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Freshmen shed inexperience in time for WNIT

三月 7, 2012

If freshman Jessra Johnson were allowed to participate in postseason NCAA bracketing, Duke’s loss to Virginia Commonwealth would have ruined her predictions.

On the other hand, fellow freshman Toy Richbow seemed immune to the racket surrounding the men’s NCAA Tournament.

“I’m just worried about us and next year,” Richbow said.

Johnson and Richbow, along with freshmen Amanda Hanneman and Marissa Scott, will play in their first postseason game at 3 p.m. today in Wyoming in the second round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament.

“I don’t think any freshman is too nervous about playing,Glasgow Rangers shirt,” Johnson said.

Richbow plays the most of the four freshmen,Villareal shirt, sharing her time at point guard with two seniors.

“For the returning players and myself, it will give us a good couple steps to the next year’s season,Kaizer Chiefs shirt,” Richbow said. “I’m just trying to get all the experience I can and learn from these seniors we have left before they leave.”

While Richbow is thinking about next season and concentrating on wiping away any traces of inexperience, Missouri coach Cindy Stein is focused on ending this season on a positive note.

“We’re not looking at the WNIT as a springboard for next year,Atletico Madrid shirt,” Stein said. “We’re looking at the WNIT to win the first game, and then focus on winning the second, regardless of whether it’s a freshman, sophomore, junior, senior playing.”

Stein said she no longer looks at playing experience or class rank. She looks at how hard a person plays in practice and how much she can contribute.

“All of them you can tell have improved a lot,” Stein said of the freshmen. “They’ve put themselves in the position to gain more playing time, if not start, and that’s kind of where we are.”

Richbow started the first game of the season against Southern Illinois and the last game against Texas in the Big 12 Conference Tournament. Against Texas in the tournament, Hanneman played eight minutes, one of her largest totals after battling minor injuries earlier in the season. Stein said Hanneman is being considered as a starter for the Wyoming game.

If the Tigers win, they will play the winner of the Oregon-University of California Santa Barbara game.

Tiger senior wins collegiate award

三月 6, 2012

,Kaizer Chiefs shirt

Tigers senior Alisha Robinson received the Kansas City Collegiate Athlete of the Year Award Tuesday from the Kansas City Sports Commission.

This year Robinson set a Missouri NCAA Championship record on the vault at 9.900,Porto shirt, beating the previous mark of 9.875. She also set Missouri records in the floor and all-around categories. Robinson’s 9.850 qualified her for the NCAA Individual Championship Final where she placed fifth. It was the third time she competed at the meet.

In her senior year,Bordeaux shirt, Robinson won 18 event titles and was named Big 12 Conference Gymnast of the Week twice.

New routine helps Stephens roll past Mount Mary College

三月 6, 2012

New routine helps<br /> Stephens roll past<br /> Mount Mary College

After a lackadaisical start to his team’s Tuesday night loss at Central Methodist, Stephens College basketball coach Dane Pavlovich thought the Stars needed a new warm-up to get ready to go at the beginning of each game.

The new warm-ups accomplished that purpose Saturday,Glasgow Rangers shirt, as Stephens jumped out to a 15-0 lead and cruised to an easy 88-19 victory against Mount Mary College,Lyon shirt, which arrived at Silverthorne Arena from Milwaukeewith only five players.

“(With) our warm-up before, we were doing a lot of stuff where we were standing,Kaizer Chiefs shirt,” junior captain Amy Burklund said. “We just wanted to add some things that we could individually add our own flair (to) and just get us going so we’ll get more ready and focused for the game.”

The Stars (4-15) also used a man-to-man full-court press in the first half to boost their intensity.

“We wanted to jump start a little momentum for us,” Pavlovich said. “At times we have the tendency to get lackadaisical and we didn’t want that from the beginning. We wanted to jump on them quick.”

Stephens forced the Blue Angels into 19 first half turnovers and held them to nine points in the first 20 minutes.

The Stars defense fueled its offense. All nine players scored in the first half.

“I loved the way we shared the basketball today,” Pavlovich said. “We really played together tonight. We had nine players working towards a very common task and doing something together.”

“It allowed (us) to work on some things,” Burklund said. “In the second half we wanted to focus on our offense and executing.”

Mount Mary (0-8), was outmanned.

“In the first half they kept up, but in the second half,Ajax shirt, they were pooped out,” coach Bernell Hooker said.

The victory opened up a three-game home stand for the Stars. Their next game is7 p.m. Monday against Avila.

“A lot of things that we did tonight I think we can take and learn from,” Burklund said. “(We can) take it into our next game.”

Tigers overcome mistakes to end CU’s domination

三月 4, 2012

Big plays, big calls and combinations of the two were the determining factors in Missouri’s win Saturday against Colorado.

The Tigers won 17-9, snapping a five-game losing streak against the Buffaloes, but for the second straight year controversial calls by the officials and penalties were integral to the outcome.

Before Saturday, Missouri was the second-least penalized team in the Big 12 Conference,Italy football shirt, with 14 penalties for 89 yards. The Tigers will drop in that category after committing seven penalties for 70 yards, all in the first half.

“We had some penalties, (problems with) the kicking game,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, and just things that you just don’t do,” coach Gary Pinkel said. “I’m disappointed when I see things like that. I want penalties and the kicking game, I want all those things to work with perfection.”

Colorado also struggled to avoid mistakes, with seven penalties for 45 yards. The Buffaloes had some difficult penalties on offense that created third and long situations and gave the Tigers second chances on defense.

One of Colorado’s biggest mistakes came on the first drive of the game, when Missouri failed to convert on third and goal, but Buffalo linebacker Jason Ackerman was called for holding in the end zone. The penalty put Missouri on Colorado’s 3-yard line and tailback Damien Nash ran the ball for a touchdown on the next play.

“We definitely hurt ourselves,” Colorado quarterback Joel Klatt said. “We had some big plays that got taken back, and there were some little things that we need to pay more attention to the details and correct those.”

Nash said mistakes and what he said were questionable calls affected both teams.

“There were a lot of penalties that probably shouldn’t have gone against us and there were some penalties that also hurt us,Retro Football Shirts,” Nash said. “We just have to avoid those things and as much as we avoid them the game is going to be played better.”

The most controversial penalty against Missouri came in the second quarter when the Tigers had first and 10 on their own 41-yard line. Quarterback Brad Smith threw a deep pass down the sideline to wide receiver Sean Coffey, who caught the ball and would have scored a touchdown, but was called for pass interference. After the game Pinkel and the Missouri players questioned the call.

“I had a real good look at that and I have to take that up with the officials,” Pinkel said.

Coffey redeemed himself in the third, though,Benfica shirt, turning a six-yard pass to the sideline from Smith into a 51-yard touchdown, beating his man and receiving a block from tight end Martin Rucker that freed him to run to the end zone.

“It’s just nice to see him come back and make that big play,” Pinkel said. “I thought that was huge.”

Missouri’s ability to overcome penalties and Colorado’s inability to do so was the difference between this year’s game and last year’s, when Colorado won 21-16. The Tigers crumbled in critical situations in that game and could not overcome plays like one on which a run by Smith that looked like a touchdown was ruled a fumble.

Pinkel said he talked in team meetings this week about the need to make big plays. Missouri’s response to that challenge was the difference in the game.

“I thought it was a pretty good gut check for our football team against a very good team,” Pinkel said.

Two MU wrestlers arrested

二月 26, 2012

COLUMBIA Two MU wrestlers were arrested early Saturday morning in downtown Columbia, according to the Columbia police department.

Nick Marable,Celtic shirt, 21, was seen fighting around 1:45 Saturday morning with 23-year-old Craig Koehmstedt of Columbia,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, according to police reports. Both were arrested on suspicion of peace disturbance. Police say neither were seriously injured.

Fellow wrestler Andrew Wood, 21,Lazio shirt, was arrested and charged with suspicion of disorderly conduct. He is a sophomore from Hannibal.

Marable, a junior from Collierville,Sunderland shirt, Tenn., enters the wrestling season ranked No. 1 in the nation in the 165-pound weight class. He won the Big 12 championship and finished third at the 2008 NCAA championship in the 165-pound weight class earlier this year.

The wrestling season begins with an intrasquad match this weekend.

Lessons of losing at Missouri Relays

二月 23, 2012

COLUMBIA — Lauren Borduin has done a lot of winning during her track and field career at Rock Bridge.

She won the state title in the 800-meter run as a sophomore,Villareal shirt, missing the state record by just two tenths of a second.

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During her junior year, Borduin struggled with a hip injury, but finished the season strong by winning the state title in both the 800-meter and the 1600-meter runs.

But, paradoxically, Borduin’s winning has been a problem for her at times. She has won so often and by such large margins that she hasn’t needed to push her limits.

Then when she has gotten into more closely-contested races on the national level or at state, she hasn’t been comfortable running side by side with her competition. She was too used to running way out in front.

According to coach Neil Blackburn, over the past two seasons there has not been a single runner in the state of Missouri who could challenge Borduin in the 800-meters.

“We went out to the Nike outdoor meet last year, the championships, and she got in there and it was kind of like she didn’t necessarily know how to handle racing with someone on her shoulder,Napoli shirt,” Blackburn said.

Because she has had so much trouble finding someone to challenge her,Sevilla shirt, Borduin was thrilled that Cydney Ross from Villa Duchesne ran right with her in the 800-meters at the season-opening Missouri Relays on Saturday.

Borduin was so thrilled that Ross pushed her to do her best that she didn’t seem to mind too much that Ross won the race.

“It pushes you to your limits,” Borduin said. “When you are running by yourself you can get comfortable and then you don’t really know what you can do.”

Borduin came within three seconds of her state-title-winning time from last season on Saturday. It was the best time she has ever had at the Missouri Relays and would have been the meet record if not for Ross, who crossed the finish line 16 hundredths of a second before Borduin.

Blackburn said the close loss was much more beneficial to Borduin than an easy win would have been.

“(A blowout win) would have been the same thing that she has experienced kind of week-in and week-out for the last two-and-a-half seasons,” Blackburn said. “Having an experience with really and truly having to race and not just going out and running makes a difference.”

Blackburn wanted Borduin to focus on racing rather than her time, so he took her watch away from her just moments before the start of the race. It was a surprise to Borduin, but she said that it was not the first time Blackburn had forced her to give up the watch.

“Having my watch is sort of like a security thing,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, and sometimes I think he just wants me to not be so focused on getting comfortable as much as just running,” Borduin said.

Borduin won the 1600-meter run earlier in the day. She won that race by over eight seconds with Ross finishing second.

Borduin had a chance to become the first girl to win both the 1600-meter and the 800-meter at the Missouri Relays. She won the 1600 last year and the 800 as a sophomore in 2006.

Although they were not upset about the loss, Borduin and Blackburn said they look forward to a possible rematch between Borduin and Ross.

“I hope they see each other again,” Blackburn said. “I hope they get a chance to race and establish kind of that camaraderie through racing to continue to push each other to perform better.”

Rock Bridge also won the boys 4×100-meter relay and the boys 4×200-meter relay this weekend. Blackburn said the relay wins were a result of the commitment of his runners, who stayed in town over spring break to practice together.

Quinn Gray won the boys 200-meter dash for Rock Bridge. Matt Brummit from Hickman won the boy’s high jump.

Missouri had another good day in women’s throwing competition on Saturday. Shernelle Nicholls won the women’s discus, setting a new school record as well as the Barbados national record.

Nicholls also finished second in the shot put. Krishna Lee finished third in the shot put.

Nick Adcock finished second in the long jump, javelin throw, and 110-meter hurdles at the Relays.

Athletics takes MU swimmer away from world of conflict

二月 20, 2012

COLUMBIA — It’s the middle of the night, and sergeant Gilad Kaufman, 20 at the time, of the 188th infantry battalion is standing guard in one of the watchtowers, looking out into the waves of grass surrounding the small village and military base in northern Israel.

Kaufman checks his binoculars and sees nothing, merely wooded area and grasslands, a scene he’s been protecting for hours.

Without warning, shots are fired at the base. In the distance Kaufman can see the small flashes coming out of the woodland.

He hears the bullets whiz by his head — enough warning to duck for cover. He finds safety in the watchtower, behind the small wall dividing him from the combatants.

He rises momentarily with his M-16, not knowing where, who or how many and fires instinctively into the distance.

“I didn’t think at all; I just shot. When someone is shooting at you, that’s what you do,” Kaufman said.

SWIMMING AT MU

In the middle of the afternoon, swimming practice is about to begin at the Mizzou Aquatics Center, and junior Gilad Kaufman, now 23, listens intently as coach Brian Hoffer gives instructions for the day and commentary about last weekend’s performance. The meeting ends, and Kaufman begins to congregate and joke with his teammates on the MU swimming and diving team.

Almost every group of players he approaches inevitably ends up laughing — with Kaufman as the instigator.

“He’s got a great sense of humor,” junior Byron Carlisle said.

Eventually, he reaches his swimming lane and dives in for a warm-up session. With a steady and smooth stroke,Ajax shirt, Kaufman works primarily on his freestyle and butterfly techniques, strokes that have brought him serious Big 12 and MU accolades. Kaufman swam the third leg of the 800 free relay team that broke the school record at the 2006 Big 12 Championship for the event.

THE FIREFIGHT ENDS

The combatants flee, and the two- to three-minute firefight comes to a halt. Kaufman and his comrades are sent to a room to be debriefed on the situation. Officers inform Kaufman the next morning that the combatants were most likely terrorists and that their exact numbers were unknown. All they tell him is that there was more than one. Kaufman, though, can only wonder what could have been. He suffers mentally from the crossfire long after the guns stopped firing.

“I had nightmares about the conflict for about a week and a half.”

The firefight in northern Israel is a fluke for Kaufman. His days are not usually that exciting, and his enemies are predominantly bartering landowners instead of camouflaged terrorists.

Kaufman works as a real estate marketer for the military, finding and negotiating for property around Israel. The Israeli Security Forces (ISF) use Kaufman’s skills in land speculation to build housing projects for officers. Kaufman only found himself in the firefight because while his primary job in the military is real estate, he and his battalion were regularly sent on security tours around the country which lasted from a week to a month. That particular tour was for two weeks.

The brief firefight is just one of many experiences for the Kaufman family. Born in Kfar Saba and raised in Netanya, both in central Israel, he grew up in a family with a strong military heritage. His grandfather, a Holocaust survivor, earned a medal of bravery for guiding his troops through a minefield. His father fought in several conflicts, and his older brother was a tank operator, a highly respected position in the Israeli army. Kaufman’s chances of reaching such heights in the military are limited,Werder Bremen shirt, though.

His position in the general infantry rarely puts him in conflict situations, something about his duty he has no choice but to accept.

“Yeah, security was a bit boring, but sometimes you realize where you could be (fighting in combat), and it’s not that bad,” he said.

A “BREAKOUT SEASON”

“His first year was all right. His second was much better, but I think this is the year he really breaks out,” Missouri coach Hoffer said.

The 2007 season started off well for the Tigers with Kaufman performing at a high level. Swimming as the third leg, Kaufman played a crucial part in the first-place finish of the 400 freestyle relay event at the Big 12 Relays.

Performance hasn’t been the issue for Kaufman at MU, though. Life outside of the military complex gave Kaufman a big change. In Israel, Kaufman’s daily routine was regimented: swimming practice before work, work and swimming practice after work. His time at MU is distinctly less crowded. Besides practice and class, Kaufman decides what to do instead of listening to a higher-ranking military officer.

“You’re on your own routine, and it’s much less strict,” he said. “Everything is organized and coaches take care of you.”

A SACRIFICE FOR SWIMMING

He knows he belongs in the Elite Forces — the Israeli equivalent of the Marines. That’s where his friends are. That’s where his family had made its service the stories of heroes,Porto shirt, but that’s exactly where he isn’t. Kaufman’s talent precludes him from doing as such. Because he is an athlete, joining the Elite Forces is not an option for Kaufman.

“The Elite Force is a full-time job, and sometimes you could be away for a week on a mission,” he said. “I would never have found time to swim.”

It would be impossible for Kaufman to continue swimming and competing if he were in the Elite Forces because of the time commitment.

“I could have chosen to (be in the elite unit). I wanted to, and if I wasn’t a swimmer, I would be a soldier,” he said.

Kaufman’s time in the general infantry is a trade-off.

“Swimming was very easy because it distracted me,” he said. “Physical pain is easier than mental pain.”

Swimming is not merely a hobby for Kaufman; it’s a sport in which he has excelled. He had already been named to the Israeli junior national team and netted three separate individual national championships for his country in 2002 and 2003.

“Everyone wants to go to America because of its the land of opportunity, and for me, it was a chance to swim and get an education for a job that would make me much more successful than in Israel,” he said.

Georgia Tech, Kenyon College (Ohio) and Missouri were his suitors. All three offered engineering programs, his desired major, and all three boasted strong swimming programs.

A NEW WORLD

As a junior, Kaufman can still readily see the differences between his old and new lives. No more monthly roadblocks in high-traffic areas. No more military tours in areas such as the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, and no more firefights.

The only hazardous condition he sees regularly is weather — and even that doesn’t faze him.

“When the tornado came a few years ago, I was walking down the street,” he said. “I mean, it wasn’t a big deal.”

A “FAMILY-LIKE” ATMOSPHERE

A year away from his release from the military, Kaufman decided once more to choose swimming over military service. He wanted to go to America to swim but choosing a college was difficult. Netanya is a city that practices kibbutz, an Israeli collectivism mind-set that emphasizes a form of socialism and community.

Kibbutz stresses family and communal well being, and only one of his three potential schools offered a relatively similar environment.

“Missouri offered a family-like atmosphere, something I was looking for in a school,” he said.

His three-year military almost finished, Kaufman had decided where his new home would be. He had plans to leave for Missouri almost immediately after he was released and start a new life in America. Two weeks after that release, he found himself in Columbia, 6,466 miles away from his home and his battalion. A new world presented itself to Kaufman, a world he was willing to acclimate to.

His choices had taken him this far, and even on retrospection,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, he felt comfortable with them.

“Sometimes I think about what it would have been like (in the army),” he said, “but I feel OK with my choice of coming here.”

Missouri soccer player has ancestor with legendary ties

二月 18, 2012

COLUMBIA Missouri soccer player Dominique Richardson has some family ties to a Notre Dame legend.

The freshman midfielder is the great-granddaughter of Clem Crowe, an end for the Seven Mules who blocked for the renowned Four Horsemen on the Notre Dame football team in the 1920s. He was team captain in 1925.

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The Four Horsemen were immortalized in print by sportswriter Grantland Rice after a game against Army in 1924. Notre Dame went on to win the national championship that season.

Crowe, who died in 1983, was the grandfather of Richardsons mother. In addition to playing for the Fighting Irish football team, Crowe played basketball at Notre Dame and was elected to the Xavier Athletic Hall of Fame after coaching football, basketball, baseball and golf in the 1930s and ’40s.

“I think its awesome that he was able to do that,” Richardson said of Crowes accomplishments.

Richardson learned about Crowe two years ago when her mother brought him up while they were discussing colleges.

“I thought it was really cool,” Richardson said.

Although she has never visited Notre Dame and didnt consider the school when it came time choose a college, Crowes legacy is never far away from her.

That legacy is one that Dominique Richardsons mother, Ann Richardson, 46,Lazio shirt, of Fullerton, Calif.,Villareal shirt, treasures.

Looking at the athletic parallel between Crowe and her daughter is something in which Ann Richardson takes pride.

“I think its quite a privilege that she’s (Dominique) been able to go to a four-year university on scholarship,Italy football shirt,” Ann Richardson said. “I found on my cousins Facebook profile a picture of him (Crowe) in his playing gear. This is three generations ago, and now shes in college. He set a precedent for that.”

Dominique Richardsons grandmother, Ann Cook, 75, of Northridge, Calif., is Crowes daughter.

At her home she has some memorabilia from Crowes playing and coaching days, including a letter to Crowe from Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne and a silver bowl given as a gift when he coached the British Columbia Lions of the Canadian Football League football in the 1950s.

Cook said her father took a quiet approach to life on and off the field.

“He didnt strut around. He just did his job,” Cook said.

With all of his accomplishments, Crowe is an inspiration to her granddaughter and other ancestors, Cook said.

“Its something to aim for,Kaizer Chiefs shirt,” she said. “They see that he did it, and they can do it, too.”

Tigers push ahead

二月 16, 2012

DALLAS — The smiles have returned.

After a long, tough two weeks of heartbreaking basketball,Newcastle United shirt, Missouri coach Cindy Stein could barely speak. She said her voice was gone from yelling. But the smile on her face after Wednesday’s game resembled that of a proud parent, too choked up to find the right words to fit the moment.

A mentally exhausting two weeks, with a few national projections keeping the Tigers (21-8) out of the NCAA tournament,Football shirts, changed on Wednesday. Missouri defeated Texas Tech 81-75 in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Conference tournament at Reunion Arena.

“I don’t know how we couldn’t be in (the NCAA),” Stein said. “But at the same time, we don’t have that invite yet, so we’re trying to get the automatic.”

Stein called the victory a redemption game. Count senior LaToya Bond as one of the redeemed.

Bond’s 24 points led all scorers and she much more resembled a first team All-Big 12 player than the one who was so frustrated in losses to Kansas and Nebraska that she said she needed a few days away from the game.

Stein said she was concerned about her team’s mind-set entering the game. Two weeks is a long time for self-doubt to creep into anyone’s mind and Stein tried to combat that by keeping things simple in the past four practices.

“Because we didn’t have any energy and that was a concern of mine from that aspect,” Stein said.

Along with that energy, Bond’s swagger made its return.

She crossed over defenders, drove to the basket practically at will and took a charge on the defensive end. Despite starting slowly, Bond stymied the Red Raiders by repeatedly driving at or around their post players.

“We just had to come out there and warm up, get our offense going and just had to kick it in gear,” Bond said.

Upon exiting the floor after the game, she joined her teammates in a group hug. They left the floor together,Sunderland shirt, smiling and waving goodbye to the small contingent of Missouri fans that made the trip to Dallas, waving goodbye to the nightmares of the past two weeks and possibly waving goodbye to the mounting pressure that Missouri wasn’t an NCAA tournament team.

With the turmoil surrounding the men’s basketball team, the women’s team has arguably become the face of Missouri sports in the past few months. It’s something the team has heard for the last half of the season,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, mostly from fans coming up to congratulate players and coaches.

“I think it’s a good pressure,” Tiffany Brooks said. “I think it will motivate us, push us hard to go harder in practice and just work harder.”

One of the few times Stein didn’t smile at the postgame press conference was when the national perception of the Big 12 was brought up. Upset with the conventional thinking that the Big 12 is in a down year, Stein, who has never been one afraid to speak her mind, lauded the Big 12 while taking a shot at the idea the Big 12 was sub-par.

“We’ve got an excellent reputation,” Stein said. “Unfortunately we have got a lot of commentators on TV that are from the SEC and we’ve got to get maybe (former Oklahoma star) Stacey Dales-Schuman working a little bit more for us.”

Criticisms aside, it appears that Missouri is headed to the big dance.

“I definitely think we deserve to be in the (NCAA) tournament,” Brooks said. “I think we have to prove ourselves until Sunday, until they make the decisions. But like I said, I think we’ve worked hard enough to be in.”

Bond talked about the history Missouri has made this season. She can add another record to the list. With the win, Missouri advanced to its first Big 12 women’s tournament semifinal in school history.

Today, the Tigers will play top-seed Oklahoma, who hung on to defeat Iowa State 78-74. Seeing Iowa State play closely with one of the best teams in the nation offered little hope for Stein, who joked that the game just made the Sooners angry.

“I’m not sure that’s good or bad,” Stein said. “We haven’t really thought about Oklahoma to be honest.”

Tennis team rivals Hickman, Rock Bridge meet for last time this season

二月 13, 2012

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Hickman and Rock Bridge high schools’ tennis teams met Tuesday to play each other for the last time this season.

Rock Bridge tennis player Sam Johnson practices serving with teammates before facing off with hometown rival Hickman on Tuesday afternoon,Kaizer Chiefs shirt, their final encounter this season.
¦ KEVIN A. ROBERTS/Missourian