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Bearcat soccer team uses big second half to down Southern

A flurry of second half goals helped propel Northwest Missouri State soccer to a, 4-1 victory over Missouri Southern in non-conference action at Bearcat Pitch Thursday afternoon.

The Bearcats (4-2-2) knocked off winless MSSU in a match that was noted as a non-conference game by league officials. Due to conference expansion each team will play only four home and four road games against conference foes that count toward determining the league champion.

Victoria Von Mende notched her sixth goal of the season just before the end of the first half in the 42nd minute giving the Bearcats an early 1-0 lead.

Both teams would keep consistent shooting number into the second half, as the Lions picked up a goal from Kelsey Haist. However, three goals in five minutes would give Northwest plenty of a cushion in a tough battle.

Fiona Moloney and Emilee Davison would pick up their first goals of the year after slipping in the top of the box giving the Bearcats a 3-1 advantage. Davison’s goal would come on an assist inside the right side of the box from Tammie Eiberger, slipping the ball past the Lion goal and the right corner post.

Northwest’s leading scorer Eiberger would add her eighth goal of the season after a Southern yellow card allowed for a Bearcat penalty kick. Eiberger would find the back of the net just after the 73rd minute for an eventual final score of 4-1.

The Bearcats enter the final two games of their five game home-stand on Tuesday hosting Emporia State in MIAA action. Kickoff from Bearcat Pitch is set for 4 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Royals fire pitching coach Bob McClure & bench coach John Gibbons

Pitching coach Bob McClure and bench coach John Gibbons will not return with the Kansas City Royals next season.

Manager Ned Yost said Thursday that the two coaches will not be on his staff in 2012.

Hitting coach Kevin Seitzer, first base coach Doug Sisson, third base coach Eddie Rodriguez and bullpen coach Steve Foster will be back.

McClure served as the team’s pitching coach the past six seasons, helping tutor Zack Greinke to the AL Cy Young in 2009. But the Kansas City pitchers struggled much of the year, particularly when it came to pitch count, and Yost says he wanted a new voice for the staff.

Gibbons had been the bench coach the past three seasons. Yost says he wants to find someone who can help tutor the Royals’ young catchers.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals blank Astros and win NL Wild Card

Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals completed one of baseball’s greatest comebacks, clinching the NL wild card Wednesday night with an 8-0 win over Houston and a later loss by Atlanta.

The Cardinals got their playoff spot when the Braves fell to Philadelphia 4-3 in 13 innings.

St. Louis trailed Atlanta by 10 1/2 games on Aug. 25. The Cardinals won 23 of their last 31 games.

The Cardinals will open the postseason on Saturday at NL East champion Philadelphia. In the other NL playoff matchup, Arizona visits Milwaukee.

Carpenter (11-9) struck out 11 and allowed two hits in his 15th career complete-game shutout as St. Louis kept up its improbable September charge.

“We had nothing to lose. We were already out of it,” Carpenter said. “People were telling us we were done. We decided to go out and play and not embarrass ourselves and do what we can. We played ourselves back into it.”

The Cardinals poured onto the field after Carpenter fielded J.D. Martinez’s weak grounder for the final out. The celebration was brief and muted, as the team raced into the clubhouse to watch the end of the game in Atlanta.

“It was exciting, there’s no doubt about it,” Carpenter said. “The way these guys have played the past month and a half has been amazing, every single night grinding, playing their butts off, not giving up.

“We continued to give ourselves an opportunity and now we are here.”

The teams entered Wednesday’s regular-season finales with 89-72 records.

Atlanta’s game started an hour earlier, but the Cardinals virtually took away any hope for a Houston victory in the first inning of their contest, jumping to a 5-0 lead against Brett Myers (7-14).

Albert Pujols and Lance Berkman drove in runs with singles, and David Freese doubled to left-center before Myers even recorded an out. Berkman scored when Skip Schumaker’s hard grounder ricocheted off Myers’ glove for an infield hit, and Freese came home on Nick Punto’s single to right.

Carpenter handled the rest.

He had struggled at Minute Maid Park lately, going 0-3 with a 4.62 ERA in his last five starts here, but he was in total command from the start on Wednesday, striking out five of the first nine hitters he faced. He also had an RBI single in the third to drive in Freese, who reached base when right fielder Brian Bogusevic dropped his fly ball for an error.

Freese led off the fifth with a double to right center, the Cardinals’ 10th hit of the game. Myers, 4-0 with a 1.24 ERA in his last five starts, hadn’t allowed more than nine hits in a start since Aug. 6.

Freese later scored on Schumaker’s groundout to shortstop Clint Barmes for a 7-0 lead, equaling the most runs given up by Myers in 33 starts this season. Wilton Lopez replaced Myers for the start of the sixth.

As the Astros batted in the seventh, the left-field scoreboard posted a 3-3 tie in the Phillies-Braves game, prompting a roar from the large contingent of Cardinals’ fans in the stands behind the St. Louis dugout.

Carpenter then struck out Bogusevic and Jimmy Paredes to wrap up another easy inning. Allen Craig hit a solo homer in the ninth off Lance Pendleton.

The Cardinals huddled around a television in the clubhouse cafeteria after their victory.

Only three weeks ago, the Cardinals had virtually lost all hope.

“There was absolute doubt from us,” Punto said. “I remember early on in September, we were like, ‘Let’s just finish up strong for the fans. Let’s give them something to come out and watch.’

“When you’re 10 1/2 games out, that’s a hole you can’t climb out of,” he said, “unless you get a lot of help.”

The Cardinals were loose and relaxed — and confident — before the game.

Champagne was ordered for a potential postgame celebration and someone wrote, “Happy Flight! After Game” on a marker board in the clubhouse.

— Associated Press —

Royals lose season finale on walk-off in Minnesota

Carl Pavano has a World Series ring, plenty of pitching experience in October and even an All-Star game appearance.

The end of this mess of a season for the Minnesota Twins still mattered to the veteran right-hander, who wanted no part of 100 losses.

Trevor Plouffe’s RBI single with two outs in the ninth inning gave Pavano and the Twins a 1-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday, helping Minnesota stave off that dubious 100th defeat.

“It was a crazy game. I’m sure you guys understand what we had hanging over our heads. No one wants to lose 100 games,” Pavano said. “This year’s definitely been a disappointment for all of us, team-wise, but you’ve got to battle.”

Pavano (9-13) went the distance for the win, the first time he pitched nine scoreless innings since July 22, 2010. He gave up five hits and struck out three to help the Twins finish with two straight wins, their first consecutive victories since Aug. 31 and Sept. 2.

“You’re only as good as your last game, right?” a smiling right fielder Michael Cuddyer said. “There you go.”

Pavano even lobbied to take the mound for the 10th, as if he were Jack Morris pitching for the Twins in Game 7 of the 1991 World Series, but manager Ron Gardenhire told him Joe Nathan would be taking his place.

“He gave me the death stare,” Gardenhire said.

Bruce Chen pitched eight shutout innings against the Twins for the second time this month, and the Royals turned to Blake Wood (5-3) for the ninth. Pinch-hitter Denard Span hit a one-out double, after Gardenhire told him to do just that. Span took third on a groundout and trotted home on Plouffe’s sharp single to left.

Plouffe raced around first base with his teammates chasing him from the dugout for a celebratory pileup, completing a season that was anything but fun. The Twins (63-99) still finished with the second-worst record in their 51 years in Minnesota.

Plouffe was careful, though, to clarify 99 losses is just as bad of a performance, pinning the exuberance on the desire to send the customers home happy. The Twins finished 33-48 at Target Field this year.

“We wanted to show the fans that we don’t give up,” Plouffe said.

Chen gave up eight hits, struck out four and walked two, capping a solid season for the crafty lefty. The Twins were 0 for 13 with runners in scoring position until Plouffe’s winner.

The Royals finished 71-91, a slight improvement from last season, but their cadre of rising stars gives them plenty of eagerness for 2012.

First baseman Eric Hosmer made himself a candidate for AL Rookie of the Year with a .293 batting average, 19 home runs and 78 RBIs, and center fielder Melky Cabrera had an exceptional season.

Kansas City threatened in the eighth. Mike Moustakas led off with a high fly down the line that Cuddyer let bounce off the wall in right, then skip by him. The Royals were cajoling Moustakas from the dugout to try for an inside-the-park homer, but he heeded third base coach Eddie Rodriguez’s stop sign and settled for a triple.

But Lorenzo Cain and Mitch Maier were each retired on comebackers to the mound — Cain’s a hot shot and Maier’s a slow roller — and Alcides Escobar grounded out to end the inning.

This wasn’t quite Game 7 of that 1991 World Series, when the Twins took down the Atlanta Braves 1-0 in 10 innings, but the crowd — paid attendance was 36,488 — emitted a lively cheer after Pavano’s escape.

The attempt to avoid reaching triple digits in the loss column provided some rather amusing drama to an otherwise-meaningless game. One local sports talk radio host even snarkily pushed the “Hunt for Hundred” campaign on Twitter and on the air so the Twins would have a glaringly large round number to stamp on this collosally unsuccessful season. One fan in the club seats held up a sign to honor the slogan.

But there were no Bronx-style cheers audible on this night. Pavano got a standing ovation as he finished a perfect ninth and walked to the dugout, and the roar was even louder when Plouffe’s bat hit the ball.

“We haven’t given them a very good show this year, but again tonight they showed up and packed it and they were standing on their feet at the end,” Gardenhire said. “That’s typical. You kind of expect that around here, but it sure makes you feel a lot better going into the offseason.”

John Gordon, the primary radio voice of the Twins since 1987, called his last game in the broadcast booth, which the team named after him in honor of his retirement. The Twins didn’t give him many highlights at all to narrate this year, but he choked up during a pregame ceremony and took off in a sidecar next to broadcast partner Dan Gladden’s motorcycle for a spin around the warning track to wave to the fans.

— Associated Press —

KU’s Beshears & McDougald on Hornung Award fan ballot

Fan voting to select the finalists for the 2011 Paul Hornung Award is now open on Facebook and being powered by Texas Roadhouse and the Louisville Sports Commission. Fans can vote as often as once a day by going to www.votepaulhornung.com.

The Paul Hornung Award, presented by Texas Roadhouse, is awarded annually to the most versatile player in major college football and Kansas juniors WR/KR D.J. Beshears and S Bradley McDougald are both on the ballot.

Beshears currently leads the Big 12 and ranks ninth in the NCAA in all-purpose yardage. The Denton, Texas, native has three rushes for 29 yards, 12 receptions for 135 yards and 18 kickoff returns for 387 yards. Beshears is averaging 183.7 all-purpose yards per game and has recorded two TDs, both on receptions.

Beshears was named Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week and to the Paul Hornung Award Weekly Honor Roll on Sept. 12 following his standout performance in leading KU to a 45-42 win over Northern Illinois. Beshears recorded 285 all-purpose yards and scored the game-winning touchdown in the final seconds as Kansas outlasted the Huskies. He set career highs in kick return yardage (197), receptions (seven), receiving yards (70) and touchdown receptions (two). His 51-yard kickoff return set up KU’s final scoring drive.

McDougald, who was named to the 2011 Watch List for the Paul Hornung Award, ranks fifth on the team with 15 tackles from his safety position. McDougald recorded his first career sack in KU’s last game at Georgia Tech and has two passes defensed on the season.

College football fans nationwide will have the opportunity to vote for players on the 2011 Watch List and any player that has been named to the Paul Hornung Award Weekly Honor Roll. Results of the fans’ selection on Facebook will count for one vote, adding to the votes cast by the 16-member Selection Committee. http://www.paulhornungaward.com/selection-process.

Fans will also have the chance to vote for the winner from among the finalists in a second round of voting starting December 9.

The Louisville Sports Commission successfully launched the Paul Hornung Award in 2010 to honor its namesake and native son and to promote outstanding performances by multi-talented college football players that often go unnoticed.

Owen Marecic of Stanford, a two-way starter and All Pac-10 performer at fullback and linebacker, won the inaugural Paul Hornung Award in 2010.

Beshears, McDougald and their Kansas teammates will host Texas Tech in their Big 12 Conference opener Saturday, Oct. 1. Game time is slated for 11 a.m., with a live broadcast on Fox Sports Net.

— KU Sports Information —

Missouri State twilight tip-off event set for October 16

Missouri State basketball fans will have a chance to meet the 2011-12 Bears and Lady Bears during a special Twilight Tip-Off event at JQH Arena on Sunday, Oct. 16.

Both programs feature a host of new talent and new faces, including first-year head coach Paul Lusk who has seven new players on the men’s side, while Lady Bears’ head coach Nyla Milleson welcomes three newcomers to her program in her fifth season at MSU.   Both coaches helped plan the event and are excited to interact with Missouri State fans as the new season gets underway.

The fan-interactive event will begin at 7 p.m. with the Lady Bears taking the floor in style prior to their abbreviated intrasquad scrimmage.  Following the women’s scrimmage, there will be a three-point contest and a dunk contest that will require fan participation. Then, the Bears will be introduced and conduct their own instrasquad scrimmage. The night will conclude with autographs and a chance to meet this year’s MSU players and coaches.

Additional specials, give-aways and promotions for the night will be announced in the coming days. Fans are encouraged to check Facebook.com/MissouriStBears for special announcements and news related to the Twilight Tip-Off event.

In other basketball news, single-game tickets for all Bears’ and Lady Bears’ home games will go on sale starting Tuesday, October 11 at 10 a.m., at the Chevy Pickup Window located at JQH Arena or by phone at (417) 836-7678 and MissouriStateTix.com.

The Bears are coming off a 26-9 season in which they won the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title for the first time in the program’s history. MSU returns six lettermen and two starters, including 2011 MVC Player of the Year and AP All-America selection Kyle Weems.

The Lady Bears were 24-11 last season and finished second in both the MVC regular-season race and post-season tournament. Coach Milleson returns 10 letter winners, including four starters and 2010 MVC Player of the Year Casey Garrison who is a three-time All-MVC performer.

— MSU Sports Information —

Chiefs sign Jake O’Connell and release Anthony Becht

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the club has signed free agent TE Jake O’Connell and released TE Anthony Becht.

O’Connell (6-3, 250) has appeared in 20 games (four starts) with Kansas City (2009-11). He has six catches for 53 yards (8.8 avg.) and added two special teams tackles. He originally entered the NFL as a seventh-round draft pick (237th overall) of the Chiefs in 2009.

Becht (6-6, 270) has appeared in 160 games (128 starts) with the N.Y. Jets (2000-04), Tampa Bay (2005-07), St. Louis (2008), Arizona (2009) and Kansas City (2011). He has caught 185 passes for 1,511 yards (8.2 avg.) with 21 touchdowns. He originally entered the NFL as a first-round pick (27th overall) of the Jets in 2000.

— Chiefs Public Relations —

Northwest volleyball falls to Rockhurst

Northwest Missouri State battled to the end Tuesday night dropping a heartbreaker to Rockhurst at Bearcat Arena in non-conference college volleyball action.

No athlete or coach wants to lose. It’s why they spend hours in practice, call timeouts to shift momentum and battle until the whistle blows to end the contest.

But winning is a process, one the young Northwest Missouri State volleyball team is learning in September.

Despite falling 25-22, 25-22, 27-25 to Rockhurst Tuesday evening at Bearcat Arena, Northwest showed plenty of signs that it will be a formidable opponent in the MIAA in October.

The two key ingredients in a youthful team are talent and a couple of seniors to lead the way. The Bearcats have it.

Instead of getting discouraged by a 4-8 start to the season, seniors Laira Akin and Alex Hanna must remain positive as sophomores Mackie Keller, Amy Majors, Whitney Mason and freshman Abby Graves continue to gain experience.

“We are just trying to get them to learn some mental toughness from the rest of us,” Akin said. “As seniors and captains, we are hoping to set that example for them so they know what this is supposed to look like.

“Tonight, we showed we didn’t have a 100 percent effort from everybody on the court. We want them to learn what Bearcat volleyball is all about. It’s about bringing everything we have to everything.”

Late in the second set, Graves, a powerful hitter in a somewhat small, 5-foot-9 frame, demonstrated some nuances in volleyball that helps win close matches.

Also during the match, Majors and Mason had kills that changed the momentum in the Bearcats’ favor

“We all come from a really good base,” said Graves, who finished with a team-high 11 kills. “What we’ve learned is we can rely on each other. We all have played a lot of volleyball. It is going to come together.”

Northwest trailed 23-19 when Graves showed her versatility to help the Bearcats score points at a critical time. She started off with a booming kill. That didn’t surprise Rockhurst because she had been doing that throughout the first two sets.

“She is really doing great things out there,” Akin said. “She has done a great job the last couple of weeks and has taken it upon herself to make a difference.”

After Rockhurst scored, Graves came back with a tip and it completely caught Rockhurst by surprise.

“You got to mix it up,” Graves said. “The whole goal is to catch people off their feet. You have to think what if you were playing defense, what would you expect. You got to think what the other team is expecting and do what they aren’t.”

Graves followed that move with a block for a point.

“You got to have that killer instinct and push to the end,” Graves said.

It helped Northwest close to 24-22.

“She is really athletic,” Rockhurst coach Tracy rietzke said. “She jumps well, hits the ball hard and she sees the court. She did a nice job. We had a difficult time stopping her.”

But Rockhurst ended the second game the same way it ended the first: a thunderous kill by McGovern.

Although the Bearcats trailed 2-0, they fought hard in the third set and held an 18-15 lead. Rockhurst scored five of the next six points for a 20-19 lead.

Trailing 23-21, Mason showed she has the clutch gene when she hit a kill to help the Bearcats close to 23-22. She did it again when Rockhurst had match point at 24-22.

Mason then served an ace that tied the set at 24-24 and Majors followed with a block that gave Northwest a 25-24 lead.

Rockhurst, though, concluded the match by winning the last three points. Once again McGovern was instrumental in the run. Her 19th kill of the match gave Rockhurst a 26-25 lead.

“She (McGovern) is tough,” Rietzke said. “When she gets on a roll, she is tough. When she plays well, typically our team plays well.”

The Bearcats want to get to the point where they can feed off a player on a roll that carries them to victory.

They will try to build that momentum Friday and Saturday when they play four matches in the Pittsburg State Regional Challenge.

“We are really going to focus on our start and getting off on the right foot,” Graves said.

It’s the last group of non-conference games before the Bearcats hit the bulk of their MIAA matches.

“We are really trying to focus on mental toughness,” Akin said. “With this young team, it is hard for them to come back from a loss in the first game. In high school and club you are playing two out of three. It is more normal to play two games and be done.

“We are trying to teach them that endurance and mental toughness to get in there and fight for every point and every game matters. We are really trying to manufacture those things in practice. We need to do a better job.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

MWSU women’s golfers finish 2nd at Fort Hays State

Missouri Western women’s golf team finished second at the Fort Hays State Women’s Invitational firing a two round total of 682 (348-334). Western finished seven strokes back of Fort Hays State, 675 (342-333). Northwest Missouri finished third with a  696 (355-341) while Iowa Western CC finished with a 737 (369-368).

The winner of the event was Kiley Johansen of Fort Hays State as she defeated Steph Charteris of Northwest Missouri State in the first playoff hole. Both players shot two round totals of 165. Missouri Western’s Kristen Cooley finished in a tie for fifth with a 170 (79-90).

The Griffons other four players finished no lower than 13th. Natalie Bird (85-86) and Darcy Smith (94-77) finished in a tie for 7th firing 171 while Shelby Stone finished in 11th with a 176 (90-86) and Casi Webb finished in 13th with a two day total of 180 (95-85)

Western’s Darcy Smith and Kristen Cooley fired the two lowest rounds of the tournament with a 77 and 79 respectively.

Western will continue it’s fall season on Thursday, October 6 and Friday, October 7 when they play in the NWMSU Bearcat Fall Classic in Maryville, Mo. The event will be played at Mozingo Lake Golf Course.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals lose to Minnesota Tuesday, 7-4

The Minnesota Twins entered the final series of the season with one goal — to avoid losing 100 games.

They’re one game away from making that happen. In a season that has been so disappointing, they’ll take any small victory they can get.

Rene Tosoni hit a grand slam and Chris Parmelee also went deep to lift the Twins to a 7-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night.

Anthony Swarzak (4-7) gave up two runs on 10 hits with six strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings for the Twins (62-99), who are hoping to avoid becoming just the second team in franchise history to lose 100 games in a season.

“We want to win tomorrow and stay away from that stuff,” manager Ron Gardenhire said.

Sean O’Sullivan (2-6) gave up six runs on nine hits with one strikeout in five innings for the Royals. Johnny Giavotella had two doubles and a triple and Salvador Perez added two hits and an RBI for Kansas City.

O’Sullivan gave up three straight singles to start the sixth before leaving. Tosoni hit Vin Mazzaro’s first pitch well into the right field seats for a 7-2 lead.

Tosoni said he couldn’t remember the last time he hit a grand slam. He didn’t hit one in the minors and couldn’t remember hitting one as a prep star in Canada, either.

“It felt pretty good off the bat,” Tosoni said with a chuckle.

The Royals scored twice in the ninth off Twins closer Joe Nathan before Eric Hosmer struck out to end the game.

Parmelee had two hits to raise his average to .351, continuing his impressive showing since being called up from Double-A New Britain. His 427-foot homer to right-center field tied the game 1-1 in the second inning.

Trevor Plouffe had three hits while Ben Revere and Denard Span had RBI triples for the Twins. Revere tried to turn his into an inside-the-park home run in the fifth, but he was thrown out by Alcides Escobar at home after running through coach Steve Liddle’s stop sign.

It ended up not mattering after Tosoni hit a fastball from Mazzaro soaring out of the ballpark for just the second grand slam by a Twins player this season.

“I was trying to make contact on the guy and get a double play,” Mazzaro said. “It was just middle down and I was trying to go in on him and it just leaked back over the plate.”

The Twins have only lost 100 games one other time in their proud history, back in 1982 when they went 60-102.

“I haven’t talked about it much with other guys, but you don’t want to get to that mark,” Tosoni said. “We want to finish winning, so that’s our plan.”

The struggles this season seemingly came out of the nowhere.

The Twins won the previous two AL Central titles and came into this season brimming with confidence. But injuries to practically every starter on the roster, including stars Joe Mauer, Justin Morneau, Jim Thome and Jason Kubel, were too much to overcome.

They sunk to the bottom of the American League and started the day a full 10 games behind the improving Royals for last place in the division.

The setback slightly stunted some nice momentum the Royals had been building as the season comes to a close. They had won 11 of their previous 14 games, getting promising performances from a bevy of highly touted youngsters including Mike Moustakas, Hosmer and Escobar.

Moustakas had two hits in the game.

Swarzak gave up an RBI single to Lorenzo Cain in the second and one more run on a fielder’s choice in the sixth in an impressive performance. He has been a jack of all trades for the Twins’ banged up pitching staff, and his versatility has put him in good standing with the organization heading into next season.

“I’ve put myself in pretty good position for a job next year,” Swarzak said. “Where that is, I don’t know and honestly I don’t care. I just want the ball.”

— Associated Press —

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