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Ticket information for Western/Northwest playoff game

Tickets for the first ever home playoff game in Spratt Stadium pitting Super Region Four’s fourth seed Missouri Western against fifth seeded Northwest Missouri State will go on sale at 9 AM Monday morning in Looney Complex Room 229 on the MWSU campus.

Ticket prices are as follows:

Adult General Admission: $10.00
Youth General Admission (ages 4 thru college student): $5.00
Senior Citizen General Admission (65 and over): $5.00
Gold Coat Bleacher Reserved: $12.00
Gold Coat Chairback Reserved: $15.00
Gold Coat Stadium Club Reserved: $25.00
Children 3 and under will be admitted FREE

Only general admission seating will be available to the general public Monday morning.  MWSU Gold Coat Club Member will have 48 hours to purchase their seats from the 2011 regular season.  Any unsold reserved seats will become available Wednesday morning at 8 AM.

There are two ways to purchase tickets in presale from MWSU.  Fans may come to the ticket office in person Monday thru Friday between the hours of 8 AM – 4:30 PM or they may charge by phone by calling either 816-271-448 or 816-271-5904. Griffon Athletics accepts cash, check (made out to MWSU Athletics) or credit card (Visa, Mastercard or Discover).  No on-line sales are available.

We expect a high volume of calls especially early in the week so please be patient with us and we invite folks to come to our office in person.

Tickets will also be available on game day beginning at 10 AM in all Spratt Stadium ticket booths.  Stadium gates will open at 10:30 AM with kickoff set for 12 PM.

Gold Coat & Stadium Club parking passes will be honored for this game with reserved lots opening at 9:30 AM.

Per NCAA policy, no complimentary tickets are allowed at NCAA Championship events.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats travel to Missouri Western to open playoffs

The Northwest Missouri State Bearcats will make their eighth consecutive NCAA Division II playoff appearance as they travel to Missouri Western Saturday, Nov. 19 for a noon kickoff in a rematch of conference rivals.

The Bearcats (9-2) are the No. 5 seed in Super Region Four and play the Griffons who are the No. 4 seed and host their first ever playoff game on Saturday. The matchup will not only be a rematch from week 10, but it will also be a rematch of last year’s first round playoff game in Maryville when the Bearcats came from behind to knock off the Griffons 28-24.

The winner of Saturday’s Northwest-Missouri Western contest will travel to No. 1 seed Midwestern State who is 10-0 on the year.

Ticket information, pricing and other game information will be available later tonight.

MIAA Champion Pittsburg State (9-1) earned the No. 2 seed and a first round bye after knocking off Missouri Southern on Saturday. The other game next Saturday will feature No. 3 seed Washburn against No. 6 seed Abilene Christian. The winner will move on to the second round to face Pittsburg State in Pittsburg, Kan.

— NWMSU Sports Information —-

Chiefs’ offense struggles in home loss to Denver

The Kansas City Chiefs knew what was coming, even after the Denver Broncos’ top two running backs went down with injuries. Their AFC West rivals were going to keep running behind Tim Tebow until the Chiefs proved they could stop them.

Just when it looked like they finally did, Tebow went to the air.

The former Heisman Trophy winner connected with Eric Decker on a 56-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter, helping the Broncos to a humbling — even humiliating — 17-10 defeat of Kansas City.

“It’s just a mindset. It’s a low-risk offense. It’s not an indictment on Tim Tebow or whoever our quarterback is,” Broncos coach John Fox said. “It’s just whatever is working for us. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. We tried to possess the ball and keep our defense fresh.”

Willis McGahee went down with a hamstring injury on the Broncos’ first offensive series, and Knowshon Moreno left later in the first quarter with a sprained knee. That left journeyman Lance Ball to tote the ball 30 times for 96 yards, churning up the Chiefs’ banged-up defense.

Tebow finished 2 of 8 for 69 yards, but added 44 yards and a score on the ground, as the Broncos (4-5) moved into a tie with Kansas City and San Diego behind AFC West-leading Oakland (5-4).

“I’m not trying to send a message,” said Tebow, who is 3-1 since taking over as the starter. “I’m just trying to be a football player. We can improve from what we did today and get better.”

Fox scrapped a large chunk of his playbook when he made Tebow the starter, trying to cater to his deft ability to run the read-option. And despite losing his best two running backs, Fox stuck with the ground game, content to wear down the Kansas City defense.

The Broncos made that clear when they ran eight straight times on their opening possession.

Moreno had the highlight carry when he hurdled the Chiefs’ Brandon Flowers on a 24-yard scamper, and Tebow finished off the drive when he scored up the middle from 7 yards out.

The way the Chiefs played, that nearly was enough.

“We knew that was going to be a great challenge coming into this game,” Kansas City coach Todd Haley said. “We had a Plan A, B and C for how we were going to stop the run, because it’s a numbers issue, and no plans ended up working like we needed it to.”

Nothing worked on offense, either.

Matt Cassel was 13 of 28 for 93 yards and a touchdown, and the Chiefs only managed 258 yards of total offense, a performance every bit as ugly as last week’s 31-3 loss to Miami.

“It was a tough game,” said Cassel, who didn’t go out for the Chiefs’ final series because the medical staff decided he was too banged up to continue. “We didn’t do enough offensively, we didn’t execute throughout the day, and we just need to execute better.”

Cassel said he hopes to play next Monday night against New England though the Kansas City Star reported that Cassel left the stadium with a cast on his right hand.

Rookie wide receiver Jon Baldwin tried to give Kansas City a spark when he hauled in an acrobatic 58-yard pass in the second quarter, reaching around safety Brian Dawkins to make the grab. Baldwin held onto the ball, still behind Dawkins’ back, as both players fell to the ground, but the play was called back because wide receiver Steve Breaston had lined up illegally.

Matt Prater’s 38-yard field goal gave Denver a 10-0 lead at halftime.

Tebow wound up missing all four of his pass attempts in the half, making Denver the first team to lead at the break without a completion since the Green Bay Packers led the Chicago Bears 14-0 on Oct. 31, 1994, according to STATS LLC. Brett Favre was 0 for 6 at halftime of that game.

Kansas City finally scored when Cassel hit Le’Ron McClain on a play-action pass from just outside the goal line midway through the third quarter. It was the first points scored by the Chiefs’ offense since 12:01 left in the fourth quarter against San Diego two weeks ago.

The Broncos snuffed out the comeback bid with 6:44 left in the game, when Tebow hit Decker with the long touchdown pass. Ryan Succop kicked a field goal with 7 seconds left for Kansas City, but the Broncos recovered the onside kick, sending the Chiefs to their second straight loss.

“We have to do a better job of playing on Sundays, because it doesn’t matter how practices go, how things look, you have to do it on Sunday,” Haley said. “The good thing is I know we can. We’ve done it against quality opponents, and we have some quality opponents coming up.”

— Associated Press —

Griffons rolls past Fort Hays State to clinch playoff birth

The Missouri Western football team ended the regular season with a 55-17 win over Fort Hays State. The win gave the Griffons seven consecutive victories for the first time since 1981, and the second time in program history. Western finished the regular season 9-2, winning nine regular season games for just the second time in program history; last in 2006.

Western rushed for 434 yards, with Travis Partridge and Michael Hill each going over the century mark on the ground. It was the first time two Griffons rushed for 100 yards in a game since Sept. 2, 2010, when Thomas Hodges and Hill did it at Mesa State.

The Griffons win streak and second consecutive NCAA Division II playoff berth seemed to be in jeopardy early. Fort Hays jumped out to an early 7-0 lead after Andre Smith ran in for a 3-yard touchdown on the second play from scrimmage.

Western responded with a methodical 6-play, 50-yard drive that was capped off by a Travis Partridge 4- yard scamper into the end zone. Fort Hays answered when Andre Smith added his second rushing TD to put the Tigers up 14-7 with 8:24 remaining in the first quarter.

From that point on it was all Griffons, with Hays only adding a 27-yard Tyler Kimbrough field goal with 2:56 remaining in the first half. Kimbrough’s kick made it 21-17, after Hill had scored two of his three touchdowns on the day.

Hill’s first score was a 20-yard run that ended a 7-play, 70-yard drive that took 2:39 off the clock. Hill added his second, a 1-yard push that put Western up for good, 21-14. Western took 2:37 off the clock with its last possession of the first half; resulting in a 2-yard Hill touchdown run. The Griffons took a 28-17 lead into halftime. It was the second time this season that Western scored 28 in the first half, scoring 43 against Lincoln on Oct. 8.

The Tigers forced Western to punt on its first drive of the second half. Dan Ritter forced a Paul Kedron fumble on the return that was recovered by Jake Buckwalter at the Hays 20. Four plays later, Partridge hit Tarrell Downing for an 8-yard touchdown to make it 35-17, Western.

On the third play of Hays’ next drive, Ben Jackson intercepted a Blake McAhren pass and took it 35 yards for a touchdown to put Western up 42-17. Greg Zuerlein padded his MIAA record for consecutive field goals made, with a 27-yarder in the third quarter that brought his streak to 17-straight. Zuerlein added another in the fourth quarter from 35 yards out.

Dominic Thomas made it 52-17 with his 12-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter; Western’s fifth rushing score on the day. Hill finished with 182 yards on 25 carries and three rushing touchdowns. Partridge had 12 carries for 105 yards and a score. Partridge was 8-14 through the air for 45 yards, one interception and a touchdown.

Hill also led the Griffons with three receptions for 13 yards. Downing added two catches for 16 yards and the touchdown. Jackson led the defense with six total tackles. David Bass picked up 1.5 sacks, falling a half sack short of tying the school record for sacks in a season.

Western will await its postseason destiny Sunday afternoon at an NCAA Division II Playoff selection show party held at the Fulkerson Center on the Missouri Western campus. Fans are invited to join the team at 3:30 p.m. The selection show will begin at 4 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest crushes Emporia State in regular season finale

A group of underclassmen helped lead 11th-ranked Northwest Missouri State to a 62-21 win over Emporia State on Senior Day Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Stadium.

The effort provided by the senior class helped set up the Bearcats (9-2, 7-2) all season long. Northwest tallied five sacks including a key sack from senior Josh Lorenson while outstanding offensive line play led by senior Cody Johnson paved the way for the Bearcats to rush for 349 yards.

“Cody has done an outstanding job leading that group and today may have been one of their best efforts up front,” said head coach Adam Dorrel who finishes his first regular season at the helm of the Bearcats at 9-2. “Jordan (Simmons) and James (Franklin) are so talented and great weapons to have. They really help complete our offensive unit.”

The duo nearly reached 100 yards apiece as James Franklin finished with a career high 229 yards and two touchdowns. His counterpart Jordan Simmons was also impressive, rushing nine times for 96 yards and four scores. Twice on the ground and one receiving and a special teams score.

Simmons put the Bearcats on the scoreboard first with a 3-yard run to cap a six play 41-yard drive.

Emporia State (5-6, 3-6) marched back down the field to even the score with their own 3-yard touchdown run. The Hornets would not muster much more offensively as the Bearcat defense limited the ESU rushing attack 100 yards under their average as Northwest scored three more times to build a 28-14 halftime lead.

Simmons added a second rushing touchdown and another receiving on an out pattern that left the junior wide open near the sideline as he easily crossed the goal line.

The Bearcats final touchdown of the half would come on Bryce Enyard’s sixth interception of the year. Enyard jumped in-front of a throw-back pass to Hornet’s quarterback Tyler Eckenrode and scamper 59-yards to the end zone.

Northwest would quickly add to their lead scoring 42 unanswered points to open the second half.

After a 24-yard Todd Adolf field goal, Franklin got his first taste of the Bearcat scoring barrage as he broke free for a 30-yard touchdown run. Franklin would score just over two minutes later when the Bearcat defense forced a quick three-and-out, but the Hornet punt pinned Northwest in the shadow of their own goal line.

Franklin took the first play from the Bearcats own 1-yard, to the ESU 26-yard line. He would find pay dirt just three plays later from 5-yards out to give Northwest a 45-14 lead.

Senior Chad Kilgore would put a stop to the ESU offense forcing another Hornet punt. Kilgore finished with nine tackles as on the ensuing punt Northwest would vault over 50 points for the eighth time this season as Simmons found an opening and jaunted 46-yards down the sideline for his third special teams score of the year.

The Bearcats would add 10 more points on a second Adolf field goal and a 23-yard run from Kohlman Adema-Schulte.

Northwest is almost assured their eighth consecutive playoff berth, but will wait to see where they are placed when the NCAA Division II playoffs selections are announced Sunday at 4 p.m. on ncaa.com.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Tom Smith wins no. 600 Saturday against Fontbonne

Missouri Western gave Head Coach Tom Smith his 600th career victory with a 69-55 win over the Fontbonne University Griffins. Lavonte Douglas led the way for the Griffons collecting a double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds lifting the Griffons to a 1-0 start.

The first half was an offensive struggle for the Griffons starting the game just 1-11. Dylan Frantz scored the first Griffon basket on a three point bucket just 49 seconds into the half. Western did not get their next field goal until the 12:21 mark of the half when Frantz nailed a jumper cutting the Fontbonne lead to 8-7.

The rest of the half belonged to Fontbonne as they built an eight point lead at 34-26 off a Bryton Curtis jumper with eight seconds to play. Frantz ended the half like he started nailing a three as time expired closing the Fontbonne lead to 34-29.

The Griffons battled in the second half outscoring Fontbonne 40-21 in the final frame. Douglas came out playing hard dumping in 11 points and snaring seven rebounds while making 5-of-7 shots. Western had 28 bench points in the half and made 15-of-30 field goal attempts on their way to the opening night victory.

Western had two other players in double figures with James Harris dumping in 17 points and Frantz scoring 15. Frantz connected on 5-of-6 field goal attempts in the game. TJ Johnson finished with eight points and eight rebounds and dished out five assists.

Fontbonne was led by Yada Demisse with 15 points while Saliou Dioum and Eric Hamilton pitched in 11 and 10 respectively.

The Griffons will play next on Monday, November 14 when they host Manhattan Christian University. Tip time is set for 7:00 pm from the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Benedictine gets record setting win over Culver-Stockson

The NAIA No,. 16-ranked Benedictine (Kan.) College Ravens closed out the 2011 regular season on Saturday with a record breaking performance against Culver-Stockton College.

Benedictine (9-2, 7-2 HAAC) broke their record for points in a single game, had a running back tie a single-game record for touchdowns and broke the their single-season inteception record in a 69-10 win over Culver-Stockton College (1-9; 1-8 HAAC) in front of a Senior Day crowd at Larry Wilcox Stadium.

The Ravens previous single-game scoring record game in a 64-0 win over Iowa Wesleyan during the 1985 season.

Running back Cameron Fore rushed for five touchdowns, which ties him with for the single-game record with Benedictine Hall of Famer Don Brown, who scored his record agaisnt Central Methodist during the 1993 season.

The final record of single-season interceptions previous stood at 25 and with four on Saturday, the Ravens pushed their 2011 total to 26.

— BC Sports Information —

Western volleyball loses season finale at SBU

The Missouri Western volleyball team closed out their season with a 3-2 (25-27, 25-23, 25-23, 15-25, 15-12) hard fought loss against the Southwest Baptist Bearcats. The Griffons had 68 kills with senior Alex Behnke getting 17. Western wraps up the season 14-17 overall and 7-11 in MIAA play.

The Griffons took set one 27-25 hitting .260 with 19 kills in 50 attacks. The next two sets belonged to the Bearcats as they took both sets 25-23 before the Griffons tied the set at two with a 25-15 set four victory. In set five the Griffons battled close but fell 15-12 ending their season.

Shelby Corkill, Hannah Zimmerman and Meredith McCormick pitched in 13, 12 and 11 kills respectively while Stephanie Hattey had 53 set assists. Sarah Faubel had 20 digs while Hattey pitched in 15.

The Bearcats improve to 12-21 overall and 5-13 in MIAA play. Caitlyn Muder had 14 of the Bearcats 62 kills while Kelsey Fankhauser had 28 set assists.

Three Griffon seniors (Hannah Zimmerman, Tahler Johnston and Alex Behnke) played their last match for the Griffons.

— MWSU Sports Information —

MWSU women lose season opener to Quincy

The Missouri Western women’s basketball team fell short in their season opener falling 91-68 against the Quincy University Hawks. The Griffons were led by Jessica Koch with 19 points and eight rebounds. Western falls to 0-1 on the season.

Western played the first ten and a half minutes close with Quincy taking a 23-22 lead after a Kallie Schoonover lay-up with 9:27 left in the first half. From there the Hawks caught fire from long range closing on a 32-13 run claiming a 54-36 lead at the break.

Quincy hit 11-of-21 long range shots with Kassidy Shuman connecting on 6-of-7 from long range finishing the half with 19 points. Western made 13-of-27 field goal attempts with Brittany Griswold connecting on 3-of-7 leading Western with seven points.

The Hawks hot shooting continued into the second half as they built their lead to as many as 35 after a jumper by Kelly Buresh with 7:52 to play in the game. Western continued to battle but it would be enough falling by 23.

The Griffons shot 50-percent (28-56) for the game as Koch made 8-of-15 shot attempts. Griswold finished with 11 points on 5-of-11 shooting.

The Hawks improve to 1-0 as they finished shooting 46.6-percent (34-73) form the field and 45.5-percent (15-33) from long range. Shuman finished with a game hit 21 points while Ali Schwagmeyer and Kelly Buresh chipped in 15 apiece.

The Griffons return to action on Friday, November 18 with a contest against Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colo. Tip is set for 7:00 pm CST.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas State rallies past Charleston Southern

Rodney McGruder scored 18 points to lead a big second-half charge, Will Spradling was solid from the foul line and Kansas State held off Charleston Southern 72-67 on Friday night, surviving a big scare from the school from the Big South.

Spradling finished with 15 points, and Jordan Henriquez and Shane Southwell each added 11 for the Wildcats, who trailed by as many as 15 in the second half before using a big run and some stingy half-court pressure defense to win their ninth consecutive season opener.

Jeremy Sexton scored 19 points and freshman Saah Nimley had 13 for the Buccaneers (0-1), who looked nothing like a team coming off a mediocre 16-16 finish last season.

Of course, Kansas State looked nothing like an NCAA tournament-caliber team, either.

Spradling’s 3-pointer from in front of the K-State bench with 2:24 remaining made it 64-62, and McGruder’s basket pushed the lead to 66-62. Spradling made six straight free throws down the stretch to seal the victory, allowing the home crowd to heave a sigh of relief.

The Wildcats, playing without Jamal Samuels while he serves a three-game suspension for a violation of team rules, struggled in just about every aspect of the game. They shot 30 percent from the field in the first half, committed 19 turnovers and were out-rebounded 48-39.

It was a rough way to start the post-Jacob Pullen era.

Pullen, who now plays for Angelico Biella of the Italian League, graduated after a stellar career in which he set school records for scoring (2,132 points), games played (135), double-digit scoring games (105), 3-point field goals (299) and steals (210). Pullen helped the Wildcats reach three NCAA tournaments and win 95 games during his four-year run in Manhattan.

The Wildcats have a long way to go if they want to achieve that kind of success this season.

Kansas State looked like it would be in for an easy night midway through the first half, when Spradling converted a three-point play and Southwell’s free throw made it 24-16.

That’s when the parade of turnovers and missed shots started.

The Wildcats made just one of their next 15 field goal attempts, committed three turnovers and even missed their only two free throws during a nearly 7-minute stretch, one that had coach Frank Martin sitting on the sideline with his chin tucked glumly in his hand.

Charleston Southern took advantage at the other end, rattling off a 19-2 run.

Sexton started it with a pair of free throws, and later on, Arlon Harper — a native of Emporia, Kan. — drained a 3-pointer while scoring seven straight. Nimley finished off the run when he scored with 4:10 left in the first half, giving the Buccaneers a 35-26 lead.

The lead was 49-35 at halftime, and it swelled to 52-37 on a free throw by Kelvin Martin early in the second half. But the Wildcats finally went on their big run, keyed largely by their ball pressure, creating five turnovers in seven possessions and scoring 12 unanswered points.

By the time McGruder stripped Chris Grier of the ball and scored on the fast break, Kansas State climbed within 52-49 with 13:17 remaining, and Charleston Southern coach Barclay Radebaugh called a timeout. The crowd of 12,528 — its size no doubt helped by Saturday’s football game between Kansas State and Texas A&M — at Bramlage Coliseum was on its feet and roaring.

Still, the game wasn’t over until the closing minutes.

— Associated Press —

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