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Throwback night: Brady, Patriots win Super Bowl the old-fashioned way

ATLANTA (AP) – Graying but still gritty, Tom Brady, Bill Belichick and the Patriots came to the Super Bowl intending to stave off, for at least one more game, the inevitable onslaught of the NFL’s future.

Job well done.

Pro football never looked flatter, older and more stuck in the days of the VCR than it did Sunday.

In a Super Bowl only New England could love, the Patriots won their sixth title by lumbering their way to a 13-3 victory over the Los Angeles Rams – that young, brash, high-flying team with the 33-year-old coach and the 24-year-old quarterback who were, we thought, changing football before our very eyes.

If only we could’ve kept them open.

Among the Super Bowl records set: Fewest points by both teams (16); fewest points by the winning team (13); fewest combined points through three quarters (6); most consecutive drives ending with a punt (8 by the Rams); longest punt (65 yards).

The halftime show with Maroon 5 offered no relief – roundly ripped, including by an Associated Press reviewer who called it “Empty. Boring. Basic. Sleepy.”

He could have said the same about the game. But give credit where it’s due.

The defense designed by Belichick turned Rams quarterback Jared Goff into a jittery mess. He completed 19 of 38 passes for 229 yards, with an assortment of rushed throws, misread coverages and, in the tiny windows in which LA showed any sign of life, a pair of terrible passes.

One, trailing 3-0 in the third quarter, was late and high to wide-open Brandin Cooks in the end zone; the other, trailing 10-3 with 4:17 left in the fourth quarter, was high under pressure for an easy interception by Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore that essentially ended the game.

“I know I definitely have a lot to learn from this one,” said Rams coach Sean McVay, who, at 33, is exactly half the age of Belichick.

McVay has been the flavor of the month in the copycat NFL. Other teams have hired away three of his assistant coaches over the last two years, as the rest of the league tries to catch up with his newfangled offense that cracked 30 points in 13 games this season.

On Sunday, it managed one 53-yard field goal from Greg Zuerlein and didn’t take a snap inside the New England 20.

Gilmore’s interception came minutes after Brady engineered the game’s lone touchdown drive.

It was five plays and included four straight completions: 18 yards to Rob Gronkowski, 13 yards to Julian Edelman, seven yards to backup running back Rex Burkhead, then a 29-yard teardrop placed perfectly into the arms of Gronkowski, who was double-covered. Sony Michel ran it in from 2 yards for the touchdown with 7 minutes left.

“We couldn’t get points on the board for one reason or another,” Brady said, “but in the end, it feels a lot better than last year, when we did get some points on the board.”

Last year, the Patriots fell 41-33 to Philly in a back-and-forth thriller that essentially featured one good defensive play: a sack and strip on Brady by Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham with the clock running down.

The year before, the Patriots scored 31 points in the second half and overtime for a riveting 34-28 comeback win over Atlanta and title No. 5.

Then, this.

New England’s road to a sixth Lombardi Trophy – tied with Pittsburgh for the most – was never easy this season. The Patriots lost five times, didn’t have home-field advantage through the playoffs and, after every loss, were beset by questions over whether the 41-year-old Brady and his 66-year-old coach might be winding down.

Through it all, though, they could score. New England averaged 27.2 points a game. And in the run through the playoffs, the offense scored 10 touchdowns and Brady barely got touched, and never got sacked.

They were not clicking like that Sunday at the $1.5 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where 70,081 fans – most of them cheering for New England – watched the game.

Other than Edelman, whose 10 catches for 141 yards won him MVP honors and made him look like a combination of Michael Irvin and Jerry Rice considering everything happening around him, the Patriots were out of sync.

Brady’s first pass got intercepted. He went 21 for 35 for 262 yards and a passer rating of 71.4 – more than 26 points lower than he averaged this season.

New England outgained Los Angeles 195-57 in the first half, but settled for two field goal attempts – one miss and one make – for a 3-0 lead at the break.

It was 3-3 heading into the fourth quarter – the fewest points through the first 45 minutes of any playoff game since a 1980 barnburner between the Bucs and Rams that LA won 9-0.

Maybe the biggest irony of all: The New England dynasty’s five previous Super Bowl victories came by 3, 3, 3, 4 and 6. Two were decided on the last play. The other three came down to the final minutes.

Compared to that, this was a veritable runaway.

On a day when New England held LA running back Todd Gurley to 35 yards, when LA couldn’t muster a drive longer than five plays for nearly three quarters, and when LA’s Johnny Hekker (eight punts, 46.3 yard average) was his team’s most effective player, a 10-point lead at the end felt like a million.

“It’s a beautiful thing, man,” said New England cornerback Jason McCourty.

And a game only the Patriots could love.

Hays High splits with Garden City in makeup games

Hays played their third game of the week as they opened with games on each of the first two days of February.  The Indians hosted Garden City in a game that was snowed out back in January.

Girls

#10 Hays – Garden City

Garden City jumped out to the first lead of the game scoring four points on a pair of Hays High turnovers.  Hays scored the next six points and pushed their lead as high as five in the first quarter after a 6-1 run at 12-7.  Hays entered the second quarter leading by five and kept their lead at 22-20 into halftime.

Highlights

 

The Indians dominated most of the third quarter to expand their lead up to ten twice at 32-22 and 34-24.  Part of that third quarter was a 10-2 run over the five minute stretch.  Garden City hit what seemed to be a harmless three pointer late in the third quarter but that basket began a 13-0 run with 10 of those points coming in the fourth quarter.  The run put Garden City on top 37-34.  After the Indians took a 34-24 lead in the third quarter Hays didn’t score for the next 9:30 and did have a field goal for 10:08.  But the field goal would be huge.  Mattie Hutchison buried a three pointer to tie the game at 38 with :12 left.  Garden City turned it over on the next possession setting up a game winning opportunity for Brooke Denning who buried a three pointer as time expired.  The basket sent Hays to a 41-38 victory.  Garden City missed four of five free throws in the final ninety seconds to leave the door open for the Indians.

Coach Alex Hutchins

 

Brooke Denning scored 15 to lead the Indians to a 10-4 record and a 3-1 mark in the WAC.  Garden City falls to 8-7 and 1-3.

Boys

Garden City 50 – Hays 39

Garden City used an 11-0 run to blow open a tight first quarter against Hays.  Down 19-7 early in the second quarter Hays went on a 8-0 to get within four at 19-15.  The Indians had the ball two more times at the score but did come away with any points.  Garden City increased the lead to nine once again with a 6-1 spurt before Hays closed the gap down to five at 25-20.  A Garden City inbound basket put the Buffaloes up at half time 27-20.

Highlights

 

 

Hays opened the second half on an 8-0 run to take a 28-27 lead with 3:50 left in the third quarter.  Garden City didn’t score for almost five minutes in the third quarter but when they did Buffaloes took the lead back at 29-28.  The basket was the first of six straight points and a 33-28 lead for Garden City.  After trailing 35-30 early in the fourth quarter, Hays closed within three at 35-32 and had the basketball but turned it over.

Garden City scored on back to back possessions to put Hays down 39-32 and Hays was never within one possession for the rest of the game.  Garden City made seven of their final eight free throw attempts in the final minute of the game to secure a 50-39 victory.

Coach Rick Keltner

 

Hays falls to 7-7 on the year and 2-2 in the WAC.  Garden City takes the lead in conference play with a 3-1 mark and is 11-4 overall.

Hays will host Great Bend on Tuesday and Liberal on Friday.

Wade is perfect as Kansas State shoots past Oklahoma State

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Kansas State’s Dean Wade didn’t know he had a perfect shooting night going from the field until assistant coach Chris Lowery told him.

“Honestly, I had no idea,” Wade said. “I didn’t really know until the very end, when coach Lowery said something to me about, ‘Oh, you just don’t want to shoot, don’t want to mess up your percentage.’ I was like, ‘What are you talking about?'”

Wade scored a season-high 24 points on 9 of 9 shooting to help Kansas State defeat Oklahoma State 75-57 on Saturday night. It was just the seventh time in school history that a Kansas State player had a perfect shooting night with at least nine attempts. He also made three 3-pointers.

Barry Brown scored 18 points and Cartier Diarra added 10 for the Wildcats (16-5, 6-2 Big 12), who entered the night tied for the conference lead.

The Wildcats were ranked seventh out of 10 Big 12 teams in 3-point percentage during league games and 10th in all games before Saturday. They made 16 against Oklahoma State, the most in school history for a conference game and the second-most overall.

“I’ve said all among we could be a good shooting team,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “We should be. The ball movement was really spectacular. Kind of what we’d hoped all year.”

In a building where Oklahoma State has pulled numerous upsets the past two seasons, the Wildcats were unusually comfortable.

“I think a lot of the credit has to go to the coaching staff,” Wade said. “The scouts — they put so much time into the scouts, and it gives us just a great base of how we’re going to play. We went out tonight and executed.”

Curtis Jones scored 14 points and Lindy Waters added 12 for the Cowboys (9-12, 2-6).

Oklahoma State hung tough for a while, but a putback dunk by Kansas State’s Makol Mawien put the Wildcats ahead by 13 late in the first half. Brown hit a 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer to give Kansas State 43-27 advantage. Kansas State shot 61.5 percent before the break.

Oklahoma State didn’t score for more than six minutes to start the second half as Kansas State pulled away. The Wildcats led by 34 at one point, and Oklahoma State went on a 13-0 scoring run late in the game to make the game seem closer.

“They shot the ball better than what they have all season, and a team that’s that good defensively shooting the ball that well offensively — you’re in for a tough game then,” Oklahoma State guard Thomas Dziagwa said.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State: The Wildcats won their sixth straight conference game, and their fourth straight by double digits. Other than a loss to Texas A&M in the SEC/Big 12 challenge, the Wildcats have been dominant lately and could make their way into the Top 25.

Oklahoma State: The Cowboys were scrappy for a while, but they were simply overmatched. It was Oklahoma State’s fourth straight conference loss. The long-term effects of four players leaving the program or being kicked off the team this season are taking effect.

WADE’S WORLD

Wade has rounded into form since returning from a foot injury. He scored just two points in his first game back, but has been on a tear since then. In his past five games, he’s averaging 18 points on 58 percent shooting, including 53 percent from 3-point range.

STAT LINES

Oklahoma State made just two of nine free throws, making just one in each half. Kansas State made 7 of 12.

HE SAID IT

Oklahoma State forward Cameron McGriff: “It’s a bad loss. It’s just one loss.”

UP NEXT

Kansas State hosts Kansas on Tuesday.

Oklahoma State plays at TCU on Wednesday.

Chiefs QB Mahomes takes MVP and top offensive player awards

ATLANTA (AP) — Patrick Mahomes’ breathtaking breakthrough season earned him the NFL’s Most Valuable Player award.

The Chiefs quarterback landed a pair of honors at NFL Honors on Saturday night, taking The Associated Press 2018 MVP and Offensive Player of the Year awards. In his second pro season, Mahomes led Kansas City to its first AFC title game since 1993 with some of the most creative and clutch plays the league has seen in years.

“I’m so humbled,” he said. “This is just the beginning. We’ve got a long ways to go.

“It is an honor. It’s a hard award to win. The next award I hope I can get is the Super Bowl.”

Mahomes received 41 votes from a nationwide panel of media members who regularly cover the league. New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees got the other nine.

With only one previous start, Mahomes entered the season as something of a curiosity in Kansas City after the Chiefs traded veteran Alex Smith to open up the job. It didn’t take long to erase any doubts as Mahomes led the Chiefs to their first AFC title game since the 1993 season, throwing for 50 touchdowns, 5,097 yards and had a 113.8 QB rating, trailing only Brees.

Mahomes’ ingenuity — the guy can throw from all angles and make plays inside and outside the pocket — energized the Chiefs’ fan base and excited fans across the league.

“The play is never dead. He can find new ways to get you the ball,” Chiefs All-Pro tight end Travis Kelce said. “It may look like a screwball, a slider here or there, but it’ll get to you eventually.”

Mahomes is the sixth straight quarterback and 11th of the past 12 years to win MVP. No Kansas City player had won the award since the Chiefs joined the NFL in 1970.

Earlier, he was selected as the top offensive player, beating Brees 30 votes to 16.

“Yeah, I mean, it’s awesome … I got put into a great situation,” he said. “I got to learn behind a great quarterback in Alex Smith. I got to be on a team with a lot of playmakers who helped me excel my game and make me look really good on a daily basis. And, then, to be able to go out there and win football games in front of a passionate fan base is something I get the luxury of doing.”

Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald, who will play in Sunday’s Super Bowl against New England, took his second straight Defensive Player of the Year award.

Donald, the only unanimous All-Pro this season and the first Rams player selected for top defensive honor, joins Lawrence Taylor and J.J. Watt as players to win the award in back-to-back seasons. Donald led the NFL with 20½ sacks.

“Any time you put a body of work into it and then it pays off,” Donald said, “and you’re rewarded for it, it means a lot. It’s a blessing.”

Chicago’s Matt Nagy, in his first season with the Bears, was voted Coach of the Year.

Nagy has overseen the development of quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, who blossomed in his second pro season, and saw a defense befitting the “Monsters of the Midway” dominate opponents at times. He is the fifth Bears coach to win the award, joining team founder George Halas (1963, 1965), Mike Ditka (1985, 1988), Dick Jauron (2001) and Lovie Smith (2005).

“It’s crazy to think this is one person, so for me, it’s being a part of this organization and for our players,” Nagy said. “Just being able to believe in what we wanted to do with our culture and then follow through with it.”

Colts quarterback Andrew Luck was chosen the Comeback Player of the Year, following a lost 2017 season to a shoulder injury with a sensational 2018 campaign.

“I truly believe there are players on every team, every roster that could be Comeback Player of the Year in their own ways,” he said. “Honestly, the best part was playing football again — having fun playing football and being pain free.”

Giants running back Saquon Barkley was the top offensive rookie, while the defensive rookie award went to Indianapolis linebacker Darius Leonard.

Described by some as a “generational running back,” Barkley rushed for 1,307 yards and 11 touchdowns behind a weak New York offensive line. He drew 26½ votes and edged Baker Mayfield. The Cleveland quarterback who was selected first overall in the draft, one spot in front of Barkley, earned 21½ votes.

Barkley also made a team-high 91 receptions for 721 yards, and his 2,028 yards from scrimmage led the NFL.

For his work as defensive coordinator of the Chicago Bears, Vic Fangio got the head coaching gig in Denver. He also won The Associated Press 2018 NFL Assistant Coach of the Year Award on Saturday.

Philadelphia Eagles DE Chris Long won the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award for community service.

“I don’t know, I’m very humbled,” Long said. “It’s hard to feel deserving with those guys on stage and, obviously, this guy right here on the statue. It’s a very heavy statue and it makes sense because his legacy is immense. I’m just honored.”

Tiger men fall short against Lopers

KEARNEY, Neb. – Fort Hays State shot only 37-percent from the floor including 5-for-20 from beyond the arc and lost 59-56 at Nebraska-Kearney Saturday afternoon at the Health and Sports Center. It’s the second straight loss for the Tigers (13-7, 7-4 MIAA) who lose back-to-back games for the first time since falling to Sioux Falls and Southwestern Minnesota State to start the season.

Aaron Nicholson scored on a layup to start to give the Tigers a 2-0 lead but they would trail the rest of the first half and were down six at the break.

They opened the second half on a 10-3 run and took the lead back on a Brady Werth jumper with 14:24 to play but UNK (7-13, 2-9 MIAA) would answer with a 17-6 run over the next 10 minutes to go up 10.

Nicholson hit three of the Tigers five 3-pointers and led them with 15 points while dishing out a team-best four assists. Brady Werth and Devin Davis both scored 11 and Kyler Kinnamon added 10. All of Werth’s points came in the second half.

The Lopers who were the worst free throw shooting and worst rebounding team in the MIAA outrebounded the Tigers by six and went 14 of 17 from the free throw line.

Lawson leads No. 11 Kansas past No. 16 Texas Tech

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas coach Bill Self had been waiting most of this season for a moment to galvanize his team.

He may have gotten it during practice on Friday.

First, the Jayhawks lost starting guard Marcus Garrett to a sprained ankle, robbing them of their defensive stopper. Then, they learned that sophomore forward Silvio De Sousa would be ineligible for this season and next after the NCAA determined his guardian had accepted impermissible benefits.

With everything going against them, the No. 11 Jayhawks responded Saturday by throwing haymakers from the opening bell in their showdown with No. 16 Texas Tech. Dedric Lawson piled up 25 points and 10 rebounds, Devon Dotson added 20 points and Kansas cruised to a 79-63 victory over the Red Raiders.

“There comes a point in every season when a team becomes a team,” Self said, “and we’ve been given an opportunity — and maybe fortunately so — that we’ve dealt with some crap, and you can become a team off that, and I hope today is a step toward it.”

Lagerald Vick added 13 points and Ochai Agbaji had 10 for the Jayhawks (17-5, 6-3 Big 12), who came into the showdown of Big 12 title contenders having lost two straight and three of four.

Yet suddenly and unexpectedly, they looked every bit the program that has won 14 straight crowns.

The Jayhawks roared to a 20-point halftime lead against the Red Raiders (17-5, 5-4), the league’s dominant defensive team, then weathered a shaky start to the second half before pulling away again.

It left a stark change in mood in Lawrence from 24 hours earlier.

“You’d have to be an idiot not to understand what we were walking into,” Texas Tech coach Chris Beard said. “Their backs were against the wall. This is how good Coach Self is. There’s too much pride in that locker room. And for whatever reason, we didn’t hear that message.”

Davide Moretti led the Red Raiders with 14 points, but nobody really got on track. Leading scorer Jarrett Culver was held to 10 points on 5-for-17 shooting, the Red Raiders were 6 of 28 from beyond the arc and they continually gave up easy opportunities on the fast break.

“We really came together. That’s what I think our statement was,” Agbaji said. “We had a lot of pressure coming into this game. We didn’t have a really good week, so we had a lot of pressure.”

Lawson got the Jayhawks off to a hot start, draining an early 3-pointer on his way to 16 points and seven boards by the break. Vick also got into the act, knocking down a trio of first-half 3s and at one point gesturing to the Texas Tech bench to bring it on.

The Red Raiders never really did.

Only three times in the first half did Texas Tech score on consecutive trips down the floor, and a team that relies on defense to dictate tempo could not contain the Jayhawks at the other end.

By the time Lawson buried two more 3s, the Jayhawks had a 46-26 lead headed into halftime.

To put its offensive efficiency into perspective, Texas Tech had been holding opponents to an average of 56.8 points. Four times the Red Raiders have allowed 46 points or fewer.

Texas Tech began to pound the paint with Norense Odiase in the second half, but misfires from the foul line prevented the Red Raiders from trimming their deficit. And when they managed to get within 15 points, the Jayhawks would answer with a driving layup or crucial putback.

Or they’d make a key defensive stop a la their opponents.

The lead swelled to 25 down the stretch, and Self was able to empty his bench with a couple of minutes remaining against a team that topped Kansas in Allen Fieldhouse last season.

“Victory favors the team that was more aggressive,” Beard said. “They were more aggressive than us the whole game, every possession, offense and defense.”

MORE ON GARRETT

Kansas announced 30 minutes before tipoff that the sophomore guard would not play, and he’s almost certain to miss Tuesday’s trip to Kansas State. Garrett has become the Jayhawks’ defensive stopper along with averaging 7.2 points and 3.6 assists this season.

NCAA APPEAL

Kansas athletic director Jeff Long said before the game the school will appeal the NCAA’s punishment of De Sousa. At issue is the NCAA’s finding that his guardian, Fenny Falmagne, received a $2,500 payment from a booster or agent but without De Sousa’s knowledge. “If the NCAA is trying to send a message or make a statement through unwarranted punishment,” Long said, “they are doing it through the wrong avenue and with the wrong man.”

UP NEXT

Texas Tech returns home to face West Virginia on Monday night.

Kansas visits the Wildcats for the Sunflower Showdown on Tuesday night.

6th-ranked Tiger women rally past Nebraska-Kearney

KEARNEY, Neb. – For the first 25 minutes Saturday it looks as if Fort Hays State was well on their way to their worst offensive game of the season but a 28-6 run over a 10 minute stretch of the third and fourth quarters helped them rally past Nebraska-Kearney 74-64 in overtime.

It’s the biggest comeback win for the Tigers under coach Tony Hobson as they move into sole possession of first place in the MIAA following Washburn’s loss at home to Lindenwood.

The Tigers (19-1, 10-1 MIAA) struggled offensively, hitting only one of their 13 three-point shots in the first half and scored only 25 points in the first 25 minutes of the game but Kacey Kennett and Taylor Rolfs combined to hit four threes during a 16-4 run to close out the third quarter which pulled them within eight. They then scored the first nine points of the fourth quarter to take their first lead on a Carly Heim layup with 6:05 to play.

Kennett hit one of two free throws with 16 seconds to play in regulation to tie the game. UNK’s Elisa Backes missed a three in the closing seconds to force the extra period.

Tatyana Legette scored 11 of her career-tying 25 points in the overtime.

Kennett added 20 points and Carly Heim added seven but left the game with an apparent serious knee injury one minute into the overtime.

McDuffie scores 27, Wichita State rallies to beat Tulsa

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Markis McDuffie had 27 points and Wichita State controlled the final 10 minutes as the Shockers defeated Tulsa 79-68 on Saturday.

After trailing 44-40 at halftime, Tulsa built a 60-52 lead with 10:55 remaining in the second half. Wichita State rallied and Tulsa went cold, scoring eight points the rest of the game. Wichita State’s winning stretch began with a 10-0 run for a 62-60 lead with 8:16 to go. Tulsa briefly regained the lead but Jaime Echenique’s layup at 3:58 gave the Shockers a 10-point lead.

Echenique had 16 points and three blocks for Wichita State (10-11, 3-6 American Athletic Conference). Dexter Dennis added 11 points and Jamarius Burton distributed seven assists.

Jeriah Horne had 16 points for the Golden Hurricane (13-10, 3-7). Curran Scott added 11 points and Darien Jackson 10. Tulsa shot 53 percent overall, 58 percent in the second half, but missed eight free throws in the second half for 11 of 21 from the line overall.

Monarchs pick up a pair of wins over rival Norton

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The TMP-Marian boys and girls basketball teams picked up a pair of key Mid-Continent League wins over Norton Friday night at Al Billinger Fieldhouse.

Girls: TMP 37, Norton 34

First place in the MCL was on the line in the first game of the night and after a slow start the Lady Monarchs rallied for a three-point win over the third ranked Lady Jays thanks to a big second half from senior Emily Schippers.

Coach McFarland postgame interview

The first half was a defensive slugfest that saw the Lady Jays go on an 8-2 first quarter run to take a six-point lead after one. In the second quarter the Monarchs held Norton to just one field goal in the second quarter in a 6-2 run to cut the halftime score to 14-12 in favor of the Lady Jays.

Norton opened the second half leading 17-14 but TMP’s Emily Schippers scored the next 11 points for the Monarchs to give them a 25-20 lead with 6:25 left in the game. It was a lead they would never give up on their way to the 37-34 win.

Schippers led the Monarchs with 13. Norton’s Taryn Kuhn led two Lady Jays in double-figures with 14. Hadley Hauser finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

Game highlights

With the win the Monarchs take over sole of first place in the MCL at 6-0. They also improved to 11-4 overall.

Norton is 13-2 and 5-1 in the MCL.

Boys: TMP 55, Norton 42

The TMP boys made nine three’s in the first half and had four score in double-figures as they put an end to their season-long three-game losing streak with a 55-42 win over the Blue Jays.

Bill Meagher interview

The Monarchs built an early eight-point lead late in the first quarter thanks to Lucas Lang’s third three-pointer of the first quarter.

Lang scored all 13 of his points in the first-half as he was inserted into the starting lineup for the first time in nearly a month.

Norton was able to close the gap to six in the second quarter but got no closer the rest of the way as the Monarchs pick up the 55-42 victory.

Game highlights

Ryan Karlin lead the Monarchs with 14, Lang had 13 and Jackson Schulte finished with 11.

Norton’s Carter Jones finished with a team-high 13.

TMP improved to 9-7 on the season and 4-2 in the MCL.

Norton drops to 7-9 and 2-4 in the MCL.

Hays sweeps Dodge City at home

Hays High opened a four game home stand on Friday against Dodge City.  Through the next eight days, Hays will play all of the home Western Athletic Conference games on their schedule.  The original schedule was altered following a snow out in January versus Garden City.

Girls

#10 Hays 41 – Dodge City 37

Neither team grasped a firm hold on the offensive game plan in the first half of play.  The two teams tied three different times over the first six minutes of the game for an 8-8 score.  Dodge City ran off seven straight points into the second quarter to lead 15-8.  Hays went without a field goal for 9:10 and without a point for 7:00 during that stretch.  Hays found a little traction in final minute scoring a pair of field goals and closing the gap down to 15-14 at halftime.

Highlights

 

Things didn’t get much better in the third quarter for either team.  Dodge City pushed held their advantage around five points for most of the quarter and led 28-23 heading to the fourth.  Down 32-26 three minutes into the fourth quarter the Hays offense finally came to life.  Hays made just 7 of their first 38 shots before making four in a row and five of their final six.  The first of the field goals brought the Indians within a point and the second gave Hays their first lead at 33-32 with 3:25 left.  Those baskets were part of a 12-0 Hays run that gave the Indians a 38-32 lead.  Dodge City pulled back within three with 23 second remaining but the Indians make three of their final four free throws for a 41-37 win.

Coach Alex Hutchins

 

Hays was led by 11 points from Savannah Schneider and move to 9-4 on the year and 2-1 in the WAC.  Dodge City falls to 6-8 and 2-1.

Boys

Hays 75 – Dodge City 63

An 11-0 run in the first quarter helped Hays build a seven point lead, 17-10.  The Indians led 19-15 going into the second quarter but the momentum was on the side of Dodge City who was in the midst of a 12-3 run.  That push allowed Dodge City to take a 22-20 lead with 5:20 left in the first half.  Fifteen short second later Hays answered back with a three pointer to regain the lead only to lose it at 29-28 with 2:50 left in the half.  The Indians held the Red Demons scoreless for the rest of the second quarter and entered the halftime locker room leading 37-29 following a 9-0 run.

Highlights

 

Hays pushed their advantage up to 12 with the first four points of the second half.  Dodge City brought the game back within reach thanks to a 10-2 run and then a 8-2 run to close the third quarter with the Indians leading 54-52.  TJ Nunnery hit a three pointer to open the fourth quarter and give the Indians some breathing room.  The Red Demons were never closer that three points rest of the way, but didn’t make things easy.  After a 9-2 run helped the Indians to a nine point lead with 5:30 left.  The Red Demons pulled back within six one time but Hays got a dunk and lay up from Trey Adams and then six straight free throws to win 75-63.

Coach Rick Keltner

 

TJ Nunnery tied his career high with 16 and was matched by 16 from Tradgon McCrae.  Trey Adams and Braiden Meyers each scored 10 in the victory.  The Indians improve to 7-6 on the year and 2-1 in conference play.  Dodge City falls to 7-7 and 1-2.

The Indians will host Garden City on Saturday in a makeup game from January.  The junior varsity games will start at 3:00 with the varsity girls at 5:00.

No. 6 Tiger women travel north to battle Lopers on Saturday

FHSU Athletics / photo by Allie Schweizer

FHSU Athletics

The No. 6 Fort Hays State women’s basketball team renews one of its oldest rivalries Saturday (Feb. 2) when the Tigers make the short trip to take on Nebraska-Kearney. First tip between the Tigers and Lopers is scheduled for 2 p.m. from the Health and Sports Center.

After two home wins last week, the Tigers head into the weekend 18-1 overall and 9-1 in MIAA play. The Lopers enter the contest 12-7 on the year and 5-5 against league competition.

Fort Hays State opened conference play with a grind-it-out 62-53 win over Nebraska-Kearney back in December in Hays (12/4/18), thanks in large part to Tatyana Legette’s second double-double of the year. The senior totaled 23 points and 13 rebounds, making 11-of-12 from the free throw line. FHSU outscored the Lopers by 17 at the charity stripe, 23-6. UNK led by one early before the Tigers pulled in front by as many as 14 in the first half. A third quarter run brought the Lopers within two, but FHSU bounced back down the stretch to secure the win.

The Tigers have met up with Nebraska-Kearney more often than any other program, with Saturday’s contest serving as the 92nd meeting of a series that began back in 1972. The Tigers hold a 55-36 edge in the series, including a 16-2 advantage under Tony Hobson. FHSU is 21-23 all-time in Kearney against the Lopers, but the Tigers have won eight-straight on the road. Hobson has never lost to UNK in Kearney.

This is the second time the Tigers have traveled to Kearney after winning a pair of non-conference contests inside the Health and Sports Center in November. FHSU easily dispatched of Colorado-Colorado Springs and Chadron State during the first month of the season, scoring an average of 84.5 points in those two contests.

While the Tigers currently sit in a tie for first place in the MIAA standings at the halfway point of the league season, Nebraska-Kearney heads into Saturday ranked seventh in the league standings. The Lopers have played well at home, winning 10 of 12 contests inside the Health and Sports Center. UNK boasts the second-best defense in the league, allowing just 59.2 points per contest, leading to the third-best scoring margin in the conference (+11.4). The Lopers and Tigers allow an identical 37.0 shooting percentage to their opponents. Kelsey Sanger (11.0 ppg) and Brooke Carlson (10.9 ppg) are the lone Lopers averaging in double figures this year.

Tiger men look to bounce back from first home loss

FHSU Athletics / photo by Allie Schweizer

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Men’s Basketball returns to the floor after a week off when it plays at Nebraska-Kearney on Saturday (Feb. 2). Tipoff is set for 4 pm in Kearney, which follows the women’s contest slated at 2 pm. The Tigers are coming off their first home loss of the season, now 13-6 overall, 7-3 in the MIAA, while the Lopers enter at 6-13 overall, 1-9 in the MIAA.

Fort Hays State currently sits in a three-way tie for third in the MIAA standings with Lincoln and Washburn. Northwest Missouri State continues to lead the MIAA at 10-0 and Missouri Southern is second at 8-3.

Nebraska-Kearney was winless in MIAA play until at 59-53 win at Emporia State on January 20, but they dropped their last two conference games to Northwest Missouri State and Missouri Western. The Lopers are in search of their first MIAA win at home this year. Fort Hays State has dropped the last five meetings in Kearney with UNK, the last win occurring back in the 2012-13 season. UNK has won six of the last 10 contests in the overall series, yet FHSU holds an 80-50 advantage in the all-time series.

The Tigers edged the Lopers earlier this season in Hays by a score of 76-73, back on December 4. It was the MIAA opener for both teams. Brady Werth led the Tigers with a season-high 27 points, while Devin Davis scored 13 and Aaron Nicholson had 12. Chase Winchester and Henry Penner led the Lopers each with 17 points, while Kanon Koster had a double-double of 11 points and 11 assists.

Wichers signs with Coffeyville CC

Every high school athlete with collegiate aspirations wants the opportunity to not only play but also win.  Hays High senior Jaysa Wichers has that opportunity after signing a National Letter of Intent with Coffeyville Community College to play volleyball.

The Indian’s once middle hitter now right side hitter finalized her decision in front of friends, teammates and family Thursday in the school cafeteria.

Jaysa Wichers

 

Wichers knew the moment she met the Red Ravens head coach the program would be a fit for her.  Coffeyville has won the last two volleyball national championships and wrapped up the 2018 season at 40-3.

Hays coach Christin Nunnery calls Wichers a coach’s dream.  Nunnery not only is impressed by the senior’s work ethic but also her willingness to cheer on the successes of all her teammates.

Christin Nunnery

 

Wichers and the Hays High Indians went 20-10 this past high school season.  She also had the opportunity to play in the Northwest Kansas All-Star Match following her senior season.

 

 

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