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League titles on line for TMP -2/13/2012, 10:17 AM

Tiger softball starts season Tuesday at home -2/13/2012, 10:17 AM

No. 7 KU, K-State ready for tussle -2/13/2012, 10:17 AM

Indian girls look to keep rolling -2/13/2012, 10:29 AM

Nicholl commentary: Setting the pace for area basketball -2/13/2012, 10:17 AM

TMP girls have no trouble with Quinter -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Hammeke leads TMP boys in rout -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

HHS has good day at Last Chance meet -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Indian girls roll to win in Liberal -2/12/2012, 8:09 PM

HHS boys' rally falls short in Liberal -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Tiger wrestlers suffer disappointing loss -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Tiger women notch big win -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Tigers win thriller at GMC -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

HHS' Binder looking forward to FHSU -2/12/2012, 8:00 PM

Scores, Feb. 11 -2/11/2012, 7:04 PM

-2/11/2012, 2:39 PM

High school basketball boxscores, Feb. 10 -2/10/2012, 11:23 PM

Scores, Feb. 10 -2/10/2012, 11:32 PM

Tiger men look to avenge big loss -2/10/2012, 10:24 AM

Tiger wrestlers escape with win -2/10/2012, 10:23 AM

Shaw stepping in as starter for Tiger women -2/10/2012, 10:23 AM

Monarchs win short dual -2/10/2012, 10:23 AM

Plainville suffers first loss -2/10/2012, 10:23 AM

HHS wrestlers claim WAC title -2/10/2012, 10:22 AM

Monarchs set to host Quinter on Friday -2/9/2012, 10:16 AM

HHS travels to Liberal -2/9/2012, 10:16 AM

Lehman's double-double helps Tiger women win -2/9/2012, 10:26 AM

Tigers roll to win at GMC -2/9/2012, 10:16 AM

Natoma's Casey putting up big numbers, despite record -2/9/2012, 10:26 AM

Plainville's Casey inks with Dodge City -2/9/2012, 10:16 AM

TMP girls roll by Larned -2/8/2012, 10:13 AM

Monarch boys win thriller -2/8/2012, 10:13 AM

Indian girls move to 4-0 in WAC -2/8/2012, 10:13 AM

Press hurts Indian boys in road loss -2/8/2012, 10:12 AM

Keyser picks up another honor for Tigers -2/8/2012, 10:12 AM

Tuesday's high school boxscores -2/7/2012, 11:12 PM

Scores, Feb. 7 -2/7/2012, 11:02 PM

Tigers on final stretch -2/7/2012, 10:12 AM

FHSU women in key home games -2/7/2012, 10:12 AM

Sports Scores

Saturday

College baskeball

Men

Kansas 81, Okla. State 66

Texas 75, Kansas State 64

Fort Hays 67, Central Mo. 66

Women

Fort Hays 68, Central Mo. 51

Friday

High school basketball

Girls

Pratt 40, Haven 38

Beloit 51 Russell 34

TMP-Marian 57, Quinter 34

Pike Valley 50, Wilson 38

Hugoton 43, Scott City 35

Hoisington 55, Ellinwood 26

Hays 64, Liberal 33

Thunder Ridge 46, Lakeside 22

Hoxie 81, Oberlin 18

Natoma 41, Northern Valley 16

St. John's Beloit-Tipton 53, Chase 35

Atwood 52, Norton 29

Wheatland-Grinnell 46, Tribune 42

WaKeeney-Trego 58, Stockton 29

Concordia 41, Chapman 30

Lakin 45, Elkhart 42

St. John-Hudson 60, Victoria 27

Boys

Natoma 56, Northern Valley 54

Phillipsburg 68, Osborne 27

TMP-Marian 74. Quinter 33

Concordia 52, Chapman 34

Beloit 64, Russell 39

Ness City 58, Otis-Bison 50

Liberal 52, Hays High 40

Hoxie 46, Oberlin 33

Scott City 83, Hugoton 43

La Crosse 47, Central Plains 40

St. John 49, Victoria 39

Pratt 61, Haven 38

Concordia 52, Chapman 34

Hoisington 54, Ellinwood 33

Scott City 83, Hugoton 43

Tribune 48, Wheatland-Grinnell 41

Garden City 57, Great Bend 54 (OT)

Downs-Lakeside 39, Thunder Ridge 34

WaKeeney-Trego 82, Stockton 59

Lakin 52, Elkhart 46

Hill City 73, Smith Center 58

Click To View All


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Tigers can't hold off upset bid from Emporia

Published on -3/7/2010, 6:49 AM

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By CONOR NICHOLL

cnicholl@dailynews.net

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- After his news conference, a visibly upset Mark Johnson rode the elevator up a floor level, got off, crumpled up a piece of paper and threw it in a trash can, releasing some of the frustration after a disappointing performance from his Fort Hays State University men's basketball team.

The Tigers, ranked 13th in NCAA Division II and third in the South Central Regional poll, were upset 65-61 by Emporia State University in Friday night's first round of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association postseason tournament at Municipal Auditorium. Fort Hays committed 17 turnovers, its most since Jan. 20, and shot 10-of-17 (58.8 percent) from the free throw line, lowest in seven games.

"Every decision we made tonight was ridiculous and not very smart and I think Emporia deserves a lot of credit for putting us in those situations," said Johnson, the Tigers' ninth-year coach, said. "We have struggled when teams have gotten physical and tough with us. We seem to be soft at times and I thought their pressure created our softness and our inability to make quality decisions."

Last Sunday, the Tigers completed the regular season with a 94-47 home victory against Emporia State, the biggest margin of victory since FHSU changed conferences four years ago, and biggest in the schools' all-time series. Five days later, Fort Hays, seeded second in the tournament, trailed for the final 34 minutes to the seventh-seeded Hornets. Down 12 early in the second half, Fort Hays closed the gap to 55-53 in the final 90 seconds before turnovers and poor choices cost the Tigers.

"I don't think last week's game had any effect on our performance," Johnson said. "... We played hard tonight, that wasn't our problem. Our problem was just our ineptness. The game to me comes down to two things, we turn it over 17 times and we made 10-of-17 free throws."

"At crucial times, we made mistakes and turnovers that cost us," senior forward Tim Peintner said. "That's the key. You can't put the ball in the bucket and you turn it over too many times, you aren't going to have a chance."

Defensively, Fort Hays (22-6) sets a goal to hold every opponent to 65 points or fewer. The Tigers were 14-1 when they held an opponent to 66 points this season. Emporia State (14-14) shot 37.3 percent (19-of-51) from the field; FHSU was 15-0 when an opponent shot 40 percent or below. But the Tigers struggled offensively against Emporia State's pressure.

"Our team has two weaknesses and they are glaring weaknesses," Johnson said. "Toughness gives us problems. If you get real physical with us, we seem to struggle with that. Then, basketball IQ on the floor gives us problems. What happens is, when it's an easy, loose game, decisions are pretty easy to make because you are not forced into tough situations over and over. ... When people get real physical and tough with us, our softness kind of shows and our decision-making is kind of glaring. That's what's got us tonight."

Fort Hays is 5-5 in its last 10 games. The Tigers had a chance to host the regional, especially after University of Central Missouri, the MIAA regular season champion and the regional's top-ranked team, was upset by Washburn University on Friday afternoon. After Friday's loss, FHSU will travel next week for the NCAA tournament.

"We just dropped the ball," Peintner said. "Plain and simple. We dropped the ball tonight as a team. The door, like coach said before the game, cracked open a little bit. We had a chance to do something with it."

Emporia State continued its run of beating higher seeded teams. Two years ago, ESU defeated Fort Hays in the second round and became the first No. 8 seed to reach the championship game. This season, ESU and Washburn's victories yielded the first time in MIAA conference tournament history that both the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds lost in the first round. ESU, injury-plagued all season, has gotten healthier down the stretch and won five of its last six.

"They bounce back and respond with effort," Emporia State coach David Moe said. "Character would be the No. 1 thing as far as was what those guys have shown."

Both teams shot well from the field to start the game. At the first media timeout, ESU led 15-14 behind 7-of-9 shooting, while Fort Hays was 6-of-7. Emporia State carried a 33-27 lead into halftime as the Tigers turned the ball over 10 times.

"We probably had maybe four times we just threw it out-of-bounds and the guy couldn't catch it," Johnson said. "One where just threw the ball around the top of the key and everybody just stood and looked. I felt like we were timid."

"They came after us and we didn't do a good job of taking care of the ball," junior guard Corbin Kuntzsch said.

Early in the second half, Fort Hays, down 37-27, had another costly turnover. Peintner (team-high 17 points) grabbed a rebound and threw a pass to junior forward Ken Bowman, who was behind ESU's defense. The ball deflected off Bowman's fingertips and went out-of-bounds.

"As a senior, I have got to be smarter than that. I put a lot of that on my shoulders," Peintner said.

Fort Hays closed the gap to two, before the Tigers had several late turnovers and a costly foul 70 feet from the basket that put the Hornets at the foul line. Emporia State -- which finished 23-of-24 from the line -- made eight free throws down the stretch to clinch the win. ESU put four players in double figures, led by 14 points from senior Tim Niles.

"We just have to be a smarter team as a whole and make better plays and smarter plays," Peintner said.

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