We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Reserved seating for K-State game with Kent State sold out

Kansas State athletics officials announced Tuesday that all reserved tickets to Saturday’s game against Kent State have been sold out and that only 500 general admission seats in section 28 remain on sale for the contest.

Following a sellout crowd of 50,292 fans for the season opener against Eastern Kentucky, K-State eyes its second-straight sellout and the sixth in the last eight home games. Kansas State was one of only 14 schools in the country in week one to sell out its football stadium, while K-State ranked seventh nationally in percent capacity after week one.

The general admission tickets in section 28 are on sale for $20 apiece or four for $75. Those tickets can be purchased through the K-State Athletics Ticket Office online at www.k-statesports.com/tickets, by phone at 1-800-221-CATS or by visiting the ticket office inside Bramlage Coliseum.

Fans should continue to allow for extra time on their trip to Manhattan as several major road construction projects in and around the city could impact gameday traffic. The most significant of the projects is the continuing work on K-18 between Ogden and Manhattan on the west side of the city.

Additionally, fans traveling from both east and west to Manhattan on I-70 will encounter road work. East of Manhattan, repair of the bridges spanning Deep Creek Road (mile marker 316) has resulted in traffic being reduced to one lane in each direction over the bridges. West of Manhattan on I-70, pavement is being patched in both the eastbound and westbound lanes at various points from approximately 8 miles east of Abilene to the Geary/Riley County line.

The contest against the Golden Flashes, which will also feature the annual Band Day and University Family Day celebration, can be seen nationally on Fox College Sports beginning at 6 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

St. Louis finalizes 2-year extension with Carpenter

Chris Carpenter never wanted to leave St. Louis. The Cardinals never wanted to see the former Cy Young Award winner go.

Still, there were moments this season, as the months passed and his club option for 2012 loomed, when the veteran right-hander wondered if he was a part of the team’s future.

“As the year went on it was definitely a concern,” Carpenter said.

Not anymore.

Carpenter signed a $21 million, two-year contract with the Cardinals on Tuesday that will keep him around until at least 2013.

“We believe with him and Adam Wainwright we do have that 1-2 punch that we were so hopeful for this year and are glad it can be something we look forward to for 2012 and ’13,” general manager John Mozeliak said.

The 36-year-old Carpenter said he feels “great” as he nears the end of an uneven season for both himself and the team. He entered Tuesday night’s start against Pittsburgh at 9-9 with a 3.75 ERA as the Cardinals try to stay in the playoff picture.

St. Louis began the day 4½ games behind Atlanta in the wild-card race and 6½ games in back of Milwaukee in the NL Central.

“There’s all kinds of things that happened this year that kind of shuffled things around,” Carpenter said. “I like the way the team continued to play and continues to compete (but) we could never get on that roll.”

Time is running out to make something happen this year, though Carpenter remains optimistic about the future. Wainwright, who missed the entire season after undergoing Tommy John surgery, will be back next spring and Carpenter is doing his part to make sure the team has money to retain core players.

The new contract frees up some money next year, giving the team some wiggle room as it tries to re-sign first baseman Albert Pujols. Mozeliak said negotiations between the club and its superstar have not resumed but believes Carpenter’s signing is the first step in the process of keeping Pujols.

“Clearly getting Chris Carpenter done puts an exclamation point on our rotation for 2012 and we can start setting our sights on other objectives,” Mozeliak said.

Carpenter didn’t rule out playing beyond 2013 but stressed it’s important for him to remain with St. Louis. The three-time All-Star is 93-42 in his nine seasons with the club and is fourth on the team’s all-time strikeout list.

It’s heady company for a player who has struggled to stay off the disabled list since winning the 2005 NL Cy Young Award.

He missed most of the 2007 and 2008 seasons with a series of arm injuries. He had bone spurs removed from his pitching elbow in May 2007 and had reconstructive elbow surgery that July, sidelining him until July 2008. A nerve in his right elbow was transposed in December 2008.

Carpenter rebounded with a sterling 2009 in which he went 17-4 and posted an NL-leading 2.24 ERA. He went 16-9 last season but hasn’t been quite as sharp this summer, though he’s coming off an impressive four-hit shutout win over Milwaukee that manager Tony La Russa called one of the best performances he’s seen all season.

While allowing every season is different, Carpenter is confident he can be effective well into the future.

“I believe I can be better than I was this year, try and be more consistent,” he said. “If I’m healthy, I’m going to be fine.”

Carpenter is 142-92 with a 3.79 ERA in 14 seasons with the Toronto Blue Jays and the Cardinals.

Closer to the end of his career than the beginning, Carpenter is well aware of the company he’s keeping.

“The whole time I’ve been here, there have been a lot of referrals to ‘the last guy to do this is Bob Gibson,’ ” Carpenter said. “I’m not Bob Gibson but … (hopefully) when my career is over, people look back and say even though (I wasn’t) Bob Gibson, Chris Carpenter was a big part of this tradition.”

— Associated Press —

High School Football rankings released

Missouri high school rankings

Statewide football rankings as compiled by a panel of 13 sportswriters and radio broadcasters, updated Sept. 13. First-place votes in parenthesis.

CLASS 6
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Rockhurst (13)        3-0    130    1
2. CBC                3-0    117    3
3. Jefferson City        3-0    98    4
4. DeSmet            2-1    74    2
5. Blue Springs South        2-1    71    6
6. Francis Howell        3-0    61    7
7. Lafayette            3-0    47    8
8. Rock Bridge            3-0    42    9
9. Fort Zumwalt West        1-2    37    5
10. Blue Springs        1-2    24    10
Others receiving votes: Eureka (2-1) 9, McCluer North (2-1) 4, Lindbergh (2-1) 1.

CLASS 5
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Lee’s Summit West (13)    3-0    130    1
2. Staley            3-0    115    2
3. Webster Groves        3-0    106    3
4. Fort Osage            3-0    88    4
5. Kirkwood            2-0    79    5
6. Parkway Central        3-0    53    7
7. Park Hill South        2-1    45    9
8. Raytown South        2-1    38    8
9. Park Hill            2-1    33    6
10. Nixa            3-0    14    —
Dropped out: Hazelwood East
Also receiving votes: Ozark (2-1) 3, Parkway North (1-2) 2, Hazelwood East (1-2) 1.

CLASS 4
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Webb City (13)        3-0    130    1
2. Bolivar            3-0    105    2
3. Union            3-0    103    3
4. MICDS            3-0    84    4
5. Savannah            3-0    79    T5
6. Helias            2-1    62    7
7. Harrisonville        2-1    47    8
8. Kearney            2-1    31    T5
9. Gateway Tech            3-0    27    10
10. Farmington            3-0    17    —
Dropped out: Platte County
Others receiving votes: Miller Career (3-0) 10, Platte County (1-2) 10, Carthage (2-1) 4, Hannibal (1-2) 4, Liberty North (3-0) 1, Sullivan (3-0) 1.

CLASS 3
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Logan-Rogersville (6)    3-0    121    1
2. Maryville (5)        3-0    117    2
3. Richmond (2)            3-0    108    3
4. Cassville            3-0    89    4
5. Springfield Catholic        3-0    81    5
6. Oak Grove            3-0    64    7
7. Osage            3-0    41    9
8. John Burroughs        2-1    35    6
9. Lutheran North        3-0    23    —
10. Pleasant Hill        3-0    12    —
Dropped out: Owensville, KC St. Pius X, Dexter
Others receiving votes: Cardinal Ritter (2-1) 9, Dexter (2-1) 7, O’Hara (3-0) 3, Versailles (3-0) 3, Owensville (1-2) 2.

CLASS 2
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Macon (10)            3-0    127    1
2. Hamilton (2)            3-0    116    2
3. Maplewood-RH (1)        2-1    101    3
4. Lamar            3-0    89    4
5. Centralia            3-0    70    5
6. Caruthersville        3-0    53    7
7. Lafayette County        2-1    44    8
8. Blair Oaks            2-1    42    6
9. South Callaway        3-0    35    9
10. Mountain View-Liberty    3-0    28    10
Others receiving votes: Brookfield (3-0) 9, Herculaneum (2-1) 1.

CLASS 1
Rank, Team            Rec.    Pts.    Prev.
1. Concordia (13)        3-0    130    1
2. Wellington-Napoleon        3-0    106    2
3. Tipton            3-0    95    3
4. Westran            3-0    84    4
5. Valle Catholic        2-1    80    5
6. Salisbury            3-0    61    T6
7. East Buchanan        3-0    40    —
T8. West Platte            2-1    24    T6
T8. Pierce City            3-0    24    —
10. South Harrison        2-1    22    10
Dropped out: Miller, South Shelby
Others receiving votes: Hayti (3-0) 16, Drexel (3-0) 15, North Platte (3-0) 5, Miller (2-1) 3, South Shelby (2-1) 2.

MWSU’s Bass named MIAA Defensive Player of the Week

Missouri Western junior David Bass has been selected as part of the this week’s MIAA Football Student-Athletes of the Week by the conference office and a panel of Sports Information Directors. Bass earned defensive player of the week honors for his performance in the Griffons 23-6 win over 12th ranked Central Missouri last Saturday in front of 6,251 fans in Spratt Stadium.

David Bass (St. Louis, Mo.) and the rest of the Griffon defensive line gave the 12th ranked Mules and their passing attack fits all night long. Bass finished the game tying a single game MWSU record for sacks in a game with four. The previous record was set back in 1999 against Washburn by Josh Charles. Bass sacked the UCM quarterback on back-to-back plays early in the third quarter.

The Griffons had seven sacks and nine tackles for a loss in the contest. The last time Western had seven sacks in a contest was on October 13, 2007 against Southwest Baptist University.  Bass also had one quarterback hurry to go along with one pass break-up. Bass tipped three other pass which were all intercepted with two being in Griffon territory. The 20 yards rushing was the least a Griffon team has giving up since September 12, 2009 when they held the Fort Hays State Tigers to 10 yards on 19 attempts. Bass finished with seven total tackles, with five being solo.

Western will return home for their first non-conference game of the 2011 season when they take on the Langston University Lions in St. Joseph, Mo. on Saturday, September 17. Kickoff is set for 11:00 am in Spratt Stadium.

MIAA OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK

J.B. Clark, QB, Truman

Clark had touchdown passes of 18, 4 and 27 yards with 298 yards passing in the Bulldogs’ 36-31 victory over Fort Hays State. His one-yard touchdown plunge on a QB sneak with 9:28 remaining in the game, proved to be the winning score. The senior from Jupiter, Fla., went 28-of-48, the most completions, attempts and yards for a Bulldog signal caller since Matt Ticich threw for 405 in 2008 (32 games). Clark was 7-of-13 passing in third-down situations and used 10 different receivers on the day.  He also added four rushes for 16 yards and was not sacked. The win broke a four-game losing streak dating back to last season.

MIAA SPECIAL TEAMS CO-PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Aaron Jamieson, K, Central Missouri

Jamieson accounted for all six of Central Missouri’s points against MWSU. The junior from Cassville, Mo., made field goals of 21 and a school-record 53 yards in the game, with the 53-yard field goal breaking the old school record of 52 yards, which was held by two separate players.

Andy Mundwiller, PR/WR, Truman

Mundwiller led Truman with 152 all-purpose yards with career highs in catches (5), receiving yards (58), single-game punt returns (5), punt yardage (94) and longest punt return (58 yards) on Saturday. The 58-yard punt return, which was the longest by a Bulldog since 2007 (Albert Coker – 60 yards), set up the Bulldogs at the Tigers 19-yard line and eventually led to a 20-yard field goal to put Truman up 23-21. Mundwiller’s return yardage on Saturday of 94 yards, was five yards shy of the entire team’s punt return yardage from 2010. Offensively, the senior from Washington, Mo., was Clark’s top target, being thrown to 14 times. Mundwiller added a special teams tackle on a fake punt by the Tigers.

— MIAA Press Release —

Junior David Bass has been selected as part of the this week’s MIAA Football Student-Athletes of the Week by the conference office and a panel of Sports Information Directors. Bass earned defensive player of the week honors for his performance in the Grifofns 23-6 win over 12th ranked Central Missouri last Saturday in front of 6,251 fans in Spratt Stadium.

David Bass (St. Louis, Mo.) and the rest of the Griffon defensive line gave the 12th ranked Mules and their passing attack fits all night long. Bass finished the game tying a single game MWSU record for sacks in a game with four. The previous record was set back in 1999 against Washburn by Josh Charles. Bass sacked the UCM quarterback on back-to-back plays early in the third quarter. The Griffons had seven sacks and nine tackles for a loss in the contest. The last time Western had seven sacks in a contest was on October 13, 2007 against Southwest Baptist University.  Bass also had one quarterback hurry to go along with one pass break-up. Bass tipped three other pass which were all intercepted with two being in Griffon territory. The 20 yards rushing was the least a Griffon team has giving up since September 12, 2009 when they held the Fort Hays State Tigers to 10 yards on 19 attempts. Bass finished with seven total tackles, with five being solo.

Others Nominated: Alex Whitehill, FHSU; Bryce Enyard, NWMSU; Nate Dreiling, LB, PSU.

Western will return home for their first non-conference game of the 2011 season when they take on the Langston University Lions in St. Joseph, Mo. on Saturday, September 17. Kickoff is set for 11:00 am in Spratt Stadium.

Cardinals loses series opener at Pittsburgh

Little-used Pedro Ciriaco became the most unlikely of opponents to damage the St. Louis Cardinals’ playoff chances.

Ciriaco hit a tiebreaking double to cap a three-run rally in the eighth inning and the Pittsburgh Pirates stunned St. Louis 6-5 on Monday night, snapping the Cardinals’ season-high five-game winning streak.

“It’s just a great feeling for him … after all the challenges he’s had this year,” Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle said of Ciriaco, sent back and forth from the minors six times this season. “I think there was a point of time when he had more flights (to Triple-A) than at-bats and we were trying to equal that out.

“He just battled. … It was a really good moment for him personally and for our club.”

Albert Pujols hit his NL-leading 35th homer and drove in three runs for St. Louis, which had won five in a row to climb within 4½ games of Atlanta for the NL wild card. The Cardinals also began the day six games behind first-place Milwaukee in the NL Central.

St. Louis built a 4-3 lead against fourth-place Pittsburgh but lost for the seventh time this season when leading after seven innings.

“We weren’t going to go (16-0 the rest of the season),” Cardinals outfielder Lance Berkman said. “The most important thing for us is to worry about winning series. If we win this series, then we’ve done our job.

“We still have that in front of us. We can win the series. It’s unrealistic to say we’ve got to go 7-0 on this road trip. That probably wasn’t going to happen. This wasn’t a death knell by any means.”

Ryan Doumit, back in the lineup a day after he sustained a chest bruise, tied it at 4 in the eighth with an RBI double off Marc Rzepczynski (0-2). With the bases loaded and two outs, the light-hitting Ciriaco hit a liner down the right-field line off Fernando Salas for a two-run double and a 6-4 lead.

Ciriaco had 23 career at-bats over two seasons coming into the game and had struck out on three pitches in the seventh. He had 17 at-bats this season and three times had stints of three days or fewer with Pittsburgh.

Once last month, Ciriaco was in the airport heading for a seventh trip back to Triple-A before a last-minute injury summoned him back to the ballpark.

“It was a good feeling for me, especially to win the game,” Ciriaco said. “When you’re here, you want to stay here. You don’t want to go down. I’m just trying to be more consistent and to be here and stay here.”

Joel Hanrahan gave up a run in the ninth but held on for his 37th save, snapping Pittsburgh’s three-game skid. With runners at second and third, the All-Star closer struck out pinch-hitter Corey Patterson to end it with Pujols on deck.

Neil Walker went 3 for 4 with an RBI and Alex Presley had two hits and scored two runs for the Pirates, two defeats shy of guaranteeing a 19th straight losing season.

Jason Grilli (2-1) worked a perfect eighth for the win.

“We gave them a chance to come back, and they came back and beat us,” Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said.

Pujols’ home run off Brad Lincoln after Jon Jay led off the sixth with a single gave the Cardinals their only lead. It was the 443rd homer of his career, moving him into sole possession of 37th place.

Pujols has hit safely in 10 of 11 games played this month and has four homers in his past 12 games. It was his third home run in seven games this season at PNC Park, his 29th career homer there — most of any opposing player at the 11-year-old stadium and the most for him at any park not in St. Louis.

But the Cardinals’ bullpen deprived Kyle Lohse of his sixth win in his past seven decisions and of the opportunity to improve to 8-2 in his career against the Pirates. Lohse allowed three runs on eight hits and a walk with three strikeouts.

Lincoln entered having allowed seven runs in four starts since permanently being put into the rotation Aug. 22. He endured his worst outing of the season, allowing four runs (three earned) on eight hits and two walks in 5 1/3 innings.

Pujols also had a sacrifice fly in the first, and Andrew McCutchen and Derrek Lee hit sacrifice flies in the bottom of the inning.

“It’s a tough one,” Lohse said, “but we’ve just got to come back and win the series. That’s all we can do now.”

— Associated Press —

Western’s Johnston named to UNK Fall Classic All-Tournament team

Griffon senior outside hitter Tahler Johnston was named to the UNK Fall Classic All-Tournament Team which was announced Monday event. Johnston had double digit kills in two of the Griffons four matches which included 14 in the final match against 10th ranked Wayne State College.

She had 11 kills in the Griffons first match against Chadron State and nine in each of the other two matches against 5th ranked Nebraska-Kearney and Black Hills State. Johnston had a total of 43 kills on 112 attempts for a hitting percentage of .225 on the weekend. She also had six service aces and 31 digs which included 12 against Chadron State.

She leads the Griffons on the season with 90 kills and is second on the team with 73 digs.

2011 UNK Fall Classic All-Tournament Team
MVP – Tali Fredrickson, Wayne

Mindy Moody, Wayne
Alex Armes, Wayne
Ariel Krolikowski, UNK
Ellie Pesavento, UNK
Jenna Rouzee, UNK
Tahler Johnston, Mo. Western

The Griffons return to action on Saturday, September 17 when they take on the Fort Hays State Tigers in their home and MIAA opener. First serve is set for 4:00 pm in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Source: Chiefs’ Eric Berry tears ACL and will miss 2011 season

A person familiar with the situation says Chiefs safety Eric Berry has a torn ACL in his left knee and is done for the year.

Berry was hurt in the first quarter of Sunday’s loss to Buffalo during a block by Bills receiver Steve Johnson, according to the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the Chiefs have not disclosed details of the injury.

The second-year strong safety made the Pro Bowl last year and was being counted on heavily by the defending AFC West champions, who were hammered 41-7 at home by Buffalo in the opener.

Berry, a former Tennessee star, made 72 tackles and four interceptions last season, returning one of them for a touchdown. He was the fifth overall pick in the 2010 draft and he started every game his rookie season.

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s golfers tied for 10th at Drury Fall Shootout

The Missouri Western women’s golf team sits in a tie for 10th place firing a 336 on the first day of the Drury University Fall Shootout which is being play at Silo Ridge Country Club in Bolivar, Mo. The Griffons are tied with Rockhurst and Southern Indiana. Shelby Stone is the top player for the Griffons firing a round one total of 80 which puts her in a tie for 18th place.

The leader of the event is California-PA with a 302 which is three strokes better than host school Drury University (305). Western is the top team out of the MIAA as they lead Truman State (337) by one stroke. They are one stroke behind Upper Iowa (335) and five strokes back of Nebraska-Omaha (331) for 8th place.

The leaders of the event are Dianne Luke and Kim Thomas of California-PA both shooting 73’s.

Casi Webb fired an 84 tying for 46th place while Natalie Bird shot an 85 putting her in a tie for 50th position. Kristen Cooley and Lauryn Huske Davies finished firing an 87 and 95 respectively.

The Griffons will play the final round of the event Tuesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest Missouri State stays No. 2 in AFCA Top 25 poll

The Northwest Missouri State University football team held onto their No. 2 ranking as announced by the AFCA on Monday.

The Bearcats (2-0) rolled in their home opener over Sioux Falls, 52-17 over the weekend as they received two first-place votes holding steady at No. 2. Minnesota-Duluth continues to hold the top spot after receiving the remaining 27 first-place votes.

No. 3 Abilene Christian also remained the same while North Alabama is the new No. 4 after Grand Valley State was upset by Hillsdale, 34-31, over the weekend. Abilene Christian and North Alabama meet this week in a showdown of top five schools in Arlington, Texas, at Cowboys Stadium. Texas A&M-Kingsville moves up to round out the top five.

MIAA teams in the top 25 include Washburn, who moves from No. 15 to No. 13, Central Missouri which made the polls’ biggest drop, and Pittsburg State. The Mules fell from No. 12 to No. 24 after unranked Missouri Western knocked off UCM, 23-6, and the Gorillas jumped six spots to No. 19.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Griffon men in seventh place after Day 1 at PSU Invite

Senior golfer Logan Gilliland fired a one over 73 in the first round of the Pittsburg State University Invitational putting him in a tie for 7th place. As a team the Griffons sit in a tie for 7th firing a day one total of 310 at the Crestwood Country Club.

Washburn fired a first round 288 taking a two stroke lead over Central Missouri (290) and a five stroke lead over host school Pittsburg State (295). Lindenwood sits in 4th with a 297, Arkansas Tech University fifth with a 304, Southwest Baptist is in 6th with a 308 and Fort Hay State is tied with the Griffons with a 310.

Individually Joe Migdal of Central Missouri fired a four under 68 which is one stroke better then Washburn’s Nate Hoeflin and Pittsburg State’s Justice Valdivia.

Kenney Stone sits in a tie for 20th after firing a 76 while Derek Hawkins sits in a tie for 38th with a 79. Tyler Gast and James O’Brien shot an 82 and 83 respectively. Scott Sheldon is playing individually for the Griffons firing an 81.

Western will play the final round of the event Tuesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File