February 12, 2012

Mizzou wins big…Safford hurt

Missouri Tigers Justin Safford gets past the Colorado Buffalo defense for two points in the first half   at the Mizzou Arena in Columbia, Missouri on February 24, 2010. Missouri defeated Colorado 92-63.     UPI/Bill Greenblatt

Missouri Tigers Justin Safford gets past the Colorado Buffalo defense for two points in the first half at the Mizzou Arena in Columbia, Missouri on February 24, 2010. Missouri defeated Colorado 92-63. UPI/Bill Greenblatt

No fear of overlooking the Colorado Buffaloes. The Missouri Tigers stayed focused and jumped out to a big lead and never looked back in the Tigers 92-63 win Wednesday night at Mizzou Arena. The Tigers are 21-7, 9-4 in the Big 12, but it didn’t come without a price. Justin Safford went down early in the first half with a knee injury.

It was Safford who jump started the Tigers as he scored eight points in the first seven minutes of the game as the Tigers jumped out to a 15-4 lead. That’s when there was contact under the basket and Safford landed funny on his left knee. A source of the Missourinet who was down on the baseline said he heard Safford tell Mike Anderson that he twisted his knee.

In Safford’s absence, Keith Ramsey picked up the slack by finishing with 13 points on 6 of 6 shooting while pulling in seven rebounds, two blocks, two steals and three assists. Marcus Denmon was the Tigers leading scorer again as he finished with 21. The Tigers finished at 58% shooting for the game.

Missouri Tigers Marcus Denmon (12) moves past Colorado Buffalo's Marcus Relphorde for the layup and two points in the first half.   UPI/Bill Greenblatt

Missouri Tigers Marcus Denmon (12) moves past Colorado Buffalo's Marcus Relphorde for the layup and two points in the first half. UPI/Bill Greenblatt

The Tigers built a 48-32 lead after the first half while shooting 68%. Head coach Mike Anderson was a little concerned after the Nebraska win that his team might overlook CU a bit given the fact they won big in Boulder and now have a tough road date with K-State on Saturday.

Listen to comments from JT Tiller, Keith Ramsey and Marcus Denmon

Tiller, Ramsey and Denmon

Listen to comments from Mike Anderson

Anderson

Senate advances “ethics” bill

What started out in the state senate as an ethics bill has been narrowed to a revision of campaign finance laws and tentatively approved. Sponsor Charlie Shields of St. Joseph decided to draft a more tightly-worded version after his original proposal got bogged down in lobbyist control provisions and limits on what lawmakers could do when they are no longer lawmakers. Shields’ bill gives the state ethics commission more teeth for investigations, bars multiple transfers of funds that hide their origin, and requires reports to be filed quickly by lawmakers getting donations during a legislative session. [Read more...]

Billikens lose second game at home

St. Louis Billikens Kwamain Mitchell drives past Xavier  Musteteers Mark Lyons in the final seconds of the close game, for a final score of Xavier 73 St. louis 71 at the Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis on February 24, 2010.    UPI/John Boman Jr

St. Louis Billikens Kwamain Mitchell drives past Xavier Musteteers Mark Lyons in the final seconds of the close game, for a final score of Xavier 73 St. louis 71 at the Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis on February 24, 2010. UPI/John Boman Jr

Xavier gained control with a 16-0 second-half run and held off a furious Saint Louis rally to post a 73-71 Atlantic 10 Conference victory Wednesday night at Chaifetz Arena.

The loss snapped SLU’s six-game winning streak and dropped the Billikens to 18-9 overall and 9-4 in the A-10. Xavier, which moved into a first-place tie with the victory, improved to 20-7 overall and 11-2 in the league.

Jordan Crawford, the A-10′s leading scorer, tallied a game-high 26 points on 11-of-20 shooting, including 4-of-6 from 3-point range. Jason Love added 21 points and a team-high nine rebounds, leading the Musketeers to a 42-28 advantage on the boards.

Kwamain Mitchell led the Billikens with 21 points that included a 5-of-8 effort from beyond the arc. Cody Ellis scored 19 points, while Willie Reed registered his seventh double-double of the season with 18 points and a game-high 13 rebounds while also blocking four shots. Kyle Cassity dished out a game-high six assists, followed by Mitchell and Christian Salecich with four apiece.

Crawford and Love scored on Xavier’s first two second-half touches to slice the Billikens’ 34-28 halftime lead to 34-32.

Following a SLU timeout, Cassity beat the shot clock with a 3-pointer, only to see Xavier narrow the gap to a point, 37-36, with Love’s layup and two Terrell Holloway free throws. Mitchell drained a 3-pointer, but Love answered with a conventional 3-point play that made it a one-point game again, 40-39.

Cassity and Crawford exchanged buckets, and a Justin Jordan trey put the Bills on top 45-41. Love’s runner was followed by a Salecich basket, and Holloway notched a trifecta to trim the SLU lead to 47-46. Reed hit a short jumper in the lane, and Holloway came right back with a basket to make it a 49-48 Saint Louis advantage. Love’s tip-in with 11:00 left gave XU its first lead since an early 4-3 edge, and Holloway drove for a layup and a 52-49 Musketeer advantage.

Crawford continued the spurt with a 3-pointer from deep in the right corner, and Lyons converted a turnover into a fast-break layup. Love grabbed an offensive rebound, made a layup while falling away and was fouled, and the free throw gave Xavier its first double-digit lead, 59-49.

Crawford’s trey from deep in the left corner capped the run with the Musketeers holding a 62-49 cushion.

Reed ended the SLU dry spell with a straight-on 14-foot bank shot, and Ellis followed with a field goal and three free throws that pulled the Bills to within eight, 64-56.

Following Jamel McLean’s offensive board and layup, Xavier was called for a technical foul. Ellis sank both free throws, and Reed converted a layup for a four-point possession that trimmed the Xavier lead to 66-60.

Following a Crawford 3-pointer, Ellis sank two free throws and Mitchell drove for a layup that narrowed the SLU deficit to 69-64. Crawford hit a short jumper, then the Bills made it a one-possession game, 71-68, with Ellis’ baseline drive and Mitchell’s jumper from the foul line. The Musketeers misfired on their next possession, and Reed made one free throw after collecting an offensive rebound to pull the Billikens closer, 71-69, with 1:00 remaining.

Love missed with time winding down on the shot clock, and SLU rebounded. Mitchell’s 3-point attempt for the lead was just off the mark, and Xavier gathered the rebound after a scramble and called a timeout with 10.1 seconds to play. The Bills forced a held ball, but the Musketeers owned the possession arrow. Love snatched a long pass out of the air and was fouled with 4.6 seconds to play. He converted both free throws, making Mitchell’s layup with less than a second to play meaningless.

Story courtesy of SLU athletics.

Missouri State handled Drake

Missouri State’s Adam Leonard scored a game-high 24 points and matched a career-best with seven three-pointers to lead the Bears to a 75-59 home win over Drake in Missouri Valley Conference play Wednesday.

[Read more...]

Incumbent Congressman challenged by political (somewhat) newcomer

St. Louis Congressman Russ Carnahan has a challenger who might be new to running for office, but certainly isn’t new to politics.

Democrat Russ Carnahan served as a state representative until winning election to Richard Gephardt’s seat in St. Louis in 2004. He says he has attempted to stay close to the district during his time in Washington and adds that the serious issues facing the nation demand a serious campaign.

“You know, I expect an active campaign, I always do. My dad always said, ‘You run like you’re ten points behind no matter what,’” Carnahan tells the Missourinet. “But part of that is just staying engaged, connecting with people, having this dialogue at a time when we have some big challenges.”

The big challenger facing Carnahan is Republican Ed Martin, former Chief of Staff for Governor Matt Blunt, who had never filed for political office before.

“I think people are really wanting a choice between the incumbent, Russ Carnahan, and me,” Martin tells the Missourinet. “I think we’re going to lay out that vision over the next seven or eight months and let people decide.”

Martin says he got used to the spotlight in his other roles, but has had to get used to the new kinds of pressures that accompany the candidate, rather than the staffer.

AUDIO: Brent Martin reports [:60]