No. 1-ranked Ichabods pull away in second half for 91-66 win over Emporia State
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
No. 1-ranked Washburn University men's basketball turned a six-point halftime lead into a 91-66 MIAA win over Emporia State Saturday in Lee Arena, improving to 14-0 overall and 4-0 in the conference.
Junior Jeremiah Jones scored 20 points with four 3-pointers, four assists and four steals in Washburn's 91-66 win over Emporia State. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
After trailing by as many as five points in the opening half, Washburn rallied for a 45-39 halftime lead, closing the half with a Jack Bachelor 3-pointer, and opened the second half with a 7-0 run to boost its lead to 52-39 at the 18:11 mark.
Washburn went up 59-43 at the 15:40 mark of the second half and increased its cushion to 18 (64-46) with 14 minutes remaining before leading by as many as 28 points late in the game.
"The beginning of halves are important,'' Washburn coach Brett Ballard said. "I kind of think we gave them life in the first half and in the second half did a much better job. There may have been a little bit of rust in that first half that we needed to knock off, but second half that first five minutes really set the tone. We got steals and converted in transition, which is big.''
Washburn knows that as the top-ranked team in the nation the Ichabods are going to get opponents' best effort and Ballard was happy with how the Ichabods have handled that challenge.
"I think it's going to make us tougher and better as the year goes along,'' Ballard said. "That's what we said at halftime, 'Guys, this is obviously a rivalry game, but a big game for them to try to knock off No. 1. We've got to respond to the challenge.'
"And I think our guys have done a good job of that, just understanding that everybody's going to come in here and give it their best shot.''
Junior Jack Bachelor scored 16 points with four 3-pointers and nine assists in Washburn's 91-66 win over Emporia State Saturday in Lee Arena. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
Junior guard Jack Bachelor was also pleased with how the Ichabods handled Emporia State's early challenge.
"I thought we responded well,'' Bachelor said. "Emporia, props to them. They're a really good team and they've got a lot of shooters and were knocking them down to start the game. but I thought we responded well, especially in the second half. I thought we did a really good job of locking in defensively and trying to make it tougher for them to score.
"I was really proud of our guys' response and how we buckled down on defense.''
Junior Jeremiah Jones paced Washburn with a career-high 20 points on 8 of 10 shooting, including 4 of 5 from beyond the 3-point arc, and added four assists and four steals.
Jones, who has led the nation in steals virtually all season, may be best known for his defense, but showed on Saturday that he is just as dangerous on the offensive end.
"Just knowing that I'm a 3 and 'D' type of player, I can knock it down, I can create for my teammates and just realize that I can help my team on offense and defense,'' Jones said.
Jones admitted that he was 'feeling it' on Saturday, scoring 15 first-half points while hitting all three of his 3-point attempts and coming up with three steals.
"I was feeling great,'' Jones said. "After that first one went in I just knew it was going to be over with after then.''
Sophomore Dillon Claussen scored 16 points with five assists in Washburn's 91-66 win over Emporia State Saturday. [Photo by Rex Wolf/TSN]
Sophomore Dillon Claussen finished with 16 points, five assists, four steals and three blocks and Bachelor scored 16 points while hitting four 3-pointers and dishing out nine assists.
Senior Brady Christiansen led the ichabods with eight rebounds.
Washburn also got key contributions off the bench, with Marcus Glock scoring 10 points with five rebounds, sophomore Tyson Ruud scoring nine points and grabbing three rebounds and Sam Ungashick hitting a pair of 3-pointers.
No. 1-ranked Ichabod men to ring in new year with Turnpike Tussle matchup against Hornets
Details
By RICK PETERSON TopSports.news
No. 1-ranked Washburn University men's basketball will ring in 2026 at 3 p.m. on Saturday, hosting Emporia State in the long-standing Turnpike Tussle.
Junior Jack Bachelor is averaging 16.2 points with 36 3-pointers and 64 assists for 13-0 and No. 1-ranked Washburn. [File photo/TSN]
Saturday's game will be the 223th meeting between Emporia State and Washburn, with the Ichabods leading 114-108.
The ESU series is the most-played series for Washburn, with the two teams starting the series in 1905-06, Washburn's first recorded year of basketball.
"We've talked to our guys about how important this game is for our program and our fans,'' Washburn coach Brett Ballard said. "I like it because it's got our guys excited that we're at home against a rival after when you've had a long week of practice.''
Washburn is 13-0 overall and 3-0 in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association, one of six remaining undefeated teams in Division II, while Emporia State is 4-8 overall and 0-3 in the MIAA after falling 78-71 at Central Missouri on Thursday.
The Ichabods took an eight-day holiday break after beating then-No. 4 Lubbock Christian on Dec. 16 and No. 4 West Texas A&M 74-48 on Dec. 17 in the River City Classic in San Antonio.
"Coming off San Antonio you're kind of wanting to keep playing because you're really rolling, but it was a good time for a break, just mentally and physically,'' Ballard said. "Everybody got to go home.''
Washburn returned to practice on Monday and Ballard has been pleased with the Ichabods' work this week as they prepare for the Hornets while also trying to continue building on their hot start to the season.
"We're really harping on battling complacency,'' Ballard said. "It's human nature when things are going well to get complacent, so we're trying to challenge them as much as we can mentally to battle that with competitive practices.''
Washburn leads the nation in scoring margin in the NCAA Division II ranks at plus 29.3 points per game and is seventh in field goal percentage at 51.3 percent, which leads the conference.
Washburn is fifth in rebound margin at plus 12.5 and ranks sixth in scoring defense (60.2 points per game). The Ichabods have not been out-rebounded in a game and have only been tied once (vs. Lubbock Christian).
Ichabod sophomore Dillon Claussen, who is averaging 16.6 points and 6.8 rebounds, ranks sixth in the nation in field goal percentage at 68.1, which also leads the MIAA.
Junior Jeremiah Jones leads the nation in total steals with 43 and he is ranked fourth in steals per game at 3.31.
Junior Jack Bachelor, a former Washburn Rural star, now has 1,017 career points in his 77 career games played. He is tied with former teammate Michael Keegan on Washburn's all-time scoring chart at No. 24 overall.
Bachelor, who is averaging 16.2 points with 36 3-pointers, is 19th in the nation in total assists with 64 and second in assist to turnover ration at 3.76 to 1.
The Ichabods' 13-game winning streak is second in the nation behind Daemen, which has won its last 15 contests.
Washburn's 22-game homecourt winning streak is third in the nation behind Nova Southeastern's 93 wins and Miles' 23 victories. The Ichabods' homecourt winning streak is tied for the fourth longest in program history.
Topeka High girls roll to second straight win over Scots, 87-31
By RICK PETERSON
TopSports.news
A scheduling quirk resulted in Topeka High's girls playing two straight games against USD 501 rival Highland Park.
And after ending the 2025 portion of their schedule with a 30-point win over the Scots at Topeka High, Ron Slaymaker's Trojans were even more dominant Friday at Highland Park, rolling to an 87-31 victory to improve to 2-4 on the season.
Sophomore Hailey Caryl scored a game-high 26 points in Friday's 87-31 Topeka High win at Highland Park. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
Junior Ahsieyrhuajh Rayton scored 21 points for Topeka High in Friday's 87-31 victory over Highland Park. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
Senior Keimara Marshall scored 18 points Friday in Topeka High's 87-31 win over Highland Park. [Photo by Rick Peterson/TSN]
Topeka High sophomore Hailey Caryl led all scorers with 26 points while junior Ahsieyrhuajh Rayton added 21 points and senior Keimara Marshall scored 18 to lead the way in the Trojan rout.
Veteran Topeka High coach Ron Slaymaker said Friday was important to continue to making strides after an 0-4 start while playing its first four games without Caryl.
"Highland Park's a little short-handed, but sometimes they can make you look bad,'' Slaymaker said. "I just wanted us to be solid and get our running game going, which we did.
"We got out 23-0 and 25-1 and we starterd subbing and it gets a little frantic there. But the start of the second half it was the same thing and we played really well.''
Topeka High took control in the opening eight minutes, outscoring the Scots 25-1.
High was still in front by 24 points (44-20) at the half before hitting the Scots with a 35-3 lick in the third quarter to force a running clock in the fourth quarter with a 79-23 advantage.
"Our practices have been high and low, really good, really bad,'' Slaymaker said. "So I was pleased to see them come out and play well because our schedule's pretty tough from here on out. Game, game, game, game, so there's not much time for practice and there's still a lot of things we need to clean up.''
Junior Zayah Kincaid led Highland Park with 11 points, including a pair of 3-pointers, while senior Koralee Jones added 8 points as the Scots fell to 1-4 on the season.
3-point goals – Topeka High 4 (Rayton 2, Martin 2), Highland Park 6 (Cosey 2, Kincaid 2, Hooper 2). Total fouls – Topeka High 13, Highland Park 15. Fouled out – none.