Michigan State basketball falls to Kansas in the Champions Classic

Michigan State goes ice cold and drops their Champions Classic match-up against Kansas

Michigan State basketball participated in the Champions Classic on Tuesday night with a match-up against Kansas. Unfortunately, the Spartans went ice cold from the floor and fell to the Jayhawks 77 to 69.

Honestly, it’s actually impressive that MSU only lost by 8. I know no one wants a moral victory after a frustrating loss, but Michigan State shot 3-for-24 from three on the night but still annoyed Kansas and hung around against the No. 1 ranked team in the country.

Frankie Fidler and Jaxon Kohler led the way in scoring for MSU, with 15 and 12 points respectively. For Kansas, Hunter Dickinson dropped 28 points.

This was a tough game for Jaden Akins as it looked like Kansas was determined to make his life miserable all night and force other players to beat them. He only had two points on the night, but, in his defense, the Jayhawks were very focused on him specifically.

Michigan State will have a chance to get back in the winning column on Saturday when they play Bowling Green.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan state news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Andrew Brewster on Twitter @IAmBrewster.

Saints make some good moves in Dane Brugler’s two-round mock draft

The Saints got better in the trenches on both side of the ball with their picks in Dane Brugler’s two-round 2024 mock draft:

These should be some popular choices for New Orleans Saints fans. There are many draft analysts who are better connected and more clued-in to what scouts and teams are thinking than the Athletic’s Dane Brugler, who updated his projections for the 2024 NFL draft with a two-round mock.

Brugler has been all-over the Saints’ interest in prospects like Chris Olave and Isaiah Foskey in recent years, so it’s important to tap in when he’s sharing information. A lot will change between now and draft day at the end of April, but Brugler’s projections are often a good tell as to which positions the Saints might be favoring.

And in this mock draft he has New Orleans upgrading its pass rush in the first round with Florida State defensive end Jared Verse. Here’s why Brugler sees Verse as a fit with the Saints at No. 14:

The quarterback situation will dominate draft talk, but the Saints must address the trenches (on both sides) this offseason. With his experience and traits, Verse is a plug-and-play pass rusher who fits the mold for what New Orleans likes to target in Round 1.

Verse nails the athletic prototype the Saints look for at the right defensive end spot, weighing in at a listed 6-foot-4 and 260 pounds. Timing drills and final weigh-ins at the combine will be important for New Orleans’ pre-draft process in evaluating him, but his tape speaks for itself: Verse came away with 29.5 tackles for loss, 18 sacks, 3 pass deflections, 2 fumble recoveries, and a forced fumble in his 25 games at Florida State, plus 89 tackles (45 solo). Pro Football Focus charting found he generated 60 quarterback pressures this season. He can play against top-shelf competition.

So it’s safe to say that Verse would add some much-needed pass rush production off the edge. That would be big for a Saints defense that tied for the fourth-fewest sacks and fifth-worst pressure rate in 2023. Cameron Jordan isn’t the force he once was and Carl Granderson can’t do it alone while Foskey and Payton Turner struggle to make a positive impact. Tanoh Kpassagnon is a good player to have in the rotation but he shouldn’t rank fifth on the team in pass-rush snaps (264).

But this is a two-round projection — so what does Brugler have the Saints doing with that second-round pick coming back to them from the Denver Broncos, slotted in at No. 45 overall? It’s no secret that their offensive line wasn’t good enough in 2023, so Brugler likes New Orleans to draft one of this year’s underrated blockers in Kansas Jayhawks tackle/guard Dominick Puni. Here’s why:

The Saints aren’t ready to give up on Trevor Penning just yet, but they still need to address the offensive line in a major way. After playing with his older brothers at Central Missouri, Puni transferred to Kansas and put together back-to-back strong seasons, starting at both left tackle and left guard.

Puni certainly has the size the Saints look for at a listed 6-foot-5 and 320 pounds, though he might be moving back to guard in the NFL after playing left tackle in 2023. Pro teams (especially the Saints) have very strict standards for arm length and wingspan when evaluating college left tackles and there are concerns Puni might not hit those thresholds.

James Hurst was a liability for the Saints at left guard last season and he’ll be entering a contract year in 2024, the same year he’s turning 33 years old. New Orleans is hopeful that Nick Saldiveri can develop into a starting-quality left guard, but he wasn’t able to fully make the transition from playing right tackle in college before an injury took him out late in the regular season. Puni has more experience at the position and the ability to play left tackle is a positive given the uncertain-at-best outlook for Penning.

Both of these picks would address the Saints’ needs and make the team better. There’s certainly an argument for drafting a young quarterback but don’t expect Dennis Allen and Mickey Loomis to reverse course on Derek Carr after spending four months making excuses for his poor performance. Their mission statement this offseason is going to be all about supporting him and empowering him to lead the offense. That means improving the trench play on both sides of the line and getting him more weapons to work with.

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Former Jayhawks basketball player Frank Mason III says he wants to try out for Chiefs

The former Kansas Jayhawks star tweeted over the weekend that he wanted an opportunity to try out with the #Chiefs for 2023.

Former Jayhawks basketball player Frank Mason III might be looking to make a career change.

We’ve seen former college basketball players make the transition to the NFL tight end position, but how about a 5-foot-11, 190-pound guard converting to receiver or cornerback? It wouldn’t be so out of the ordinary for Mason, who as a high school basketball player with no experience playing football, was offered a full-ride scholarship to play football at West Virginia.

Mason tweeted over the weekend that he’d like an opportunity to revisit that offer with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Mason, of course, went on to play college hoops for Bill Self at the University of Kansas, where he’d become a consensus First-Team All-American, Big 12 Player of the Year and a consensus National Player of the Year in 2017. He was selected by the Sacramento Kings in the second round of the 2017 NBA draft and appeared in 52 games. He’d later sign a two-way contract with the Milwaukee Bucks and earn the NBA G-League MVP in 2020.

He’s since bounced around between a few NBA G-League teams, but could his next home be GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium? The 28-year-old is still a world-class athlete, appearing in a Basketball tournament for Team USA this past Summer. At the very least, Brett Veach should give him an opportunity to try out at the team’s rookie minicamp this summer and see what happens. In the worst-case scenario, nothing comes of the tryout. In the best-case scenario, you find a diamond in the rough that could help your team.

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Cowardly Missouri reportedly passes on Liberty in favor of security

The Border War will have to wait a little big longer before it resumes. Blame Missouri.

Back in 2011, just days after the University of Missouri announced it would be abandoning the Big 12 for the greener pastures of the Southeastern Conference, then-Mizzou athletic director Mike Alden pleaded to keep a century-old rivalry alive with Kansas.

The Border War stretched back not just to the 1800s, but the bad blood pre-dated the Civil War itself. Now Missouri was leaving its longtime rival—helping throw the conference into turmoil as Texas A&M went to the SEC, Colorado joined the Pac 12 and Nebraska moved to the Big Ten—and Alden just couldn’t understand why the Jayhawks wouldn’t want to continue playing the Tigers.

“Everyone in here recognizes that our rivalry with the University of Kansas is one of the great rivalries in our country,” Alden told reporters in November 2011. “It’s gone on for, I believe, 119 years, and it’s certainly our hope and our desire to continue to participate against the University of Kansas in every sport that we play — and for the next 119 years.”

At the time Alden argued that traditional rivals like Florida-Florida State, Georgia-Georgia Tech, Kentucky-Louisville and Clemson-South Carolina continue to face each other despite playing in different conferences.

Also at the time, Mizzou had won five of the last six Border War games in football, taking a 57–54–9 all-time series lead as KU football began its long trek to rock bottom. Similarly, the Tigers’ men’s basketball program had seen a quick resurgence under head coach Frank Haith and was ranked in the Top 25.

Of course Missouri wanted the series to continue. The school could have its cake and eat it, too, jumping to a much more powerful conference while reaping the benefits of its previous commitments. All while their programs continued to excel.

Keep that in mind for what you’re about to read next.

On Friday, after days of speculation that Mizzou and Kansas were set to renew their football rivalry at the Liberty Bowl, Brett McMurphy of Action Network reported the Tigers specifically declined not just an invite to the Liberty Bowl, but any bowl game in which they would have to face the Jayhawks.

Per McMurphy:

The Jayhawks, who are making their first bowl appearance since 2008, were not opposed to playing the Tigers in a bowl, sources said.

Schools provide their bowl preferences and the conferences, bowls and schools usually come to an agreement whenever possible. It’s not unusual for schools to request not playing certain opponents in the postseason, sources said.

The Liberty Bowl is one of three that matches SEC vs. Big 12 opponents. The other two are the Sugar and Texas bowls. Missouri and Kansas are both 6-6.

“A 6-6 team dictating who they don’t want to play in a bowl?” an industry source said. “What a world. What a world.”

The Jayhawks and Tigers are both 6-6 but Kansas’ reputation is soaring after two years under head coach Lance Leipold. Missouri, apparently, wants none of that and would rather play the likes of East Carolina in the Gasparilla Bowl, per McMurphy’s projections.

In other words, Missouri would rather play a lesser program—in a game that would surely attract fewer casual and diehard fans—than risk a loss to Kansas.

Twitter, message boards and pretty much any forum college fans use to communicate immediately lit up once this news broke. Kansas fans were laughing at Mizzou fans for being afraid to play the Jayhawks after more than a decade of mocking them. Missouri fans were outraged their athletic department would put them in a position to look inferior to Kansas. College fans across the board were reaching for popcorn as the Border War caught fire once again.

The noise got so loud that Mizzou’s official Twitter account had to refute McMurphy’s report in a way that wouldn’t make the Tigers look weak, but also wouldn’t commit to playing Kansas.

A short while later, McMurphy was on local radio in Kansas City doubling down on his reporting. Missouri was avoiding Kansas at all costs.

So let’s zoom out for a moment. A decade after leaving the Big 12, Mizzou hasn’t finished atop the SEC East since 2014. It hasn’t won more than six games in a season since 2018. And it’s gone from trying to goad the Jayhawks into continuing their rivalry to actively running away from playing them in an exhibition game.

Fortunately for fans of chaos, the Tigers can’t run forever. Missouri and Kansas have already resumed their basketball rivalry—with the Tigers hosting the Jayhawks next on December 17—and their football series will resume in Columbia in 2025.

Missouri finally got its wish of being able to play in the SEC and continue facing Kansas. Turns out the Tigers may have only wanted that outcome when they knew it wasn’t possible.

College GameDay in Kansas opened with a chilling Rock Chalk chant and hilarious signs

Students are on fall break in Kansas but you’d never know by the scene on GameDay

Do not adjust your television set. There is nothing wrong with the picture on your screen.

That’s really ESPN’s College GameDay coming to you live from Lawrence, Kansas. Home of the undefeated No. 19 Kansas Jayhawks. And man does it look like a party on campus Saturday morning.

Despite classes on hold for fall break, it seems like every student stayed in town to show out for GameDay. And that began right away when the broadcast kicked off.

ESPN opened up the show with a crowd of thousands of fans on the the hill performing the Rock Chalk Chant and, wow, did this sound awesome.

Just look at the vibes in Lawrence right now.

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El presidente de la NCAA dice por error ‘Kansas City Jayhawks’ en la premiación y se lo están acabando

El lunes en la noche en Nuevo Orleans, los Kansas Jayhawks llegaron al medio tiempo estando 15 puntos abajo en el marcador, pero remontaron el partido y ganaron el cuarto título de la NCAA de basquetbol varonil. Fue la mayor remontada en un partido …

El lunes en la noche en Nuevo Orleans, los Kansas Jayhawks llegaron al medio tiempo estando 15 puntos abajo en el marcador, pero remontaron el partido y ganaron el cuarto título de la NCAA de basquetbol varonil. Fue la mayor remontada en un partido para título, y los Jayhawks usaron la segunda mitad para anotar 47 puntos y derrotar a North Carolina por 72-69.

Después de que sonó el silbatazo final y cayó el confeti, los jugadores y los entrenadores de Kansas se reunieron para recibir el trofeo de manos del presidente de la NCAA Mark Emmert. Al momento de presentarles el trofeo, Emmert cometió un gravísimo error.

“Los Kansas City Jayhawks…la University of Kansas.”

¡Ay no, así no era! KU está ubicada en Lawrence, Kansas, a unas 40 millas al oeste de Kansas City.

Traducción: El gran momento del presidente de la NCAA Mark Emmert.
Felicidades a los Kansas City Jayhawks.

 

Y no es de sorprenderse que el internet no ha dejado de acabarse a Emmert.

Traducción: El presidente de la NCAA Mark Emmert sabe lo suyo: “Felicidades a los Kansas City Jayhawks”.

 

Traducción: Acaba de llamarlos los Kansas City Jayhawks.

 

Traducción: ¿Acaso Mahomes también juega para los Kansas City Jayhawks?

 

Traducción: Escuchar al presidente de la #NCAA Mark Emmert llamarlos los Kansas City Jayhawks. ¿A alguien más le sorprende que no esté al día?

 

Artículo traducido por Ana Lucía Toledo

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Georgia Tech Coach from the “Rudy Game” Dies at 88

Pepper Rodgers helped quarterback Georgia Tech to a national title before returning two decades later as their head football coach.

Pepper Rodgers helped guide Georgia Tech to a share of the 1952 national championship with the Yellow Jackets going 12-0 that season, capping it with a 24-7 win over No. 7 Mississippi in the Sugar Bowl.  A year later he’d cap his college career with three touchdown passes and a Sugar Bowl MVP performance in a win over West Virginia.

Rodgers would go on to be drafted by the Baltimore Colts in the the 1954 NFL Draft but Rodgers instead chose to serve five years in the United States Air Force.  While at the Air Force he got into coaching, ultimately working his way to the head spot at Kansas in 1967, a spot he’d hold for four seasons, winning the Big 8 Coach of the Year Award twice and leading the Jayhawks to a 1968 Orange Bowl appearance.

He’d spend three seasons at UCLA, winning two Pac 8 Coach of the Year Awards before returning to Georgia Tech.

Rodgers would spend six seasons as the head coach of the Yellow Jackets, going 34-31-2 and earning a Peach Bowl bid in 1978 as Georgia Tech finished 7-5.

For Notre Dame fans curious about the connection, Rodgers coached against the Fighting Irish six times at Georgia Tech, including the “Rudy Game” in 1975, a 24-3 Irish victory.  In his six games against Notre Dame, Rodgers and the Ramblin’ Wreck went just 1-5.

Rodgers would also spend time as a head coach for the USFL’s Memphis Showboats and the CFL’s Memphis Mad Dogs before serving as the Vice President of the Washington Redskins from 2001-2004.

Rodgers died Thursday at 88 years old.

March Madness: How members of the Warriors performed in the NCAA Tournament

With no basketball on the schedule, take a look at how members of the Golden State Warriors fared in the NCAA Tournament.

For many basketball fans, March is considered the best month on the calendar. Selection Sunday marks the start of a four-week, drama-filled sensation known as March Madness. However, in 2020, things are a bit different.

There will be no “Cinderella story” or “bracket busters” in the 2020 edition of the NCAA Tournament due to the coronavirus pandemic. The NCAA has canceled its 68-team championship tournament in precaution to COVID-19.

With no games on the NBA or college basketball schedule, Warriors Wire looked back at how members of the 2019-20 edition of the Golden State Warriors fared in March Madness.

Before they were with Golden State, three different Dubs made trips to the final game, with others stamping spots in the Elite Eight. At the same time, one newly acquired Warrior was a victim of an upset in the opening weekend.

Why the Kansas Jayhawks will win the NCAA Tournament

Thre reasons why the Kansas Jayhawks will win the 2020 NCAA Tournament

The Kansas Jayhawks (28-3) are one of the blueblood programs in college basketball. They haven’t won a national title since 2008 despite winning or sharing the Big 12 regular-season crown in 15 of the last 16 seasons. But here they are again, No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll after the regular season.

Here are three good reasons why the Kansas Jayhawks will win the 2020 NCAA Tournament.

The six-pack challenge

The Jayhawks have the players to make a long run in the tournament, facing the task of beating six teams that will present different styles and personnel. After dropping its season opener to Duke, Kansas rattled off nine consecutive wins before losing to Villanova and Baylor four games later. Since then, the Jayhawks have strung together 16 straight wins (eight by double digits), including a “payback” victory at then-No. 1 Baylor Feb. 22.


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Sharing the wealth

Kansas has seven players who average more than 10 minutes a game, five that average more than 24.5 minutes and three – G Devon Dotson, G Ochai Agbaji and G Marcus Garrett – who average more than 32 minutes. Four Jayhawks played in all 31 games, while three others played 30 and one played 29. The team is a well-oiled machine with tons of experience – the starting five has two seniors, two sophomores and a junior. Seven different players have been the leading scorer in games led by Dotson (13 times) and C Udoka Azubuike (8 times). The Jayhawks’ balance is such that Dotson (18.1 PPG) is the only player who has averaged 14 or more points. They are unselfish and go with the hot hand. Few teams have the kind of balance the Jayhawks do, which allows them to survive when a key player or two gets in foul trouble.

Home cookin’

The NCAA has a special affinity (an unfair affinity in some minds) that consistently leaves Kansas playing close to home, not forcing fans to travel far. Even when Kansas hasn’t been a No. 1 seed, it somehow ends up with a decent home-court advantage. It has happened too often to be denied and, with a first-/second-round site in St. Louis this year, one can probably bet Kansas will end up there. For more than 40 years, the NCAA was headquartered in Kansas City and it still seems to favor the Jayhawks every Selection Sunday.

It’s been more than a decade since Kansas won it all, but this could be the best team it has to bring the championship back to Lawrence in years.

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Texas Women’s Basketball Drops Second-Straight Game

The Texas Longhorns women’s basketball team dropped their second-straight game against the Kansas Jayhawks.

The Texas Longhorns traveled to Lawrence, Kansas to take on The Jayhawks. KU came into the game with a 1-11 conference record with their lone victory coming against Texas Tech. The Jayhawks added the Longhorns to their short list of victories with the score of 82-67.

The game stayed close throughout until the final quarter. After falling behind The Jayhawks 41-31 at the half, the Longhorns came out with a big third quarter, outscoring them 21-12 to get within one point of tying the game. Celeste Taylor who provided 15 points off the bench gave them the lead early in the fourth quarter.

Kansas quickly answered with a 10 run that stretched the next four minutes to build their lead back up to eight. Taylor scored 11 of her 15 points in the fourth but just wasn’t able to get Texas back in the game. Joyner Holmes added two of her team-high 17 and Charli Collier added two more. The stretches of scoring droughts ruined the Longhorns chances of getting back in the game as Kansas outscored them 29-15 to take the 15-point victory.

The Longhorns will head back home to host West Virginia on Monday.