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  • Tabor receives KCAC’s first award for sports excellence

    KCACCommissionersCupFrick Scott Crawford, KCAC Commissioner (second from left), presents Rusty Allen, Tabor College vice president of athletics, with a plaque recognizing Tabor as the winner of the inaugural KCAC Commissioner’s Cup. Tabor President Jules Glanzer and Associate Athletic Director Amy Ratzlaff look on. The award, presented during Tabor’s annual sports banquet, will be given annually to the conference school with the greatest cumulative performance over the three athletic seasons.

    Tabor College has earned the inaugural KCAC Commis­sioner’s Cup for its athletic achievements during the 2012-13 school year.

    “It’s exciting, it’s fun,” said Rusty Allen, Tabor vice president of athletics. “One of the things we had set as our goal was to finish in the top three of this every year, and so in the inaugural year to win it, we feel like we’ve accomplished a lot.”

    The award—designed to recognize the accomplishments of student-athletes and the KCAC schools they represent—will be given annually to the school with the greatest overall performance throughout the three athletic seasons, based on points.

    “Many of our peer conferences have a similar award,” said KCAC Commissioner Scott Crawford. “To align ourselves with those conferences, but also to highlight excellence at the athletic-department level, we moved forward with this award last spring knowing our first recipient would be recognized in spring 2013.”

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TC splits quarterfinal games; men drop to Ottawa, women win

Tabor hosted two quarterfinal matchups against Ottawa Friday night. The No. 2 seeded Tabor men opened play and dropped a 69-53 contest to No. 7 Ottawa. The No. 2 Tabor women followed with a 44-35 victory over No. 7 Ottawa.

MEN – The Tabor men couldn’t get things going Friday night and while the Bluejays were within five at the half, the game ended with Tabor on the short side of a 69-53 score.

The lead changed hands in the opening minutes, but Tabor’s last lead, 6-4, came with 16:31 left in the first half when Chance LeBlanc drained a three-point basket. A Cameron Rust three-pointer later tied the game at nine, but the Braves surged 7-0 before Marc Hopkinson contributed a basket behind the arc at 11:42 to draw within 12-16. The Braves answered with a three-point basket, but Tabor found a small spark when JT Nemit cashed in on a traditional three-point play and a Bluejay steal led to a Ryan Chippeaux score to draw within two, 19-17, with 9:58 left to play. But the Braves widened the gap when Tabor shots refused to fall, and Ottawa enjoyed a 34-29 lead at the half.

Ottawa continued to pound away, hitting a three-point basket 15 seconds into the second half and following just 22 seconds later with a basket off a steal to claim a double-digit, 39-29, advantage. Neither team scored the next three and a half minutes, and momentum shifted to Tabor when a Chippeaux steal led to a Jackson three-pointer at 15:58. A Brave turnover contributed to another three by Jackson 30 seconds later to bring the Bluejays within 39-35. But Tabor could not close the gap, and the Braves again surged to a 10-point, 45-35, advantage when Bluejay shots refused to fall. Chippeaux and Nemit scored back-to-back baskets to draw within 47-41 with 8:40 left to play, but the Braves used a 9-0 run to build a 56-41 lead. Ottawa maintained a double-digit advantage the rest of the game and burst to its largest lead of the night, 65-43, with a three-point basket with 3:22 left to play. Jackson answered with a three-pointer 11 seconds later, and Nemit scored one final three with nine seconds left on the clock, but the Braves held the 16-point advantage when time expired.

Jackson led the Bluejay attack with 15 points. Chippeaux grabbed 10 rebounds.

The Tabor loss, paired with a 91-82 overtime loss by No. 1 University of Saint Mary to No. 8 McPherson, ends Tabor’s national tournament bid.

WOMEN – It was a battle of the defenses Friday night, and a stifling Bluejay defense proved key in Tabor women’s 44-35 victory over Ottawa. Both teams struggled to get shots to fall in a low-scoring first half. Tabor claimed a narrow lead, but a three-point Brave basket tied the game at five with 9:36 left in the opening half. Ottawa evened the score at seven and 10 before Tabor gained a bit of distance, 17-11, thanks in part to three-point baskets by Molly Moran and Nikki Lewis. The Braves answered, however, scoring five unanswered points at the end of the half to narrow the gap to 17-16 at the break.

In the opening minutes of the second half, the lead changed hands with every score until Lewis drained a three-point basket at 16:08 that put the Bluejays in the lead for good, 24-22. Tynan Honn followed with a traditional three-point play 30 seconds later for a 27-22 score. More than three minutes passed before Ottawa scored to narrow the gap to 27-24, and another two-some minutes passed before Hannah Paust cashed in on a three-point play at 9:49 for a 30-24 Tabor advantage. Although Ottawa drew within four points a few times in the final nine minutes, Tabor maintained the lead to the end and enjoyed a nine-point advantage when time expired.

Coming – The Tabor women will face No. 3 Southwestern Saturday at home, with tipoff set for 8 p.m. The winner will advance to the championship game at Hartman Arena Monday at 8 p.m.