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Chiefs awarded Kyle Orton via waiver claim; Colbert released

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the club has been awarded QB Kyle Orton via waiver claim from Denver. The Chiefs also announced that they waived WR Keary Colbert.

Orton (6-4, 225) has played in 67 games (66 starts) with Chicago (2005-08) and Denver (2009-11), completing 1,225 of 2,107 passes for 13,753 yards with 79 TDs and 55 INTs. Orton also has 104 career rushes for 278 yards with three TDs.

Orton started the first five games of the 2011 season, completing 91 of 155 passes for 979 yards with eight TDs and seven INTs. He started 13 games for Denver in 2010.

He originally entered the NFL as a fourth-round draft pick (106th overall) of the Chicago Bears in 2005.

The Altoona, Iowa native was a three-year starter at Purdue University, where he finished third in school history in passing yards (9,337), touchdown passes (63) and completion percentage (58.8 – 786 of 1,336).

Colbert (6-1, 205) has played in 75 games (49 starts) with Carolina (2004-07), Denver (2008), Seattle (2008), Detroit (2008) and Kansas City (2011). He has caught 130 passes for 1,629 yards (12.5 avg.) with eight TDs. The Oxnard, Calif. native originally entered the NFL as a second-round selection (62nd overall) of Carolina in the 2004 NFL Draft.

— Chiefs Public Relations —

Western women use big second half to defeat Rockhurst

The Missouri Western women’s basketball squad outscored the Rockhurst Hawks 30-18 in the second half lifting the Griffons to a 57-50 victory in Kansas City, Mo. Western made 23-of-27 free throws evening their record to 2-2 on the season.

The Griffons led just twice in the first half at 7-6 and 9-8 after Jessica Koch nailed a three pointer with 17:40 to play in the frame and a jumper with 16:23 to play. The Hawks went on a 14-5 run during the next eight minutes claiming an eight point lead after a Gabbie Binion three with 8:45 to play.

The Griffons cut the lead to three twice but another 8-2 run by the Hawks pushed its lead to 32-23 with 42 seconds play in the half after a jumper by Megan Cook. Four free throws down the stretch by Koch helped Western close the Rockhurst lead to 32-27 at the half.

The Hawks opened up the second half pushing their lead to 36-27 but a 15-4 run by Western and a layup by Charlonda Bozeman with 10:53 to play gave Western a 42-40 lead which was their first lead since the 16:23 mark of the first half.

Western was able to tighten up their defense down the stretch allowing the Hawks just 10 points in the final 10:53 of the game dropping Rockhurst to 0-4 on the season.

The Griffons did not shoot the greatest from the field making just 16-of-43 shots and 2-of-16 from long range.  Western forced 27 turnovers scoring 21 points off those turnovers. They also had 20 points in the paint to the Hawks 14.

Koch made a career best 13 free throws in the game finishing with a game high 28 points. She also had two assists and four steals in the game. Brittany Griswold scored 12 points on 4-of-9 shooting with four rebounds while Bozeman dumped in seven points off the bench.

The Hawks shot 35.7-percent (20-56) from the field and made 6-of-8 free throw attempts. Chrissy Sarcone and Allison Streich both had 10 points for the Hawks. Kara McFarland led the charge on the boards with seven.

Western will return to action on Wednesday, November 30 when they travel to Pittsburg, Kan. for the MIAA opener. The Griffons take on the Pittsburg State Gorillas at 5:30 pm from John Lance Arena.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Mizzou routs Cal to win CBE Championship

Kim English can’t remember a time during his four seasons that Missouri has played with so much teamwork, so much energy on offense and defense. His mind wandered all the way back to a Big 12 title his freshman season for something that came close.

The way the Tigers have played this week, there’s reason to believe they’ll win more championships before this season is over.

English had 19 points to lead six Tigers in double figures, and No. 21 Missouri dominated California (No. 18 ESPN/USA Today, No. 20 AP) 92-53 to win the CBE Classic on Tuesday night.

“This is the best I’ve felt in my four years, because it’s the most selfless team I’ve played on,” English said. “We’re all 10 guys, plus three transfers — we’re buying into the process every day.”

The process sure seems to be working.

Missouri built a 45-26 lead by halftime and the outcome was never in doubt over the final 20 minutes, with coach Frank Haith pulling his starters with a few minutes left in the game.

Marcus Denmon added 18 points and was the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. Matt Pressey had 13 points and Michael Dixon finished with 11 for the Tigers (5-0), who won the event just a couple hours’ drive from their campus in Columbia for the second time in four appearances.

“The kids are buying in and that’s great to see. We understand we have to stay hungry. It’s a marathon — this is coach-speak now — it’s not a sprint,” Haith said. “As long as our guys understand the focus, there are things we have to work on, we’ve got a chance. No doubt about it.”

Jorge Gutierrez scored 11 points to lead Cal (4-1), but fouled out with 11:12 remaining. Richard Solomon also fouled out with more than 7 minutes left and finished with nine points.

“They’re aggressive,” Gutierrez said. “They play with a lot of intensity, and we felt it.”

The Tigers used relentless man-to-man, half-court pressure to force the guard-oriented Golden Bears into a plethora of early turnovers, and the result was a lot of easy points.

After a free throw by Allen Crabbe got Cal within 19-14 with just under 10 minutes left in the first half, the Tigers went on a 12-2 spurt in which five players scored. Phil Pressey’s bucket with 7:29 left prompted Cal coach Mike Montgomery to call timeout, but Dixon added a 3-pointer moments later off a feed from Denmon to keep the run going.

Denmon’s two free throws made it 31-16 with 5:55 remaining in the half.

The Golden Bears committed three straight turnovers at one point during the stretch, and wound up with 14 of them in the first half, which Missouri turned into 15 points.

The Tigers, who took a 45-26 lead on two foul shots by Phil Pressey with under a minute left in the half, wound up shooting 3 of 12 from beyond the arc and got outrebounded 22-11 over the first 20 minutes, yet still managed to build what turned out to be an insurmountable lead.

“It starts with us playing as a team,” Denmon said, “everybody passing up the good shot for a better shot, and that’s what we did as a unit. It allowed us to have California playing on their heels, and that’s something I felt if we did as a team, we would be hard to guard.”

The Golden Bears had grown accustomed to being on the other side of the scoreboard.

They routed Georgia 70-46 in the semifinals Monday night, their fourth consecutive victory by at least 17 points. The win gave them their best start since Montgomery took over four years ago, and was made even more impressive when the Bulldogs knocked off Notre Dame in the third-place game.

Of course, the Tigers also had their way with the Fighting Irish.

Missouri showed over two games in Kansas City that it has made a flawless transition from the fast-paced, “40 minutes of hell” style of former coach Mike Anderson to a style employed by Haith that values scrappy defense, transition baskets and lights-out shooting.

All of which was on display Tuesday night.

“We’re working. We’re a work in progress,” Denmon said. “We continue to do the things we need to do to get better as a team. … Everything else will take care of itself.”

Things were going so well for the Tigers that when Moore was left open at the top of the key late in the first half, he popped the 3 and hit nothing but net. It was the 6-foot-9 senior center’s third career 3-pointer, and it brought a heavily pro-Missouri crowd to its feet in a roar.

The din never died down in the second half.

The Golden Bears never managed to get into a rhythm, settling for a series of off-balance jumpers, awkward shots at the rim and contested 3-pointers — when they got a shot off at all.

Just as often, it seemed, California was coughing up the ball. The 14 turnovers it had in the first half were two shy of its season high, set against Austin Peay last week, and one fewer than it had in the semifinals against Georgia the previous night.

“We really didn’t have much going,” Montgomery said. “It’s as simple as that.”

— Associated Press —

Ravens win at home against Missouri Baptist

The Benedictine College Ravens went 9 of 10 from the free throw line in overtime on Tuesday night to earn a 78-68 win over Missouri Baptist University inside the Ralph Nolan Gymnasium on the campus of Benedictine College.

Benedictine (4-3) moved to 1-1 on their home floor to start off a stretch in which they play six of their next eight at home to close out 2011. MBU (4-3) hit 41.9 percent from the floor in the second half to erase a two-point halftime deficit and force overtime.

The Ravens outscored the Spartans 42-32 in the paint and forced MBU into 17 turnovers off which they scored 13 points.

Benedictine finished with five players in double figures, led by the 16 points of guard Quaran Johnson. Forward Charlie Wallrapp added a double-double, scoring 14 points and pulling in 10 rebounds.

Missouri Baptist was led by the game-high 18 points of guard Kalvin Lewis.

Benedictine remains at home for the second of three straight home games, hosting a 7 p.m. game against the University of St. Mary (Kan.) on Monday, Nov. 28.

— BC Sports Information —

Kansas tops UCLA to reach Maui Inviational title game

Kansas looked unbeatable early and flustered in the middle before securing a hard-earned victory in the semifinals of the Maui Invitational.

All that work just to face an even more formidable challenge: No. 6 Duke, the undisputed king of Maui, in the championship game.

Holding on after nearly blowing all of a 20-point lead, Kansas set up what could be one of the most exciting championship games in the Maui Invitational’s 28-year history with a 72-56 win over UCLA on Tuesday night.

Two of college basketball’s blue bloods in paradise, playing with a title on the line in a tiny gym in an atmosphere unlike any other.

Yeah, this could be good.

“I will bet the atmosphere for tomorrow night’s game will be as good an atmosphere as this building’s seen for this tournament,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “And this may be as good a neutral-court atmosphere as there is in college basketball, better than the NCAA tournament because you can feel the crowd.”

The Jayhawks almost blew their shot.

Kansas (3-1) appeared as though it was going to run away from the Bruins at the start, going up 12 points in the first 6 minutes and building from there.

The Jayhawks fizzled with a flurry of turnovers and defensive breakdowns to let UCLA back in it, then pulled away over the final 5 minutes for a harder-than-expected victory.

Elijah Johnson scored 23 points, Thomas Robinson had 15 points and 10 rebounds, and Tyshawn Taylor added 13 points and six assists for Kansas.

Next up for the Jayhawks is Duke, the undefeated four-time champions in Maui.

“This is one of the games when you come to Kansas, you sign up for,” Taylor said. “This is one of those games we’ll probably always remember.”

The Bruins tried to ruin it.

UCLA (1-3) got off to a brutal start and rallied to trim a 20-point lead down to five. The Bruins lingered for a little while before running out of steam, headed toward the third-place game instead of the championship.

Tyler Lamb had 15 points and Jerime Anderson added 14 for UCLA.

“We were right there,” Anderson said. “That second-half comeback is much easier if we’re even or closer in the first half. Some things don’t go our way, we come back and if a team makes another run, that’s the hardest thing to do is come back from two runs.”

The young Jayhawks were humbled a bit in a loss to No. 2 Kentucky at Madison Square Garden a week ago, but responded with a poised-down-the-stretch win over scrappy Georgetown to open the Maui Invitational.

Kansas got off to a shaky start against the Hoyas, made a run to get the lead, then let Georgetown claw its way back. The Jayhawks grinded out the 67-63 win behind key plays down the stretch from Travis Releford, who hit two free throws with 15 seconds left and scrambled to dig out a loose ball after the Hoyas missed a shot.

Robinson was the catalyst with 20 points, 12 rebounds and what Georgetown coach John Thompson III said felt like 24 dunks — just the kind of aggression Self has been looking for from his dynamic big man.

Robinson wasn’t much of a factor against UCLA early, so Kansas spread it around.

Swinging the ball around in halfcourt sets and getting out on the break, the Jayhawks opened the game with a 14-2 run and kept pushing. Kansas hit 12 of 24 shots in the half — 5 of 9 from 3-point range — had 10 assists and got 13 points from Johnson to lead 43-26.

The Jayhawks still looked as though they were going to run away with it to start the second half, then went into a funk.

Unable to stop the Bruins or hold onto the ball, Kansas went nearly 6½ minutes without a field goal as UCLA trimmed a 20-point lead down to five with 8 minutes left.

The Jayhawks finally put a stop to UCLA’s momentum with a couple of baskets by Robinson, then pulled away as the Bruins cooled off.

“We knew they weren’t going to just go away and lay down,” Taylor said. “We got out to a big lead early, but we knew we had to continue to play. We just had to keep battling out there.”

UCLA opened a season of expectations in disappointing fashion, losing by double digits to Loyola Marymount and Middle Tennessee State. The Bruins avoided a potential meltdown in the Maui opener, turning a two-point halftime lead over Division II Chaminade into a blowout.

UCLA blew the game open with a 29-3 run and turned away any thought of a comeback by blocking 12 of the Silverswords’ shots in the 92-60 victory.

But Kansas isn’t anything like Chaminade, as the Bruins learned in a hurry.

Unable to find any room against the Jayhawks’ scrambling defense, UCLA missed its first six shots, had five turnovers and just two free throws until Reeves Nelson scored on a 3-pointer at the 13:36 mark.

The best the Bruins could do after that was get within six points and Kansas didn’t let that last, storming the Bruins a second time to push the lead to 19 before the half was over.

Then something clicked for UCLA.

Forcing turnovers and stroking 3-pointers, the Bruins went on a 12-0 run midway through the second half and kept dropping shots to pull within 57-52.

That turned out to be it for UCLA, which will face No. 15 Michigan in the third-place game.

“I was really happy the way the guys fought back in the second half,” UCLA coach Ben Howland said. “We had it down to five … and I think we ran out of gas.”

— Associated Press —

23 Benedictine football players honored by HAAC

The 2011 All-Conference football team was selected by the coaches of the Heart of America Athletic Conference (HAAC) on Monday and 23 Ravens earned 26 honors on the list.

Defensive End Jordan Ancar (Sr., Port Sulphur, La.) was named a unanimous first-team defensive lineman and also added his name to a list of Ravens to earn Player of the Year honors as he was named HAAC Defensive Player of the Year.

Ancar led the Ravens in tackles with 64 and was No. 2 in the HAAC in tackles for a loss with 17.5. He was also No. 12 in the NAIA in tackles for a loss and his three forced fumbles placed him No. 6 in the NAIA. He also led the team in sacks with 4.5.

In all, Benedictine earned 10 first-team selections, four second-team selections, six third-team selections and six honorable mention selections.

Wide receiver Jordan Jackson (Jr., Altamonte Springs, Fla.), offensive lineman Ron Fontenot (Sr., Kenner, La.) and running back Cameron Fore (Soph., Rolla, Mo.) joined Ancar as unanimous first-team selections.

Wide receiver Geoff Akpom (Jr., San Diego), offensive lineman Walton “Bubba” Pearl (Sr., Parkville, Mo.), inside linebacker Moses Cato (Sr., San Bruno, Calif.), corner Luke O’Brien (Sr., Saline, Mich.), safety Ashton Stephens (Sr,. Topeka) and kick returner Xavier Cooper (Fr., Tucson, Ariz.) were also named to the first team.

Offensive lineman Eric Bossler (Sr., O’Fallon, Ill.), running back Kevon McGrew (Jr., St. Louis), nose tackle Tyler Lueckenhoff (Sr., Jefferson City, Mo.) and linebacker Ray Gragg (Jr., Topeka) were named to the second team.

Tight End Alex Boyd (Jr., Overland Park), offensive lineman Frank Robles (Jr., Westminster, Calif.) defensive end Kevin Pacholski (Sr., Chicago, Ill.), outside linebacker RJ Nill (Sr., Kansas City, Kan.) were named to the third team. Ancar was also named a third-team athlete for contributions made in other aspects of the game not related to his role as defensive end.

Punter Dylan McGuire (Jr., Colorado Springs, Colo.), outside linebacker Nick Rudolph (Sr., Overland Park), inside linebacker Nick Anderson (Sr., Winslow, Ariz.), corner Lawrence Haynes (Sr., Seaside, Calif.) and safety Dylan Meisenheimer (Jr., Oak Grove, Mo.) were named honorable mention. Fore was also named honorable mention athlete for contributions made in other aspects of the game not related to his role as running back.

The Ravens finished third in the HAAC with an overall record of 9-3 and qualified for the NAIA Football Championship Series for the 12th time under head coach Larry Wilcox.

— BC Sports Information —

K-State dominates after half to defeat Maryland-Eastern Shore

Thomas Gipson scored 13 points and grabbed nine rebounds while Jamar Samuels added 12 points on 7-of-9 free-throw shooting to help Kansas State defeat Maryland-Eastern Shore 92-50 on Tuesday night.

The Wildcats (3-0) led just 36-29 at halftime after shooting 38 percent from the field, but they put the game out of reach in the first eight minutes of the second half with a 28-6 run.

The Hawks (1-4) kept it close early, with Percy Woods and Louis Bell combing to make 4 of 6 tries from 3-point range by midway through the first half. Maryland-Eastern Shore trailed just 25-23 with a little more than five minutes left before the break.

Woods finished with 13 points while Bell added 10.

The Wildcats shot 18 for 23 from the free-throw line.

Rodney McGruder and Martavious Irving scored 11 points each for the Wildcats while Jordan Henriquez grabbed 10 rebounds.

— Associated Press —

Benedictine women fall at College of Saint Mary

The Benedictine College women’s basketball team took to the road on Tuesday night falling to the College of St. Mary 77-70 after CSM converted 22 of 31 from the free throw line in the second half.

Benedictine (5-3) led 38-35 at the half but couldn’t hold off St. Mary (7-1) as they scored 22 of their 42 second-half points from the charity stripe.

The Ravens converted 56.5 percent from the floor in the first half but were held to just 27 percent in the second half.

Benedictine was led by the double-double of center Teresa Zienkewicz (Sr., Wichita) who scored 20 and pulled in 10 rebounds.

St. Mary had two players scored a game-high 21 points in Kelsey Heese and Tiffany Anzalone.

Benedictine remains on the road Monday, traveling to Warrensburg, Mo., for an exhibition against the University of Central Missouri at 6 p.m.

— BC Sports Information —

Chiefs get blown out at New England

Rob Gronkowski somersaulted into the end zone, staggered to his feet and still managed to spike the ball.

“I was just fine,” the Patriots star tight end said. “I just got the wind knocked out of me a little bit.”

New England was more than fine after looking groggy on offense early in the game before finishing big with a 34-3 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Monday night.

Tom Brady threw two touchdown passes to Gronkowski, who has five in his past three games. Julian Edelman returned a punt 72 yards for another score and Kyle Arrington had two of the Patriots three interceptions.

“We try to be a very opportunistic defense,” Arrington said, “and when plays like that present themselves, you’ve got to capitalize on them. And if I can get into the end zone one of these times, that would be good, too.”

The Patriots (7-3) didn’t need him to do that on Monday when they increased their AFC East lead to two games.

The Chiefs (4-6) weren’t expected to do much on offense behind untested quarterback Tyler Palko, who threw three interceptions in his first career start with Matt Cassel injured. And they didn’t, managing just a 26-yard field goal by Ryan Succop with 1:30 left in the first quarter for their only lead.

“Three interceptions is inexcusable,” Palko said. “The game is hard enough as it is without making mistakes.”

With Gronkowski collecting his ninth and 10th TD receptions of the season, the Patriots had their second straight dominant game after beating the New York Jets 37-16. The Chiefs lost their third straight.

The Patriots didn’t generate much of an attack during their first four series. There were three punts and a fumble by Brady that was recovered by Kansas City’s Allen Bailey on the first play of the second quarter. And on his next series, Brady was sacked twice.

“Obviously, the first half we didn’t do anything,” Brady said. “I don’t think it could have gotten much worse.”

But the protection improved and Brady, who had thrown for just 19 yards in the first quarter, took advantage, leading three consecutive scoring drives.

He connected with Gronkowski for a 52-yard score when the tight end caught the ball over the middle and scampered the last 35 yards, barely managing to remain inbounds on the right side as he neared the end zone.

“When I get the ball, you just don’t want to go down,” he said. “You’ve got to try and do something with the ball. That’s why you get it.”

Arrington, who leads the NFL with seven interceptions, got his first of the game on Kansas City’s next series and Stephen Gostkowski made it 10-3 at halftime with a 21-yard field goal.

“We were still fighting and we knew it was a close game going into halftime,” Chiefs safety Kendrick Lewis said. “They got a big play and a big score (Gronkowski’s second touchdown) in the second half and that started their rally.”

The Patriots got the ball to start the third quarter and went 85 yards on nine plays, scoring on Brady’s 19-yard pass to Gronkowski, who went head over heels, landing on his neck in the right corner of the end zone after being hit by Derrick Johnson.

“He’s a great football player,” Patriots guard Brian Waters said. “It doesn’t surprise me for him to be able to bounce up.”

Gronkowski has 20 touchdowns in 26 games, surpassing Mike Ditka’s mark of 31 for the fewest games needed by a tight end to reach 20 touchdowns. He also pulled within three of the single-season, tight end record of 13 touchdown receptions held by Antonio Gates of San Diego and Vernon Davis of San Francisco.

“Everyone’s doing their job and I just happen to be an open guy and Tom hits me in the end zone,” Gronkowski said.

Just 1:03 after his second touchdown, Edelman got his second punt return touchdown of his career as the Patriots jumped to a 24-3 lead with 9:24 left in the third quarter.

Edelman, a wide receiver, also played defensive back, a position hit hard by injuries.

“I do whatever I can to help the team,” he said.

Arrington picked off another pass on the Chiefs’ next possession, leading to a 19-yard field goal by Gostkowski.

And just when it looked as if Palko, who had thrown just 13 passes before Monday night, might direct his team to a touchdown, he threw an interception to Phillip Adams in the end zone with 10:50 left in the game.

“We did too many things that get you beat in this league too many times,” Chiefs linebacker Tamba Hali said.

The Patriots finished the scoring on rookie Shane Vereen’s first NFL touchdown on a 4-yard run with 1:01 left.

In the previous meeting between the teams, Brady went down with a season-ending knee injury in the 2008 opener and was replaced by Cassel. But he injured his right throwing hand in the Chiefs’ last game, a 17-10 loss, and had season-ending surgery on Nov. 14.

Palko completed 25 of 38 passes for 236 yards and three interceptions. Brady was 15 of 27 for 234 yards and no interceptions.

“All in all, I felt pretty confident,” Palko said. “Obviously, there’s a few things I’d like to have back.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s Johnson earns MIAA weekly honor

Missouri Western senior guard/forward TJ Johnson earned MIAA Men’s Basketball Player of the Week for the first time in his career for the week of Nov. 14-20 as selected by a conference SID panel and released Monday afternoon.

MIAA MEN’S BASKETBALL PLAYER OF THE WEEK

TJ Johnson, G, Missouri Western

Johnson had an outstanding week leading the Griffons to three victories. The Griffons are 4-0, which is their best start since the 2007-2008 season. The senior from Pflugerville, Texas, tied his career high twice with 22 points in both the Manhattan Christian contest and the Rockhurst game. With the Griffons trailing 59-56 late in the contest against William Jewell, Johnson took over, scoring the Griffons’ final nine points to help them to the one-point victory. He shot extremely well from the field on the week, making 57.1-percent (20-35) of his shots, including an 8-of-11 performance against Manhattan Christian. He also made 4-of-9 three-point shots and 18-of-25 free throws, including 9-of-11 against Rockhust. He snared 19 rebounds, which included seven twice, and dished out nine assists with four against Rockhurst.

The Griffons will head to San Antonio, Texas for the River City Shootout hosted by Saint Mary’s University. Western takes on Southeastern Oklahoma State Friday, Nov. 25 at 5:30 p.m. and face host, St. Mary’s on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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