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MWSU soccer loses opener against Southwestern Oklahoma

The Missouri Western soccer team fell 2-0 against the Southwestern Oklahoma State Bulldogs in the first game of the 2012 season on Friday evening. Western managed just two shots as they fall to 0-1 on the season.

The Missouri Western soccer team struggled offensively in the first half getting just one shot which was on goal by Teddie Serna. Griffon goalkeeper Kelly Voigts made two saves on three shots on goal.

The Bulldogs had five shots with Jessica Carbonara and Paige Doherty leading the way with two apiece. Doherty gave the Bulldogs the lead in the first half when she headed one past Voigts at the 27:56 mark of the first half. The assist went to Josie Price.

The Bulldogs held the Griffons to just one shot in the second half while the Bulldogs tacked on one more goal giving them the 2-0 victory. Southwestern Oklahoma State scored its second goal in the 58th minute when Jessica Carbonara put one in the bottom right of the goal.

The Bulldogs improve to 1-0 as they had eight corner kicks to the Griffons zero.

Missouri Western will play again on Sunday, September 2 against the East Central Tigers at 2:30 pm in Spratt Stadium. East Central fell 1-0 against the Emporia State Hornets in the first game of the Drury Inn Classic Friday evening.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest soccer plays Saint Cloud State to a draw

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s soccer team began its season Friday with a draw, 2-2, against Saint Cloud State at Bearcat Pitch.

The Bearcats set a fast pace early in the home opener, but the Huskies were at their side through the whole game. Both teams took 19 shots in the game. The Bearcats lost the lead in 83rd minute, and could not recover.

Amanda Bundrant connected with Victoria Von Mende for a goal in the fourth minute to give Northwest an early 1-0 lead. The goal was Von Mende’s first of the season. In the 2011 season, she tied the program record for most goals scored in a season with 11.

St. Cloud made their comeback in the second half. The unassisted goal by Bailly Drayton started their final push to the end of regulation. Coco Cammon assisted with the tying goal by Gabby Fleck in the 83rd minute.

Freshman, Crystal McElhose, scored her first career goal in the 53rd minute that gave Northwest a 2-1 lead.

Bearcat Goalkeeper Kelsey Adams was solid in the net with 12 saves out of 14 shots on goal.

With the draw, the Bearcats and Huskies records start at 0-0-1. The Bearcats host Newman University at Bearcat Pitch Sunday at 1 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Griffons open season with 38-26 victory over Central Missouri

Missouri Western started its season out with a 38-26 victory over Central Missouri Thursday night at Spratt Stadium.

MWSU moved the ball efficiently early on after a personal foul penalty returned the ball to the Griffons on their second drive of the game. The Griffons took full advantage of the penalty; driving 49 yards on five plays that concluded with a Travis Partridge 8-yd touchdown pass to tight end Reggie Jordan that put MWSU on top 7-0.

After Central Missouri’s drive stalled out, the Griffons steadily drove to the 21-yard line, setting up Michael Hill’s first rushing touchdown of the season. Hill’s 21-yard touchdown put Missouri Western up 14-0 with 3:25 to play in the first quarter.

MWSU continued to improve its score, taking a 21-0 advantage early in the second quarter after Hill’s second touchdown run, this time from 17-yards out. The Mules were soon intercepted by Yomi Alli, whose 18-yard return set the Griffons up with great field position at Central’s 13-yard line.

The Griffons jumped ahead by four scores when Travis Partridge connected with backup tight end Alek Ferbet for a 5-yard score, giving MWSU a comfortable 28-0 lead with 7:19 to play in the first half.

MWSU’s defense harassed Central in the first half, making the Mules switch to backup quarterback Colter Smith. The change benefited the Mules, as he led them down the field for their first score of the game, hitting Ronrei Lloyd for a 16-yard touchdown.

The Griffons still led 28-7 heading into the half.

MWSU took a 35-7 lead midway through the third quarter when Tyron Crockom caught his first touchdown of the season. Crockom’s six-yard score came one play after he caught a strike from Partridge but was out of bounds.

Central Missouri kept the game close with a 52-yard fumble recovery and score with 34 seconds left in the third. Taylor Anderson gave the Griffons three more points with a 20-yard field goal to give Missouri Western a 38-13 lead with 11:17 left in the game.

The Mules scored two more times pushing the score closer, but time ran out as MWSU took the game 38-26.

David Bass’ first sack of the season came in the first minute, putting him just a ½ sack away from tying the all-time record at MWSU which is held by Kinney Redding with 30.5.

Hill continued to his push toward a Missouri Western record. Coming into the night’s game, Hill was 596 yards away from the career rushing total record. He ended the night with 169 yards on 28 carries.

Partridge finished the first game of the season throwing 14 completions on 20 attempts for 126 yards. He connected on three touchdown passes for the third time in his career.

MWSU was 5-1 last season when scoring first and 1-0 this year. The Griffons have won six straight home games against the Mules, while winning nine of the last 10 in the series.

The Griffons take on William Jewell at 6 p.m. next Saturday, September 8th in Spratt Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats win opener behind dominating defensive effort against East Central

A solid defensive effort paved the way for a 33-3 season-opening win for the 3rd-ranked Northwest Missouri State football team Thursday night against East Central (Okla.) in nonconference action from Bearcat Stadium.

The Bearcats battled hard to move to 1-0 on the year while the Tigers fell to 0-1. Northwest will have nine days before opening MIAA play at Central Missouri Sept. 8.

After a record-setting season on offense in 2011, the defense answered the bell only allowing a 32-yard field goal. The Bearcat defense held ECU to only 48-yards on the ground and picked-off the Tigers three times.

Northwest jumped on the board after Brandon Dixon’s first interception of the night was tipped to Eric Reimer who raced 55-yards – setting up the Bearcats’ first score. One play later, Trevor Adams would punch it in from 3-yards out putting Northwest up 7-0.

The Bearcats would put together their longest drive marching 80-yards in six plays. Jordan Simmons scored his first touchdown from the one yard line as Northwest took a 14-0 lead into the break.

East Central picked up its only points of the night as a seven-play drive stalled at the Bearcat 30-yard line. However, Brian Gonzalez drilled a 32-yard field goal for the Tiger’s lone points.

The Northwest defense locked in as Brandon Dixon picked-off his second ECU pass and raced 38-yards to give the Bearcats a 24-3 lead.

A bad snap from ECU went through the Tigers’ end-zone giving Northwest two more points and 26-3 lead midway through the fourth quarter.

After the Bearcats forced the ECU safety, Trevor Adams would find Bryce Young with a shovel pass on the Bearcat’s first play from scrimmage. Young then raced 53-yards for the game’s final score, giving Northwest a 33-3 lead.

However after the final whistle, it was the Northwest defense that highlighted the season-opening win. Picking off ECU three times and adding three sacks Northwest held the Tigers to just under 300-yards of total offense. DJ Gnader led Northwest with 10 tackles while Brandon Dixon added seven tackles to his two interceptions.

“We have really hit it hard during practice, so it was kind of like slow motion,” Dixon said of the defenses’ solid play.

Starting his second season at the helm of the Bearcats, Dorrel was pleased with the way the defense picked up the offense.

“I’d rather have a game like tonight where the offense struggles,” Dorrel said. “Defense is what wins championships and we have a really good foundation.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Chiefs lose preseason finale at Green Bay

Graham Harrell finally showed why the Green Bay Packers believed he could be Aaron Rodgers’ primary backup.

Brushing off a shaky preseason, Harrell drove the offense for touchdowns on all three of his possessions and the Packers beat the Kansas City Chiefs 24-3 on Thursday night.

Harrell completed 13 of 15 passes for 223 yards with two touchdowns in both teams’ final preseason tuneup.

“It was just doing what we’ve done all year, just more consistently,” Harrell said. “When things are going well, I think all of the guys start to feel it — you get some momentum, you get more emotion — and I thought the tempo was up just a little bit. When things are going well, you kind of start rolling.”

Harrell’s play has been scrutinized by fans and the media, and Packers coach Mike McCarthy said handling that was part of his maturation process.

“We talk about it all the time: It’s nice when people say nice things about you and it’s not so nice when they don’t,” McCarthy said. “And it’s one extreme to the other, particularly at that position. That’s part of the deal. I think he handled it very well.”

But with the final round of roster decisions looming Friday, McCarthy stopped short of making a definitive declaration when asked if he was comfortable going into the season with Harrell as the backup.

“I think he definitely grew through the preseason, topped it off with an excellent performance tonight,” McCarthy said. “But we’re not going to make any roster selections here tonight.”

Second-year running back Alex Green had touchdowns rushing and receiving, and Jarrett Boykin caught a touchdown for the Packers.

Rookie running back Nate Eachus had 21 carries for 99 yards and the Chiefs rushed for 247 yards.

“It was effective, I thought,” coach Romeo Crennel said of the Chiefs’ running game. “I wanted to reinforce what happened in practice. It was successful in the game, so that was good.”

Peyton Hillis had 46 yards on six carries, and said the offensive line showed improvement from last week.

“It was a great job up front,” Hillis said. “That’s where we found the holes. I think as far as coming out and trying to work the running game and try to get that accomplished, I believe we did that.”

Defensive tackle B.J. Raji appeared to hurt his left ankle on the Packers’ first defensive play, but was able to walk off the field without assistance. Raji did not return to the game, but McCarthy said he wasn’t particularly concerned about the injury.

Cornerback Sam Shields had an interception for the Packers.

The two teams had a combined total of 22 penalties, but it seemed an indication of sloppy play rather than mistakes by the replacement officiating crew.

Chiefs starting quarterback Matt Cassel came out of the game a few plays into their second possession. Brady Quinn was 6 of 12 for 83 yards with an interception, while Ricky Stanzi and Alex Tanney struggled to move the ball.

Crennel said Quinn was “decent,” with room for improvement.

“He’s my second quarterback, so I’m going to ask him to step up like I would ask anyone else to step up,” Crennel said.

The Chiefs put together several long drives in the first half, but had only a 26-yard field goal by Ryan Succop to show for it.

After Rodgers played the first two series, Harrell took over early in the second quarter.

He seemed to gain confidence after Jermichael Finley made an acrobatic catch for a 27-yard gain. Harrell found Tori Gurley wide open for a 54-yard gain on the next play, and Green ran in for a 2-yard touchdown two plays later for a 7-3 lead.

Harrell and the Packers got the ball back at their 7-yard line on the next series and Harrell drove them downfield, eventually throwing a pass to Green for a 17-yard touchdown.

After halftime, Harrell put together another steady drive, eventually finding Boykin again for a 12-yard touchdown.

Harrell, a former standout at Texas Tech, came into camp as the Packers’ main backup after Matt Flynn signed a free agent deal with Seattle.

Coming into Thursday, Harrell had completed 50.8 percent of his passes with a touchdown and two interceptions. However, Harrell has been playing with a second-string offense that has struggled to give him any help, especially in pass protection. He was sacked five times in the first three games.

Now he hopes he has sealed his spot on the roster.

“I want to play as long as they let me,” Harrell said. “It was fun tonight, and I love the game. I get to play a game as a professional right now. As long as they let me do that, I’ll do it.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas City beat Detroit to finish three-game sweep

Jeremy Guthrie pitched effectively into the eighth inning and Alex Gordon homered to lead the Kansas City Royals over the Detroit Tigers 2-1 Thursday night for a three-game sweep.

Prince Fielder had three hits for the slumping Tigers, who remained three games behind the first-place Chicago White Sox in the AL Central. The teams begin an important three-game series Friday night in Detroit.

Royals rookie Kelvin Herrera worked around a walk and a single in the ninth to earn his first career save, coaxing slugger Miguel Cabrera to ground into a game-ending double play.

Guthrie (3-3), who did not give up a hit to the White Sox until the eighth inning on Aug. 19 in his previous Kauffman Stadium start, held Detroit to one run on 10 hits — nine of them singles. He walked none and struck out three.

Guthrie has made eight starts for the Royals since they acquired him in a July 20 trade with Colorado for left-hander Jonathan Sanchez. He is 6-12 overall.

Gordon hit his 10th homer leading off the sixth and extended his hitting streak to eight games.

The Royals loaded the bases with none out in the fifth, but converted that into just one run. Mike Moustakas doubled to start the inning and Jeff Francoeur singled on the 10th pitch to snap an 0-for-19 streak. After Eric Hosmer walked to load the bases, Johnny Giavotella’s groundout to shortstop Jhonny Peralta scored Moustakas.

Rick Porcello (9-10) lost his fourth straight start, giving up two runs and eight hits in five-plus innings. He struck out four and walked two.

The Tigers snapped a 17-inning scoreless drought with a run in the eighth when one-out singles by Fielder and Delmon Young chased Guthrie. After reliever Tim Collins struck out pinch-hitter Jeff Baker on three pitches, Peralta delivered a run-scoring single.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose 8-1 at Washington in series opener

Bryce Harper hit his third home run in two games, Jayson Werth homered for the first time since May, and Edwin Jackson struck out 10 Thursday night as the Washington Nationals padded their NL East lead with an 8-1 win over the punchless St. Louis Cardinals.

The Nationals opened an 11-game homestand with an overwhelming performance against a wild-card contender that failed to score an earned run for the third straight game.

Jackson (8-9) was so dominant that three of his strikeouts required throws to first because the Cardinals were chasing balls in the dirt.

The victory moved the Nationals 5 1/2 games ahead of idle Atlanta.

Jaime Garcia (3-6) allowed six runs for the Cardinals, whose streak of 28 scoreless innings ended in the eighth.

— Associated Press —

Missouri extends AD Mike Alden’s contract through 2019

University of Missouri Chancellor Brady Deaton announced Thursday that Athletic Director Mike Alden’s contract has been extended by two years. The contract now extends through June 30, 2019. The extension is designed to provide support to Alden as he continues to oversee the successful athletic programs, student-athlete academic performance and sound financial management of the department.

“Mike has provided important leadership during a time of transition of conferences,” Deaton said. “His record of integrity is stellar and his national leadership in the NCAA reflects recognition of his orientation to the success of the student athlete. The academic, competitive and financial strength of our Athletic Department is due to Mike’s leadership, and the university is proud of his contributions. We want to see a stable pathway as we look to the future. This contract extension is one way to reinforce our commitment to excellence in athletics and to the academic mission of our university.”

Under Alden’s guidance, Mizzou Athletic programs have consistently competed at a higher level. The football program has competed in seven consecutive bowl games, a school record. Additionally, their 48 wins in the last five seasons ranks ninth in the NCAA among BCS automatic qualifying leagues. The men’s basketball program finished last season with 30 wins and received a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The softball program has competed in the Women’s College World Series in three of the last four years, and in the last six years, six Tiger programs have won 11 conference championships (regular season and post-season combined).

“I want to thank Chancellor Deaton and our leadership at Mizzou for their continued confidence and support of our efforts in Tiger Athletics,” Alden said. “This extension is greatly appreciated, and I believe it reflects the efforts of so many people working together for academic integrity, social responsibility and competitive excellence. We look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead as we enter the SEC.”

Prior to coming to MU, Alden was director of athletics at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He has worked in athletic administration for Division I schools since 1985, serving as assistant athletic director for administration at Arizona State University in Tempe, Ariz., and as associate athletic director for development at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, N.M.

— MU Sports Information —

Chen throws gem as Kansas City beat Detroit 1-0

The Royals proved Wednesday night just how fickle baseball can be.

One night after roughing up Tigers ace Justin Verlander to win a stunning shootout, Kansas City saw crafty veteran Bruce Chen go eight innings in an equally surprising pitcher’s duel with Anibal Sanchez. Eric Hosmer’s shank single in the fourth score the lone run in a 1-0 victory.

“That’s baseball. That’s why this game is so great,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We won the game on an 80-foot bomb in the Bermuda triangle. That’s baseball.”

Indeed, Hosmer managed to get just enough of Sanchez’s pitch to drop the ball between the mound and second base, and that was enough to score Mike Moustakas from third base.

Try that for fickle.

“Isn’t it amazing?” Hosmer asked. “You can go up there and hit three lasers at guys, and then have a hit like that and it ends up deciding the game.”

Greg Holland earned his ninth save with a shaky ninth inning, allowing a leadoff single to Andy Dirks. Jarrod Dyson likely saved the tying run with a diving grab in center, and after Prince Fielder singled, Holland struck out Delmon Young and Jhonny Peralta to end the game.

The star of the game, though, unmistakably was Chen (10-10), who lasted eight innings for the first time since his last two starts of last season. The 35-year-old left-hander hadn’t even gone seven in his past 11 outings, though he had been pitching better of late.

Sanchez (2-4) matched him most of the night, finally looking like the guy the Tigers thought they were acquiring in a July trade with Florida. He allowed seven hits in seven innings.

“Chen pitched a great game. A great matchup — Chen and Sanchez — and Chen was just a little better,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “Chen throws this when you’re looking for that, and vice-versa. He knows what he’s doing, obviously.”

The Tigers came to town hoping to make up ground on the AL Central-leading White Sox, but the third-place Royals have gotten the most of them so far.

Kansas City battered Verlander, the reigning AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, in the opener Tuesday night, scoring eight earned runs in 5 2/3 innings. Moustakas then delivered the go-ahead RBI double in the eighth to give the Royals a 9-8 victory.

They did it with pitching and defense Wednesday night, getting Chen’s best start of the year and turning a pair of inning-ending double plays to help him out.

“I felt really good. I felt like my teammates played really good defense,” Chen said. “After the third inning, I didn’t have to shake off anything. Everything was working.”

Everything was working for Sanchez until the fourth.

Moustakas doubled down the right-field line with one out and Hosmer came to the plate with two outs. He managed to catch a pitch so close to the hands that it popped over Sanchez’s head like a knuckleball, and dropped with a thud between the mound and second base.

Sanchez tried to grab it while whirling toward first, but he just about whiffed on the pick-up and Hosmer had an RBI single. Brayan Pena grounded out to leave the score 1-0.

“It’s part of the game, a blooper like that,” Sanchez said. “I have to take it. You have to go back to the mound and get the next guy out.”

Meanwhile, Chen was getting just about everybody out.

After giving up a leadoff double to Austin Jackson, the left-hander pitched 1-2-3 innings in the second and fourth, and got help from Moustakas in starting inning-ending double plays to get Kansas City out of the third and fifth.

The most perilous situation came in the seventh, when Miguel Cabrera scorched a pitch to center for a leadoff double. Cabrera advanced to third on Fielder’s flyout, and Chen hit Young with a pitch to put runners on the corners with one out.

Relying on his deep repertoire of off-speed stuff, Chen struck out Peralta and then watched Moustakas charge a grounder to third by Jeff Baker and throw him out to end the threat.

Chen retired the side in the eighth before Holland slammed the door in the ninth.

“Outstanding,” Yost said. “Chen was surgical with his stuff today. He was sharp, he was extremely effective. And then Holland was there to finish it off.”

— Associated Press —

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