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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
Washburn University's men's basketball team was far from perfect shooting the ball Wednesday night, including a dismal seven of 32 showing from 3-point range.
But the Ichabods made up for that with a solid performance in other areas, including a perfect 15 of 15 night at the free throw line, to take a 70-65 MIAA win over Missouri Southern in Lee Arena.
In a game that included eight lead changes and five ties, Washburn trailed 30-29 at the half after leading by as many as 12 points and fell behind by seven early in the second half before taking control down the stretch to improve to 11-5 overall and 7-3 in the MIAA.
"It was a game of runs and I'm really proud of our team for finding a way to win on a night we shot it miserably,'' Washburn coach Brett Ballard said.
The Lions (6-10, 4-6) rallied from an 8-point deficit to tie the game at 58-all and the game was also deadlocked at 60-60 after a Southern basket with 2:24 remaining, but freshman Jack Bachelor canned two charities with 2:11 remaining to put the Ichabods ahead to stay and WU held off Southern the rest of the way, scoring 10 of its final 12 points at the free throw line.
"I'm really proud of how we battled the last three minutes,'' Ballard said. "When they made that last run and tied it up I thought we were out of gas. We looked tired but our guys dug in and got stops and made plays late.''
Bachelor went six of six from the free throw line over the final 7:12, including the game-clinching free throws with 11 seconds left, while sophomore Brady Christiansen also went six of six at the charity stripe, with all six of his makes coming over the final 2:47 and four over the final 31 seconds.
"Pressure free throws and that was big,'' Ballard said. "They stepped up and made some big free throws.''
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
While many other Shawnee County basketball teams have sat idle during the recent run of inclement weather in the area, Hayden's girls have been able to get in two games over the past four days.
And the second-ranked (Class 3A) Wildcats have taken full advantage of that opportunity, running their record to 8-1 with a pair of lopsided wins, including Tuesday's 55-29 non-league decision over city rival Shawnee Heights at the Bueltel Activity Center.
"It's nice playing,'' Hayden coach Carvel Reynoldson said. "We all hate having games cancelled because the girls work really hard at practice and love the game so it's been nice that we've been able to play.''
After taking a 61-32 Centennial League win at Topeka High last Friday, Hayden picked up where it left off Tuesday night, running its win streak to three game while trailing just once in the game, at 2-0.
Hayden ended the opening quarter with a 16-2 run to open up a commanding 16-4 advantage and the Wildcats built a 33-15 cushion at the half.
"I was really happy with our energy tonight,'' Reynoldson said. "I wasn't real happy with how we played Friday, and especially early. We got beat to some 50-50 balls that we normally don't and tonight we were really, really good at being the first to the ball.''
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Hayden's rally from a 13-point deficit came up just short Thursday night, with Lansing taking a 48-45 victory in the opening round of the Topeka Invitational Tournament at the Bueltel Activity Center.
But even though the Wildcats suffered their fourth straight loss to fall to 4-5 on the season, Hayden coach Trey Brown saw plenty of positives that his team can build on moving forward.
"We got a small taste of it and we've got to figure out what it's like to win again,'' Brown said. "We were right there and I think when we get healthy that will make a big difference but I thought the guys played hard and executed for the most part down the stretch.
'We got a great look with a great player at the end so we told them we've just got to keep hammering away, got to keep bulding. We're getting so much experience right now, playing all these big schools and good teams, so at the end of the year this is going to pan out for us.''
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
Topeka High boys basketball coach Geo Lyons didn't get the performance he was looking for from his Trojans in Thursday's Topeka Invitational first-round game against Wichita Northwest at Hayden.
But after taking a 60-34 loss to the Grizzlies, Lyons was ready to turn the page and focus on trying to bounce back in the final two games of the tournament on Friday and Saturday.
"That was the message in the locker room right now,'' Lyons said. "Going into the tournament you want to go 3-0 and if you can't go 3-0 you definitely want to win your last two.
"We're telling the boys right now fifth place is better than fourth place, better than second place. Even though second place is 2-1. Even though fourth place finishes above you they actually go 1-2 and second place finishes with a loss and you don't want to end with a loss so we we need to salvage it right now and really try and go 2-1 the rest of the way.''
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By Rick Peterson
TopSports.news
After winning three of its first four games, Topeka West's boys basketball game has encountered some tough sledding, losing three of its past four games, including a 49-47 heartbreaker to Shawnee Mission North on Thursday in the opening round of the Topeka Invitational Tournament at Hayden.
And while he still has high hopes for his young Chargers, veteran Topeka West coach Rick Bloomquist admits it's been a tough stretch to deal with.
"We're struggling right now, ever since the De Soto game (a 76-30 loss), which I'm going to be frank when I tell you the De Soto game was probably the most embarrassing night I've spent on the bench,'' Bloomquist said. "I've never spent a night like that on the bench and I don't want to do it again.
"It's not just the fact that I was embarrassed, I felt like a fool. I felt like we're not accomplishing anything here and it's frustrating. We have things that we have to fix and it's not physical, it's mental. It's a mental situation and I'm trying my damndest to fix it. It's still early, but we're not playing well at all. We have no chemistry, we have no unity, we have no resilience. We just shut down way too easy.''
But Bloomquist still believes his team has time to reverse its fortunes in the second half of the season
"We're going to keep working at it because I like my team,'' Bloomquist said. "I really like them and we show signs of brilliance. Unfortunately, we don't see that very much.''