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No. 7 Jayhawks ease by Washburn
College Basketball
spt Washburn Kansas Baske Kiew
Kansas forward Perry Ellis (34) is covered by Washburn forward Bobby Chipman during an exhibition NCAA basketball game in Lawrence on Monday night. - photo by The Associated Press

LAWRENCE — Ben McLemore had 17 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 7 Kansas was tested by Division II power Washburn before easing to a 62-50 exhibition victory Monday night.
Elijah Johnson added 13 points and freshman Perry Ellis had 10 for the Jayhawks, who turned the ball over 24 times in their final tuneup before they open their regular season Friday night against Southeast Missouri State.
After that is a date with No. 14 Michigan State on Nov. 13.
Kansas has a long way to go before that early season showdown in Atlanta.
Despite returning three starters from the team that pushed Kentucky to the limit in last season’s national championship game, the Jayhawks have appeared ragged and unpolished through their first two exhibition games against small, in-state schools Emporia State and Washburn.
They needed a 19-1 run to help put away the Hornets last week, and then used a 16-3 run early Monday night before coaxing the game toward its messy conclusion.
McLemore, who sat out last season as a partial NCAA qualifier, was one of the few players in coach Bill Self’s lineup who managed to produce on offense. He combined with Ellis and Johnson to score 29 of the Jayhawks’ first 34 points, allowing them to build a 36-24 lead by halftime.
Still, even McLemore gave Self plenty of teachable moments.
One of them came early in the second half, when he gathered in the ball on the wing. With only one smaller defender in his way to the basket, McLemore opted to take a midrange jumper rather than go to the rim, leaving Self to scream halfway across the court for him to attack.
Self wound up calling three timeouts in the first 10 minutes of the second half.
These are the kind of growing pains that Kansas will no doubt experience through the first part of the season, though.
Seven-footer Jeff Withey, one of the nation’s premier post defenders, struggled again to get on track. He only had seven points and six rebounds against Emporia State, and had nine points and eight rebounds against the Ichabods, even though he had a massive size advantage in the paint.