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Sunflower Showdown to be televised by FSN

The 109th edition of the Sunflower Showdown, presented by Dillons, will air to a full FSN national audience as Fox Sports Net and the Big 12 Conference announced its football television selections for October 22 today.

The game between the Wildcats and Jayhawks will kick at 11 a.m. from Memorial Stadium in Lawrence and mark the seventh straight week that a K-State football game will be televised this season.

The 17thth-ranked Wildcats (5-0, 2-0) travel to Texas Tech (4-1, 1-1) for a 6 p.m. Big 12 matchup that will also air nationally on FSN.

The Jayhawks host top-ranked Oklahoma Saturday on ESPN2, before hosting the Wildcats in the annual Sunflower State Showdown. KU enters the Oklahoma game with a 2-3 mark and in search of its first Big 12 victory of the 2011 season.

Big 12 Television Schedule For Next Two Weeks

Saturday, Oct. 15

Baylor at Texas A&M                    11 a.m., FX

Oklahoma State at Texas              2:30 p.m., ABC

Kansas State at Texas Tech           6 p.m., FSN

Oklahoma at Kansas                     8:15 p.m., ESPN2

Saturday, Oct. 22

Kansas State at Kansas                 11 a.m., FSN

Oklahoma State at Missouri            11 a.m., FX

Texas A&M at Iowa State              2:30 p.m., ABC

Texas Tech at Oklahoma               7 p.m., ABC

Big 12 announces weekly football honors

Landry Jones (Oklahoma), Jamell Fleming (Oklahoma) and Dustin Harris (Texas A&M) have been named Big 12 Conference Football Players of the Week, as selected by a media panel. Jones (offense) picked up his fifth career honor. Fleming (defense) and Harris (special teams) were recognized for the first time.

Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week

Landry Jones, Oklahoma, QB, Jr, Artesia, N.M.

In No. 1/3 Oklahoma’s 55-27 win over No. 10/11 Texas, Landry Jones completed 31-of-50 passes for 367 yards and three touchdowns with no interceptions. His TD throws covered 19, five and 14 yards. Previously unbeaten Texas had picked off six passes coming into the game while permitting just two passing touchdowns.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week

Jamell Fleming, Oklahoma, CB, Sr, Arlington, Texas

Jamell Fleming had a career-high 13 tackles in No. 1/3 Oklahoma’s 55-17 win over No. 10/11 Texas. The senior cornerback also returned a fumble 56 yards for a touchdown and forced a fumble. Eleven of Fleming’s tackles were unassisted and two went for three yards in losses. The Oklahoma defense held UT to 259 yards, 161.8 yards below its average, and 17 points, 17.2 under its average. One of UT’s touchdowns came on a kickoff return. The other occurred with 2:31 remaining in the game.

Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week

Dustin Harris, Texas A&M, CB, Jr, Livingston, Texas

With the Aggies clinging to a 31-23 third-quarter lead, junior cornerback Dustin Harris made the play of the game for Texas A&M when he flashed off the edge to block a 50-yard field goal attempt by Texas Tech. His block was scooped up by Terrence Frederick and returned 65 yards for a touchdown. The No. 25/24 Aggies went on to beat the Red Raiders, 45-40.

— Big 12 Press Release —

Missouri State’s Saffold earns national FCS honor

Missouri State senior Jermaine Saffold (Grandview, Mo.) was named Division I FCS National Wide Receiver of the Week by the College Football Performance Awards, the organization announced Monday (Oct. 10).

Saffold tallied the fourth-best single-game receiving effort in Missouri State history this week with five catches for 207 yards, two long touchdown plays and 270 all-purpose yards against visiting Illinois State.  He scored on the Bears’ first play from scrimmage, an 82-yard strike from Trevor Wooden, to give MSU an early lead. Later in the opening quarter, he scored from 91 yards out, the longest pass play in Plaster Field history and third-longest completion in program history.

He became just the sixth Missouri State receiver to collect 200 yards or more in a single game and the first since Steven Rush set a school record with 249 yards against Illinois State on Nov. 8, 2003. His two long touchdown catches rank third and seventh on the MSU list of longest passing plays and give him four TD grabs of 70 yards or more this season.

At the midway point in the 2011 campaign, Saffold has 21 receptions for 505 yards and six touchdowns. He has collected 99 career pass receptions for 1,813 yards and 14 scores, all of which rank in the program’s all-time top 10.  He currently ranks 21st nationally in receiving yards per game (84.2).

— MSU Sports Information —

Chiefs rally from 17-0 down to win at Indianapolis

Matt Cassel finally figured out how to beat the Colts on Sunday.

He used the unbeatable combination of Dwayne Bowe’s size and Steve Breaston’s elusiveness.

Cassel threw four touchdown passes — two each to Bowe and Breaston — to rally the Chiefs from a 17-point deficit for a 28-24 victory over winless Indianapolis.

“He is a guy I trust with all my heart — and the ball,” Cassel said of Bowe. “Then you get Steve Breaston, who continues to make so many plays. They compliment each other very well. If you’re going to double one, you can’t double the other.”

Without paying a steep price, as the Colts learned.

Even Peyton Manning’s return to the sideline couldn’t detract from the impact of this big-play tandem. Kansas City’s comeback was the largest since Todd Haley took over as coach in 2009 and rekindled images of how the Chiefs (2-3) won the AFC West last season.

Cassel was an efficient 21 of 29 for 257 yards with a rating of 138.9.

Bowe caught seven passes for 128 yards and simply outmuscled the much smaller Jacob Lacey for many of them. Breaston caught four passes for 50 yards but made a spectacular effort to get into the end zone at the end of the first half and a terrific move against a backup cornerback to give the Chiefs their only lead with 5:15 left in the game.

Jackie Battle also ran 19 times for 119 yards, enough to give the Chiefs their first win at Indy.

“We just started doing things better,” coach Todd Haley said. “That’s three weeks in a row with strong second halves. That’s our conditioning and hard work paying off in our favor. We did a good job wearing them out.”

Indy, one of three winless teams left in the league, is 0-5 for the first time since 1997 and has lost five straight for the first time in a decade.

But this one was not Curtis Painter’s fault.

With Manning around to advise to Painter and the receivers between series, Painter delivered a brilliant first half. He opened the game 12 of 17 for 237 yards with two TDs and a near-perfect 152.2 rating. A series of second-half drops prevented the Colts from moving the ball, though, and Painter finished 15 of 27 for 277 yards.

Painter even managed to avoid getting sacked despite playing behind a makeshift offensive line.

This time, it was the defense that broke down.

“The offense was doing a great job in the first half, and we just kind of let down,” Colts safety Antoine Bethea said. “We blew this.”

Bowe was the primary reason.

He burned Lacey on a slant for a 41-yard touchdown in the first half, a play that seemed to spark Kansas City’s moribund offense. He repeatedly broke tackles for first downs. And when Cassel needed a play on first-and-goal from the Indy 5, of course he went to Bowe, who caught the TD pass despite Lacey’s deflection and pass interference penalty. That made the score 24-21.

Two series later, with Bowe as the set-up guy, Cassel went the other direction and found Breaston matched up against rookie cornerback Chris Rucker. It was no contest — an 11-yard TD reception for the go-ahead score.

“Take your hats off to them,” Colts receiver Reggie Wayne said. “They came out with a good game plan in the third quarter and they executed it well. I feel like we should be walking out of this game with a ‘W,’ but we didn’t get that done.”

Yes, Indy dominated early.

Painter threw a 6-yard TD pass to Pierre Garcon on the opening series and after a 53-yard field goal from Adam Vinatieri, hooked up with Garcon on a 67-yard TD pass to make it 17-0 less than 20 minutes into the game. Garcon finished with five catches for 125 yards.

Then, after Bowe’s long TD catch, Painter led the Colts down the field again, setting up Delone Carter for a 3-yard TD run that made it 24-7 with 1:09 left in the half.

That was too much time for Cassel and Breaston, who made a nifty stop just before stepping out of bounds and dived across the goal line for a 16-yard score to make it 24-14 at the half.

Painter had one chance to rally the Colts late, but his fourth-down pass was knocked away by Jon McGraw and the Chiefs held on for their second straight win.

“This is a big win, a step in the right direction,” Cassel said. “We kept our focus, and you could see the end result was very positive for us.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose Game 1 of NLCS at Milwaukee

Even before the first pitch, the Milwaukee Brewers took a swing at the St. Louis Cardinals.

Come Sunday, the Brewers swapped their barbs for bats — and just kept bashing.

Needing a comeback in the NL championship series opener, Milwaukee turned to its power duo of Ryan Braun and Prince Fielder, then got a clutch hit from Yuniesky Betancourt to beat the Cardinals 9-6.

The Brewers celebrated wildly as the big hits came during a rapid-fire rally.

“It’s the playoffs, bro,” Fielder said. “You’ve got to let it all out.”

Braun launched a two-run, 463-foot homer in the first inning and added a two-run double during a six-run burst in the fifth. Fielder hit a two-run homer and the typically light-hitting Betancourt added a two-run homer to cap it.

The midgame turnaround came so fast that the crowd wasn’t done cheering Braun’s big hit when Fielder went deep.

“I don’t even know if I heard the ball come off Prince’s bat,” Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said. “I knew it was a good swing and came off nice, but when you can’t hear the ball, the sound of it, because of all the people yelling. I wasn’t sure what was going to happen there until I saw the ball flight.”

At least for one game, the bitter NL Central rivals avoided any on-field confrontations in their first postseason matchup since the 1982 World Series.

That’s despite an already tense atmosphere that gained some steam when Brewers starter Zack Greinke let it slip on Saturday that some of his teammates don’t like the Cardinals’ Chris Carpenter — a comment that drew a stern rebuke from Cardinals manager Tony La Russa.

Greinke hinted that he heard a few comments from the Cardinals’ dugout Sunday, but he said it was nothing out of the ordinary.

“They’re yelling from the dugout some, but most teams do that,” Greinke said. “Everyone always makes fun of me grunting when I throw a fastball. It’s kind of funny sometimes, but no big deal.”

The atmosphere was tense even before the first pitch, as La Russa was showered with boos during pregame introductions. He calmly tipped his cap to the crowd.

La Russa said afterward that he hoped the tension wouldn’t overshadow the competition — although he said he had a sense that some fans and media members would be disappointed if there aren’t any repeats of the on-field confrontations the teams have had in the recent past.

“I don’t want our players and their players to be egged on, and I don’t think they will,” La Russa said. “We’re going to play as hard and good against each other as we can.”

Greinke struggled at times, but reliever Takashi Saito got Cardinals star Albert Pujols to ground into a key double play in the seventh. Francisco Rodriguez pitched a hitless eighth and closer John Axford threw a hitless ninth for a save.

Game 2 is at Miller Park on Monday night. Shaun Marcum starts for the Brewers against Edwin Jackson.

“We’ll come back out,” Cardinals star Lance Berkman said. “The same thing happened to us in the first game against Philly. We were able to regroup.”

David Freese hit a three-run homer off Greinke in the fourth, and the Cardinals led 5-2 in the fifth.

But Milwaukee made it tough on Cardinals starter Jaime Garcia, who left after giving up Fielder’s homer. Garcia, who hit Fielder with a pitch earlier in the game, gave up six runs and six hits in four-plus innings with three walks. He took the loss.

Greinke earned the win despite his uneven outing, giving up six runs and eight hits in six-plus innings. He left the game to a standing ovation after giving up a leadoff single to Rafael Furcal in the seventh.

The Cardinals took a three-run lead into the fifth before Garcia allowed a leadoff single to Corey Hart and a double to Jerry Hairston Jr. Braun hit a two-run, ground-rule double to right and with the crowd still saluting him, Fielder hit the first pitch from Garcia deep to right for a two-run homer, giving the Brewers the lead.

Fielder then showed off his repertoire of celebrations, giving the team’s “Beast Mode” gesture upon his arrival at home plate and exchanging mock knockout blows with Braun as he trotted back to the dugout.

That was it for Garcia, who left with no outs in the fifth and his team down 6-5. It that wasn’t the end of trouble for the Cardinals, though.

Reliever Octavio Dotel fielded Rickie Weeks’ grounder and threw the ball away, allowing Weeks to go to second on the error.

Betancourt — who batted .252 in the regular season with 13 homers — then sent a 2-1 pitch from Dotel deep to left, where it flew into the Brewers’ bullpen and was fielded on the fly by Milwaukee bullpen catcher Marcus Hanel. Hanel pumped his fist, Betancourt circled the bases and the crowd continued its inning-long eruption.

Betancourt has taken plenty of criticism this season, but might be among the rare group of athletes who say they don’t pay attention to the critics and actually mean it. Through an interpreter, Betancourt said he manages to avoid criticism because he doesn’t speak much English.

“I don’t really pay attention to what the critics say,” Betancourt said.

With the score 8-5, Pujols came to the plate with runners on first and third and no outs in the seventh. Pujols broke his bat on a double-play grounder — a run scored, but the Brewers had limited the damage.

Betancourt doubled in the seventh and scored on a single by Jonathan Lucroy.

The Brewers and Cardinals split an 18-game series evenly this season, a sign of what has been one of baseball’s most intense rivalries in recent years. The Cardinals’ success against the Brewers in the final month of the season was one of the main reasons they climbed back into playoff contention.

St. Louis won six of its last seven games against Milwaukee, including a three-game sweep at Miller Park.

The animosity between the two teams spilled into this week, when Greinke told reporters Saturday that some of his teammates don’t like Carpenter because of his “phony attitude.”

La Russa said he got an umpire’s warning after Garcia hit Fielder with a pitch in the first inning, right after Braun’s homer. But the Brewers said they didn’t think the pitch was intentional, and La Russa said the team’s recent history probably affects the umpires’ attitudes.

“I certainly can’t fault the umpire,” La Russa said. “But, you know, you can’t go out and argue those things, or you get thrown out. I didn’t say anything. What I would have said is, if you watched the way Jaime pitched that whole inning, every fastball he threw was in that same area, out away from the right hander or in on Fielder. They just looked bad, but he was just trying to get the ball somewhere near the glove.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas State makes a jump in both polls

Following its 24-17 win over Missouri on Saturday, Kansas State moved up several spots in both national polls on Sunday as the Wildcats checked in at No. 17 in this week’s AP poll and No. 18 in the USA Today Coaches poll.

K-State has now made appearances in the rankings in consecutive weeks for the first time since 2004, while the No. 17 ranking is the highest since checking in at No. 13 that same season.

Following Saturday’s win over Missouri, K-State improved to 5-0 for the sixth time in head coach Bill Snyder’s 20 seasons and moved to 2-0 in Big 12 play for the first time since 2000.

The Wildcats begin a two-game road swing this Saturday when they visit Texas Tech (4-1, 1-1) for a 6 p.m. nationally-televised conference matchup on Fox Sports Net.

Following a road trip to Kansas the following week, K-State returns home October 29 to face top-ranked Oklahoma for homecoming. Tickets remain available and can be purchased online at www.k-statesports.com, by calling 1-800-221-CATS and at the Athletics Ticket Office in Bramlage Coliseum.

— KSU Sports Information —

KU tight end Tim Biere earns national honor

Kansas senior tight end Tim Biere has been honored by the College Football Performance Awards (CFPA), being named the National Tight End Performer of the Week Sunday.

The 6-foot-4 senior from Omaha, Neb., recorded career bests in catches (seven) and receiving yards (93), to go along with his first touchdown of the season in KU’s loss to No. 6 Oklahoma State.

Biere’s 19 catches this season match his season total from a year ago, while his 235 receiving yards this season are a career high. He was named to the CFPA Preseason Watch List in July.

The College Football Performance Awards are selected each year by a panel that uses a scientific ranking system which measures how an individual player increases the effectiveness of his team.

Kansas (2-3 overall, 0-2 in Big 12) will host No. 1/3 Oklahoma Saturday at 8:15 p.m. on ESPN2. It will mark KU’s first game against a No. 1-ranked team since it faced Nebraska in 1997.

— KU Sports Information —

Griffons use big plays to blow out Lincoln, 81-20

The Missouri Western football team used big plays defeating the Lincoln Blue Tigers 81-20 in the annual Hall of Fame game. Western tied the school record for most points in a game with 81, a record they set a season ago against Lincoln. The Griffons scored 10 touchdowns in the contest with two coming on special teams, one from the defense and seven from the offense. Senior kicker Greg Zuerlein scored 19 of the Griffons 81 points tying a school record with 10 extra points. He tied Brad Beckwith who set it a season ago against Lincoln. Western improves to 4-2 overall and 3-2 in MIAA action.

Missouri Western scored 26 points in the final 5:47 of the first half claiming a 37 point leading heading to the locker room. The Griffons racked up 199 yards of total offense with Michael Hill rushing for 94 yards on eight carries and two touchdowns. Hill also caught two passes for 56 yards and a touchdown.

The Griffons opened up the scoring on a Tarrell Downing 72 yard punt return with 13:34 to play in the first quarter giving Western the 7-0 lead.  Hill caught a 53 yard touchdown from Travis Partridge on the Griffons next possession giving Western the 14-0 lead with 9:42 to play. Greg Zuerlein kicked his first of two field goals with 12:14 to play in the second quarter from 32 yards out giving Western the 17-0 lead.

The Blue Tigers hung in there driving down to the Griffons four yard line before being turned away on fourth down. A Partridge interception on the next possession set Lincoln up on Western’s 12 yards line. The Blue Tigers went 12 yards on three plays with Deon Brock rushing in from one yard out cutting the Griffon lead to 17-6.

From there the Griffons dominated as Yomi Alli blocked the extra point returning it for two points. Downing returned the ensuing kickoff 88 yards to give Western the 26-6 lead with 5:33 to play in the half. A Zuerlein 50-yard field goal along with two touchdown runs by Hill, a 13-yarder and 44-yarder, gave the Griffons the commanding halftime lead.

Ben Jackson and Shane Simpson had interceptions in the final five minutes while Ben Pister led the way with six tackles.

Lincoln had 151 yards of total offense with Robert Redmond connecting on 12-of-19 for 115 yards. Corderious Gregory had four catches for 59 yards. Kendrick Causey led the way with 6 tackles.

The Griffons continued the onslaught into the second half when Cody Kremer ran an interception back 30 yards giving Western the 50-6 lead with 12:21 to play in the third.
Western scored 10 more points in the third with Dominic Thomas rushing in from two yards out and Zuerlein hitting his second field goal of over 50 yards making a 51 yarder.

Western used touchdowns by Jerrin Walton, Thomas and Dalton Krysa in the fourth to give the Griffons the 61 point victory. Western finished the night rushing for 363 yards on 29 attempts for an average of 12.5 per rush. Western improves to 4-0 when they rush for over 200 yards in a game this season. Western had 478 yards of total offense holding the ball just over 17 minutes in the game.

Thomas rushed nine times for 124 yard and two touchdowns while Walton and Hill finished with 94 yards. Hill and Derek Libby caught two passes apiece. Downing had two punt returns for 78 yards and one kickoff return for 88 yards. Zuerlein had 14 kickoffs with six resulting in touchbacks.

The Blue Tigers had 452 yards of total offense with 317 coming through the air. Redmond connected on 31-45 attempts for 269 yards and one touchdown but had three interceptions. Gregory finished with 170 yards on 13 receptions and one touchdown. Brock had 73 yards rushing on 20 carries with on touchdown.

Defensively Stephen Juergens had nine tackles with one being for a loss while Meshack Kennedy had seven tackles. Lincoln was led by Kendrick Causey with 11 tackles.

Western will hit the road for on Saturday, October 15 when they travel to Emporia, Kan. to take on the Emporia State Hornets in MIAA action. Game time is set for 1:00 pm from Jones Field at Welch Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats bounce back and rally at Central Missouri

The 7th-ranked Northwest Missouri State Bearcats scored 24 unanswered points and played spoiler on homecoming for No. 19 Central Missouri taking a, 38-20 win in front of an MIAA on-campus record 14,377 fans.

The Bearcats rebounded after their first conference loss in 49 games and improved to 5-1 on the year and 4-1 in league play. The Mules fall to 4-2 on the year and 3-2 in the MIAA and have now lost nine straight to the Bearcats.

Trevor Adams found Jordan Simmons down the sideline who then scampered 39-yards to the end zone extending the Bearcat lead to, 31-20. After the pass was nearly intercepted, Simmons was able to regain his balance racing to the end zone for the score that seemingly broke the Mules back.

Adams finished 13-of-25 with only one touchdown, but it was the rushing game that proved key for Northwest on Saturday.

It was the first time since head coach Adam Dorrel rejoined the Northwest coaching staff a pair of running backs finished over 100 yards rushing. James Franklin finished with 143 yards on 28 carries while Simmons added 138 yards on 19 carries.

Franklin added three touchdowns including the final score of the game, a one-yard plunge that put the game out of reach.

The Bearcats and Mules traded scores to start the game in what looked like the beginning of a shootout. However, both defenses would lock in as UCM would steal the momentum coming out of halftime when Tommy Corwin found David Cannon in the end zone giving the Mules a, 17-14 lead.

UCM would extend their lead on an Aaron Jamieson 22-yard field goal giving the Mules a, 20-14 lead after Adams’ second interception of the afternoon.

However, unlike last week, the Bearcat defense held the Mules to a field goal and scored on their next drive putting together a six play 69-yard drive that was capped by Bryant Hummel’s first touchdown of the season putting Northwest back on top.

“With our defense to hold after the interception it gave us a different feeling from last week,” said Dorrel. “To score after the field goal I think was really the turning point in the game.”

On the ensuing kickoff the Mules return man Alexis Reedus fumbled and Clarke Snodgrass recovered for the Bearcats on the UCM 36-yard line.

Todd Adolf would add a 46-yard field goal to give the Bearcats a 24-20 lead after the turnover.

After Adams only touchdown toss of the afternoon to Simmons the Bearcats would pick off a Mules pass to seal the win as Chad Kilgore grabbed his first pick of the season. Kilgore added a tackle for a loss and a forced fumble on the day, but his second half presence in the Mules backfield jump started the Bearcat defense in the second half.

“This was a big game for us. To come on the road in an atmosphere like this it really helps us,” said Dorrel. “It’s not easy to play here. We played physical for 60 minutes including guys sucking it up and playing hurt.”

It was also the first time since a 2009 playoff win over California (Pa.) in which Northwest rushed of over 300 yards in a game. The Bearcats finished with 308.

“To run the football like we did is not easy. They knew we were going to run the ball and to just keep doing it and see our guys finish in the fourth quarter was really fun.”

MWSU volleyball loses in five at Truman State

The Missouri Western volleyball team played tough in a 3-2 (19-25, 25-23, 23-25, 25-20, 12-15) loss against the Truman University Bulldogs. Western hit the ball well accumulating 64 kills and 27 errors in 179 attacks for a percentage of .209. Western falls to 9-9 overall and 2-4 in MIAA action.

Western found themselves withstanding an onslaught early in game one, being down by as many as 11 points at one point. However, the Lady Griffons battled back to within four points, bringing the score to 19-23. Unfortunately they would lose the next two points and drop the first game 19-25.  In game two, the Lady Griffons carried over their momentum from late in game one to open with a quick 4-1 lead. The Bulldogs battled back, but Western maintained control not allowing Truman to get within two points the rest of the game, winning 25-23.

Western came out of the break determined to take a lead in the match, and came very close to getting ahead 2-1, but dropped game three at the very end. It was a closely contested game, neither team taking a lead of more than four points. The Lady Griffons pulled ahead late in the game 23-22, but allowed the Bulldogs to score three unanswered points to take game three 23-25. Western came out flat in game four, finding themselves in a quick 4-1 hole. However, the Lady Griffons battled back and quickly took control of the game late to pull ahead 18-17. Carrying on this momentum, Western took game four 25-20, outscoring Truman 7-3 the rest of the way.

In the critical game five, Western opened with a quick lead of 4-1. It wasn’t enough however as Truman came roaring back to take the lead at 7-6. The Lady Griffons tried to stop Truman and battle back, but it wasn’t enough as the Bulldogs took the final game of the match 15-12.

Alex Behnke hit .419 in the match with 15 kills on 31 attempts. Western had 74 digs in the match with Hattey accumulating 20 digs and 58 set assists.

The Bulldogs hit .251 in the match with 63 kills. Molly Sinclair let the way for the Bulldogs with 20 kills while Kylie Easlon accumulated 26 set assists. Abby Moser had 33 of the Bulldogs 78 digs.

Western will play their third of four straight road matches on Tuesday, October 11, when they travel to Quincy, Il. to take on the Quincy University Hawks. Match time is set for 7:00 pm in Pepsi Arena.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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