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Gooden, Snow lead Schreiner to searing second-half rout of Colorado College

The Mountaineers trailed 40-36 at intermission before exploding for 52 second-half points while holding the Tigers to just 28 after the break.

Schreiner University turned a four-point halftime deficit into a commanding 20-point victory, overwhelming Colorado College 88-68 Sunday afternoon at Stephens Family Arena.

The Mountaineers trailed 40-36 at intermission before exploding for 52 second-half points while holding the Tigers to just 28 after the break. Dylan Snow orchestrated the turnaround with 16 points and a game-high eight assists, while Justin Gooden poured in a team-high 18 points on 7-of-14 shooting.

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Nick Nuedorfer provided a crucial lift off the bench with 17 points on 5-of-10 shooting, adding eight rebounds in 22 minutes. Hudson Czarnecki contributed 11 points, hitting all four of his free throw attempts, while Mason McGowan added 10 points and six rebounds.

Schreiner shot 49.2 percent from the field (31-of-63) and dominated at the free throw line, converting 18 of 21 attempts for 85.7 percent. The Mountaineers held a 44-34 advantage on the glass and dished out 25 assists on 31 field goals.

Asher Nofziger led Colorado College with 21 points and seven rebounds, while Gavin Carter added 10 points. The Tigers struggled from the field in the second half, managing just 36.5 percent shooting for the game and connecting on only 8 of 24 three-point attempts.

Carson Diamond added eight points and three rebounds for Schreiner, which improved to 11-11 overall and 8-5 in Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Gold Division play. The victory keeps the Mountaineers in third place in the division standings behind conference leaders St. Thomas and Concordia (Texas).

Author

Growing up in Southern California, Louis Amestoy remained connected to Texas as the birthplace of his father and grandfather. Texas was always a presence in the family’s life. Amestoy’s great-grandparents settled in San Antonio, Texas, drawn by the city’s connections to Mexico and the region’s German communities. In 2019, Louis Amestoy saw an opportunity to make a home in Texas. After 30 years of working for corporate media chains, Louis Amestoy saw a chance to establish an independent voice in the Texas Hill Country. He launched The Lead to be that vehicle. With investment from Meta, Amestoy began independently publishing on Aug. 9, 2021. The Amestoys have called Kerrville home since 2019.

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