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HOOPER SCORES 17 IN HUSKER WIN OVER MINNESOTA

Jordan Hooper _ UNL _2010

Minneapolis, Minn. – Nebraska played its most complete games of the season, rolling to an 84-63 win over Minnesota at Williams Arena on Sunday evening.

With the victory, Nebraska improved to 13-6 overall and 3-3 in the Big Ten while notching its second Big Ten road victory. Minnesota slipped to 13-6 overall and 2-3 in the conference.

Senior Lindsey Moore put together her best game of the year with a season-high 26 points and a season-high seven rebounds to go along with seven assists and three steals in a marquee matchups of Big Ten point guards with Minnesota’s Rachel Banham. Moore hit 9-of-15 shots from the field, including 2-of-5 three-pointers and 6-of-7 free throws.

Jordan Hooper added 17 points and eight rebounds, while Emily Cady contributed her third double-double in Big Ten play with 12 points and a game-high 10 rebounds.

Freshman guard Rachel Theriot added the best all-around game of her young career with 13 points and a career-high eight assists against just one turnover. Theriot hit 5-of-8 shots from the field, including 3-of-5 three-pointers.

The contributions came across the board for the Big Red, who also got nine points, six rebounds and two assists from Hailie Sample and five points and three boards from Meghin Williams. Tear’a Laudermill rounded out the scoring for NU with a second half bucket while providing intense defensive pressure.

“It was a great win for us today, and it was great to get a win in the way we got it,” Nebraska Coach Connie Yori said. “I thought we were the most aggressive we have been all season, and I thought we got back to playing the kind of basketball we want to play. We defensive rebounded and got out in transition and we played with confidence. It is really fun to win when everybody contributes like they did today.”

Nebraska shot a season-high 48.3 percent (29-60) from the floor, including 8-of-15 three-pointers. NU also hit 18-of-23 free throws, while keeping Minnesota off the line entirely in the second half. NU won the battle of the boards, 42-35, and won the turnover battle 12-11.

Defensively, the Huskers’ zone defense held Banham to 15 points on just 6-of-21 shooting from the field. Banham entered the contest averaging nearly 21 points per game. Micaella Riche added 10 points and eight boards before fouling out, while Shayne Mullaney contributed 10 points for the Gophers.

Minnesota hit just 37.5 percent (24-64) of its shots from the field for the game, including 7-of-17 three-pointers, while hitting 8-of-10 free throws – all in the first half.

Nebraska put together a strong first half and took a 41-38 lead into the locker room at the break. Theriot led the Huskers with 10 points and five assists in the opening period, while hitting 4-of-6 shots from the field, including 2-of-3 three-pointers.

Cady added nine points and five rebounds, while Moore pitched in eight points and three assists. NU also got five points and five rebounds from Hooper despite playing just 12 minutes because of foul trouble. Williams added five big points and three boards in place of Hooper to help the Huskers, while Sample contributed four points, two boards and two assists in the first half.

The Huskers return home to take on Michigan State on Thursday night at the Devaney Center. The Spartans improved to 16-2 overall with a win at Indiana on Sunday afternoon and will be making their first-ever trip to the Devaney Center. Tip-off between the Huskers and Spartans is set for 7:05 p.m. and tickets are available now at Huskers.com.

OTERO MEN DOWN WNCC, 99-93 IN OT

WNCC Image

The Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team lost another heartbreaker Saturday afternoon, falling to Otero Junior College 99-93 in overtime at Cougar Palace.

It was the teams’ fourth overtime loss in the last eight games. Trey Moore, who finished with nine points and eight assists, said the team competed hard to tie the game at 82-82 to force overtime, but they just need to learn to finish.

“We played hard but it is our fourth overtime loss and I was pretty sure that we would have won one sometime,” Moore said. “It was big of us to come back, but we have to finish the game. “

The way the Cougars came back to force overtime was thrilling. The Cougars didn’t take their first lead of the contest until the 13:14 mark of the second half on a Charles Ward bucket. The Cougars were then down by as much as five points on different occasions with a minute to play when things started to turn their way.

Ward was the catalyst of the comeback as he hit a 3-pointer off an inbounds play to slice the lead to 80-78. Moments later, Ward stole the ball and dunked home the tying bucket. Otero came back and went ahead 82-80 with 21.3 seconds to play on two free throws by Yoshio Allen. WNCC answered as Tahir Little found a small gap underneath the bucket with 9.4 seconds to play to tie the game at 82-82.

Otero had a chance to win it at the end of regulation but the Cougars came through with two blocks to force the extra period.

Moore said the way the team came back, never giving up after the Rattlers opened the game with five straight 3-pointers, shows a lot of heart with this team.

“Those blocks were a big momentum changer because they still had time so we couldn’t celebrate after Ty made that shot. We got back and got the stop and send it into overtime,” Moore said. “We just need to get over that hump and come together as a team and make some shots in overtime.”

The Cougars were led in scoring by Ward with 37 points. Ward was 10 of 11 from the field, including four 3-pointers. WNCC also saw Quante Cooley finish with 16 points and 11 rebounds, while Cody Johnson has 12 points.

The Cougars did out-rebound the Rattlers 40-39 and also dished out 26 assists. Little led the team in assists with nine followed by Moore with eight.

The sub-region heart-breaking loss drops the team to 1-3 in the south sub-region, but they still are not out of a top finish for the regional tournament as they have plenty of sub-region games left.

“We still can win sub-regions with three losses, so we have to take it one game at a time,” Moore said. “We have to just get over that hump, dig deep and just keep going. We battled the whole game out there today, but we just have to finish games.”

Still, it is vital that that Cougars learn to close out a game. Look at it this way, if the Cougars would have won the four overtime games, their 7-10 record would be 11-6. On top of everything, the road doesn’t get any easier as they host Eastern Wyoming on Tuesday in another sub-region contest.

“We will get rested up with our Sunday break and then come back Monday, practice hard and prepare for them,” Moore said. “We don’t want another loss at home.”

Tuesday’s home contest begins at 7:30 p.m. and after that, the Cougars won’t be home again until Feb. 8-9 against Lamar Community College and Northeastern Junior College.

 

Otero                    41 41 18 – 99

WNCC                   36 46 11 – 93

OTERO

Chris Golden 17, Perryonte Smith 13, Kentwan Smith 17, Terrel Brown 10, Andre Reider 14, Alex Padgett 6, Yoshio Allen 20, Daniel Hield 2.

WNCC

Tahir Little 7, Zach Clemens 4, Quante Cooley 16, Trey Moore 9, Charles Ward 37, Cody Johnson 12, Youssoupha Kane 6, Chad Calcaterra 2.

WNCC WOMEN DOWN OTERO, 68-35

WNCC_Cougar _ 250 PixelsAshley Stevens finished with a double-double and the Western Nebraska Community College women’s basketball team used a stingy defense in picking up a South Sub-Region win over Otero Junior College 68-35 Saturday afternoon at Cougar Palace.

Stevens was one of many outstanding players on the day. Her 12 points, 12 rebounds included two 3-pointers on the day. In fact, the Cougars connected on 10 treys altogether, led by Shalisa Moffit with three 3-pointers. Gritt Ryder popped in two treys, while Mikayla Brower, Laurin Rivera and Jessica Aratani each buried one.

“The teams will not know who is on that night,” Stevens said. “It is like a weapon for us because anybody can step up and hit that 3-pointer.”

While the offense was highlighted by outstanding 3-pointer shooting, what really defined the win was the team’s defense. Saturday, the Cougars held Otero to just 28 percent shooting. The Cougars also out-rebounded the Rattlers 45-34.

Stevens said the team played much better defense against Otero then they did Trinidad on Friday night.

“After our defense last night [Friday] where we gave up too many points, we knew we had to pick up our defense and play all-together,” the Bridgeport graduate said. “We played last night where we weren’t moving and keeping the ball in front. Today we picked it up and kept everything in front of us and played better as a team defensively.”

Stevens said the key to the Cougars stingy defense was communication.

“We had to talk a lot more today,” Stevens said. “Like on their back screens or even other screens, you have to tell your teammates that they are coming so they don’t get blindsided. And when you go trap, you have make sure the person doesn’t see us.”

More importantly, though, the win helped the Cougars remain perfect in the South Sub-Region at 4-0 and they have a two game lead over the second place teams. The winner of the sub-region hosts the Region IX tournament in March.

“We can’t let that [leading the region] get to our heads,” Stevens said. “We have to keep playing has hard as we are right know. We have to keep stepping up to each level and to each new team that we play. We play Eastern Wyoming on Tuesday and they have beat McCook and Otero, so we have to step up and try to beat them, too. We have to take it one game at a time.”

The early part of the contest was a battle as both teams were knotted at 10-10. It was then the Cougars would go on a 12-01 run, aided by back-to-back NBA-range 3-pointers by Moffit. The Cougars also received six points from Rivera to take a 22-10 lead. WNCC didn’t let up as Stevens scored the last seven points on the half to give the Cougars a 37-21 lead at intermission.

The second half was all WNCC thanks to one of the top defenses in the nation. WNCC, leading 42-24, came back and buried five straight 3-pointers. Ryder started things and then Moffit, Brower, Rivera and Aratani each hit a 20-footer to put WNCC up 59-29 and never looked back.

The Cougars had solid scoring with three players in double figures. Aratani led the way with 13 points while also pulling down six rebounds. Stevens and Ryder each finished with 12 points, followed by Rivera and Moffit with nine points each. Ryder also pulled down six rebounds and had six assists.

Otero didn’t have anyone in double figures. Holly Carter led the team with nine points.

WNCC, 4-0 in sub-region play, will look to stay unbeaten when they host Eastern Wyoming College on Tuesday beginning at 5:30 p.m.

 

Otero                    21 14 – 35

WNCC                   37 31 – 68

OTERO

Meredith Barnes 2, Holly Carter 9, Siutin Lo’amanu 5, Brittany Gutierrez 5, Chelby Santiago 4, Danica Shipley 8, Chantal Cross 2.

WNCC

Mikayla Brower 6, Laurin Rivera 9, Kelsey Doddridge 1, Gritt Ryder 12, Shalisa Moffit 9, Simone Evans 4, Ashley Stevens 12, Jessica Aratani 13, Jenna Lindquist 2.

WESTERN NEW MEXICO MEN 76, CSC MEN 65

BasketballSILVER CITY, N.M. – Western New Mexico’s Chad Carter scored 24 points and two others joined him in double figures as the Mustangs    turned back road weary Chadron State College 75-65 Saturday night at Drag’s Court.

The Eagles, now 1-14 overall and 1-10 in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference, played in a double overtime game Friday evening at New Mexico Highlands and then arrived in Silver City, N.M., early Saturday morning.

On Saturday, CSC was also missing its second-leading scorer – Grant Stone – to an ankle injury and they lost starter Kendrick Holliman with an apparent shoulder injury in the first half.

However, the Eagles played well in a tightly contested game. The two teams traded the lead eight times and it featured six ties before Western New Mexico pulled away down the stretch.

In the second half, Western New Mexico (6-10, 5-7 RMAC) shot 48 percent from the field and made 12 of 15 from the charity stripe.

In addition to Carter’s 24 points, Juan Suarez scored 12 points and Lucio Luttrell added 11 more.

Zac Bargen, who entered the weekend as the RMAC’s leading scorer, led Chadron State with 20 points and added six rebounds and three assists.

Also for Chadron State, Kyle Vinich scored 14 points and had five rebounds, David Downey scored five points and grabbed a team-high seven boards and Dominique Watkins scored eight points.

Chadron State will host CSU-Pueblo and the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs Friday and Saturday in Chadron. Both men’s games start at 8 p.m.

WESTERN NEW MEXICO DOWNS CSC WOMEN, 72-44

CSC Eagles Logo _ 2012_13_14_ectSILVER CITY, N.M. – Five Western New Mexico women’s basketball players scored at least nine points and the Mustangs used a 25-3 scoring run in the first half en route to their 72-44 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference victory over Chadron State Saturday at Drag’s Court.

Morgan Wohltman scored 15 points and Heather Hamilton and Kassie Scott each scored 11 points to lead a balanced scoring attack. All eight Western New Mexico players scored and the Mustangs shot over 42 percent from the field and nailed 10 3-point shots.

The Eagles, now 3-12 overall and 3-8 in the conference, led 11-4 early in the first half but the Mustangs erupted on a 25-3 scoring run and led 36-20 at halftime.

In the second half, Western New Mexico continued to put the pressure on the Eagles’ defense and increased its lead to as many as 29 points.

Chadron State also had eight players score but Kattie Ranta, who finished with 12, was the only player in double figures. Ranta also finished with a team-high six rebounds.

Also for Chadron State, Dallas Shaw finished with nine points and Kate Simonton and Sadie Waugh chipped in six apiece.

The Eagles will host Colorado State University-Pueblo Friday and the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs Saturday in Chadron. Both women’s games tip-off at 6 p.m.

ALLIANCE WRESTLERS FIFTH AT CHADRON INVITE

Alliance Bulldogs Logo _ Circle _#2
Chadron High Wrestling Invitational – Jan 18-19
Campbell County(Gillette, Wyo) 308,
Cheyenne,WY 249,
Fossil Ridge, CO 172.5,
Natrona(Casper, WY) 140,
Alliance 131,
Valentine 121,
Chadron 98.5,
Douglas AFB, SD 96,
 Hot Spring, SD 90.5,
Sterling, CO 86,
Gering 85,
Bennett Co, SD 79.5,
Mitchell 79.5,
Custer, SD 62,
Gordon-Rushville 62,
Poudre, CO 57.5,
Newell, WY 47.5,
Bridgeport 45,
Crawford 25,
Ogallala 24,
Evergreen, CO 23,
Pine Ridge 19,
 Wheatland, WY 19,
Hemingford 16.5,
Little Wound,SD 2,
Minatare 0
 __________________________________________
Alliance Individual Medalists:
120 Devin Ushio 3rd,
126 Walker Johnson 4th,
152 Tyson Dowler 1st,
160 Dawson Johnson 4th,
195 Kyson Schnell 5th

ALLIANCE GOLF PRO RESIGNS

Alliance Logo 2012 Small

City of Alliance Golf Pro Brian Jerred has accepted a similar position in Minnesota at a substantially higher rate of pay.

“The City Manager and I have already met today, and have started the ball rolling on a replacement” said Culture and Leisure Services Director Shana Brown. “We’re keeping all of our options open for now.”

Jerred’s current contract continues through the end of February.

“I hate to see Brian leave,” said City Manager J. D. Cox. “Yet, I believe we have a great town and environment to offer a new golf pro. We have made many fabulous hires during the last couple of years and I very much look forward to seeing what may come!” Brown added, “We wish Brian the best and are grateful for all he did to develop and promote  golf in our community. Although we will need to move quickly, I think our future is bright.”

EAGLE MEN FALL IN DOUBLE OT, 89-86

Chadron State Eagles Image

LAS VEGAS, N.M. – New Mexico Highlands’ Augustus French’s triple double of 16 points, 10 rebounds and 12 blocks helped spur the Cowboys to an 89-86 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference victory over Chadron State College in double overtime Friday.

While French’s triple double stole the show, he received plenty of help. Mannie Cass scored 24 points and Lavell McDade scored 20 more as the Cowboys made free throws down the stretch in regulation and both overtime periods to upend the Eagles.

The Eagles had a chance to tie the game in double overtime as time expired but the shot rimmed out.

Zac Bargen scored a career-high 33 points and Kyle Vinich added 19 points, also a career-high, to lead Chadron State.

“This is the best game we’ve played, especially on the road,” CSC head coach Brent Bargen said following the game. “I’m disappointed we didn’t get the win but I’m proud of my team.”

In regulation, the Cowboys trailed 69-66 with less than a minute to play but Cass was fouled on a 3-point attempt and sank all three of his attempts to tie the game.

The Eagles had a chance to score but Highlands gathered the defensive rebound with 25 seconds to play. However, Chadron State’s defense stood strong in the final possession of regulation and the two squads headed to the extra session.

In the first overtime, the Eagles nailed two quick 3-pointers but Highlands chipped away and managed to tie it at 79-79 from the foul line once again.

Chadron State took a quick lead after Bargen sank a trey to open the second overtime but French tied the game for the 10th time after sinking both free throws. The Cowboys then added a quick 3-pointer from Dominick Baca following a CSC turnover and McDade put them up 88-83 with a minute and a half to play after a steal and a layup.

Bargen hit a 3-pointer on the Eagles’ next possession – his sixth of the game – but the Eagles couldn’t get any closer.

In addition to career nights from Bargen and Vinich, Chadron State’s David Downey scored 15 points and hauled in seven rebounds.

Also for Chadron State, Chris Taylor scored seven points and grabbed eight boards and dished out four assists, while Kendrick Holliman and Justyn Anderson scored six apiece.

CSC WOMEN DOWN N.M. HIGHLANDS, 66-64

CSC Eagles Logo _ Sports 2012

LAS VEGAS, N.M. – Chadron State’s Lisa Durden hit two free throws with 3.3 seconds to play and New Mexico Highlands missed a long range shot as time expired to give the Eagles a 66-64 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference victory Friday evening.

The Eagles, now 3-11 overall and 3-7 in the RMAC, trailed by as many as nine points in the second half but they received some clutch play down the stretch.

Hattie Guzman put the Eagles up 64-62 with 56 seconds to play when she sank a layup while being fouled. She added the ensuing free throw and it was the first time CSC led since early in the second half.

Highlands answered with two free throws from Alyssa Lopez, who finished with a game-high 22 points, but the Eagles had possession of the ball and 25 seconds on the clock.

After running down the time in the backcourt, Durden, who finished with nine points, drove to the lane and drew a foul on the Cowgirls. Durden calmly sank both foul shots and Highlands’ final shot spun off the back end of the rim.

Dallas Shaw led the Eagles with her second consecutive double double – 11 points and 12 rebounds – andGreer Babbe added 11 points, five boards and two blocks.

Guzman finished with 10 points and Sadie Waugh scored nine more.

The Eagles and Cowgirls each made 20 field goals but CSC shot 36 percent compared to just 29 for Highlands

NEBRASKA PREP BASKETBALL SCORES — FRIDAY, JAN. 18

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BOYS BASKETBALL
Alliance 52, Ogallala 39
Aquinas 63, Hastings St. Cecilia 36
Arlington 57, Douglas County West 40
Ashland-Greenwood 61, Syracuse 47
Axtell 51, Wilcox-Hildreth 48, OT
Blair 67, Elkhorn 62
Bloomfield 47, Hartington 46
Boone Central/Newman Grove 62, Ord 44
Boys Town 76, Nebraska City 63
Brady 52, SMC 43, OT
Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 56, Exeter/Milligan 51
Centennial 42, Heartland 38
Clarinda, Iowa 47, Auburn 32
Clearwater/Orchard 76, Osmond 45
Columbus 58, Lincoln North Star 57, OT
Columbus Lakeview 51, Schuyler 35
Columbus Scotus 67, Archbishop Bergan 53
Creighton 68, Elkhorn Valley 36
Crofton 64, Plainview 38
Deshler 37, Harvard 22
Doniphan-Trumbull 78, Superior 43
Elkhorn South 61, Waverly 58, OT
Elm Creek 70, Pleasanton 37
Ewing 42, Elgin Public/Pope John 41
Fillmore Central 49, Tri County 31
Fort Calhoun 72, Conestoga 41
Gering 56, Chadron 55
Gibbon 46, Centura 42
Gordon/Rushville 65, Cody-Kilgore 40
Gothenburg 55, Broken Bow 39
Grand Island Northwest 47, Hastings 39
High Plains Community 76, Lawrence-Nelson 44
Holdrege 59, Minden 53
Homer 52, Wisner-Pilger 44
Humphrey 42, Lyons-Decatur Northeast 31
Hyannis 41, Arthur County 35
Johnson-Brock 78, Friend 45
Kenesaw 67, Franklin 32
Laurel-Concord 54, West Holt 52
Lincoln Lutheran 47, Bishop Neumann 40
Lincoln Pius X 60, Lincoln Christian 57, OT
Lincoln Southeast 57, Kearney 48
Lincoln Southwest 61, Lincoln East 57
Logan View 52, Stanton 34
Lutheran High Northeast 71, Clarkson/Leigh 46
McCool Junction 48, Osceola 42
Meridian 50, Hampton 48
Milford 54, Elmwood-Murdock 34
Millard South 59, Papillion-LaVista South 47
Millard West 75, Omaha North 68
Mitchell 64, Bayard 45
Mullen 47, Twin Loup 37
Norris 46, Bennington 43
North Platte 69, Grand Island 59
Oakland-Craig 58, North Bend Central 33
Omaha Burke 51, Norfolk 44
Omaha Central 51, Omaha Creighton Prep 33
Omaha Concordia 55, St. Albert, Council Bluffs, Iowa 51
Omaha South 77, Omaha Northwest 36
Overton 71, Eustis-Farnam 40
Palmyra 70, East Butler 45
Papillion-LaVista 64, Bellevue West 39
Pawnee City 65, Falls City Sacred Heart 57
Ponca 54, Bancroft-Rosalie 45
Randolph 71, Neligh-Oakdale 20
Ravenna 54, Loup City 43
Red Cloud 51, Silver Lake 43
Scribner-Snyder 56, Omaha Christian Academy 50
Seward 64, Aurora 59, OT
Shelby/Rising City 52, Dorchester 48, OT
Sidney 56, Bridgeport 43
Sterling 47, Southern 31
Stuart 51, Arcadia 38
Wahoo 65, Norfolk Catholic 39
Wakefield 54, Emerson-Hubbard 31
Wausa 68, Winside 26
Wayne 55, Hartington Cedar Catholic 40
West Point-Beemer 52, Twin River 38
Wilber-Clatonia 36, Malcolm 34
Wood River 54, Central City 44
York 58, Fairbury 44
Colby Classic Tournament
Semifinal
McCook 43, Hays, Kan. 30
Nebraska Native American Tournament
Winnebago 79, Santee 63
River Cities Conference Tournament
Fifth Place
Ralston 51, Beatrice 47

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Anselmo-Merna 23, North Central 20
Arlington 62, Douglas County West 38
Ashland-Greenwood 44, Syracuse 27
Axtell 57, Wilcox-Hildreth 32
Bancroft-Rosalie 71, Ponca 64
Bellevue West 58, Papillion-LaVista 45
Boone Central/Newman Grove 54, Ord 34
Brady 55, SMC 25
Centennial 37, Heartland 28
Central City 47, Wood River 42, 2OT
Centura 44, Gibbon 24
Chadron 49, Gering 29
Columbus 54, Lincoln North Star 33
Columbus Lakeview 66, Schuyler 39
Creighton 65, Elkhorn Valley 41
Crofton 68, Plainview 27
Deshler 68, Harvard 10
East Butler 47, Palmyra 38
Elkhorn 55, Blair 36
Elm Creek 54, Pleasanton 42
Emerson-Hubbard 48, Wakefield 43
Ewing 55, Elgin Public/Pope John 47
Exeter/Milligan 60, Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 49
Falls City Sacred Heart 40, Pawnee City 29
Fillmore Central 58, Tri County 18
Fort Calhoun 56, Conestoga 31
Friend 63, Johnson-Brock 39
Gordon/Rushville 65, Cody-Kilgore 24
Gothenburg 38, Broken Bow 30
Grand Island Northwest 72, Hastings 27
Hampton 64, Meridian 47
Hartington 60, Bloomfield 43
Hastings St. Cecilia 54, Aquinas 41
High Plains Community 39, Lawrence-Nelson 37
Homer 68, Wisner-Pilger 8
Howells/Dodge 56, Tekamah-Herman 34
Humphrey 65, Lyons-Decatur Northeast 49
Hyannis 53, Arthur County 37
Johnson County Central 37, Auburn 36
Kenesaw 32, Franklin 29
Laurel-Concord 62, West Holt 31
Lincoln High 36, Lincoln Northeast 19
Lincoln Pius X 40, Lincoln Christian 18
Lincoln Southeast 81, Kearney 38
Lincoln Southwest 53, Lincoln East 32
Lutheran High Northeast 36, Clarkson/Leigh 19
Malcolm 62, Wilber-Clatonia 30
Milford 53, Elmwood-Murdock 31
Millard South 43, Papillion-LaVista South 34
Millard West 54, Omaha North 51
Minden 46, Holdrege 41
Mitchell 74, Bayard 32
Norris 53, Bennington 35
North Bend Central 46, Oakland-Craig 27
North Platte 47, Grand Island 35
Ogallala 44, Alliance 41
Omaha Central 68, Omaha Marian 30
Omaha Concordia 46, St. Albert, Council Bluffs, Iowa 25
Omaha Northwest 54, Omaha South 42
Osceola 51, McCool Junction 40
Osmond 53, Clearwater/Orchard 27
Overton 40, Eustis-Farnam 32
Pierce 47, Kearney Catholic 42
Randolph 53, Neligh-Oakdale 39
Ravenna 38, Loup City 17
Seward 43, Aurora 20
Shelby/Rising City 59, Dorchester 13
Sidney 65, Bridgeport 37
Silver Lake 40, Red Cloud 27
Sterling 49, Southern 46, OT
Stuart 54, Arcadia 31
Superior 58, Doniphan-Trumbull 53
Wahoo 46, Norfolk Catholic 43
Waverly 64, Elkhorn South 47
York 43, Fairbury 31
Colby Tournament
Semifinal
McCook 41, Colby, Kan. 28
Goldenrod Conference Tournament
Semifinal
Cedar Valley 46, Palmer 43
Lindsay Holy Family 35, Humphrey St. Francis 27
Panhandle Conference Tournament
Crawford 64, Edgemont, S.D. 34
Sioux County 45, Hemingford 44
River Cities Conference Tournament
Fifth Place
Omaha Duchesne Academy 43, Omaha Roncalli 24
Third Place
Omaha Gross Catholic 57, Omaha Skutt Catholic 45
South Platte Valley Tournament
Semifinal
Hershey 47, Chase County 16
North Platte St. Patrick’s 52, Sutherland 46

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