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Former Griffon Zuerlein makes 4 FGs to help Rams defeat Tampa Bay

RamsTAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Austin Davis played with the poise and resolve of a seasoned pro.

“We never panicked,” veteran tackle Jake Long said Sunday after Davis led a late field goal drive that gave the St. Louis Rams a 19-17 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday in the 25-year-old quarterback’s first NFL start.

“It’s special. I can’t really describe what I felt,” Davis, a third-stringer when training camp began, said after receiving a game ball from coach Jeff Fisher. “I felt a peace out there. I felt at home, and it had a lot to do with the guys I was around and how well we played.”

Greg Zuerlein’s fourth field goal of the day, a 38-yarder with 38 seconds remaining, won it.

You can place blame for the Bucs’ loss to the Rams on the shoulders of Lovie Smith and his staff for their conservative game plan, Pat Yasinskas writes. Story

Davis threw 13 yards to Lance Kendricks on third-and-1, 15 yards to Brian Quick on second-and-9, and 27 yards to Austin Pettis on third-and-9 to set up the winner.

“I can’t say enough about Austin. … I felt like he’d be OK because of the entire weeks’ worth of preparation,” Fisher said. “He was very poised. … Nothing overwhelming to him. He made really good decisions against a good defense, an injury-depleted defense, but a good defense.”

Davis completed 22 of 29 passes for 235 yards with no interceptions. Zac Stacy had a 2-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, and Zuerlein also made field goals of 36, 35 and 46 yards to help the Rams (1-1) rebound from a lopsided season-opening loss to Minnesota.

Davis made his debut in that game after Shaun Hill was injured, throwing for 192 yards but also having an interception returned for a touchdown.

“He made good decisions and handled the run checks very well. He did well with the play action stuff,” Fisher said. “He gave receivers opportunities to make plays. … Credit the offensive line, too. We ran the football and we protected fairly very well.”

Bobby Rainey rushed for 144 yards and quarterback Josh McCown had two short touchdown runs for the Bucs (0-2), who moved the ball into St. Louis territory in the closing seconds only to have the game end when rookie Mike Evans was slow getting up after a 29-yard reception to the St. Louis 32.

Officials stopped the clock with 8 seconds remaining and Evans was eventually helped off the field, But by rule, an injury in that situation requires a 10-second runoff, and the remaining time was wiped off the clock.

“Unfortunately he just took a hard hit. Mike was just trying to find his bearings, I think, and so the refs blew (the whistle for an injury timeout), I guess. It’s unfortunate because I felt like we were getting to the spot where we wanted to let (kicker Patrick Murray) take a swing at it.”

McCown scored on runs of 1 and 5 yards. Rainey, filling in for the injured Doug Martin, helped the Bucs move into position for Murray to kick a 36-yard field goal to give Tampa Bay a 17-16 lead with 5:15 remaining.

But a defense playing without tackle Gerald McCoy and middle linebacker Mason Foster couldn’t keep Davis from leading the Rams on a 12-play, 71-yard drive to win the game.

With Sam Bradford out for the year with a knee injury and Hill hobbled by a thigh injury, Davis prepared the entire week to be the starter.

Hill was active Sunday, however Fisher didn’t waver on his decision to go with Davis, who spent most of the past two seasons on the Rams’ practice squad.

“At no point was there a chance for Shaun to start. … It couldn’t have worked out better for him,” Fisher said. “Again, he’ll be day to day next week. This week really helped him, and another week will significantly help him put this thing behind him.”

McCown, a career backup entering a season as a starter for the first time in a decade, completed passes of 18 and 20 yards to Vincent Jackson before Rainey broke a 10-yard run to set up the quarterback’s second TD made it 14-10.

The Bucs threatened again on their next possession, driving deep into Rams territory before Murray’s 26-yard field goal attempt was blocked by T.J. McDonald.

The Bucs also had a punt blocked, leading to a Rams field goal. McCown also threw a first-quarter interception that stopped a drive inside the Rams 10.

“That was a tough one to lose. Anytime you have a blocked punt, blocked field goal, in the red zone getting ready to put points on the board and you throw an interception, you’re not going to win many games,” Bucs coach Lovie Smith said. “We got ourselves back in position at the end, and it’s unfortunate we didn’t handle the situation as well as we needed to there at the end.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis completes sweep of Rockies with 4-1 victory Sunday

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — St. Louis rookie Marco Gonzales grew up watching the Colorado Rockies.

Raised in Fort Collins, about an hour north of Denver, he is quite familiar with Coors Field.

“I spent a good part of my life there,” the Cardinals lefty said.

Gonzales came back to beat his boyhood favorites on Sunday.

In just his fifth major league start, Gonzales struck out nine and allowed one run over 5 2/3 innings to help the NL Central-leading Cardinals beat the Rockies 4-1 for their third straight win.

The Cardinals held their 3 1-2-game division lead over Pittsburgh. St. Louis has won 13 straight regular-season home games in September and October.

Colorado lost all six games on its just-completed road trip. Third baseman Nolan Arenado left the game soon after bruising his chest diving for a ball in the third inning.

Jhonny Peralta hit a two-run homer to cap a three-run rally in the third inning. It was his team-high 21st homer.

Gonzales (3-2) turned in the finest effort of his career under the pressure of a pennant chase.

“It’s great to be in a race, you could feel the intensity out there,” Gonzales said. “My number was called and I just tried to focus, go out there and do my job.”

Gonzales, the Cardinals’ first-round pick in the 2013 draft, gave up two hits over the first five innings and carried a 3-1 lead into the sixth. He surrendered a two-out single to Brandon Barnes before leaving.

“It was a terrific outing,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “We needed that. He really came up big.”

Added catcher Yadier Molina, “He stepped up and I’m happy for him.”

Gonzales’ strikeout total was the most by a Cardinals rookie left-hander since Rick Ankiel fanned 11 in 2000 against Pittsburgh.

Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side in the ninth to pick up his NL-leading 44th save in 49 opportunities. Six St. Louis pitchers combined to fan 16.

Peralta’s homer, a 410-foot shot off Jordan Lyles (6-3), broke a 1-all tie and put the Cardinals ahead to stay.

“When I hit it, right away, I knew I hit it good,” Peralta said.

Matt Holliday hit an RBI double before Peralta homered. Molina had three hits for St. Louis and scored in the eighth on a wild pitch.

Barnes drove in the Rockies’ run with a double in the second.

Lyles gave up three runs on nine hits over six innings.

“I just made a mistake to Peralta and good hitters put good swings on the ball,” Lyles said. “He hit it a long way.”

Colorado scored just eight runs during the six-game losing streak, three came in the ninth inning of a 5-4 loss to St. Louis on Saturday.

The Cardinals, who are 19-2 in their last 21 home games in September and October, carry plenty of momentum into a three-game series against Milwaukee that begins Tuesday.

“For us, it’s a one-game series every night,” Matheny said. “That’s the way we’ve got to look at it.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rockies: 1B Justin Morneau did not start for the second successive game after straining a side muscle in Friday’s 5-1 loss.

Cardinals: 1B Matt Adams was held out of the lineup. He sustained a slight oblique muscle pull in Saturday’s 5-4 win. He is listed as day-to-day.

UP NEXT

Rockies: RHP Christian Bergman (2-3, 4.89) will face Roberto Hernandez (8-11, 4.04) in the opener of a three-game against Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday in Denver. Bergman will be making his eighth major league start.

Cardinals: RHP Lance Lynn (15-9, 2.73) will open a three-game series at home against Milwaukee’s Wily Peralta (16-10, 3.75) on Tuesday. Lynn is 5-2 with a 2.37 ERA in nine starts against the Brewers.

— Associated Press —

Mo. man hospitalized after Sunday accident

LEAVENWORTH- A Missouri man was injured in a motorcycle accident just 3 p.m. on Sunday in Leavenworth County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 ASVE motorcycle driven by Michael Robert Zimmerman, 37, Platte City, was east bound on U.S. 24. The driver lost control of the motorcycle. It left the roadway to the north and struck a KDOT guardrail.

Zimmerman was transported to KU Medical Center
The KHP reported he was not wearing a helmet.

FedEx worker dies in Mo. accident

PARKVILLE (AP) – A FedEx worker has died after being pinned by his delivery vehicle outside Kansas City.

The Kansas City Star reports that the accident happened Friday just outside of Parkville. The name of the FedEx worker who died wasn’t immediately released.

Preliminary reports indicate that the worker was outside of his delivery vehicle at a residence when the vehicle rolled and struck him. Authorities arrived and found the worker pinned between the vehicle and a house. No other details were immediately available.

FedEx said in a written statement that its “heartfelt thoughts and condolences” were with the friends and family of the driver. The company said it was cooperating with authorities.

2 dead, 3 injured on Kansas Turnpike near Topeka

FatalTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say two people have been killed and three injured in a single-vehicle crash on the Kansas Turnpike west of Topeka.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that a sport utility vehicle driving from Omaha, Nebraska, rolled Saturday night near a highway exit. Turnpike officials said the vehicle was turning too fast while exiting the highway.

The victims were identified as 22-year-old Janetta-Marie Niesha Godbolt and 20-year-old Arthur L Godbolt Jr. Three other occupants of the vehicle were taken to a hospital, but their conditions weren’t immediately available.

Analysis: Kobach at center of Kansas Senate drama

Kobach

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

 

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s position as chief Kansas elections officer is allowing him to play a marquee role in the political drama surrounding Democrat Chad Taylor’s attempt to get off the ballot in the U.S. Senate race.

Taylor ended his campaign last week. He was nudged out of the race against three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts by Democrats who viewed independent candidate Greg Orman as the stronger rival and wanted to consolidate most of the anti-Roberts vote behind Orman.

The GOP secretary of state has faced a torrent of criticism for refusing to remove Taylor’s name from the ballot. Taylor turned to the Kansas Supreme Court for relief.

But Kobach’s official duties made him an administrative gatekeeper for any nominee seeking to get off the ballot.

KU Baby Lab studies brain development

KU Med  University of Kansas HospitalOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — The researchers at the University of Kansas who monitor the seemingly everyday activities of babies are seeking to unlock the key to childhood language development.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the KU Baby Lab at the university’s Edwards Campus is studying how infants pay attention in social settings.

The first phase of the study is for two years and about halfway finished. The second phase will be a three-year longitudinal study of children with signs of developmental delays. The research could eventually reveal early warning signs of autism and lead to advancements in the way all infants are taught language.

The university also has baby labs in Lawrence and at the KU Medical Center.

Farming rights measure survives Mo. recount

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A recount of a Missouri farming rights amendment appears to have confirmed its passage.
Opponents of the measure had asked for a recount after the official tally from the August election showed the proposed constitutional amendment passing by a margin of 2,490 votes out of nearly 1 million cast.

According to figures submitted by local election authorities to Secretary of State Jason Kander, the recount has reduced that margin of passage to 2,376 votes.
The secretary of state’s office is expected to officially certify the results of the recount Monday.
The amendment creates a constitutional right to engage in farming and ranching. Missouri is just the second state behind North Dakota to place farming rights in its constitution.

St. Joseph teens hospitalized after truck overturns

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPST. JOSEPH- Two teenagers were injured in an accident just before 5 a.m. on Sunday in Andrew County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Chevy pickup driven by Dalton S. Anderson, St. Joseph, was southbound on U.S. 71 six miles north of St. Joseph. The driver fell asleep. The pickup went off the west side of the road, struck a guardrail and overturned.

Passengers in the vehicle Jessica D. Talley, 18, and Sarah M. Alsbury, both of St. Joseph, were taken to Heartland Regional Medical Center.

Anderson was not injured.

The MSHP reported they were not wearing seat belts.

Hurdles for Obama health law in 2nd sign-up season

Healthcare Healthcare.govRICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The next open enrollment season for President Barack Obama’s health care law is only two months away.

Don’t expect a repeat of last year’s website meltdown, but other potential complications await consumers.

This year could expose underlying problems with the law itself that are less easily fixed than a computer system.

The way the law combines insurance and taxes — already two of the most complicated areas for consumers — looks like a sure-fire formula for confusion.

Even supporters of the law are concerned.

The Obama administration is promising a better consumer experience when open enrollment starts Nov. 15, but even its officials say things won’t be perfect.

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