn said of Green. “He got to the rim and just did what he wanted. He’s a really good player.” 

Green’s 12th point of the final frame made it 49-39 with just 2:36 remaining.

The Cardinals were unable to rally late, as empty possessions and turnovers were too much to overcome.

“We were taking too many jump shots all game,” Horn said. “We wanted to get the ball inside and assert ourself in the lane. We passed up some shots inside that we should have took and then we didn’t finish on some shots when we had a chance to swing the momentum. We missed wide open layups.”

Green made 11-of-14 free throw attempts and converted three field goals in the fourth quarter..

“When he’s shooting his free throws like that, that’s right where we want to be,” Culp said. “Once we got up by a little bit, we wanted to let him have the ball and we let him do his thing.”

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Both teams have conference home games on Friday, as Webb City hosts Branson and Neosho entertains Willard.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

GIRLS HOOPS: Webb City edges Neosho in COC opener

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals held on tightly and eked out a 40-38 win over the Neosho Wildcats on Monday night in their Central Ozark Conference opener inside the Cardinal Dome.

Webb City erased a four-point deficit entering the fourth quarter with some timely baskets early and some critical defensive stops later in the fourth.

Webb City held Neosho to only seven points in the fourth with two field goals and three free throws accounting for the Wildcats’ total.

Webb City’s Malorie Stanley lines up a shot against Neosho’s Courtney Thomason on Monday inside the Cardinal Dome. Photo by Derek Livingston.

The Cardinals’ defense helped them overcome going without a point for the final 2 minutes and 12 seconds after Kate Brownfield’s old-fashioned three-point play put them ahead 40-34.

“Neosho is a much-improved basketball team,” Webb City coach Lance Robbins said. “We knew that coming into the game. Any time you’re playing a conference game, it’s going to be a battle. We struggled a lot tonight offensively. We never could get into a flow and could never get the tempo where we wanted it to be.

“Part of that has to do with Neosho and the way they played defensively, but I thought our defense is really what won the game for us. I thought we were able to get stops when we needed, and we were able to salvage together some baskets on the offensive end to give us a little bit of cushion toward the end.”

Neosho outscored Webb City 25-19 in the second and third quarters to build a 31-27 lead after three.

The Wildcats nearly saw the Cardinals break away from them late in the fourth, but a couple defensive stops and four timely points allowed Neosho to get within two points and the Wildcats had a chance to tie or to win it during the final seconds.

“We talked to the girls about how it was going to be a battle,” Neosho coach Daniel Durst said. “We were within a couple points at the end, and we put ourselves in a position to win it. That’s what they did, and unfortunately some things didn’t fall or go our way. That just happens, but we’ve been preaching toughness and that was pretty tough of us there. I’m frustrated it’s a loss, but I saw a lot of positives that we can take going forward.”

Sophomore center Sami Mancini sparked Webb City with 13 points, six rebounds, three assists, one steal, and six blocked shots. Most importantly, she managed to avoid picking up her fourth personal foul until later on in the fourth; despite missing a pair of front ends of 1-and-1s, Mancini netted seven of her points in the final eight minutes. Of course, on the defensive end, her presence in the paint loomed large over Neosho’s plan of attack.

Brownfield added 10 points, four rebounds, two assists, two steals, and one block.

Malorie Stanley knocked down a pair of 3-pointers for her six points, Mia Robbins’ five points came from three early in the fourth that knotted it up at 33 and a steal-and-score that accounted for the first points after halftime, Izzy Lopez scored all four of her points in the first, and Dawsyn Decker hit a pair of free throws in the third for her only points.

“Mal hit a couple huge threes for us in the first half when we were struggling offensively,” Coach Robbins said. “That’s something we know that she can do. She was able to do that tonight. In the second half, we struggled offensively but we had some kids step in and make some shots when we needed them. Again, our defense carried us toward the end. It wasn’t pretty, but a win is a win and we’re happy to walk out of here with a ‘W.’”

Webb City’s Kate Brownfield and Neosho’s Raine Harris look to control a loose ball on Monday night inside the Cardinal Dome.

Webb City improved to 9-4 overall and 1-0 COC, and the Cardinals will take a five-game winning streak into Thursday’s second home conference game against Branson.

“This conference is arguably one of the best conferences in the state of Missouri in girls basketball,” Robbins said. “Like I said, every night’s going to be a battle, so we’re happy.”

Turnovers often tell the tale more than anything else for the Wildcats — their 21 turnovers Monday night helped Webb City overcome 13-47 (27.7 percent) shooting overall and allowing Neosho to shoot 15-36 (41.7 percent) for the game.

Senior post Karlee Ellick led all players with 15 points and 12 rebounds, and she added one steal and two blocks. She had 12 of her points by halftime.

Fellow seniors Raine Harris and Meredith Baldwin each contributed six points, Beclynn Garrett added five points and seven rebounds, and Autumn Kinnaird and Courtney Thomason added six more points to Neosho’s 12 bench points with three points each.

“The other thing we preach is keeping our heads on our shoulders,” Durst said. “When we get sped up and we get in a hurry, then that just kills our game. When we calm down, we are pretty formidable.”

Neosho dropped to 7-6 overall and 0-1 COC, and the Wildcats return to the court Wednesday for their second overall and first home conference game against Willard.

 

Webb City’s Izzy Lopez attempts a layup against Neosho’s Maelynn Garrett during Monday’s COC clash inside the Cardinal Dome. All photos by Derek Livingston.

 

Webb City coach Lance Robbins gives his team instructions during Monday’s game with Neosho. The Cardinals extended their winning streak to five with a 40-38 win over the Wildcats.

 

Neosho’s Karlee Ellick and Webb City’s Dawsyn Decker battle for control of a rebound during Monday’s COC contest inside the Cardinal Dome. Photos by Derek Livingston.

 

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)

KAMINSKY CLASSIC: Neosho erases 17-point halftime deficit, earns seventh place

It was a tale of two halves on Saturday in the seventh-place game of the Kaminsky Classic between the Neosho Wildcats and the Carl Junction Bulldogs at Kaminsky Gymnasium.

Carl Junction shot 11-23 (47.8 percent) while Neosho shot 5-21 (23.8 percent) from the floor during a first half that produced a 30-13 halftime lead for the Bulldogs.

After halftime, though, Neosho shot 12-22 (54.5 percent) while Carl Junction dipped to 4-16 (25 percent) from the floor and the Wildcats turned a 17-point halftime deficit into a 44-38 victory with a 31-8 advantage in the second half.

Neosho only led for 2 minutes and 18 seconds on Saturday, but they proved to be the 2:18 that mattered the most, specifically the final 1:54.

“Like I told the guys, it was more like 31-6 … they scored late in the game when we were just trying to stall time,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “At halftime, we challenged them. ‘Listen, we’re not making any shots, but the fact that we gave up 30 points is also very bad. If we would have just dug in and played good defense, we honestly thought it should have been tied or maybe they led by a little bit. We’re not going to win the game by doing it just once. We just have to continue to get stops and slowly get back into it.’ That’s exactly what happened.”

The Wildcats ratcheted up the defensive pressure on Carl Junction after halftime and accumulated 19 of their 22 points off turnovers in the final 16 minutes.

Carl Junction also took and made seven fewer shots, went 0-4 from 3-point range, and had no free-throw attempts in the second half.

“It almost forced us to play good defense,” Culp said. “If we weren’t going to be up in passing lanes or if we weren’t going to get steals or if we weren’t going to be diving on the floor, it didn’t matter if we got a bunch of stops in a row because the time would just go away. We had to get steals, and we did that. Isaiah Green had a good spurt there which helped us … everybody played well.”

Senior guard Green continued to be the definition of a stat-sheet stuffer and led Neosho with 14 points, seven assists and seven steals, and he also finished with four rebounds. His steal and slam dunk put an exclamation point on Neosho’s turnaround—a 41-36 lead with 41 seconds remaining in regulation.

Carter Baslee added 11 points and seven rebounds, while fellow senior Kael Smith finished with 10 points, nine rebounds, two assists, three blocked shots, and three steals.

Neosho seniors Brock Franklin, Michael Day, and Carter Fenske each hit a trifecta for their three points.

Franklin’s three gave the Wildcats a 38-36 lead with 1:54 remaining, their first lead since Green opened the game’s scoring with a layup.

“We had three 3s in the fourth and those were huge,” Culp said. “You’re going to have to hit outside shots to beat teams. That’s just the way basketball is now. It was good to hit a few (outside shots), probably still missed too many, but we had to have those, and it was nice to see them go through.”

Neosho has struggled at times shooting the ball in recent games, including the first half Saturday against Carl Junction.

The Wildcats improved to 10-4 overall and they avoided heading into Central Ozark Conference play on a three-game losing streak.

“The road doesn’t get any easier, that’s for sure,” Culp said. “Webb City, who’s playing in the championship game tonight, we’ve got them on Tuesday and Willard, who just beat Bolivar last night, on Thursday. Right after that, we’ve got Mac (McDonald County), who’s always a big game, and then we play Forsyth, who’s ranked ninth in Class 4.

“Just to show ourselves how good we could be and how if we’re down that we shouldn’t give in and anything can happen, it was good to see.”

Ayden Bard led Carl Junction with 12 points and seven rebounds, Cooper Vediz added 10 points and three rebounds, and Wyatt McAfee totaled six points and seven rebounds.

Carl Junction dropped to 5-8 overall and the Bulldogs open COC play at home Tuesday against a Republic squad currently 12-1 overall, ranked ninth in Class 6 by the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association, and on an 11-game winning streak since an early-season loss against Springdale, Ark.

Conference rivals Neosho and Carl Junction meet again Feb. 14 in Carl Junction.

 

KAMINSKY CLASSIC: Neosho falls to William Chrisman in OT

Neosho took a six-point lead into the fourth quarter only for William Chrisman rallied to tie the game by the end of regulation before going on to beat the Wildcats in overtime of the consolation semifinals in the Kaminsky Classic on Friday. 

The Bears (6-5) jumped out in front of the overtime period with a bucket on the drive by Aidan Chavez before a pair of free throws by Trey Taylor pushed the advantage to 57-53. Neosho’s Isaiah Green drew contact on a jumper and converted the and-1 free throw with 2:53 left to trim the deficit to one, 57-56. The William Chrisman lead fluctuated between three points and one point over the remaining two-plus minutes with Neosho (9-4) unable to gain the lead before the final horn.

Trey Taylor led William Chrisman in scoring with 26 points to go along with a team-high three assists. Chavez added 10 points and six rebounds. Say’V’on Lankford had nine points and six boards.

Kael Smith led Neosho in scoring with 19 points as well as five rebounds. Carter Baslee added 11 points and nine rebounds, while Green finished two assists shy of a triple-double, totaling 10 points, 12 rebounds and eight dimes. He also swiped a team-high four steals on the defensive end.

Neosho takes on Carl Junction in the seventh-place game at 11 a.m.

KAMINSKY CLASSIC: Francis Howell starts fast in win over Neosho

Francis Howell limited Neosho to one field goal in the first quarter while building a double-digit cushion it didn’t relinquish in a 57-23 win in the opening round of the Kaminsky Classic on Thursday.

“Our guys didn’t come out ready and that starts with me,” Neosho coach Zane Culp said. “We weren’t ready and they jumped all over us. I wouldn’t even say they shot the lights out. It was kind of a slow death. It starts at the top and we just have to do a better job. Hopefully, that starts tomorrow. 

The Wildcats (9-3), which shot just 19 percent from the field in the loss, fell behind 13-2 in the first quarter after shooting just 1-for-12 from the floor. Neosho found its rhythm offensively in the second period but still trailed by 15 heading into the second half. Francis Howell (6-3) outscored the Wildcats 20-7 in the third quarter to build an insurmountable cushion in the final eight minutes.

“Defensively, we only allowed 50-something points, so it wasn’t that bad,” Culp said. “Our offense was just so stagnant, and our first two or three possessions were shots at the rim without anybody guarding us. It was probably the best team we’ve played, so maybe it was a little shellshock after not playing teams of that caliber, size and athleticism. We didn’t respond very well.”

Rebounding played a big role in the win for the Vikings as well. Francis Howell outrebounded Neosho 39-22 and had a 16-2 advantage on second-chance points.

“That was one of our big keys coming into the game—to box out and grab rebounds,” Culp said. “Obviously, I didn’t have them ready to do that. It felt like for every shot we had, they had four.” 

Dwight Lomax led Francis Howell in scoring with 12 points, while Donovan Sparks added 10 points. Ben Toebben finished with eight points and 14 rebounds. 

Neosho was led in scoring by Collier Hendricks, who finished with 13 points. Isaiah Green added four.

UP NEXT

Neosho will play William Chrisman at 4:30 p.m. on Friday in the consolation semifinals.