Just two short weeks ago, basketball spirits were running high at Missouri Southern.
Coming home after a road doubleheader sweep at Lincoln, the Lions had a combined three MIAA losses — one by the women, two by the men — and they were preparing to play three of their next four games at the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.
The homestand started with a split as the MSSU men defeated Pittsburg State 87-80 after the women dropped a 66-63 decision.
But since then the friendly confines of the LAPAC haven’t been so friendly as Nebraska-Kearney and Northeastern State swept the Lions on the last two Saturdays. In between, the Lions dropped a midweek doubleheader at Emporia State.
The Lions’ last two home appearances were disappointing, to say the least.
Disappointing against Nebraska-Kearney because both Loper teams came to town with only one MIAA victory apiece.
Disappointing against Northeastern State because both RiverHawk teams built double-digit halftime leads, and the Lions made no second-half charges while being held to their fewest points this season — 54 by the men, 45 by the women.
Now the Lion men — who hadn’t lost three straight since 2009 — are on their second three-game skid of the season.
“This is crazy,” junior center Jordan Talbert said. “The fact that it happens when I become a leader, I take that personal. When I was here (the previous two seasons), our leaders didn’t let that happen. Now it’s supposed to be my role to not let this happen.
“It’s time to get our minds back, get our bodies back and get back to work. We have to get focused on getting back to the basics, back to having fun out there. I don’t think we’re having fun right now. Obviously winning is fun and losing is not fun. We have to get back to the basics.”
“This team, if we get off to a quick start and make some baskets early, we’re pretty good,” men’s coach Robert Corn said. “If we don’t make baskets early, then we kind of play a little bit more in a panic mode rather than fighting through things.
“It was obvious (Saturday) when we had a hard time scoring, we didn’t do a very good job in fighting through it and played more in a panic where we didn’t take the shots we should have been taking.”
Missouri Southern’s women, after winning their first four league games in January, have lost four straight.
“We talked to them about we could not stop (on defense) before (NSU) did because of all their movement,” women’s coach Maryann Mitts said. “What you saw in the second half was when we would sub, they would get a 3 off. That is just us stopping first, and any time you stop first when you’re on defense, you’re going to get scored on or they are going to get an offensive rebound and get a putback.”
The task certainly doesn’t get any easier for the Lions as they face a road trip this week to Washburn on Thursday night and Fort Hays State on Saturday afternoon.
“We have to forget about (Saturday’s game), come into practice this week and do what we need to in order to get the win on the road,” sophomore guard Nicole Hartzog said.
“We’ll get them ready for Washburn and Hays,” Mitts said. “They are going to have to make a decision on whether or not we’re going to follow a game plan for an entire 40 minutes.”
JIM HENRY is executive sports editor of The Joplin Globe.
Missouri Southern Sports
Henry: Lions hit disappointing skid
- Missouri Southern Sports
-
-
Lions eliminated at regional
After a 14-inning heartbreaking defeat late Thursday night to Minnesota State, there was a question as to how Missouri Southern would respond on such a short turnaround.
-
'No one deserved to lose' Southern opener against Mavs
It’s hard to imagine a bigger emotional roller-coaster than the one the Missouri Southern baseball team rode the past week.
-
Lions squeezed in 14-inning loss to Minnesota State
An instant classic.
-
Lions open regional play against top-seeded Minnesota State
For most of March and April, Minnesota State endured a long winter as it gradually made its case for the home-field advantage that goes along with being the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Division II Central Region baseball tournament.
-
Lions qualify 12 for track nationals
Missouri Southern has qualified a dozen athletes — six men and six women — for the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships, it was announced Tuesday.
-
Times set for MSSU's regional tourney
MIAA Tournament champion Missouri Southern will travel to Mankato, Minn., today by bus in preparation for the six-team Central Region tournament at Franklin Rogers Park.
-
MSSU volleyball coach Trish Knight 'relieved of duties'
Missouri Southern volleyball coach Trish Knight was relieved of her coaching duties on Monday, according to a release from the MSSU athletics department.
-
MSSU seeded sixth in Mankato regional
MIAA champion Missouri Southern will face No. 1 seed Minnesota State-Mankato (35-8) in the first round of the Central Regional tournament Thursday at Mankato.
-
Ryan's three-run blast lifts Lions to MIAA title
Sam Ryan’s three-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning brought home the MIAA Championship for Missouri Southern in a 6-3 victory Saturday against No. 5 Missouri Western.
-
Bates' gem lifts MSSU into MIAA title round
Ryan Bates pitched Missouri Southern’s second complete game in two days Friday, and the Lions advanced to the championship game of the MIAA Tournament by defeating No. 5 Missouri Western 4-3 at CommunityAmerica Ballpark.
- More Missouri Southern Sports Headlines
-




