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Royals rally again to defeat Mets in 12 innings, win first World Series since 1985

RoyalsNEW YORK (AP) — Crown `em, Kansas City!

One agonizing step from ecstasy last season, this time the Royals reign after their latest incredible comeback and a go-ahead hit from maybe the most unlikely player in uniform.

Christian Colon singled home the tiebreaking run in the 12th inning and those bound-and-determined Royals rallied one more time to beat the New York Mets 7-2 in 12 innings early Monday for their first World Series championship since 1985 and second overall.

Down two runs in the ninth, Kansas City fought back in Game 5 against two of the top arms on the pitching-rich Mets: Matt Harvey and Jeurys Familia. And the Royals did it not with home run power but instead a daring dash from Eric Hosmer, a three-run double by Lorenzo Cain, a couple of crucial stolen bases.

Consistent contact, keep the line moving.

And that’s how Series MVP Salvador Perez and the Royals became the first team since the 2002 Angels to come from behind in all four World Series wins, according to STATS. That’s how they washed away the bitter taste of last year’s Game 7 loss at home to San Francisco, an October heartbreak that drove them to their singular focus all season.

Never waver. Win it all this time.

Now, this group of homegrown favorites that turned around a floundering franchise, Mike Moustakas and Alex Gordon and Hosmer, can take their place in Royals history alongside George Brett, Willie Wilson, Bret Saberhagen and those champs from 30 years ago.

With no margin for error, Harvey put the Mets’ last hope in his hands and hung on as long as he could. After eight scoreless innings, he pushed to pitch the ninth and finally faltered.

New York slugger Yoenis Cespedes exited with knee pain but Curtis Granderson hit a leadoff homer, his third long ball of the Series, and the Mets managed a 2-0 lead against heavy-hearted Royals starter Edinson Volquez, pitching one day after returning from his father’s funeral.

But for these resilient Royals, no deficit is too large, no time in the game too late.

Perez looped a leadoff single in the 12th off losing pitcher Addison Reed, and pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson stole second. One out later, Colon stepped in as a pinch-hitter for his first plate appearance since the regular-season finale Oct. 4.

Hardly rusty, he lined a 1-2 pitch into left-center and pounded his chest at first base. Alcides Escobar added an RBI double, and Cain’s bases-loaded double off Bartolo Colon broke it open.

All that was left was for Wade Davis to close it out. He threw a called third strike past Wilmer Flores to end it and tossed his glove high in the air as the Royals rushed toward the mound to celebrate.

Hundreds of Royals fans dressed in blue descended toward the Kansas City dugout to cheer their champs. Perez received his MVP award after the catcher hit .364.

Later, the Mets came back onto the field to salute a smaller pocket of fans who stuck around for one last chant of “Let’s go, Mets!”

Fired up all night, Harvey was at 102 pitches following a 1-2-3 eighth and stalked briskly back to the dugout with one purpose in mind. There, cameras caught him telling manager Terry Collins — in no uncertain terms — he was going back out for the ninth.

Collins relented, and a huge roar went up as Harvey bounded off the bench and sprinted to the mound, looking for his second complete game in the majors. But he walked Cain on a full-count slider, and Hosmer hit an RBI double.

Harvey was pulled for closer Familia, and Hosmer advanced on Moustakas’ groundout to the right side.

Sound fundamentals, a Royals staple.

So up stepped Perez with the potential tying run 90 feet away, same as last year when he fouled out against Giants ace Madison Bumgarner to end the World Series.

This time, Perez got jammed and hit a slow grounder to third baseman David Wright, who froze Hosmer with a glance and threw across the diamond for the second out.

Hosmer, however, bolted for the plate when Wright released the ball. First baseman Lucas Duda fired wide of catcher Travis d’Arnaud — a good throw probably would have been in time — and Hosmer made a headfirst dive home with the tying run.

Hosmer celebrated with excited teammates, while Familia was saddled with his third blown save of the Series, though two were the result of shaky defense.

For the rising Mets, it was the final stop on a storybook ride. Underdogs in the NL East, they re-energized fans at Citi Field during their first winning season since Shea Stadium was still home in 2008, sweeping the Chicago Cubs for their first pennant in 15 years.

But the Mets remain without a World Series title since 1986.

Flush with young aces who flashed October mettle, New York could be a force for years to come. But first, offseason decisions on two important bats in the middle of the lineup: Cespedes and postseason star Daniel Murphy.

— Associated Press —

MWSU soccer loses to No. 10 Central Missouri 1-0; earns six seed in MIAA Tourney

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western women’s soccer team came up just short of pulling off a huge upset to end the 2015 regular season. An outstanding performance in goal from Sarah Lyle came with just one blemish in a 1-0 loss to No. 10 Central Missouri.

The junior goalkeeper turned in one highlight save after another on her way to an 11-save match. Central Missouri’s only goal came in the 62nd minute when Megan Wooley rolled one to Lyle that just got under her hand and trickled past the line before Lyle could stop it. Lyle’s stellar performance overshadowed a challenging day offensively for the Griffons. Missouri Western managed just seven shots to Central Missouri’s 23. The Jennies had six corner kicks and Missouri Western none.

Sydney Cluck, Nikki Birr, Paige Phipps and Layne Shepherd each had a shot on goal for the Griffons. Bridget Blessie and Ashlyn Powers added the other two Griffon shots.

Prior to the game seniors Katie Kempf, Sydney Andrews, Drew Mantlo, Melody Johnson and Nikki Birr were honored as part of Senior Day festivities. The group helped Missouri Western to clinch its first ever winning season and second trip to the MIAA Tournament, after making the first ever last season.

Missouri Western finishes the regular season 9-7-1 overall and 5-5-1 in the MIAA.

For the second straight year, the Griffons are headed to the postseason as they qualified for the MIAA Tournament.

Missouri Western is the six seed and will open the tournament on Wednesdaybat Northeastern State in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. The match will begin at 7 p.m. and is a rematch of the teams’ Sept. 27 contest that Northeastern State won 1-0.

Semifinal matches will be played on Friday at campus sites with the championship match coming on Nov. 8 at the highest remaining seed’s home pitch.

— MWSU Athletics —

Smith, Chiefs run over Lions 45-10 at Wembley Stadium

riggertChiefsLONDON (AP) — When Alex Smith had no options left, he ran. And he ran far.

The Kansas City quarterback carried the ball five times and gained 78 yards, including a career-high 49-yard scramble in the second quarter that set up his 12-yard touchdown run.

With a comfortable lead in hand, Smith settled into his usual role, throwing for 145 yards and a pair of touchdowns to lead the Chiefs to a 45-10 victory over the Detroit Lions at Wembley Stadium in the last of three regular-season NFL games in London.

“We got a lot of guys with a lot of different strengths,” Smith said. “We can present a lot to a defense. It’s hard for them to defend.”

De’Anthony Thomas, Charcandrick West and Spencer Ware also rushed for touchdowns — the first time the Chiefs had four different players rush for scores in the same game since 1960. Thomas ended up with 100 total yards, while West ran for 97. Travis Kelce and Jeremy Maclin caught the two TD passes in the second half.

“Alex was putting the ball on the money today and Charcandrick was running north,” said Kelce, who had six receptions for 49 yards.

The Chiefs (3-5) were at Wembley for the first time, while the Lions (1-7) played in London for the second straight season.

The Lions were playing for the first time since offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter took over for the fired Joe Lombardi. And although the offense got moving on the opening possession, it stalled horribly after that.

Matthew Stafford threw for 217 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. Also, Calvin Johnson had 85 receiving yards, while Joique Bell ran for 56. But after the Lions took a 3-0 lead on 35-yard field goal from Matt Prater, Detroit was hapless with the ball.

“Not a good outing, obviously. An understatement,” Lions coach Jim Caldwell said. “We ran the ball decently early on, but we reached the point where we wouldn’t be able to regain lost ground quickly enough to keep running.”

The Kansas City pass rush posed huge problems for the Lions, and Stafford’s two interceptions resulted in 10 points going the other way. He was sacked six times, including on fourth-and-8 near midfield early in the fourth quarter while trailing 31-3.

Smith also got tackled a few times, mainly because he was running effectively and picking up some key yardage. The quarterback helped set up the first touchdown by scrambling 8 yards for a first down. On the next play, Thomas ran in from the 10.

At the start of the second quarter, Smith ran for a career-high 49 yards to open a drive. On third-and-10 from the 12, Smith scrambled into the left corner to make it 14-3.

“He had some very positive yards for us at needed times,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “We know he can run. We don’t really want him to run, but if it works out that way that’s OK.”

On the defensive side, Sean Smith and Justin Houston both picked off passes from Stafford. Smith’s interception resulted in a 33-yard field goal from Cairo Santos. Houston’s pick set up West’s 8-yard TD run up the middle.

Kelce caught a touchdown pass from the 2 at the start of the second half, and Maclin scored from 17 yards right after Thomas returned a punt 37 yards to the 16.

With the game out reach, Stafford threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Lance Moore. But Ware restored the 35-point lead with Chase Daniel in at quarterback by running in from the 4.

The Lions trailed by 21 points at the half, the same deficit they erased last year at Wembley by scoring 22 unanswered points against Atlanta. But Sunday’s ineffective offense will lead to more questions for Caldwell, who fired Lombardi after last week’s 28-19 loss to the Minnesota Vikings.

“Jim Bob called a good game,” Stafford said, “but we just failed to execute.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest soccer ends season with win over Lindenwood

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State soccer team scored two goals in the final five minutes to defeat Lindenwood in Sunday’s Senior Day match, 4-3.

The eight Bearcat soccer seniors, Jill Kieffer, Anna Holden, Crystal McElhose, Sara Worsfold, Nicole Mitchell, Taylor Trotter, Katelynn Lindsey and Elizabeth Lee, were honored at halftime.

All four Northwest goals were scored by seniors.

Holden scored two goals in the match, giving her 13 all-time as a Bearcat. The forward added an assist while attempting three total shots. Holden opened the scoring in the sixth minute when she scored to the right post from the center of the box after a through ball from McElhose.

Worsfold put the Bearcats ahead 2-0 in the seventh minute when she scored from the center of the box. The goal was set up by an Ashley Cole pass to the corner that found Holden, who subsequently sent a cross into the box.

McElhose scored the game-tying goal in the 86th minute on a penalty kick. The midfielder sent the ball to the right side of the net, past the diving keeper. She added one assist and three shots, two on frame.

Lee made four saves in the match and earned the win in goal, her second win career win as a goalie. The Omaha, Neb. native made a crucial save at the end of the first half.

Northwest attempted 17 shots in the match, compared to just 11 for the Lady Lions.

The Bearcats end their season 4-10-3 and 3-7-1 in the MIAA.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffons’ upset bid falls short against No. 2 Northwest Missouri State

MWSUST. JOSEPH – Costly turnovers wiped out an upset bid by the Missouri Western football team as they lost at home Saturday to No. 2 Northwest Missouri State 24-10.

Northwest Missouri scored two of its three touchdowns off MWSU turnovers in a game that was tight for nearly three full quarters. Missouri Western took a 7-0 lead on its first offensive possession with a 52-yard touchdown pass from Skyler Windmiller to Dee Toliver. Northwest tied the game at seven eight minutes later then Missouri Western’s first turnover, an interception thrown by Windmiller resulted in the go-ahead touchdown for Northwest, a 10-yard pass from Brady Bolles to Shawn Bane.

Missouri Western went to halftime down 14-10 after a 29-yard field goal from Tanner Pettet. The Griffons held Northwest to 133yards of offense in the first half. Both defenses shined early in the second half, forcing punt after punt until a promising Missouri Western drive late in the third quarter ended in a Raphael Spencer fumble at the Northwest 20 yard line. Northwest drove 80 yards in five plays to take a 21-10 lead. Simon Mathiesen added a 37-yard field goal in the fourth quarter, the final points scored in the game.

Missouri Western finished with four turnovers, three interceptions by Windmiller. In his first start since Oct. 10 against Fort Hays, Windmiller went 15-33 for235 yards with one touchdown and three interceptions. He was also sacked three times. Toliver finished with six catches for 152 yards. The Northwest defense held the Griffons to just 28 net yards rushing. Raphael Spencer netted 50 yards on the ground on 19 carries. The team total was hurt by 37 negative rush yards.

The defense was led by 12 Yomi Alli tackles. The senior had 3.5 tackles for loss, a pass break up and a quarterback hurry. The senior linebacker now has 57 tackles, 11.5 for loss in his last four games. Michael Jordan added his fourth interception of the season. Northwest managed to finish the game with 354 yards of offense, 221 in the second half. Missouri Western limited Northwest to 87 yards rushing.

The loss dropped Missouri Western to 4-5 on the season. It’s the first time Missouri Western has lost five games in a season since 2008 and it’s also the program’s first three-game losing streak since ’08. The Griffons hit the road next week with a tip to winless Nebraska-Kearney.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals rally past Mets, take 3-1 World Series lead

riggertRoyalsNEW YORK (AP) — The Kansas City Royals keep finding new ways to win this October. And now with one more victory in November, they will be World Series champions.

Second baseman Daniel Murphy’s error on Eric Hosmer’s grounder in the eighth inning keyed yet another comeback for the tenacious Royals, and Kansas City startled the New York Mets 5-3 Saturday night to take 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series.

Edinson Volquez returned Saturday from his father’s funeral in the Dominican Republic and gets a chance to pitch the Royals to their first World Series title in 30 years. He faces Matt Harvey in a rematch of Game 1, when Volquez went six innings just hours after his dad died.

Seemingly spooked by the raucous New York crowd early on Halloween, the Royals rallied for the seventh time in 10 postseason victories this year, this one from a 3-2 deficit. Rookie Michael Conforto homered twice as the Mets built their lead.

Murphy’s charmed October slipped away as the calendar was an hour from flipping to a new month.

With runners on first and second on a pair of one-out walks by Tyler Clippard, Jeurys Familia relieved. So steady in his new role as closer this year, Familia had allowed Alex Gordon’s ninth-inning, tying homer in a Game 1 loss.

This time, he came on with a 3-2 lead and got Hosmer to hit a soft grounder toward Murphy as 44,815 fans stood, waving their orange towels in hopes of an inning-ending double play.

But the slow chopper sneaked under the glove of the NL Championship Series MVP as he charged in. Murphy, who would’ve only had a play at first, appeared to glance at the runner and failed to get his glove down. The ball rolled helplessly toward right field, and Ben Zobrist raced home from second base as Familia crouched on the mound.

Surely no one in the silenced Citi Field stands expected this scary ending. It got worse for the Mets in a hurry, too.

Mike Moustakas and Salvador Perez followed with RBI singles to break away.

Ryan Madson pitched a perfect seventh for the win, and Wade Davis worked two scoreless innings for his first save.

Not known for his defense, Murphy still made every play look easy in the NLCS and almost single-handedly slugged the Mets to their first World Series since 1986 with seven homers in nine playoff games. He has slumped in the Fall Classic but had a one-out infield single in the ninth.

Yoenis Cespedes followed with another single, but he was doubled off first base when Lucas Duda hit an easy liner to third base and Moustakas tossed it to first to finish off another incredible comeback for the Royals.

— Associated Press —

Western volleyball gets swept by No. 10 Washburn Saturday

MWSUST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western volleyball was swept at home Saturday by No. 10 Washburn 25-19, 25-20, 25-20.

All three matches had at least six ties, with the first and second having seven and all three had three lead changes. The second and third sets went 25-20 in Washburn’s favor and 25-19 in the first. Both teams battled back in every set, overcoming early deficits but Washburn was able to pull ahead just enough about midway through each set to sweep the season series from the Griffons and move into a tie for first place in the MIAA.

The Griffons were held to a .177 hitting percentage on the night, while Washburn hit .256. Jessie Thorup led Missouri Western once again with 11 kills on a .229 hitting percentage. Rachel Friedrichs finished with nine kills. Jordan Chohon led the team in digs for the second night in a row, she had 18. Lindsey Partridge had five blocks for Missouri Western.

The loss dropped the Griffons to 19-6 on the season and 10-3 in the MIAA. The Griffons hit the road again next week with a match at Fort Hays on Nov. 6 and at Nebraska-Kearney on Nov. 7.

— MWSU Athletics —

Kansas gets blown out by No. 14 Oklahoma 62-7

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — With three tough games looming at the end of its schedule, No. 14 Oklahoma had no trouble getting up for Saturday’s game against winless Kansas.

Baker Mayfield completed 27 of 32 passes for 383 yards and four touchdowns and Oklahoma beat Kansas 62-7.

It was evident quickly that the Sooners would have little trouble with the Jayhawks, but they stayed sharp in this blowout. Oklahoma will face No. 2 Baylor, No. 5 TCU and No. 12 Oklahoma State in the last three weeks of November.

“We know what’s coming,” Mayfield said. “That’s why we’re preparing. We knew from the beginning our hardest three games were at the end of the year. That’s no surprise. Obviously you have to win one week at a time with Big 12 play, but we knew that our little gauntlet at the end was the most important.”

Sterling Shepard had 183 yards receiving and a touchdown on 11 catches for the Sooners (7-1, 4-1 Big 12). Samaje Perine added 90 yards rushing and two touchdowns on 11 carries.

Oklahoma fans comprised the majority of the audience at Memorial Stadium, which had a crowd nowhere close to capacity.

“If we can come out and create energy in front of a smaller crowd, that’s good for us,” Mayfield said. “Who knows what will happen when we get a bigger crowd now, so we’re doing a good job right now.”

Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops is now 11-0 against the Jayhawks in his career. Kansas (0-8, 0-5) has dropped 11 consecutive games dating to last season.

The Sooners led the Jayhawks 38-7 at halftime then scored on its first drive of the second half when Sam Grant snagged a 1-yard touchdown pass from Mayfield. Kansas fumbled on the first play of the next drive, and Oklahoma quickly took a 52-7 lead after backup quarterback Trevor Knight finished a short drive with a 1-yard touchdown run.

The Sooners kicked a field goal with 2:03 remaining in the third quarter, upping their lead to 55-7. Oklahoma pushed its advantage to 62-7 when Knight connected with his twin brother, Connor Knight, for a 17-yard score with 5:32 left in the game.

The Jayhawks had no answer for a powerful Sooners offense that scored 50 points for the third time in as many games. It was the first time Oklahoma has done that since 2008, when quarterback Sam Bradford won the Heisman Trophy.

Oklahoma took a 7-0 lead early in the first quarter when Joe Mixon caught Mayfield’s strike and outran defenders for a 68-yard touchdown. The Sooners scored again on their next drive, which culminated in an 11-yard touchdown pass to Durron Neal. On the following drive, Shepard’s leaping catch in the end zone stretched Oklahoma’s lead to 21-0 with 1:51 left in the first quarter.

Oklahoma outgained Kansas 248-41 in the first 15 minutes of play.

The Jayhawks showed signs of life in the second quarter after recovering Shepard’s muffed punt. Kansas took advantage of the short field, and Ryan Willis found Tyler Patrick for a 17-yard touchdown that brought Kansas within 21-7.

With 9 minutes remaining in the half, Oklahoma upped its lead to 28-7 with a 3-yard rushing touchdown by Perine. The score capped a 14-play drive that lasted nearly 6 minutes. Mayfield was sacked twice during the possession and the Sooners hurt themselves with a 15-yard penalty, but Oklahoma still found the end zone.

On its next drive, Kansas threw a wrinkle at the Sooners when it had Willis punt, and the ball rolled out of bounds at the 3-yard line. The Sooners settled for a 46-yard field goal on the ensuing drive, taking a 31-7 lead.

Oklahoma finished with 445 passing yards and 265 rushing yards.

“Last week we did a great job running the ball, so you have no choice but to load the box,” Shepard said. “You’ve got to stop Perine and Joe Mixon and them, so it definitely helps us wideouts a lot, and we’ve got to continue to win one-on-one battles and make competitive catches, and I feel like guys did a great job of that today.”

— Associated Press —

Nebraska loses shootout at Purdue 55-45

riggertNebraskaWEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — With a sparse Ross-Ade Stadium crowd of 31,351 to see it, third-year Purdue coach Darrell Hazell’s wait for a Big Ten Conference home victory is over.

And in a big way.

Freshman quarterback David Blough, in only his fifth collegiate start, completed 28 of 43 passes for 274 yards and four touchdowns in the Boilermakers’ 55-45 victory against Nebraska on Saturday. Blough also rushed 10 times for 82 yards and a touchdown.

Cornerback Anthony Brown intercepted three Nebraska passes as the Boilermakers’ snapped a nine-game Big Ten losing streak and gave Hazell his first conference victory after losing his first nine league home games.

Purdue (2-6, 1-3) improved to 6-26, 2-18 in the Big Ten under Hazell. It is the Boilermakers’ first Big Ten victory since winning at Illinois last October.

“Any win is good, but when it comes in conference against a good football program, it feels so much sweeter,” Hazell said, “I just thought our players had a great focus. David Blough played relaxed today and made some big-time throws.”

Nebraska (3-6, 1-4) played without starting quarterback Tommy Armstrong, who has a right foot injury, and turned to junior Ryker Fyfe, who was intercepted four times, including three times by Brown.

“Every day I come to practice, I just think about making plays like those,” Brown said. “It just clicked today, finally. We knew they would throw one right to us, because he was a young guy and hadn’t played that much. We knew we would get a couple of chances today.”

While Fyfe led back-to-back touchdown drives in the first 3:21 of the fourth quarter to pull his team to within 42-31, a 26-point deficit was too much to overcome. Fyfe finished 29 of 48 for 407 yards with four touchdown passes, three during a 29-point Cornhuskers’ fourth quarter.

Brown’s three interceptions is the first time a Purdue player intercepted three passes in the same game since linebacker Mike Rose had three against Northwestern in 1997.

Nebraska had beaten the Boilermakers by a combined 79-21 the past two seasons, including 44-7 in 2013 in West Lafayette, but the struggling Cornhuskers had no answer for Blough and could not score enough to negate Fyfe’s four interceptions and five total turnovers.

“I missed some throws early, but then you see the catches some of our guys made, and that made my job easy,” said Blough, who was completing 48.1 percent of his passes in Big Ten play before facing the Cornhuskers.

Purdue delivered what amounted to a knockout punch when Blough threw an 83-yard touchdown pass to DeAngelo Yancey with 5:19 to play in the third quarter, pushing the lead to 35-16.

Nine seconds later, Brown intercepted Fyfe for a third time, giving Purdue the ball at the Nebraska 19, setting up Blough’s 9-yard touchdown pass to Yancey. With 2:34 remaining in the third quarter, the Boilermakers led, 42-16.

“You like to get more of those long ones than you miss, but DeAngelo’s was a great catch, and getting the (defender) off him to score from 83 yards, that was the best part of that entire play,” Blough said. “We’re going to continue to throw it and give our playmakers a chance to make plays.”

Blough threw his second touchdown pass — a 5-yarder to tight end Jordan Jurasevich — to give the Boilermakers a 28-16 lead with 7:42 left in the third quarter. Blough was 8 of 10 for 68 yards during the 13-play, 80-yard drive, including an 18-yard screen pass to Markell Jones that gave Purdue a first down at the Cornhuskers’ 25.

The Cornhuskers pulled to within 21-16, driving 75 yards with the second-half kickoff and getting an 8-yard touchdown run from Imani Cross with 12:04 left in the third quarter.

The drive included a 30-yard pass from Fyfe to Devine Ozigbo to the Purdue 18 and a roughing-the-passer penalty against Boilermaker defensive tackle Jake Replogle that advanced the ball to the 9.

Purdue took advantage of three first-half Nebraska turnovers, converting two into touchdowns, for a 21-9 lead through 30 minutes.

For Nebraska coach Mike Riley, five turnovers made this task more difficult than it already was.

“We put our defense in really bad positions several times with short fields to defend,” said Riley, whose team’s six losses are by a collective 23 points.

The Cornhuskers took a 3-0 lead with 7:53 remaining in the first quarter on Drew Brown’s 41-yard field goal, capping a 12-play, 70-yard drive that included an 18-yard run by Terrell Newby to the Boilermakers’ 22.

Purdue countered with a 56-yard touchdown run by Blough on a quarterback draw, giving the Boilermakers a 7-3 lead with 5:06 left in the opening quarter. Blough ran four times for 63 yards during that six-play, 77-yard drive.

With 23 seconds left in the first period, Nebraska center Ryne Reeves snapped the ball over Fyfe’s head, and Purdue linebacker Garrett Hudson returned the fumble 27 yards to the Cornhuskers’ 16.

Five plays later, Blough threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Danny Anthrop, and Purdue led 14-3 with 13:48 to play in the second quarter.

Nebraska got a 42-yard kickoff return from Stanley Morgan, Jr., and then a 22-yard run by Newby, setting up Fyfe’s 20-yard touchdown pass to Morgan, Jr., trimming the Purdue lead to 14-9 with11:52 remaining in the first half.

Brown’s diving interception at the Nebraska 22-yard line with 6:12 to play in the half set up a 4-yard touchdown run by wide receiver Domonique Young with 4:12 left in the second quarter, and Purdue had its halftime lead.

Nebraska outgained Purdue 173-172 during the first two quarters and had 11 first downs to the Boilermakers’ 8, but the 14 points as the result of turnovers were the difference.

— Associated Press —

Area District Semifinal High School Football Scores – Friday, October 30

riggertFootballWEEK 11 – District Semifinals

CLASS 5 DISTRICT 8
4 St. Joseph Central 0 (4-7, 2-3 SUB Red)
@ 1 Staley 27 (9-1)

3 Liberty North 7 (8-3)
@ 2 Park Hill 10 (10-1)

CLASS 4 DISTRICT 8
4 Savannah 6 (5-6, 3-4 MEC)
@ 1 Kearney 42 (10-1)

3 Platte County 23 (8-3)
@ 2 Smithville 7 (8-3, 6-1 MEC)

CLASS 3 DISTRICT 8
5 Lincoln Prep 6 (5-6)
@ 1 Maryville 48 (11-0, 7-0 MEC)

3 Richmond 38 OT (7-4)
@ 2 Chillicothe 37 (7-3, 4-3 MEC)

CLASS 2 DISTRICT 8
4 Bishop LeBlond 9 (5-6, 2-5 MEC)
@ 1 East Buchanan 18 (11-0, 7-0 KCI)

3 Lexington 0 (9-2)
@ 2 Brookfield 27 (10-1)

CLASS 1 DISTRICT 7
4 North Platte 34 OT (5-6, 1-6 KCI)
@ 1 Wellington-Napoleon 28 (9-2)

3 Mid-Buchanan 8 (5-6, 2-5 KCI)
@ 2 West Platte 42 (5-6, 2-5 KCI)

CLASS 1 DISTRICT 8
5 Maysville 46 (6-5, 3-3 GRC)
@ 1 Polo 38 (8-3, 5-1 GRC)

3 Hamilton 15 (8-3, 5-2 KCI)
@ 2 South Harrison 14 (7-4, 5-1 GRC)

8-MAN DISTRICT 1
4 North West Nodaway 44 (3-7, 2-5 275)
@ 1 Worth County 68 (8-2, 6-1 275)

3 Rock Port 38 (5-5, 3-4 275)
@ 2 Greenfield 22 (4-4)

8-MAN DISTRICT 2
4 South Nodaway 0 (2-9, 0-5 PVC)
@ 1 Stanberry 50 (10-0, 7-0 275)

3 Mound City 52 (3-7, 1-6 275)
@ 2 Albany 72 (7-3, 4-3 275)

8-MAN DISTRICT 3
4 South Holt/Nodaway-Holt 14 (6-5, 4-3 275)
@ 1 North Andrew 62 (10-0, 5-0 PVC)

3 DeKalb 8 (7-4, 3-2 PVC)
@ 2 St. Joseph Christian 70 (7-3)

8-MAN DISTRICT 4
5 Sacred Heart 20 (3-5)
@ 1 Southwest Livingston 71 (8-2, 4-1 PVC)

3 Chilhowee 6 (2-7)
@ 2 Norborne/Hardin Central 62 (9-1, 2-0 CRC)

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