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Northwest/Emporia State game to air on MIAA TV Network

This week’s homecoming contest between No. 5 Northwest Missouri State and No. 16 Emporia State Saturday, Nov. 3, has been selected as the MIAA TV Game of the Week and will kick off at 2:30 p.m. The selection fills the first week of flex broadcasting as announced by the MIAA.

Kickoff for the Bearcats’ homecoming game was originally slated for 2 p.m., but is pushed back to fit the network TV window at 2:30 p.m. This will be the second time this season the Bearcats will be featured as the MIAA TV Game of the Week with the first being during a week five win over Northeastern State.

The Bearcats and Hornets enter Saturday’s game tied atop the MIAA standings, both with only one loss. Northwest is coming off an impressive 56-6 road win over Washburn while ESU fell at home Thursday night to Missouri Western, 57-28.

The final flex game in the MIAA TV has yet to be set by the league office.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Kansas State/Oklahoma State game to kickoff at 7:00 PM

Undefeated Kansas State will be featured in prime time Saturday against Oklahoma State in a 7 p.m., kickoff on ABC, the Big 12 Conference has announced.

The contest against the Cowboys, which will be shown to a national audience, marks the Wildcats’ first appearance on ABC this season and the first since a 53-50 victory in four overtimes last year against Texas A&M.

Saturday’s sold-out game will feature two of the top teams in the Big 12. The Wildcats, sitting at 8-0 overall and 5-0 in the Big 12, sit atop the conference standings following its 55-24 victory over No. 14 Texas Tech. Oklahoma State (5-2) enters the game tied for second in the conference with a 3-1 Big 12 record after a 36-14 win over TCU on Saturday.

Television Selections for November 3

Oklahoma at Iowa State, 11 a.m., ABC

TCU at West Virginia, 2 p.m., FOX

Texas at Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN2

Kansas at Baylor, 2:30 p.m., FSN

Oklahoma State at K-State, 7 p.m., ABC

— KSU Sports Information —

Bearcats roll past Washburn for seventh straight win

He grew up watching Northwest Missouri State football, dressed and played for the Bearcats and now has spent 15 years on their sideline as a coach.

Never, Adam Dorrel said, had he seen their defense secondary put in a day like Saturday.

Six different players came up with six interceptions at Washburn, the first a little more than two minutes into the game. Every one led to a touchdown. It turned what could have been a critical test on the road – with the regular season winding down and a playoff berth hanging in the balance – into a relaxed, 56-6 rout of the Ichabods.

The victory extended Northwest’s winning streak to seven, put an exclamation point on a four-week, four-game stretch away from home and fortified the Bearcats’ top-five ranking in the NCAA’s Super Region 3. Looming are showdowns with Emporia State and Missouri Western – both in Bearcat Stadium the next two weeks.

“They’ve got a lot to play for,” Dorrel said, “just like we do.”

Northwest Missouri (8-1) is one of three once-beaten teams atop the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association. The others: Emporia and Missouri Western.

Western raised eyebrows with a 57-28 beat down of Emporia State on Thursday, rushing for 382 yards. The Bearcats made their own statement two days later, striking hard and often on both sides of the line.

Washburn had won seven of its first eight games in part by taking care of the ball, committing the fewest turnovers – four fumbles and five interceptions – in the MIAA. Northwest’s Clarke Snodgrass was the first to pad those numbers, sniffing out a screen pass by the Ichabods’ Mitch Buhler, stepping in front of the intended receiver and giving the Bearcats the ball at their own 45-yard line just 2:02 into the game.

It took six plays for the offense to capitalize, quarterback Trevor Adams hitting Tyler Shaw with a 31-yard TD pass.

The template was set. The next interception, by the Bearcats’ Travis Manning in the end zone, choked off a threat after Washburn recovered a fumble at the Northwest 6. The following three – by Nate DeJong and Brian Dixon in the second quarter and Collin DeBuysere in the third – set the offense up at the Ichabods’ 22-, 23- and 14-yard lines, respectively.

The payoff each time was a Bearcats TD. They led 14-0 by the opening minutes of the second quarter, 35-0 by halftime and 49-0 before Washburn finally managed to score with 4:09 left in the third quarter.

Sophomore Chet Meneely returned the last of the half-dozen interceptions 14 yards for a touchdown with 1:26 left.

“We got a couple of turnovers,” Dorrel said, “and then it just kept going and going and going. I thought our secondary played a very complete game.

“We’ve got two really good safeties (Snodgrass and Nate DeJong, both fifth-year seniors), and it really starts with them. They’re the information center of our defense. And right now, our coaching staff is putting a lot on their shoulders to get us checked into the proper coverages and things of that nature.”

Said Snodgrass, “Our coaches had a great game plan for us today, a lot of tip(off)s out of their offense that we saw.”

Indeed, the Bearcats seemed prepared for everything that Washburn’s two sophomore quarterbacks – Buhler and Joel Piper – threw at them. Each was picked off three times.

Manning’s interception of Buhler late in the first quarter was pivotal. The score was still 7-0. The Northwest defense had forced a punt but, on the first play from scrimmage, Adams couldn’t connect on an attempted handoff and Washburn’s Alex Dowty recovered the fumble at the Bearcats’ 6-yard line.

The Ichabods went for a quick kill, Buhler throwing into the end zone. But Manning snatched the pass away.

I’m just thinking, ‘My gosh, they score here and the game will be 7-7.’ ” Dorrel said. “Then, the momentum swung and we turned around and picked that football off. After that, I had just a tremendous sense of confidence. . . . I was, like, ‘We’re ready to play. They’re going to pick us up.’ ”

Adams and the offense responded again, moving 80 yards on 11 plays with James Franklin scoring on a seven-yard run to make it 14-0. Some 3½ minutes later, DeJong picked off Piper and returned it 17 yards to the Washburn 22.

Franklin carried three more times, the last five yards for a TD that made it 21-0.

“We feed off the defense,” Franklin said. “If they can make any kind of play – make a stop, make a big hit, an interception – our offense loves to see that. And we like to return the favor.”

The junior running back from Olathe, Kan., continued a late-season surge. His two TDs gave him seven in his last three games against Pittsburg State, Missouri Southern and Washburn. They also gave him a career total of 34, moving him past Derek Lane and teammate Jordan Simmons into fourth place in NMSU history.

Simmons, a senior, ran for his 33rd from one yard out late in the first half.

Adams, meanwhile, extended his own hot streak to five games – dating to his late-September return to the lineup from an ankle injury. He has completed 70.3 percent of his passes for 1,220 yards and 14 TDs in that stretch.

The junior from Odessa, Texas, was 19-for-26 for 216 yards and three TDs Saturday. “I think he’s playing inside himself more,” Dorrel said, “and I think he’s counting on the people around him more.”

Adams and the Bearcats didn’t merely get through what looked to be a challenging October. They crushed it.

The past four weeks took them to Edmond, Okla., and Kansas City, then to Joplin and finally Topeka. They beat Central Oklahoma, Pittsburg State, Missouri Southern and Washburn by an average of almost 37 points.

It was only the fourth time in Northwest’s 96-year football-playing history that it ran that kind of gauntlet – stringing four games away from home – and won them all. The first, in 1984, led to the Bearcats’ first appearance in the Division II playoffs. The next two propelled them to the national championship game.

In 2008, they pulled off the road-trip sweep in September and October and kept winning until running into Minnesota-Duluth in Florence, Ala. In 2005, they rolled through four playoff games on the road en route to a title-game matchup and four-point loss against Grand Valley State.

“We’ve come a long way in those four road games,” Adams said. “I feel like it really helped us find our identity of who we are as a team, knowing we don’t have to be at home to take it to anybody. We can go in anywhere and take care of business.”

The next two weeks, finally, it will be at home.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Mizzou defeats Kentucky for first SEC victory

Missouri got touchdowns off all three of Kentucky’s lost fumbles and quarterback James Franklin presided over a strong finish in a reserve role coming off a knee injury as the Tigers earned a long-delayed first win in their debut SEC season with a 33-10 victory on Saturday.

Kendial Lawrence ran for 108 yards on 23 carries with two TDs for Missouri (4-4, 1-4), which overcame its own sloppiness, too, after getting last week off following a 32-point loss at home to top-ranked Alabama. Marcus Murphy fumbled his first two punt-return attempts and Corbin Berkstresser was intercepted on consecutive passes by freshman J.D. Harmon to start the second half before getting replaced by Franklin, who was limited in practice this week after missing most of the previous two games with a strained left knee.

Raymond Sanders scored on a 1-yard run in the first quarter for Kentucky (1-8, 0-5), which has lost seven in a row. The Wildcats produced just three points off three turnovers.

The game was still up for grabs, with Missouri leading 17-10 midway through the third quarter, when Franklin got the call. The junior was a steadying influence although he was much better when he just handed it off.

Defensive tackle Sheldon Richardson ran 60 yards to the Kentucky 25 after stripping the ball from Jonathan George to set up the game’s first touchdown. Zavier Gooden recovered a fumble at the Kentucky 12 after Brad Madison and Will Ebner combined to sack Patrick Towles early in the fourth quarter to set up a 9-yard run by Marcus Murphy and E.J. Gaines skirted the sideline on a 13-yard return off Frank Sanders’ fumble for a 33-10 cushion with 8:45 to go.

Harmon’s first career interception gave Kentucky possession at the Missouri 33, but the Wildcats netted minus-12 yards with an offensive pass interference call before punting it back. Craig McIntosh, who made a 43-yard field goal in the first half, was wide right on a 47-yard attempt after Harmon’s second pick near midfield.

The interceptions were Kentucky’s first in five games.

Missouri totaled four fumbles in the first half but lost just one. Berkstresser fumbled twice but recovered both of them.

Lawrence’s second score came with 1:32 to go and capitalized on a fumbled snap on a 53-yard field-goal attempt by Kentucky that wasted Demarco Robinson’s 27-yard return of a 27-yard punt. Richardson sacked holder Jared Leet, who recovered the ball after mishandling the snap and had attempted to roll out.

Freshman Dorial Green-Beckham caught two passes on the go-ahead drive, the first receptions for the nation’s top recruit last winter since catching an 80-yard touchdown pass against Central Florida in Week 5.

Kentucky had plenty of success with cutback runs its first two drives, rolling up 115 yards, but finished with just 179 yards.

— Associated Press —

No. 3 Kansas State routs 14th-ranked Texas Tech

Bill Snyder moved at a brisk pace when he walked into his postgame press conference a few minutes after third-ranked Kansas State polished off a 55-24 victory against No. 14Texas Tech.

Must not have had much to tell the team after that one, eh Coach?

”I’m working on my conditioning,” Snyder said flatly.

There’s always something to work on in Snyder’s world, though it might take a couple extra looks at Saturday’s game tape to find much to complain about, besides a slow start. The Wildcats led by a field goal at halftime before roaring through a big third quarter to their first 8-0 start since 1999.

Collin Klein threw for 233 yards and two touchdowns, and had 83 yards and two more scores on the ground, bolstering his Heisman Trophy credentials. Arthur Brown returned an interception for a touchdown, John Hubert added two TDs rushing and Angelo Pease also scored for the Wildcats.

”We were playing well defensively. Offensively we hadn’t figured it out yet,” Snyder said of the shaky first half. ”Sometimes you have to spar a little bit to get going.”

Evidently, the Wildcats (5-0 Big 12) found the sweet spot in the nation’s No. 7 defense.

They wound up going on a 52-7 run that spanned about 35 minutes, eclipsing the 50-point mark for the fifth time this season and putting up the kind of result that should help them in the polls – they trailed Alabama and Florida in the BCS standings coming into the game, and the Gators lost to No. 12 Georgia.

”It’s tough not to (look ahead) knowing you’re so close,” said Chris Harper, who had five catches for 99 yards. ”But we just have to focus on next week.”

Seth Doege threw for 331 yards and two touchdowns for the Red Raiders (6-2, 3-2), but also had the costliest of interceptions. Doege had thrown for 13 TDs in wins over West Virginia and TCU the last two weeks to jump into the Heisman conversation.

Of course, Klein is a major part of that discussion.

The senior quarterback, now 19-4 as a starter, joined kicker Martin Gramatica as the only players in school history with at least 300 points. And his vastly improved passing game, a subject of such ridicule last season, is a big reason the Wildcats have been so prolific on offense.

”We got some pretty short fields, which helps a lot,” Klein said. ”It was just a great team effort, hanging in there when things weren’t going well early in the game.”

The Red Raiders’ second-half meltdown was similar to last year’s matchup in Lubbock, when they blew a 28-20 lead against Kansas State by turning it over three times in the fourth quarter.

”We moved the ball, made a lot of yardage, but you can’t turn it over,” Texas Tech coach Tommy Tuberville said. ”I think we gave up 17, 20 points on offense and our kicking game today.”

Things started off well enough for the Red Raiders.

Doege took advantage of soft coverage on the opening series of the game, completing six of his first eight passes. An encroachment penalty on third down kept the drive alive, and Doege finished it off with a 32-yard touchdown toss to Eric Ward.

The Wildcats, meanwhile, couldn’t get anything going.

Klein was sacked to end their first series, and had a pass tipped on third down to end their second. By the end of the quarter, Kansas State had just 19 yards of offense.

”We knew what they were going to do,” Texas Tech linebacker Terrance Bullitt said.

It was Kansas State’s defense that finally provided a spark when Meshak Williams delivered a crushing blindside hit on Doege, popping the ball loose. Jarell Childs went the other way for what appeared to be a 74-yard TD return, but an illegal block brought it back to the Texas Tech 14.

Kansas State had to settle for Anthony Cantele’s 34-yard field goal.

Ryan Bustin matched it with a 37-yarder to cap the Red Raiders’ next possession, but Kansas State finally started humming. Hubert capped off its ensuing drive by winning a race to the pylon after getting stood up at the line of scrimmage to make it 10-all.

Bustin had a 50-yard field goal blocked on Texas Tech’s next series, and Kansas State’s quick-strike offense set up a 19-yarder by Cantele for the halftime lead.

It was a sign that everything was starting to go right for the Wildcats.

Four straight plays of 10-plus yards to start the second half led to a 21-yard TD toss from Klein to Tramaine Thompson. And after Ward fumbled on the Red Raiders’ first offensive play of the third quarter, Klein needed only two plays to scamper in from 16 yards out for a 27-10 lead.

”When it came down to making plays to finish,” Doege said, ”we just didn’t make them.”

Sadale Foster’s touchdown run gave the Red Raiders a flicker of hope, but Klein added a 22-yard TD run, Hubert had a 15-yarder early in the fourth quarter, and Brown’s pick-six snuffed it out completely. Pease added the Wildcats’ final score midway through the third quarter.

”You look around the country and they’re making more of college football than they do the presidential election,” Snyder said afterward. ”It’s so easy to lose sight of things. I’m so proud of our guys because of the way they’ve handled things up to this point in time.”

— Associated Press —

KU’s upset bid falls short as Texas scores late touchdown

Case McCoy hit D.J. Grant with a 1-yard touchdown pass with 12 seconds to play, capping a 70-yard drive in the final 2 minutes and lifting Texas past Kansas 21-17 on Saturday.

With 2:28 left and the Jayhawks (1-7, 0-5 Big 12) straining to end a 16-game Big 12 losing streak, Nick Prolago kicked a 29-yard field goal for a 17-14 lead over a Longhorns squad that came in as three-touchdown favorites.

But McCoy, who replaced an ineffective David Ash in the fourth quarter, quickly had the Longhorns (6-2, 3-2) soaring down the field.

He hit Jaxon Shipley for 18 yards on fourth down, then connected with Mike Davis streaking down the sideline for 39 yards to the Kansas 3.

On third-and-goal from the 1 and with Kansas crowding the line of scrimmage, Grant sneaked into the end zone and cradled McCoy’s softly tossed pass for the winning TD.

James Sims rushed for 178 yards and became the first Kansas player with four straight 100-yard games since Tony Sands in 1991. The Jayhawks, who fell to 0-10 against Texas since the Big 12 was formed, rushed for 234 yards altogether against a Texas defense that was ranked 107th in the country against the run. Freshman quarterback Michael Cummings did not attempt a pass in the second and third quarters and was only 3 of 9 for 39 yards.

Tony Pierson scored on an 11-yard run for Kansas, and Christian Matthews added a 15-yarder in the second quarter.

The Longhorns tied it at 14 on an 11-yard run by Marquise Goodwin following his 41-yard run on an end-around in the fourth quarter.

Sims, who came into the game second in the Big 12 with an average of 111.5 yards rushing per game, had 139 yards in the first two quarters. In the second quarter, facing a first down on their own 2, the Jayhawks stunned the visitors by breaking Sims through the middle for a 64-yard gallop, Kansas’ longest run in six years. Adding 15 yards for a personal-foul penalty against the Longhorns gave Kansas a first down on the Texas 15. On third down, Matthews went through a big hole on the left side to make it 7-7.

In Kansas’ second TD drive of the second quarter, Sims ripped off a 20-yard gain through the middle and Pierson went wide left for 18. On first down from the Texas 11, Pierson went right, then cut back through a big hole and practically walked into the end zone to put the Jayhawks on top 14-7.

Texas took a 7-0 lead in just four plays on its first possession when Joe Bergeron dragged would-be tacklers 3 yards into the end zone.

Johnathan Gray, who totaled 111 yards rushing, ran for 31 to the Kansas 12 on Texas’ first play from scrimmage. But the Longhorns’ next four possessions ended in punts, and their fifth came to a halt when Greg Brown intercepted Ash’s underthrown pass at the Kansas 11.

The Longhorns punted again on their first possession of the second half, but Bradley McDougald muffed the punt and Josh Turner recovered for Texas on the Kansas 19. But on fourth-and-goal from the 2, Bergeron was stopped by Ben Heeney and Huldon Tharp.

After forcing another punt, the Longhorns again started in Kansas territory. But on third-and-7 from the 17, Lubbock Smith intercepted a poorly thrown pass that was deflected right into his arms.

— Associated Press —

Northwest volleyball stays hot with 3-1 win at Southern

The Northwest Missouri State volleyball extended its winning streak to three games as the defense shined in a 3-1 win over Missouri Southern Saturday evening at the Leggett and Platt Athletic Center.

Northwest improved to 14-13 overall and 8-6 in the MIAA as the Lions remained winless on the year at 0-26 and 0-14. The Bearcats return home for the first of two final regular season home matches as they face first place Central Missouri Wednesday night at Bearcat Arena.

As a team the Bearcats recorded eight blocks and held Missouri Southern to a sub .100 hitting percentage in the win. Northwest raced out to a lead taking the first two sets before the Lions stole the third set, however the Bearcats dominated the fourth set to take the match 25-20, 25-20, 22-25, 25-18.

Tori Beckman led the Bearcat defense with 30 digs, as the senior continues to lead the MIAA with 5.54 digs per set.

Offensively, Abby Graves led Northwest in kills for the second straight night with 16 as sophomore teammate, Brooke Bartosh added 12.

The Bearcats sit in sixth place and continue to hold onto a spot in the MIAA postseason tournament as the top eight teams earn a berth. With just four games remaining, three of Northwest’s final four opponents all sit above them in the league standings.

Wednesday’s first serve against the Jennies from Bearcat Arena is slated for 7 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

High School Football District Scores – October 25 & 26

CLASS 5 District 8
4 Central (6-4) 43, Park Hill (3-7) 13
3 Park Hill South (6-4) 56, 6 Oak Park (1-9) 8

CLASS 4 District 8
1 Platte County (8-2) 35, 8 Benton (1-9) 6
2 Savannah (9-1) 39, 7 Van Horn (6-4) 14
5 Liberty North (6-4) 21, 4 Lafayette (7-3) 13
6 Smithville (7-3) 37, 3 Excelsior Springs (7-3) 14

CLASS 3 District 8
1 Maryville (10-0) 66, 8 Lincoln Prep (2-8) 8
4 Kansas City Northeast (7-3) 27, 5 Central Academy (5-5) 26
6 St. Pius X (4-6) 35, 3 Richmond (5-5) 13
7 Cameron (2-8) 38, 2 Kansas City East (6-4) 6

CLASS 2 District 8
1 Bishop LeBlond (6-4) 38, 8 Carrollton (0-10) 6
2 Lathrop (9-1) 54, 7 Plattsburg (2-8) 0
3 Lawson (7-3) 42, 6 Lexington (3-7) 13
4 Brookfield (7-3) 28, 5 Trenton (5-5) 0

CLASS 1 District 7
1 Wellington-Napoleon (9-1) 68, 8 Wentworth Academy (0-9) 0
2 West Platte (6-4) 56, 7 Orrick (1-9) 6
3 North Platte (5-5) 19, 6 Mid-Buchanan (2-8) 6
5 Long Jack (4-6) 54, 4 St. Mary’s (2-7) 24

CLASS 1 District 8
1 Hamilton (10-0) 60, 8 Albany (2-8) 22
2 South Harrison (9-1) 50, 7 King City (3-7) 0
3 Polo (7-3) 42, 6 Maysville (3-7) 8
4 Gallatin (7-3) 27, 5 East Buchanan (4-6) 6

8-MAN District 1
4 North Nodaway (4-6) 54, 5 West Nodaway (1-9) 22

8-MAN District 2
4 South Nodaway (3-6) 52, 5 Craig/Fairfax (0-10) 12

8-MAN District 3
3 Union Star (4-5) 48, 6 Stewartsville (1-8) 24
5 South Holt (3-7) 76, 4 DeKalb (3-7) 32

8-MAN District 4
3 Hardin-Central (7-3) 72, 6 Lincoln (1-2) 28
5 Norborne (3-6) 72, 4 Chilhowee (3-6) 18

Western volleyball snaps five-game skid with win over Southern

The Missouri Western volleyball team snapped a five match losing streak defeating the Missouri Southern Lions 3-0 (25-17, 28-26, 25-14). The Griffons improve to 13-13 overall and 4-9 in MIAA play with the victory.

The Griffons came out sluggish in the first set getting down 4-1. MWSU went on 15-8 run claiming a 16-11 lead after a kill by Jessie Thorup. The Griffons continued to play well winning 25-17 as Melissa Cairns closed the set with a kill.

In the second set the two teams played close but but a four point run by the Griffons gave MWSU the 17-13 lead after a Cairns kill. The Lions made things interesting down the stretch but a MSSU service error and an ace by Cairns gave the Griffons the 28-26 victory and a 2-0 lead in the set.

The Griffons dominated the third set using runs of 5-0 and numerous 3-0 runs to win the set 25-14 and the match 3-0.

Missouri Western hit .274 with 46 kills and had 41 set assists with 24 coming from Stephanie Hattey. Sarah Faubel had 22 digs while Hattey pitched in 15.

The Lions fall to 0-25 overall and 0-13 in the MIAA. Callie Whetstone had eight kills whlie Sydney Potts had 17 assists.

The Griffons return to action on Tuesday, October 30 when they host the Truman State Bulldogs in St. Joseph, Mo. First serve is set for 7:00 pm from the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest volleyball defeats Lindenwood, 3-1

Using a combination of solid offense and defense the Northwest Missouri State volleyball team knocked off Lindenwood 3-1 Friday night at Robert F. Hyland Arena.

Northwest saw its record move back to the .500 mark at 13-13 and improved to 7-6 in MIAA play. The Bearcats keep their postseason tournament hopes alive as the Lions fell to 13-13 overall and 3-9 in league play.

An outstanding offensive effort helped pace the Bearcats to the 20-25, 25-15, 25-16, 25-23 victory.

A trio of Bearcats recorded double figure kills as Bridget Hanafin controlled the offense with 46 assists and 12 digs for her second double-double of the year.

Abby Graves led Northwest with 16 kills as Brooke Bartosh added 15. Shelby Duren knocked down 12 kills in the win.

Northwest continued to eliminate unforced errors as the Bearcats rallied to hit .249 on the night after a slow start.

The defensive side of the net was also outstanding for Northwest as they tallied 10 blocks as a team with Lindsey Schlake and Bartosh holding off five apiece. Hanafin and Mackie Keller added four blocks each.

The Bearcats make a quick turnaround as they travel to Missouri Southern (0-25, 0-13) Saturday to face the winless Lions. First serve is set for 6 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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