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MIAA announces volleyball Players of the Week

Mollie Lacy (Washburn), Courtney Haring (Emporia State) and Abby Moser (Truman) have been named MIAA Volleyball Student-Athletes of the Week for the week of Sept. 2-4 as selected by a conference SID panel.

MIAA CO-HITTERS OF THE WEEK
Mollie Lacy, RH, Washburn
Lacy averaged 3.31 kills per set and hit .401 in four matches at the Midwestern State Invitational. The senior from Lincoln, Neb., reached double-figure kills in final four matches. She had seven blocks in the opener and averaged 0.77 per set. Lacy finished with 3.69 points per set.

Courtney Haring, MH, Emporia State
Haring averaged 1.82 kills per set, hitting .393 while racking up 30 blocks, averaging 1.76 per set. The freshman from Kirkwood, Mo., was named to the All-Tournament Team at the Lynn Invitational. Against KSU, she had ten kills, hitting .529 for the match. She had four block assists as she was responsible for 12 of the Hornets’ points. Against ABU, Haring had five kills, hitting .714 while adding three blocks and scoring seven points for ESU. Against Post, she was a perfect eight for eight hitting and added eight total blocks as she finished with 13 points in the match for ESU. Against Minnesota-Crookston, Haring had five kills and a career-high nine blocks as she scored 11 points for the Hornets. Against Lynn, she had six blocks and three kills for the Hornets.

Others Nominated: Kelsey Ortwerth, UCM; Sara Hewson, FHSU; Alexandra Behnke, MWSU; Kylie Heim, SBU.

MIAA SPECIALIST OF THE WEEK
Abby Moser, L, Truman
Moser averaged 5.80 digs per set and was named to the Midwestern State Hampton Inn-vitational all-tournament team as the event’s top libero. The freshman from Wildwood, Mo., opened her collegiate career with a 21-dig effort in Truman’s four-set win against Nova-Southeastern (Fla.). She also added two assists and an ace in the match. Moser then proceeded to average 6.33 digs/set against tournament host Midwestern State before finishing the weekend with two more 20+ dig efforts against Texas A&M-International and Incarnate Word. She finished the weekend with four total aces (one per match).

Others Nominated: Julia Bates, UCM; Meg Schwartz, ESU; Kayla Zoglman, FHSU; Laira Akin, NWMSU; Alyx Glover, SBU.

— MIAA Press Release —

Nebraska K Maher earns two awards

Nebraska place-kicker/punter Brett Maher was recognized for his performance in the Huskers’ season opener, while also making Nebraska football history on Monday.

The junior from Kearney, Neb., was named the Big Ten Special Teams Co-Player of the Week this morning and earned the College Football Performance Award as National Place Kicker of the Week this afternoon.

Maher’s Big Ten honor is the first individual honor won by a Husker football player. He shared the Big Ten honor with Penn State kick returner Chaz Powell.

Maher went 4-for-4 on field goals, including kicks of 50 and 48 yards, and 4-for-4 on extra points in helping the Huskers to a 40-7 win over Chattanooga. In addition, he punted four times, averaging 52.0 yards per kick, and placed a pair of kicks inside the UTC 20-yard line. Maher’s was the highest single-game average by a Husker since 2005 and the best at home since the 2002 campaign.

— NU Sports Information —

Northwest soccer defeats Wayne State Sunday, 2-1

Northwest Missouri State University soccer team finished their season opening home stand by picking up their first win of the season Sunday afternoon beating Wayne State University 2-1 at Bearcat Pitch.

The Bearcats improved to 1-1 on the season after falling in overtime to Texas A&M-Commerce on Saturday.

Wayne State struck first with less than two minutes remaining in the first period when Kelsey Meyer scored but that would be the only goal of the afternoon for Wayne State.

Northwest started hot in the second period scoring off of a strike by Kelly Obley in the 47th minute.  Tammy Eiberger continued her hot start to the 2011 season by heading in her fourth goal of the season off of a corner kick by Obley just two minutes later.

The Bearcats return to action this week when they travel to Wichita, KS for two games.  Northwest opens action on Thursday at Friends University.  They will then close out the weekend at Newman University on Saturday.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Chiefs sign eight to practice squad

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Sunday that the following players have been signed to the club’s practice squad roster:

No.       Name                    Pos.        Ht.          Wt.         Age        Exp.        College

40        Shane Bannon            FB          6-3          245         22           R         Yale

57        Justin Cole             LB          6-3          242         23           2         San Jose State

66        Darryl Harris           G           6-4          300         26           1         Mississippi

11        Jeremy Horne            WR          6-2          193         24           1         Massachusetts

31        Quinten Lawrence        DB          6-0          184         26           2         McNeese State

79        Butch Lewis             OL          6-5          295         23           R         Southern California

70        David Mims              OL          6-8          335         23           R         Virginia Union

98        Anthony Toribio         DT          6-1          315         26           2         Carson-Newman

— Chiefs Public Relations —

Ramsell leads Griffon soccer to first win for Edwards

K.C. Ramsell continues her hot start scoring two more goal giving the the Griffons their first victory of the season and first under Head Coach Chad Edwards. Ramsell has scored all four of Western’s goals this season as Western sits at 1-1.

Despite being out shot 22 to eight in the contest Western had six on goal with three coming from Ramsell. She put the Griffons up 1-0 in the eighth minute of the game from ten yards out. Western held the Bulldogs out of the net the rest of the contest and in the 63rd minute Ramsell scored her second of the game and fourth of the season of a corner kick that deflected off the SWOSU goalie.

Griffon goalie Kelly Voigts had ten saves in the shutout. Abby Widrig and Ashly Castillo each had two shots apiece while Ramsell had three in the contest.

The Bulldogs were led by Kelsey Visor and Jessica Carbonara as they both had six shot with three on goal. Southwest Oklahoma State was picked to win the Great American Conference, but it at 0-1-1 on the young season.

Western returns to action on Sunday, September 11 when they travel to Wayne, Neb. to take on the Wayne State Wildcats in non-conference action.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals lose two of three to Indians

After a harmless groundout in the fourth inning Sunday against Kansas City, Shelley Duncan made a minor adjustment to his swing at the suggestion of Cleveland hitting coach Bruce Fields.

There was nothing harmless about Duncan’s next two trips to the plate.

He pounded a three-run homer into the gusting wind in the sixth inning, and then added a two-run shot in the eighth as Cleveland built a big lead. Duncan’s career-high five RBIs helped the Indians beat the pesky Royals 9-6 and set up a critical three-game series starting Monday against Detroit.

“Both balls were just left over the plate,” said Duncan, who had just four homers and 24 RBIs coming into the game. “It was nice getting that big lead for once. We haven’t done that for a while.”

Asdrubal Cabrera returned to the lineup to drive in two runs, and Jason Donald and Jerad Head also had RBIs for the Indians (70-67), who surpassed their win total from all last season as they try to keep pace with the Tigers in the AL Central. They began the day 6 1/2 games back in second place.

The Tigers, who played Sunday night, face Cleveland in a three-game series starting Monday.

“You want to go into that series with a positive outcome here,” Indians manager Manny Acta said. “If we don’t take advantage of this series, you can’t be looking at the last three games of the season (also against Detroit), because you might not be there.”

Jeanmar Gomez (2-2) was effective again in his second start since getting recalled from Triple-A Columbus, allowing six hits and only Mike Moustaksas’ RBI groundout in 5 1/3 innings.

The bullpen wasn’t nearly as good.

Eric Hosmer drove in a pair of runs in the ninth inning, and Johnny Giavotella had one of his two RBIs in the ninth as Kansas City tried to rally. Chris Perez came in with a runner on first and got Moustakas and Brayan Pena on weak pop outs for his 32nd save.

Melky Cabrera also drove in a run for Kansas City, but it wasn’t enough to help Jeff Francis (5-15) finally end his home woes. He allowed four runs — all in the first two frames — and nine hits over five shaky innings, and still hasn’t tasted victory at Kauffman Stadium since May 31.

“I tried to make an adjustment and was able to put up at least three zeros,” Francis said. “When you only go five innings, you don’t give the team much of a chance. It was disappointing.”

Francis got in trouble quickly when Kosuke Fukudome doubled with one out in the first. Carlos Santana and Duncan walked to load the bases for Donald, whose single made it 1-0.

Santana was thrown out trying to score on the play by Mitch Maier, the 24th time a Royals outfielder has thrown someone out at home. Only the 1978 Montreal Expos have more outfield assists at the plate (30) in a single season since 1974, when accurate records started being tracked.

Cleveland piled on in the second inning when Jack Hannahan doubled, Lou Marson singled and Head hit an RBI single. After a couple quick outs, including a great stab by Hosmer on a hard-hit ball by Fukudome, Cabrera ripped a two-run double down the left-field line.

Cabrera fouled a pitch off his knee Friday night, causing a colorful bruise that kept him out of the lineup Saturday night. He returned to push his team-leading RBI total to 82, a career best.

“He’s been such a strong player for us all year long,” Duncan said. “He’s a hard one to just plug someone in and have them do what he’s done for us this year.”

The Royals finally scored in the fourth when Hosmer lined a double into the wind, which was whipping up to 27 mph. He came home when Moustakas hit a grounder to third base.

The Indians got some breathing room in the sixth when Ezequiel Carrera and Santana reached base and Duncan pounded a 1-0 pitch from Jesse Chavez into the Royals’ bullpen for a 7-1 lead. The two-out homer to left field was Duncan’s fifth of the season and first since Aug. 5.

Hosmer and Giavotella drove in runs in the seventh for Kansas City, and Moustakas nearly tied the game with a bases-loaded drive that just skirted the foul pole. He eventually flied out to right, and Duncan’s second homer of the game in the eighth restored Cleveland’s six-run cushion.

“Today, Shelley Duncan stepped up, and we need just about every guy to step up with the roster we have right now,” Acta said, referring to his patchwork lineup. “We need heroes every day.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose series finale to Reds in 10 innings

Now, the St. Louis Cardinals have to sweep the Milwaukee Brewers again just to keep a sliver of hope alive.

Rookie Juan Francisco capped a career-best four-hit day with the go-ahead single in the 10th inning and the Cincinnati Reds won 3-2 on Sunday to take two of three from a team desperately trying to stay in contention.

The Cardinals swept a three-game series at Milwaukee right before the Reds came to town, but went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position Sunday to fall 9 1/2 games behind the NL Central leaders with 22 games to go. The Cardinals and Brewers have one last three-game set beginning Monday night in St. Louis.

“If we had been able to win at least two out of three here it would have been a lot more compelling, I guess,” Lance Berkman said. “If we can sweep them again, we can put ourselves at least within the realm of possibility, I guess you could say.”

Jon Jay homered and Daniel Descalso had an RBI triple for the Cardinals, who were only 2 for 20 with men on base and dropped their first series at home against Cincinnati since June 1-3, 2009. They’re 13-3 in series against the Reds at 6-year-old Busch Stadium.

Berkman just missed a two-run homer in the first on a ball caught at the right-field wall and Bronson Arroyo robbed Rafael Furcal of a likely two-run single in the second, taking a liner off his leg but recovering to throw to first.

“To go scoreless like we did, it’s an aggravating, upsetting day,” manager Tony La Russa said. “We got zeros is what I’m looking at. The guys were not happy to get zeros.”

Francisco Cordero went through the heart of St. Louis’ order for his 30th save in 35 chances and 13th in a row, also giving him seven 30-save seasons. Edgar Renteria hit a two-run homer in the first for the Reds, who won for only the second time in their last eight games.

Cordero passed Doug Jones with his 320th save for 14th on the career list and is one behind countryman Jose Mesa, the saves leader for pitchers from the Dominican Republic. He has five straight 30-save seasons.

“It means a lot, it shows me I’m doing my job,” Cordero said. “I’ve been doing my job a long time.”

Three straight Reds reached with two outs in the 10th against Fernando Salas (5-6) and pinch-runner Chris Valaika scored easily from second on Francisco’s single to center. The Cardinals fell to 6-12 in extra innings, and lead the majors in extra-inning losses.

“I think it’s meaningful,” La Russa said. “As good as our bullpen has been, at times it’s made mistakes. We’ve gotten beat on a lot of pitches that were good to hit.”

Cincinnati reliever Bill Bray (5-2) got pinch-hitter David Freese to fly out with a runner on second to end the ninth.

Arroyo pitched eight innings, matching his season best. He allowed only two runs despite giving up 10 hits, but is winless in his last seven starts against St. Louis.

“Yeah, he was great,” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. “He has a big ‘ol welt on his leg from that line drive from Furcal. He got some tough hitters out in some tough situations and we wanted to get him the win, but we got the win.”

Jay’s drive was the 37th allowed by Arroyo, extending his franchise record for a right-hander, but he didn’t allow a runner to reach scoring position his last four innings. He’s 1-5 in his last 12 starts since June 24.

Edwin Jackson struck out eight in seven innings in his best outing since joining the Cardinals at the trade deadline. He trailed 2-0 after the first two hitters but worked six straight scoreless innings after that and is 2-0 with a 1.80 ERA his last three starts.

Brandon Phillips opened the game with a single and Renteria followed with his fifth homer before Jackson retired the next three in order.

Renteria struck out with the bases loaded to end the second. Cincinnati also left two on in the sixth and eighth and another scoring opportunity was squandered in the fourth when catcher Gerald Laird reacted quickly on a pitch in the dirt, recovering it several feet away and throwing to Jackson to catch Francisco trying to score.

Jay hit his ninth homer with one out in the first and Descalso’s triple tied it in the fourth.

The first hit with runners in scoring position by either team was Francisco’s squibber off the end of the bat just out of the reach of Descalso at third and reliever Mark Rzepczynski to put runners on the corners with two outs in the eighth. Octavio Dotel got Ryan Hanigan to ground out to end the threat.

— Associated Press —

Royals hand out Minor League awards to Herrera & Giavotella

The Kansas City Royals have named right-handed pitcher Kelvin Herrera the 2011 Paul Splittorff Pitcher of the Year and second baseman Johnny Giavotella the 2011 George Brett Hitter of the Year.

On Tuesday, the Royals named the pitchers and players of the year from all eight minor league affiliates.  A majority of those players are expected to be at Kauffman Stadium for Futures Night on Friday, September 16, where they will take part in an autograph session at Gate A from 5:30 p.m. to 6:15 p.m., as well as be honored in an on-field presentation prior to the Royals game against the White Sox.

PAUL SPLITTORFF PITCHER OF THE YEAR

21-year-old Kelvin Herrera has rocketed through the system this season by posting dominant numbers out of the bullpen that earned him a spot on the World squad in the XM Futures All-Star Game.  Herrera has combined to go 7-1 with 14 saves and a 1.64 ERA in 44 relief appearances for Wilmington (A Advanced), Northwest Arkansas (AA) and Omaha (AAA).  In 65.2 innings, he has allowed just 12 earned runs on 42 hits and 14 walks, striking out 70 and allowing opponents to bat just .181.  Born and raised in Tenares, Dominican Republic, Herrera signed with the Royals as a non-drafted free agent on December 13, 2006.

GEORGE BRETT HITTER OF THE YEAR

Johnny Giavotella, 24, was hitting .338 with a minor league-leading 153 hits for Triple-A Omaha at the time of his call-up to the Royals on August 5.  The second baseman had 34 doubles, two triples, nine home runs, 72 RBI and 67 runs scored in 110 games for the Storm Chasers.  Giavotella was a starter on the Pacific Coast League All-Star team as well as a part of the 12-member All-PCL Team.  The University of New Orleans alum was the Royals’ second-round selection in the 2008 Draft.

— Royals Media Relations —

Missouri Western names four finalists for Athletic Director opening

Missouri Western State University has named four finalists for the director of athletics position. The finalists include two senior administrators in Big 12 athletic departments, the athletic director at a top NCAA Division II school and a former Western athletic director.

“The search committee had an outstanding pool of more than 80 applicants to choose from,” said Dr. Robert A. Vartabedian, Western’s president. “I think all of our athletes, coaches, alumni and fans will agree that the four finalists are exceedingly well-qualified, and I’m very excited to bring them on campus and get to know them better.”

The four finalists will visit Western’s campus for interviews later this month. The schedule will be announced when it is finalized.
The finalists are:

Mark Alnutt, the senior associate athletic director for administration at the University of Missouri. Alnutt was promoted to that position in 2009, after three years as associate athletic director for administration. In that role, Alnutt provides administrative oversight to the sports of football, track and field, cross country, gymnastics and golf, leads the department’s project management team and has direct oversight of the media relations
office. He also manages postseason travel arrangements for each of MU’s 20 intercollegiate sport programs and handles the scheduling for a number of sports. He has overseen a number of facility improvements, including a $5 million video board project throughout the MU Sports Complex, a $2 million expansion and renovation of Taylor Baseball Stadium, and the current construction of a $5.6 million new Golden Girls/Gymnastics practice facility.
Alnutt spent the previous six years as football’s director of operations. In that role, his duties included coordinating the team’s travel plans, overseeing the football budget, handling compliance issues, scheduling facilities, assisting with recruiting operations and managing the day-to-day operations of the football program.

Alnutt was a three-year letterman for the Tigers as a linebacker and tight end and was voted the team’s Champion of the Year as a senior in 1995. He graduated that year with a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology, and earned his Master of Public Administration with an emphasis in sports psychology in 2000, also at Mizzou.

Alnutt is a volunteer board member and coach with the Columbia Youth Football League. He previously served as the president of the Board of Directors for Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Boone County, and was selected to participate in the 2002-03 NCAA Leadership Institute for Ethnic Minority Males. In June of 2005, he received recognition by Columbia Business Times as one of Columbia’s 40-Under-40 business leaders, for his work in the community. He also participated in the Division I-A Athletic Director’s Institute in July of 2005 and 2007, attended the NACDA Mentoring Institute in June of 2008 and was appointed to the NCAA Women’s Gymnastics committee in December of 2008. In 2010, he received the university’s Barbara S. Uehling Award for Administrative Excellence.

Don Kaverman, the current athletic director at Harris-Stowe University in St. Louis and director of athletics at Western from 1995-1999. In his year at Harris-Stowe, he has led upgrades to athletics’ facilities, including a new basketball floor and soccer and baseball field improvements; developed a Student-Athlete Advisory Committee; worked to improve academic support for at-risk student-athletes; and improved fiscal accountability and communication in the department.

From 1999 to 2009, Kaverman was athletic director at Southeast Missouri State University, an NCAA Division I school in Cape Girardeau, Mo. During his 10 years there, Southeast claimed more than 30 Ohio Valley Conference championships and sent nine teams and numerous individual athletes to NCAA postseason competition. In addition, half of all student-athletes earned a cumulative grade point average exceeding 3.0. Kaverman oversaw almost $5.2 million of capital improvement projects at Southeast.

At Western, Kaverman eliminated a budget deficit in the athletic department, increased funding by more than 35 percent by expanding the corporate sponsorship program and oversaw several capital improvement projects, including new seating for the Looney Arena.
Before his time at Western, Kaverman served as associate director of athletics for business and financial affairs at San Diego State from 1992-1995 and associate director for student-athlete services from 1988-1992. Prior to that, he was head athletic trainer at San Diego State, coordinator of sports medicine at Ferris State University, conditioning coordinator and assistant athletic trainer for the Detroit Lions and assistant athletic trainer at Northwestern University.

Kaverman holds a Bachelor of Arts in Business Administration and a Master of Arts in physical education from Michigan State University.
Active in a number of organizations, Kaverman has served on the NCAA Committee for Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports, chairing the Drug Education/Drug Testing Subcommittee. He is an active member of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics and is the past President for the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Athletic Directors Association. In addition, he served on the NCAA FCS Football Committee and the Division I Football Issues Committee.

Kaverman is the recipient of the 1988 Meritorious Performance and Professional Promise Award from the California State University system and the 1980 Outstanding Young Man in America Award from the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Jeremy McClain, director of athletics at Delta State University in Cleveland, Miss., an athletic department with 13 sports and approximately 350 student-athletes, a position he has held since 2007. He also serves as the executive director of the Green & White Fund, the athletics fundraising arm. McClain helped secure $4.5 million for the first phase of Delta State’s athletic master plan, and secured corporate funding for a $1 million scoreboard/videoboard project. Over two years, corporate sponsorship dollars increased by more than 100 percent. McClain worked with selected architects and engineers on several projects, and negotiated departmental contracts with various providers, including Nike, Cellular South and All-Sport.
Delta State’s student-athletes have been successful in the classroom and in athletic competition. During McClain’s tenure, graduation rates of student-athletes increased from 50 percent to 69 percent. Teams won six Gulf South Conference championships. The Delta State football team competed in the NCAA Division II national championship game last year, and the women’s basketball team made two consecutive Final Four appearances. The school has hosted eight NCAA regional events as well as nine regionally televised and two nationally televised sporting events.

McClain has been a member of NCAA regional football and baseball selection committees and is a member of the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame selection committee. He received the Gen. Robert R. Neyland Outstanding Athletic Director of the Year Award from the All-American Football Foundation in 2010.
Prior to serving as Delta State’s athletic director, McClain was the university’s director of development in 2006 and 2007. He secured more than $250,000 in pledges during his first three months in that position. He previously worked as a marketing representative for Federated Insurance Company in Calhoun, Miss., and as an account executive for the Jackson Senators professional baseball team.

McClain was an All-American baseball player at Delta State, setting many school pitching records that still stand. He was drafted by the Boston Red Sox organization in 1999 and played professional baseball for the next five years, and was named a Central Baseball League all-star three times. He graduated from Delta State with a Bachelor of Business Administration in 1999 and a Master of Business Administration in 2002.

Kurt McGuffin, assistant athletic director/director of athletics development at the University of Colorado-Boulder, a position he’s held since 2010. McGuffin created and implemented a new annual giving program which increased total giving by 15 percent and added more than 600 members in the first year. He assisted with fundraising and development of a new $15 million court sport practice facility.

Prior to his time at Colorado, McGuffin served 10 years in the Kansas State University athletic department. From 2008-2010, he served as senior associate athletic director for external operations. He was the administrator for men’s basketball, men’s and women’s track and field/cross country and men’s and women’s golf. He oversaw all external operations in the department, including development, ticketing, marketing and communication offices. The department completed more than $25 million in facility enhancements.

McGuffin had a role in drawing more fans to Kansas State sporting events. He led marketing campaigns that generated the biggest football opening day crowd in Kansas State’s history and led the sales group that sold out men’s basketball games three out of four years. During his tenure, Kansas State women’s basketball and volleyball were in the top 10 nationally for attendance.

Previously at Kansas State, McGuffin served as associate director of athletics for development from 2005-2008. In that role, he directed the efforts of six fundraisers and four staff members to raise more than $12 million annually. He also oversaw the ticket office, which generated more than $16 million in revenue. McGuffin successfully completed the $90 million athletics department piece of the $500 million “Changing
Lives” university-wide capital campaign, and oversaw a $6.5 million growth in the endowment for athletics.

Also at Kansas State, McGuffin served as assistant director of athletics for annual giving and assistant director of athletic development. He also served as assistant director of athletics for development at the University of Idaho in 1999 and 2000, and as a graduate assistant for fundraising at Wichita State University, director of men’s basketball operations at Eastern Washington University and head men’s basketball student assistant at Kansas State.
McGuffin received his Bachelor of Science in Education from Kansas State in 1996 and his Master of Science in Education from Wichita State in 1999.

— MWSU News Release —

Mizzou hangs on to defeat Miami (OH)

James Franklin’s gut reaction: He flunked his first career start.

“Umm, I probably failed this test today,” Franklin said after No. 21 Missouri’s tougher than expected 17-6 victory over stubborn Miami, Ohio, on Saturday. “I’d say, eh, around a D, maybe.”

As the sophomore quarterback kept talking, he eased up on himself. Although his interception led to Miami of Ohio’s lone score, he did run for one score and passed for the clinching touchdown.

“I just think a win’s a win and it’s something I have to learn to enjoy,” Franklin said. “There’s things that I’m worried about and things that I’m focused on that I didn’t do so well.

“I’ll give it a C-minus, being positive.”

Franklin was 17 for 26 for 129 yards. That was often a half-game under the three quarterbacks who preceded him at Missouri — Blaine Gabbert, Chase Daniel and Brad Smith — all of whom are in the NFL. Coach Gary Pinkel noted that Franklin made some nice throws in the second half, and said there was plenty of room for improvement.

“You grow from adversity,” Pinkel said. “You don’t like going through it, but you grow from it.”

E.J. Gaines had an end zone interception for the Tigers, who whipped the RedHawks by 38 points in their final pre-Big 12 tuneup last season but had their struggles on both sides of the ball in 90-degree heat. Three of their first four possessions ended quickly with punts for an offense that averaged 30 points last season, and Miami moved the ball with some success.

“We played solid overall,” defensive end Brad Madison said. “We made a lot of good stops and it was a satisfactory performance.”

Gaines’ pickoff halted a 67-yard drive near the end of the first half with Missouri up 10-0.

“The momentum shift stuns you,” first-year Miami coach Don Treadwell said. “Kind of like a boxer, you get that uppercut but you don’t go down.”

Missouri hurt itself with 81 yards on nine penalties, and has a short week ahead with the next game Friday night at Arizona State.

“I thought we just made more first-game mistakes than we’ve had for a long time,” Pinkel said. “We have to get better, and we’ve got to do it pretty fast.”

Miami recovered from a 51-13 spanking at Missouri last fall to win the Mid-American Conference, and entered the opener with a six-game winning streak. The RedHawks gave Missouri a scare, trailing 10-6 after Erik Finklea’s 10-yard run late in the third quarter.

“We moved the ball well,” quarterback Zac Dysert said. “We just have to finish, have to score.”

Missouri, which had been around a 20-point favorite, answered on the first play of the fourth quarter. Marcus Lucas’ 10-yard catch was his first college touchdown and in his first start as the fill-in for injured Jerrell Jackson.

Dayonne Nunley’s interception and 5-yard return of Franklin’s overthrown pass gave Miami possession at the Missouri 19 and set up Finklea’s score.

Down by 11, Miami ran out of downs at the Missouri 30 midway through the fourth quarter. Dominique Hamilton recovered quarterback Dysert’s fumble with 1:49 left.

Two Missouri defensive players left with injuries. Linebacker Will Ebner sustained a high left ankle sprain in the first quarter, which could sideline him for a month, and end Jacquies Smith has a dislocated left elbow that’ll keep him out for at least one game.

Miami of Ohio center JoJo Williams left with a slight concussion in the second half.

Franklin’s 5-yard run up the middle capped a 76-yard drive late in the first quarter.

The RedHawks struggled on the kicking game, with Mason Krysinski wide left on a 41-yard field goal attempt in the first half and the extra point kick partially blocked after Finklea’s score. It was the first game for Krysinski, a sophomore.

“Right off the bat, it puts bad thoughts in your head,” Dysert said. “When you miss a field goal, and you have a great kicker, it makes the game a lot different.”

— Associated Press —

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