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Northwest Missouri State to honor Mel & Carol Tjeerdsma

Northwest Missouri State University will honor its recently retired Bearcat football coach and his wife in September during Mel and Carol Tjeerdsma Day.

“We are excited to have the opportunity to honor Mel, Carol and the Tjeerdsma family,” Northwest Director of Athletics Wren Baker said. “The Tjeerdsma family has made many contributions to this institution, athletic department and the Maryville community. We know the campus and community will enjoy having the opportunity to say ‘thank you’ to two of our most dedicated Bearcats.”

The two-day celebration begins Friday, Sept. 9, with a reception, dinner and tribute. The reception begins at 6 p.m. in the Lamkin Activity Center foyer; the dinner and tribute begins at 7 p.m. in Bearcat Arena.

The cost for the Friday evening events is $100 per person. Private reserved tables of eight are available for $800, and private reserved tables of 10 are available for $1,000. Proceeds benefit the Coach T Student-Athlete Success Program, which improves academic and life enrichment opportunities for Northwest student-athletes. Dress is casual, Bearcat attire.

The registration deadline for the event is Wednesday, Aug. 17. Register by going to www.nwmissouri.edu/alumni/events/tjeerdsmaday/dinner.htm or calling 660.562.1248.

Patrons who cannot attend the event but wish to contribute to the Coach T Student-Athlete Success Program may go to www.nwmissouri.edu/alumni/giving/forms/coacht.htm.

A series of events also will take place in the Tjeerdsmas’ honor Saturday, Sept 10, coinciding with the Bearcat football team’s home opener against the University of Sioux Falls. Kickoff is 6 p.m. at Bearcat Stadium.

Former Bearcat football players are invited to a reunion from 10 a.m. to noon on the Gaunt House lawn. The event is by invitation only. Players may register by going to www.nwmissouri.edu/alumni/events/tjeerdsmaday/reunion.htm.

The day continues with Bearcat Zone festivities honoring the Tjeerdsmas from 4 to 6 p.m. at College Park. The celebration will include free mini posters to be autographed by Coach Tjeerdsma, collectible bobbleheads of Coach Tjeerdsma for purchase, tailgate food for purchase, and performances by the Bearcat Marching Band, Northwest Steppers and Cheer Squad.

The Tjeerdsmas also will be recognized at the football game. Fans may purchase tickets online by visiting www.northwestbearcats.com and finding ticket information in the drop-down menu under “game day” or by contacting the Student Services Center at 660.562.1212. Individual game tickets go on sale Monday, Aug. 22.

Fans also may leave special messages for Mel and Carol Tjeerdsma using an online form at www.nwmissouri.edu/alumni/events/tjeerdsmaday/message.htm. Messages will be compiled and presented to the Tjeerdsmas during the celebration.

For more information about the events, call Brenda Untiedt at 660.562.1248.

Mel Tjeerdsma, who retired in December 2010 after coaching the Bearcats for 17 seasons, elevated the Northwest football program to one of the greatest in the history of Division II.

Under his leadership, the Bearcats won back-to-back national championships in 1998 and 1999. Northwest added a third championship in 2009, capping an unprecedented run of five national championship game appearances that began in 2005.

Among his peers in Division II, Tjeerdsma’s 242 victories are third on the active wins list when he retired, and he tallied more postseason victories than any other coach in Division II history. He led Northwest to the playoffs 13 times in the last 15 seasons, sporting a 32-10 overall postseason record and is the program’s all-time winningest coach.

From 1996 to his last season in 2010, Tjeerdsma’s teams won 12 conference championships, and 10 of those teams finished 9-0 in league play. Northwest won 41 consecutive conference games from 1997-2001, a record that stood until his squad surpassed it in 2010.

Tjeerdsma was the Liberty Mutual Division II National Coach of the Year in 2009 and was among the first three coaches inducted into the NCAA Division II College Football Hall of Fame in 2010. He is a 12-time MIAA Coach of the Year honoree and was inducted into the MIAA Hall of Fame in June.

Carol Tjeerdsma retired from Northwest in June as instructor of curriculum and instruction. After arriving at Northwest with her husband in 1994, she became an integral part of the Department of Curriculum and Instruction, teaching special education and general education courses. She was chair of the College of Education and Human Services’ Diversity Team, coordinated volunteer projects and served on the board of directors for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Nodaway County.

— NWMSU Press Release —

Cardinals trade Rasmus to Toronto

With Major League Baseball’s non-waiver deadline approaching this Sunday, July 31, the St. Louis Cardinals today announced a multi-player trade with the Toronto Blue Jays.

The Cardinals have acquired right handed pitcher Edwin Jackson, right handed reliever Octavio Dotel, left handed reliever Marc Rzepczynski (pronounced Zep-CHIN-ski), outfielder Corey Patterson and three players to be named later or cash considerations.   St. Louis sends outfielder Colby Rasmus, pitchers P.J. Walters, Trever Miller and Brian Tallet to Toronto.   The Jays acquired Jackson earlier today in a deal with the Chicago White Sox.

“We feel that this deal strengthens us in a number of key areas,” said Cardinals’ Senior Vice President/ General Manager John Mozeliak.  “Trades of this nature are never easy to make, but we felt that it was important to solidify a number of areas on our ball club to better position ourselves for what looks to be a highly competitive divisional race.”

Jackson, 27, was 7-7 with a 3.92 ERA for the White Sox this season.  He’s compiled a career mark of 55-58 with a 4.53 ERA, winning 14 games in 2008 for Tampa Bay and 13 games in 2009 for Detroit.  He threw a no-hitter for Arizona on June 25, 2010 at Tampa Bay.

Rzepczynski, 25, was 2-3 with a 2.97 ERA and 10 Holds for Toronto this season and he has been used as both a reliever and starter since debuting with Toronto in 2009.

Dotel, 37, had a 2-1 mark, one save, four Holds and a 3.68 ERA in 36 games for the Jays this season and he has 106 career saves, combining for a career-high 36 in 2004 with Houston and Oakland.

Patterson, 31, was batting .252 this year with 6 homers, 33 RBI and 13 steals.  His career marks include a .253 BA with 118 HR’s, 428 RBI and 218 steals.  Patterson hit a career-high 24 homers for the Cubs in 2004 and he swiped a career-best 45 steals for Baltimore in 2006.

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Nielson joins Northwest as Associate Athletic Director for External Affairs

Northwest Missouri State University announces the hiring of Scott Nielson as its associate athletic director for external affairs. He will be responsible for coordinating the external affairs of the Department of Athletics including development, marketing and media relations.

Nielson earned his bachelor’s degree in public relations from Northwest in 2001 and has worked in various capacities within the University of Missouri-Columbia’s athletics department since 2003.

“We are excited to have someone of Scott’s caliber come on board,” Northwest Director of Athletics Wren Baker said. “We are making a lot of changes with the external side of our athletic department and getting someone with Scott’s knowledge and experience will help us improve the way we do business and increase the customer service we provide our fans. It is always good to welcome a Bearcat back home.”

“I would like to thank Wren Baker, the Northwest athletics department and the entire University for this chance to come back home,” Nielson said. “Northwest is a very special place to me, and I’m excited for this opportunity. I look forward to working hard to contribute to the overall success of Bearcat athletics and being part of the Northwest community once again.”

At the University of Missouri, Nielson began as a marketing associate and was promoted to assistant director of marketing in 2005. He became director of marketing in 2009 and was responsible for game presentation, formulating marketing plans, negotiating advertising agreements and assessing customer needs, among other duties.

In his new role at Northwest, Nielson’s primary emphasis will be on developing and cultivating donors and supporters for the athletic department. He will supervise the assistant athletic director for media relations and communications and the assistant athletic director for marketing, licensing and promotions.

— NWMSU Press Release —

Royals get blown out at Boston

David Ortiz had four hits and five RBIs, and Dustin Pedroia had four of Boston’s 16 hits Tuesday night to lead the Red Sox to a 13-9 victory over the Kansas City Royals, their 18th win in 22 games.

Hours after the teams took a 1-1 pitcher’s duel into the 14th inning and finished up at 1:59 a.m., they combined for 31 hits and 22 runs against nine pitchers — including Royals outfielder Mitch Maier, who threw a scoreless inning.

Alfredo Aceves (6-1) threw 3 1/3 scoreless innings in relief to improve to 20-2 in his career. Nathan Adcock (1-1) got just one out for the Royals, allowing three earned runs, three hits and three walks as Boston scored six times in the fifth inning to turn a back-and-forth game into a blowout.

— Associated Press —

Northwest football adds seven transfers for 2011

Northwest Missouri State Head Coach Adam Dorrel has announced the addition of seven transfers on Tuesday for the upcoming 2011 football season including four members from former MIAA member Nebraska-Omaha.

“We have seven guys that can come in and contribute right away,” said Dorrel.  “It’s been a great summer and have new guys coming in and doing everything that is asked of them.  We are also adding a group of players that are proven at the Division II level and in the MIAA.”

In total the Bearcats have added five Division II transfers and two junior college transfers.

A trio of offensive players from UNO include: Brian Miller (WR), John Becklon (OL), and James Franklin (RB), and Jerry Key (CB) on the defensive side of the ball.  Also from Division II Texas A&M-Kingsville is Derrick Thomas (CB) who played against the Bearcats twice last season.  Rounding out the group is Jon Gregg (TE) from Monterey Peninsula Junior College and Travis Chappelear (DE) who played one season at Missouri State.

“We really believe we added seven guys who fit our system,” said Dorrel, who enters his first season at the helm after replacing the late Scott Bostwick who passed on June 5. “The men we have brought in have done a good job and worked hard this summer.  They all are fitting in well and buying into what Northwest football is all about.”

Thomas was a second-team all-Lone Star Conference selection at cornerback for the Javelinas and and brings a physical style of play to the Bearcat secondary.  The San Antonio native started in all 12 games in 2010 including two match-ups with Northwest.

“Derrick is a special player and to have him in our secondary we fortunate,” Dorrel said.  “He has lockdown corner ability and has proven he can compete at a high level in Division II.”

Brian Miller is a speedy receiver from UNO who was second in receiving with 476 yards.  A Kansas City product, Miller caught 26 passes and averaged 18.3 yards per catch for the Mavericks in his sophomore season.

John Becklun also comes from Nebraska-Omaha where he saw limited action in four games as a redshirt freshman.  Running back James Franklin also joins Beckun and Miller in the green and white after earning honorable mention all-MIAA honors as a true freshman.  Franklin was the second leading rusher for the Mavericks in his only season carrying the ball 158 times for over 820 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Jerry Key also joins the Bearcats from UNO as a corner back playing in 10 games in one season for the Mavericks.  Key brings even more talent to the Northwest secondary and could be a valuable asset on special teams.

“The men from UNO are all proven players in the MIAA,” said Dorrel.  “All four can contribute right away.  Brian (Miller) is a big tall receiver with great hands that we had tried to recruit out of Parkhill High School in Kansas City, so we’re happy to finally get him back on campus.  John has great foot speed and brings flexibility to the offensive line being able to play either guard or center.  James Franklin is also going to be a great fit in our offense where we can get him the ball a number of ways.  He has great vision in the open field and along with Jerry Key’s talent they will both find a spot on the field on Saturdays.”

Dorrel also added a pair of ends on each side of the ball in Jon Gregg, a tight end from Monterey Peninsula Junior College.  Travis Chappelear will join the Bearcats on the defensive side of the ball at defensive end and nose guard after playing one season at Missouri State.

“Jon has been working hard and has great hands and is a former basketball player converted tight end fitting the mold for a number of ends in today’s game,” Dorrel said.  “Chappelear will also bring some great versatility to the defensive line where he has played nose guard and at the end positions which is a rare trait.”

The Bearcats report on August 10th with the first fall practice starting Thursday August 11th.  Head Coach Dorrel and the Bearcats will close out fall camp on the 25th with a scrimmage open to the public followed by Meet the Bearcats Night before opening the Season on September 1 at Truman State.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Pujols, Westbrook lead Cardinals past Houston

Albert Pujols got the St. Louis Cardinals off to a quick start with a two-run first inning homer and starter Jake Westbrook made it hold up with six innings of one-run ball as the Cardinals defeated the slumping Houston Astros 3-1 on Tuesday night.

Pujols hit the first pitch he saw from Houston starter Brett Myers on a line to left center field. The ball appeared to hit the top of the wall but was ruled a home run by third-base umpire Mike DiMuro. Houston center fielder Michael Bourn and left fielder Carlos Lee rushed in to dispute the call, which was subsequently reviewed by replay and upheld for Pujols’ 23rd homer.

It was the third time in the last six games that Pujols has homered in the first inning.

David Freese later cleared the fence with ease on an opposite field shot for the Cardinals, who have won five of six.

The Astros are going in the other direction. Houston fell to 0-5 on its season-long 10-game road trip and 0-4 at Busch Stadium.

Lee had an RBI single in the third for Houston’s only run. He drove in Bourn, who had doubled to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.

Houston had plenty of chances against Westbrook (9-4), who allowed seven hits and a walk in his six innings. But the Astros went 2-for-17 with runners on base and 1-for-11 with runners in scoring position.

Fernando Salas struck out the side in the ninth for his 19th save in 22 opportunities.

Myers (3-11) settled down after the Pujols’ blast, allowing just Freese’s solo shot with two-out in the sixth. He gave up 11 hits but just the three runs with no walks and four strikeouts in eight innings of work while falling to 0-4 in the month of July.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs report to Missouri Western Thursday; first practice Friday at 3:30

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Tuesday they’ll report to Missouri Western State University for their 2011 training camp on Thursday and begin practicing Friday afternoon.

Players will meet as a group in Kansas City Thursday afternoon and then drive to St. Joseph to report and check-in at Scanlon Hall at MWSU.

The first practice will be Friday at 3:30 p.m., and they’ll also practice at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.  All outdoor practices in St. Joe will be open to the public.

Family Fun Day is tentatively scheduled for August 6 and Chiefs’ President Mark Donovan said Tuesday that there will be multiple night practices during their time at Missouri Western.

Click here for a map of training camp at Missouri Western.

Royals outlast Red Sox in 14 innings

The Boston Red Sox botched a suicide squeeze in extra innings and gave Kansas City another chance to win. The Royals messed up their squeeze attempt, too, and still managed to score the game-winning run.

Eric Hosmer doubled to lead off the 14th inning and scored when Mike Aviles bunted the ball over the head of charging first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, giving Kansas City a 3-1 victory over Boston on Monday night. The play was supposed to be a safety squeeze but Hosmer and Jeff Francoeur, who was on first, mistakenly ran on the pitch.

“I wasn’t supposed to be running. Hosmer wasn’t supposed to break. We all kind of messed up, but it worked out,” Francoeur said. “It could have been a triple play.”

Louis Coleman (1-2) went two innings and twice pitched out of jams for the win. Joakim Soria struck out three in the bottom of the 14th to earn his 18th save and send Boston to just its fourth loss in 21 games.

The Red Sox threatened to score five times in the last six innings, but the Royals made their best chance count. Hosmer doubled off Randy Williams (0-1) to start the 14th, but he was held at third when Francoeur singled.

Aviles came to the plate and squared to bunt as the runners took off and the corner infielders charged in. He popped it up but it landed safely behind Gonzalez and out of the reach of second baseman Dustin Pedroia, who was moving over to cover first.

Hosmer scored, and Francoeur came home on a sacrifice fly by Alcides Escobar to make it 3-1.

“We caught a break,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “If Frenchie (Francoeur) doesn’t break — and he wasn’t supposed to — Gonzalez doesn’t break. We finally got to run the play we don’t have much time to practice — we bunt over the first baseman’s head with runners running.”

The Red Sox kept it interesting when Josh Reddick doubled — his third hit of the game — with one out in the bottom of the 14th. But Soria struck out Jarrod Saltalamacchia and then Marco Scutaro to end it — thanks in part to a pregame rain delay of 2 hours, 21 minutes — at 1:59 a.m. Tuesday.

Melky Cabrera had four hits and Hosmer had three for the Royals, who won for the fifth time in six games. It was their 10th extra-inning victory — most in the AL, according to STATS Inc.

The Red Sox had their chances.

Reddick singled to lead off the 12th and then, with one out, took two bases on an errant pickoff throw. But he was hung up between third and home after Scutaro never squared around to bunt on the suicide squeeze that had been called.

“I just didn’t see the sign,” Scutaro said. “My fault. I didn’t see the sign.”

Scutaro then lined a hit to left and was thrown out trying to stretch it into a double. In the 13th, Jacoby Ellsbury drew a leadoff walk and, one out later, Gonzalez hit a sinking liner that bounced under Francoeur’s glove as he came in for it; only his leg kept it from going off the wall. Ellsbury wound up at third, and Gonzalez at first.

Again, Coleman pitched out of it. The fifth of six Kansas City pitchers, he went two innings and allowed three hits and a walk.

“I would say right about now they’re probably kicking themselves because they missed a lot of chances,” Francoeur said.

Jon Lester made his first start since July 5, when he left a no-hitter after four innings with a strained muscle in his back, and pitched 5 1/3 strong innings. He shut out the Royals until Cabrera led off the sixth with a single and scored to make it 1-1 when Billy Butler’s double rattled around in the left-field corner.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals clobber Houston in series opener Monday

Known for his game-managing and defensive skills, Yadier Molina made another statement with his bat.

The St. Louis Cardinals’ slow-footed catcher was a triple shy of the cycle for the second time in three games and homered for the third straight game, helping Kyle McClellan end an eight-game victory drought in the Cardinals’ 10-5 win over the Houston Astros on Monday night.

Molina has eight three-hit games, tied for the major league lead at his position. After getting a rare day off, he doubled in the second, homered in the fourth and hit an RBI single in the fifth. He didn’t play Sunday and has three days off this month.

“Sometimes it helps,” Molina said. “This heat can wear you out, and sometimes you take a day off, you feel good the next day.”

Trailing 8-1, Carlos Lee made it interesting with his 16th career grand slam in the eighth off P.J. Walters, cutting the gap to three runs before St. Louis answered with two runs. He’s tied for ninth on the career list with Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron and Dave Kingman and second on the active list, trailing only Alex Rodriguez’s 21.

Lee is 2 for 2 against Walters, both grand slams, also connecting on July 21, 2009 in Houston.

“I didn’t know that. For real?” Lee said. “That’s crazy, but that’s the game.”

The Astros’ Hunter Pence suffered his second fielding gaffe in as many games, handing Nick Punto a gift RBI triple in the second after misjudging a routine fly, appearing to lose the ball in the lights and then stumbling. It wasn’t clear whether new turf, replaced after a U2 concert eight days earlier, played a role.

“We’ll deal with it,” manager Brad Mills said. “We’re not thrilled with it. You want the sure footing and so forth but it wasn’t there. And it cost us a little bit.”

Center fielder Michael Bourn also wasn’t happy, saying he had some slips.

“I didn’t have a clue,” Bourn said. “It’s hard to keep your feet under you.”

La Russa said there were no complaints from his players. Center fielder Colby Rasmus made one of the top plays, going airborne to rob Jose Altuve of extra bases to end the eighth.

“It was definitely playable,” La Russa said. “Too often it happens in the second half of the season, whether you have a concert or not, it’s hot and it’s hard.”

Rasmus, the Cardinals’ player mentioned most in rumors heading into the trade deadline, homered for the second straight day with three RBIs.

Molina has three career triples in 897 career at-bats and missed his only shot for the cycle when he took a called third strike from Mark Melancon in the eighth. He’s 6 for 12 with two homers and five RBIs his last three games and his eighth homer, matching his career single-season best from 2005, came in the fourth off J.A. Happ (4-12).

Four of Molina’s homers have come this month.

McClellan (7-6) was the first National League pitcher to get to six victories after working eight strong innings in a 4-2 victory over the Astros at home on May 19 and finally made it to No. 7 after working seven strong innings. The right-hander had been 0-4 with a 5.48 ERA the previous seven starts, all St. Louis losses.

The first-year starter allowed one run on six hits and walked none and has won all three of his outings against the Astros.

“You keep your mindset the same if you’re winning every time out or losing every time out,” McClellan said. “I don’t feel like I went out and pitched terrible for two months.”

Happ surrendered five or more runs for the sixth straight start, and has given up five or more runs in half of his eight career starts against the Cardinals. He’s lost all four starts against St. Louis this year and is 1-7 with a 8.02 ERA on the road this season.

“He was throwing a lot more strikes and that’s definitely moving in the right direction,” Mills said.

Pence leads the National League with nine assists and was the Astros’ lone All-Star, but has struggled lately.

On Sunday, Pence said he was blinded by the sun on Marlon Byrd’s leadoff triple, which should have been a routine play, in the 10th inning of the Cubs’ 5-4 victory. He came in on Punto’s fly ball, then appeared blinded by lights on a hit that put St. Louis up 2-1.

In the eighth, Pence apparently believed he had caught Ryan Theriot’s fly ball for the third out, running several steps before finally throwing late to third as Punto took the extra base.

Punto scored on what appeared to be a busted squeeze play, and was halfway down the line when McClellan swung away and grounded out to second for an RBI that made it 3-1.

“I thought it was a hit and run, right?” McClellan joked. La Russa said the RBI “just reduces the fine a little bit.”

The Astros have lost four in a row and are a major-league worst 33-69, going 10-35 since June 2. A bright spot was rookie Altuve, who had three hits and has hit safely in all five career starts.

The 21-year-old Altuve began the year at Class A Lancaster and at the time of his callup led all minor leaguers with a .389 average.

— Associated Press —

Big 12 announces new branding campaign

The Big 12 Conference, in conjunction with its football media days in Dallas, has announced a new branding and imaging campaign to debut with the start of the 2011 season.

The campaign will focus on “How We Play” in the Big 12 and highlight the core purpose of the Conference.  Its primary attention will be on three features of the league that make it unique – fierce rivalries, heartland values and one true champion.

“How We Play will showcase the strengths and uniqueness of Big 12 membership as we move forward into our bright and stable future,” said Commissioner Dan Beebe.  “It will allow us to continue our place as one of the nation’s premier intercollegiate athletic conferences.”

The initiative highlights the rivalries among Big 12 institutions and the fact they will only intensify by playing every team on an annual basis.  A second component focuses on the heartland values of middle America – competitiveness, integrity, mutual respect, and the value of education.  The third point stresses that with full round-robin scheduling, the Big 12 will crown one true champion.

“The extensive research we conducted on behalf of the Big 12 uncovered attributes of the conference that make it unique and special,” said Jeff Orth, Account Director at GSD&M, the company working with the Big 12 on the campaign.  “This campaign is going to promote those attributes, and we look forward to showcasing all facets as we enter the fall seasons.”

— Big12Sports.com —

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