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K-State plays at Texas A & M Saturday

KANSAS STATE (15-4, 5-2 Big 12) at TEXAS A&M (7-10, 1-5 SEC)

Saturday, January 26, 2019 >> 1:05 p.m. CT >> Reed Arena (12,989) >> College Station, Texas

6th Annual SEC/Big 12 Challenge

 

SEC/BIG 12 CHALLENGE

Bragging rights will be up for grabs when the 10 Big 12 teams play 10 from the SEC in the 6th annual SEC/Big 12 Challenge on Saturday. The Big 12 holds a 29-21 advantage in the series, including wins in 2013, 2014, 2016. The SEC won the Challenge, 6-4, in 2018.

 

Overall: K-State leads 3-2 (0-2 on the road)

 

TELEVISION

ESPN

  • Jon Sciambi (play-by-play)
  • Fran Fraschilla (analyst)
  • Scott Gustafson (producer)

 

RADIO

K-State Sports Network

  • Wyatt Thompson (play-by-play)
  • Stan Weber (analyst)

 

Listen Online: TuneIn.com [free] // www.kstatesports.com/watch [free]

Satellite Radio: Sirius 135 / XM 199 / Internet 953

 

LIVE STATS

www.12thman.com

tamu.statbroadcast.com [media only]

 

TICKETS

www.12thman.com/tickets

(888) 99.AGGIE [992.4443]

 

Single Game: $10-$22 (bench/chairback)

 

COACHES

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

Overall: 453-239/21st season

At K-State: 140-84/7th season

  1. Texas A&M: 1-1 (0-1 on the road)

 

Texas A&M: Billy Kennedy (SE Louisiana ’86)

Overall: 355-287/21st season

At Texas A&M: 144-108/8th season

  1. Kansas State: 1-3 (1-1 at home)

 

PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP

Kansas State (15-4, 5-2 Big 12)

G: #3 Kamau Stokes

G: #5 Barry Brown, Jr.

G/F: #20 Xavier Sneed

F: #32 Dean Wade

F: #14 Makol Mawien

 

Texas A&M (7-10, 1-5 SEC)

G: #0 Jay Jay Chandler

G: #2 T.J. Starks

G: #11 Wendell Mitchell

F: #1 Savion Flagg

F: #21 Christian Mekowulu

 

SERIES HISTORY

Overall: K-State leads 18-8

Current Streak: Texas A&M, 1

In College Station: Texas A&M leads 7-3

At Reed Arena: Texas A&M leads 6-3

Last Meeting: L, 68-78, 12/12/15

Weber vs. Kennedy: 1-1 (0-1 on the road)

 

OPENING TIP

  • Kansas State (15-4, 5-2 Big 12) steps out of Big 12 play on Saturday, as the Wildcats travel to College Station, Texas to take on former conference foe Texas A&M (7-10, 1-5 SEC) in the sixth annual SEC/Big 12 Challenge. The game will tip at 1:05 p.m., CT on ESPN with Jon Sciambi (play-by-play) and Fran Fraschilla (analyst) on the call.
  • K-State is 3-2 all-time, in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge, which started during the 2013-14 season, including 0-2 in road matchups (losses to Tennessee in both 2014 (65-64) and 2017 (70-58). The Wildcats defeated Ole Miss at home in 2013 (61-58) and 2016 (69-64) before beating Georgia, 56-51, last season. The Big 12 holds a 29-21 record in the Challenge series, including wins in 2013, 2014 and 2016. However, the SEC won the Challenge in 2018, 6-4, after the two conferences tied 5-5 in 2017.
  • Although familiar opponents as Big 12 rivals from 1997-2012, this will be the first meeting between K-State and Texas A&M in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge Series.  The Wildcats own an 18-8 lead in a series that dates to 1960, however, the Aggies hold a 7-3 edge in games played in College Station, including a 78-68 win in the last meeting between the schools on Dec. 12, 2015. Seniors Barry Brown, Jr., Kamau Stokes and Dean Wade all played in the last meeting with Stokes and Wade each starting the contest and Stokes posting 9 points, 6 rebounds and 3 assists.
  • Texas A&M enters Saturday’s game with losses in 6 of its last 7 outings, including 3 in a row since winning 81-80 at Alabama on Jan. 12. The Aggies are averaging 72.8 points on 43.8 percent shooting, while 3 players (T.J. Starks (12.9 ppg.), Savion Flagg (12.6 ppg.) and Wendell Mitchell (11.1 ppg.) averaging in double figures. The team is coming off an 81-72 loss at Florida on Tuesday night.
  • K-State has posted a 10-2 record so far in non-conference play, extending its streak of winning 10 or more non-conference games in each of the last 4 seasons. Since going 7-6 in non-conference play in 2014-15, the Wildcats have collected a 40-8 (.833) record, which includes a 29-game winning streak at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • K-State extended its Big 12 winning streak to 5 games by holding No. 14/13 Texas Tech to its lowest point total in more than four seasons, as the Wildcats won a battle of two of the best defensive teams in the country, 58-45, at home on Tuesday night.  The 45 points were the fewest surrendered to a conference opponent under head coach Bruce Weber and the fewest since the Wildcats held No. 23 Texas Tech (under Beard mentor Bobby Knight) to 44 points on Jan. 11, 2003. The team has now held 12 of their 19 opponents to 60 points or less, while 3 of the last 4 opponents (Iowa State, TCU and Texas Tech) have been held to its season-low in points.
  • K-State’s 5-game winning streak is the second of the season since winning its first 6 games of the season, while it is the first 5-game winning streak in Big 12 play in nearly 6 years since rattling off 6 in a row from Feb. 18 to March 5, 2013 and the second such streak under head coach Bruce Weber.

 

NOTES ON TEXAS A&M

  • Texas A&M (7-10, 1-5 SEC) has dropped 6 of its last 7 games, including 3 in a row, since winning 5 consecutive from Nov. 23 to Dec. 22. The Aggies have lost 3 straight games (Auburn, Missouri and Florida) since an 81-80 win at Alabama on Jan. 12. The squad is coming off an 81-72 setback at Florida on Tuesday, in which, they led by as many as 13 points in the first half.
  • Texas A&M is averaging 72.8 points on 43.8 percent shooting, including 28.7 percent from 3-point range, to go with 38.9 rebounds, 12.7 assists, 6.5 steals and 5.3 blocks per game, while allowing 73.6 points on 41.6 percent shooting, including 34.6 percent from 3-point range. The team is connecting on 68.6 percent from the free throw line.
  • Sophomores T.J. Starks and Savion Flagg pace a young Aggie squad that has a combined 10 freshmen and sophomores and just two seniors and a graduate transfer. Starks (12.9 ppg.) and Flagg (12.6 ppg.) both average better than 12 points, while junior Wendell Mitchell also averages in double figures at 11.1 points per game. Three others (Jay Jay Chandler, Christian Mekowulu and Josh Nebo) all average better than 8 points per game. Flagg averages a team-high 7.8 rebounds per game, while Starks dishes a team-high 3.5 assists. Mitchell is one of 3 players with 20 or more 3-pointers.
  • Texas A&M is led by head coach Billy Kennedy, who has posted a 144-108 (.571) record in his eighth season, which includes two trips to the Sweet 16 (2016, 2018). He has a 355-287 (.553) overall record in his 21st season as a head coach, which includes stints at Centenary (1997-98), SE Louisiana (1999-2005), Murray State (2006-11) and now, Texas A&M (2011-present).

 

SERIES HISTORY

  • K-State and Texas A&M will meet for the 27th time in their histories with the Wildcats holding an 18-8 advantage in a series that dates to 1960. The Aggies are 7-3 all-time in games played at home, including a 78-68 win in the teams’ most recent meeting on Dec. 12, 2015.
  • K-State has won 5 of the last 7 meetings, including a split of the last 4 games played in College Station. The Wildcats swept the last regular-season series in Big 12 play in 2012, which includes the last victory at Reed Arena – a 76-70 win on Feb. 28, 2012. Most recently, the schools split a home-and-home series with K-State winning 71-64 at the Sprint Center in Kansas City on Dec. 20, 2014 before Texas A&M won 78-68 at home on Dec. 12, 2015.
  • In that most recent meeting in 2015, Houston native and current Orlando Magic Wesley Iwundu scored a game-high 23 points, but it wasn’t enough to overcome an impressive shooting night by Texas A&M, which connected on 54 percent (27-of-50) from the field, including 50 or better in each half. All three current seniors (Brown, Stokes and Wade) played in the game with Stokes and Wade earning starts.
  • Head coach Bruce Weber is 1-1 all-time against Texas A&M, including a 0-1 mark on the road, while Weber is 1-1 against head coach Billy Kennedy.

 

SEC/BIG 12 CHALLENGE

  • K-State is 3-2 all-time in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge, including 0-2 in games played on the road. The Wildcats have twice defeated Ole Miss (2013 and 2016) at home and twice lost at Tennessee (2014 and 2017), while last season they defeated Georgia, 56-51. This will be the first meeting with Texas A&M.
  • K-State has won 5 consecutive games against SEC competition dating back to 2017-18, including wins against Missouri (82-67 in the championship game of the Paradise Jam on Nov. 19) and Vanderbilt (69-58) this season.
  • The Big 12 leads the all-time Challenge series, 29-21, winning the event in 2013, 2014 and 2016, however, the SEC won the event, 6-4, in 2018 after  the two leagues tied 5-5 in 2017. This season, the Big 12 has a 7-2 edge in head-to-head matchups with the SEC in 2018-19.

 

LAST TIME OUT: K-STATE 58, 14/13 TEXAS TECH 45

  • Kansas State extended its winning streak to 5 games, as the Wildcats held No. 14/13 Texas Tech to a season-low 45 points on 32.7 percent shooting in earning a 58-45 victory on a snowy Tuesday evening at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • The 5-game winning streak in Big 12 play is the longest such streak for the Wildcats since rattling off 6 in a row from Feb. 18 to March 5, 2013 and the second such streak under head coach Bruce Weber. It is the second 5-game winning streak this season. The team has now won 3 straight against ranked squads since losing at No. 11/11 Texas Tech on Jan. 5 and has now posted at least 3 wins over Top 25 opponents in each of the last 3 seasons.
  • In a battle of two of the best defensive teams in the country, the Wildcats lived up to their billing, holding the Red Raiders to their lowest point total (45) under head coach Chris Beard and the lowest since scoring 44 at Loyola Chicago on Dec. 22, 2014. The team was held to a season-low 32.7 field goal percentage (16-of-49), including 21.7 percent (5-of-23) from 3-point range.
  • The 45 points were the fewest surrendered a conference opponent under Weber and the fewest since holding No. 23 Texas Tech to 44 points on Jan. 11, 2003. The Wildcats have held 81 opponents to 60 points or less in the Weber era, including 12 of 19 opponents. Three of the last 4 foes (Iowa State, TCU and Texas Tech) have been held to its season-low for points.
  • On the offensive end, K-State connected on a Texas Tech opponent-high 46.3 percent (19-of-41) from the field, including 54.5 percent (12-of-22) in the first half, as the Wildcats used a 10-2 run near the end of the first half to break open a tight game, in which, they led for 33 minutes.
  • Seniors Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade both scored in double figures, as Brown, who scored in double figures for the sixth consecutive game, led the way with 15 points on 6-of-11 shooting, while Wade added 13 points on 3-of-6 field goals and 7-of-8 free throws. Brown also added a game-high 7 rebounds to go with 3 steals. Sophomore Mike McGuirl posted his second-highest point total of the season with 9 points off the bench.
  • The win snapped a 3-game skid for the Wildcats against the Red Raiders and extended K-State’s series lead to 24-16.

 

‘CATS HAVE BEEN STELLAR ON DEFENSE UNDER WEBER

  • K-State has put up some impressive defensive numbers under head coach Bruce Weber, leading the Big 12 in scoring defense twice in the last 6 years (60.4 ppg., in 2012-13 and 65.4 ppg., in 2013-14).
  • K-State is holding opponents to 58.5 points on 40.2 percent shooting, including 30.1 percent from 3-point range, while forcing 15.2 turnovers per game. The Wildcats rank 4th in scoring defense, 31st in 3-point field goal percentage defense, 38th in turnover margin (+3.2) and 40th in field goal percentage defense. The team leads the Big 12 in rebounding defense (31.4), while is second in scoring defense and turnovers forced (15.2) and third in 3-point field goal percentage defense and steals (7.4) in the Big 12.
  • K-State has held 12 of 19 opponents to 60 points or less this season with one eclipsing 70. The squad has now held 81 opponents to 60 points or less in Weber’s tenure, boasting a 73-8 mark in those contests.
  • K-State has held its opponents to an average of 12.7 points per game under their scoring average, including 16.4 points in Big 12 play. Eight foes have been held to 20 or more points under their average, including Penn (35.3), Tulsa (28.8), Texas Tech (26.6), Southern Miss (26.2), Vanderbilt (25.6), TCU (25.4), Iowa State (24.3) and Eastern Kentucky (20.3).
  • In Big 12 play, K-State is allowing a league-best 59.6 points per game on 43 percent shooting, including 34.8 percent from 3-point range, while forcing opponents into a Big 12-high 15.0 turnovers per game and scoring an average of 16.9 points off those turnovers. The Wildcats have held three league foes (Iowa State, TCU and Texas Tech) to less 60 points.

 

POINTS OFF TURNOVERS

  • More than a quarter of K-State’s total points (320/1239) this season have come off opponent turnovers, as the Wildcats are averaging 16.8 points off 15.2 opponent mistakes per game. The team ranks 38th nationally in turnover margin (+3.2), 72nd in turnovers forced (15.2) and 92nd in steals (7.4).
  • The Wildcats scored 20 or more points off turnovers in 7 games, including a season-high 25 in the come-from-behind 71-69 victory over West Virginia (1/9/19). They have also put up 20 points or more off opponent turnovers against Kennesaw State (20), Denver (23), Eastern Kentucky (24), Penn (22), Marquette (22) and TCU (21).
  • K-State has scored more than 3,000 points (3,424) off turnovers during Weber’s tenure, an average of 15.3 points per game. In 2017-18, the Wildcats averaged 17.3 points off turnovers, outscoring opponents, 639-423.
  • A year ago, K-State ranked eighth nationally in total steals (294) and 18th in steals per game (7.9), while the school was one of just 5 nationally (Georgia State, Nicholls State, Purdue and Stephen F. Austin) with three players (Barry Brown, Jr., Dean Wade and Xavier Sneed) with 40 or more steals.
  • Led by all-time steals leader Barry Brown, Jr., who recently broke the record with 211st steal against Vanderbilt (12/22/18), the Wildcats have 3 other players with 100 or more steals, including Kamau Stokes (117), Xavier Sneed (115) and Dean Wade (109). Stokes now ranks ninth in career steals, while Sneed and Wade could also join the career Top 10.

 

IMPROVED REBOUNDING

  • One of the big emphasis in the off-season was rebounding, as the Wildcats finished 10th in the Big 12 in every rebounding categories, including overall rebounding (30.7), offensive rebounds (8.2), defensive rebounds (22.5) and rebounding margin (-3.4). The 30.7 rebounding average was the lowest by a K-State team since averaging just 30.0 per game in 1984-85.
  • K-State is averaging 34.9 rebounds per game, which ranks ninth in the Big 12, to go with averages of 9.6 offensive (eighth) and 25.3 defensive (ninth) rebounds per game. On the positive side, the Wildcats are allowing opponents a Big 12-low 31.4 rebounds per game and hold a Big 12-best 78.0 defensive rebounding percentage.
  • K-State has out-rebounded 13 of 19 opponents, including 4 in 7 Big 12 games. In comparison, the Wildcats out-rebounded just 10 opponents in 2017-18 in 37 games, including 4 Big 12 foes.
  • K-State added one of the top rebounders in the community college ranks in junior Austin Trice, as he is averaging 3.1 rebounds per game in just 8.6 minutes game. Trice ranked among the Top 10 in 4 rebounding categories in the community college ranks in 2017-18, including 4th in average (12.1 rpg.).
  • In addition to Trice, the entire team has collectively elevated their efforts in rebounding this season, including Dean Wade (6.2 to 6.6 rpg.), Xavier Sneed (5.1 to 5.6 rpg.), Makol Mawien (3.4 to 4.5 rpg.), Barry Brown, Jr., (3.1 to 4.2 rpg.) and Cartier Diarra (2.5 to 3.3 rpg.).

 

NON-CONFERENCE SUCCESS

  • K-State has a 105-6 (.946) record at home venues (includes home games played at Bramlage Coliseum, INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita and the Sprint Center in Kansas City) in non-conference play dating back to the 2006-07 season, including a 96-5 (.950) mark at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • The Wildcats have won 92 of their last 96 non-conference home games, including a 29-game winning streak at Bramlage Coliseum. The last home non-conference loss came against Georgia, 50-46, on Dec. 31, 2014.
  • K-State has posted a 140-35 (.800) record in non-conference play since the 2006-07 season, which includes a 10-2 (.818) mark in 2018-19. The team has registered double-digit non-conference wins in 12 of the last 13 years, averaging 10.8 non-conference wins in that span, and went a program-best 13-1 in non-conference play during the 2009-10 season.
  • Since going 7-6 in non-conference in 2014-15, which included back-to-back losses to Texas Southern and Georgia, the Wildcats has won double-digit non-conference games each of the past three seasons and is 40-8 (.833) in non-conference play since 2015-16.
  • After losses to Marquette and Tulsa in December, the team is looking for its first non-conference road win since a 68-65 win at Washington State on Dec. 20, 2017.

 

HISTORIC COMEBACK

  • K-State overcame its largest deficit ever when senior Barry Brown, Jr., laid in the go-ahead bucket with 29 seconds left to cap a 50-point second half by the Wildcats in a 71-69 defeat of West Virginia (1/9/19).
  • K-State trailed by as many as 21 points a little more than a minute into the second half before a 17-0 run cut the deficit to 42-38 with 13:07 left. A 4-point play by junior Xavier Sneed gave the Wildcats their first lead with 2:30 remaining before the Mountaineers regained the advantage, 69-68, on a Lamont West free throw a minute later. In the final 60 seconds, Brown put the Wildcats ahead 70-69 with a layup with 29 seconds remaining.
  • West Virginia missed a shot in the paint with 5 seconds and Sneed came down with the rebound and was sent to the line, where he hit one free throw. The Mountaineers were unable to get a final shot up at the buzzer.
  • Brown led K-State behind a season-high 29 points on 9-of-14 field goals and a 10-of-12 effort from the line to go with a career-tying 6 steals. It was his highest point total since scoring 34 points at Baylor on Jan. 22, 2018. In the process, he became the ninth Wildcat to eclipse 1,500 career points.
  • Brown was joined in double figures by a career night from sophomore Mike McGuirl, who scored a career-high 18 points on 7-of-12 field goals, including 4-of-6 from 3-point range, while senior Kamau Stokes and Xavier Sneed added 12 and 10 points, respectively. It was McGuirl’s second career double-digit scoring game and his first since the 2018 NCAA Tournament.
  • K-State scored its 50 points after halftime on 62.1 percent (18-of-29) shooting, including 63.6 percent (7-of-11) from 3-point range, compared to just 21 in the first half on 29.2 percent (7-of-24) shooting, including 16.7 percent (2-of-12) from long range. In addition, the Wildcats scored 25 points off 17 Mountaineers turnovers, while only turning the ball over 6 times.
  • It marked the second time this season that K-State had rallied from a double-digit deficit at home, as the Wildcats came from 16 points down to defeat Southern Miss, 55-51, on Dec. 19 at home. Senior Kamau Stokes scored 16 of his season-high 18 points in the second half.
  • K-State went on a 24-2 run over 8:08 in the second half to take over the game, as the Wildcats held the Golden Eagles scoreless for 5:24 during the span. The run came after scoring a season-low 19 points in the first half, the fewest points in any half since scoring 15 vs. TCU on Feb. 15, 2015.

 

‘CATS HAVE FIRST 5-GAME WIN STREAK IN BIG 12 PLAY SINCE 2013

  • Since starting Big 12 play 0-2 for the first time since 2011, K-State has rattled off 5 consecutive victories, which started with the come-from-behind win over West Virginia (71-69) and includes back-to-back Top 25 road wins over No. 20/21 Iowa State (58-57) and No. 20/19 Oklahoma (74-61) and  home wins over TCU (65-55) and No. 14/13 Texas Tech (58-45). It is just the Wildcats’ seventh winning streak of 5 or more games in Big 12 play and the first since winning 6 in a row from Feb. 18 to March 5, 2013.
  • During the winning streak, K-State is averaging 65.2 points on 45 percent (115-of-256) shooting, including 34.3 percent (34-of-99) from 3-point range,  to go with 72.1 percent (62-of-86) from the free throw line, while averaging 12.6 assists and just 10.4 turnovers per game. In losing the first 2 Big 12 games, the team averaged just 52 points on 33 percent (36-of-109), including 24.4 percent (10-of-41) from 3-point range, with 12.5 turnovers per game.
  • On the defensive end, the Wildcats are allowing just 57.4 points in the win streak on 41.8 percent (102-of-244) shooting, including 31.2 percent (34-of-109) from 3-point range, while averaging 16.2 points off 15 opponent turnovers. In those first 2 Big 12 games, the team allowed 65 points on 46.5 percent (40-of-86), including 43.5 percent (20-of-46) from 3-point range.
  • During the win streak, senior Barry Brown, Jr., has averaged a team-best 20.4 points on 52.6 percent (40-of-76) shooting, which includes 3 straight 20-point performances, while fellow senior Dean Wade, who has played in 4 of the 5 games, is averaging 12.8 points on 47.1 percent (16-of-34) shooting. Four others (Xavier Sneed, Kamau Stokes, Makol Mawien and Mike McGuirl) are averaging between 6.0 and 9.2 points per game. Brown averaged just 12.0 points in the first 2 Big 12 games.

 

BETTER WITH DEAN WADE

  • It’s stating the obvious that K-State is a better team when the Wildcats have their Preseason Big 12 Player of the Year Dean Wade on the floor. The team is 11-2 this season with Wade, who missed 6 games from Dec. 19 to Jan. 9 with a foot injury, in the lineup and just 4-2 with him out of it.
  • K-State is averaging 67.8 points on 43.8 percent shooting, including 31.5 percent from 3-point range, in the 13 games with Wade in the lineup, while the team is averaging just 59.7 points on 40.2 percent shooting, including 31.1 percent from 3-point range, in the 6 games without him.
  • Three Wildcats (Barry Brown, Jr., Dean Wade and Xavier Sneed) are averaging in double figures in the 13 games with Wade in the lineup, while three other players (Kamau Stokes, Makol Mawien and Cartier Diarra) are averaging betwen 5.2 and 9.0 points per game. In comparison, only two Wildcats (Brown/15.3 ppg., and Stokes/13.8 ppg.) are averaging in double figures in the 6 games without Wade.

 

GAME OF RUNS

  • K-State’s use of runs have been particularly effective this season, as the Wildcats have totaled 42 runs of at least 7 or more points, including 23 runs of 10 or more points. The team posted five such runs in the win over Georgia State (12/15/18), including runs of 8-0, 16-4, 13-2, 12-0 and 9-1, while they produced the biggest run (24-2) in the comeback win over Southern Miss (12/19/18), which was the largest comeback before the West Virginia game. The team had a 17-0 run to close the gap against the Mountaineers.
  • The Paradise Jam was a tournament of runs for K-State, as the Wildcats put together decisive runs en route to double-digit victories against Eastern Kentucky (11/16/18), Penn (11/18/18) and Missouri (11/19/18) in the title game. The team had runs of 12-2 and 20-6 against EKU to take control, while the Wildcats erupted for a 17-2 run right before halftime against Penn. Against Missouri, the squad scored 20 of the next 22 points after a 27-all tie.
  • In addition, K-State used a 21-7 to jump out ahead of Vanderbilt (12/22/18) en route to building a 22-point lead in the second half, while the Wildcats had 17-0 and 20-8 runs in the comeback against West Virginia (1/9/19) and ended the Iowa State (1/12/19) game on a 10-2 run.

 

OFFENSIVE BALANCE KEY TO SUCCESS

  • Much like 2017-18, balance has been key to K-State’s offensive success this season, as four players (Barry Brown, Jr., Dean Wade, Xavier Sneed and Kamau Stokes) are averaging in double figures.
  • Five different players (Wade, Brown, Sneed, Stokes and Makol Mawien) have led the Wildcats in scoring, while 7 players have at least one double-digit scoring game, including 15 by Brown, 11 by Stokes and Wade, 10 by Sneed, 6 by Mawien, 3 by Cartier Diarra and 1 by Mike McGuirl.
  • Since Weber took over in 2012-13, K-State has posted a 58-19 (.750) record when four or more players score in double figures, including a 6-1 mark in 2018-19. The Wildcats are 12-4 when Mawien scores in double digits, while the team is 10-3 (8-2 in 2017-18) when Diarra reaches double-digits.

 

BROWN, WADE BACK-TO-BACK BIG 12 PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

  • Seniors Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade became the first Wildcats since 2013 to capture Phillips 66 Big 12 Player of the Week honors in back-to-back weeks, as the duo has helped the squad to 4 consecutive victories.
  • Brown earned his first-ever Big 12 Player of the Week honor on Jan. 14, as he averaged 26 points on 52.9 percent shooting (18-of-34), including a pair of game-winners, in K-State’s victories over West Virginia and No. 20/21 Iowa State, while Wade averaged 18 points and 3.5 assists in the wins over No. 20/19 Oklahoma and TCU this past week.
  • Brown helped K-State engineer a school-record 21-point comeback in the victory over the Mountaineers. He scored a season-high 29 points on 9-of-14 field goals and 10-of-12 free throws to go with a career-tying 6 steals, 1 assist, 1 block and 1 rebound in 38 minutes. He scored a game-high 23 points in the win over the Cyclones, including game-winner with 4 seconds left.
  • Just 2 games removed from missing 6 games due to injury, Wade earned just his second 20-point game of the season with 20 points on 8-of-14 field goals in the Wildcats’ first win at Oklahoma since 2015, while he added 16 points and a game-high 6 assists in the victory over TCU.

 

MORE ON BROWN

  • Senior Barry Brown, Jr., registered a significant milestone in the win over Vanderbilt (12/22/18), becoming the school’s all-time steals leader with 3 against the Commodores to eclipse Jacob Pullen (210, 2007-11). Brown now has 225 career steals in 124 games played.
  • Brown places among several career offensive records, including 5th in field goals attempted (1,352), 7th in scoring (1,576), field goals made (562), 3-point field goals attempted (475), double-digit scoring games (78) and 9th in 3-point field goals made (153) and assists (302).
  • Brown also ranks among the leaders in games played, as his streak of 124 consecutive games ranks second (just 3 shy of Steve Henson’s school record) and his 102 straight starts tie for second (with Rolando Blackman) in school history. He is also third in minutes played (3,933), needing 542 to pass Steve Henson (4,474; 1987-90). He has a chance to top the school record of 135 games played, which is held by Jacob Pullen and Rodney McGruder.

 

STOKES ECLIPSES 1,000 CAREER POINTS

  • With 20 points against George Mason (12/29/18), senior Kamau Stokes became the 30th player to post 1,000 points and joined fellow seniors Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade in achieving the milestone. The trio became the first class in school history to each top 1,000 career points in a career.
  • Brown (1,576 points) and Wade (1,360 points) each eclipsed the mark as juniors and currently rank 7th and 11th, respectively, on the all-time scoring list, while Stokes ranks 23rd with 1,065 points.
  • Stokes already ranks in the career Top 10 for both 3-point field goals made (173/7th) and attempted (502/5th), while he ranks fifth with 366 assists and has a chance to become the third Wildcat (Steve Henson and Jacob Pullen) with 400 assists.

 

DON’T FORGET SNEED

  • With all the attention paid to the three seniors, the accomplishments of junior Xavier Sneed can’t be overlooked. He enjoyed a career best year in 2017-18, averaging 11.1 points, 5.1 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 31.4 minutes.
  • Since missing the opener with Kennesaw State (11/9), Sneed has scored in double figures in 10 games, including a season-high 18 points in the win over TCU (1/19/19) on 6-of-9 field goals.
  • Sneed collected his second career double-double and first of the season at Tulsa (12/8/18), posting a team-best 13 points to go with 10 rebounds.

 

WELCOME GOODNEWS

  • K-State got some unexpected “good news” on New Year’s Eve when recent signee Goodnews Kpegeol joined the team and filled the 13th and final scholarship for the reminder of the 2018-19 season.
  • An NCAA qualifier prior to enrolling at TaylorMade Academy in Pensacola, Florida for the 2018-19, Kpegeol is immediately eligible after enrolling for the spring semester and has been cleared to play by the NCAA. He is expected to redshirt the reminder of the season.
  • A 6-foot-6, 180-pound guard from St. Paul, Minnesota, Kpegeol spent the first half of the 2018-19 season as a postgraduate at TaylorMade after finishing his four-year prep career at North High School. He led the Polars to the Class 4A State Tournament for the first time in 17 years as a sophomore in 2015-16 before the school to a 22-5 record with a 15-1 mark in conference play as a senior in 2017-18. He averaged a team-best 18.2 points in 19 games played as a senior, which included nine 20-point games.

 

K-STATE WINS PARADISE JAM; FIRST TITLE SINCE 2011

  • Included in K-State’s 6-0 start to season was a 3-game sweep to win the 19th annual U.S. Virgin Islands Paradise Jam in St. Thomas, U.S.V.I., Nov. 16-19, as the Wildcats knocked off Eastern Kentucky (95-68), Penn (64-48) and Missouri (82-67).
  • The tournament championship marked the 14th in school history and the first since winning the 2011 Diamond Head Classic in Honolulu, Hawai’i. It was also the sixth career tournament title for head coach Bruce Weber and his first with the Wildcats.
  • Senior Dean Wade was named the tournament’s most valuable player after averaging 17.3 points on 61.8 percent (21-of-34) shooting with 6.0 rebounds and 3.7 assists in three games, including a team-high 21 points in the title game against the Tigers, while fellow senior Barry Brown, Jr., was one of five players selected as Paradise Jam Tournament All-Stars.

 

MORE ABOUT K-STATE

  • The Wildcats return 10 lettermen, including six players (Barry Brown, Jr.Cartier DiarraMakol MawienXavier SneedKamau Stokes and Dean Wade) that combined to start all 37 games a season ago, for a team that posted a 25-12 overall record (10-8 in Big 12 play) and advanced to the Elite Eight for the 12th time in school history and the first time since 2010.
  • It marked just the sixth 25-win campaign in school history, including the second under head coach Bruce Weber, while the school advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time in six seasons and 30th time overall.
  • K-State returns 185 combined starts from 2017-18, which is the most of any Division I team in the country, and ahead of other schools which return all of its starts, including George Mason (165), Iowa (165), Lipscomb (165) and North Florida (165).
  • K-State returns 93.2 percent (2,452 of 2,630 points) of its offense from 2017-18, which ranks 11th among Division I teams (trailing George Mason, Harvard, Wofford, Washington, Brown, Iowa, Wisconsin, UC Irvine, Syracuse and St. Francis). The Wildcats also returns more than 90 percent of their field goals made (869/92.7%), 3-point field goals made (232/91.3%), free throws made (482/96%), assists (476/93.3%) and steals (266/90.5%) as well as 80 or better percent of their minutes (6,558/85%), rebounds (905/80%) and blocks (98/89%).
  • K-State returns seven of its top-8 scorers from last season, including three with double-digit averages [Wade (16.2 ppg.), Brown (15.9 ppg.) and Sneed (11.1 ppg.). Other returners include Kamau Stokes (9.0 ppg.), Cartier Diarra (7.1 ppg.), Makol Mawien (6.8 ppg.) and Mike McGuirl (3.3 ppg.). The Wildcats return their individual leader in scoring (Wade), rebounding (Wade), assists (Brown), steals (Brown) and blocks (Mawien).

 

‘CATS EARN PRESEASON RANKINGS

  • K-State opened the 2018-19 season in the Top 15 in both major polls, as the Wildcats earned a No. 11 ranking in the preseason USA Today Coaches poll to go with a No. 12 ranking in the preseason Associated Press poll.
  • It marks the first time that K-State has started with preseason rankings in both polls since the 2010-11 campaign when the school opened at No. 3 in the AP and USA Today Coaches polls.
  • K-State appeared in the Preseason AP poll for the 17th time in school history, while it was the highest preseason ranking since starting the 2010-11 campaign at No. 3. It was also the 12th time debuting in the AP Top 15 (1951-52, 1952-53, 1953-54, 1956-57, 1957-58, 1958-59, 1961-62, 1964-65, 1965-66, 1975-76 and 2010-11).
  • The Wildcats have received several preseason rankings, including No. 11 by NBCSports.com, Yahoo! Sports, Street & Smith’s, Lindy’s and Athlon, No. 12 by ESPN.com, CBSSports.com, USA Today, Stadium, No. 13 by The Athletic, Blue Ribbon Yearbook and No. 14 by SI.com.
  • K-State was one of four Big 12 teams to place in both Top 25 polls, as Kansas was the unanimous No. 1 team. West Virginia was No. 13 in both polls, while TCU was ranked No. 20 (Coaches) and No. 21 (AP), respectively.

 

‘CATS PICKED SECOND IN BIG 12 PLAY; WADE NAMED PRESEASON POY

  • K-State was picked to finish second by the league coaches in the annual Big 12 Preseason poll released on Oct. 19, as the Wildcats received 72 points and two first-place votes. Kansas was selected first, while West Virginia, TCU and Texas rounded out the Top 5.
  • The second-place selection was the second-highest by a K-State team in the history of the poll, following the 2010-11 team which was picked to finish first with 119 points. In fact, the Wildcats have been picked to finish fifth or better on just six other occasions in the poll, including fourth in 2007-08, 2009-10 and 2014-15 and fifth in 2006-07, 2012-13 and 2013-14.
  • Senior Dean Wade became just the second Wildcat to ever be selected the Preseason Big 12 Player of the Year by the league coaches, while Wade and Barry Brown, Jr., were both named to the Preseason All-Big 12 Team. The duo was joined on the team by Kansas’ Dedric Lawson, Iowa State’s Lindell Wigginton and West Virginia’s Sagaba Konate.
  • Wade’s selection marked the second time that a K-State player has been named the preseason Player of the Year and the first since Jacob Pullen in 2010-11. It also was just the second time that two Wildcats appeared on the Preseason All-Big 12 Team, following Pullen and Curtis Kelly in 2010-11. Wade and Brown are just the sixth and seventh players in school history to earn recognition to the Preseason All-Big 12 (since 1996-97), following Manny Dies in 1998-99, Kelly and Pullen in 2010-11, Rodney McGruder in 2012-13 and Marcus Foster in 2014-15.

 

NEXT UP: AT OKLAHOMA STATE (8-11, 2-5 Big 12)

  • K-State earned its only bye of the conference season next week, as the Wildcats return to Big 12 play on Saturday, Feb. 2 with a visit to Stillwater, Okla., to take on Oklahoma State (8-11, 2-5 Big 12) at 5 p.m., CT.

TOM GILBERT
Director for Men’s Basketball Communications | K-State Athletics

 

Attachments area

Troopers split in boys basketball with Concordia

The Fort Riley Troopers boys basketball teams split their games with Concordia Thursday evening in Concordia.

The 8th grade team lost their first game 46-34 but won the second one 40-22. The 7th grade team won their first game 56-43 but lost the second one 30-25.

Basketball results

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL=

Barstow, Mo. 67, KC Washington 63

Beloit 58, Salina Sacred Heart 51

Cornerstone Family 54, St. Mary’s Academy 42

Hoisington 57, Pratt 29

Manhattan 57, Topeka West 47

Metro Academy 54, Southeast, Mo. 52

Plainville 77, Logan 57

Tonganoxie 50, Heritage Christian 36

Willard, Mo. 66, SM North 56

Lyon County League Tournament=

Consolation Semifinal=

Southern Coffey 61, Hartford 51

Waverly 65, Marais des Cygnes Valley 23

Saints Classic Tournament=

Third Place=

Olathe East 52, Grandview Christian, Mo. 49

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Centralia vs. Troy, ccd.

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL=

BV North 63, Blue Valley 33

Barstow, Mo. 50, KC Washington 28

Beloit 57, Salina Sacred Heart 52

Conway Springs 52, Mulvane 27

Lawrence 62, KC Harmon 12

Metro Academy 54, Butler, Mo. 51

Ness City 54, Ell-Saline 51, OT

Olathe East 42, BV West 33

Pratt 36, Hoisington 19

Reno County 52, SVHE 28

South Haven 34, Oxford 16

Tonganoxie 45, Heritage Christian 40

54 Classic Tournament=

Consolation Semifinal=

Medicine Lodge 43, Pratt Skyline 29

Pretty Prairie 50, Norwich 36

Semifinal=

Attica 30, South Barber 29

Cunningham 37, Kinsley 34, OT

Eli J. Walter Tournament=

Consolation Semifinal=

Douglass 41, Goessel 29

Minneapolis 60, Burrton 32

Semifinal=

Halstead 40, Berean Academy 28

Wichita Trinity 56, Hutchinson Central Christian 39

Glacier’s Edge Tournament=

Derby 65, SM North 17

Emporia 50, Topeka 49

Topeka Seaman 50, SM South 35

Glaciers Edge Tournament=

Wichita Northwest 54, Goddard-Eisenhower 51

Haven Wildcat Classic=

Quarterfinal=

Cheney 40, Andale 34

Haven 50, Moundridge 36

Nickerson 43, Kingman 28

Rose Hill 56, Garden Plain 47

Jefferson County North Tournament=

Atchison County 45, Rossville 29

Jefferson North 54, Perry-Lecompton 19

Pleasant Ridge 77, Oskaloosa 53

Valley Falls 40, Cornerstone Family 39

Lady Cat Classic Tournament=

Augusta 49, Wichita East 41

Circle 36, Gardner-Edgerton 29

Maize South 54, El Dorado 21

Mill Valley 58, Wichita Campus 36

Lady Firebirds Winter Classic=

Quarterfinal=

BV Southwest 78, Topeka West 19

Lawrence Free State 60, Hutchinson 45

Leavenworth 62, Olathe West 54

Maize 84, Junction City 23

Lady Thunderbird Tournament=

Quarterfinal=

Washburn Rural 52, Great Bend 15

Wichita Heights 59, Shawnee Heights 34

Wichita South 61, SM East 45

Lyon County League Tournament=

Consolation Semifinal=

Burlingame 49, Marais des Cygnes Valley 39

Lebo 49, Southern Coffey 24

Mid America Classic Tournament=

Manhattan 81, Wellington 51

McPherson 67, Wichita Southeast 39

Olathe South 51, Valley Center 31

Ulysses 29, Dodge City 24

Mulvane Wildcat Classic Tournament=

Wichita Collegiate 40, Wichita North 32

Newton Invitational Tournament=

Andover Central 52, Garden City 38

Bishop Miege 69, Newton 35

Olathe Northwest 59, Kapaun Mount Carmel 36

Wichita Bishop Carroll 46, SM Northwest 45

SPIAA Tournament=

Minneola 37, Satanta 28

Consolation=

Ingalls 62, Pawnee Heights 44

Spearville 43, Hodgeman County 37

Semifinal=

South Central 55, Bucklin 39

South Gray 38, Kiowa County 32

Steve Shepherd Tournament=

Canton-Galva 44, Wichita Independent 32

Sedgwick 44, Belle Plaine 42

Quarterfinal=

Chaparral 52, Fairfield 25

Inman 48, Clearwater 34

Wellsville Top Gun Tournament=

Baldwin 73, Anderson County 40

Lansing 71, Spring Hill 55

Nemaha Central 52, Topeka Hayden 50

Wellsville 60, Louisburg 28

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Centralia vs. Troy, ccd.

Horton vs. Jackson Heights, ppd. to Jan 25th.

Lady Jays fall in Firebirds Winter Classic

The Junction City Lady Jays fell to Maize 84-23 in the 2019 Lady Firebirds Winter Classic in Lawrence Thursday night.

Junction City will play Hutchinson in a consolation semifinal game at 3 p.m. on Friday.

In other first-round games in the tournament Lawrence Free State defeated Hutchinson 60-45, Blue Valley Southwest rolled by Topeka West 78-19 and Leavenworth defeated Olathe West 62-54.

Blue Jay boys basketball vs. Topeka High rescheduled

The Junction City Blue Jay boys basketball games at Topeka High have been rescheduled for Monday, February 11th.

The teams were scheduled to play this past Tuesday night at Topeka High but the games had to be postponed due to inclement weather.  The new times for the games on the 11th include the ninth grade game at 4:30 p.m. in the Topeka High auxiliary gym, the J-V contest at 4:30 p.m. in the main gym and the varsity contest at 6 p.m. in the main gym.

There will not be any girls basketball that night.

Lady Jays to play Maize in first round of Lady Firebirds Winter Classic

The Junction City Lady Jays meet Maize in the first round of the 2019 Lady Firebirds Winter Classic in Lawrence on Thursday.  The game is scheduled to tip off at 7:30 p.m. at Lawrence Free State High School. Maize is the number one seed and Junction City the number eight seed in the tournament.

The other first round pairings have Lawrence Free State against Hutchinson, Leavenworth playing Olathe West and Blue Valley Southwest meeting Topeka West.

The tournament will continue Friday and Saturday.

New date set for Blue Jay boys swim meet

The Junction City Blue Jay boys swimming meet that was postponed on Tuesday in Topeka has been rescheduled for Monday, January 28th.

JCHS Athletic Director Matt Westerhaus announced that It will begin at 4 p.m. at the Capitol Federal Natatorium.

Kansas State rides defense to win over Texas Tech

MANHATTAN, Kansas (AP) — Kansas State and Texas Tech have two of the four highest-rated defenses in the country. They didn’t disappoint Tuesday night.

In a preview of the tough test that awaits Big 12 opponents, the Wildcats ground down the 14th-ranked Red Raiders 58-45 on Tuesday night. Kansas State held Tech to a season low in points and hasn’t allowed a team to score more than 71 this season.

“First of all, it is about K-State’s defense,” Texas Tech coach Chris Beard said. “One team has broken 70 on them this year, and we knew it was going to be a difficult game to score so we set up a game plan.”

That game plan didn’t work. Barry Brown Jr. had 15 points, Dean Wade scored 13 and Mike McGuirl added nine as K-State hit big shot after big shot.

“Everyone is coming to win and play their best game,” Brown said. “Especially knowing you’ve won five straight, everyone is trying to stop your momentum.”

The Big 12’s top-ranked defenses combined to force 30 turnovers. The Wildcats (15-4, 5-2) held Texas Tech to 33-percent shooting and never let the Red Raiders get their offense rolling.

Jarrett Culver led Texas Tech (15-4, 4-3) with 17 points. Tariq Owens had 12.

The Wildcats outrebounded Texas Tech 33-25 overall and 27-18 on the defensive side, limiting second-chance points.

The Red Raiders struggled to contain Brown in the first half. He had two step-back 3-pointers and 11 points. Wade was a mismatch as well, with Red Raider big man Norense Odiase called for three fouls in the first half. He only played five minutes.

Owens scored seven points off the bench in Odiase’s absence, keeping Texas Tech in it, but Kansas State led 32-24 at the half.

“They made shots,” Beard said. “They were aggressive, they got to the free-throw line and late in the game when we were trying to come back from a deficit they got good looks.”

The Wildcats led 46-38 midway through the second half before Wade made two free throws and Xavier Sneed hit a 3. The Red Raiders got back within eight but couldn’t get any closer.

“I think the biggest improvement we’ve made from the start of the season is passing the ball and slowly I think we are becoming a better offensive team,” coach Bruce Weber said.

After Tuesday night, the teams seem to be going in different directions. K-State has won five straight while the Red Raiders have lost their last three games after starting 4-0 in Big 12 play. Beard thinks the Wildcats are built for a title run this year and was quick to give them credit after the loss.

“This is one of the best teams in the country,” he said. “Now they have won five straight, which is a direct reflection of the character of the guys they have on their team.”

K-State is in a tie for first in the conference with Kansas, which has won 14 straight regular-season titles. The Wildcats will clash with the Jayhawks for the first of two meetings on Feb. 5th at home.

“Well we dug out of the hole and not only were we 0-2, but we were down 21 points to West Virginia,” Weber said. “There’s a lot more coming up and as I said, these next two road games are very, very important.”

Chiefs fire their Defensive Coodinator

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs fired defensive coordinator Bob Sutton on Tuesday, just two days after Kansas City failed to stop Tom Brady and the New England Patriots on what turned out to be the only possession of overtime in a crushing 37-31 playoff defeat.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid announced the firing in a brief statement. It came one day after he said he would evaluate all aspects of the team but declined to address Sutton’s future specifically.

“Bob is a good football coach and a great person. He played an integral role in the success of our team over the last six seasons,” Reid said. “I’ve said before that change can be a good thing for both parties, and I believe that is the case here for the Chiefs and Bob.”

The 67-year-old Sutton had been defensive coordinator since 2013, when he joined Reid’s initial staff in Kansas City. The longtime college and NFL assistant had previously spent more than a decade with the New York Jets, including a stint as defensive coordinator.

Brown named to Midseason List for Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award

 – Senior guard Barry Brown, Jr., has been named of 15 midseason candidates for the 2019 Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award presented by Bona, as announced by the Atlanta Tipoff Club (Jan. 22).

 

Brown was one of three Big 12 players named to the watch list, along with Texas Tech graduate transfers Matt Mooney and Tariq Owens. Other candidates include Gonzaga’s Brandon Clarke, UCF’s Tacko Fall, Maryland’s Bruno Fernando, Kentucky’s Ashton Hagans, Wisconsin’s Ethan Happ, Virginia’s De’Andre Hunter, Oregon State’s Kylor Kelley, Minnesota’s Jordan Murphy, Michigan’s Zavier Simpson, Washington’s Matisse Thybulle, Tennessee’s Grant Williams and Duke’s Zion Williamson.

 

A 6-foot-3, 195-pound three-year lettermen from St. Petersburg, Florida, Brown currently captains the nation’s fourth-best scoring defense (59.2 ppg.). The Wildcats rank among the national leaders in several defensive categories, including turnover margin (28th), 3-point field goal percentage defense (43rd) and field goal percentage defense (56th), and have held 11 of 18 opponents to 60 points or less this season.

 

The school’s all-time steals leader, Brown currently ranks 10th in Big 12 history with 222 steals, just two behind Baylor’s A.J. Walton (2009-13) and Oklahoma’s Hollis Price (1999-2003) for eighth place.

 

Brown leads the Wildcats in a number of categories, including scoring (15.4 ppg.), 20-point games (5), double-figure scoring games (14) and steals (33). He ranks among the career Top 10 in 11 different categories, including points (1,561/8th), double-digit scoring games (77, 7th), field goals made (556, 7th), field goals attempted (1,341, 5th), 3-point field goals made (151, 9th), 3-point field goals attempted (468, 7th), assists (301, 9th), steals (222, 1st), consecutive games played (123/t-2nd), consecutive starts (101, t-3rd) and minutes played (3,895/3rd).

 

An All-Big 12 Second Team selection and a member of the Big 12’s All-Defensive Team, Brown enjoyed a career-best season as a junior in 2017-18, averaging 15.9 points on 44.8 percent shooting (203-of-453), including 31.8 percent (42-of-132) from 3-point range, to go with 3.2 assists, 3.1 rebounds and 1.8 steals in 34.7 minutes per game. The team leader in double-digit scoring games (29), 20-point games (11), assists (120) and steals (67), he became the first Wildcat to post 500 points, 100 rebounds, 100 assists and 50 steals in a single season.

 

–www.kstatesports.com–

TOM GILBERT
Director for Men’s Basketball Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

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