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By ISAAC DEER
TopSports.news
The Silver Lake girls' 59-54 comeback overtime win in Saturday's Class 3A sub-state final was a game that will long be remembered.
“This game was special because we were the toughest when it mattered the most,” Silver Lake coach Kyle Porter said. “We showed a ton of resiliency. We talk a lot about just playing the next play and staying in the moment.”
ilver Lake's girls pose with their Class 3A sub-state championship trophy Saturday night after pulling out a 59-54 overtime win over Nemaha Central. [Photo by Isaac Deer/TSN]
Nemaha Central had a nine-point lead over Silver Lake with 5:31 left in the game.
In fact, the Thunder had held a lead since the 4:32 mark of the second quarter, with things not going well for Silver Lake for the majority of Saturday night’s thriller.
With a state ournament berth on the line, the Lady Eagles had to fight for their basketball lives. It was time to rally.
“It was tough but I had to pull through and move on from the emotions,” Silver Lake's Taylor Ross said. “The next play is a whole new play with many different opportunities. I feel like as a team, we all did a great job moving on from calls that didn’t go our way. We can’t dwell on anything that we can’t control.”
Six different players would score the basketball in the fourth quarter.
The Lady Eagles kept digging away at the Thunder after Ross hit a clutch basket underneath the rim with 58.9 seconds to go.
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By KYLE MANTHE
The Washburn Review
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Washburn men’s basketball knew it had to keep winning in the MIAA tournament to have a chance at making the NCAA tournament.
The Ichabods did just that, knocking off No. 1 seed Central Oklahoma, 79-65, to advance to Sunday's 3:30 p.m. MIAA championship game against Northwest Missouri State.
Washburn senior star Tyler Geiman reacts after hitting a 3-pointer in Saturday's 79-65 MIAA semifinal win over top seed Central Oklahoma. Geiman scored 17 points and hit five 3-pointers. [Photo by Kyle Manthe/The Washburn Review]
“I thought our defense was tremendous the entire game, that is a hard team to guard,” said Washburn coach Brett Ballard said. “To hold that team to 33 percent field goal shooting and out-rebound them by eight. I thought our guys did a great job locking in on the defensive end.”
“We didn’t reach that goal that we wanted to in the regular season” said senior Tyler Geiman. “We knew we had to come in here to win games and prove that we belong and that’s what we are doing and people are seeing what our team is all about.”
The Ichabods used a hot shooting night and a strong defensive effort to move on to a second straight conference championship game.
“(We) have been in the MIAA championship game four out of my first five years here,” Ballard said. “I am proud of the work they have put in and hope that we can show up tomorrow and believe in ourselves … it’s a great opportunity.”
The win moved Washburn to 21-9 overall on the season, surpassing last season’s win total.
From the start neither team could create any kind of separation from each other, with both teams playing sound defense.
Jonny Clausing scored 18 points and grabbed 11 rebounds in Washburn's 79-65 win over top seed Central Oklahoma in Saturday's MIAA Tournament semifinal. [Photo by Kyle Manthe/The Washburn Review]
The Ichabods did have success when they got the ball inside to junior Jonny Clausing who scored the team's first four points and eight in the half.
Central Oklahoma possessed a 14-9 lead nearly nine minutes into the game on the back of junior Callen Haydon’s eight early points.
From that point Washburn went on a 5-0 run to tie, and would eventually begin to build a lead. Inside-out play built a six-point lead with under five to play in the first half.
After a slow start offensively, Geiman took over the game, knocking down four 3-pointers in the final five minutes to lead by as many as 13.
“When you see one go it definitely helps. But I thought last night I got into the paint quite a bit and probably could have made more plays off of that,” Geiman said.
The Bronchos responded by ending the half on a 9-3 run to make it 39-32 at the break.
Central Oklahoma came out of halftime and continued to score, led by Haydon who scored 10 points in the first five minutes.
Five quick points for WU sophomore Connor Deffebaugh helped to stave off the run but back-to-back baskets from Bronchos senior Isaiah Wade kept the game within six points.
Wade’s 10th point of the half with just over 11 minutes to go cut the Washburn lead to just three.
“I feel like I’m on cruise control right now, these guys are out there controlling things and taking ownership of what is going on the court,” Ballard said. “They just really don’t get rattled … they don’t flinch.”
The Ichabods got hot offensively with under 10 minutes to play, knocking down three 3-pointers in a three-minute span. Freshman Michael Keegan, Deffebaugh and Geiman provided the points to pull back ahead by 12.
“I thought we would shoot like this most of the year, we really haven’t shot how we were capable of for a good majority of the year,” Ballard said. “We outscored them in points in the paint 26 to 18 and Jonny was a big part of that … he helps us playing inside-out it opens some of those 3s up.”
Jalen Lewis continued the hot shooting by knocking down two more 3-pointers before the five-minute mark, putting Washburn up by a game-high 16.
From that point the lead would never drop below 14, with Central Oklahoma pulling its starters with just more than a minute left as the Ichabods ultimately finished with the 14-point win.
“It was a good win for us, that was a good team we just beat,” Ballard said. “I am proud of our guys for coming in here and getting a win versus a very good team,”
Clausing led Washburn with 18 points and added 11 rebounds for a double-double. Geiman had 17 points and a game-high seven assists.
“It will be a great environment (Sunday),'' Ballard said. "I know our guys will be ready to take advantage of it and try to win back-to-back/''
WASHBURN MEN 79, CENTRAL OKLAHOMA 65
Washburn 39 40 -- 79
Central Oklahoma 32 33 -– 65
Central Oklahoma (24-6)
Wade 5-17 5-7 15, Turner 1-4 0-0 2, Haydon 7-14 4-4 22, Wells 2-7 2-2 7, Givens 1-4 4-4 7, Richardson 3-7 2-2 10, Aymond 0-3 2-4 2, Ca. Calavan 0-0 0-0 0, Co. Calavan 0-0 0-0 0, Streich 0-1 0-0 0. Totals: 19-57 19-23 65.
Washburn (21-9)
Clausing 8-14 2-8 18, Deffebaugh 4-6 0-0 10, Geiman 5-12 2-3 17, Lewis 5-14 2-2 15, Keegan 3-7 0-0 7, Nelson 2-6 1-2 7, Ellis 0-2 0-0 0, Harrell 1-3 2-2 5, Braun 0-0 0-0 0. Totals: 28-64 9-17 79.
3-point shots – Central Oklahoma: 8-28 (Wade 0-5, Turner 0-2, Haydon 4-7, Wells 1-4, Givens 1-3, Richardson 2-5, Aymond 0-2). Washburn: 14-28 (Deffebaugh 2-2, Geiman 5-8, Lewis 3-8, Keegan 1-3, Nelson 2-4, Ellis 0-2, Harrell 1-1). Rebounds – Central Oklahoma 36 (Givens 9), Washburn 46 (Keegan 15). Assists – Central Oklahoma 10 (Wade 3), Washburn 17 (Geiman 7). Turnovers – Central Oklahoma 9, Washburn 11. Fouled out – None. Technical fouls – Central Oklahoma 1 (Richardson).

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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.newsclass
Hayden's boys basketball team continued its late-season turnaround with is biggest win of the season Saturday afternoon, with the No. 12-seeded Wildcats punching their ticket to next week's Class 4A state tournament in Salina with a 52-37 road win at No. 4 seed Wamego.in a sub-state final.
"Wamego's a very talented team,'' Hayden first-year coach Dwayne Paul said. "They shoot the ball at a high rate and it was going to be extremely important for us to guard the bounce.
"We guarded very well today and we rebounded very well and that kind of kept us in it until our offense kind of picked up towards the end of the first (half) going into the second. We kind of made a run there and did some good things.''
Hayden junior Joe Otting led the way with 18 points as the Wildcats earned a berth in the Class 4A state tournament with a 52-37 win at Wamego Saturday. [File photo/TSN]
Saturday's win came on the heels of a 53-43 overtime sub-state semifinal victory at No. 5 Holton.
Hayden was 3-12 in mid-February, but has won six of its last seven games, including five straight.

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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
All basketball teams suffer through tough shooting nights.
Unfortunately for the Seaman girls basketball team, its shooting woes came at a most inopportune time, with a Class 5A state tournament berth on the line Saturday in a sub-state final against Andover Central at Seaman.
Seaman played solid defense, didn't commit a ton of turnovers and for the most part got good shots, but had trouble from start to finish putting the ball in the basket, shooting 21.7 percent in a 52-38 loss.
Seaman's players console each other while Andover Central celebrates at the end of the Jaguars' 52-38 Class 5A sub-state win Saturday night at Seaman. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
"We just didn't have it tonight, but one bump in the road does not sum up our season,'' Seaman coach Matt Tinsley said. "We just had a night where the ball didn't go in the hole.
"Sometimes you can lose games because of a lack of effort, that wasn't the case. You can lose games because you don't run the right alignment and assignment, that wasn't the case. We just didn't hit and you can't do anything about that. Unfortunately it was at the wrong time for us, but we got beat by a really good team of seniors.''

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By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
The No. 9-seeded Seaman boys basketball team made the long trip to Hays pay off with its biggest win of the season Friday night, with the Vikings rolling to a 61-44 victory over the Indians, the No. 1 West seed.
Seaman led 27-12 at halftime and never let Hays (20-2) closer than 14 in the second half, snapping Hays’ 18-game win streak while posting their eighth straight victory.
Senior Mateo Hyman (right) drives to the basket in Friday's 61-44 victory over No. 1 West seed Hays in a Class 5A sub-state final. [Submitted]
"Being able to hold them down to 12 points the first half was just phenomenal,'' Seaman coach Craig Cox said. “We knew they were going to score in the second half. It was just about keeping them at arm’s length so they didn’t get too much momentum.
“They had a couple spurts where the energy picked up and it got loud in here and you’re thinking, ‘Uh oh, this could turn in a hurry.’ It’s hard to go in halftime up 15, especially when they’ve only got 12, and maintain that. Our guys get all the credit for their defensive effort all night.”
The Vikings, who improved to 15-7, advanced to next week's Class 5A state tournament at Emporia's White Auditorium and will play a first-round game on Wednesday.