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Griffons move up four spots to No. 14 in AFCA Top 25

The Missouri Western football team moved up four spots from No. 18 to No. 14 in the latest AFCA top 25 Division II coaches poll which was released on Monday. Missouri Western will face William Jewell College at home in non-conference action at 6 p.m. on Sept. 8 in St. Joseph, Mo.

The Griffons jumped four spots after opening the season with a 38-26 win over Central Missouri in their home opener. The Griffons have been ranked in the top 25 in the last nine polls and have received votes in 27 of the last 31 coaches polls.

Click here to view AFCA Top 25 Division II Poll.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Western, Bird win Nebraska-Kearney Women’s Fall Classic

The Missouri Western women’s golf team won the University of Nebraska Kearney Women’s Fall Classic by ten strokes over host school Nebraska-Kearney in its first event of the fall. Missouri Western fired a two round total of 654 (317-337) at Awarii Dunes in Axtell, Neb. Senior, Natalie Bird won the event by eight strokes firing a two round total of 150 (72-78).

Host school Nebraska-Kearney took second place firing a 664 (332-332) which was seven strokes better than Fort Hays State’s, 671 (335-336). Dodge City CC finished fourth with a 699 (340-359) while Central Missouri (728) and Hastings College (728) tied for fifth and Doane (733) finished in seventh.

Bird won the event by eight strokes over Nebraska-Kearney’s Ana Summers, 178 (78-80). Darcy Smith finished in 7th with a 163 (82-81) while Shelby Stone finished in 12th with a 171 (78-93). Casi Webb and Callie Wilson finished in 15th and 21st respectively. Anna Kloeppel finished in 18th with a 175 (82-93) playing as an individual.

The Griffons return to action on September 10-11 participating in the Drury University Fall Shootout in Bolivar, Mo. The event will be held at Silo Ridge Country Club and will be hosted by Drury University.

— MWSU Sports Information —

MIAA announces weekly football honors

Anthony Abenoja (Pittsburg State), Michael Elliot (Truman) and John Brown (Pittsburg State) have been named MIAA Football Student-Athletes of the Week for the week of Nov. 5 as selected by a conference SID panel.

MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week
Anthony Abenoja, QB, Pittsburg State

Making his first collegiate start, Abenoja established a new Pittsburg State single game passing record. He was 26 of 36 on the night throwing for 378 yards and three touchdowns. He helped lead the #1 Gorillas to a 41-20 victory on the road at Northeastern State to open the season. He threw an eight yards touchdown pass to John Brown that capped off a 12-play, 87-yards drive on the opening series of the season. The 6-3 sophomore quarterback is a native of Overland Park, Kan. where he competed at Blue Valley High School.

Others nominated: Tyler Eckenrode, ESU; Khiry Draine, LU; Ben Gomez, LWU; Michael Hill, MWSU.

MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week
Michael Elliot, DB, Truman

Michael Elliot returned to the field after a year off due to injury and made an immediate impact. The former first team all-conference defensive back thwarted three SBU drives with interceptions in the fourth quarter. The three picks helped preserve the Bulldogs 24-14 victory on the road at Southwest Baptist. With the Bulldogs up 21-14, Elliot grabbed his first interception on the second play of the final quarter at the Truman 35 and returned it to midfield. After Truman got the insurance field goal Elliot picked off a pass to stop an SBU six play drive that had moved into Truman territory. His final pick came with two minutes to play as SBU had the ball on the Truman goal line. The 5-11 senior defensive back is a native of Cypress, Texas where he attended Cy-Fair High School.

Others nominated: Yomi Alli, MWSU; Darryl Blackmon, LU; Joe Day, LWU; Brandon Dixon, NWMSU; Kevin Gaddis, ESU; Jahmill Taylor, WU.

MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week
John Brown, KR/PR, Pittsburg State

Brown compiled a game high 270 all-purpose yards as he helped #1 Pittsburg State pick up a 41-20 win at Northeastern State. He averaged 29.0 yards per return on three punts and one returned for a touchdown that was called back due to penalty. He averaged 21.5 yards per return on two kickoffs in the game. He also caught a game-high nine passes for 140 yards and a pair of touchdowns. The 5-11 junior wide receiver is a native of Homestead, Fla. and played football at Coffeyville Community College and Homestead High School.

Others nominated: Taylor Anderson, MWSU; Aaron Hummert, WU; Eli Kuhns, ESU; Neal James, LWU; Keke Paul, FHSU; Eric Phillips, TSU.

— MIAA Press Release —

Royals lose series opener against Texas

While Yu Darvish flirted with a no-hitter, the Texas Rangers were hitting the ball over the Kauffman Stadium fences.

Darvish retired the first 17 batters, Texas hit five home runs and the Rangers beat the Kansas City Royals 8-4 Monday in a game that turned testy.

Adrian Beltre and Nelson Cruz homered on consecutive pitches in the sixth inning. Cruz watched his drive sail over the wall, then was hit by Louis Coleman’s first pitch leading off the ninth.

Cruz took a few steps to the mound, but was restrained by catcher Brayan Pena.

“It’s part of the game,” Pena said. “We’re trying to go inside. Cruz is a very strong guy and we were trying to not let him extend his arms. He is one of my good friends and I hope he knows we were not trying to hit him.”

The dugouts and bullpens emptied, but only words were exchanged. Both teams were issued a warning by plate umpire Mike Everitt.

Michael Young answered that by homering on the next pitch and Coleman was replaced by Francisley Bueno.

“That was an outstanding sequence,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. “Not the fact Cruz got hit, but the fact Michael hit the home run. I don’t know what that was about, but undoubtedly it didn’t affect us because we put another two runs on the board and got him out of the game. We was fired up already. All he did was make it shine a little brighter.”

Josh Hamilton hit his 38th homer and Geovany Soto added a three-run shot as Texas won for the ninth time in 12 games. The AL West leaders moved a season-high 26 games over .500 with some more pop after hit four homers Sunday in an 8-3 victory at Cleveland.

A day after he homered and doubled in his first two big league at-bats, 19-year-old Jurickson Profar was not in the Texas lineup. Second baseman Ian Kinsler, who sat out Sunday with a stiff back, returned to the lineup.

Darvish (14-9), who retired the final seven batters he faced in his previous start, did not allow a runner until two out in the sixth when he walked Johnny Giavotella on a close full-count pitch.

“When I threw that pitch — it was a slider — I tried to throw it right down the middle,” Darvish said through an interpreter. “It ended up being on the outer edge, a very close call. At that moment, I wanted the call, but later after that inning I looked at the replay video and saw that it was fairly a ball. So it just goes to show the umpires are right and good. And that hitter had a very good take, a very good at-bat.”

David Lough, playing in his third big league game, blooped a single just over the reach of shortstop Elvis Andrus and into shallow center to end Darvish’s no-hit bid.

“I didn’t think about that at all,” Darvish said.

Darvish gave up a two-run triple to Tony Abreu and a RBI double to Alex Gordon to cut the Texas lead to 6-3 before the inning ended.

“It takes one hit sometimes and other guys can feed off it,” Lough said. “I saw him going back for it and I was hoping it would fall in.”

Darvish was pulled after the seventh and struck out six, including five in the first three innings, while walking one.

“It was as good as I’ve seen his stuff,” Washington said. “His stuff was real crisp. His curveball they just couldn’t do anything with it. Early in the game his cutter was just outstanding. His four-seamer, he was zipping it. He was hitting his spots with consistency.

“He was doing everything he wanted to do out there. He’s getting a feel for what is working and he’s staying with it.”

Darvish tied Wade Miley of Arizona for the most victories by a rookie this season.

Soto homered in the second for a 3-0 lead.

Bruce Chen (10-11) allowed six runs on six hits, four of them home runs. He lasted six innings as his career ERA against Texas climbed to 8.68.

Abreu also singled in a run in the eighth, giving him six RBIs in two games.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis wins appeal, takes down New York

The St. Louis Cardinals took another step toward a playoff spot, thanks to a misstep by the New York Mets.

Andres Torres lost an apparent leadoff double in the ninth inning when he was called out for missing first base, and the Cardinals held off the Mets 5-4 Monday.

“I’ve never seen it called. Not in the big leagues like that,” Mets manager Terry Collins said.

Cardinals closer Jason Motte tied a career high by getting a five-out save. The wild card-contending Cardinals’ position improved when first base umpire Dave Rackley ruled Torres missed the bag and called him out on an appeal.

“He went over the front corner with his toe and it just kicked dirt up onto the base,” Rackley said.

Rackley said he wouldn’t make that call if he weren’t sure.

“That’s what I told Terry. I wouldn’t make that up,” Rackley said.

Crew chief Dale Scott said the umpires watched televised replays afterward and agreed the call was correct.

“It was exactly what (Rackley) described. His foot went over, the toes hit the ground, the heel never did,” Scott said. “And did you see where (Rackley) was? He was right there to make the call.”

Torres was standing on second after hitting a ball down the right-field line. Instead, he returned to the dugout.

“That’s not happened in my career,” Motte said. “It’s one out and nobody on rather than no one out and a guy on second. They can bunt him over, they have a lot of options right there.”

“It definitely changes that inning,” he said.

Torres insisted he ran the bases right.

“I just touched the base with my heel,” Torres said. “I never thought he was going to call me out, to be honest. What can I say? Nobody’s perfect.”

Collins came out to argue the play, to no avail.

“I get back to the bench, and I got 10 guys telling me he touched the bag,” Collins said.

Cardinals star Carlos Beltran, who was on the bench, told manager Mike Matheny to make the appeal.

“We’re saying our MVP is Carlos Beltran, who never hit the field,” Matheny said.

Said Beltran: “I was in the cage and watching him running. He was looking at the ball and not the bag. I saw sand coming up around the bag area and told them let’s try to throw to first.”

Rookie Joe Kelly (5-6) pitched 6 2/3 effective innings and also doubled for the Cardinals.

Kelly allowed five hits and two runs. He made his second start after a brief stint in the bullpen, and turned in his longest outing of the season.

Edward Mujica got the last out of the seventh, giving him 16 straight scoreless appearances since coming over from Miami at the trade deadline.

Skip Schumaker hit a solo homer and Matt Carpenter drove in two runs for St. Louis. Yadier Molina and Allen Craig added RBI singles and Kelly scored a run.

Daniel Murphy and Kelly Shoppach hit two-run homers for New York, which had won three straight and seven of eight.

Collin McHugh (0-1), recalled from Triple-A Buffalo to make the start, lasted just four innings and gave up four runs.

“These guys fought and scratched all game and I put us in a pretty deep hole early on,” McHugh said.

McHugh blanked the Colorado Rockies for seven innings Aug. 23 in his major league debut.

It took the Cardinals just two batters to give McHugh an ERA. Jon Jay led off with a triple into the left-field corner and Carpenter followed with an RBI groundout.

The Cardinals got two more in the third and Schumaker’s first home run leading off the fourth made it 4-0.

Kelly had retired 10 batters in a row before walking Mike Baxter and then allowing Shoppach’s homer in the seventh.

New York closed within a run on Murphy’s homer off reliever Mitchell Boggs in the eighth. The Mets had the tying run at second with one out later in the inning when Motte got Scott Hairston on a soft liner and struck out Shoppach.

— Associated Press —

Griffon soccer shuts out East Central for first win of season

The Missouri Western soccer team dominated the East Central University Tigers picking up a 2-0 victory in the final game of the 2012 Drury Inn Women’s Soccer Classic. The Griffons had 25 shots with 12 on goal as they improve to 1-1 on the season.

The Griffons put a lot of pressure on the Tigers in the first half taking 10 shots with four on goal. MWSU had multiple opportunities in the first frame with a couple shots hitting the crossbar. AJ Powers led the way with three shots and one on goal while Katie Kempf, Brittany Wagner and Sadie Naumann all had two shots with one on goal.

The Tigers had eight shots with four on goal. Molly Hummel had four shots with three on goal. Missouri Western had four corner kicks to East Central’s one. Both goalkeepers had four saves in the opening period.

The Griffons opened the second period putting pressure on the Tigers. Ashley Juravich took an assist from Katie Kemp and K.C. Ramsell giving the Griffons its first goal of the season at the 45:32 mark of the game.

MWSU put the game out of reach in the 61st minute when Kempf blasted a shot past goal keeper Stephanie Gutierrez for her goal of the season. The Griffons never looked back getting 10 corner kicks in the game.

Voigts improves to 1-1 on the year making seven saves while Powers had six shots in the game. Ramsell had four while Kempf, Juravich and Wagner all had three.

Missouri Western returns to action on Tuesday, September 7 in Liberty, Mo. taking on the William Jewell Cardinals at 7:00 pm. This marks the first ever meeting between the two schools.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Abreu helps Kansas City avoid sweep against Twins

Tony Abreu is making the most of his limited chances and that could earn more playing time.

Abreu drove in three runs and the Kansas City Royals beat the Minnesota Twins 6-4 Sunday to avoid a three-game sweep.

Abreu’s three RBIs matched his career high, set on Sept. 18, 2007 while with Arizona at Colorado.

“He’s got some clutch hits,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He had some great at-bats, really was huge offensively for us. I would gather to say he’s been more of a clutch hitter than a good hitter. I mean he’s hitting .300, but the majority of his hits have either tied ball games or given us the lead. He’s done a great job for us.”

“He made some great defensive plays (Saturday). He’s done a tremendous job for us defensively.”

Abreu, appearing in his eighth game since his Aug. 8 promotion from Triple-A Omaha, delivered a two-run two-out second inning single, scoring Mike Moustakas and Lorenzo Cain. Salvador Perez, who walked to lead off the inning, scored the first run of the inning on Eric Hosmer’s sacrifice fly.

Abreu’s two-out sixth inning single scored Hosmer, who had doubled, and broke a 4-4 tie.

Yost said he would probably give shortstop Alcides Escobar off Monday and play Abreu, who is hitting .344 with seven RBIs while starting four games at second base, three at third and one at shortstop.

“I just see him as a good hitter,” Royals closer Greg Holland said. “He doesn’t try to do too much. He puts good swings on the ball and works the count. I guess that counts as clutch.”

Holland struck out all three batters he faced in the ninth to log his 10th save in 12 chances. He is 9-for-9 in save situations since the Royals traded closer Jonathan Broxton on July 31 to Cincinnati.

The Twins jumped out to a 2-0 lead on Justin Morneau’s groundout in the first and Chris Parmelee’s homer in the next inning.

In the fifth inning, Billy Butler singled home David Lough, who had four hits in his first two big league games.

The Twins tied it in the sixth on a two-run single by Alexi Casilla on a full-count pitch with two out and the bases loaded against Tim Collins.

While Collins (5-2) got a blown save, he also got the win. Starter Luis Mendoza left with a 4-2 lead after five innings, allowing two runs on seven hits, throwing 84 pitches.

“Mendoza was starting to labor,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “They had (Joe) Mauer, (Justin) Morneau and (Ryan) Doumit coming up. I just said I’m going to match up from here. I wish he could have got the win.”

The Royals padded their lead in the eighth with Lorenzo Cain’s run-producing double.

Esmerling Vasquez (0-1), who was making his first big league start after 141 relief appearances, allowed five runs on seven hits and three walks in 5 2/3 innings.

“Vasquez was good,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. “He misfired a little there in the second inning and threw some balls to the backstop. He had one bad inning early, but then he settled down OK. He gave us a chance to win. We’ll take that and go forward.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s golf team leads UNO Fall Classic by 15 strokes

The Missouri Western women’s golf team fired its lowest round since October 5, 2009 when they fired a 318 in the UNO Fall Classic. In the first round of the University of Nebraska-Kearney Invitational the Griffons fired a 317 while Natalie Bird fired a career low 72 claiming the lead. The event is being played at Awarii Dunes in Axtell, Neb.

The Griffons lead the tournament by 15 strokes over second place Nebraska-Kearney (332). Fort Hays State sits in third with a 335 while Dodge City CC sits in fourth with a 341. Hasting College, Central Missouri and Doane College sit five, six and seven with 356, 358 and 363 respectively.

Bird leads the individual event by five strokes over Carmen Thompson of Fort Hays State (77). Sheby Stone sits in a tie for 3rd with a 78 while Darcy Smith sits in a tie for seventh with an 82. Freshman, Anna Kloeppel fired an 82 playing as an individual in her first ever collegiat event. Casi Webb fired an 85 while freshman Callie Wilson rounded out the Griffons with an 89.

MWSU will play the final round of the event tomorrow, Monday, September 3.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Cardinals drop three of four against Washington with loss Sunday

Stephen Strasburg returned to dominant, strike-throwing form against St. Louis after struggling in his last start. According to his manager, the All-Star ace will have two more opportunities at being “vintage Strasburg” this season.

Strasburg allowed two hits over six scoreless innings, striking out nine before being pulled Sunday as the Washington Nationals beat the Cardinals 4-3.

The NL East-leading Nationals took three of four from St. Louis and passed their 80-win total from last season.

Strasburg, rocked for seven runs last Tuesday at Miami, left with a 2-0 lead and a 2.94 ERA. He threw 97 pitches and wound up with a no-decision.

“I think he had another inning in his tank, but I didn’t want to run it up, maybe cost him a start,” Nationals manager Davey Johnson said. “He was outstanding. … He was vintage Strasburg today.”

The 23-year-old Strasburg has struck out a league-leading 195 in 156 1-3 innings this season. The Nationals have repeatedly stated they intend on shutting him down in his first full season since undergoing Tommy John surgery in 2010.

Johnson stuck with the party line after the win while providing a firmer timeline than the club has to date.

“I think two starts, unless I let him pitch 10 (innings) in the next one out, which I’m not going to do,” Johnson said. “I think his last start will be on the 12th.”

The Nationals play at the New York Mets on Sept. 12, not that Strasburg is thinking that far in advance. He is scheduled to face Miami at home on Sept. 7

“I’m just focused on the next start,” Strasburg said. “We’re going to have a sit down and talk here soon.”

The Nationals have been vague about an innings limit, but the team sat Jordan Zimmermann at 161 1-3 innings last season in a similar situation.

“When we feel that he’s had enough in and around that area of innings, and we take into account all the things we’ve talked about taking into account, stressful innings, pitches, and that type of thing, then we’ll make that decision and shut him down,” said Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo, acknowledging he has yet to have that sit down with Strasburg.

“I don’t think he’s going to fight me on it, I think he’s going to be unhappy about it, I know he’ll be unhappy about it. He is an ultimate competitor, but we’ve taken that out of his hands,” he said. “We’ve made (a decision) five months ago and we’re going to stick to it.”

For his part Strasburg added, “I’m in with these guys. We still have a long way to go. I’m going to fight with them to the end.”

Ian Desmond and Danny Espinosa produced two-out RBI singles in the seventh that lifted Washington. Kurt Suzuki homered and drove in two runs for the Nationals.

The Cardinals rallied in the seventh after Strasburg left with three hits against reliever Sean Burnett, including Daniel Descalso’s two-run homer.

Washington responded with four consecutive two-out singles against Lance Lynn (13-6). Desmond’s flare to center scored pinch-runner Eury Perez with the go-ahead run. Espinosa had three of the Nationals’ 13 hits.

Ryan Mattheus (2-3) pitched 1 1-3 innings, allowing a run on Tony Cruz’s RBI double in the eighth. Tyler Clippard, the worked the ninth for his 29th save.

Lynn pitched one inning, allowing two runs on four hits for the Cardinals, who have lost five of six while trying to hold off Pittsburgh for the final NL wild-card berth.

Facing the Cardinals for the first time, Strasburg gave up Matt Holliday’s two-out double in the first. The All-Star ace held St. Louis without another hit until Holliday’s sixth-inning single.

“I just settled in a little bit,” Strasburg said. “That’s just getting out there, feeling your way through the first couple of innings. When you’ve got your pitches working, it’s just attack.”

Attack he did, fanning at least two hitters in four innings and regained the NL strikeout lead by whiffing St. Louis pitcher Jake Westbrook in the fifth. Strasburg walked one overall.

“Strasburg did a great job of holding us down,” said Cardinals outfielder Jon Jay, twice a strikeout victim in three at-bats against Strasburg. “He had a good fastball and changeup. He kept us off-balance.”

Third baseman Ryan Zimmerman’s throwing error, a walk and a wild pitch put runners on the corners with one out in the fourth. Holliday attempted to score the game’s first run on Bryan Anderson’s shallow fly ball to right, but Bryce Harper easily threw him out at the plate for the final out.

Usually in center, Harper shifted to right with Jayson Werth scratched from the lineup minutes before the first pitch.

Suzuki, acquired in a trade with Oakland last month, stroked his third homer on the season in the bottom half. In the sixth, he tacked on a third consecutive single against Westbrook, which scored Desmond and ended Westbrook’s day.

Westbrook allowed two runs on nine hits with six strikeouts and one walk. He avoided his third loss in four starts when Descalso, the Cardinals number eight hitter, turned on a 3-1 pitch from Burnett for his fourth home run of the season.

— Associated Press —

Bearcats crush Newman Sunday for first win

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s soccer team finished its weekend with its first win of the season, 9-1, Sunday against Newman University.

In a showcase of the Bearcats youthful team, two goals were scored by freshmen. Anna Holden and Sara Worsfold scored their first goals of their collegiate careers as junior Jordan Albright added her first of the season as well.

Bearcats Victoria Von Mende and Elizabeth Walde both scored two goals in the win. Von Mende scored two goals in a game for the third time in her career. The two goals bring Von Mende to three goals this season. Walde scored her first and second goals of her Northwest career in the game also.

The team was one goal shy from tying the school record for goals in a game. The record of 10 goals in a game was set against Presentation College in 2001. The Bearcats offense set the momentum for the game with 38 shots on goal compared to Newman’s five shots.

Amanda Spade also scored her first goal of the season in the 28th minute to give Northwest a 3-0 lead. The Bearcats first three goals all came in a span of six minutes as Chelsea Fournier netted her first goal of the year in the 25th minute.

Newman’s only goal came in the 59th minute of the game as Mallory Hurst shot the ball passed Kelsey Adams. Adams received the win, making her season record 1-0-1. Adams had four saves in the game.

The loss was credited to Haley Borchers who allowed five goals in the first half.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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