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Northwest’s DeBuysere named MIAA Defensive Player of the Week

Senior linebacker, Collin DeBuysere, was tabbed MIAA Defensive Player of the Week as voted on by league sports information directors Monday.

DeBuysere is the fifth Bearcat to be honored by the league and first defensive player this season. The Geneseo, Ill. native recorded seven tackles, 1.5 tackles for a loss and one sack in the Bearcats’ 55-10 rout of then-20th ranked Emporia State. He grabbed his fourth interception of the season and 24th of the year for the NCAA leading Northwest defense.

The Bearcats close out the regular season as they host Missouri Western on the MIAA TV Game of the Week. Kickoff between the Bearcats and Griffons is set for 2:30 p.m. from Bearcat Stadium.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Royals SS Escobar wins 2012 Joe Burke Special Achievement Award winner

The Kansas City Royals have announced that shortstop Alcides Escobar was selected as the 2012 Joe Burke Special Achievement Award winner.  The award was voted on by the Kansas City Chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA).  The Joe Burke is awarded to an unsung player who contributed above and beyond what was expected, or someone who the writers felt deserved some recognition for an outstanding season.

Escobar had a breakout offensive season in 2012, his second with Kansas City after being acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers on December 19, 2010.  The 25-year old set career highs with a .293 average, 177 hits, 30 doubles, five home runs, 52 RBI, and 35 stolen bases.  The 177 hits were 13 more than the previous single-season mark for a Royals shortstop.  His .293 average ranked second to New York’s Derek Jeter among MLB shortstops and was the third-highest single-season mark at the position by a Royal.  Escobar’s 35 stolen bases ranked fifth in the American League and were the most by a Royals player since 2003.  He became the first infielder in franchise history to post at least 30 doubles and 30 steals in the same season and the first Royal to accomplish the feat since Carlos Beltran in 2002.  Escobar’s first career multi-homer game on July 14 vs. Chicago was the first by a Royals shortstop since 1997.

The Royals plan to announce the 2012 Bruce Rice Pitcher of the Year tomorrow and the 2012 Les Milgram Player of the Year on Wednesday, November 7.  Both awards will be revealed at noon CT.

— Royals Media Relations —

K-State’s Chapman & Lockett earn weekly Big 12 honors

Kansas State senior defensive back Allen Chapman and sophomore kick returner Tyler Lockett have been named the Big 12 Defensive and Special Teams Players of the Week for their performances in the Wildcats’ 44-30 win over Oklahoma State, the conference office announced Monday.

The two selections gave K-State a Big 12-leading eight player-of-the-week honors this season and pushed its total to 17 since the beginning of 2011, which is also a league best. It was the first honor of Chapman’s career, while Lockett was selected for the second time this year and fourth in his career.

Both players recorded non-offensive touchdowns as Chapman returned an interception 29 yards for a score late in the first half, while Lockett returned a kickoff 100 yards to give K-State a 24-10 lead with 7:35 left in the second quarter. The two scores represented Kansas State’s 86th and 87th non-offensive touchdowns since 1999 – which leads the nation – while the Wildcats are now 16-0 under head coach Bill Snyder when scoring on both defense and special teams.

Chapman, who was also named the Walter Camp National Defensive Player of the Week, intercepted three Oklahoma State passes as part of a five-turnover night for the Wildcat defense. The San Francisco, Calif., product tallied the second-most interceptions in a game in school history and the most by a Wildcat since Chris Canty’s three picks against Akron in 1995.

One of six players this year with a nation-leading three interceptions in a game, Chapman’s first interception was the pick-six, while he ended a Cowboy drive in K-State territory at the end of the first half and in the end zone with 2:06 left in the game and the Wildcats holding their 14-point lead.

Lockett carded the fourth kickoff-return touchdown of his career and his second of 100 yards. The Tulsa, Okla., native is now tied for second in school and Big 12 history in kickoff-return scores, just one shy of Brandon Banks’ five from 2009-08. It was the fourth 100-yard kickoff return touchdown in school history, while the return was a part of a 202 all-purpose-yardage night for Lockett as he added 27 yards on another kickoff return and 75 receiving yards on five catches.

Second-ranked K-State (9-0, 5-0 Big 12) will travel to take on TCU (6-3, 3-3) Saturday at Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas. The game, which kicks off at 6 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

Big 12 TV selections made for November 17 games

For the third-straight week and fourth time in the last five games, Kansas State will play under the lights as its game at Baylor on November 17 will kick off at 7 p.m., and will be shown to a national audience on ESPN, Big 12 Conference and network officials announced Monday.

K-State, 9-0 for the first time since 1999, will be shown on ESPN for the first time this season and the second in as many seasons.

The second-ranked Wildcats will travel to Fort Worth, Texas, to take on TCU Saturday in a 6 p.m., contest at Amon G. Carter Stadium. The contest will be televised nationally by FOX, while fans can hear the game on the K-State Sports Network as well as SIRIUS Satellite Radio channel 91 and XM channel 91.

Television Selections for November 17

Texas Tech at Oklahoma State, 2:30 p.m., FSN
Oklahoma at West Virginia, 6 p.m. (CT), FOX
Iowa State at Kansas, 6 p.m., FSN
K-State at Baylor, 7 p.m., ESPN

— KSU Sports Information —

Mizzou rolls past Missouri Southern in final exhibition game

Freshmen Stefan Jankovic and Negus Webster-Chan combined for 34 points and 12 rebounds as the former high school teammates led Missouri Basketball to an 86-60 victory over Missouri Southern to close out exhibition play on Sunday.

Jankovic came off the bench and flourished on the perimeter, hitting 8-of-13 shots, including three from outside the three-point stripe to pace the Tigers with 20 points. His former high school point guard, Webster-Chan, earned his first start as a Tiger and scored 14 points on 5-of-7 shooting to go with seven rebounds and three assists.

Webster-Chan earned the start after senior Keion Bell was sidelined with an illness. The Scarborough, Ontario, native quickly stepped in for Bell and even saw extended time running the point and did not commit a turnover in 28 minutes of playing time.

Missouri was once again balanced offensively, led by the two freshmen. Junior college transfer Tony Criswell also came off the bench and added 13 points on 5-of-8 shooting, while Laurence Bowers and Earnest Ross chipped in 11 and 10 respectively.

Missouri Southern kept the game tight in the first half thanks to the hot shooting of Marquis Addison. Addison had 14 of his team-high 19 points in the first half and the Tigers carried just a 42-33 lead into the break.

The game quickly turned in the second half, however, as an improved defensive intensity allowed Mizzou to start the second frame with a 13-2 run. Phil Pressey and Webster-Chan each scored four quick points and Missouri pushed its lead to 57-35 with just under 14:00 remaining.

Missouri led by as many as 31 in the second half and shot 63 percent over the final 20 minutes, while holding Missouri Southern to just 33 percent shooting during that same stretch.

The win caps exhibition play for the Tigers. Missouri returns to action on Saturday afternoon vs. SIU Edwardsville at 4 p.m. That game time was moved back one hour due to Mizzou Football’s game at Tennessee next weekend.

— MU Sports Information —

Kansas State/TCU to kick at 6 PM on FOX

K-State’s Big 12 Conference matchup with TCU has been chosen as the FOX College Football Game of the Week and will air to a full national audience as the network and the league office announced today television selections for Saturday.

Kickoff from Amon Carter Stadium is set for 6 p.m. Gus Johnson will handle the play-by-play duties for the game with analysis from Charles Davis, while Julie Alexandria reports from the sidelines.

The second-ranked Wildcats beat No. 24 Oklahoma State, 44-30, Saturday to move to 9-0 overall and 6-0 in Big 12 play, while TCU is 6-3 and 3-3 after a win at West Virginia this past weekend.

Television Selections for November 10

Kansas at Texas Tech, FSN, 11 am CT
Iowa State at Texas, LHN, 11 am CT
West Virginia at Oklahoma State, ABC, 2:30 pm CT with reverse mirror on ESPN2
Baylor at Oklahoma, FSN, 2:30 pm CT
K-State at TCU, FOX, 6 pm CT

— KSU Sports Information —

KSU’s Chapman named Walter Camp Defensive Player of the Week

Following his three-interception game against No. 24 Oklahoma State, Kansas State senior defensive back Allen Chapman was named the Walter Camp National Defensive Player of the Week, the Walter Camp Foundation announced Sunday.

It is the Wildcats’ second honor of the year from the foundation as quarterback Collin Klein earned the offensive nod following the West Virginia contest.

Chapman led a K-State defense that picked off four passes and forced five Oklahoma State turnovers, which resulted in 21 points, in the Wildcats’ 44-30 victory. His three interceptions were tied for the second most in school history and were the most by a Wildcat since Chris Canty had three against Akron in 1995, while Chapman is one of six players with a nation-leading three interceptions in a game this season.

A product of San Francisco, Calif., Chapman’s first interception was returned 29 yards for a touchdown to give K-State a 31-17 lead in the second quarter. It was the second pick-six of his career, both coming against Oklahoma State as he returned one 60 yards for a score last year. His second pick of the evening halted an OSU drive in K-State territory towards the end of the first half, while his final interception was in the end zone late in the fourth quarter with the Wildcats’ clinging to the 14-point lead.

In addition to his interceptions, Chapman recorded five tackles and batted away two other passes.

No. 2 Kansas State will travel to Fort Worth, Texas, Saturday to take on TCU at Amon G. Carter Stadium. The contest, which kicks off at 6 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

No. 11 Griffons roll again with 56-28 win over Washburn

The Missouri Western football team tied the record for most wins in a season winning its ninth game of the year defeating the 25th ranked Washburn Ichabods 56-28 on Senior Day from Spratt Stadium. Michael Hill scampered for a career best 259 yards and three touchdowns and now holds the record for most rushing yards in regular season games with 1,688 on the season. The Griffons honored 22 seniors before the game as the have now won 35 games in their four year career. MWSU has won nine games in the following years (2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011 and now 2012). MWSU sits at 9-1 overall and 8-1 in MIAA play.

The Griffons started the first quarter with tons of momentum. Linebacker Nick Williams snatched an interception out of the air on Washburn’s second drive, and after Travis Partridge ran a quarterback sneak for a 5-yard touchdown, Partridge hit Tyron Crockom across the middle for a 45-yard score to go ahead 14-0.

Running back Michael Hill added a 36-yard touchdown to make the score 21-0 after one quarter of play.

MWSU carried the momentum into the next quarter. The Griffons drove 91 yard on five plays and finished with a 3-yard touchdown by Hill to go ahead 28-0.

Following that score, Ichadbod’s running back Hayden Groves scored on a 71-yarder to draw the Ichabods closer, making the game 28-7 midway through the second quarter.

Washburn drew within two scores late in the first half as Kameron Stewart piled into the end zone on a 2-yard run to make the game 28-14 heading into the break. Hill rushed for 145 yards on 12 carries and two touchdowsn while Reggie Jordan caught two passes for 42 yards. Ben Jackson led the charge with five tackles.

The Ichabods had 214 yards in the opening half with 128 coming on the ground. Hayden Groves had 103 yards on 13 carries with a touchdown while Matt Kobbeman had five catches for 47 yards. Calvin Kenney had six tackles while Willie Williams had five.

Missouri Western broke the game open in the second half, scoring 28 unanswered points to take the game 56-14. The Griffons opened up the half going 80 yards on five plays which was capped off by a Travis Partridge one yard touchdown plunge. Hill rushed for his third touchdown of the game on the next possession capping an 80 yard 13 play drive. Two more touchdowns one by Raphael Spencer and one by Partridge gave the Griffons the 56-14 lead with 9:43 to play in the game.

Washburn tacked on two late touchdowns as they fell to 7-3 overall and 7-3 in MIAA play.

Griffon place kicker Taylor Anderson set the record for most extra points in a row with 63 in his career and now has 57 in a row this season. The Griffons finished with 569 yards with 418 coming on the ground. Spencer had 69 yards and a touchdown while Travis Partridge had 42 yards on seven carries and three touchdowns.

Defensively Ray Cottman finished with eight tackles while Dan Ritter pitched in seven.

Washburn had 375 yards with 177 on the ground and 198 threw the air. Groves finished with 123 while Kameron Stewart had 57 and a touchdown. Joel Piper completed 13-of-24 passes for 153 yards and two touchdowns while Tore’ Hurst caught six passes for 106 yards. Willimas finished with 14 tackles.

The Griffons close out the regular season next weekend against rival Northwest Missouri State in Maryville, Mo. The game will be broadcasted on the MIAA Network with kickoff changed from 1:00 pm to 2:37 pm from Bearcat Stadium. The winner of the game will be the out right MIAA Conference Champion.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats crush Emporia State for eighth straight win

Northwest Missouri State took care of business Saturday afternoon, rolling past Emporia State 55-10 to extend its winning streak to eight games, move into a tie atop the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association and stay pointed toward the NCAA’s Division II football playoffs.

Buckle up. It sets up a seismic final game of the regular season.

Missouri Western also won impressively Saturday, 56-28 over Washburn, and the Griffons will bus to Maryville for a high-stakes, high-emotion showdown next weekend. They and Northwest share the MIAA lead, both at 8-1 in conference play, and are neck-and-neck in the NCAA’s Super Region 3 rankings.

Northwest Missouri was No. 4 this week, trailing undefeated Henderson (Ark.) State and Minnesota State and once-beaten Harding (Ark.). Western was No. 5.

Six teams in the ultracompetitive region will advance to the playoffs. Maybe the Bearcats or Griffons can afford a second loss, but it would make for a restless day’s wait until the bracket is revealed Nov. 11. The winner almost certainly can count on a first game at home.

“I couldn’t have drawn a better, written a better, story. It’s just something to look forward to,” said Northwest tackle Rod Williams, the only senior starting on the Bearcats’ offensive line. “They (the Griffons) are a great team. They do things on film that you have to be prepared for. Their D-line is probably going to be one of the better ones that we’ve seen all season, if not the best.”

Said Bearcats running back Jordan Simmons, who ignited the rout of Emporia State with an 85-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, “It’s a great way to end our regular season, especially for our seniors. . . . It’s going to be a great matchup.”

Northwest Missouri – back in Bearcat Stadium after playing all of October on the road – looked every bit a contender against Emporia, delighting a Homecoming crowd of 9,137 that included Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon. The Bearcats (9-1 overall) won for the 18th consecutive time against the Hornets and 14th time in a row at home.

Simmons’ day only started with the kick return. He also ran for three touchdowns, piled up 225 all-purpose yards and was named the Don Black Homecoming MVP.

James Franklin rushed for a couple of scores. Rover Collin DeBuysere spearheaded a Northwest defense that intercepted three passes, keeping Emporia’s signature passing game in check. And Todd Adolf kicked 30- and 45-yard field goals.

The Bearcats spotted Emporia State an early 3-0 lead, then – starting with Simmons long return – erupted for 48 unanswered points.

They doused the Hornets’ MIAA title hopes and likely their playoff chances. Emporia had fallen 57-28 to Missouri Western a week earlier, and now is 8-2 both overall and in the league.

“We were just ready to play,” Northwest coach Adam Dorrel said. “Our enthusiasm and energy level were really good. That’s to be expected, being on the road for four weeks.”

Emporia’s initial lead lasted just 15 seconds. That’s how long it took to kick to Simmons and for the 5-9, fifth-year senior from Kansas City to bob, weave and sprint all the way to the end zone. It was his second kick return for a touchdown this season and the fifth of his career, the latter padding his MIAA record.

A little more than a minute later, Simmons gathered in an Emporia punt and returned it 16 yards to the Hornets’ 43-yard line. That set up a seven-play drive ending with his one-yard run for a TD.

Simmons added another 1-yard scoring run just before halftime, making it 38-3. And he ran for a three-yard TD in the third quarter. He finished with 90 yards on the ground, another 34 on four pass receptions and the 101 yards in returns.

“I’ve coached football for 15 years, and he’s got a really high football IQ. And his instincts are just really good, really natural,” Dorrel said.

He marveled at the kick return. “I can’t wait to watch it on film,” Dorel said. “It’s like he feels those guys coming. It’s like he’s got rear-view mirrors on his helmet. . . . I don’t know how he does it, but he’s definitely special.”

Of late, so is Northwest’s defensive secondary.

A week earlier, the Bearcats intercepted six passes in a rout of Washburn. They already led Emporia 24-3 when Nate DeJong came up with the first of their three against Hornets quarterback Tyler Eckenrode – extending a remarkable six-week stretch for DeJong. The senior safety now has a pick in each of Northwest’s last six games.

The ’Cats’ offense converted the turnover into a TD to make it 31-3. And it turned subsequent interceptions by cornerback Brian Dixon and DeBuysere into two more scores later in the first half and near the end of the third quarter.

DeBuysere also had one of Northwest’s four quarterback sacks and a total of 2½ tackles for losses.

He and the Bearcats have a Division II-high 24 interceptions on the year.

“We’ve had good schemes from our coaches,” DeBuysere said, “and our D-line is just doing a phenomenal job of getting pressure on the quarterback. I don’t think he necessarily wants to throw it sometimes when he wants to. And our DBs have improved tremendously from last year. You can see that in Nate and the Dixon brothers (Brian and Brandon) and Clarke (Snodgrass) back there.

“As a linebacker, it’s fun to play in the middle of those guys and just run around.”

Now, the Bearcats can turn their attention to a game – vs. Missouri Western – that has loomed increasingly large as the season played down.

Northwest was ranked No. 4 in the coaches’ poll this past week, Western No. 11. Only twice before have both been that high when they met, and the timing in each case was a little less dramatic: in early October 2009, when the sixth-ranked Bearcats beat Western 49-35, and the first weekend in October 2010, when Northwest Missouri rolled 42-0.

The Bearcats, of course, went on to win the 2009 national championship. Both teams wound earning playoff berths the next season and drew a first-round rematch, Northwest winning 28-24 en route to the D-II semifinals.

Last season poured more fuel on the rivalry. Missouri Western celebrated a 31-28 victory in St. Joseph on the next-to-last weekend of the regular season. Paired again in the playoffs two weeks later, the Bearcats erased a two-touchdown deficit in the final 23 minutes – finally moving ahead on Matt Longacre’s return of a fumble recovery with 8:01 left – to win 35-29.

Another expected crowd of 9,000 plus and a regional television audience will look on when the teams collide again next Saturday.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Mizzou’s upset bid comes up short at Florida

Florida has reason to celebrate, although it’s not enough to elicit much reaction from coach Will Muschamp or his players.

Mike Gillislee took a screen pass and went 45 yards for a touchdown, and the No. 8 Gators used stifling defense to stave off Southeastern Conference newcomer Missouri 14-7 on Saturday.

Florida rebounded from a turnover-filled loss to rival Georgia, clinched at least a share of the SEC’s Eastern Division and eclipsed last season’s win total.

The Gators hardly seemed to care.

”I took this job understanding fully the expectation is to go to Atlanta and win a championship,” Muschamp said. ”I’ve made my comment about how I feel about your season if that’s not accomplished. We’ve made strides, but we’re not where we want to be.”

Florida could still get there.

The Gators (8-1, 7-1 SEC) need the Bulldogs to lose one of their remaining games, against Mississippi on Saturday or Auburn next week, to clinch a spot in the league title game.

At times, Florida looked less than interested in staying in the SEC hunt. The Gators were shut out in the first half, managing just 111 yards and failing to contain Missouri quarterback James Franklin.

But like it has in so many other games this season, Florida played considerably better in the second half.

The Gators turned two short fields into touchdowns, with Omarius Hines scoring on a 36-yard jet sweep to tie the game in the third before Gillislee put Florida ahead for good in the fourth.

”We gave up too many big plays,” Missouri linebacker Will Ebner said. ”We put this loss on our back because we allowed them to score more points than our offense scored. We’re never going to blame someone else. You’ve got to have each other’s back. We shut them out the first half, why couldn’t we do it in the second half?”

Jeff Driskel lofted a pass to Gillislee in the right flat, and with two blockers out front, Gillislee made one cut and went untouched for his eighth score of the season.

The defense did the rest, stopping Missouri on six consecutive drives that ended in Florida territory.

”I always tell them, ‘You’re the firemen. Go put the fire out,”’ Muschamp said. ”I don’t care how bad it’s blazing. Go put it out. And regardless of the situations and circumstances, when you walk on the field, your job is to stop them. … It’s an opportunity for greatness. You go out and make a stop on the goal line. You want to be great, be put in those situations and do it.”

Florida’s defense has done it all season, the main reason it’s in this position, and the offense needed to be bailed out again against Missouri (4-5, 1-5).

The Gators finished with 276 yards, went 2 of 13 on third down and struggled to get anything going in the passing game.

Driskel completed 12 of 23 passes for 106 yards, with nearly half of that coming on the screen pass. Gillislee ran 16 times for 68 yards – his fourth consecutive game under 70 yards. And Florida’s offensive line was overmatched again.

”I’m a realist and I believe in being honest and calling it the way it is,” Muschamp said. ”And when it stinks, it stinks. … We’ve been able to win and do what we had to do to win the games – I’m not trying to downgrade it at all. This football team has as much resolve as a football team that I’ve been around.”

That showed down the stretch on defense.

Josh Evans sealed the victory, intercepting Franklin’s fourth-down pass in the end zone with 5 seconds remaining. The Tigers drove to the 21-yard line, but had to try to make something happen as the clock wound down.

”That’s actually like a great feeling,” Florida defensive tackle Sharrif Floyd said. ”Can their offense make big plays on a defense that’s coming? We’re relentless and that’s how we want to play and that’s how we strive to play every week.”

Franklin, who sprained his left knee against Vanderbilt on Oct. 6 and sat out all or part of the last two games, finished with four interceptions. He completed 24 of 51 passes for 236 yards. He overthrew open receivers much of the day and had less mobility than normal.

”We just couldn’t get any completions,” Franklin said. ”I know (teammates) are trying to have my back, but we can’t turn the ball over four times.”

Still, Franklin ran for 29 yards and burned Florida several times with scrambles.

Florida was flat to start the game, no surprise since it was a noon start and came after a disappointing loss against Georgia. The Gators turned the ball over six times in the 17-9 loss that left them needing help to get to Atlanta.

They vowed to play better this week, but it didn’t exactly happen. They avoided turnovers, though, which is key for their grind-it-out style.

”When you have a defense like our defense has been playing, just don’t turn the ball over,” Driskel said. ”We turned the ball over a lot against Georgia and we end up losing. It comes down to taking care of the ball and taking shots when they come.”

— Associated Press —

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