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MWSU men’s golf in 15th after first round in St. Charles

riggertMissouriWesternST. LOUIS – The Missouri Western men’s golf team shot a 324 in the first round at the Lindenwood Invitational at Missouri Bluffs Golf Course in St. Charles, Missouri.

Patrick McCarthy led the Griffons in the first round with an even par 70.  Jacob Majeske and Kevin Kim both shot an 82.  Jakob Rudosky scored a 90 for MWSU as Lucas Horseman carded a 94 in the first round.

Western is in 15th place after the first round, while Lindenwood lead the team race after shooting a 287.  Central Missouri is in second place and Missouri-St. Louis sits in third.

The second round of play was suspended due to darkness and will resume Tuesday at 8 a.m. followed by the third round.

— MWSU Athletics —

Big 12 presidents decide to pass on expansion

riggertBig12GRAPEVINE, Texas (AP) — The Big 12 Conference has decided against expansion from its current 10 members.

The announcement came after a six-hour meeting Monday with the conference’s university presidents and Commissioner Bob Bowlsby.

The Big 12 has been analyzing expansion options for the last three months, but it never made a commitment to expand.

Conference officials held interviews in September with Air Force and Colorado State from the Mountain West; Central Florida, Cincinnati, Connecticut, Houston, South Florida, SMU and Tulane from the American Athletic Conference; and BYU, which is a football independent with its other sports in the West Coast Conference.

The Big 12 has been tossing around the idea of expansion for almost two years as it tries to find ways to increase revenue and improve the conference’s chances to make the College Football Playoff. The Big 12 was left out of the first CFP in 2014, but conference champion Oklahoma made the playoff last season.

Boren has said the Big 12 was “psychologically disadvantaged” by being the smallest Power Five league and the only one without a football championship game.

This past offseason, expansion talk got fired up again. The Big 12 announced it was bringing back its football championship game in 2017, no matter what its composition. But with only 10 teams, a title game is not a natural fit.

In June, the conference announced record payouts to members of $30 million each, and expansion talk again seemed to fade.

In July, the presidents were briefed by consultants who explained how the conference could increase its playoff chances by adding schools and increase its revenue. The Big 12’s TV contracts call for ESPN and Fox to increase their payouts to the conference so that any new member would be making what the current members are making, which is about $25 million.

It was after that last board meeting that the Big 12 announced the presidents had given Bowlsby the go-ahead to do a deep-dive on expansion and possible candidates. Boren and Bowlsby said the conference would consider adding two or four new members. Or none.

Two new members would mean an extra $50 million in TV revenue per season for the Big 12 on contracts that runs through 2025. And the current members would share the majority of that money at first. TCU and West Virginia joined the Big 12 in 2012, but they did not receive full revenue shares until this year.

The networks have not been keen on the idea of paying the Big 12 to add schools.

“We don’t think expansion in the Big 12 is a good idea for the conference. We think it will be dilutive to the product in the short term. In the long term, it’s probably harmful to the future of the conference,” Fox Sports President Eric Shanks said earlier this month at Sports Media and Technology conference, according to the Sports Business Journal.

The networks could offer the Big 12 a smaller increase in rights fees and possibly an extension on its TV deal for not expanding.

What the conference presidents will decide to do is impossible to predict. Even the athletic directors in the Big 12 are unsure which way this will go.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State keeps suspension of QB Breck Ruddick in effect for remainder of season

riggertMSUSPRINGFIELD – Missouri State University head football coach Dave Steckel announced at a news conference late Monday (Oct. 17) that the suspension of quarterback Breck Ruddick will remain in effect for the remainder of the 2016 season.

Steckel suspended Ruddick and removed him from all team activities after allegations of animal cruelty were brought to light on Sept. 23.

Steckel’s announcement Monday came after an independent University investigation into the matter was completed. According to Steckel, he has also imposed the following conditions for Ruddick’s return to the program next year should he choose to remain at Missouri State:

– Pay full restitution to the victim for veterinary charges and damages to her pet

– Apologize to the team and the University for the embarrassment, pain and the distraction the incident has caused

– Fulfill any municipal and/or legal obligations from the citations issued by Greene County Animal Control

– Comply with any disciplinary action taken by the Office of Student Conduct, which is handled separately and privately between the University and student.

The Missouri State Office of Student Conduct is also reviewing the Ruddick case and will determine its disciplinary actions separately.

“The University and I considered the charges to be serious,” Steckel said. “His admitted actions violate the MSU Student-Athlete Code of Conduct and the Missouri State Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities.

“Our players, our coaches and our staff are focused on playing out our season and representing this university in a positive fashion, as we do every time we take the field. Finding resolution in this matter will help that process and provide closure for all parties to move forward.”

Brodie Lambert, who has been the team’s starting quarterback since week three, is expected to remain Missouri State’s starter for the remainder of the season. The Bears (3-3, 1-2 MVFC) have five games remaining on this’s season slate, including Saturday’s 1 p.m. (CT) conference game at Northern Iowa.

— MSU Athletics —

MIAA hands out weekly football honors

riggertMIAAKansas City, Mo. – Pittsburg State’s John Roderique has been named the MIAA Football Offensive Athletes of the Week. Nebraska-Kearney’s Tyke Kozeal has been named the Defensive Athlete of the Week with Washburn’s Bryce Chavis earning Special Teams Athlete of the Week honors.

MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week
John Roderique, QB, Pittsburg State

Roderique passed for a career high 373 yards and a school record tying five touchdowns to lead Pittsburg State University to a 55-47 road win over Missouri Western State University Saturday (Oct. 15). Roderique completed 22 of 30 passes in the contest, averaging 18.7 yards per completion. He also rushed for 74 yards to compile a career-best 447 yards of total offense. The Gorillas piled up a season-high 659 yards of total offense, nearly doubling the season average allowed by the Griffons defense entering the contest (359.3 ypg). The 6-4 sophomore quarterback is a native of Webb City, Mo. where he competed at Webb City High School prior to redshirting one season at Sam Houston State.

MIAA Football Defensive Athlete of the Week
Tyke Kozeal, LB, Nebraska-Kearney

Kozeal helped end UNK’s 17-game losing streak by making 15 tackles (9 solo), recovering a fumble that led to a field goal and forcing a fumble. He also picked off a pass with 1:44 left and returned it 16 yards for a TD and a final score of 47-32. It marked UNKs six forced turnover of the game. Kozeal now has 541 career tackles, including an NCAA best 111 this year. The 6-0 senior linebacker is a native of Sargent, Neb. where he competed at Sargent High School.

MIAA Football Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Bryce Chavis, RS, Washburn

Returned a Fort Hays State punt 83-yards for a touchdown with 11:41 remaining in the third quarter to put the Ichabod’s up 30-14. He also added four receptions for 101 yards and a 67-yard touchdown catch which put the Ichabod’s up 20-0 with 13:27 to play in the first half. Overall he had 189 all-purpose yards averaging 41.5 yards per punt return on two returns.  The 5-9 senior wide receiver and return specialist is a native of Riley, Kan. where he competed at Riley County High School prior to playing at Butler County Community College.

— MIAA Press Release —

Kansas’ Moos named Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. – Kansas junior punter Cole Moos averaged 50.4 yards per punt in the Jayhawks’ game at Baylor Saturday, Oct. 15, on his way to earning Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week honors, the conference office announced Monday morning.

Moos, a native of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, punted eight times for a total of 403 yards. Four of his punts reached further than 50 yards, including an 82-yarder on his first boot of the day. Moos’ 82-yard punt tied for the fifth-longest in KU history and was the longest punt for a Jayhawk since Curtis Ansel hit an 82-yarder at UNLV on Sept. 7, 2002.

Moos also recorded a 73-yard punt in the third quarter on his way to a 50.4 average on the afternoon, the first 50-plus game average for a KU player since Trevor Pardula averaged 51.8 yards on eight punts at Duke in 2014 (Sept. 4).

Moos is the first Jayhawk to win a conference weekly award since cornerback Dexter McDonald took home the Defensive Player of the Week Award following on Sept. 8, 2014. Pardula was the last KU player to snag a Special Teams Player of the Week Award for KU as he was the winner on Sept. 23, 2013.

Kansas will return to action on Saturday, Oct. 22, when it plays host to Oklahoma State for Homecoming. Kickoff is scheduled for 11 a.m.

— KU Athletics —

Missouri Western soccer upsets No. 21 Northeastern State

MWSUST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s soccer team needed a big win, and they got it on Sunday inside Spratt Memorial Stadium.  Emily Kemp scored her first goal of the season and it gave the Griffons a 1-0 win over No. 21 Northeastern State.

Kemp’s game winner came in the 69th minute. It was all set up by a corner kick from Maddy Cowell. Layne Shepherd’s header off the corner bounced off the Northeastern State goal keeper and Kemp was there to poke it just across the line.

Missouri Western handed Northeastern State just its second loss of the season, the other coming last week to then No. 2 Central Missouri. It was the Griffons first-ever win over Northeastern State and first win over a ranked team in program history.

The Griffons controlled the action through most of the game, outshooting Northeastern State 13-6 and allowing just three shots on goal. Paige LaBadie saved all three of those shots, including one with just seconds remaining in regulation. LaBadie picked up her fourth win of the season and her third shutout.

The win moves Missouri Western to 9-5 on the season, one win shy of the program record for wins in a season with four games remaining in the regular season. Missouri Western stays in St. Joseph next week as they host Washburn on Friday and Emporia State on Sunday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Ware, Smith help lead Chiefs to 26-10 win at Oakland

riggertChiefsOAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — With two weeks to stew over a lopsided loss, the Kansas City Chiefs went back to basics and put together a balanced offense that allowed the running game to shine.

Spencer Ware ran for a career-high 131 yards and a touchdown, Alex Smith picked apart Oakland’s struggling defense and the Kansas City Chiefs shut out Derek Carr and the Raiders in the second half of a 26-10 victory Sunday.

“That’s the game we play,” said defensive lineman Dontari Poe, who got into the act on offense with a TD run of his own.

“You come out sometimes and it doesn’t go your way, but you got to make sure it goes your way the next time. Can’t keep on the downward spiral. You got to get it back up.”

In their first game since getting blown out by 29 points in Pittsburgh two weeks ago, the Chiefs (3-2) efficiently handled a Raiders team that had overcome defensive shortcomings with a big-play offense to lead the AFC West.

Smith completed 19 of 22 passes for 224 yards and the Chiefs forced two turnovers by Carr to dampen a fast start to the season by the Raiders (4-2), who are trying to end a 13-year playoff drought.

“I felt like we did a great job taking our shot today and when we did, hitting them,” Smith said. “But certainly the running game got us going and staying with that. Those guys drove it down in the beginning.”

Marcus Peters set up Ware’s TD run with an early interception of Carr and Dee Ford forced a fumble from Carr in the fourth quarter to end any hopes of a late comeback.

After allowing a touchdown on the opening drive, the Chiefs held the Raiders to one field goal the rest of the way.

“It hurts man,” Carr said. “We didn’t do good enough at all. That was bad. That was a bad performance by us.”

BIG-MAN TD: The 346-pound Poe showed off some versatility. With the Chiefs facing 3rd-and-goal from the 1 in the third quarter, Poe came in as an eligible receiver. He initially lined up in the backfield before shifting out wide right. He then took a lateral from Smith and bulled with way into the end zone for the TD . It was the first TD run by a defensive player since Poe had won last year against San Diego.

“I’m taking credit for that one for all the chubby guys out there,” coach Andy Reid said. “He’s got phenomenal hands. … It’s just a matter of looking it in, be patient and then cut the beast loose.”

WELCOME BACK: After getting only two carries in his first game back from a torn ACL, Jamaal Charles played a bigger role this week. He scored his first TD since Sept. 28, 2015, with a 4-yard run midway through the second quarter. Charles finished with nine carries for 33 yards and two catches for 14 yards.

QUICK TURNAROUND: Just when it looked as if the Chiefs would add on to a 13-7 lead late in the first half, there was a major momentum shift. Spencer Ware was stopped for a 2-yard loss on third-and-1 by Stacy McGee and Cairo Santos missed a 38-yard field goal. The Raiders took over with 25 seconds left and one timeout. But Carr quickly completed three passes for 44 yards and then spiked the ball with 1 second left, setting up a 46-yard field goal by Sebastian Janikowski that cut Kansas City’s lead to 13-10 at the half.

All that momentum was erased when Kansas City took the second-half kickoff and drove down for a touchdown.

“To come out and let them go right down the field to start the second half, that’s a major can’t do,” coach Jack Del Rio said.

HAPPY HOMECOMING: For the second straight year, Peters had an interception in his return to his hometown. Peters left the game for a bit in the second half to go through the concussion protocol, but was cleared and able to return.

FAST START: The Raiders jumped out early, thanks to a 50-yard return of the opening kick by Jalen Richard. Carr completed four of five passes on the ensuing drive, including a 3-yarder to Andre Holmes that made it 7-0 with Oakland’s second first-drive TD of the season. That was about it for highlights for the Raiders as Carr struggled in the rain and wasn’t helped by dropped third-down passes from Seth Roberts and Richard.

— Associated Press —

Northwest soccer gets blanked by Central Oklahoma 3-0

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University soccer team came up short against Central Oklahoma, 3-0, on Sunday at Bearcat Pitch in Maryville, Mo.

– Northwest falls to 4-8-1 on the year and 2-5 in MIAA play. The Broncos improve to 10-3-1 overall and 6-1 in conference action.

– Brooke McCluskey in her first collegiate start had nine saves for the match.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Broncos had 22 shots, with 12 on frame. Northwest had 13 shots, three coming on goal.

– Central Oklahoma scored in the 22nd, 31st and 80th minutes.

– Northwest earned two corner kicks on the afternoon while the Broncos had six.

– Izzy Romano had a team high four shots on the day, two coming on goal.

– Ashley Cole, Rachel Roshek, Cassie Phillips, Annie Poelzl, Elizabeth Finn and Danielle Wolfe added shots on the afternoon.

– The Broncos were whistled for 19 fouls while the Bearcats were called for nine.

Up Next
– Northwest will face Emporia State at 3:00 p.m. on Bearcat Pitch on Friday, Oct. 21.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffons’ rally comes up short in 55-47 loss to Pittsburg State

MWSUST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western football team nearly pulled off a comeback for the ages, but ultimately fell 55-47 to Pittsburg State on Saturday.

The Griffons trailed 55-26 with 13:24 left in the game before rattling off 21 unanswered points, including a 54-yard touchdown pass from Skyler Windmiller to Patrick Bolton with 55 seconds remaining. Pittsburg State recovered an onside kick attempt by Missouri Western and kneeled twice to end the game.

The two teams combined for 1,301 yards of total offense. Pittsburg State’s 659 yards of offense are the most ever allowed by a Griffon Football team, surpassing Minnesota Duluth’s 603 accumulated in a 57-55 three-overtime win for the Griffons in the opening round of the 2012 playoffs. Missouri Western’s 642 total yards of offense were the second most in program history. It was the most points the Griffons had allowed since that 2012 playoff game and the third most all-time.

Missouri Western and Pittsburg State traded blows in the first quarter with the Gorillas outscoring the Griffons 14-12 in the quarter on a missed PAT attempt and a failed two-point conversion by the Griffons. Pittsburg State owned the second quarter, taking a 34-19 lead to halftime then added two more TDs in the third quarter and one early in the fourth to gain the 55-26 lead.

Windmiller rushed it in himself from five yards out with 10:42 to go then Josh Caldwell added his second long touchdown run of the day (52 yards) with 6:38 to go. Then Windmiller dropped a bomb to Bolton who leaped over a Pittsburg State defender in the corner of the end zone to pull the Griffons within eight with just under a minute to go. Sean Galey’s onside kick attempt went right to a Pittsburg State player, effectively ending the game as Missouri Western had used all three of its timeouts.

Caldwell surpassed a career-high rushing total for the second straight week, picking up 188 yards rushing on 23 carries and three touchdowns, which included a 75-yard score and the 52 yarder. The career day put Caldwell at 1,041 yards for the season. Windmiller had a career day as well, throwing for 392 yards and three touchdown passes. He was 17-25 without an interception. Dijuan Ussery finished the game with four catches for 158 yards and a 69-yard touchdown, the longest of his career. Bolton had his best game as a Griffon, hauling in four passes for 119 yards and a touchdown.

Donte Watkins had a career-high 15 tackles for the Griffons, including 12 solo stops. James Huskey added 11 tackles and Tyrell Robision had 10, indluding 1.5 for loss.

The loss dropped Missouri Western to 4-3 on the season. The Griffons travel to Fort Hays State (5-2) who will be coming off a loss to Washburn Saturday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Missouri falls at No. 18 Florida 40-14

riggertMissouriGAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — When Steve Spurrier spoke to No. 18 Florida earlier in the week, he talked about how one player can affect the entire team.

The message stuck with Jalen Tabor, who wanted to be — and was — that guy Saturday.

Tabor and Quincy Wilson returned interceptions for touchdowns, helping No. 18 Florida beat Missouri 40-14 and move into first place in the Southeastern Conference’s Eastern Division.

The cornerback tandem provided nearly as many highlights as either offense and seemingly saved the Gators (5-1, 3-1) from a fourth homecoming loss in the last seven years.

“Anytime you get a defensive score or a non-offensive score, it’s a momentum shift for the whole team,” Tabor said. “I felt like I did that for my team today.”

Tabor, widely considered a first-round pick in the 2017 NFL draft, squatted on a short pass by Drew Lock and went untouched for a 39-yard score in the second quarter. It was Tabor’s second Pick Six in as many years against the Tigers (2-4, 0-3). Not to be outdone, Wilson stepped in front of Sean Culkin on the ensuing possession, picked off Lock’s pass and went 78 yards the other way for his first career touchdown.

“When you’ve got two great corners like that, they’ve got to pick one side of the field,” Gators coach Jim McElwain said. “It’s like pick your poison. Where you going to go with it?”

Florida, at least early, looked like it might need both of them on a rainy day in the Swamp.

Playing for the first time in a month, Luke Del Rio threw three interceptions in his return from a sprained left knee. And the Gators were flagged for eight false starts.

“Knee felt great,” Del Rio said. “Brett Favre said it: Playing injured or hurt is not an excuse for playing poorly. The knee didn’t affect me at all. It was just bad decisions, bad throws.”

Florida’s defense once again bailed out a less-than-sharp offense, which has become an all-too-often occurrence in Gainesville.

Missouri went three-and-out on its first six possessions, and Lock threw for a meager 39 yards. The result was a ninth consecutive conference loss for the Tigers.

“It’s definitely one of the worst feelings as a quarterback when you can’t hold up your end,” Lock said. “It’s on you. You force your defense back out on the field and they can barely get off the field because they’re so tired. We’re out there making them play for 10 minutes at a time and that’s not right.”

Mizzou’s latest loss came after an off week in which coach Barry Odom retooled his defense in hopes of better results. The Tigers allowed 418 yards rushing in a 42-7 loss at LSU two weeks ago.

Florida finished with 523 yards.

“They took advantage of mistakes we made, and that’s what good teams do,” Odom said.

Tabor and Wilson have done that before and surely will again.

“It’s like a domino effect with those guys,” Florida defensive tackle CeCe Jefferson said. “If one gets one, the other’s guaranteed to get one. That was big, man. That was big. It definitely changed the momentum of the game. We were definitely rolling from there.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Missouri: The Tigers will surely face more questions about an inept offense and a run-porous defense that has struggled to adjust to a new scheme.

Florida: Despite losing to rival Tennessee last month, the Gators now control their fate in the SEC East. But to win the division for the second consecutive year, Florida probably will need to beat Georgia, Arkansas, South Carolina and LSU in consecutive weeks down the stretch.

KEY INJURY

Florida linebacker Jarrad Davis, the team’s leading tackler, injured his left ankle in the third quarter and had to be helped off the field. McElwain said Davis was getting tests to determine the severity, but said it was not broken.

FOLEY’S FINALE

McElwain gave the game ball to retiring athletic director Jeremy Foley. It was Foley’s final game at Florida Field. He officially steps down Nov. 1.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Florida should move up a few spots in the next AP poll . The Gators topped 500 yards for the second time this season and would have enjoyed an even easier time had it not been for four turnovers.

UP NEXT

Missouri: Hosts Middle Tennessee next Saturday. The Tigers won the only other meeting, 41-40 in overtime in 2003.

Florida: Gets another off week before playing rival Georgia in nearby Jacksonville. The Gators have won 20 of the last 26 in the series.

— Associated Press —

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