Workshops can help plan farmers’ markets

The Kansas Department of Agriculture and K-State Research and Extension will host six regional workshops in February to assist farmers’ market vendors and managers. 

The first will be at 9 a.m. Feb. 1 at Allen Community College in Iola.

Workshop topics will vary slightly by location. Main topics include: 

• Double Up Food Bucks Program and Accepting EBT 

• Food Safety and Regulations on Selling Meat, Eggs and Poultry

• Kansas Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program Certified Farmer Training

• Marketing Tips 

• Produce Grower Panel 

Registration costs $20 per participant to cover the cost of lunch. Lunch will only be guaranteed to those participants who register in advance.

Registration for the workshops can be found at FromtheLandofKansas.com/FMworkshop or at local extension offices.

Onsite registration for the workshop opens at 8:30 a.m. and the workshops will begin at 9 o’clock, ending by 3 p.m.

For more information, contact Robin Blume, KDA’s education and events coordinator, at 785-564-6756 or robin.blume@ks.gov. The workshops are funded by the Kansas Center for Sustainable Agriculture and Alternative Crops, the Kansas Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, K-State Research and Extension, and the Kansas Department of Agriculture.

New Thunder uniforms to honor bombing victims

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Ryan Whicher is ecstatic the Thunder-Rockets game will be nationally televised Thursday night.

It’s not because he lives in Maryland and none of Oklahoma City’s other games this season have been broadcast beyond the local telecasts. It’s not even because Russell Westbrook will make his return to OKC.

Whicher is pumped because millions of people will get to see the Thunder’s uniforms.

On Thursday, OKC will debut its new “City” uniforms, designed to pay homage to those affected by the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. A striking combination of charcoal and bronze, numerous details will be familiar to Oklahomans. The Survivor Tree on the waistbands. The Gates of Time on the side panels.

But for people outside of the state, the symbolism may be foreign.

And for some, the bombing itself may be unknown.

That’s why Whicher is so grateful the Thunder and the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum collaborated on these uniforms, why he is so glad viewers across the country and even around the world will have a chance to see them. They will help keep alive the memory of what happened.

“Tragedies like this, I always worry that everyone else is going to forget about it and the victims will kind of be on their own at some point,” Whicher said. “That’s a fear in the back of everyone’s head, I’m sure.

“And this is absolute 100% proof that’s not the case.”

Those killed, those injured and those affected haven’t been forgotten.

That includes Ryan Whicher’s dad.

Alan Whicher became the assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service field office in Oklahoma City back in August 1994. He decided to take the desk position after serving on President Bill Clinton’s security detail, moving to Oklahoma from Washington, D.C., hoping for a slower, simpler life.

Whicher didn’t want to miss any more birthdays or holidays with his family. He wanted to spend more time with his wife, Pam, and children Meredith, Melinda and Ryan.

No one welcomed that more than Ryan, who was in middle school at the time.

“He was like the Terminator in real life,” Ryan said. “He was this massive figure who was a law enforcement guy. To me, he was just this awesome human.”

Alan Whicher was in his new office on the ninth floor of the Murrah Building when that truck bomb exploded.

Two days later came the official notification of his death.

Ryan was only 12, but he had grown accustomed to his dad traveling for work. All of his dad’s years in the Secret Service meant when the president or vice president went somewhere, Alan Whicher went, too.

“It just felt like he was on a long trip,” Ryan said of those days after the bombing, “and we were just waiting for him to get home.”

But when Ryan saw adults in tears, including men who were big and strong and brave like his dad, Ryan started to understand the gravity of the situation. His dad wasn’t on a long trip. He wouldn’t be coming home.

Whicher’s mom moved the family back to the Washington, D.C., area soon after the bombing.

Ryan, along with his wife and two children, still live in Maryland.

Because the entire Whicher family has lived outside Oklahoma much of the past 25 years, they aren’t constantly exposed to reminders about the bombing. There are no field trips to the museum. No weekend strolls around the memorial. No special visits to the field of chairs.

Ryan Whicher doesn’t need those cues.

“It’s been almost 25 years, and not a day goes by where I don’t reflect on it in some way, shape or form,” he said.

But he knows most people living outside Oklahoma aren’t as aware of what happened that April day — or how so many responded in the wake of the tragedy.

There was care and love, support and hope.

“The actual act itself?” Ryan Whicher said. “That’s pain. You can go find a million things daily that will give you that pain.

“I want people to know the hope.”

He believes the Thunder’s uniforms will help spread that message.

“Think of some kid in France watching the basketball game,” Ryan Whicher said. “He probably doesn’t know this story. Maybe he does, but now he definitely will.”

Those are the kinds of people Kari Watkins was hoping to reach when the Thunder first approached the memorial about a special-edition uniform. As the executive director of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, she embraced the idea of not only honoring those killed, injured and changed by the bombing but also spreading the “Oklahoma Standard” of service, honor and kindness to a new audience.

“We have our work cut out for us as far as really needing to make sure this story is told,” Watkins said. “A lot of people here know it. Some people don’t know it. But I feel like when those players put on that jersey, people will begin to ask questions.”

She heard some of them the other day when she went to Dick’s Sporting Goods to buy a “City” edition warmup. It features the service, honor and kindness motto, and when a young sales associate saw it, he asked Watkins what it meant.

Getting to share that message near and far is powerful.

“You can’t imagine the tentacles this will have,” Watkins said.

Ryan Whicher has imagined it — and it creates a physical reaction.

“I just get a little chill thinking about it,” he said. “It’s literally worldwide. Basketball is everywhere.”

He can’t wait for the story of the bombing to reach new hearts and minds during Thursday night’s game and every other game the Thunder wears its “City” edition uniform this season. The history will spread. The education will grow. And he hopes the takeaway is how people responded to evil and fear.

“A tragedy like this never goes away,” he said. “It’s just how you decide to approach it, where your mindset is with it, whether or not you make positives out of it or negatives out of it.”

Ryan Whicher hates all that was lost in the bombing — he wishes every day he could call his dad and ask advice about raising his own kids — but he loves what grew out of it.

There was care. There was compassion.

Most of all, there was love.

Officers seek truck in connection with outage

Iola city officials are continuing to gauge the extent of damage incurred during a power outage shortly before sunrise Tuesday.

The outage was connected to a traffic incident near the intersection of North Elm and Peach streets in east Iola.

Officers believe a  passing semi-tractor trailer rig snagged a utility pole guy wire, which in turn flipped one of the electric wires, which sent a supercharged jolt of electricity through the circuit, Assistant City Administrator Corey Schinstock said.

The incident fried one of the city’s transformers near the area, while causing extensive damage to electrical components at homes and businesses throughout town.

Iola firefighters were called to Great Southern Bank because the outage caused one of the bank’s servers to overheat. The small fire was quickly extinguished.

Calls to City Hall have forwarded to the Iola Police Department, because the outage stemmed from a traffic incident.

Iola Police Chief Jared Warner said they are seeking information about a truck witnesses spotted in the area at the time of the outage. The truck was white with “Olathe” on the door.

Officers are describing the incident as a hit-and-run.

For more information, call 365-4960.

 

 

Trump says Iran ‘standing down’ after attacks

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Iran appears to be “standing down” and no Americans or Iraqis were harmed in Iran’s missile strike on two Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops.

Speaking from the White House, Trump seemed intent on deescalating the crisis, indicating that he would not retaliate militarily for the strikes. Instead, he said the U.S. would immediately put in place new economic sanctions “until Iran changes its behavior” after that country’s most brazen direct assault on America since the 1979 seizing of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. 

The attack came days after Trump authorized the targeted killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds Force. Iran had pledged to retaliate, bringing the two countries closer to the brink of war.

Trump credited an early warning system “that worked very well” for the fact that no Americans or Iraqis were killed. He added that Americans should be “extremely grateful and happy” with the outcome.

He reiterated his position that “Iran will never be allowed to have a nuclear weapon” and called for new nuclear negotiations to replace the 2015 nuclear deal from which he withdrew the U.S.

Trump also announced he would ask NATO to become “much more involved in the Middle East process.”

The Iranian strikes came days after Trump authorized the targeted killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds Force. Iran had pledged to retaliate, though its actions did not appear to result in any American casualties, according to a U.S. official. Its missiles targeted two bases — one in the northern Iraqi city in Irbil and the other at Ain al-Asad in western Iraq. 

The lack of U.S. casualties could signal that Iran is not interested in escalating the tension with Washington — at least not now — and could give Trump an opening to calm relations with Iran and pull the U.S. back from the brink of war. Trump, who is facing reelection in November, campaigned for president on a promise to keep the United States from engaging in “endless war.” 

Sen. James Inhofe, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee told reporters Wednesday that he spoke with Trump Tuesday evening after the Iranian strike and said the president indicated his desire to reopen negotiations with Iran. 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin in a joint statement after a closed-door meeting on Mideast security are warning that the further use of force “would lead to a new cycle of instability and would eventually damage everyone’s interests.”

In the hours before the missile strikes, U.S. officials said they expected some sort of response from Iran, and Trump warned the longtime U.S. foe against a disproportionate response. “If Iran does anything that they shouldn’t be doing, they’re going to be suffering the consequences, and very strongly.”

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted that the country had “concluded proportionate measures in self-defense.”

But speaking on Wednesday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the strike was not necessarily the totality of Iran’s response.

“Last night they received a slap,” Khamenei said in a speech. “These military actions are not sufficient (for revenge). What is important is that the corrupt presence of America in this region comes to an end.”

Soleimani’s death last week in an American drone strike in Baghdad prompted angry calls for vengeance and drew massive crowds of Iranians to the streets to mourn him. Khamenei himself wept at the funeral in a sign of his bond with the commander.

The Iranians fired a total of 15 missiles in Wednesday’s strike, two U.S. officials said. Ten hit the Ain al-Asad air base in Iraq’s western Anbar province and one targeted a base in Irbil in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region. Four failed, said the officials, who were not authorized to speak publicly about a military operation.

According to a U.S. official, early warning systems detected the missile launches and alarms sounded, giving personnel at the bases time to get to shelter. Officials also said that the U.S. was closely watching the region and communicating with allies, and was aware of preparations for the attack. It’s unclear if any intelligence identified specific targets or was more general in the potential strike locations.

Two Iraqi security officials said a missile appeared to have struck a plane at Ain al-Asad, igniting a fire. There were no immediate reports of casualties from the attacks, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity as they had no permission to talk to journalists.

Ain al-Asad was first used by American forces after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein, and it later was used by American troops in the fight against the Islamic State group. It houses about 1,500 U.S. and coalition forces. Trump visited it in December 2018, making his first presidential visit to troops in the region. Vice President Mike Pence visited both Ain al-Asad and Irbil in November.

Democrats called on Trump avoid military escalation with Iran. 

Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the administration needs to quickly “extricate us from what could lead into a full-fledged war with terrible casualties.” Engel said he feared the situation ”spirals out of control.”

The fallout for Trump’s order to kill Soleimani has been swift. 

Iran announced that it would no longer be bound by the 2015 nuclear agreement and vowed to retaliate against the U.S., its allies and American interests. Iraq’s Parliament also voted to expel U.S. troops from Iraq, which would undermine efforts to fight Islamic State militants in the region and strengthen Iran’s influence in the Mideast.

The counterattack by Iran came as Trump and his top advisers were under pressure to disclose more details about the intelligence that led to the American strike that killed Soleimani. 

Top Senate Democrats, citing “deep concern” about the lack of information coming from the Trump administration about the Iran operation, called on Defense Department officials to provide “regular briefings and documents” to Congress.

Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the senators said in a letter Wednesday that the White House’s classified War Powers notification to Congress was “generic, vague, and entirely inconsistent in its level of detail” compared with the norm.

“While recognizing the need for operations security, we similarly believe there is a requirement to be transparent with the American people about how many troops this Administration plans to deploy in support of contingency plans,” wrote Schumer, Sen. Dick Durbin and the Armed Services Committee’s Sen. Jack Reed to Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

They also registered their “grave concern” with Trump’s comments on targeting Iranian cultural sites and asked for clarification. They said they expected a response by Friday.

Trump said Tuesday that his decision saved American lives. Members of Congress were to be briefed on the strike Wednesday afternoon in closed-door sessions on Capitol Hill.

Trump and top national security officials have justified the airstrike with general statements about the threat posed by Soleimani, who commanded proxy forces outside Iran and was responsible for the deaths of American troops in Iraq.

But the details have been scarce. 

“He’s no longer a monster. He’s dead,” Trump said. “And that’s a good thing for a lot of countries. He was planning a very big attack and a very bad attack for us and other people, and we stopped him, and I don’t think anybody can complain about it.”

One lawmaker who has read the classified notification that Trump sent Congress after the U.S. air strike that killed Soleimani said the two-page document did not describe any imminent planned attacks or contain any new information. The lawmaker, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the classified document, said the letter gave a historic account of attacks that have been reported publicly.

Soleimani was targeted while he was at an airport in Baghdad with Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a veteran Iraqi militant, who also was killed.

A timeline of escalating rhetoric, attacks

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Iran’s missile attack on two American bases in Iraq in response the the U.S. strike that killed its top general is the culmination of nearly two years of steadily rising tensions since President Donald Trump withdrew from Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

The two countries are now engaged in their most serious confrontation since the 1979 Islamic revolution and takeover of the U.S. Embassy. Both sides have signaled restraint following the missile attack, but the threat of an all-out war remains.

A timeline of the main events leading up to this week’s hostilities:

May 8, 2018: Trump announces that the U.S. is withdrawing from the nuclear deal signed by his predecessor, President Barack Obama, which had provided sanctions relief in exchange for restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program and stepped-up U.N. monitoring. Over the next several months, the U.S. ratchets up sanctions, exacerbating an economic crisis in Iran.

———

Nov. 5, 2018: U.S. imposes tough sanctions on Iran’s oil industry, the lifeline of its economy, as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announces a list of 12 demands it must meet for sanctions relief. Iran rejects the wide-ranging demands, which include ending its support for armed groups in the region, withdrawing from the Syrian civil war and halting its ballistic missile program.

———

May 5, 2019: The U.S. announces the deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group and a bomber task force in response to “a number of troubling and escalatory indications and warnings,” without providing details. It threatens “unrelenting force” in response to any attack.

———

May 8, 2019: Iran vows to enrich its uranium stockpile closer to weapons-grade levels if world powers fail to negotiate new terms for its nuclear deal. The European Union urges Iran to respect the nuclear deal and says it plans to continue trading with the country. Trump says he would like Iran’s leaders to “call me.”

———

May 12, 2019: The United Arab Emirates says four commercial ships off its eastern coast “were subjected to sabotage operations.”. Trump warns that if Tehran does “anything” in the form of an attack, “they will suffer greatly.”

———

June 13, 2019: Two oil tankers near the strategic Strait of Hormuz are hit in an alleged assault that leaves one ablaze and adrift as 44 sailors are evacuated from both vessels and the U.S. Navy rushes to assist. America later blames Iran for the attack, something Tehran denies.

———

June 20, 2019: Iran’s Revolutionary Guard shoots down a U.S. military surveillance drone. Trump says he called off a planned retaliatory strike on Iran over concerns about casualties.

———

July 1, 2019: Iran follows through on a threat to exceed the limit set by the nuclear deal on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium, which is used for civilian applications and not for nuclear weapons.

———

Sept. 14, 2019: A drone attack on Saudi oil facilities temporarily cuts off half the oil supplies of the world’s largest producer, causing a spike in prices. The U.S. says Iran carried out the attack directly, calling it an “act of war” against Saudi Arabia. Iran denies involvement, while the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen claim responsibility.

———

October 2019: Massive anti-government protests erupt in Lebanon and Iraq. While the protests are primarily driven by economic grievances, they target governments that are closely allied to Iran. In Iraq, protesters openly decry Tehran’s influence and attack Iranian diplomatic facilities.

———

November 2019: Protests break out in some 100 cities and towns in Iran after authorities raise the price of gasoline. The scale of the protests and the resulting crackdown are hard to determine as authorities shut down the internet for several days. Amnesty International later estimates that more than 300 people were killed.

———

Dec. 27, 2019: A U.S. contractor is killed and several American and Iraqi troops are wounded in a rocket attack on a base in northern Iraq. The U.S. blames the attack on Kataeb Hezbollah, one of several Iran-backed militias operating in Iraq.

———

Dec. 29, 2019: U.S. airstrikes hit Kataeb Hezbollah positions in Iraq and Syria, killing at least 25 fighters and bringing vows of revenge. Iraq calls the strikes a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty.

———

Dec. 31, 2019: Hundreds of Iran-backed militiamen and their supporters barge through an outer barrier of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and hold two days of violent protests in which they smash windows, set fires and hurl rocks over the inner walls. U.S. Marines guarding the facility respond with tear gas. There are no casualties on either side.

———

Jan. 3: A U.S. airstrike near Baghdad’s international airport kills Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the leader of Iran’s elite Quds Force and the mastermind of its regional military interventions. A senior commander of Iran-backed militias in Iraq is also killed in the strike. Iran vows “harsh retaliation.” Trump says he ordered the targeted killing to prevent a major attack. Congressional leaders and close U.S. allies say they were not consulted on the strike, which many fear could ignite a war.

———

Jan. 5: Iran announces it will no longer abide by the nuclear deal and Iraq’s parliament holds a non-binding vote calling for the expulsion of all U.S. forces. Some 5,200 American troops are based in Iraq to help prevent a resurgence of the Islamic State group. Trump vows to impose sanctions on Iraq if it expels U.S. troops.

———

Jan. 8: Iran launches several ballistic missiles on two bases in Iraq housing American troops in what it says is retaliation for the killing of Soleimani. There are no immediate reports of U.S. or Iraqi casualties. Trump tweets that “All is well!” and says he will deliver a statement Wednesday. Iran’s supreme leader says “we slapped them on the face” but that “military action is not enough.”

Turkey, Russia launch pipeline

ISTANBUL (AP) — The presidents of Turkey and Russia inaugurated the dual natural gas line connecting their countries today, opening up a new export path for Russian gas into Turkey and Europe and promising cooperation in trade and diplomacy.

The meeting in Istanbul between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russia’s Vladimir Putin came amid deteriorating security in the Mideast, with U.S.-Iranian tensions high since the American killing of a top Iranian commander last week. Erdogan, with Russian support, vowed to work for de-escalation.

With TurkStream, Russian gas passes through the Black Sea to Turkey. Together, the two 578-mile lines under the Black Sea, along with the Russian and Turkish onshore pipes, have the capacity to carry 1.1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas annually.

Russia is the top gas supplier to Turkey, which relies on imports for its energy needs. 

TurkStream allows Russia to bypass Ukraine by opening up a new direct transport line to Turkey, in addition to the Blue Stream line also under the Black Sea further east. The simmering conflict between Moscow and Kyiv has prompted Russia to seek alternative gas routes to Europe.

From Turkey, Russian gas will reach southern and southeastern Europe through new and existing lines. Turkstream has already begun transporting gas but the two leaders turned a symbolic valve in the ceremony.

Erdogan said the “historic” project was a key example of Turkey and Russia’s “win-win cooperation” and a basis for future projects.

The opening of the TurkStream pipeline comes amid tensions over another ambitious Russian project, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which is supposed to allow Russia to transport natural gas directly to Europe, again bypassing Ukraine. Late last year, construction of Nord Stream from Russia to Germany was halted after U.S. President Donald Trump signed off on sanctions against individuals and companies involved with it. Immediately after that, a Swiss company laying the pipeline suspended work on it.

Turkey is also part of a race to explore oil and gas in the eastern Mediterranean, where it fears being excluded from resources around the ethnically split island of Cyprus. A maritime deal it signed with the Tripoli-government in Libya heightened tensions in the region over exploratory and drilling rights.

In the ceremony Wednesday, Erdogan also vowed to work diplomatically to calm soaring tensions between Washington and Tehran.

“No one has the right to throw the region, especially Iraq, into a new ring of fire for their personal gains,” he said.

Iran targeted with missiles Iraqi bases where American troops are stationed in retaliation for Friday’s American drone strike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani. The escalation risks open conflict between the two rivals and violence through their proxies in the region.

“We will be in constant dialogue and consultation with the Russian Federation and my dear friend Mr. Putin. God willing, with help of our Russian friends support and contributions, I believe we will overcome this troubled phase,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan and Putin talk and meet often, cooperating on trade, energy and defense industries. Their close partnership is a dramatic reversal from 2015, when diplomatic relations hit rock bottom with Turkey’s downing of a Russian fighter jet along the border with Syria. Their increased cooperation has worried Turkey’s NATO allies, especially with Moscow’s delivery of a Russian-made missile defense system to a base near Ankara over the summer.

In a closed-door meeting ahead of the ceremony, the two leaders were also expected to discuss Syria and Libya.

Putin is in Turkey following a visit to Damascus where he met Syrian President Bashar Assad, who has re-established control in much of Syria with Russian and Iranian backing. Turkey, in contrast, has supported the rebels opposing Assad and has carved out zones of control in Syria’s north.

The Syrian government’s all-out offensive to retake rebel-held Idlib has pushed hundreds of thousands of civilians towards the closed Turkish border, risking a major new refugee flow into Turkey.

War-torn Libya is now another venue where the two leaders will press their diplomatic influence. Turkey has moved to send Turkish soldiers and weapons to support the weak U.N.-recognized Tripoli-government while Russia has backed the rival eastern-based forces of Gen. Khalifa Hifter.

“Unfortunately, the situation in the region we are at tends to escalate. But Turkey and Russia are demonstrating different examples – examples of cooperation for the sake of our nations and all of Europe,” Putin said at the ceremony.

Dodgeball for Donuts

At halftime of the Iola  boys’ game, students faced off against officers from the Iola Police Department and Sheriff’s Department. It was the third year for the event sponsored Iola High’s student council. The Iola students defeated the officers to win the wager that grants the entire student body along with faculty a free doughnut.

Davis injured in Lakers win

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Anthony Davis left in the third quarter after bruising his lower back on a painful fall during the Los Angeles Lakers’ sixth straight victory, 117-87 over the New York Knicks on Tuesday night.

Davis bruised his sacrum — the bottom part of his spine above the tailbone — when he attempted to block Julius Randle’s driving shot. He got knocked off balance and fell awkwardly to the court, landing hard on his back with 2:45 left in the third.

The six-time All-Star pounded the court in pain and stayed down for roughly two minutes, but eventually rose with his teammates’ help and then slowly walked off unaided.

X-rays were negative, but Davis didn’t return to the game. His agent, Rich Paul, said his client felt extremely sore.

LeBron James scored 31 points and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 15, but the Lakers (30-7) didn’t exactly celebrate becoming the second team to win 30 games this season.

R.J. Barrett scored 19 points for the Knicks, and Randle had 15 points and 10 rebounds against his former team. New York dropped to 0-3 on its four-game West Coast trip.

 

KINGS 114, SUNS 103

 (AP) — De’Aaron Fox scored 27 points, Nemanja Bjelica added 19 and Sacramento rallied from a 21-point deficit in the third quarter to beat Phoenix.

The Kings — who have won three of their last four — got big contributions from bench players Dewayne Dedmon and Trevor Ariza. Dedmon finished with 12 points and 10 rebounds and Ariza — who played for Phoenix part of last season — added 15 points.

The Suns were led by Devin Booker, who scored 34 points and had seven assists. It was Booker’s seventh straight game with at least 30 points, which extends his franchise record.

Deandre Ayton added 21 points and nine rebounds. Kelly Oubre Jr. had 17 points.

 

TRAIL BLAZERS 101, RAPTORS 99

TORONTO (AP) — Carmelo Anthony made the winning basket with four seconds remaining and Portland rallied to beat Toronto.

Anthony scored 28 points, Damian Lillard had 20 and Hassan Whiteside added 14 points and 16 rebounds for the Trail Blazers, who snapped a four-game losing streak in Toronto and won for the second time in 10 meetings with the Raptors.

Anfernee Simons scored 12 points and C.J. McCollum had 10.

Kyle Lowry had 24 points and 10 rebounds, and Serge Ibaka added 17 points and 11 rebounds as the injury-ravaged Raptors lost for just the second time in 16 games against opponents with losing records.

Oshae Brisett scored a career-high 12 points for Toronto. and Chris Boucher also had 12, including 10 straight Raptors points in the fourth.

 

PISTONS 115, 

CAVALIERS 113

CLEVELAND (AP) — Derrick Rose hit a 15-footer with 27 seconds left and Detroit rallied past Cleveland.

Rose, who scored 24 points, scored on a runner in the lane to give Detroit a 114-113 lead and cap a comeback that began with the Pistons trailing 110-91 early in the fourth quarter.

Cleveland set up for a go-ahead shot, but Collin Sexton was called for stepping out of bounds with seven seconds left. The ruling was overturned, but Sexton’s shot in the lane didn’t hit the rim and Detroit was awarded possession on a shot-clock violation.

Andre Drummond finished with 23 points and 20 rebounds, the 38th time in his career he has hit the 20-mark in both categories.

Kevin Love matched a season high with 30 points, but Cleveland lost its fifth straight and went winless on its four-game homestand.

 

THUNDER 111, 

NETS 103, OT

NEW YORK (AP) — Chris Paul scored 20 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, leading Oklahoma City past Brooklyn.

The game was tied at 103 before Paul made consecutive jumpers and the Nets never scored again. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander closed out the scoring with four free throws, after making a jumper to open OT.

Gilgeous-Alexander added 22 points for the Thunder, who bounced back from a loss Monday in Philadelphia to win for the sixth time in seven games. Steven Adams had 10 points and 18 rebounds as Oklahoma City won without Danilo Gallinari, who rested a calf injury.

Taurean Prince scored 21 points and Caris LeVert had 20 in his second game back from right thumb surgery, but the Nets dropped their seventh straight. Spencer Dinwiddie had 14 points, but he struggled early and late in a 6 for 21 night.

 

GRIZZLIES 119, 

TIMBERWOLVES 112

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Dillon Brooks scored 28 points, Ja Morant added 25 and Memphis rallied in the fourth quarter for a victory over Minnesota.

Jaren Jackson Jr. finished with 21 points, including a trio of 3-pointers in fourth. Jae Crowder finished with 14 points and eight rebounds as Memphis won its third straight.

Rookie Jarrett Culver led the Timberwolves with a career-high 24 points, converting 8 of 11 shots, including 3 of 5 from outside the arc. Jeff Teague scored 18 points and handed out six assists for Minnesota, while Robert Covington scored 17 points. Andrew Wiggins had 15 points.

Frogs edge Wildcats by a pair

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kevin Samuel and TCU had been bludgeoning Kansas State on the offensive glass all night.

Made perfect sense that’s where the Horned Frogs would ultimately beat the Wildcats.

Their bruising sophomore center deftly tipped in RJ Nembhard’s errant floater with 1.7 seconds remaining Tuesday night, moments after the Wildcats had hit a 3-pointer at the other end to tie the game, and that allowed the Horned Frogs to escape from a stunned Bramlage Coliseum with an ugly 59-57 victory.

“Big thing for us — and it’s always been — offensive rebounding is a big part of everywhere I’ve been,” said TCU coach Jamie Dixon, whose team pulled down a whopping 15 offensive rebounds. “I mean, Kevin was terrific and has been. Defensively, he does so many things for us and 15 rebounds says a lot.”

The last one was the biggest one. It came after the Wildcats had tied the game on David Sloan’s 3-pointer with 13 seconds left, and Nembhard had driven left on Mike McGuirl and hoisted up his shot. Samuel’s tip-in found the bottom of the net with so little time left that all Sloan could do was throw up a heavily guarded, off-balance 3 at the buzzer.

“That’s what Samuel does. He’s a monster,” TCU’s Desmond Bane said. “I tell him that every day. He’s gotten a lot better since last year, his motor is a lot better, is tough. Around the rim is a lot better. These are the types of games he’s going to have throughout the season.”

Samuel finished with 10 points to go with the 15 boards and lead four players in double-figures scoring, helping the Horned Frogs (11-3) start 2-0 in the Big 12 for the first time since joining the league. Bane contributed 16 points, Nembhard added 15 and Jaire Grayer finished with 10 in a total team effort.

Xavier Sneed led Kansas State (7-7, 0-2) with 19 points, though he was just 5 of 14 from the field. His biggest help came at the foul line, where he was 8 of 10 and the rest of the team was just 3 of 9.

“We need to get where we’re getting consistent production out of guys every game and so far that hasn’t happened,” Kansas State coach Bruce Weber said. “It’s typical of our season that we’ve had to deal with one thing after another.”

The Horned Frogs allowed Kansas State to hang around as long as they were clanking 3-pointers

That started to change late in the first half.

Nembhard’s deep shot from the wing broke a 23-all tie, then the Wildcats came up empty on their next two possessions, and Bane and Edric Dennis Jr. added back-to-back 3s that helped TCU take its largest lead of the game.

Makol Mawien scored just before halftime for Kansas State, but he left enough time for the Horned Frogs to race up the floor. The ball got loose but wound up in the hands of Grayer, and his buzzer-beating 3 gave his team a 35-25 lead at the break.

The Horned Frogs started 1 of 10 from beyond the arc. They proceeded to hit eight of their next 12.

Another lull hit TCU midway through the second half, but the Wildcats struggled to take advantage of it. They trailed 40-29 when the Horned Frogs went more than six minutes without a field goal, but when Bane ended the drought with a 3-pointer with 10:45 to go, the visitors from Fort Worth still maintained a 44-40 advantage.

Kansas State kept up the defensive pressure, though, and Sneed took it upon himself to carry the Wildcats on the other end. He buried a 3-pointer from the wing to pull within 51-49 with 3:50 left, then was fouled driving to the basket moments later and made the second of two free throws to make it 53-50 after the final media timeout.

That set the stage for the frantic final couple of minutes.

“Coaches are on me for being on the court too much. Maybe I need to jump on it and get a technical (foul) to wake our guys up a little bit,” Weber said. “They made the big plays.”

 

BIG PICTURE

TCU had lapses in poise that could be attributed in part to playing its first true road game — even though there may have been more empty seats than full ones. The Horned Frogs’ only other games away from the Dallas metro this season came against Clemson and Wyoming in late November at the MGM Resorts Main Event in Las Vegas.

Kansas State has struggled to score all season, so it made was somewhat poetic that the Wildcats would lose another game on a missed shot at the buzzer. Six of their seven losses have been by single digits.

 

UP NEXT

TCU returns home to face Oklahoma State on Kansas State heads to Texas on Saturday night.

No. 4 Baylor wins 11th in a row against No. 22 Texas Tech

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — Coach Scott Drew and No. 4 Baylor got exactly the kind of game they expected, and extended their winning streak even with a season-high 20 turnovers.

“Very proud of our guys from this standpoint … we knew it was going to be a rock fight,” Drew said. “You had two great defenses and two teams that really pride themselves on the defensive end.”

Davion Mitchell scored 14 points, Mark Vital grabbed 13 rebounds and the Bears won their 11th game in a row, 57-52 on Tuesday night at No. 22 Texas Tech, which hadn’t lost at home in nearly a year.

“This is just life in the Big 12, lose by five on your home floor to the No. 4 team in the country on a night where we just didn’t do a lot of things well enough to try to find a way to win the game,” Texas Tech coach Chris Beard said.

The Bears (12-1, 2-0 Big 12) made their last field goal with 3:06 left, but hit five free throws after Chris Clarke’s three-point play for Texas Tech with 29 seconds left cut the gap to 52-50.

Texas Tech (10-4, 1-1) had won 15 consecutive home games since a loss to Iowa State last Jan. 16, and is 58-6 at home in Beard’s four seasons. The Red Raiders had won their last 10 Big 12 games overall.

Freshman Jahmi’us Ramsey led the Red Raiders with 20 points, and Kyler Edwards had 10.

Jared Butler, Baylor’s leading scorer, had only five points — more than 12 below his season average. But he made his first basket on a layup with 3:48 left, and then added a jumper 42 seconds later for a 51-45 lead.

“The thing that I was most proud of, being in the first road Big 12 game, hostile arena against a very well-coached and very good team, we never lost our composure,” Drew said. “Some teams get rattled and throw it away and then now they score another quick bucket. I thought our guys did a great job on moving on to the next play.”

Baylor made the necessary free throws late, and basically sealed the game after a technical foul against the Red Raiders for reaching across and touching the ball before an inbound pass following Ramsey’s layup with eight seconds left.

“I feel like we had momentum at first but then they just kept coming back and getting tough buckets on us,” Edwards said. “Think that kind of derailed us and getting offensive rebounds.”

Texas Tech had an early 9-7 lead on a Ramsey layup. Baylor then scored the next eight points, including two baskets by Freddie Gillespie, and never trailed again.

 

BIG PICTURE:

Baylor: The Bears went into a hostile environment and took care of business, and improving to 4-0 against Top 25 opponents this season. Baylor focused in on their mismatches and never looked back. They used their size advantage for a 44-25 rebounding margin.

Texas Tech: The Red Raiders saw their weakness exploited as the Bears controlled the paint. Texas Tech doesn’t really have a big man inside. Ramsey got his 20 points on 7-of-17 shooting and Davide Moretti struggled to eight points on 3-of-11 shooting — 0-for-6 on 3s.

 

STREAKING BEARS

Only No. 7 San Diego State (15) and No. 5 Auburn (13), who both play Wednesday, have longer active winning streaks than Baylor. The 11 in a row by the Bears matches the fifth-longest in program history.

 

TIP-INS

Gillespie finished with nine points and 10 rebounds. … Texas Tech has held seven of its 14 opponents this season under 60 points. … Baylor entered the game leading the Big 12 in scoring defense, allowing only 58.9 points a game.

 

UP NEXT

Baylor has another Top 25 matchup on the road, at No. 3 Kansas on Saturday.

Texas Tech plays three of its next four games on the road, the first coming Saturday at No. 17 West Virginia.