Johnson ‘terrific’ as Tigers trip KSU, 71-63

? This time, Arthur Johnson made his presence felt under the basket.

Johnson followed one of his worst rebounding games with one of his best, grabbing 17 boards and scoring 14 points as No. 21 Missouri beat Kansas State, 71-63, Saturday.

Johnson is averaging 10 rebounds a game and had been embarrassed by a four-rebound showing in a two-point loss Wednesday at Texas A&M.

“A.J. was terrific,” Missouri coach Quin Snyder said. “For us to be able to play through him like that, and for him to be as unselfish as he was, it makes us hard to guard at times.”

Rickey Paulding added 19 points and six rebounds and Travon Bryant had a career-best 15 points and four blocked shots for Missouri.

The Tigers (15-6 overall, 6-4 Big 12 Conference) are 12-0 at home, including five conference victories. They held Kansas State without a basket for more than 81¼2 minutes down the stretch.

Bryant didn’t start after several lapses, especially on defense, at Texas A&M. He responded with what Snyder called his best game of the season.

“It was a game we had no business losing,” Bryant said of the Texas A&M game. “If you don’t bring it every night, that’s what happens. We learned from that.”

Frank Richards equaled his career best with 20 points for Kansas State (12-11, 3-7), which has lost five of its last six — four to Top 25 opponents. The Wildcats have dropped 13 straight Big 12 games on the road, a slump dating to last season, and 23 in a row on the road to ranked teams.

“We don’t think we’ve played our best basketball all season,” KSU coach Jim Wooldridge said. “If that’s true, hopefully we can find it soon and start winning some games.”

Johnson, who has 14 double-doubles, added five assists and two blocked shots. He missed his career best for rebounds by two, accomplished at Colorado on Jan. 10, 2001.

“I just was being more assertive with my passes and making the right reads,” Johnson said. “I wasn’t rushing anything.”

Jarrett Hart hit from the key with 12:57 to go to cut the gap to 50-47, the last basket for the Wildcats until Tim Ellis connected with 4:20 left. Kansas State had six free throws during the drought and Missouri scored nine straight points in one stretch.

“It seems like we do that all the time on the road, we catch up and then let them get their big lead back,” forward Matt Siebrandt said. “If you want to win on the road, you can’t let that happen.”

Kansas State was 3-for-17 from three-point range, and missed several long-range attempts during the drought.