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MWSU’s Zuerlein named MIAA Special Teams Player of the Week

Redshirt senior kicker Greg Zuerlein has been selected as part of this week’s MIAA Football Student-Athletes of the Week by the conference office and a panel of Sports Information Directors. Zuerlein earned special teams player of the week honors for his performance in the Griffons 35-23 win over Missouri Southern State last Saturday in Joplin, Mo.

MIAA SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Greg Zuerlein, K, Missouri Western

Zuerlein had an outstanding game setting career and school records in field goals made in a game and longest field goal. The senior from Lincoln, Neb., tied the school record for field goals in a game with five (27, 57, 46, 34 and 47) which included three over 45 yards. He tied the school record with Brad Beckwith who had five field goals against Mesa State last season. Zuerlein had four field goals in a game in the Kanza Bowl against West Texas A&M in the 2009.

His four field goals in a game is a single game record at UNO. He also broke the MWSU record for longest field goal of 57 yards. He broke Brad Beckwith’s record of 56 yards, which was set last season against Fort Hays State University. His previous long was a 52-yarder against West Texas A&M in the Kanza Bowl. Zuerlein recorded 17 of the Griffons 35 points and had three touchbacks in nine kickoff attempts. He averaged 68.4 yards per kickoff.

The Griffons return to action on Saturday, October 8 when they host Lincoln University in the Hall of Fame game. Kickoff is set for 6:00 pm in Spratt Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

KU’s Robinson named to Wooden Award Preseason Top 50

Kansas junior forward Thomas Robinson has been named to the John R. Wooden Award Preseason Top 50 list announced Monday by The Los Angeles Athletic Club.

Robinson, one of four Big 12 student-athletes on the list, is Kansas’ leading returning rebounder from last season when he averaged 6.4 rebounds per game. The 6-9 Washington, D.C., native also scored 7.6 points per game and had a team-best 60.1 field goal percentage and 22 blocked shots.

“This is based on potential and I am grateful to be named to the list,” Robinson said. “We have a lot of great players on our team, like Tyshawn (Taylor), that could be on the list just like me.”

Last year, KU’s Marcus Morris was named to the Wooden Award Preseason top 50 and later was on the 10-member Wooden Award All-American Team.

Transfers, freshmen and medical redshirts are not eligible for the preseason list. These players and others who excel throughout the season will be evaluated and considered for December’s Midseason list and the official voting ballot released in March. The National Ballot consists of approximately 20 top players who have proven to their universities that they are also making progress toward graduation and maintaining at least a cumulative 2.0 GPA.  The Wooden Award All-American Team will be announced the week of the “Elite Eight” round of the NCAA Tournament.

Created in 1976, the John R. Wooden Award is the most prestigious individual honor in college basketball.  Kansas’ Danny Manning was the 1988 recipient.

A complete list of candidates is available at http://www.woodenaward.com/.

— KU Sports Information —

Western men’s golf tied for 4th at SBU Invite

The Missouri Western men’s golf team sits in a tie for 4th place after play Monday at the SBU Invitational in Bolivar, Mo. The event is being played at Silo Ridge Golf & Country Club. Western and Central Baptist shot a team total of 302 which is one stroke better than Fort Hays State (303) and 11 strokes back of third place Washburn (291) in the MIAA sanctioned event.

Central Missouri leads the event with a 281 which is one stroke better than second place Lindenwood (282). Lincoln sits in 7th with a 308 while Southwest Baptist is in 8th with a 309. Central Missouri B, Missouri Southern State and Pittsburg State round out the field with 311, 315 and 318 respectively.

The leader of the even is Jared King of Central Missouri firing a 4-under par 68 while Paul Colditz of Lindenwood sits in second with a 3-under 69. Tyler Gast of Western sits in a tie for third with Steven Mallow of Lincoln with 2-under par 70’s.

Kenny Stone is in a tie for 23 with a 76 while Logan Gilliland and James O’Brien sit in a tie for 32nd with 78’s. Derek Hawkins rounds out the Griffon squad with an 82.

The final round will be played tomorrow, Tuesday, October 4.

— MWSU Sports Information —

K-State at Texas Tech to air on national TV

Kansas State’s Big 12 football matchup at Texas Tech will air to a full FSN national audience as Fox Sports Net and the Big 12 Conference announced Monday television selections for October 15.

The game will kick at 6 p.m. from Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock, Texas, and mark the sixth straight week that a Wildcat football game will be televised this season.

The 20th-ranked Wildcats (4-0, 1-0) host Missouri (2-2, 0-1) this Saturday at Bill Snyder Family Stadium. Tickets still remain for the 2:30 p.m., ABC-televised game for as little as $40, and fans that attended the Baylor game can receive $10 off the price of admission with their ticket from last week’s contest.

Fans can order tickets for any of the four remaining home games online at www.k-statesports.com, by phone at 1-800-221-CATS or at the ticket office located inside Bramlage Coliseum. The ticket office will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. this week or until the Missouri game is sold out.

— KSU Sports Information —

MSU’s Dorrian Williams to miss 2011-2012 season

Missouri State freshman guard Dorrian Williams (Oklahoma City, Okla.) will undergo surgery Friday to repair a torn labrum and is expected to miss the upcoming season, head coach Paul Lusk announced Monday (Oct. 3).

“It’s unfortunate that he’ll have to miss the season,” Lusk said. “He has been doing a great job in the preseason and learning our system. We’ll redshirt Dorrian this year, and he’ll be even stronger next season.”

According to MSU Athletic Medical and Rehabilitation Services, the typical recovery time from this type of surgery is 3-6 months.

The Oklahoma 4A all-state point guard from Douglass High helped coach Terry Long’s team to back-to-back state titles and a 54-4 combined record over the last two seasons.

— MSU Sports Information —

Northwest falls to No. 7 in latest AFCA Top 25

Northwest Missouri State fell seven spots to No. 7 in the latest AFCA Top 25 after a, 38-35 loss to Pittsburg State over the weekend as announced by the organization on Monday.

The Bearcats were not the only top 10 team to lose as Shepherd (W. Va.) and Valdosta State lost over the weekend knocking both teams out of the top 10 on Monday. With their field goal as time expired, Pitt State made the biggest jump to No. 8 as they ended a five game losing streak to the Bearcats.

North Alabama takes over the new No. 1 spot followed by Bloomsburg (Pa.) at No. 2 and last year’s national runner-up Delta State at No. 3. Future MIAA foe Nebraska-Kearney received their highest ranking ever in the AFCA poll at No. 4 as Washburn rounds out the top five. The Ichabods will travel to Maryville on Oct. 22 for a top 10 match-up with the Bearcats for Homecoming.

Wayne State (Mich.) sits in front of the Bearcats at No. 6 as PSU moves to No. 8 after their win on Saturday. Minnesota-Duluth sits at No. 9 as Abilene Christian rounds out the top 10.

The Bearcats opponent this weekend, Central Missouri stayed put at No. 19 as they prepare for their second top 20 opponent in as many weeks. Kickoff from Warrensburg is set for 1:30 p.m.

Click here to see the AFCA Top 25.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Two Wildcats earn weekly Big 12 honors

Christine Michael (Texas A&M), Arthur Brown (Kansas State) and Anthony Cantele (Kansas State) have been named Big 12 Conference Football Players of the Week, as selected by a media panel.Cantele (special teams) was recognized for the second time in his career while Michael (offense) and Brown (defense) picked up their first honor.

Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week

Christine Michael, Texas A&M, RB, Jr, Beautmont, Texas

Christine Michael rushed for a career-high 230 yards on 32 carries in Texas A&M’s 42-38 loss to Arkansas. He scored three touchdowns on runs of 48, 29 and four yards. Michael also caught two balls for seven yards.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week

Arthur Brown, Kansas State, LB, Jr, Wichita, Kan.

With Kansas State behind 35-33, Arthur Brown forced Robert Griffin III into his first interception of the season, which set up the Wildcats’ game-winning field goal by Anthony Cantele. Brown, who has averaged over eight tackles a game in 2011, then sacked Griffin on first down and also collected another stop on third down during the Bears’ final drive of the game to seal the win. For the game, Brown recorded eight tackles and 1.5 sacks for K-State, which is now 4-0 on the season after the 36-35 victory.

Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week

Anthony Cantele, Kansas State, PK, Jr, Wichita, Kan.

Anthony Cantele drilled a career-high three field goals, including the game-winner with 3:10 left in the fourth quarter, as Kansas State moved to 4-0 on the season after a 36-35 win over No. 15 Baylor. The junior connected on field goals of 28 and 37 yards to give the Wildcats a 13-7 lead in the first quarter. Following Robert Griffin III’s first interception of the season, the Wildcats moved the ball to the Baylor 15-yard line to set up Cantele’s 31-yard kick that completed the fourth-quarter comeback.

— Big12Sports.com —

Chiefs earn first win by hanging on against Minnesota

Three straight losses, an offense that couldn’t punch it into the end zone — the frustration started to boil over for Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

Matt Cassel had just spiked the ball on third down to force another field goal, and the quarterback was greeted at the sideline by coach Todd Haley. An animated conversation ensued, some choice words exchanged, the TV cameras catching all of it in gory detail.

Whatever message Haley delivered must have been received.

Cassel hit Dwayne Bowe for a 52-yard fourth-quarter touchdown pass, Ryan Succop was perfect on five field-goal attempts and the Chiefs held off the Minnesota Vikings 22-17.

“It’s just part of the game,” Cassel said of the sideline flare-up. “You hug, you make up, you do high-fives and you just move on to the next play. It’s part of football.”

So is winning, something neither team had experienced before Sunday.

The Chiefs lost to Buffalo 41-7 in their opener and were trounced 48-3 at Detroit, before nearly rallying in a 20-17 loss to San Diego. The miserable start had some fans calling for Haley and general manager Scott Pioli to be fired.

The heat is off them for a week.

It’s still on Vikings coach Leslie Frazier.

Minnesota squandered first-half leads each of its first three games, and this time couldn’t hang on after Ryan Longwell’s field goal in the third quarter pushed them ahead.

The Vikings are 0-4 for the first time since 2002.

“We’ve got to re-evaluate everything,” Frazier said simply.

Succop’s field goals included a career-long 54-yarder, and his total matched Jan Stenerud and Nick Lowery for the single-game franchise record.

His accurate right leg had staked Kansas City (1-3) to a 15-10 lead by the start of the fourth quarter. Cassel dropped back to pass and saw Bowe get around Cedric Griffin, who slipped just after the snap, and hit his Pro Bowl wide receiver in stride.

Bowe made a pirouette to get around safety Jamarca Sanford, then broke Griffen’s tackle, and trotted the last couple of yards for the touchdown.

“It was a simple play, a simple hitch-and-go route,” Bowe said. “Coach told me, ‘If I call this, will you score?’ And I told him, ‘Coach, all you have to do is put it in my hands.’ ”

Cassel said the Chiefs saw a weakness in the Minnesota defense and drew the play up on the fly, just like a bunch of kids on a school-yard playground.

“It was a great adjustment by our coaching staff,” he said. “They saw that they were jumping some of those routes, intermediate routes, so we thought we had an opportunity.”

The Vikings answered with a 13-play drive that Donovan McNabb capped with a short pass to Michael Jenkins for Minnesota’s first second-half touchdown of the season.

The defense held to give McNabb time to mount a potential game-winning drive, but after picking up a first down, four straight incompletions effectively ended the game.

“It’s frustrating. We’ve got to go back and do the same thing we’ve been doing the last couple of weeks and try to find a solution,” McNabb said.

McNabb finished 18 of 30 for 202 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, while Adrian Peterson carried 23 times for 80 yards in another underwhelming performance.

Kansas City’s defense set the tone early, forcing Minnesota to go three-and-out on its opening possession. Succop’s 40-yard field goal gave Kansas City its first lead all season.

McNabb answered with a 34-yard touchdown pass to Devin Aromashodu, who beat Brandon Carr down the sideline and laid out to make a spectacular catch, and looked like it would build on the 7-3 lead by marching deep into Chiefs territory.

After a sack by Tamba Hali set up third-and-long, McNabb’s pass was tipped by running back Toby Gerhart and intercepted by Carr. The Chiefs struck with a 42-yard completion to Steve Breaston, but the drive fizzled before they could cross the goal line.

Cassel didn’t see Breaston open in the end zone on second down, and he chucked the ball into the turf on the third down. When he trotted over to Haley on the sideline, their heated conversation ensued, with a few expletives crossing their lips on television.

“Matt and I and a number of others who really, passionately care about trying to make this team special, you’re going to have some emotion and feeling,” Haley said. “Like I said, Matt, great response, and how he played, and that’s No. 1. That’s all that matters.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals rally past Philly to even NLDS

Cliff Lee has lost his October touch.

Albert Pujols hit a go-ahead single in the seventh inning after Lee blew a four-run lead, and the St. Louis Cardinals rallied past the Philadelphia Phillies 5-4 Sunday night to even their NL playoff matchup at one game each.

The best-of-five series shifts to St. Louis for Game 3 on Tuesday. Cole Hamels will be the third straight All-Star pitcher to face the Cardinals, who’ll send Jaime Garcia to the mound.

The wild-card Cardinals, who got into the postseason only after the Phillies beat Atlanta in Game 162, got the split they were looking for on the road against the team that had the best record in the majors.

Lee hardly looked like the guy who used to be so dominant in the postseason. He gave up five runs and 12 hits, striking out nine in six-plus innings, to lose his third straight playoff start.

“I wasn’t able to make my pitches, so I take full responsibility,” Lee said.

The most sought-after free agent last winter, Lee stunned the baseball world when he spurned the New York Yankees and Texas Rangers to return to the Phillies, who traded him away after he helped them win the 2009 NL pennant.

Lee’s arrival raised Philadelphia’s expectations to all-or-nothing proportions. Anything less than a World Series title won’t be considered a success by fans, players and management.

For a while, it seemed the Phillies had this one under control as they took a 4-0 edge.

After all, Lee is one of the best postseason pitchers in history, and he was 17-9 with a 2.40 ERA and a major league-best six shutouts this season.

Lee was 7-0 with a 1.26 ERA in his first eight playoff starts — 4-0 with the Phillies in 2009 — before losing Games 1 and 5 of the World Series to the San Francisco Giants as a member of the Texas Rangers last year.

He’s 0-3 with a 7.13 ERA in the last three outings.

“Anytime I got a 4-0 lead in the first or second, I feel I have the game well in hand,” Lee said.

Now the Phillies head to St. Louis with no guarantees of any more home games. If they lose two at Busch Stadium, their season is over.

“Nobody is going to hand us anything. We have to earn it,” Lee said.

Pitching on three days’ rest for the first time in his career, Chris Carpenter struggled for the Cardinals.

But one reliever after another did the job for manager Tony La Russa.

Six Cardinals relievers combined to toss six shutout innings, allowing just one hit. Jason Motte finished for a four-out save.

After chipping away for a few innings, the Cardinals took the lead in the seventh. Allen Craig led off with a triple off center fielder Shane Victorino’s glove. A three-time Gold Glove winner, Victorino misplayed the ball. He had to go a long way to make the catch, but overran it and the ball bounced off his glove.

Pujols, who struck out in his previous two at-bats, lined a single over drawn-in shortstop Jimmy Rollins to give St. Louis a 5-4 lead.

Cardinals players jumped up and cheered wildly in the dugout, while Phillies fans sat silently in disbelief. The red-clad faithful had their hearts broken already once Sunday.

Just a few hours earlier, the Eagles blew a 20-point lead and lost 24-23 to the San Francisco 49ers in an NFL game across the street.

Many fans walked over to watch the two-sport doubleheader, and the crowd of 46,575 was the largest in the eight-year history of Citizens Bank Park.

On a chilly night when the gametime temperature was 50 degrees, Lee was the only starter in short sleeves.

Maybe he got cold.

Clinging to a 4-3 lead, Lee got the first two outs in the sixth. Then Ryan Theriot lined a two-out double to left and Jon Jay followed with an opposite-field single to left. Theriot slid home safely ahead of Raul Ibanez’s high throw to tie it at 4.

Down 4-0, the Cardinals started their rally in the fourth. Lance Berkman walked and Yadier Molina hit a one-out infield single. Theriot sliced an RBI double down the right-field line and Jay followed with an RBI single to get St. Louis within 4-2.

Jay advanced to second on the throw to the plate, and Carpenter was pulled for pinch-hitter Nick Punto. Lee fired a 92 mph fastball by Punto for the second out.

But Rafael Furcal followed with a line-drive single to left. Theriot scored and Jay came rumbling around the bases. Ibanez made a perfect one-hop throw and the ball arrived along with Jay. He slammed into catcher Carlos Ruiz, his left forearm knocking the stocky catcher backward. But Ruiz held to temporarily prevent the tying run from scoring. Lee, backing up the plate, pumped his fist while Ruiz calmly picked up his mask and jogged to the dugout.

Carpenter, the 2005 NL Cy Young Award winner, allowed four runs and five hits in three innings. It was the shortest outing of the season for Carpenter, who led the NL with 237 1/3 innings pitched this year.

The bullpen bailed him out.

“We felt real good about ourselves,” manager Charlie Manuel said. “We got Carpenter out of the game early, and we were trying to get into their bullpen. The big problem was that their bullpen held us.”

Fernando Salas retired all six batters he faced, and Octavio Dotel set down five in a row to earn the win. Marc Rzepczynski gave up a two-out single to Rollins in the seventh, ending a streak of 15 straight batters retired. Rzepczynski left after hitting Chase Utley to start Philadelphia’s eighth.

Mitchell Boggs came in and got Hunter Pence to ground into a forceout. Arthur Rhodes replaced him and struck out Ryan Howard. Then it was Motte’s turn.

The Phillies, who overcame a 3-0 first-inning deficit in Game 1, took a 3-0 lead in the first in this one.

Rollins lined a double off the right-field fence and Utley and Pence walked to load the bases. Howard, who hit the go-ahead three-run homer in the sixth inning Saturday, then hit a sharp single up the middle to score two runs. His grounder appeared to hit the rubber and took an odd bounce on its way to center field.

Carpenter retired Victorino on a shallow fly, but Ibanez hit an RBI single to left to make it 3-0.

Rollins got things started again in the second with a two-out double off the top of the right-field fence. After Utley walked, Pence lined an RBI single to right for a 4-0 lead.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State now ranked for the first time in four years

Kansas State’s 4-0 start and 36-35 comeback win over No. 15 Baylor have catapulted the Wildcats into the national rankings this week as K-State checked in at No. 20 in this week’s AP poll and No. 21 in the USA Today Coaches poll.

K-State last made an appearance in the Top 25 back in 2007 when it was ranked 25th in the AP poll following a win against Colorado on October 13, while this week’s rankings were the highest by a Wildcat team since it checked in at No. 13 back in 2004. It also marked the first time since 2004 that a K-State team appeared in both polls during the same week.

Following Saturday’s win over Baylor, K-State improved to 4-0 for the second straight season and the 11th time in head coach Bill Snyder’s 20 seasons.

A total of six Big 12 teams appeared in one or both national polls this week with a seventh team just outside the rankings and receiving votes.

The Wildcats will make their second straight appearance on ABC Saturday as they host Missouri at Bill Snyder Family Stadium for Harley Day. Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

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