We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Griffons fall ten spots to No. 13 in D2Football.com Top 25

The Missouri Western football team suffered its first loss of the season last Saturday and now sit in 13th in the latest D2Footballl.com media poll which was released Tuesday morning.

The Griffons are one of six MIAA teams ranked in the latest poll.  Northwest Missouri State is third, while Pittsburg State fell from No. 1 to No. 8.  Washburn comes in at 20th, Central Missouri is No. 21 and Emporia State is ranked 22nd.

Western is 6-1 this season and 5-1 in MIAA play. The Griffons travel to Pittsburg, Kan. Saturday to play Pitt State.

Kickoff is set for 2:00 pm from Carnie Smith Stadium.  You can hear the game on the Griffon Sports Network (680 KFEQ & 1360 KMRN) beginning at 1:00 pm.

Click here to view the entire D2Football.com Top 25.

Northwest Missouri State to host “Basketball Bash” this Thursday

The Northwest Missouri State University men’s and women’s basketball teams’ annual “Basketball Bash” to kick off the 2012-13 basketball season is lined up for 8 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 18, in Bearcat Arena.

Admission is free with the doors opening at 7:45 p.m. The event will begin with food and fun for Bearcat fans of all ages. Free pizza and drinks will be provided for the first 200 people.

The program begins at 8 p.m. and will feature performances by the Bearcat Cheerleaders and Steppers, interactive contests for fans to compete with players and a look at the 2012-2013 squads on the floor. The evening will also include promotional giveaways with the grand prize being an iPad.

The Northwest men are coached by Ben McCollum who enters his fourth season at the wheel of the Bearcat team. McCollum was named 2011-12 MIAA Coach of the Year and the Division II National Coach of the Year by CollegeInsider.

The Bearcat men are the defending MIAA Champions and were deemed No. 19 by the Division II Bulletin Preseason Poll for this upcoming season. The men return a solid trio of seniors including Preseason All-American and First Team All-MIAA selection DeShaun Cooper, alongside Alex Sullivan and DeAngelo Hailey.

Also returning are juniors Dillon Starzl and Bryston Williams. Last year Williams was near the top of the league in free-throw percentage while Starzl averaged 4.3 rebounds per game and shot 56 percent from the field during his sophomore campaign.

The Northwest women are led by first-year Head Coach Mark Kellogg. Kellogg is a three-time Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Coach of the Year and two-time Women’s Basketball Coaches Association Region Coach of the Year. Kellogg has been a fixture in postseason play, having participated in the last five NCAA Division II tournaments.

The Bearcat women return seniors Alexis Boeh and Ashley Thayer to lead a young nucleus. Kellogg will also look for positive contributions from Maggie Marnin and Annie Matthews in the post as both gained valuable experience as true freshmen last year. Also making her debut for the Bearcats will be transfer Victoria Naylor, who sat out last year due to transfer rules.  Naylor will be counted on for a positive contribution in the Bearcats backcourt this season.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western falls to No. 16 in latest AFCA Top 25 poll

The Missouri Western football team dropped 12 spots to 16th in this weeks AFCA top 25 Division II coaches poll which was released on Monday morning.

After opening the season 6-0 the Griffons fell for the first time this season last Saturday by a score of 31-30 against Missouri Southern in St. Joseph, Mo.

The schedule does not get any easier for the Griffons as they travel to 7th ranked Pittsburg State on Saturday, October 20th. Kickoff is set for 2:00 pm in Pittsburg, Kan.

MWSU is 6-1 overall and 5-1in MIAA play.

The Griffons have been ranked in the top 25 in the last 15 polls and have received votes in 33 of the last 37 coaches polls. This is the 43rd time under Partridge that a Griffon team is ranked in the top-25.

Click here to view the entire AFCA Top 25 poll.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest men ranked No. 19 by Division II Bulletin

The Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team was tabbed No. 19 by the Division II Bulletin Preseason Poll for the upcoming 2012-13 season.

The Bearcats are the defending MIAA Champions after going 22-7 a season ago and 15-5 in the MIAA. The Bearcats also claimed the program’s 13th trip to the NCAA tournament as fourth-year Head Coach Ben McCollum was named MIAA Coach of the Year.

A trio of seniors will return in 2012-13 for the Bearcats including Preseason All-American DeShaun Cooper. Cooper, who was a First Team All-MIAA selection a year ago, led Northwest in scoring with 14.7 points per game and was in the top three in free-throw percentage.

Along with Cooper, the Bearcats return Alex Sullivan and DeAngelo Hailey to round out the Northwest senior class. Bryston Williams also returns, nearly topping the league in free-throw percentage as Hailey averaged over 10 points per game off the bench and joined Sullivan near the MIAA leaders in three-point percentage.

Junior Dillon Starzl returns in the post for Northwest as the other lone starter to return with Cooper. Starzl averaged 4.3 rebounds per game and shot 56 percent from the field last season.

The Bearcats will hold their annual Bearcat Bash Thursday, Oct. 18 at 8 p.m. inside Bearcat Arena. Fans can get their first look at the 2012-13 basketball teams and meet the players and coaches.

Northwest opens its season Oct. 29 in exhibition action at the University of Missouri. Game time from Mizzou Arena is set for 7 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Western sits in 11th after day one of MWSU Invitational

The Missouri Western men’s golf team sits in 11th place after day one of the MWSU Invitational which is being held at the St. Joseph Country Club in St. Joseph, Mo. The Griffons fired 601 (306-295) which is one stroke back of Winona State and two strokes back of Augustana (S.D.). The leader of the event is Central Oklahoma with a 566 (283-283) which is 17 strokes ahead of Arkansas Tech University who fired a 583 (303-280).

Tyler Gast leads the charge for the Griffons firing a 145 (71-74) putting him in a tie for 9th place. Weston Apple is in a tie for 36th with a 150 (79-71) while Scott Sheldon, Derek Hawkins and James O’Brien fired 152 (78-74), 154 (78-76) and 158 (80-78) respectively.

Eric Kline of Central Oklahoma is in first place firing a 137 (67-70) which is five strokes ahead of teammate Russ Puser, Northeastern State’s Zach Tucker and Missouri Southern State’s Ryan Burek.

The final round of the event will be a shotgun start tomorrow morning at 9:00 am.

— MWSU Sports Information —

St. Louis falls 7-1 in game two of NLCS at San Francisco

Marco Scutaro answered Matt Holliday’s hard takeout with a big hit of his own to help the San Francisco Giants end their home slide.

Scutaro hit a two-run single in San Francisco’s four-run fourth inning before leaving with a hip injury and the Giants got their first home win this postseason, 7-1 over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night that tied the NL Championship Series at one game apiece.

More Cardinals-Giants Coverage

Marco Scutaro and Ryan Vogelsong made the NLCS a series with their Game 2 performances against the Cardinals, writes David Schoenfield. Blog

“It shows you how tough he is,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “It’s a shame somebody got hurt. It was more of a roll block. We’re hoping he comes out of this OK. He got hit pretty good.”

Scutaro left after the fifth because of his damaged left hip. X-rays were negative, and he’ll likely get an MRI on Tuesday. There was no word on his future status.

“You’re trying to get to the second baseman and obviously try to knock him down so he can’t turn a double play,” Holliday said. “As long as you’re in the baseline, it’s within the rules.”

The series now shifts to St. Louis for three games, starting with Game 3 on Wednesday when San Francisco ace Matt Cain takes on Kyle Lohse of the Cardinals.

Things got off to a testy start when Holliday barreled into Scutaro at second base to break up a potential double play in the first inning. The play riled up a crowd that had seen three straight losses by the Giants so far this postseason.

There was plenty to cheer all night for the Giants. Ryan Vogelsong pitched seven strong innings, Angel Pagan hit a leadoff homer to give San Francisco its first home lead this postseason, and Scutaro broke the game open with his single off Chris Carpenter.

Making Scutaro’s hit even sweeter for the Giants was the fact that Holliday misplayed the ball in left field, allowing a third run to score on the error.

The Giants also benefited from a missed call by an umpire in the eighth inning after St. Louis center fielder Jon Jay made a spectacular, diving catch to rob Brandon Crawford of a hit.

Jay threw toward first and the Cardinals should have gotten a double play, but first base umpire Bill Miller did not see Allen Craig tag Gregor Blanco’s jersey as he raced back to first on the play.

St. Louis manager Mike Matheny argued the call and the umpires huddled to discuss it, but they kept the safe call even though replays showed Craig made the tag. The Giants capitalized when Ryan Theriot hit a two-run single to make it 7-1.

Back at Busch Stadium, Holliday will be cheered after being the target of boos all night following his aggressive play on the basepaths.

With runners on first and second and one out, Craig hit a bouncer to Crawford, and the shortstop quickly flipped to Scutaro for the forceout.

Holliday, a former high school football star in Oklahoma, came tumbling in and slid late into Scutaro, crushing his left leg to prevent up the double play. Scutaro lay on the ground twisting in pain while trainer Dave Groeschner and Bochy ran out of the dugout to attend to the second baseman.

“As I watched it live it looked like it was a hard slide,” Matheny said. “It didn’t go out of the baseline to get him. Once again, I haven’t looked at it again, but we teach our guys to go hard. Play the game clean, play it hard, not try and hurt anybody.”

“I hated to see that it ended up that way. That’s not how we play the game. But we do go hard, but within the rules,” he said.

Vogelsong got out of the jam by retiring Yadier Molina on a groundout and Scutaro stayed in the game with a limp until being replaced in the sixth by Theriot.

By then, he had done his damage with the bat in the big fourth inning.

The rally started innocently enough with a bloop, opposite field double by Brandon Belt and a chopper over third baseman David Freese by Blanco. Crawford then hit a bouncer between the mound and first base that Carpenter fielded and threw away toward first base. It appeared Crawford may have impeded Carpenter by running inside the baseline but the Cardinals did not argue the play.

With the bases loaded and two outs, Scutaro lined his single to left-center that Holliday misplayed to the delight of Giants fans, putting Carpenter and the Cardinals into a 5-1 hole.

Vogelsong made the lead hold up by becoming the first Giants starter to make it through six innings this postseason. He allowed four hits and one run for his first career postseason win.

“It was unbelievable. It was fun to watch,” Pagan said. “It was very tough tonight. All his pitches were right in the zone, you know, hitting the corners and getting the hitters off balance. That was the key for him tonight.”

These teams have a history of contentious meetings in the NLCS from Jeffrey Leonard’s one-flap down home run trot in 1987 that riled up the Cardinals to a benches-clearing dustup 10 years ago when St. Louis reliever Mike Crudale buzzed Kenny Lofton after he showboated on a home run.

San Francisco answered with the bats this time as Pagan led off the bottom of the first with a homer — matching his feat from Game 4 of the division series against Cincinnati. The Giants had been outscored 20-6 and never led in two home losses to the Reds and the Game 1 defeat to the Cardinals.

The Cardinals tied it in the second inning when Pete Kozma drew a two-out walk and scored on Carpenter’s RBI double, his third hit already this postseason.

But Carpenter, making his fifth appearance in 2012 after complicated surgery to remove a rib and two neck muscles, wasn’t nearly as sharp on the mound or in the field. He allowed five runs — two earned — and six hits in four innings, failing to add to his 10 career postseason wins.

“He’s been real sharp lately,” Matheny said. “Today they just got a few things going. We couldn’t get it stopped until there were too many runs on the board. We have faith in him in these situations and know he’ll come out next opportunity and make good pitches for us.”

— Associated Press —

Bearcats’ Goodburn named MIAA Special Teams Player of the Week

After a big Bearcat football victory over then-No. 1 Pittsburg State Saturday, Northwest Missouri State sophomore punter Kyle Goodburn was titled as a MIAA Player of the Week Monday.

Goodburn played a crucial role for the Bearcats this weekend as he averaged 46.2 yards per punt and helped guide special teams to set up two vital stops for Northwest’s defense.

Goodburn punted six times pinning the Gorillas inside the 10-yard line three times including once inside the 10-yard line. He continues to lead the league in punting average and is also fourth in NCAA Division II averaging 45.38 yards per punt.

Goodburn originates from Shawnee Mission North High School in Roland Park, Kan.

The Bearcats return to action Saturday against Missouri Southern. Kickoff from Joplin is scheduled for 2 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Big 12 hands out weekly football awards

Seth Doege (Texas Tech), Cody Davis (Texas Tech) and Quinn Sharp (Oklahoma State) have been named Big 12 Football Players of the Week, as selected by a media panel. Doege (offense) was honored for the third time in his career while Sharp (special teams) picked up his second career award. Davis (defense) was recognized for the first time.

Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week
Seth Doege, Texas Tech, QB, Sr, Wollforth, Texas

Seth Doege led the Red Raiders to a 49-14 upset over No. 5/4 West Virginia. The 35-point win marked the largest victory over a Top 5 team in school history. Doege threw for a career high 499 yards along with six touchdowns. He was 32-for-42 on the day and became just the fifth quarterback in Tech history to reach the 50 career touchdown plateau. Doege helped TTU take a 35-7 halftime lead as he was 21-of-30 for 336 yards and four TDs at the break. Texas Tech was named the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl National Team of the Week.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week
Cody Davis, Texas Tech, S, Sr, Stephenville, Texas

Cody Davis led a defensive effort that held a potent West Virginia offense to 14 points in Texas Tech’s 49-14 win. He logged a season and game high 13 tackles along with two pass breakups. WVU converted just 30 percent of its third down attempts and 22 percent on fourth down.

Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week
Quinn Sharp, OSU, PK/P, Sr, Mansfield, Texas

Quinn Sharp averaged 53 yards on five punts, had four kickoffs that went for touchbacks and connected on field goals from 49 and 42 yards in Oklahoma State’s 20-14 win at Kansas. In a scoreless game, he helped set up OSU’s first touchdown when his 70-yard punt was downed at the KU 8-yard line. After a Jayhawk three-and-out, OSU scored the game’s first points on a 51-yard drive. Sharp had a second punt of over 70 yards and a special teams tackle on a KU kickoff return.

— Big 12 Press Release —

Kansas City gets destroyed at Tampa Bay, 38-10

Ronde Barber is getting older, but no less valuable to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The 37-year-old, five-time Pro Bowl selection has always had a knack for making big plays, and his interception and 78-yard return for a touchdown Sunday keyed a 38-10 rout of the struggling Kansas City Chiefs.

”If I could bottle that, I’d sell it for a lot of money,” the oldest player on the field said of his penchant for changing games. ”I’ve always been ball aware. I see the ball out a lot because I’m always around it. I can’t tell you why. I’ll just take them as they come, though.”

The only remaining player from Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl champion of 10 years ago picked off a pass that nearly hit the ground after glancing off the intended receiver’s arm, and it smooth sailing up the right sideline, with teammate E.J. Biggers leading the way.

”I was covering the inside slant. E.J. actually made a great play,” Barber said. ”He’s gotten the assist on a couple of my interceptions here the past couple of years. Give him more credit than me. I just snatched it off the ground before it hit it. It was a pretty easy 78-yard run for me.”

Josh Freeman threw for a season-high 328 yards and three TDs for the Bucs (2-3), who intercepted Brady Quinn twice in the Kansas City quarterback’s first start in nearly three years.

Freeman’s inconsistency has been an issue during a slow start by Tampa Bay, however the fourth-year pro is developing a touch on deep passes that’s sparked a sputtering offense over the past two games.

He teamed with Mike Williams on a 62-yard scoring play in the first quarter and threw TD passes of 19 and 17 yards to Vincent Jackson in the second half.

The victory coming off a bye week ended a three-game skid and left the Chiefs (1-5) heading into their open date with a three-game skid of their own.

”It’s a big day for our offense and for our team to get back on track,” Bucs coach Greg Schiano said. ”For Josh, especially, I thought he kept his cool throughout the game when things didn’t go well. … Sure, there are going to be throws he’s going to wish he had back and things he wished he did differently. It’s a slow process, but he’s getting better.”

Barber, making the transition to safety after 15 seasons as one of the NFL’s top cornerbacks, scored his 14th career regular season touchdown when he picked off a pass that bounced off Dexter McCluster and ran up the sideline untouched to make it 21-3 early in the third quarter.

The Chiefs thought the ball hit the ground. The play was reviewed, but the ruling that it was an interception and TD stood.

”I got hit on the play,” Quinn said. ”I thought I put the ball in a good spot, but all of a sudden I looked up and I saw him running. It was a tremendous play on his part. I couldn’t tell on the replay. From my point of view it looked like it hit the ground, but he made a great play.”

It was Barber’s eighth career interception return for a TD.

Quinn completed 22 of 38 passes for 180 yards, filling in for the injured Matt Cassel, who sat out after leaving the previous week’s 9-6 loss to Baltimore with a concussion.

The Chiefs scored their only touchdown early in the fourth quarter on Edgar Jones’ 11-yard fumble return on a play that began with Shaun Draughn blocking a punt into the end zone.

Bucs punter Michael Koenen chased down the loose ball and ran out to the 1, where he was hit by Draughn as he was trying to throw the ball forward. Jones caught the ball on the fly, but it was ruled a fumble because a pass can’t be attempted off a blocked punt.

”I was surprised once I saw him pick up the ball in the end zone. He looked like as he was running the ball, he just kind of looked at me and just threw it,” Jones said. ”I’ll take it.”

Williams finished with four receptions for 113 yards, his second consecutive 100-yard game. LeGarette Blount finished the rout with a 12-yard touchdown run.

The Bucs played without cornerback Aqib Talib, who began serving a four-game suspension for violating the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs.

Tampa Bay limited NFL rushing leader Jamaal Charles to 40 yards on 12 attempts.

— Associated Press —

Beltran, Freese hit two-run HRs as Cards win opener at San Francisco

Carlos Beltran and David Freese each hit two-run homers and the St. Louis Cardinals held on to beat the San Francisco Giants 6-4 Sunday night in Game 1 of the NL championship series.

The wild-card Cardinals took an early 6-0 lead and made it stand up. Two days earlier, St. Louis overcame a 6-0 deficit to beat Washington in the deciding Game 5 of the division series.

After starter Lance Lynn struggled, the St. Louis bullpen delivered with 5 1-3 scoreless innings.

The Giants dropped to 0-3 at home so far during this postseason, outscored 20-6 at AT&T Park.

Game 2 in the best-of-seven series is Monday night. Chris Carpenter pitches for the Cardinals against Ryan Vogelsong.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File