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Missouri football players boycott in protest of president

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Student protests over racial incidents on the University of Missouri campus escalated over the weekend when at least 30 black football players announced they will not participate in team activities until the school’s president is removed.

President Tim Wolfe gave no indication he has any intention of stepping down, but agreed in a statement Sunday that “change is needed” and said the university is working to draw up a plan by April to promote diversity and tolerance.

For months, black student groups have complained of racial slurs and other slights on the overwhelmingly white, 35,000-student campus. Their frustrations flared during the homecoming parade Oct. 10 when black protesters blocked Wolfe’s car and he would not get out and talk to them. They were removed by police.

On Saturday night, black members of the football team joined the outcry.

The athletes did not say explicitly whether they would boycott the team’s three remaining games this season. The Tigers’ next game is Saturday against BYU at Arrowhead Stadium, the home of the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs, and canceling it could cost the school more than $1 million.

“The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe ‘Injustice Anywhere is a threat to Justice Everywhere,'” the players said in a statement. “We will no longer participate in any football related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students’ experience. WE ARE UNITED!!!!!”

Head football coach Gary Pinkel expressed solidarity with the black players on Twitter by posting a picture of the team and coaches locking arms. The tweet read: “The Mizzou Family stands as one. We are united. We are behind our players.”

Practice and other team activities were cancelled on Sunday, Pinkel and Missouri athletic director Mack Rhoades said in a joint statement. The statement linked the return of the protesting football players to the end of a hunger strike by a black graduate student who has vowed to not eat until Wolfe is gone.

“Our focus right now is on the health of Jonathan Butler, the concerns of our student-athletes and working with our community to address this serious issue,” the statement said.

Missouri won the SEC East title in 2013 and 2014 but is unranked this year with a 4-5 record.

The protests at the campus began after the student government president, who is black, said in September that people in a passing pickup truck shouted racial slurs at him. Days before the homecoming parade, members of a black student organization said slurs were hurled at them by an apparently drunken white student.

Also, a swastika drawn in feces was found recently in a dormitory bathroom.

Butler, who participated in the homecoming parade protest, began his hunger strike on Nov. 2 to call attention to racial problems at the state’s flagship university.

Many of the protests have been led by an organization called Concerned Student 1950, which gets its name from the year the university accepted its first black student. Its members besieged Wolfe’s car at homecoming last month, and they have been conducting a sit-in on a campus plaza since last Monday.

The organization has demanded among other things that Wolfe “acknowledge his white male privilege,” that he be removed immediately, and that the school adopt a mandatory racial-awareness program and hire more black faculty and staff.

One of the sit-in participants, Abigail Hollis, a black undergraduate, said the campus is “unhealthy and unsafe for us.”

“The way white students are treated is in stark contrast to the way black students and other marginalized students are treated, and it’s time to stop that,” Hollis said. “It’s 2015.”

She said Wolfe has shown “much more of a lack of concern and much more of a lack of understanding for us” than other administrators.

On Sunday, Wolfe said most of the 1950 group’s demands have already been incorporated into the university’s draft plan for promoting tolerance.

“It is clear to all of us that change is needed,” he said.

Already, at Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin’s request, the university announced plans to require diversity training for all new students starting in January, along with faculty and staff.

Late Sunday, the university system’s governing body, the Board of Curators, announced a special meeting had been set for Monday. A statement indicated part of the meeting will be closed to the public. A system spokesman didn’t immediately respond to questions about the meeting’s agenda.

Wolfe, 56, is a former software executive and Missouri business school graduate whose father taught at the university. He was hired in 2011 as president of a four-campus system that includes Columbia, succeeding another former business executive who also lacked experience in academia.

The campus in Columbia is about 120 miles west of Ferguson, the St. Louis suburb where tensions erupted over the shooting death of unarmed black 18-year-old Michael Brown last year by a white police officer.

The school’s undergraduate population is 79 percent white and 8 percent black. The state is about 83 percent white and nearly 12 percent black.

It’s the latest controversy at the university in recent months, following the suspension of graduate students’ health care subsidies and an end to university contracts with a Planned Parenthood clinic that performs abortions.

Two graduate student groups have called for walkouts by graduate student workers on Monday and Tuesday in solidarity with the protesters.

Two years ago, Pinkel and his team made headlines after defensive end Michael Sam came out as gay. Sam came out to his teammates and coaches before the 2013 season, and they agreed to keep his secret until he was ready to go public.

— Associated Press —

Griffons run past Nebraska-Kearney to snap three-game skid

MWSUKEARNEY, Neb. – The Missouri Western football team rushed for 387 yards and got career-high games from two running backs in a 34-17 at Nebraska-Kearney that snapped a three-game losing streak for Missouri Western.

It was the team’s first 300 yard rushing game since 2013. Raphael Spencer rushed 31 times for a career-high 251 yards with two touchdowns. The senior also moved over 1,000 rush yards on the season for the third year in a row. Spencer now has 4,106 career rushing yards. Josh Caldwell rushed 19 times for 153 yards and two touchdowns himself, also a career-high. The Griffons could have been well over 400 yards on the ground were it not for 23 yards lost on two sacks of Skyler Windmiller.

On the other side of the ball the Griffon defense held Nebraska-Kearney 25 yards rushing on 28 carries. The defense did give up 254 passing yards to the Lopers and two touchdowns that kept Nebraska-Kearney in the game for several stretches. Yomi Alli came one tackle short of having a fifth-straight double-digit tackling game, finishing with nine tackles in the game. Michael Jordan picked off his fifth pass of the season and had a tackle for loss, playing most of the game at safety for the injured Donte Watkins.

The win moved the Griffons to 5-5 on the season. Missouri Western will host Missouri Southern next Saturday in Senior Day at Spratt Stadium. The game begins at 11 a.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

MWSU volleyball loses in three sets at No. 12 UNK

riggertMissouriWesternKEARNEY, Neb. – Without the team’s top offensive weapon, the Missouri Western volleyball team fell in three sets at No. 12 Nebraska-Kearney Saturday night.

Jessie Thorup did not play due to an injury suffered in Friday night’s win at Fort Hays State. The loss dropped Missouri Western to 20-7 on the season and 11-4 in MIAA play. The Griffons will host Northwest Missouri State and nationally ranked Central Missouri next week in the teams’ final two home games of the 2015 regular season.

Down two sets to none and facing game point in the third set, Missouri Western scored three straight points to take a 25-24 lead but UNK scored the next two to take the match in three sets. Missouri Western hit .189 on the night with 18 attack errors and had a 53 sideout percentage. Meanwhile, UNK hit .330 in the match with a 72 percent sideout percentage.

Shellby Taylor led the Griffons with nine kills as she hit .348. Ashley Mainord and Rachel Friedrichs each had eight kills with Friedrichs hitting .500 for the match and adding two blocks. Kayla Ruff’s 16 digs were most on the team and Jordan Chohon paced the Griffons with 34 assists.

Missouri Western will play on Tuesday and Thursday night next week in the fieldhouse, hosting Northwest on the 10th at 7 p.m. and Central Missouri on the 12th at 7 p.m. Nov. 12, the team will honor seniors Jessie Thorup, Jordan Chohon and Lindsey Partridge.

— MWSU Athletics —

Nebraska rallies to upset No. 7 Michigan State

riggertNebraskaLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — This time one went Nebraska’s way.

Tommy Armstrong drove Nebraska 91 yards in the final minute, hitting Brandon Reilly with a 30-yard touchdown pass that survived a video review with 17 seconds left to hand Michigan State (No. 7 CFP, No. 6 AP) a 39-38 loss that likely will ruin the Spartans’ playoff hopes.

Armstrong rallied the Cornhuskers from 12 points down in the last 4 1/2 minutes. He scored on a short touchdown with 1:47 left to make it 38-33. After Michigan State (8-1, 4-1 Big Ten, No. 7 CFP) went three-and-out, he led the drive that defines his career so far.

Starting at his own 9, he hit Jordan Westerkamp for passes of 28 and 33 yards. Two plays later, he found Reilly for the winning score. Reilly went out of bounds and came back in to make the catch, but officials ruled it was legal because cornerback Jermaine Edmondson forced him out.

The Spartans got a final chance, but Connor Cook passed out of bounds from the Nebraska 41 as time ran out.

Nebraska’s sideline cleared, a season full of pent-up frustration playing out with players and coaches at midfield dancing as the music blared. The Spartans walked slowly toward their locker room. The Huskers (4-6, 2-4) kept partying on the field.

The win came at the end of a tumultuous week that followed a 55-45 loss at Purdue that gave Nebraska its worst nine-game record since 1960. On Monday, athletic director Shawn Eichorst responded to fan angst by giving first-year coach Mike Riley a vote of confidence. Two days later, Nebraska chancellor Harvey Perlman voiced his support for Riley, who took over this year for Bo Pelini, who never won fewer than nine games in his seven seasons.

The first five of the hard-luck Huskers’ six losses came by a total of 13 points, with the initial one against BYU coming by way of a Hail Mary.

The Huskers played strong throughout against the Spartans, but it didn’t look as if it would be enough. Cook matched his career high with four touchdown passes and Michigan State used a drive that lasted almost 9 minutes of the fourth quarter to go up 12 points.

The Huskers weren’t done.

Riley had a knack for upsetting top-10 opponents over his 14 years at Oregon State, and he said on Thursday that he thought the Huskers had a good chance to beat Michigan State. It was the first time an unranked Nebraska team beat a top-10 opponent at home since 1977.

Imani Cross ran 18 times for 98 yards, and Armstrong completed 19 of 33 passes for 320 yards. He ran for two touchdowns and passed for two.

Cook completed 22 of 35 passes for 318 yards and Holmes ran 20 times for 115 yards. His four TD passes gave him a school-record 68 for his career, two more than Kirk Cousins had from 2008-11.

The Spartans had not been overly sharp in their 8-0 start, and Nebraska put an end to their 12-game win streak in dramatic fashion.

— Associated Press —

Bearcat volleyball falls at Fort Hays State 3-2

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State volleyball team dropped a tough five-set match against Fort Hays State Saturday afternoon in Hays, Kan.

The loss drops the Bearcats to 15-10 this season and 8-7 against conference opponents, while the Tigers improve to 19-12 overall and 8-8 in the MIAA.

Freshman Maddy Bruder led Northwest with 14 kills and added 13 digs and two block assists on defense, while Sofia Schleppenbach picked up seven block assists to go along with 11 kills, hitting .308 for the match.

Down a set and after a Fort Hays block, Northwest trailed 20-18 late in the second set. A Tiger service error returned serve to the Bearcats. Two straight blocks from Sofia Schleppenbach and Jackie Becker put the Bearcats in front 21-20. Schleppenbach then added a kill on a pass from Darcy Sunderman before Maddy Bruder extended the lead on a pass from Jordan Trimble. On the following point, Trimble found Becker to give Northwest set point. Bruder finished things off with a kill two points later, giving the Bearcats the second set, 25-20.

Northwest Missouri State will play three matches in five days to close out the regular season. First up, Northwest will make the short drive to St. Joseph, Mo. to face off against Missouri Western on Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Jayhawks remain winless as they lose at Texas

riggertKUAUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Jerrod Heard threw an 84-yard touchdown pass to John Burt on Texas’ first offensive play and D’Onta Foreman ran 93-yards for a third quarter score as Texas routed winless Kansas 59-20 Saturday night.

Tyrone Swoopes ran for four touchdowns for Texas (4-5, 3-3 Big 12), two in the fourth quarter. He also threw a 40-yard touchdown in mop-up duty in the Longhorns’ highest-scoring game in two seasons, a week after being shut out by Iowa State.

Foreman’s run was the third-longest touchdown run in Texas history.

Kansas (0-9, 0-6) has lost 37 in a row away from home. The Jayhawks have given up at least 58 points in three straight games

Kansas was within 24-14 late in the first half but had a drive end at the Texas 1 and the Jayhawks missed a short field goal on the final play.

Texas then finished off the Jayhawks with 35 straight points in a scoring burst the Longhorns hadn’t seen in a long time.

Heard finished with 201 yards passing and 23 yards rushing, one of his best games since a 527-yard school record effort in a loss to California back on Sept. 12. Foreman finished with 157 yards rushing after gaining just 16 in the first half.

Swoopes scored two touchdowns on runs of 4 and 1 yards in the first half when the game was still close, then finished off the Jayhawks with a burst in the fourth quarter when the game turned into a Texas romp.

Ryan Willis led Kansas with 214 yards passing and one touchdown.

The Longhorns still need two wins in their final three games to qualify for a bowl in coach Charlie Strong’s second season. The Longhorns play next at West Virginia, host Texas Tech on Thanksgiving and end the regular season at Baylor.

The scoring outburst will be a confidence boost for a Texas team that badly needed one and has struggled to keep up in the wild scoring of the Big 12. The Longhorns jumped to a 17-0 lead against one of the worst defenses in the country and survived a second-quarter surge from the Jayhawks.

Heard, who hadn’t passed for more than 53 yards in three of the previous four games, threw over the top of the Kansas secondary for the long strike to Burt, who easily beat one-on-one coverage to haul it in. Swoopes’ two short first-half touchdown runs made it 24-7 early in the second quarter.

Kansas had a chance to force a tie by halftime. De’Andre Mann, whose earlier touchdown pulled Kansas with 24-14, was stuffed at the Texas 1 on fourth down. Nick Bartolotta’s 26-yard field goal bounced off the right upright as time ran out on the half.

Texas poured it on in the second half, starting with Foreman’s long run. Foreman took the handoff, bounced around the left end and suddenly was in the clear all the way to the end zone. His touchdown on Texas’ next drive put the Longhorns up by 24.

Swoopes replaced Heard at quarterback to start the fourth quarter and his first pass attempt was a 40-yard touchdown to Armanti Foreman. He added a 44-yard TD run, then scooped a fumble for another late touchdown.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State drops seventh straight as they lose at No. 21 Youngstown State

riggertMSUYOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – Youngstown State scored on its first six offensive possessions and rolled up more than 400 yards in the opening half to pull away for a 47-7 victory over Missouri State Saturday afternoon at Stambaugh Stadium.

YSU finished the day with 644 yards of total offense, including 338 rushing yards and 306 through the air, and moved the chains for 29 first downs to just five for the Bears. The Penguins’ dual threat ground game featured 100-yard games from Jody Webb (12 carries for 107 yards) and Martin Ruiz (18 carries for 100 yards), while Hunter Wells completed 15-of-25 passes for 241 yards and three touchdowns.

The No. 21 Penguins (5-4, 3-3 MVFC), who racked up 222 yards of offense over the first 15 minutes of action, used two of Wells’s touchdown passes and a consistent ground attack to build a 24-0 first-quarter lead. While YSU’s early offensive attack yielded positive results for the home club, the Penguins defense was equally as dominant, limiting the Bears to 11 yards of total offense in the first quarter.

After a 34-yard Ruiz run set up a Zak Kennedy 20-yard field goal to open the scoring, Wells connected with Andrew Williams on the first of two scoring pass plays for the duo in the opening half, capping an eight-play, 63-yard drive to put the home club on top, 10-0. Webb’s 27-yard rush–one of four YSU runs of 16 yards or more in the opening period–highlighted the drive.

A David Rivers interception on the Bears’ next play from scrimmage put the Penguins on the offensive again, as YSU engineered another scoring march with the help of two critical MSU penalties that kept the drive alive. On first down at the MSU 27, Vashon Landers picked off a Wells pass in the end zone, only to see the turnover wiped away by one of three offsides penalties on the Bears defense in the first half. Then, on third-and-10 at the MSU 15, Wells fired incomplete to seemingly halt the drive, but yet another offsides call gave the Penguins another chance, which Wells cashed in with a 10-yard TD pass to Andre Stubbs.

Next, Webb’s 62-yard bolt to open YSU’s fourth offensive possession set up another quick strike for the Penguins. Yet another MSU offsides penalty on third down in the red zone aided the Penguins cause, as Ruiz ran it in from three yards out to stretch the margin to 24 points.

MSU moved the chains for the first time on its initial drive of the second period, using a 17-yard Lambert-to-Deion Holliman pass to spark the offense. The Bears’ junior quarterback also hit Malik Earl and Holliman again for gains of seven and 10 yards, respectively, before the YSU defense stopped the drive.

Wells kept the Penguins offensive momentum burning, firing a strike to Williams over the middle before the senior receiver broke away from a Bears defender and streaked to the end zone for a 72-yard scoring play.

YSU regained the ball on the first play of the ensuing drive, as Jaylin Kelly intercepted Lambert at the Penguins 48. Wells moved the ball to the MSU 15 with a 21-yard completion to Darien Townsend, before Ricky Davis carried it in from a yard out for a 38-0 margin with 6:05 remaining in the opening half.

Missouri State’s defense found itself on the short end of a wide time of possession disparity, as YSU ran off 29 offensive plays to the Bears eight in the first period. The Bears defense did come up with a key takeaway to set up MSU’s lone touchdown of the day, as Tre Betts stepped in front of a Wells pass and returned it 44 yards to the YSU 21 late in the first half.

Lambert found a wide-open Zac Hoover in the end zone for a 20-yard scoring pass to put the Bears on the scoreboard with just 42 seconds left in the half.

YSU kept the pressure on in the third period, adding to its lead courtesy of a five-yard run by Webb and a 43-yard field goal from Kennedy which made it a 40-point margin.

MSU was limited to 107 total yards on only 40 offensive plays and faltered on third down, converting just one of its 10 attempts in the game. On the flip side, YSU was virtually unstoppable on third down, cashing in on 13-of-17 tries.

Holliman accounted for a game-high 178 all-purpose yards for the Bears, topping the 100-yard mark for kickoff returns for the fifth time this season. The sophomore also reeled in a team-best three receptions for 28 yards.

Defensively, Dylan Cole led the Bears in tackling for the ninth straight game with a game-high 12 stops, including two for losses.

The Bears (1-8, 0-6 MVFC) return to Springfield for their final home contest of the season next Saturday (Nov. 14), when the host UNI in a 2 p.m. game at Robert W. Plaster Stadium.

— MSU Athletics —

Missouri Western men’s basketball loses exhibition game at Mizzou

MWSUCOLUMBIA, Mo. – The Missouri Western Men’s Basketball team opened the 2015-2016 season with a 92-53 loss in exhibition play at the University of Missouri.

Missouri Western struggled to get the offense going, shooting 30 percent from the field for the game, 27 percent from three-point range. The Griffons turned the ball over 17 times, nine of them coming in the first nine minutes of the game. Wes Mitter and Currie Byrd led the team with nine points each. Mataika Koyamainavure scored six in his first game as a Griffon. Aaron Emmanuel scored five and led the team with seven rebounds.

On the other side, Mizzou shot 57 percent from the field and 50 percent from behind the arc. K.J. Walton scored 17 for Missouri to lead all scorers. He was one of four Tigers to score double-digits with Tramaine Isabell adding 16, Russell Woods scored 13 and Wes Clark had 10.

The regular season begins for Missouri Western next weekend when the team hosts the 24th Annual Hillyard Tip-Off Classic on Nov. 13-14 at the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

High School Football Scores – Friday, November 6

riggertFootballDistrict Championships

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 8
3 Platte County 3 (8-4)
@ 1 Kearney 43 (11-1)

CLASS 3 DISTRICT 8
3 Richmond 7 (7-5)
@ 1 Maryville 42 (12-0, 7-0 MEC)

CLASS 2 DISTRICT 8
2 Brookfield 43 (11-1)
@ 1 East Buchanan 18 (11-1, 7-0 KCI)

CLASS 1 DISTRICT 7
4 North Platte 26 (5-7, 1-6 KCI)
@ 2 West Platte 38 (6-6, 2-5 KCI)

CLASS 1 DISTRICT 8
5 Maysville 34 (6-6, 3-3 GRC)
@ 3 Hamilton 56 (9-3, 5-2 KCI)

8-MAN DISTRICT 1
3 Rock Port 42 (5-6, 3-4 275)
@ 1 Worth County 88 (9-2, 6-1 275)

8-MAN DISTRICT 2
2 Albany 18 (7-4, 4-3 275)
@ 1 Stanberry 70 (11-0, 7-0 275)

8-MAN DISTRICT 3
2 St. Joseph Christian 24 (7-4)
@ 1 North Andrew 78 (11-0, 5-0 PVC)

8-MAN DISTRICT 4
2 Norborne/Hardin Central 24 (10-1, 2-0 CRC)
@ 1 Southwest Livingston 8 (8-3, 4-1 PVC)

Western volleyball rallies to defeat Fort Hays State in five sets

riggertMissouriWesternHAYS, Kan. – The Missouri Western volleyball team battled back from a 2-1 hole to take a five-set victory at Fort Hays on Friday night. After winning the first set, 25-21, Missouri Western dropped the next two but squeaked out a 25-22 win in the fourth to force the deciding set.

Missouri Western won the fifth 15-11 and picked up its 20th win of the season despite hitting .104 as a team and having just 44 kills in five sets. Fort Hays State had 69 kills and hit .179 on the night with 32 attack errors. The Tigers also helped the Griffons’ chances with eight service errors and Missouri Western totaled 14 blocks on the night.

Shellby Taylor led the Griffons with 12 kills and Blair Russell finished with 10. Jordan Chohon had 36 assists and 21 digs. Kayla Ruff led the team with 24 digs. Missouri Western improved to 20-6 with the win and 11-3 in the MIAA. The team travels to Kearney, Nebraska for a showdown with No. 12 Nebraska-Kearney Saturday night at 7 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

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