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Western softball sweeps Northwest Missouri State

The 10th ranked Griffons softball team scored 18 runs and pounded out 19 hits in a doubleheader sweep over the Northwest Missouri State Bearcats on Friday afternoon. Western won game one 9-0 in five innings and took game two 8-3 improving to 23-4 overall and 6-0 in MIAA play. The Griffons have won a season best nine straight games.

Game 1: MWSU 9, NWMSU 0 (5 Innings)

Western pounded out nine hits and got another solid pitching performance from Jackie Bishop earning a 9-0, five inning victory over rival Northwest Missouri State in game one. Western used a four run second inning and a five run fourth inning earning its eighth straight victory.

In the second inning Western scored four runs on two hits while capitalizing on two Bearcat errors. Keri Lorbert opened the inning with a single to left field and then pinch runner Erin Widrig scored on a fielders choice bunt by Leah Steele. Taylor Anding and Steele scored on a Kat Steponovich single and Steponovich scored on a Sarah Elliot fielder choice putting Western up 4-0 after  two.

In the fourth Western scored five more runs on five hits. Kendall Sorenson, Meagan Roemmich, Taylor Anding, Leah Steele and Steponovich all had hits in the inning. Bishop struckout the side in the Bearcat fifth finishing with nine K’s on the win. She improves to 12-1 with the victory.

Roemmich went 2-for-2 with two RBI and a run scored while Steponovich went 3-for-3 with three RBI and a run scored.

The Bearcats had just one hit which was by Josie Van Houten while Jenna Creger falls to 4-4 on the season going 3.2 innings givin gup eight hits and six earned runs.

Game 2: MWSU 8, NWMSU 3

Western used two three run innings and a two run inning taking game two of the doubleheader 8-3. Western got on the board in the second inning scoring three runs on three hits. Roemmich, Elliot and Sorenson all had singles in the inning.

The Griffons scored two more in the fourth claiming a 5-0 lead after four. Western added three more hits with a single up the middle by Sorenson which plated Steponovich and Steele.

In the fifth the Bearcats made things interesting smacking two homers. One by Kyle Cantrell and one by Hailee Hendricks cutting the Griffon lead to 5-3 after four and a half.

The Griffons responded in the bottom of the fifth with three more runs as Lorbert singled down the left field line leading off the inning. Two more hits and three Bearcat errors allowed Western to take the 8-3 lead after five.

Annalee Rubio shut down the Bearcats the rest of the way as she picked up her seventh straight victory. She improves to 9-3 pitching all seven innings. she gave up eight hist and three earned runs while striking out eight.

Sorenson and Steele each had two hits as Steele scored three runs and Sorenson had two RBI.

The Bearcats fall to 11-11 overall and 2-2 in MIAA play. Kristen Uthe had two of Northwest’s eight hits while Morgan Brunmeier falls to 4-4 on the year.

Western returns to action on Saturday, March 17 with a doubleheader against MIAA opponent Truman State. Game time is set for 1:00 pm from the Griffon Softball Field at the Spring Sports Complex.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri gets stunned by 15th seed Norfolk State in NCAA opener

Kyle O’Quinn’s booming voice echoed through the halls, the jovial center for Norfolk State riding the euphoria of a monumental upset of Missouri as the words spilled out of his mouth faster than he could think.

“We messed up some brackets! We messed up some brackets!” he bellowed, before turning a corner and seeing a pack of reporters.

“We even messed up my bracket,” he said sheepishly.

O’Quinn put together the finest game of his career at the biggest moment in the history of Norfolk State basketball. The senior finished with 26 points and 14 rebounds, helping the No. 15 seed Spartans to an 86-84 victory over the second-seeded Tigers on Friday.

All those brackets that had the Big 12 tournament champs advancing to face Florida in the West Regional — perhaps even all the way to the Final Four — can be torn up. It’s the MEAC champions who are moving on.

Pendarvis Williams and Chris McEachin each added 20 points for the Spartans (26-9), who have already made their first trip to the NCAA tournament a memorable one. They became the fifth No. 15 seed to beat a No. 2 and the first since fellow conference member Hampton in 2001.

“You always go into the game with a sense of confidence,” O’Quinn said, “but I never thought it was an upset-alert until that buzzer went off.

“At the end of the game,” he said, “that’s when I thought it would happen.”

O’Quinn had a chance to take some drama out of the final possession, but the 70-percent foul shooter missed two free throws with 3.8 seconds left. Missouri coach Frank Haith called timeout to set up a final play, and Phil Pressey got a pretty good look at a 3-pointer just before the buzzer sounded.

It clanked off the back iron as O’Quinn leaped for joy.

Pressey fell to the court in disbelief.

“We just shocked everybody,” Spartans swingman Brandon Wheeless said.

Michael Dixon led Missouri (30-5) with 22 points, and Pressey and fellow guard Marcus Denmon finished with 20 points each. Pressey also contributed eight assists, though senior guard Kim English was held to two points on 1-for-7 shooting.

“I’m very disappointed, as everyone in that locker room was,” Haith said. “I hurt for those seniors because they put so much into this. They had high expectations.”

The Tigers rolled into the NCAAs on the strength of a dominant run to the Big 12 tournament title, rarely getting tested in three games in Kansas City. That was enough to make Missouri a trendy Final Four pick, something the school had never before accomplished.

Norfolk State made sure it wouldn’t happen this year, either.

The plucky Spartans shot 54.2 percent from the field — 62.5 percent in the second half — and managed to knock down 10 of 19 3-point shots. They also turned the ball over just 11 times against the Tigers’ quick-handed guards, who had caused fits for most teams this season.

“We knew coming into this game if we let them hang around it was going to be a ballgame. They hung around the whole game,” Preseey said. “They made the plays at the right time.”

The Spartans opened the game on a 15-7 surge, turning most of the folks dressed in Florida blue and Virginia orange into surrogate fans. And when Missouri jumped ahead on the strength of three consecutive 3-pointers, Norfolk State didn’t seem to be rattled.

Fifth-year coach Anthony Evans simply called timeout and Norfolk State regrouped.

Things were going so well for the Spartans in the first half that O’Quinn, an 18-percent shooter from beyond the arc, swished one from the top of the key. The big guy added a conventional three-point play later in the half, slamming his hand onto the court after he was fouled and then stepping to the free throw line and giving Norfolk State a 38-36 lead.

Dixon’s basket with 23.4 seconds left meant a tie game at halftime.

Missouri spent nearly the entire 20-minute break in its locker room. The Spartans were back on the court before it was half over, putting up shots like it was a Sunday afternoon shootaround.

They must have liked the way things were going.

Marcos Tamares scored right out of halftime and the Spartans kept plugging away. Ricardo Ratliffe made a couple of baskets for Missouri and Williams hit another deep jumper for Norfolk State. Dixon hit a 3 from the corner and O’Quinn scored underneath.

The only time Missouri threatened to create some breathing room came when Pressey followed his own basket with a 3-pointer with 7:15 to go, giving the Tigers a 73-69 lead.

Tamares was there to provide a 3-pointer of his own.

The game was tied 81-all when O’Quinn plucked an airball out of midair and put it back with 34.9 seconds left, getting fouled in the process. The three-point play made it 84-81.

O’Quinn added the first of two free throws moments later, but Pressey hit a deep 3-pointer from the wing with just a shade over 10 seconds left, giving Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon — seated two rows behind the Tigers’ bench — some reason to hope.

Rodney McCauley restored an 86-84 lead with the first of two free throws, and after a loose ball wound up in Norfolk State’s hands, O’Quinn missed both of his foul shots.

That set the stage for Missouri’s dramatic final possession.

A possession that nobody at tiny Norfolk State will ever forget.

“Coming into the game, I believed it. I believed it from the jump. Honest to God’s truth,” McCauley said. “We’ve got good shooters. We dig deep. We’re not ready to go home yet. We’ve got five seniors. We’re ready to keep playing.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas cruises past Detroit Friday night

Thomas Robinson had 16 points and 13 rebounds, and second-seeded Kansas rolled to a 65-50 victory over No. 15 seed Detroit in the second round of the Midwest Regional on Friday night.

Elijah Johnson added 15 points and Tyshawn Taylor had 10 for the Jayhawks (28-6), who toyed with the Titans (22-14) for the first 15 minutes before ramping up the defense and making sure they didn’t accompany fellow No. 2 seeds Missouri and Duke on the way out of the NCAA tournament.

Kansas advanced to play No. 10 seed Purdue on Sunday.

Doug Anderson led the Horizon League-champion Titans with 15 points before fouling out with 11:06 left. Ray McCallum, the son of the Detroit coach, added eight on 4-for-15 shooting.

— Associated Press —

Bearcats get shutout by No. 2 Central Missouri

For the first time all season Northwest Missouri State hitters were held at bay as No. 2 Central Missouri shutout the Bearcats 5-0 to open a four-game MIAA series from Bearcat Field on Friday.

Northwest fell to 5-12 on the season and 4-5 in league play while the Mules improved to 13-1 overall and 7-1 in the MIAA. The Bearcats and Mules continue the conference series on Saturday with a double header from Bearcat Field starting at noon.

Both teams locked in a pitcher’s duel for the first two innings before UCM broke through with two runs in the top of the third inning.

Starter Chris Green went 5.1 innings scattering six hits and striking out two. Green ran into trouble allowing five walks as Bearcat pitchers walked seven on the day.

Mules’ starter Kurtis Schuyler was outstanding striking out 10 batters while only walking two through six innings.

Four errors haunted Northwest as well as the miscues accounted for three UCM runs.

The bullpen for the Bearcats was solid as Jacob Raffaele and Nathaniel Horton combined for 3.2 innings. Both pitchers were solid limiting UCM base runners as the Mules left 12 runners in the game.

Eric Swain went 1-for-4 extending his hitting streak to four games while Jake Kretzer also extending his hitting streak of five games. Kretzer finished 1-for-3 in the loss.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest’s Cooper named 2nd Team All-District

Northwest Missouri State junior DeShaun Cooper was named second-team All-District by the National Association of Basketball Coaches on Friday.

The junior guard helped lead Northwest to a share of the MIAA regular season championship, a 22-7 record and a berth in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2008. He crossed the 1,000 point mark and moved into the all-time top 10 for assists with 357 during the season.

Cooper also is just 11 steals shy of cracking the all-time top 10 for steals and is an 80.6 percent free throw shooter for his career ranking him third on the all-time list. The St. Louis native was named All-MIAA first-team as well after earning a second-team selection as a sophomore and being named Freshman of the Year during the 2009-10 campaign.

Teams were selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, these student-athletes represent the finest basketball players across America. The 89 student-athletes, from eight districts, are now eligible for the NABC Coaches’ Division II All-America teams, selected by the NABC.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Kansas City signs tight end Kevin Boss to free agent deal

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Friday that the club has signed free agent tight end Kevin Boss.

“We are excited about the opportunity to make Kevin a member of the Kansas City Chiefs,” said Head Coach Romeo Crennel. “Kevin has been a part of successful teams in the past and knows what it takes to win. I am eager to add him to our offense.”

“We felt that signing Kevin continued our free agent plan of adding good players to our roster,” said General Manager Scott Pioli. “Kevin has a track record of personal and team success in this league and he is a good fit for us.”

Boss (6-6, 255) has played in 72 games (56 starts) in five NFL seasons. His most recent stop was with the Oakland Raiders in 2011 after spending four years with the New York Giants (2007-10). Boss’ career numbers include 147 receptions for 1,968 yards (13.4 avg.) with 21 TDs. He has started five postseason contests tallying eight receptions for 142 yards (17.8 avg.). In 2007, Boss was part of the New York Giants squad that won Super Bowl XVII. The Philomath, Ore. native originally entered the NFL as a fifth-round pick (153rd overall) of the New York Giants in the 2007 NFL Draft.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

St. Joseph Christian falls to Drexel in Class 1 Final Four

The St. Joseph Christian boys’ basketball team made it’s first appearance in the Class 1 semifinals Tuesday afternoon at the Hearnes Center in Columbia, but the Lions struggled against Drexel and fell to the Bobcats 61-36.

Christian never led in the game and fell behind 28-19 at halftime.  It’s was a 12-point game, 46-34, with four minutes to go in the fourth quarter and then Drexel used a 13-0 run to put the game out of reach.

The Lions committed 23 turnovers in the game and were outrebounded 28-18.  SJCS also shot just 35 percent (14-40), while Drexel finished the game 58.7 percent (27-46).

Forrest Hicks led St. Joe Christian with 12 points and eight rebounds, while Robbie Kaufman and David Beard added six points each.

Christian falls to 23-7 and they’ll close out their season in the Class 1 third-place game as the Lions will play Glasgow (25-6) at 5:00 p.m. Friday inside Mizzou Arena.  You can listen to the game on 680 KFEQ.

McGruder leads K-State past Southern Miss in NCAA opener

Frank Martin watched freshman point guard Angel Rodriguez flub his way through the first half against Southern Miss Thursday and tried to keep his sanity.

At one point, the always animated Martin feared Rodriguez and his fellow freshmen were “going to make me cry on national TV.”

Tears of joy, maybe.

Rodriguez overcame his early jitters to score seven of his 13 points in the final 2 minutes, 10 seconds as the eighth-seeded Wildcats surged past the ninth-seeded Golden Eagles 70-64 at the NCAA tournament.

Martin called it no coincidence that Rodriguez — who airballed a couple of shots early and gave it away three times — was the player with the ball in his hands and the season on the line.

“It’s not like I trust him with 10 minutes to go and not trust him with two minutes to go,” Martin said. “I’ve got tremendous faith in him. That’s why you saw him out there making the plays he made towards the end of the game.”

Southern Miss, making its first NCAA appearance in 21 years, pulled within 62-59 on a steal and dunk by Darnell Dodson with 2:34 to play.

Rodriguez, handed the starting job in January after the Wildcats got off to a slow start in Big 12 play, calmly dribbled on the wing after a timeout then slipped past two defenders before hitting a nifty reverse layup.

Kansas State’s defense tightened up, and Rodriguez nailed five free throws in the final 57 seconds to send the Wildcats into Saturday’s matchup against Syracuse, which beat UNC Asheville 72 -65.

“We were fortunate to take the punch and stop the bleeding by making another run,” Rodriguez said

Rodney McGruder led Kansas State (22-10) with 30 points — including 18 in the first half when the Wildcats could muster little else — and center Jordan Henriquez added 15 points, nine rebounds and six blocks for Kansas State, which won its opening NCAA game for the third straight year.

“We’ve elevated our program to one of the better programs in the country,” Martin said. “We have been in this thing consistently. I don’t know how many people can claim they’ve been in it four out of five years.”

Certainly not Southern Miss (25-9), making its third tournament appearance since the program moved to Division I in 1972-73.

The Golden Eagles overcame some early jitters to build a five-point lead midway through the second half but couldn’t win in coach Larry Eustachy’s return to the game’s biggest stage.

“We just didn’t make the plays,” Eustachy said. “We didn’t execute the things we needed to do, particularly in critical situations.”

Neil Watson led the Golden Eagles with 16 points, and LaShay Page had 15. Kentucky transfer Darnell Dodson scored all 14 of his points in the second half, but Southern Miss fell to 0-3 in NCAA play by wilting during a critical stretch midway through the second half.

The Golden Eagles had all the momentum after a Dodson 3-pointer gave them a 45-40 lead.

Kansas State responded with a 18-6 run led by McGruder and Henriquez, who combined for 13 points during the burst, including a 3-pointer by McGruder that hit every inch of the rim before rolling in.

Southern Miss made one last run but couldn’t extend Eustachy’s revival act through the weekend.

The former Iowa State coach led the Cyclones to a pair of Big 12 titles over a decade ago before his stunning downfall. He resigned in 2003 shortly after photos of him partying with students surfaced.

Eustachy went to rehabilitation to treat alcoholism and found a job at Southern Miss in 2004, where he’s slowly built the program into a Conference USA contender by providing a home for cast-offs from other programs and junior college transfers.

The Golden Eagles repaid Eustachy’s patience by leading the program to the tournament for the first time since Brett Favre was still in school, but Southern Miss had trouble all game overcoming the bigger, tougher Wildcats.

No Wildcat was bigger or tougher than Henriquez. The 6-foot-11 center dominated the lane, swatting six shots and altering a handful of others.

He wasn’t too bad on the other end of the floor either. Henriquez — a 52 percent free-throw shooter — made 9-of-10 at the line to give McGruder some help after a first half in which McGruder singlehandedly kept Kansas State in front.

It’s the way Martin expected Henriquez to play all season. There were flashes of brilliance last fall before Henriquez got “a little full of himself” according to his coach. Though never technically in the doghouse, Henriquez slumped during most of the Big 12 season before finding his footing in the last two weeks.

Brimming with confidence, Henriquez provided a presence in the middle that let the guys in front of him play aggressively knowing he would erase mistakes. His long arms made every Southern Miss foray into the lane a difficult task and he wasn’t too bad at the other end of the floor either.

A 52 percent free-throw shooter on the season, Henriquez made 9-of-10 at the line to help send the Wildcats rolling into the third round.

“We have to do what I told the team,” Martin said. “We got to be on a bunch of one-game winning streaks. That’s all we got to do.”

— Associated Press —

Royals sign SS Alcides Escobar to multi-year deal

The Kansas City Royals announced Thursday the club has reached an agreement on a multi-year contract with shortstop Alcides Escobar.  The contract includes four guaranteed years through the 2015 season, then club options for each of the following two seasons: 2016 and 2017.  Consistent with club policy, financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

The 25-year-old Escobar spent his first season with the Royals in 2011 after being acquired in a six-player trade with the Milwaukee Brewers on December 19, 2010.  The defensive standout tied for the Major League lead with 158 games at shortstop while pacing baseball with 459 assists, 745 total chances and 271 putouts.

The 6-foot-1, 193-pounder batted .254 with 21 doubles, eight triples, four home runs, 46 RBI and 69 runs scored.  In addition, he stole a career-best 26 bases, becoming one of four shortstops in Royals history to steal 20 or more bases in a season (Freddie Patek, U.L. Washington and Angel Berroa). After a slow start, Escobar hit .286 from June 7 through the remainder of the season, including batting .324 in the month of September.

— Royals Media Relations —

Chiefs sign free agent RB Peyton Hillis

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Thursday that the team has signed free agent RB Peyton Hillis. Entering his fifth NFL season, Hillis joins the Chiefs after spending two seasons each with the Cleveland Browns (2010-11) and the Denver Broncos (2008-09).

“We are happy that Peyton decided to join us,” said Chiefs Head Coach Romeo Crennel. “Peyton is a big, strong, physical back with a lot of talent and he should fit into our system well. We are looking forward to working with him and adding him into our offense.”

“Peyton was a player we planned to target when free agency began,” said Chiefs General Manager Scott Pioli. “One of our goals going into free agency this year was to build depth at the running back position and we are pleased to add a talented player like Peyton to the mix.”

Hillis (6-2, 250) has played in 52 career games (31 starts), recording 512 carries for 2,161 yards (4.2 avg.) with 20 TDs. He also has 101 career receptions for 805 yards (8.0 avg.) with three TDs.

Hillis led Cleveland in carries and rushing yards in each of the past two seasons after being acquired in a trade from Denver following the 2009 season. In 2011, he carried the ball 161 times for 587 yards (3.6 avg.) with three TDs and caught 22 passes for 130 yards (5.9 avg.) in 10 games.

In 2010, Hillis had his most productive season to date when he rushed 270 times for 1,177 yards (4.4 avg.) with 11 TDs and caught 61 passes for 477 yards (7.8 avg.) with two TDs. He became the only player in Browns history to rush for 1,000-plus yards, record 50-plus receptions and score 10-plus touchdowns in the same season and was named to USA Today’s All-Joe Team.

The Conway, Ark., native originally entered the NFL as a seventh-round draft pick (227th overall) with Denver in 2008. He totaled 2,624 all-purpose yards and 23 touchdowns in 49 collegiate games at the University of Arkansas.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

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