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Fans Encouraged to Black Out Bramlage on January 21

blackoutMANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State will host a Black Out at Bramlage Coliseum when the Wildcats host nationally-ranked West Virginia at 5 p.m., on Saturday, January 21.

Fans are encouraged to purchase the official t-shirt, which was voted on by fans via social media earlier this month, at K-State Super Store locations on the Bramlage concourse, Bill Snyder Family Stadium and at 519 McCall Road in Manhattan as well as online at www.kstatesuperstore.com. It will also be available at the K-State Campus Store and the Rally House location in Aggieville and after the first of the year on Fanatics’ site at shop.kstatesports.com.

The first 3,500 students will receive the official t-shirt.

Tickets are available for as low as $18.75 with the Wildcat 4-Pack, which includes four general admission tickets for $75. Group tickets start at just $15 for groups of 12 or more.

The Black Out is just one of a number of promotions schedule for the 2016-17 season, including Lego Day set for the Baylor game on Saturday, January 14 at Bramlage Coliseum. The Bramlage Bundle ticket option is available for the contest, which includes a game ticket, $10 concessions voucher and a souvenir from the K-State Super Store for just $30 per package. A minimum order of two Bramlage Bundles is required. Tickets also start at less than $20 with a Wildcat 4 Pack or just $15 for groups of 12 or more.

Chiefs Roll Past Denver

chiefs logoKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Ten months ago, confetti rained down on the Denver Broncos after they won the Super Bowl. On Sunday night, the only thing coming down was rain.

The Kansas City Chiefs dashed all Denver’s remaining hopes of a repeat with a 33-10 rout at wet, sloppy Arrowhead Stadium that knocked the Broncos from postseason contention.

“We can’t win all the time,” Denver cornerback Chris Harris Jr. said. “We had a great run. Five straight AFC titles. I guess it’s time for somebody else to win.

The Broncos started the season 4-0 and went into their bye week with a 7-3 record. But in their ensuing game against Kansas City, they blew an eight-point lead with 3 minutes remaining, and the Chiefs wound up getting two field goals in overtime for the victory. That loss sent the Broncos into a downward spiral.

Blue Jays to Compete in Tournament of Champions in January

small-blue-jayThe Junction City Blue Jays boys basketball team will compete in the Dodge City High School Tournament of Champions January 19th through the 21st at the United Wireless Arena in Dodge City.

This is billed as the longest running invitational high school boys basketball tournament west of the Mississippi.

The other teams in the tournament will include Dodge City, Derby, Holcomb, Newton, Bishop Carroll, Shawnee Mission South and Wichita North.

Tickets are $30 for reserved seating for the entire tournament, $10 for single day reserved seating, $20 for general admission for the entire tournament, $7 for single day general admission and $5 for single day K through 5 general admission.

Tickets are available at the United Wireless Box Office. For online sales go to www.ticketmaster.com and search for United Wireless Arena. For telephone sales call 1-800-745-3000. All online and telephone orders will have an additional convenience fee.

 

Shamet Scores 21, Leads Wichita State Over South Dakota State

shockersWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Landry Shamet made six 3-pointers and scored a career-high 21 points to lead Wichita State over South Dakota State 89-67 on Thursday night.

Markis McDuffie added 17 points and a career-best five steals for the Shockers (10-3), who bounced back from their only home loss, 93-76 against Oklahoma State on Saturday. Zach Brown added 10 points and a career-high five assists.

Mike Daum scored 20 points to lead South Dakota State (7-8). A.J. Hess had 15 points.

The Shockers had a double-digit lead with five minutes left in the first half and led 44-32 at the break. Wichita State opened the second half on a 15-7 spurt to stretch its lead to 59-39 with 13 minutes left and cruised from there.

The Shockers improved to 7-1 at home. South Dakota State had its three-game win streak snapped.

Josh Jackson Leads Kansas Past UNLV

jayhawkLAS VEGAS (AP) — Josh Jackson scored 21 points, Svi Mykhailiuk had 20 and Frank Mason III added 13, as No. 3 Kansas beat UNLV 71-53 on Thursday night, extending its winning streak to 11 games.

Kansas got 12 rebounds and four points from Landen Lucas.

The Jayhawks (11-1) haven’t lost since a season-opening 103-99 overtime setback to Indiana, in Honolulu.

UNLV (7-6) was led by Tyrell Green’s 12 points, with Jalen Poyser and Uche Ofoegbu adding 10 points each. It was the Runnin’ Rebels’ third loss to a Top 25 team in their last five games.

UNLV tried making things interesting by opening the second half on a 15-7 run, cutting into Kansas’ lead, making it 49-35 at the 14:30 mark. In that span, the Jayhawks shot just 30 percent, while the Rebels hit 6 of 7 (85.7 percent).

K-State Women’s Basketball Team Falls to Northern Iowa

PowerCatMadison Weekly had 20 points, including a season-high five 3-pointers, Hannah Schonhardt had her second double-double of the season and Northern Iowa beat No. 24 Kansas State 67-59 on Thursday night.

Schonhardt had 14 points and 11 rebounds, Mikaela Morgan hit three 3s and added 11 points and Ellie Herzberg scored 10 for Northern Iowa, which made 13 3s and shot 41 percent from behind the arc — both season highs.

Kansas State’s Karyla Middlebrook hit 4 of 4 free throws to spark a 9-1 run that made it 43-all when Kindred Wesemann hit a 3-pointer with 6:51 to play. Weekly answered with a 3 and the Panthers (7-4) led the rest of the way. Shaelyn Martin’s 3-pointer pulled the Wildcats within one with 4:39 remaining, but another 3 by Weekly sparked a 15-7 run that made it 61-52 when Megan Maahs hit a 3, moments after blocking a shot on the other end, with 59 seconds left.

Middlebrook had a career-high 19 points and tied her career best with six assists for Kansas State (10-2), which has lost two of three after starting the season 9-0.

 

KSU Grad Architect Behind the Texas Bowl Stadiums

When the Wildcat fans cheer on the football team at NRG Stadium on Dec. 28, they also may want to thank Kansas State University alumnus Bruce Beahm for making it possible.

Beahm, a 1982 graduate in architecture, is a principal and senior architect for Populous and was project architect on the team that designed NRG Stadium, where the Kansas State University Wildcats will play in the AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl. He also was the project manager for BBVA Compass Stadium, which will host the Texas Bowl pep rally for Kansas State University fans on Dec. 27.

“I feel like my career has come full circle,” Beahm said. “It’s especially fun to see K-State play in a stadium Populous has designed and to top it off with the pep rally at BBVA Compass Stadium. K-State is where I developed my career interest in architecture and it’s an honor to know that two of my projects with Populous are now benefiting the university, its football team and its fans. I am proud to have that connection with my alma mater.”

Upper Bowl Field View
For nearly 30 years, Beahm has worked at Populous, a global architecture firm that specializes in arenas, sports facilities, convention centers and airports and has U.S. headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri. Beahm has worked on a variety of commercial projects and sports facilities, including Arrowhead Stadium for the Kansas City Chiefs, Guaranteed Rate Field for the Chicago White Sox and AT&T Park for the San Francisco Giants. He is currently project manager on Orlando City Stadium, a soccer stadium for the Orlando City Lions, which will open in March 2017.

Beahm and the Populous team began work on NRG Stadium – then Reliant Stadium – in 1998 as a stadium for the Houston Texans. Beahm was involved in the entire project – from the early days of design to the finish of construction in 2002. Populous was the design architect for the project and collaborated with several Houston firms.

Beahm was especially proud of the stadium’s roof, which was the first retractable roof in the NFL. The stadium seats more than 70,000 people and will host 2017 Super Bowl.

“When the project was finished and the doors opened, I loved seeing people’s reaction when they went through the doors,” Beahm said. “It is so rewarding to get to see people enjoy what you have been working on for years and years.”

For the BBVA Compass Stadium — home to the Houston Dynamo, a Major League Soccer club — Beahm and the Populous team were the architect of record on the project. The stadium was completed in 2012 and has since spurred improvements to the surrounding area, Beahm said.

“The area is really reacting to the development of the stadium,” Beahm said. “There is new construction now and it has become an extension of the downtown area.”

Beahm credits his career success to the professors and staff at the university’s College of Architecture, Planning & Design for being caring and professional. Faculty members led by example, he said, which encouraged students like him to jump out of their comfort zones and pursue their career and academic goals.

“Kansas State University’s architecture program is a top program in the country and really prepares students for the real world,” Beahm said. “It’s such a well-rounded program and the professors give you a well-rounded experience. Once you get in the real world, that really helps.”

Beahm and his family are K-Staters through and through. Bruce met his wife, Joan, at Kansas State University. Joan Beahm is a 1983 graduate in journalism and mass communications, and their son, Alex, is a 2015 graduate in computer science. Their son, Kevin, is a freshman in electrical engineering. The Beahm family lives in Overland Park. While the family will not be attending the Houston Bowl in person, they will cheer the Wildcats from afar.

The university’s College of Architecture, Planning & Design, which also is known as APDesign, is a comprehensive, interdisciplinary, environmental design college with accredited professional programs in architecture, interior architecture and product design, landscape architecture, and regional and community planning. DesignIntelligence magazine recently recognized the college with several national and regional rankings, including the nation’s No. 5 graduate program in landscape architecture, No. 7 graduate program in interior architecture and No. 18 graduate program in architecture.

First Half Run Powers K-State Over Gardner-Webb, 67-54

18-points

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – A 19-1 run over the final 6:08 of the first half proved to be the difference in the game for K-State as the Wildcats cruised to a 67-54 over Gardner-Webb in front of 11,602 fans in Bramlage Coliseum on Wednesday night.

 

The win was K-State’s sixth straight and moved its record to 11-1, marking the Wildcats’ best start to a season since an 11-1 record to begin the 2011-12 season and also marking their longest winning streak since winning 10-straight games from Nov. 24, 2013 to Jan. 7, 2014. K-State’s 8-0 start at home marks the second straight season of going unbeaten in non-conference home games.

 

Down 23-22, K-State turned up the defensive intensity in the closing minutes of the first half, holding Gardner-Webb scoreless for the final 7:02 of play. The Wildcats were 5-of-6 from the field during that span and were 8-of-10 from the free throw line to build a 41-24 lead at the break.

 

Offensively, the Wildcats connected on a season-low 43.4 percent (23-of-53) from the field for the game, while knocking down 73.9 percent (17-of-23) from the charity stripe. The sub-50 percent outing marked the first time this season that K-State has failed to shoot 50 percent from the field in at least one half of play in a game.

 

On the defensive end, K-State padded its stout numbers, holding Gardner-Webb to 24 points below its season scoring average and just 37.7 percent shooting (20-of-53). The 54 points allowed marked the sixth time this season the Wildcats have held an opponent to 55 points or fewer, while it was the ninth time in 12 games that K-State has limited an opponent to 40 percent or less shooting from the field.

 

Two Wildcats scored in double figures as sophomore guard Kamau Stokes had a game-high 18 points on 6-of-10 shooting and added 4 assists, while senior forward D.J. Johnson finished with 16 points on an 8-of-8 shooting and pulled down 7 rebounds. Johnson’s perfect night from the field marked the 10th time in K-State history that a player has shot 8-of-8 or better from the field, while he was the first Wildcat to accomplish the feat since Luis Colon was 9-of-9 against Southern Miss on Dec. 11, 2008.

 

Gardner-Webb was paced by Jamaal Robateau’s 17 points that included five 3-pointers.

 

The Basics

  • Final Score: Kansas State 67, Gardner-Webb 54
  • Records: Kansas State 11-1, 0-0 Big 12 // Gardner-Webb 7-6, 0-0 Big South
  • Attendance: 11,602
  • Next Game: Friday, Dec. 30 // vs. Texas // 7 p.m. CT // ESPNews

 

The Short Story

  • K-State capitalized on a 19-1 run over the final seven minutes of the first half against Gardner-Webb to drop the Runnin’ Bulldogs 67-54 on Wednesday night.
  • The win pushed K-State to 11-1, the team’s best start since going 11-1 to begin the 2011-12 season.
  • K-State connected on a season-low 43.4 percent (23-of-53) from the field for the game, while knocking down 73.9 percent (17-of-23) from the charity stripe.
  • Two Wildcats — Kamau Stokes and D.J. Johnson — scored in double figures, as Stokes had a game-high 18 points on 6-of-10 shooting and pitched in 4 assists.
  • Johnson scored 16 points on 8-of-8 shooting, while also hauling down 7 rebounds. Johnson’s perfect night from the field marked the 10th time in K-State history that a player has shot 8-of-8 or better from the field,
  • Defensively, the Wildcats held its sixth opponent to 55 points or less this season, while the Runnin’ Bulldogs became the ninth foe to shoot 40 percent or less from the field.

 

How It Happened | First Half

  • K-State jumped out to an early 10-5 advantage just five minutes into the game behind eight points in the paint from Johnson.
  • Gardner-Webb answered with a pair of 3-pointers as part of a 12-5 run to take a 17-15 lead with 10:03 to play in the half.
  • Two more buckets from Johnson helped K-State regain the lead, 22-21, before the Runnin’ Bulldogs went up 23-22 at the under-8 media break.
  • A Barry Brown 1-and-1 capped a 19-1 K-State run to end the half, as the Wildcats held Gardner-Webb without a field goal (0-of-11) over the final 7:02 of the half to take a 41-24 advantage into the break.
  • K-State connected on 44.8 percent (13-of-29) in the first half, including 81.3 percent (13-of-16) from the charity stripe, while Gardner-Webb shot 35.7 percent (10-of-28).
  • Stokes and Johnson paced all scorers in the half with 12 points as Johnson was a 6-of-6 from the field.

 

How It Happened | Second Half

  • Gardner Webb opened the second half with three triples to begin an 11-4 run that closed the gap, 45-35, at the first media timeout of the second half.
  • Neither team scored over the next three minutes before a coast-to-coast lay-in from Stokes followed by a 30-foot alley-oop slam from Stokes to Xavier Sneed put the Wildcats up 14 at the under-12 media.
  • A smooth mid-range jumper from Stokes at the 6:12 mark gave K-State its largest lead of the game, 60-41.
  • The Runnin’ Bulldogs slimmed the margin below 15 points in the waning seconds as K-State won its non-conference finale, 67-54.
  • K-State connected on 41.7 percent (10-of-24) after intermission while Gardner-Webb shot 40.0 percent (10-of-25), including 5-of-8 from deep.
  • Stokes scored 6 in the second half to finish with a game-high 18 points on 6-of-10 shooting, while Johnson closed out the game with 16 points and 7 rebounds.

Beyond the Boxscore

  • K-State now leads the all-time series against Gardner-Webb, 4-0, and is now 9-1 all-time against teams from the Big South Conference.
  • With the win, the Wildcats are now on their longest winning streak since winning 10-straight games from Nov. 24, 2013 to Jan. 7, 2014.
  • K-State has now won 15 consecutive non-conference home games at Bramlage Coliseum and 17 consecutive as the home team dating back to 2014.
  • For a second straight year, K-State posted undefeated non-conference home records (9-0 in 2015-16, 10-0 in 2016-17).
  • Johnson scored in double figures (16) for the second-straight game and the seventh time this season.

 

Quotable

  • “It was not as pretty as we would have liked it to have been. A lot of that is when you make shots, it looks a lot nicer,” said head coach Bruce Weber. “Through these first 12 games, we have made shots up until tonight. I thought we ran some good offense in the first half. Maybe it was mentally not being there with Christmas coming and they are ready to go home. We guarded the heck out of them and I thought they were bothered by the double team.”

 

Up Next

  • K-State will have a nine-day layoff before opening Big 12 play at 7 p.m., CT on Friday, December 30 against Texas (6-5) at Bramlage Coliseum and will be broadcast nationally on ESPNews. Tickets are available starting at $30 with the Holiday Mini Plan by calling the K-State Athletic Ticket Office at (800) 221.CATS or online at www.kstatesports.com/tickets. The ticket package also includes the women’s basketball Big 12 home opener against West Virginia on Sunday, January 1 and an exclusive K-State stocking cap.

 

www.kstatesports.com

 
TOM GILBERT
Associate Director for Athletics Communications | K-State Athletics

Cats Face Aggies in Big 12/SEC Showdown

AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl
rv/nr Kansas State vs. rv/rv Texas A&M
Date: Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Kickoff: 8 p.m.

Location: Houston, Texas

Stadium: NRG Stadium (72,220)

Series: Texas A&M Leads, 8-7

TV: ESPN

Dave Flemming (Play-by-Play)

Jesse Palmer (Analyst)

Laura Rutledge (Sidelines)

K-State Radio: K-State Sports Network; k-statesports.com

Wyatt Thompson (Play-by-Play)

Stan Weber (Analyst)

Matt Walters (Sidelines)

National Radio: ESPN Radio

Bill Rosinski (Play-by-Play)

David Norrie (Analyst)

Ian Fitzsimmons (Sidelines)

Sirius Satellite Radio Ch. 80, XM Satellite Radio Ch. 80

Twitter Updates: @kstatesports, @kstate_gameday, @KStateFB

 

CATS FACE AGGIES IN BIG 12/SEC SHOWDOWN
• Following its fourth eight-win regular season in the last six years that was highlighted by a 5-1 mark in the second half of the 2016 campaign, Kansas State received its 20th bowl berth all-time and 18th under head coach Bill Snyder as the Wildcats will face former Big 12 rival Texas A&M in the 2016 AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas.

  • Of K-State’s 20 total bowl appearances all-time, 18 of those have come in the last 23 seasons.
  • The Wildcats are looking to better their 7-12 record in bowl games, including a 7-10 mark under Snyder.
  • All told, K-State has traveled to bowl games in seven different states with Texas (3-Cotton, 2-Alamo, 2-Texas) and Arizona (3-Fiesta, 3-Copper/Insight/Buffalo Wild Wings) being the most frequent destinations.

A LOOK AT K-STATE

  • K-State heads into bowl season as one of the hottest teams in college football, winning five of its last six games, including the final three.
    • A young Wildcat offense in 2016 was tested right out of the gate with a road game at Stanford but the unit continued to get better each week, and by the end of the regular season the offensive production – and the run game in particular – was firing on all cylinders.
  • Quarterback Jesse Ertz heads into the bowl season as the fifth-leading rusher among FBS quarterbacks, while three different running backs (Charles Jones, Alex Barnes and Justin Silmon) hit the 100-yard mark in a game this season.
  • A young offensive line, anchored by sophomore and All-Big 12 pick Dalton Risner, paved the way for a second-half of the season that saw K-State rush for 200 or more yards in each of the final six games, including three games with 300 or more yards while also averaging a school-record 5.6 yards per rush on the season.
  • On defense, turnovers and stopping the run were the emphasis, and the Cats excelled at both as they enter the bowl game ranked 12th nationally in rush defense (112.6 ypg) and sixth nationally in turnover margin at plus-11. Individually, Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year Jordan Willis has led the charge up front, leading the conference in sacks, while All-Big 12 linebacker Elijah Lee has led the team in tackles and could hit the century mark against the Aggies.
  • The Wildcats have steadily been one of the top special teams units in all of college football under Snyder, and 2016 has been no different. Dominique Heath and Byron Pringle each have recorded touchdowns on returns this year as K-State continues to lead the nation in non-offensive touchdowns since 1999 (106) and combined kick/punt return scores since 2005 (42).

A LOOK AT TEXAS A&M

  • Texas A&M heads into the game with an identical 8-4 record and got off to a hot 6-0 start in 2016 with wins over ranked opponents UCLA, Auburn, Arkansas and Tennessee.
    • A familiar face in Trevor Knight, the former Oklahoma quarterback, will be under center for the Aggies as the senior has thrown for 2,122 yards and 16 scores this season while rushing for 594 more yards and 10 scores.
  • Dynamic playmakers are littered throughout the offense for Texas A&M, including running back Trayveon Williams and receiver/returner Christian Kirk. Williams has run for 1,024 yards and eight touchdowns, while Kirk has 77 catches for 842 yards and also averages 24.5 yards per punt return on the season.
    • On defense, the Aggies are led by All-American defensive end Myles Garrett, who has 8.5 sacks and 15.0 tackles for loss, while Shaan Washington has collected a team-best 93 tackles this season.

K-STATE IN TEXAS

  • This year’s Texas Bowl marks the seventh time K-State will play a bowl game in the state of Texas as the Cats are 1-5 all-time in their previous six bowl games in the state.
  • The Wildcats’ lone bowl win in the Lone Star State was a 35-21 triumph over Tennessee in the 2001 Cotton Bowl.

    CATS AND AGGIES

  • The matchup in this year’s Texas Bowl is unique as the Wildcats will face a former conference foe in Texas A&M, which resided in the Big 12 from 1996 to 2011.
  • K-State holds a 7-8 record all-time against the Aggies, while the teams split the 10 meetings during Texas A&M’s time in the Big 12.
  • The last meeting between the teams as Big 12 members was a classic as 14th-ranked K-State earned a 53-50 victory in four overtimes on November 12, 2011, in Manhattan.
  • The Wildcats connected on a 44-yard field goal with two minutes left in regulation to send the game into overtime.
  • K-State won on a one-yard touchdown run in the fourth overtime by quarterback Collin Klein, who tied the school record with five rushing touchdowns in the contest.

    K-STATE AND THE SEC

  • K-State will be playing its 137th game all-time against current members of the SEC, but 107 of those meetings were against either Texas A&M or Missouri as Big Eight/12 foes.
  • The AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl marks the fourth time K-State will face an SEC team in a bowl game – including the second-straight year – as the Wildcats defeated Tennessee in the 2001 Cotton Bowl, 35-21, and fell to Arkansas in the 2012 Cotton Bowl and 2016 Liberty Bowl.
  • Additionally, K-State has a pair of SEC teams lined up for non-conference home-and-home series with Vanderbilt (2017, 2020) and Mississippi State (2018-19).

 

RIDING THE PURPLE WAVE

  • The Wildcat faithful continues to be one of the nation’s top traveling groups of supporters when it comes to bowl season.
  • In addition to a crowd of 40,000 at the 2013 Fiesta Bowl, an estimated 37,000 Wildcat fans swarmed to Tempe, Arizona, to watch Kansas State take on Ohio State in the 2004 Fiesta Bowl.
  • The Wildcats had an estimated 40,000 fans travel to Dallas for the 1997 Cotton Bowl, a figure nearly matched for the 2001 Cotton Bowl.
  • The largest crowd ever to cross state lines to watch a college football game went with the Wildcats to Tempe for the 1997 Fiesta Bowl as nearly 45,000 fans joined K-State for its victory over Syracuse.
  • As a result, K-State has averaged an announced attendance of more than 25,000 fans at seven of its bowl games played in the Continental U.S. since 1993.

 

BOWLING AGAIN

  • In an era of college football where more than 80 teams play in bowl games each year, K-State is one of just 21 FBS schools nationally to ride of streak of at least seven-consecutive bowl berths.
  • Of the 21 teams, four are from the Big 12 as Oklahoma (18), Oklahoma State (11) and Baylor (7) join the Wildcats on the list.

FROM 3 TO 8

  • K-State was sitting at 3-3 following its sixth game of the year, a 38-17 loss at No. 19 Oklahoma. However, the Wildcats were able to right the ship over the second half – going 5-1 in their final six games – to earn an 8-4 record in the regular season.
  • The Wildcats are one of only three Power 5 teams this year to reach at least eight regular-season wins despite starting the year 3-3, joining Georgia Tech and USC.

 

BIG 12 FINISH

  • After starting the year predicted to finish eighth in the Big 12, all K-State did was win six conference games – including three road contests – to finish in sole possession of fourth place in the conference.
  • The Wildcats have finished fourth or better in the Big 12 in four of the six years since the round robin schedule was created in 2011.

 

NARROW MISSES

  • Despite the four-spot jump from the Big 12 preseason poll to the final standings, K-State was a few plays away from earning an 8-1 conference record as two of their three league defeats were by a combined seven points.
  • The Wildcats opened the conference slate at West Virginia and took a 16-3 lead into the fourth quarter until the Mountaineers scored a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns for a 17-16 win.
  • In K-State’s lone blemish during the second half of the season, the Cats led 18th-ranked Oklahoma State, 37-28, early in the fourth quarter before the Cowboys scored two touchdowns, including one with 1:46 left, to take a 43-37 lead. K-State marched down the field to try to tie the game but threw an interception in the end zone on the final play.

 

SUSTAINABLE SUCCESS

  • Kansas State is in rare company in college football as the Wildcats rank in the top 20 in wins among FBS programs over the last 21-plus seasons.
  • Since 1995, K-State has picked up 182 victories, which is tied for 19th in the nation.
  • Among current Big 12 teams, only Oklahoma (t4th; 206), Texas (13th; 196) and TCU (15th; 185) rank higher.

 

SNYDER: HALL OF FAMER

  • The architect of the “greatest turnaround in the history of college football,” Bill Snyder was inducted into the National Football Foundation’s College Football Hall of Fame last December.
  • Snyder is just the fourth person in the history of college football to be inducted as an active coach.
  • Snyder has compiled an amazing 201-105-1 (.656) record in the midst of his 25th season at the helm of the Cats.
  • Holding 162 more victories than any other coach in K-State history, Snyder ranks first in the FBS in wins among coaches at their current schools and second in total wins among active coaches.
  • Additionally, Snyder has 118 conference wins to stand as one of four coaches with 100 Big 8/12 victories (Tom Osborne [153], Bob Stoops [117], Barry Switzer [100]).

 

THE 200 CLUB

  • With K-State’s 34-19 win over Kansas, head coach Bill Snyder became the 26th FBS coach all-time with 200 career victories, including the second to hit the mark this season (Nick Saban).
  • However, Snyder is only the sixth coach to reach the 200-win mark and coach at only one school in his career.

 

THE CENTURY MARK

  • Earlier this year, K-State became the third Big 12 program to reach 100 league wins since the conference began in 1996.
  • The Wildcats, who have 105 wins, are joined by Oklahoma (129) and Texas (118) in the century club.

 

TURNOVER TURNAROUND

  • A year after finishing minus-3 in the turnover battle, K-State enters the bowl season tied for sixth nationally and ranks first in the Big 12 with a plus-11 turnover margin.
  • The Wildcats have given up only 12 turnovers to tie for eighth nationally and lead the conference.
  • More significantly, K-State has allowed just 17 points of its turnovers, 27 less than the next best Big 12 team.

 

YOUTH IS SERVED

  • The 2016 team has been the youngest during Bill Snyder’s 25 years in Manhattan as Kansas State has a combined 125 starts from freshmen or sophomores. The previous high was 101 in 1989, Snyder’s first season at the helm.
  • A majority of the starts this year are by sophomores (87), while 38 starts have come from redshirt freshmen.
  • K-State started 11 underclassmen – including four redshirt freshmen – in the opener at Stanford. It was the most for either category since at least 1997 as K-State had no more than two freshmen starters in a season opener in any of the previous 18 years.

    DRAWING FIRST BLOOD

  • Since 1990, K-State is 160-31 (.838) when scoring first.
  • K-State finished the regular season with a 5-2 mark when scoring first and is 8-4 in that department over the last two seasons.
  • In 2014, the Wildcats held a perfect 7-0 record when scoring the game’s first points.

    QUICK OUT OF THE GATE

  • Kansas State has started games on the right side of the scoreboard this season, outscoring opponents 88-47 in the opening 15 minutes.
  • That mark improves to 225-123 through the first half and 310-163 after three quarters, but opponents have gotten the best of K-State in the final quarter to the tune of 99-76.

 

LEADING AT THE HALF
• Kansas State had a 49-game game winning streak when leading a halftime snapped in 2015 at Oklahoma State, a streak that was the nation’s longest at the time.

  • This year, K-State is 7-1 when taking a lead into the locker room with its only blemish being a loss at West Virginia.

 

THESE CATS ARE SMART
• For a third-consecutive season, Kansas State led the conference in Academic All-Big 12 players with a school-record tying 29 honorees, including a conference-high 18 on the first team.

  • K-State also paced the Big 12 with two players that accomplished 4.0 GPAs in Matt Seiwert (agribusiness) and Zach Reuter (biochemistry).
  • Seiwert, who earned first-team honors last year, was one of six Wildcats repeating as first-team honorees, joining linebacker Will Davis, place kicker Ian Patterson, linebacker Trent Tanking, tight end Dayton Valentine and defensive end Tanner Wood.
  • K-State will have 21 players on its Texas Bowl roster who will already have their undergraduate degree in hand, which ranks third in the nation among bowl teams.

 

OFFENSIVE NOTES

GROUND ATTACK

  • K-State leaned heavily on its running game during the regular season to move the football, especially in the last five contests.
  • The Cats, who currently rank first in school history in yards per carry (5.26) and third in rushing yards per game (232.9), hit the 200-yard barrier in the final six regular-season contests, including three 300-yard efforts in the final four contests.
  • The six-game stretch with at least 200 rushing yards is the most since the 2003 squad did so in six-straight games, culminating with 292 rushing yards in a 35-7 victory over No. 1 Oklahoma in the Big 12 Championship.
  • K-State’s three 300-yard games this season are also the most since 2003, while it is the first time the Wildcats hit 300 yards in a four-game stretch since 2001 (vs. Kansas, Iowa State and Louisiana Tech).
  • K-State also currently sits fourth in school history in season rushing yards and seventh with 36 rushing touchdowns.

 

GROWTH EVIDENT ON THE LINE

  • Despite boasting only 17 combined starts entering the season, K-State’s offensive line has grown throughout the season to rank as one of the best in the Big 12, evidenced by the 290-yard rushing average over the last six games.
  • The unit, which featured the fewest combined starts entering a season since 1990, has been consistent over the last six games with four first-time starters – left tackle Scott Frantz, left guards Abdul Beecham and Tyler Mitchell, and center Reid Najvar – learning alongside veteran right guard Terrale Johnson (16 career starts) and right tackle Dalton Risner (25 career/consecutive starts).
  • Of the group, Risner (coaches) and Johnson (Associated Press) picked up First Team All-Big 12 accolades, while Najvar was an honorable mention pick by the league’s coaches.

 

RED ZONE ALERT

  • K-State has been one of the best red zone teams over the past few years as they were one of only four teams – joined by Nevada, Oklahoma State and UCLA – to rank in the top-15 nationally in red zone offense in both 2014 and 2015 but the only one of that group to remain in the top 15 this season.
  • The Cats rank 12th nationally and second in the Big 12 by converting on 91.5-percent (54-of-59) of red zone trips.
  • Since the beginning of 2014, K-State has converted on 162-of-176 red zone attempts (.920) with 119 touchdowns. Included in that stretch was a nation-leading scoring streak of 56-straight trips that was snapped earlier this year.
  • In their 51 wins over the last six seasons, the Cats are 239-for-262 (.912) in red zone chances with 178 touchdowns, while four of their non-scoring trips have come via kneel downs to close out victories.

 

LONG DRIVES

  • In the era of quick-strike offenses in college football, K-State remains a team that likes to possess the ball.
  • Of K-State’s 58 scoring drives this season, 35 have been seven plays or longer including 18 of 10-plus plays.
  • Eighteen scoring drives have lasted at least five minutes with a 17-play, 8:32 drive at Oklahoma being the longest.

 

PROTECTING THE FOOTBALL

  • Kansas State finished the regular season ranked eighth in the country in turnovers lost (12), while the Wildcats only threw five interceptions to tie for fifth nationally.
  • A year after tossing 13 picks, K-State’s minus-8 interception differential from last year to this year ranks third nationally among Power 5 teams behind Maryland (minus-21) and Nebraska (minus-12).

 

ERTZ ON THE RUN

  • Quarterback Jesse Ertz was injured and out for the year following a five-yard rush on the first offensive play of 2015, but he has not let that deter him in 2016.
  • Ertz leads the team, ranks eighth in the Big 12 and sixth nationally among quarterbacks by averaging 78.8 rushing yards per game.
  • Additionally, Ertz’s 5.94-yard per rush average ranks fifth in the nation among signal callers and fourth in K-State history among players with at least 100 attempts.
  • Ertz’s total was given a boost at Iowa State (106 yards) and against Oklahoma State (153 yards) when he became the first Wildcat with consecutive 100-yard games since John Hubert in 2013.
  • He carded his third 100-yard game of the season – a mark that ties for third in school history among quarterbacks – at TCU when he rushed for a career-high 170 yards. His yardage total was the fifth-most in school history among QBs, and he teamed with Justin Silmon (133 yards) to give K-State its first double 100-yard rushing game since 2012.
  • The 303 combined yards by Ertz and Silmon was tied for the third most in a double 100-yard game in school history.

    FRESHMAN ADDS NAME TO MIX

  • Coming into season with three running backs that have seen game action, redshirt freshman Alex Barnes has added yet another dimension to the running game.
  • Barnes has rushed for 442 yards on 56 attempts and six scores, ranking second in school history in both rushing yards and rushing touchdowns among freshmen.
  • Barnes’ 7.9-yard per carry average leads the Big 12 among players with at least 50 attempts, while he is the only player in the league with at least 50 attempts to not have a negative rush. The other 21 non-quarterbacks to rush at least 50 times have averaged 17.9 lost yardage.

    BANRES HAS BREAKOUT GAMES
    • Totaling 210 yards in the first nine contests, Alex Barnes ran for 129 yards and four touchdowns at Baylor before adding another 103 yards and a leaping 31-yard score against Kansas.

  • His four rushing scores against the Bears are the most by a freshman in school history, tied for third overall in K-State history and tied for most nationally by a freshman in a game this year.
  • His 129 yards also ranked third in K-State history for single-game yards by a freshman.
  • With his efforts against the Bears and Jayhawks, he became the first freshman in school history with two straight 100-yard games.

    HEATH MAKING HEADWAY
    • Dominique Heath has become K-State’s go-to receiver, leading the team with 41 catches, including a team-leading 11 that have gone for third-down conversions.

  • He has hauled in at least seven receptions on three occasions, including career-high nine at Iowa State. He also set a new career high with 101 yards at Oklahoma, which featured a 54-yard touchdown.
  • Heath’s nine catches at ISU were the most by a Wildcat since the Alamo Bowl following the 2014 season (Tyler Lockett [13] and Curry Sexton [10]). He is also tied for fifth in school history in catches among sophomores.
  • His 41 receptions this year are tied for fifth in school history among sophomores.

    PRINGLE’S SOLID FINISH
    • Another sophomore receiver, Byron Pringle, came on strong toward over the last three contests of the regular season by averaging 5.3 catches and 83.0 yards per game.

  • Over the first nine games of his career, Pringle averaged just 2.2 catches and 30.6 yards per game.
  • Pringle, a product of Tampa, Florida, ended the regular season with a six-catch, 126-yard effort at TCU, the most yards by a Wildcat this year. He also teamed with Jesse Ertz (170 yards) and Justin Silmon (133 yards) to give K-State its first game with two 100-yard rushers and a 100-yard receiver since the 2003 season opener against California.

    DEFENSIVE NOTES

NOT YOUR AVERAGE JOES
• Although it plays in a high-powered offensive league, K-State has been outstanding in terms of keeping opposing teams off the scoreboard as the Wildcats rank second in the Big 12 in scoring defense.

  • The Wildcats held all 12 of their regular-season opponents to a total average difference of 16.7 points per game below their season averages at the time.
  • K-State held eight of its opponents to at least 17 points below its average at the time. Some of the most impressive performances have been against: Texas Tech, which was averaging 59.5 points prior to scoring only 38; West Virginia, which scored 17 points despite its 33.0-point average going in; Baylor, which scored 17 points fewer than its average; and TCU, which scored six points despite its 34.0-point mark.
  • The only two opponents to score more against the Wildcats than its scoring average were Iowa State and Oklahoma State, which were only 2.3 and 2.4 points better, respectively.

    TOUGH AGAINST THE RUN
    • Kansas State has been stout on rushing defense this year, ranking 12th nationally and leading the Big 12 by allowing only 112.6 yards per game.

  • The Wildcats are looking to finish in the top 15 in run defense for the first time since ending the 2002 season ranked second in the nation by allowing 69.5 yards per game.
  • K-State has limited opponents to less than 125 yards on eight occasions, including five times in Big 12 play.
  • The 112.6-yard average entering the Texas Bowl currently ranks seventh in school history.

    PICKING THEM APART
    • A year after recording only five interceptions, Kansas State has picked off 15 passes to tie for 14 nationally and lead the Big 12.

  • K-State’s plus-10 uptick in interceptions from 2015 to 2016 is the highest turnaround among Power 5 teams.
  • The Wildcats, who have notched at least one interception in 27 of the last 37 games, have made the turnaround despite starting three sophomores in the secondary for a majority of the season.
  • Additionally, 10 of K-State’s 15 picks this year have come from defensive backs after only one in 2015.
  • Among the 15 picks this year, three have been returned for touchdowns as D.J. Reed had a 35-yard return against Texas Tech, Duke Shelley went 29 yards to paydirt against Oklahoma State and Donnie Starks had a 39-yarder against Kansas.
  • The three interception-return touchdowns by the Wildcats this year are tops in the Big 12 and tied for ninth nationally.

    LEE LEADS THE CHARGE
    • Junior linebacker Elijah Lee, a two-time All-Big 12 pick, leads the team and ranks fifth in the Big 12 with 98 tackles despite being a converted high school defensive end.

  • Lee got to that point by being a model of consistency as he has at least seven tackles in 13 of the last 19 games – including all but one Big 12 contest this year – while he has reached double figures on four occasions.
  • Of his 98 tackles, 67 have been solo stops to tie for 21st nationally and sit five away from entering the school’s single season top-10 list.
  • A product of Blue Springs, Missouri, Lee posted a career-high 14 tackles at West Virginia to earn Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week honors.
  • Lee also has two interceptions this year to give him five in his career, the most by a Wildcat linebacker under Bill Snyder.

    WILLIS GETS AFTER THE PASSER

  • A force from his defensive end positions, Jordan Willis was honored for his stellar play as the senior was named the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year by both the league’s coaches and Associated Press.
  • Named an All-American by multiple outlets, Willis’ accolades have mostly come from accumulating a school-record tying 11.5 sacks this year to rank ninth in the nation and tops in the Big 12.
  • Willis, who has sacks in 11 of the last 16 games, now has 26.0 sacks in his career to rank third in school history and seventh in Big 12 history.
  • On the Midseason Watch List for the Hendricks Award, the Kansas City, Missouri, product has also forced seven fumbles in his career – primarily by knocking the ball out of the quarterback’s hand – to tie for fifth in school history and 10th nationally among active players.

    WILLIS LIVES BEHIND THE LINE

  • Although his pass-rushing abilities have given him his notoriety, Jordan Willis has also excelled against the run.
  • Willis ranks second in the Big 12 and is tied for 20th nationally with his 16.5 tackles for loss.
  • He is 1.5 TFLs shy of entering K-State’s single season top-10 list, while he has 39.5 TFLs in his career to rank ninth.
  • He is the first Wildcat to enter the school’s career TFL list since former linebacker and 10-year NFL veteran Ben Leber did so in 2001.

    WALKER A GOOD UNDERSTUDY

  • Learning from the best in the Big 12, redshirt freshman Reggie Walker has made an impact during his first season on the field as the Big 12 Defensive Freshman of the Year and Freshman All-American has 6.5 sacks and 11.0 TFLs entering the Texas Bowl.
  • Walker’s sack total is tied for second in school history among freshmen, 1.5 sacks shy of Dwayne Castille’s 8.0 in 1984. He is also tied for second in school history in TFLs among freshmen, just one behind the 12.0 that Theopilis Bryant totaled in 1973.

    REED PASSING FIRST-YEAR TEST
    • Sophomore defensive back D.J. Reed has been solid in his first year playing Division I football as the community-college transfer picked up Big 12 Defensive Newcomer of the Year honors from the league’s coaches in addition to First Team All-Big 12 accolades.

  • The Bakersfield, California, product enters the bowl season tops in the Big 12 and tied for fifth nationally with 18 passes defended.
  • Totaling three interceptions and 15 breakups, Reed is tied for fifth in school history in single-season passes defended and became the first player to enter the list since current Minnesota Viking Terence Newman had 19 in 2002.
  • Reed has one of K-State’s three interception-return touchdowns this year. He took an interception 35 yards for a score against Texas Tech en route to Big 12 Newcomer of the Week honors.

    BARNETT SERVES AS VETERAN PRESENCE
    • A year after seeing his season end with an injury in the first half of the 2015 season opener, safety Dante Barnett has been his usual self during his second senior season.

  • Barnett, who received a medical hardship for the 2015 season, leads all K-State defenders with 242 career tackles, sitting eight stops shy of becoming the 27th player in school history with 250 career tackles.
  • The Tulsa, Oklahoma, who ranks sixth among active Big 12 players in career tackles, also has 180 career unassisted tackles to rank seventh in school history.

    SPECIAL TEAMS NOTES

CATS TOP IN NON-OFFENSIVE TDs
• K-State is the nation’s best in non-offensive touchdowns over the last 15-plus seasons as it has 106 since 1999.
• Since 1990, the Wildcats are 58-17 when scoring on special teams and 20-1 when scoring on special teams and defense, including an 18-0 mark under Bill Snyder.
• The Cats have had at least five non-offensive touchdowns in five of the last six years and in 16 of the 18 seasons since 1999.
• The Wildcats’ fifth non-offensive score this year was a 39-yard pick-six by Donnie Starks against Kansas, while the Cats also have interception returns by D.J. Reed (Texas Tech) and Duke Shelley (Oklahoma State). Dominique Heath gave K-State its first non-offensive score of 2016 on a 75-yard a punt return against Florida Atlantic, while Byron Pringle returned a kickoff 99 yards against Texas Tech.
• Reed’s pick-six and Pringle’s KOR score marked the first time the Wildcats had two non-offensive scores in a Big 12 game since doing so against Oklahoma State in 2012.

NON-OFFENSIVE TDs PART II
• Under head coach Bill Snyder, K-State is 70-21 (.769) when scoring a non-offensive touchdown, while the Cats are 51-14 (.785) since 1999 in that department.
• Since Snyder returned to the sidelines in 2009 K-State is 26-7 (.788) in this same category.

SCORING IN THE THIRD PHASE
• Kansas State has been far and away the best team among FBS programs over the last decade when it comes to scoring via a kickoff or punt return.
• The Wildcats have a combined 42 kickoff- and punt-return touchdowns since 2005, 14 more than any other FBS school over the last 11-plus seasons.
• K-State has been fairly consistent between kickoff and punt returns with 22 and 20 touchdowns, respectively, during the current stretch.

DEFENSE IN THE THIRD PHASE
• On the flip side, K-State has been just as consistent in terms of kickoff and punt coverage.
• The Cats have not allowed a kickoff-return touchdown in the last 49 games as the last time an opponent took a kickoff back for a score was Louisiana on Sept. 7, 2013.
• Similarly, the Wildcats haven’t allowed a punt-return score since the second game of 2014 – Sept. 6 at Iowa State – which is a span of 36 games.
• Kansas State enters the bowl season ranked 15th nationally by allowing just 3.95 yards per punt return, while the Cats are 25th nationally by allowing an 18.5-yard average on kickoff returns.

KICK RETURN STREAK
• Kansas State has returned a kickoff for a touchdown in each of the last 12 seasons, which is the longest streak in the nation.
• Byron Pringle extended the streak this year when he returned a kickoff 99 yards against Texas Tech.
• Since head coach Bill Snyder’s return in 2009, K-State has returned 17 kickoffs for touchdowns as opposed to only four in his first tenure, which lasted 17 years.

RETURNERS RANK HIGH
• K-State returners have routinely enjoyed success under head coach Bill Snyder, and it appears that 2016 will be no different as both Byron Pringle and Dominique Heath rank highly in the nation in the return categories.
• Pringle, a First Team All-Big 12 kick returner, is ranked eighth in the nation with a 28.7-yard kickoff-return average – a mark that currently ranks ninth in school history – while his 659 yards this season rank fifth in school history. Heath, an Honorable Mention All-Big 12 returner, enters the bowl season tied for seventh nationally in punt-return scores.

KICKERS IN THE RECORD BOOK
• Juniors Matthew McCrane and Nick Walsh have performed to historic marks as both are etching their names into the K-State record book.
• McCrane, a two-time All-Big 12 place kicker, made his first two field goals at Stanford to extend a streak to a career record 16-straight makes.
• Additionally, he is ranks seventh in school history in both career field goals made (36) and career extra-points made (85), while he has 193 career points scored to sit three shy of entering the school’s top-10 list.
• A 2015 All-Big 12 punter and two-time member of the Ray Guy Award watch list, Walsh has booted to a career 42.8-yard average to rank sixth in K-State history, while he is seventh in career yards (6,350) and eighth in attempts (156).
• Walsh’s career averaged has been aided by two big games this year when he recorded a 48.7-yard average in the season opener at Stanford prior to a career best 50.3-yard mark against Texas Tech.

K-State to Host Gardner-Webb in Men’s Basketball

PowerCatGARDNER-WEBB (7-5, 0-0 Big South)

AT KANSAS STATE (10-1, 0-0 Big 12)

Wednesday, December 21, 2016  7 p.m. Bramlage Coliseum (12,528)

 

 

 COACHES

Kansas State: Bruce Weber (Wis.-Milwaukee ’78)

Overall: 402-210/19th season

At K-State: 89-55/5th season

  1. Gardner-Webb: First meeting

 

Gardner-Webb: Tim Craft (Florida ‘00)

Overall: 62-51/5th season

At Gardner-Webb: 62-51/5th season

  1. Kansas State: First meeting

 

PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP

Kansas State (10-1)

G: #3 Kamau Stokes (9.6 ppg., 4.3 apg.)

G: #5 Barry Brown (13.3 ppg., 2.5 rpg.)

G: #25 Wesley Iwundu (12.0 ppg., 5.6 rpg.)

F: #32 Dean Wade (9.1 ppg., 5.9 rpg.)

F: #4 D.J. Johnson (11.6 ppg., 7.1 rpg.)

 

Gardner-Webb (7-5)

G: #0 Jamaal Robateau (7.8 ppg., 2.5 rpg.)

G: #3 LaQuincy Rideau (12.8 ppg., 4.9 apg.)

G: #5 Liam O’Reilly (7.9 ppg., 3.3 rpg.)

F: #20 Tyrell Nelson (13.6 ppg., 6.3 rpg.)

C: #31 L’Hassane Niangane (2.7 ppg., 4.7 rpg.)

 

INSIDE THE SERIES

Overall: K-State leads 3-0 (series dates to 2001)

  1. Big South: K-State leads 8-1 (8-1 at home)

In Manhattan: K-State leads 3-0

Current Streak: K-State, 3

Last Meeting: K-State won 107-48 in Manhattan, Kan. (12/14/2008)

Weber vs. Gardner-Webb: First meeting

Weber vs. Craft: First meeting

 

GAME 12 – QUICK HITTERS

  • Kansas State (10-1) concludes the home portion of its non-conference schedule on Wednesday night, as the Wildcats play host to Big South foe Gardner-Webb (7-5) at 7 p.m. CT at Bramlage Coliseum. The squad will have 9 days before opening Big 12 at home against Texas (5-5) on Dec. 30.
  • K-State is riding a 5-game win streak for the second time this season and a win on Wednesday would give the team its longest winning streak since winning 10 in a row from Nov. 24, 2013 to Jan. 7, 2014.
  • During its current win streak, K-State is averaging 79.4 points on 50.9 percent shooting, including 42.6 percent from 3-point range, with 5 players averaging in double figures led by senior D.J. Johnson’s 12.4 points per game. Opponents are averaging 59 points on 36.9 percent shooting.
  • The Wildcats have won 16 consecutive non-conference games at home venues (which includes victories over Colorado State in Wichita in 2015 and Washington State in Kansas City in 2016), including 14 in a row at Bramlage Coliseum with an average margin of victory of 18.1 points. The last non-conference loss came to Georgia on Dec. 31, 2014.
  • K-State has an 86-5 (.945) record at home in non-conference play dating back to 2006-07, including a 31-3 (.912) mark under Bruce Weber. The squad has won 75 of its last 78 non-conference home games.
  • The Wildcats have won their 7 home games by an average of 19.3 points per game, while averaging 76.7 points on 50.3 percent shooting, including 45.0 percent from 3-point range. Sophomore Barry Brown is averaging 15 points on 52.6 percent shooting, including 50 percent from long range.
  • This will be the fourth meeting between K-State and Gardner-Webb and the first since a 107-48 win by the Wildcats at home on Dec. 14, 2008. The team is 3-0 all-time against the Bulldogs, including a 75-57 win at home on Dec. 1, 2001 and a 68-65 win at home on Nov. 29, 2003.
  • K-State is coming off an 89-70 win over Colorado State in the Duel in Denver on Saturday at the Pepsi Center, in which, 6 players scored in double figures, including all 5 starters, for the second time under Bruce Weber and the first time since a win over Southern Utah on Nov. 14, 2014.
  • Johnson led the way with his third career double-double, including his second this season, with game-highs in both scoring (19) and rebounding (10). He has tallied at least 10 rebounds in 3 of the last 4 games.
  • K-State has four players averaging in double figures led by Brown’s 13.3 points per game, who has double-digits in 10 of the first 11 games.

 

THE OPPONENT: GARDNER-WEBB (7-5)

  • Gardner-Webb enters Wednesday’s game with a 7-5 record, including consecutive wins against Warren Wilson (95-45) and at Nebraska (70-62)… The Runnin’ Bulldogs have won 7 of their last 9 games since opening the year with losses at SMU (44-72), at Pittsburgh (80-99) and on a neutral court against Eastern Michigan (68-76)… The team is 2-3 on the road this season.
  • In addition to Nebraska, Gardner-Webb has notable recent road wins at Clemson and Purdue in 2014 under coach Tim Craft.
  • The Bulldogs are averaging 77.9 points on 48.4 percent shooting, including 37.1 percent from 3-point range, on the season with 39.1 rebounds, 16.0 assists, 8.8 steals and 3.3 blocks per game… They are allowing opponent 67.9 points per game on 39.9  percent shooting, including 33.6 percent from beyond the arc… The team is shooting 57.2 percent from the free throw line.
  • Gardner-Webb has 7 players averaging 6 or more points this season, including 3 averaging in double figures led by senior forward Tyrell Nelson, who leads the way in both scoring (13.6 ppg.) and rebounding (6.3 rpg.)… Nelson is also connecting on a team-best 58 percent from the field, including 60 percent from 3-point range… Sophomore guard David Efianayi also averages double figures at 13.5 points per game on 52.6 percent shooting, while sophomore guard LaQuincy Rideau averages 12.8 points on 46.9 percent shooting to go with 5.4 rebounds and team-bests in assists (4.9 apg.) and steals (2.8 spg.).
  • Gardner-Webb is led by 5th-year head coach Tim Craft, who has a 62-51 record during his tenure.

 

BREAKING DOWN THE SERIES

  • Wednesday’s game will mark the fourth meeting between K-State and Gardner-Webb.
  • The Wildcats have won all 3 previous meetings at home, including 75-57 on Dec. 1, 2001, 68-65 on Nov. 29, 2003 and 107-48 in the latest meeting on Dec. 14, 2008.
  • K-State is 8-1 all-time against the Big South with all 9 previous matchups coming in Manhattan… The Wildcats have won 8 straight meetings against Big South competitive with the last loss coming to Campbell in 1905… This will be the 1st meeting with a Big South foe since defeating Charleston Southern, 72-67, on Nov. 11, 2012.

 

NON-CONFERENCE SUCCESS

  • K-State has an 86-5 record at home in non-conference play dating back to 2006-07, including a 31-3 mark under head coach Bruce Weber… The Wildcats has won 75 of their last 78 non-conference home games at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • K-State has won 16 consecutive games played at home venues against non-conference opponents (61-56 win over Colorado State at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita), including 14 straight at Bramlage Coliseum… The Wildcats’ last loss to a non-conference team at home came against Georgia, 50-46, on Dec. 31, 2014… The team is 15-2 at home in December under Bruce Weber.
  • K-State is looking to go unbeaten at home in non-conference games for the second straight year after going 9-0 in 2015-16.
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