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Markus Howard leads Marquette past Kansas State

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Markus Howard kept attacking the bucket and getting to the foul line against one of the best defensive teams in the country to set Marquette records.

Imagine how good he might have been if he hadn’t been recovering from food poisoning.

Howard had 45 points, a Marquette record for a regulation game, and went a school-best 19 of 21 from the free-throw line, his aggressive play setting the tone for Marquette in an 83-71 victory over No. 12 Kansas State on Saturday.

Sacar Anim added 16 points for the Golden Eagles (6-2), who handed the Wildcats their first loss of the season.

“We knew they were going to be physical, so we wanted to attack them first,” Anim said.

Howard led the charge despite missing two days of practice because of illness. His 45 points were the most by a Marquette player since his 52-point game against Providence in overtime on Jan. 3.

Kansas State: Barry Brown, the team’s second-leading scorer (15.7 points) and steals leader (13), was limited to nine minutes after picking up three fouls, including a technical, in a tightly called first half. Leading 20-17 at the time, the Wildcats were outscored 27-16 the rest of the half with Brown on the bench. Weber said losing Brown “changed the momentum of the game, but he’s got to keep his composure. In (the officials’) eyes, I guess he showed up the ref.”

Forward Xavier Sneed, who finished with 12 points, played only five minutes in the first after picking up two fouls.

Jayhawks defeat Stanford in overtime

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lagerald Vick hit the tying 3-pointer in the closing seconds of regulation, and then had eight of his 27 points in overtime to lead No. 2 Kansas to a 90-84 win over Stanford on Saturday night.

Daejon Davis hit two free throws with 13.3 seconds left to push Stanford’s lead to 75-72 after driving in and drawing a foul by Dedric Lawson. Kansas then ran its “chop” play — the same one it ran when Mario Chalmers sent the 2008 national championship into overtime — and Devon Dotson found Vick for the tying 3 with just 7 seconds left.

Vick then opened overtime with another 3, and followed it with a poster dunk that set the Allen Fieldhouse crowd into a frenzy. He kept it going the next time down, hitting his seventh 3 to make it an eight-point game and put it out of reach.

Lawson finished with 24 points and 15 rebounds, and Udoka Azubuike had 18 points and nine rebounds for the Jayhawks.

Friday night basketball scores

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL=Abilene 69, Smoky Valley 56

Anderson County 75, Osawatomie 68

Andover 66, McPherson 64

Andover Central 71, Maize South 62

Augusta 65, Mulvane 53

Axtell 64, Wabaunsee 63

Belle Plaine 58, Hillsboro 56

Beloit 59, Concordia 48

Bennington 62, Centre 52

Berean Academy 73, Sterling 45

Bishop Seabury Academy 63, Hanover 56

Chaparral 71, Medicine Lodge 50

Cheney 55, Conway Springs 38

Cherryvale 44, Riverton 43

Cheyenne Mountain, Colo. 58, Wichita Sunrise 56

Clearwater 41, Labette County 35

Colby 61, Burlington, Colo. 27

Council Grove 49, Central Heights 39

Douglass 48, Norwich 40

Eureka 80, Humboldt 73

Frankfort 63, Pawnee City, Neb. 53

Fredonia 55, Neodesha 52

Galena 46, St. Paul 38

Girard 72, Parsons 65, OT

Halstead 66, Remington 52

Hesston 59, Salina Sacred Heart 55

Hill City 56, Stockton 54

Hodgeman County 50, Deerfield 29

Hoxie 67, Victoria 35

Inman 68, Goessel 37

Jackson Heights 58, Jefferson North 47

Junction City 87, Dodge City 71

KC Piper 73, Ottawa 70

KC Washington 68, Highland Park 49

Kingman 74, Wichita Independent 46

Kinsley 57, Sublette 40

Little River 74, Lincoln 35

Logan 60, Western Plains-Healy 26

Louisburg 58, Tonganoxie 47

Lyndon 53, Marais des Cygnes Valley 20

Lyons 74, Ellsworth 42

Maize 67, Goddard-Eisenhower 42

Marion 67, Southeast Saline 49

Maur Hill – Mount Academy 62, Pleasant Ridge 21

Meade 61, Elkhart 25

Minneapolis 57, Russell 41

Nemaha Central 67, Centralia 36

Northern Heights 59, West Franklin 27

Olathe West 91, KC Turner 42

Osborne 45, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 39

Otis-Bison 53, Wilson 49

Oxford 46, Fairfield 23

Paola 62, Baldwin 37

Pawnee Heights 76, Fowler 69

Perry-Lecompton 63, Royal Valley 53

Phillipsburg 50, Ellis 39

Plainville 64, Smith Center 62

Pleasanton 45, Madison/Hamilton 43

Pratt 42, Larned 37

Rawlins County 68, Oberlin-Decatur 37

Riley County 63, Valley Heights 23

Riverside 65, Troy 57

Rock Hills 69, Pike Valley 35

Rose Hill 44, Circle 40

Rural Vista 49, Canton-Galva 34

Sabetha 77, Marysville 50

Salina Central 77, Goddard 28

Scott City 68, Wichita County 49

Sedan 68, Chetopa 34

Shawnee Heights 67, DeSoto 43

South Barber 58, Caldwell 46

South Gray 90, Bucklin 26

Southeast 69, Oswego 23

Southwestern Hts. 77, Lakin 65

St. Xavier 57 Ponca City 55

St. John 66, Stafford 34

St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 62, Natoma 24

St. Mary’s 57, Olpe 36

St. Thomas Aquinas 65, Hays-TMP-Marian 39

Stanton County 52, Greeley County 26

Sylvan-Lucas 30, Wakefield 23

Syracuse 57, Goodland 44

Thunder Ridge 51, Chase 27

Trego 44, Dighton 39

Ulysses 71, Cimarron 50

Veritas Christian 63, Heritage Christian 38

Veritas Christian 63, Heritage Christian 38

Wamego 38, Rossville 32

Washburn Rural 69, BV North 47

Washington County 57, Clifton-Clyde 45

Wheatland-Grinnell 53, Golden Plains 44

Wichita Bishop Carroll 69, Wichita North 32

Wichita Campus 57, Salina South 45

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

BV Randolph 61, Onaga 35

Wetmore 42, Linn 37

Hays City Tournament=

Consolation=

St. Thomas Aquinas 65, Hays-TMP-Marian 39

Semifinal=

Manhattan 78, Hays 56

Millwood, Okla. 58, Great Bend 48

Waverly Tournament=

Burlingame 46, Cornerstone Family 43

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Quinter vs. St. Francis, ppd.

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL=

Abilene 50, Smoky Valley 23

Anderson County 61, Osawatomie 45

Atchison County 47, Oskaloosa 37

Augusta 47, Mulvane 32

Baldwin 58, Paola 26

Beloit 59, Concordia 50

Bennington 47, Centre 28

Bucklin 55, South Gray 41

Caney Valley 42, Independence 37

Central Plains 81, Hoisington 19

Cheney 58, Conway Springs 39

Cherryvale 55, Riverton 20

Circle 67, Rose Hill 32

Clay Center 50, Rock Creek 18

Clifton-Clyde 42, Washington County 36

Council Grove 58, Central Heights 19

DeSoto 44, Shawnee Heights 39

Dodge City 55, Junction City 22

Ellinwood 51, La Crosse 24

Eureka 55, Humboldt 33

Fairfield 47, Oxford 38

Flint Hills Christian 45, Lebo 38

Frankfort 56, Pawnee City, Neb. 16

Fredonia 49, Neodesha 38

Garden City 59, Guymon, Okla. 50

Garden Plain 57, Wichita Trinity 45

Girard 46, Parsons 40

Goddard 62, Salina Central 42

Golden Plains 51, Wheatland-Grinnell 20

Goodwell, Okla. 35, Rolla 21

Halstead 50, Remington 15

Hanover 85, Bishop Seabury Academy 8

Herington 58, Peabody-Burns 5

Hesston 48, Salina Sacred Heart 40

Highland Park 60, KC Washington 14

Hillsboro 48, Belle Plaine 22

Hodgeman County 42, Deerfield 13

Holton 46, Atchison 20

Hoxie 47, Victoria 45

Inman 43, Goessel 21

Jackson Heights 51, Jefferson North 49

KC Piper 93, Ottawa 21

Kapaun Mount Carmel 51, Wichita Northwest 42

Kingman 43, Wichita Independent 29

Kinsley 50, Sublette 47

Kiowa County 50, Pratt Skyline 34

Lakeside 58, Tescott 35

Liberal 66, Holcomb 19

Little River 38, Lincoln 19

Logan 31, Western Plains-Healy 19

Louisburg 58, Tonganoxie 26

Lyndon 44, Marais des Cygnes Valley 12

Lyons 37, Ellsworth 32

Macksville 53, Ness City 41

Maize 64, Goddard-Eisenhower 42

McPherson 55, Andover 44

Medicine Lodge 45, Chaparral 33

Nemaha Central 57, Centralia 35

Northern Heights 59, West Franklin 27

Norton 49, Oakley 28

Norwich 48, Douglass 22

Olathe East 51, SM West 47

Olpe 29, St. Mary’s 4

Osborne 56, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 47

Otis-Bison 46, Wilson 26

Palco 32, Triplains-Brewster 23

Phillipsburg 67, Ellis 37

Pike Valley 51, Rock Hills 29

Pleasant Ridge 44, Maur Hill – Mount Academy 30

Pleasanton 28, Madison/Hamilton 9

Pratt 42, Larned 39

Rawlins County 56, Oberlin-Decatur 38

Riley County 58, Valley Heights 36

Riverside 46, Troy 0

Royal Valley 68, Perry-Lecompton 47

Rural Vista 50, Canton-Galva 35

Russell 49, Minneapolis 33

Sabetha 60, Marysville 32

Scott City 50, Wichita County 21

Sedan 39, Chetopa 33

Smith Center 71, Plainville 49

Solomon 37, Burrton 27

South Barber 58, Caldwell 46

South Central 81, Satanta 25

South Haven 73, Udall 34

Southeast 56, Oswego 44

Southeast Saline 46, Marion 11

Southwestern Hts. 41, Lakin 29

Spearville 64, Ashland 31

St. John 46, Stafford 12

St. Paul 45, Galena 32

Stanton County 47, Greeley County 16

Sterling 47, Berean Academy 34

Stockton 39, Hill City 34

Sylvan-Lucas 28, Wakefield 10

Syracuse 66, Goodland 54

Thunder Ridge 42, Chase 4

Topeka 55, Lawrence 39

Trego 38, Dighton 33

Uniontown 45, Marmaton Valley 34

Wabaunsee 54, Axtell 37

Wamego 38, Rossville 32

Washburn Rural 53, BV North 46

Wichita Bishop Carroll 60, Wichita North 6

Winfield 52, Arkansas City 25

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

BV Randolph 43, Onaga 15

Wetmore 52, Linn 34

Hays City Tournament=

Consolation=

Millwood, Okla. 53, Hays-TMP-Marian 32

Semifinal=

Manhattan 49, Hays 39

St. Thomas Aquinas 71, Great Bend 41

Waverly Tournament=

Cornerstone Family 51, Burlingame 38

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Quinter vs. St. Francis, ppd.

___

Some high school basketball scores provided by Scorestream.com, https://scorestream.com/

Friday’s Scores

By The Associated Press
BOYS PREP BASKETBALL=Abilene 69, Smoky Valley 56

Anderson County 75, Osawatomie 68

Andover 66, McPherson 64

Andover Central 71, Maize South 62

Augusta 65, Mulvane 53

Axtell 64, Wabaunsee 63

Belle Plaine 58, Hillsboro 56

Beloit 59, Concordia 48

Bennington 62, Centre 52

Berean Academy 73, Sterling 45

Bishop Seabury Academy 63, Hanover 56

Chaparral 71, Medicine Lodge 50

Cheney 55, Conway Springs 38

Cherryvale 44, Riverton 43

Cheyenne Mountain, Colo. 58, Wichita Sunrise 56

Clearwater 41, Labette County 35

Colby 61, Burlington, Colo. 27

Council Grove 49, Central Heights 39

Douglass 48, Norwich 40

Eureka 80, Humboldt 73

Frankfort 63, Pawnee City, Neb. 53

Fredonia 55, Neodesha 52

Galena 46, St. Paul 38

Girard 72, Parsons 65, OT

Halstead 66, Remington 52

Hesston 59, Salina Sacred Heart 55

Hill City 56, Stockton 54

Hodgeman County 50, Deerfield 29

Hoxie 67, Victoria 35

Inman 68, Goessel 37

Jackson Heights 58, Jefferson North 47

Junction City 87, Dodge City 71

KC Piper 73, Ottawa 70

KC Washington 68, Highland Park 49

Kingman 74, Wichita Independent 46

Kinsley 57, Sublette 40

Little River 74, Lincoln 35

Logan 60, Western Plains-Healy 26

Louisburg 58, Tonganoxie 47

Lyndon 53, Marais des Cygnes Valley 20

Lyons 74, Ellsworth 42

Maize 67, Goddard-Eisenhower 42

Marion 67, Southeast Saline 49

Maur Hill – Mount Academy 62, Pleasant Ridge 21

Meade 61, Elkhart 25

Minneapolis 57, Russell 41

Nemaha Central 67, Centralia 36

Northern Heights 59, West Franklin 27

Olathe West 91, KC Turner 42

Osborne 45, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 39

Otis-Bison 53, Wilson 49

Oxford 46, Fairfield 23

Paola 62, Baldwin 37

Pawnee Heights 76, Fowler 69

Perry-Lecompton 63, Royal Valley 53

Phillipsburg 50, Ellis 39

Plainville 64, Smith Center 62

Pleasanton 45, Madison/Hamilton 43

Pratt 42, Larned 37

Rawlins County 68, Oberlin-Decatur 37

Riley County 63, Valley Heights 23

Riverside 65, Troy 57

Rock Hills 69, Pike Valley 35

Rose Hill 44, Circle 40

Rural Vista 49, Canton-Galva 34

Sabetha 77, Marysville 50

Salina Central 77, Goddard 28

Scott City 68, Wichita County 49

Sedan 68, Chetopa 34

Shawnee Heights 67, DeSoto 43

South Barber 58, Caldwell 46

South Gray 90, Bucklin 26

Southeast 69, Oswego 23

Southwestern Hts. 77, Lakin 65

St. John 66, Stafford 34

St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 62, Natoma 24

St. Mary’s 57, Olpe 36

St. Thomas Aquinas 65, Hays-TMP-Marian 39

Stanton County 52, Greeley County 26

Sylvan-Lucas 30, Wakefield 23

Syracuse 57, Goodland 44

Thunder Ridge 51, Chase 27

Trego 44, Dighton 39

Ulysses 71, Cimarron 50

Veritas Christian 63, Heritage Christian 38

Veritas Christian 63, Heritage Christian 38

Wamego 38, Rossville 32

Washburn Rural 69, BV North 47

Washington County 57, Clifton-Clyde 45

Wheatland-Grinnell 53, Golden Plains 44

Wichita Bishop Carroll 69, Wichita North 32

Wichita Campus 57, Salina South 45

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

BV Randolph 61, Onaga 35

Wetmore 42, Linn 37

Hays City Tournament=

Consolation=

St. Thomas Aquinas 65, Hays-TMP-Marian 39

Semifinal=

Manhattan 78, Hays 56

Millwood, Okla. 58, Great Bend 48

Waverly Tournament=

Burlingame 46, Cornerstone Family 43

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Quinter vs. St. Francis, ppd.

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL=

Abilene 50, Smoky Valley 23

Anderson County 61, Osawatomie 45

Atchison County 47, Oskaloosa 37

Augusta 47, Mulvane 32

Baldwin 58, Paola 26

Beloit 59, Concordia 50

Bennington 47, Centre 28

Bucklin 55, South Gray 41

Caney Valley 42, Independence 37

Central Plains 81, Hoisington 19

Cheney 58, Conway Springs 39

Cherryvale 55, Riverton 20

Circle 67, Rose Hill 32

Clay Center 50, Rock Creek 18

Clifton-Clyde 42, Washington County 36

Council Grove 58, Central Heights 19

DeSoto 44, Shawnee Heights 39

Dodge City 55, Junction City 22

Ellinwood 51, La Crosse 24

Eureka 55, Humboldt 33

Fairfield 47, Oxford 38

Flint Hills Christian 45, Lebo 38

Frankfort 56, Pawnee City, Neb. 16

Fredonia 49, Neodesha 38

Garden City 59, Guymon, Okla. 50

Garden Plain 57, Wichita Trinity 45

Girard 46, Parsons 40

Goddard 62, Salina Central 42

Golden Plains 51, Wheatland-Grinnell 20

Goodwell, Okla. 35, Rolla 21

Halstead 50, Remington 15

Hanover 85, Bishop Seabury Academy 8

Herington 58, Peabody-Burns 5

Hesston 48, Salina Sacred Heart 40

Highland Park 60, KC Washington 14

Hillsboro 48, Belle Plaine 22

Hodgeman County 42, Deerfield 13

Holton 46, Atchison 20

Hoxie 47, Victoria 45

Inman 43, Goessel 21

Jackson Heights 51, Jefferson North 49

KC Piper 93, Ottawa 21

Kapaun Mount Carmel 51, Wichita Northwest 42

Kingman 43, Wichita Independent 29

Kinsley 50, Sublette 47

Kiowa County 50, Pratt Skyline 34

Lakeside 58, Tescott 35

Liberal 66, Holcomb 19

Little River 38, Lincoln 19

Logan 31, Western Plains-Healy 19

Louisburg 58, Tonganoxie 26

Lyndon 44, Marais des Cygnes Valley 12

Lyons 37, Ellsworth 32

Macksville 53, Ness City 41

Maize 64, Goddard-Eisenhower 42

McPherson 55, Andover 44

Medicine Lodge 45, Chaparral 33

Nemaha Central 57, Centralia 35

Northern Heights 59, West Franklin 27

Norton 49, Oakley 28

Norwich 48, Douglass 22

Olathe East 51, SM West 47

Olpe 29, St. Mary’s 4

Osborne 56, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 47

Otis-Bison 46, Wilson 26

Palco 32, Triplains-Brewster 23

Phillipsburg 67, Ellis 37

Pike Valley 51, Rock Hills 29

Pleasant Ridge 44, Maur Hill – Mount Academy 30

Pleasanton 28, Madison/Hamilton 9

Pratt 42, Larned 39

Rawlins County 56, Oberlin-Decatur 38

Riley County 58, Valley Heights 36

Riverside 46, Troy 0

Royal Valley 68, Perry-Lecompton 47

Rural Vista 50, Canton-Galva 35

Russell 49, Minneapolis 33

Sabetha 60, Marysville 32

Scott City 50, Wichita County 21

Sedan 39, Chetopa 33

Smith Center 71, Plainville 49

Solomon 37, Burrton 27

South Barber 58, Caldwell 46

South Central 81, Satanta 25

South Haven 73, Udall 34

Southeast 56, Oswego 44

Southeast Saline 46, Marion 11

Southwestern Hts. 41, Lakin 29

Spearville 64, Ashland 31

St. John 46, Stafford 12

St. Paul 45, Galena 32

Stanton County 47, Greeley County 16

Sterling 47, Berean Academy 34

Stockton 39, Hill City 34

Sylvan-Lucas 28, Wakefield 10

Syracuse 66, Goodland 54

Thunder Ridge 42, Chase 4

Topeka 55, Lawrence 39

Trego 38, Dighton 33

Uniontown 45, Marmaton Valley 34

Wabaunsee 54, Axtell 37

Wamego 38, Rossville 32

Washburn Rural 53, BV North 46

Wichita Bishop Carroll 60, Wichita North 6

Winfield 52, Arkansas City 25

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

BV Randolph 43, Onaga 15

Wetmore 52, Linn 34

Hays City Tournament=

Consolation=

Millwood, Okla. 53, Hays-TMP-Marian 32

Semifinal=

Manhattan 49, Hays 39

St. Thomas Aquinas 71, Great Bend 41

Waverly Tournament=

Cornerstone Family 51, Burlingame 38

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=

Quinter vs. St. Francis, ppd.

K-State plays at Marquette on Saturday

GAME 7

12/10 KANSAS STATE (6-0) at MARQUETTE (5-2)

Saturday, December 1, 2018 >> 1:30 p.m. CT >> Fiserv Forum (17,500) >> Milwaukee, Wis.

 

COACHES

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

Overall: 444-235/21st season

At K-State: 131-80/7th season

  1. Marquette: 0-0

 

Marquette: Steve Wojciechowski (Duke ‘98)

Overall: 78-61/5th season

At Marquette: 78-61/5th season

  1. Kansas State: 0-0

 

PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP

Kansas State (6-0)

G: #3 Kamau Stokes

G: #5 Barry Brown, Jr.

G/F: #20 Xavier Sneed

F: #32 Dean Wade

F: #14 Makol Mawien

 

Marquette (5-2)

G: #0 Markus Howard

F: #10 Sam Hauser

F: #22 Joey Hauser

F: #23 Jamal Cain

F: #4 Theo John

 

SERIES HISTORY

Overall: K-State leads 7-3

In Milwaukee: K-State leads 3-2

Last Meeting: W, 78-57, 1/3/1988

Weber vs. Wojciechowski: First Meeting

 

OPENING TIP

  • No. 12/10 Kansas State (6-0) will face its biggest challenge to date, as the Wildcats hit the road for the first time in 2018-19 with a trip to Milwaukee, Wisconsin to face BIG EAST foe Marquette (5-2) at 1:30 p.m., CT on Saturday afternoon at the Fiserv Forum, the brand-new 17,500-seat home of the Milwaukee Bucks and Golden Eagles.
  • K-State is off to its best start in more than 14 seasons and the best since the Wildcats opened the 2004-05 season with eight consecutive victories. Overall, it is the 14th 6-0 start in school history and just the seventh such start in the last 50 seasons (1977-78, 1979-80, 1984-85, 1986-87, 1997-98 and 2004-05). The school record for wins to start the season is 17 by the 1918-19 squad, while the 1947-48 Final Four team won their first 10 games.
  • K-State and Marquette will meet for the first time in more than 30 years on Saturday, including the first time in Milwaukee since 1987. The Wildcats have won four in a row in the series, including a 78-57 victory in the last meeting on January 3, 1988 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City and an 85-84 victory in the last visit to Milwaukee on January 7, 1987 at Milwaukee Arena.
  • Overall, the two schools have faced off 10 times since the first meeting in Manhattan in 1953 when the then top-ranked Wildcats defeating the Tex Winter-led Warriors, 88-72, at Ahearn Field House on January 10, 1953. The next season, Winter, formerly an assistant coach at K-State, would return as head coach, leading the Wildcats to eight Big Seven/Eight Conference titles, six NCAA Tournament appearances and two Final Fours (1959, 1964) over the next 15 seasons. The Hall of Fame coach passed away at the age of 96 on October 10.
  • Saturday’s game will also be a homecoming for K-State head coach Bruce Weber, who born and raised in Milwaukee, only leaving his hometown to start his coaching career at Western Kentucky in 1979. He grew up going to Marquette games, even practices, when legendary Warriors head coach Al McGuire guided the school to the national championship.
  • In addition to the multiple off-the-court storylines, the game will pit some of the two of the best scoring tandems in the country, as K-State’s Dean Wade (16.2 ppg.) and Barry Brown, Jr. (15.7 ppg.) combine 31.9 points per game on 49 percent shooting (74-of-151), while Marquette’s Markus Howard (19.4 ppg.) and Sam Hauser (16.6 ppg.) combine for 36 points per game on 43.2 percent shooting (83-of-192).
  • Wade and Brown continued their move up the career scoring list in Saturday’s 77-58 win against Lehigh, collecting 18 and 16 points, respectively. Brown, who recently cracked the school’s Top 10, now ranks ninth with 1,377 points, while Wade now places 13th with 1,284 points and needs just 82 points to join Brown in the Top 10.
  • Wade, who became the tallest player in school history with 200 career assists at the Paradise Jam, recently became just the fourth Wildcat with 1,000 points, 500 rebounds and 200 assists, joining Ed NealyWesley Iwundu and Rolando Blackman.
  • With his four steals against Lehigh, Brown became just the second Wildcat to eclipse 200 career steals and moved within eight steals of the all-time mark set by Jacob Pullen (210; 2007-11).
  • K-State has been strong on the defensive end to start the season, holding opponents to 56.3 points on 37.7 percent shooting, including 29.9 percent from 3-point range, while forcing opponents into 17.3 turnovers per game. The Wildcats rank among the Top 35 in several defensive categories, including seventh in scoring defense, 19th in turnover margin (+5.8), 28th in field goal percentage defense and 32nd in turnovers forced.
  • After a slow start to the season, the offense seems to be gaining steam after averaging 79.5 points on 48.2 percent shooting in the last four games, including a season-high 95-point performance against Eastern Kentucky (11/16/18). Four Wildcats are averaging in double figures during that span, led by Wade’s 17.5 points per game average, while Brown (13.5 ppg.), junior Xavier Sneed (11.8 ppg.) and senior Kamau Stokes (11.5 ppg.) have also averaged double digits.

 

NOTES ON MARQUETTE

  • Marquette (5-2) enters Saturday’s game with consecutive wins after dropping a 77-68 decision to current No. 2/2 Kansas in the Preseason NIT on November 21. The Golden Eagles knocked Louisville, 77-74, in overtime in the consolation game in the Preseason NIT before moving to 4-0 at home with a 76-55 win over Charleston Southern on Tuesday night.
  • The Eagles return nine lettermen, including four starters (Markus HowardSam HauserSacar Anim and Matt Heldt) from a squad that posted a 21-14 overall record, including a tie for sixth in the BIG EAST with a 9-9 mark, and advanced to the quarterfinals of the NIT. Howard, who twice has been named to the All-BIG EAST Second Team, ranked second nationally in free throw percentage in 2017-18 at 93.9 percent.
  • Marquette was picked second in the preseason BIG EAST coaches’ poll, collecting 70 points and one first-place vote, just below reigning champion Villanova. Howard was named to the Preseason All-BIG EAST First Team, while Hauser was selected to the Second Team.
  • The Eagles are averaging 75.3 points on 43.9 percent shooting, including 37.2 percent from 3-point range, to go with 40.0 rebounds, 16.0 assists, 4.7 steals and 5.1 blocks per game, while allowing 65.4 points on 38.1 percent shooting, including 33.1 percent from long range. The team is connecting on 77.8 percent from the free throw line.
  • Howard paces three players in double figures at 19.4 points per game on 40.7 percent shooting, including 36.5 percent from 3-point range, to go with 5.1 rebounds and 5.3 assists in 35.1 minutes per game, while Hauser averages 16.6 points on 46.4 percent shooting, including 42.6 percent from long range, to go with team-tying 5.7 rebounds in 31.9 minutes per game. Hauser’s younger brother, Joey, also averages double figures at 10.3 points on 43.8 percent shooting to go with a team-tying 5.7 rebounds in 27.6 minutes per game.
  • An All-American during his playing career at Duke (1994-98), Steve Wojciechowski enters his fifth season at Marquette, collecting a 78-61 overall record, which includes an NCAA Tournament appearance in 2016-17 and a NIT appearance in 2017-18. He spent 15 years as an assistant coach at his alma mater from 1999 to 2014.

 

SERIES HISTORY

  • K-State and Marquette will meet for the 11th time on the hardwood in a series that dates to 1953. Many of the meetings came during in a stretch from 1982-88 when the two schools played six times, including home-and-home matchups in 1981-82 and 1982-83, 1984-85 and 1985-86 and 1986-87 and 1987-88 seasons.
  • K-State leads the all-time series, 7-3, including a 3-2 mark in Milwaukee (1961, 1962, 1982, 1985, 1987). The Wildcats have won four straight meetings, including a 78-57 victory in the last meeting on January 3, 1988 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City.
  • This will be the first meeting between the schools since 1988 and the first in Milwaukee since an 85-84 victory on January 7, 1987 at the famed Milwaukee Arena (MECCA Arena).
  • One of the more memorable meetings between K-State and Marquette came in the 1977 NCAA Midwest Regional Semifinals at the Myriad in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, as Al McGuire-led Warriors knocked off Jack Hartman’s Wildcats, 67-66, on March 17, en route to winning the national championship.
  • K-State is 24-23 all-time against the BIG EAST, including a 5-14 mark in road matchups. These matchups include Butler (0-1), Creighton (8-8), DePaul (3-3), Georgetown (0-1), Marquette (7-3), Providence (1-0), St. John’s (1-1), Seton Hall (0-1), Villanova (0-1) and Xavier (4-4). The last meeting with the BIG EAST Conference foe came in the 2018 NCAA Tournament when the Wildcats knocked off Creighton, 69-59, in the first round on March 16 in Charlotte.

 

THE 1977 NCAA TOURNAMENT GAME AND THE “WINSTON RULE”

  • The K-State/Marquette NCAA Tournament game in 1977 finds an interesting place in school history, as its ending led to the adoption of the so-called “Winston Rule” named for former Wildcat Darryl Winston.
  • With K-State trailing Marquette, 67-64, in the final minute, Winston hit a tip-in lay-up while being fouled. But tip-ins weren’t considered controlled shots at the time, so the basket was waved off. Instead of counting the basket and going to the free throw line with a chance to tie the game, as would be the case under the current rules, Winston went to the line with his team trailing by three. He made both free throws, and K-State lost 67-66.
  • The NCAA adopted the “Winston Rule” the following year, allowing tips to be counted despite fouls, but that meant little to Winston. He vowed never to return to Oklahoma City. It wasn’t until K-State started the 2010 NCAA Tournament in Oklahoma City as a No. 2 seed that Winston relented and returned to the city for the games.

 

MORE MEETINGS TO COME

  • Saturday’s game will be the first of a home-and-home series between K-State and Marquette, as the schools will at a date to be determined at Bramlage Coliseum in December 2019.
  • The game in Manhattan in 2019 will be part of the newly-inked Big 12 and BIG EAST four-year scheduling agreement that will start in 2019-20 and include all 10 teams from both leagues. Ten games will be played every year at five campus sites in each conference.
  • Aside from K-State and Marquette, other planned matchups in 2019 include Kansas at Villanova, Oklahoma at Creighton and Texas at Providence.

 

BOTH SCHOOLS SHARE TEX

  • The schools share several connections, but no more important than that of Naismith and College Basketball Hall of Fame head coach Fred “Tex” Winter, who served as head coach at both schools during his illustrious coaching career.
  • A native of Huntington Park, California, Winter began his coaching career as the first full-time assistant at K-State for fellow Hall of Fame head coach Jack Gardner from 1947-51, helping the Wildcats to the Final Four in 1948 and 1951. He became the youngest coach in the nation at Marquette in 1951, guiding the Warriors to the National Catholic Championship in his first season. After his second season, he replaced Gardner as head coach at K-State in 1953.
  • Winter owns the second-most wins (261) of any K-State coach, and laid claim to more league titles (eight) than any other Wildcat coach, while his winning percentage of 68.9 ranks third all-time in school history. He led the Wildcats to six NCAA Tournament appearances, including Final Four appearances in 1958 and 1964.
  • K-State wears a triangle patch on its uniform to honor Winter, who passed away at the age of 96 on October 10, 2018, and the only person associated with all four Final Four appearances.

 

WEBER RETURNS TO HOMETOWN OF MILWAUKEE

  • Head coach Bruce Weber was born and raised in Milwaukee, becoming the first member of his family to leave the area when he accepted a graduate assistant coaching spot at Western Kentucky for head coach Gene Keady in 1979.
  • Weber grew up going to Marquette games under famed head coach Al McGuire and even attended McGuire’s practice on Friday and Saturday nights early in the season.
  • Weber attended Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in education in 1978, and later coached at Milwaukee’s Marquette and Madison High Schools.
  • His brother, Ron, was inducted into the Wisconsin Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame in 2011 after 27 years coaching high school basketball in the state, including the last 23 years as a successful head coach Waupaca High School.

 

K-STATE HOLDS STEADY IN THE POLLS

  • K-State held steady in both major polls, staying at No. 12 in The Associated Press poll for the third consecutive week, while the team moved to No. 10 in the USA Today Coaches poll for the first time since 2010.
  • K-State has a 263-102 record as an AP ranked team, including a 14-4 mark as the No. 12 team.
  • 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 TodayCoaches polls.

 

LAST TIME OUT: K-STATE 77, LEHIGH 58

  • A big second-half push, including 14 points from senior Dean Wade, helped No. 12/12 Kansas State knock off Patriot League favorite Lehigh, 77-58, on Saturday afternoon at Bramlage Coliseum to give the Wildcats their best start to a season in 14 years.
  • Wade scored 14 of his game-high 18 points in the second half to pace four players in double figures, as he added 8 rebounds, a team-tying 5 assists and 2 steals in 34 minutes of action. Fellow senior Barry Brown, Jr., scored 16 points, while senior Kamau Stokes and junior Makol Mawien chipped in 10 points each.
  • K-State scored 75 or more points for the third time in 4 games with 77 against Lehigh on 41.5 percent shooting. The Wildcats dished out a season-high 19 assists on 27 made field goals.
  • K-State scored 18 points off 16 Lehigh turnovers and have now scored at least 16 points off turnovers in all 6 games this season.
  • K-State is now 98-6 in non-conference play at home since the 2006-07 season with wins in 88 of its last 92 non-conference home games. The Wildcats have won 26 straight non-conference games at Bramlage Coliseum.

 

K-STATE WINS PARADISE JAM; FIRST TITLE SINCE 2011

  • Included in K-State’s 6-0 start is 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.

 

‘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). Last season, the Wildcats held opponents to 67 points on 42.5 percent shooting.
  • K-State is holding opponents to 56.3 points on 37.7 percent shooting, including 29.9 percent from 3-point range, while forcing opponents into 17.3 turnovers per game. The Wildcats rank seventh nationally in scoring defense, 19th in turnover margin (+5.8), 28th in field goal percentage defense and 32nd in turnovers forced.
  • K-State has held 4 of 6 opponent to 60 points or less this season with none eclipsing 70 on the season. The squad has now held 73 opponents to 60 points or less in Weber’s tenure, boasting a 66-7 mark (losses to Kansas in 2012, Northern Colorado and Kentucky in 2013, Texas Southern and Georgia in 2014, Texas and Oklahoma State in 2016 and West Virginia in 2017).
  • K-State has a 110-28 (.797) record under Weber when holding a foe to 69 points or less and a 21-52 (.288) when allowing 70 or more points.

 

POINTS OFF TURNOVERS

  • Nearly a third of K-State’s points (123/438) this season have come off turnovers, as the Wildcats are averaging 20.5 points off 17.3 opponent mistakes per game.
  • The Wildcats scored 20 or more points of turnovers in the first four games before being held to a season-low 16 in the win over Missouri (11/19/18) at the Paradise Jam. The squad scored a season-high 24 in the win over Eastern Kentucky (11/16/18), while they had 23 vs. Denver (11/12/18) and 22 vs. Penn (11/18/18).
  • K-State has scored more than 3,000 points (3,223) off turnovers during Weber’s tenure, an average of 15.3 points per game. In 2017-18, the Wildcats averaged 17.3 points per game off turnovers, including 15.9 points per game in Big 12 play, and outscored opponents, 639-423. The team scored at least 20 points off opponent turnovers in 13 games with a school-record 38 vs. Northern Arizona on Nov. 20 and 36 vs. USC Upstate on Dec. 5, 2017.
  • 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.

 

OFFENSIVE SPARK

  • K-State’s offense gained a spark during the run to the Paradise Jam Championship, averaging 80.3 points on 50.6 percent (91-of-180) shooting, including 37.5 percent (18-of-48) from 3-point range, after averaging just 60 points on 40 percent (48-of-120) shooting, including 17.5 percent (7-of-40) from long range, after the first two games.
  • Including last Saturday’s win over Lehigh, K-State has now scored 75 or more points in 3 of the last 4 games on a collective 48.2 percent shooting from the field.
  • The Wildcats connected on 50 percent or better from the field in five of six halves at the tournament, hitting on 55.2 percent (37-of-67) against Eastern Kentucky (11/16/18) and 53.6 percent (30-of-56) against Missouri (11/19/18).
  • K-State scored a season-high 95 points in the first-round win over Eastern Kentucky (11/16/18), hitting on 55.2 percent (37-of-67) from the field, as five players scored in double figures led by junior Xavier Sneed’s game-high 16 points.
  • After hitting on just 4 of their first 19 attempts in the first 13 minutes against Penn (11/18/18), the Wildcats connected on 52.6 percent (20-of-38) in the last 27 minutes in a 64-48 victory. Three players scored in double figures led by Dean Wade’s 17 points.
  • K-State connected on 50 percent or better in each half in the win over Missouri (11/19/18), hitting on 53.6 percent for the game, including 50 percent (12-of-24) from 3-point range. Four players scored in double figures, including 21 from Wade and 19 from Barry Brown, Jr.
  • The 12 3-point field goals were the most since hitting 13 at Iowa State (12/29/17).

 

OFFENSIVE BALANCE KEY TO SUCCESS

  • Much like 2017-18, balance has been key to K-State’s offensive success this season, as five players are averaging 7.0 points per game, including three (Dean WadeBarry Brown, Jr., and Xavier Sneed) in double figures. Three different players (Wade, Brown and Sneed) have led the Wildcats in scoring, while six players have at least one double-digit scoring game.
  • Since Weber took over as head coach in 2012-13, K-State has posted a 55-18 record when four or more players score in double figures, including a 3-0 mark in 2018-19. The Wildcats are 11-1 (9-1 in 2017-18) when Makol Mawien scores in double figures, while the team is 9-2 (8-2 in 2017-18) when Cartier Diarra reaches double-digits.

 

GAME OF RUNS

  • The Paradise Jam was a tournament of runs for Kansas State, as the Wildcats put together decisive runs, particularly at the end of the first half, en route to double-digit wins.
  • Leading 23-22 against Eastern Kentucky with 5:57 before halftime, K-State used a 12-2 run to take a 37-28 lead into halftime. After the Colonels had closed to within 43-37 with 16:14 to play, the Wildcats rattled off a 20-6 run to take a 63-43 lead at the 11:28 mark. The lead was never less than 17 the rest of the way and actually grew to 30 with 4:13 remaining.
  • Down 19-11 to Penn at the 7:16 mark of the first half, K-State erupted for a 17-2 run to take a 28-21 lead into halftime. Again, after the Quakers had closed to 46-40 with just under 10 to play, the Wildcats used a 14-4 run to push ahead en route to a 14-point win.
  • After an early lead evaporated into a 27-all tie with 4:17 before halftime against Missouri,

K-State scored 20 of the next 22 points, including a 13-0 run to end the half. After the Tigers had closed to 60-47 midway through the second half, a 10-4 spurt by the Wildcats pushed the lead back up to 19 points en route to a 15-point win.

  • Even though K-State slowly took control early in the second half in the 77-58 win over Lehigh, the Wildcats used a 20-7 run late to blow the game open, extending a 57-48 lead with less than eight minutes to play to 77-55 with 2:22 remaining.

 

NON-CONFERENCE SUCCESS

  • K-State will be playing the 11th non-conference road game under head coach Bruce Weber, as the Wildcats boast a 6-4 mark in those matchups. The team has wins over George Washington (65-62, 2012), Georgia (68-66, 2015), Saint Louis (84-53, 2016), Colorado State (89-70, 2016), Vanderbilt (84-79, 2017) and Washington State (68-65, 2017), while their losses in that span have come at Long Beach State (60-69, 2014), Tennessee (64-65, 2014 and 58-70, 2017) and Texas A&M (68-78, 2015).
  • K-State has posted a 136-33 (.804) record in non-conference play since the 2006-07 season, which includes an 11-2 (.846) mark in 2017-18. The team has posted double-digit non-conference wins in 11 of the last 12 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 39-6 (.864) in non-conference play since the start of 2015-16 season. It is during this span that the school has won 26 consecutive games at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • K-State has a 101-6 (.943) 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 since the 2006-07 season, including a 93-5 (.948) mark at Bramlage Coliseum.
  • The Wildcats have won 88 of their last 92 non-conference home games, including a 26-game winning streak at Bramlage Coliseum. The last home non-conference loss came against Georgia, 50-46, on Dec. 31, 2014.

 

WADE CONTINUES TO PRODUCE

  • Senior Dean Wade has continued where he left off before his injury in 2017-18, as he averages a team-best 16.2 points on 56.5 percent shooting (39-of-69) to go with team-highs in both rebounding (8.5 rpg.) and assists (3.8 apg.) in a team-best 32.5 minutes per game.
  • Wade has scored in double figures in all 6 games this season, leading the Wildcats in scoring 4 times, in rebounding 3 times and in assists 3 times.
  • Wade, who became the tallest player in school history with 200 career assists at the Paradise Jam, recently became just the fourth Wildcat with 1,000 points, 500 rebounds and 200 assists, joining Ed NealyWesley Iwundu and Rolando Blackman.
  • In 2017-18, Wade was one of just 15 players in the Big 12 era to average at 15 points, 5 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.5 steals in a single-season, joining the likes of Iowa State’sCurtis Stinson, Oklahoma State’s Tony Allen, Texas’ P.J. Tucker and Oklahoma State’s Marcus Smart. He was one of just three Big 12 players to accomplish the feat since 2012-13, joining Smart (2012-13 and 2013-14) and Kansas’ Josh Jackson.
  • Wade was the fourth Wildcat to shoot 50 percent or better from the field, 40 percent or better from the 3-point line and 75 percent from the free throw line in a single season and the first double-digit scorer to do it since Mitch Richmond and Will Scott did it in 1987-88.

 

BROWN CLOSING IN ON STEALS MARK

  • Senior Barry Brown, Jr., has a chance to become the school’s all-time steals leader, as he trails career leader Jacob Pullen (210, 2007-11) by a mere 8 steals. Brown has 202 career steals in 111 games played, which ties for second on the career per game (1.82) list. He set the school single-season mark with 82 as a sophomore in 2016-17, while his 67 a season ago tied Pullen for the second-most on the single season list.
  • Brown also ranks among the leaders in games played, as his current streak of 111 consecutive games played ranks seventh in school history, while his 89 consecutive starts ranks fourth. With 111 career games played, he has a chance to eclipse the school record of 135 set by Jacob Pullen (2007-11) and Rodney McGruder (2009-13).

 

ATTEMPTING TO BECOMING FIRST TRIO TO SCORE 1,000 POINTS

  • Senior Kamau Stokes needs 67 points to become the 30th player in school history to post 1,000 in a career and join fellow seniors Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade in achieving the milestone. If Stokes achieves the mark, the trio would become the first senior class in school history to each top 1,000 career points in a career.
  • Brown (1,377 points) and Wade (1,284 points) each eclipsed the mark as juniors and currently rank 9th and 13th, respectively, on the all-time scoring list. Brown cracked the school’s Top 10 during the Paradise Jam and recently passed Chuckie Williams (1,364 points; 1972-76) for ninth place with 16-point effort vs. Lehigh, while Wade needs 82 points to join the Top 10.
  • Stokes already ranks in the career Top 10 for both 3-point field goals made (147/t-8th) and attempted (433/8th), while he is one of just eight players in school history with 300 or more assists in a career. His current total of 325 assists ranks sixth on the all-time list.

 

DON’T FORGET SNEED

  • With all the attention paid to the three seniors, the accomplishments of junior Xavier Sneed have somehow been overlooked.  The St. Louis native enjoyed a career best year in 2017-18, averaging 11.1 points, 5.1 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 31.4 minutes per game while starting all 37 games. He was named to the NCAA South Regional All-Tournament team after averaging 19 points and 7.5 rebounds in games against Kentucky and Loyola Chicago.
  • Since missing the opener with Kennesaw State, Sneed has scored in double figures in 4 of the last 5 games, including a season-high 16 points on 6-of-11 shooting, including 3-of-4 from 3-point range. His 8 treys pace the team, as he has connected on 7 of his last 16 attempts from long range after going just 1-of-7 in his first game against Denver (11/12/18).
  • Sneed ranks second on the team with 9 steals, snagging at least 2 in 3 of 5 games, including a game-high 4 against Penn (11/18/18).

 

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 TodayCoaches 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 andMarcus Foster in 2014-15.

 

NEXT UP: AT TULSA (5-2)

  • K-State continues its road swing on Saturday, Dec. 8, as the Wildcats travel to Tulsa, Oklahoma to face American Athletic Conference foe Tulsa (5-2) at 3:30 p.m., CT, at the Donald W. Reynolds Center in downtown Tulsa. The game will air nationally on CBS Sports Network.

 

–www.kstatesports.com–

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

 

 

Thursday night basketball scores

 Print 

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL=
Basehor-Linwood 61, Eudora 44

Bishop Seabury Academy 75, St. Mary’s 29

Cedar Vale/Dexter Co-op 71, Flint Hills Job Corps 25

Coffeyville 66, Dewey, Okla. 59

Colby 61, Burlington 27

Gardner-Edgerton 56, BV Southwest 54

Republic County 77, Thayer Central, Neb. 37

Silver Lake 57, Jefferson West 55

Topeka Heritage Christian 49, Fort Scott 48

Washington County 52, Doniphan West 22

Wichita East 85, Wichita South 51

Wichita Sunrise 58, Fountain-Fort Carson, Colo. 49

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

BV Randolph 91, Wetmore 68

Onaga 35, Linn 32

Hays City Tournament=

Hays 74, Great Bend 58

Manhattan 67, Hays-TMP-Marian 48

St. Thomas Aquinas 58, Millwood, Okla. 35

Waverly Tournament=

Cair Paravel 55, Burlingame 41

Cornerstone Family 67, Waverly 59

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL=

BV Southwest 59, Gardner-Edgerton 22

Burlington 61, Prairie View 10

Dewey, Okla. 41, Coffeyville 26

Doniphan West 56, Washington County 50

Eudora 54, Basehor-Linwood 47

Jefferson West 50, Silver Lake 40

KC Sumner 61, Kauffman Charter, Mo. 38

Lawrence Free State 51, BV West 30

Thayer Central, Neb. 34, Republic County 25

Waverly 65, Cornerstone Family 54

Wichita East 63, Wichita South 45

Blue Valley Randolph Tournament=

Linn 38, Onaga 24

Hays City Tournament=

Hays 79, Great Bend 44

Manhattan 53, Hays-TMP-Marian 32

St. Thomas Aquinas 58, Millwood, Okla. 35

Waverly Tournament=

Cair Paravel 57, Burlingame 28

Opening Night for JCHS Basketball

The offseason conditioning and skill development and three weeks of basketball practice in November are over. Junction City High School boys and girls basketball teams host Dodge City tonight ( Friday night )  at the Shenk Gym.

Blue Jay boys head coach Nick Perez is ready for his team to play an opponent. “We’re excited. I think the kids are ready to play. I’m always nervous because it’s always the first one and what happened last year with Dodge, and all of a sudden it was 14-0 we had to use two timeouts.” Despite the early deficit the Blue Jays came back to win that ballgame.

The Lady Jays will have a young team this season with only two juniors and one new senior on the squad. Coach Derek Petty anticipates Dodge City playing mostly man to man defense. “They’ll pick up full court every now and then as a surprise, but I think mostly they want to be a half court man and offensive team.”

You can hear both games on KJCK AM 1420 and FM 107.9 beginning at 6 p.m.

 

Remembering a state championship!!

Ten years ago Thursday the Junction City Blue Jays won the Class 6A State football championship. The Blue Jays defeated Lawrence Free State in the title game 19-14. The contest was played at Yager Stadium at Washburn University in Topeka. ( Photos courtesy of Connie Gallentine, Bob Cervera and Ashley Murphy ).

Chiefs safety Eric Berry gets back on practice field

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Eric Berry was back on the Kansas City Chiefs’ practice field Wednesday for the first time since early in training camp, the first step toward the star safety being ready for games.

When that could happen remains unclear.

Berry had torn his Achilles’ tendon in last season’s opener, but was back on the practice field over the summer. He began training camp and looked as if he’d be ready for the season, but then was sidelined by a troublesome heel problem that seemingly nobody completely understood.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid kept calling Berry “day to day,” even as it stretched to week to week and month to month, and has maintained ever since August that he was slowly getting better.

“We’ll just see how he’s doing. There’s no pressure there or any of that. Just see how he feels and take it play to play,” Reid said ahead of Wednesday’s afternoon practice. “I think he’s just as curious as we are to see how he feels. We’re going to go easy with him.”

It seems unlikely that Berry will be ready by Sunday, when the Chiefs (9-2) play their first game after a bye in Oakland. But there will be four more regular-season games, and getting Berry up to speed in time for what Kansas City hopes is a deep playoff run is most important.

“This week, next week, I don’t care. I just want to make sure he’s healthy,” Reid said. “The one thing about Eric, this is killing him to watch. He loves to play. It tears him up not to be out there, but at the same time we have to do it smart. Those juices get going and everything is OK.”

The five-time Pro Bowl selection certainly knows how to make a comeback.

Berry missed most of a season earlier in his career when he tore knee ligaments, and the injury to his Achilles tendon scuttled another season. Berry also missed the end of a season when he was diagnosed with cancer, only to be declared cancer-free by the following summer in time for training camp.

Berry has been around the team all season, juicing up the defense while helping a young secondary as a pseudo coach. He’s been in meeting rooms, traveled to road games and maintained a constant presence in the locker room, where his stuff is hung close to rookie quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

“He’s up here as much as anyone,” Mahomes said. “He’s up here as much as I am. He’s up here as much as anyone except Coach Reid. I know he wants to be on that field. He’s going to train and keep himself right so that when he gets an opportunity like he has now, he’ll be ready to go.”

The Chiefs have struggled at safety all season, signing veteran Ron Parker on the eve of the season because they were so short-handed. Daniel Sorensen broke his leg in training camp and only recently was back on the field, and rookie Armani Watts landed on injured reserve as he was getting up to speed.

Not surprisingly, the Chiefs have been gouged by opposing offenses most of the year.

They are allowing more than 400 yards and 26.7 points per game, both near the bottom of the league. Their pass defense is last at 297.2 yards per game, and their inability to get stops in the red zone has been due in part by the unsteady play of their safeties.

But beyond the physical boon Berry would provide is the emotional lift.

Yes, he’s been around the team all season. But offensive lineman Mitchell Schwartz said there’s a different feeling when one of the team’s longest-tenured and most vocal leaders suits up.

“He’s the guy that gets everybody hyped and ready to go,” Schwartz said, “and that’s team wide, whether it’s offense or defense. It’s great to have a guy like that around. We’ll see how that situation goes, but big for the defense and also big for the team.”

Notes: C Mitch Morse (concussion) returned to practice for the first time since getting hurt Oct. 14 in New England. … WR Sammy Watkins (foot) remained out of practice. He played a few snaps against the Rams before the bye before deciding that the injury was too severe to continue. It’s unclear when he will be ready again. … Reid gave a shout-out to Sporting Kansas City, the MLS club that plays Portland on Thursday night in the Western Conference finals. “Great for the city,” he said.

Risner leads five Wildcats named to All-Big 12 teams

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State senior right tackle Dalton Risner, the 2018 Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year, led five Wildcats that were named to the Coaches’ All-Big 12 teams, the conference office announced Wednesday.

 

Risner was a first-team recipient for a third-straight season, while running back Alex Barnes and defensive back Duke Shelley were named to the second team. Punter Devin Anctil and defensive end Kyle Ball were both honorable mention selections. Shelley earned his second All-Big 12 honor from the league’s coaches as he was an honorable mention last year, while Barnes, Anctil and Ball picked up their first-career accolades.

 

A product of Wiggins, Colorado, Wiggins is the second Wildcat to earn Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year honors, the first being B.J. Finney in 2014. He was joined as an Offensive Lineman of the Year in 2018 by Oklahoma’s Dru Samia and West Virginia’s Yodny Cajuste.

 

Risner is the fourth offensive lineman in conference history to earn First Team All-Big 12 accolades in three-straight seasons, while he is the fourth player in school history to accomplish the feat, joining defensive tackle Will Geary (2015-17), Finney (2012-14) and linebacker Mark Simoneau (1997-99).

 

Risner led an offensive unit that finished third in the Big 12 by averaging 182.6 rushing yards per game, which included a 184.2-yard average in conference games to rank second. The Wildcat rushing attack averaged 208.6 yards and 2.3 rushing touchdowns per game in the final seven contests after averaging 146.2 yards and 0.8 rushing touchdowns in the first five.

 

A majority of that rushing yardage went to Barnes, the Big 12’s regular-season rushing champion at 112.9 yards per game with a league-high tying 12 touchdowns. The Pittsburg, Kansas, native was even better in conference play as he averaged 125.2 yards per game with 11 scores.

 

Barnes’ season rushing total of 1,355 yards ranked fourth in school history and seventh nationally at the end of the regular season. He topped the 100-yard rushing mark on seven occasions to tie for third in school history. His impressive junior campaign improved his career rushing total to 2,616 yards to rank fifth in K-State history, while his 12 career 100-yard games is tied for second.

 

Shelley concluded his senior campaign with a team-high three interceptions despite missing the final five games of the season due to injury. His interception total included two against Oklahoma State, while he had one the previous week at Baylor. The Tucker, Georgia, native finished his career with eight interceptions – just outside the school’s top-10 list – while his 39 career passes defended ranked seventh. He also had two pick-sixes in his career to tie for fourth in school history.

 

Anctil had a great finish to the season as he punted the final six games, averaging 43.6 yards per punt with 10 landing inside the opponent’s 20-yard line and six that traveled at least 50 yards. His average would lead the Big 12 if he met the required minimum amount of games played. His six punts of at least 50 yards are the most by a Wildcat since 2013, while his five punts downed inside the TCU 20-yard line were the most by a Wildcat in a single game since 2014.

 

Ball completed the 2018 season with 16 tackles, including 4.0 tackles for loss and 2.0 sacks, while he also batted away two passes. The Prairie Village, Kansas, product carded a season-high seven tackles at Oklahoma, while his sacks came against UTSA and Oklahoma State.

 

Coaches’ All-Big 12 Teams (Kansas State)

Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year: Dalton Risner (joined by Oklahoma’s Dru Samia and West Virginia’s Yodny Cajuste)

First Team: Dalton Risner (OL).

Second Team: Alex Barnes (RB) and Duke Shelley (DB).

Honorable Mention: Devin Anctil (P) and Kyle Ball (DE).

 

– k-statesports.com –

RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football and Golf Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

Brown, Wade named to Lute Olson award watch list

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Seniors Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade were among 40 players selected to the watch list for the Lute Olson National Player of the Year Award, as announced by CollegeInsider.com (November 27).

 

The Lute Olson Award, which is named for the legendary head coach at Long Beach State, Iowa and Arizona, is presented annually to the nation’s top Division I player byCollegeInsider.com. The 40-player list does not include current freshman and transfer, who are not eligible for the preseason watch list.

 

K-State was among just three schools nationally to have at least two players on the watch list, joining Gonzaga (2) and Virginia (2). In addition, Brown and Wade were among four Big 12 players selected to the list, including Iowa State’s Lindell Wigginton and West Virginia’s Sagaba Konate.

 

The 2019 Lute Olson Award will be presented at the CollegeInsider.com awards event in April in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the site of the Final Four.

 

Brown and Wade’s inclusion on the list continues to add to a long list of preseason accolades, as each were selected to Citizen Naismith Trophy Watch List, while Wade was named a candidate for the John R. Wooden Award and NABC Player of the Year. Each were selected to their respective positional player of the year lists (Brown for the Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year and Wade for the Karl Malone Power Forward of the Year).

 

The Preseason Big 12 Player of the Year, Wade is off to an impressive start to his senior season, pacing the Wildcats in scoring (16.2 ppg.), rebounding (8.5 rpg.), assists (3.8 apg.) and minutes (32.5 mpg). He played a key role in the Wildcats’ first regular-season tournament since 2011 at the U.S. Virgin Islands Paradise Jam, averaging 17.3 points on 61.8 percent shooting with 6.0 rebounds and 3.7 assists in wins over Eastern Kentucky, Penn and Missouri. He has scored in double figures in all six games to start the season.

 

Wade recently became just the fourth Wildcat to record at least 1,000 career points, 500 career points and 200 career assists, joining Rolando BlackmanEd Nealy and Wesley Iwundu.

 

A Preseason All-Big 12 selection, Brown also is enjoying a strong start to his senior season, averaging 15.7 points, 5.0 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 2.2 steals in 32.5 minutes per game. He was one of five players selected as Paradise Jam Tournament All-Stars after scoring 19 points in the tournament final over Missouri.

 

With his 16-point effort in the win over Lehigh on Saturday, Brown moved into ninth place all-time in scoring with 1,377 points. He also became the second Wildcat with 200 career steals with 4 steals against the Mountain Hawks, moving to within eight of the all-time record of 2010 held by Jacob Pullen (2007-11).

 

No. 12/10 K-State (6-0) begins a two-game road trip this weekend, as the Wildcats travel to Milwaukee, Wisconsin to take on BIG EAST foe Marquette (4-2) at 1:30 p.m., CT on Saturday. The game will air nationally on FS1.

 

–www.kstatesports.com–

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

 

 

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